Battle of Chieveley

Battle of Chieveley
Part of the Second Boer War

Illustration depicting the ambushed train and the battle.
Date15 November 1899
Location
Chieveley, South Africa
28°52′24.8″S 29°46′08.2″E / 28.873556°S 29.768944°E / -28.873556; 29.768944 (Battle of Chieveley)
Result Boer victory
Belligerents
British Empire

 South African Republic

Commanders and leaders
Charles James Long
Aylmer Haldane
Louis Botha
Camillo Ricchiardi
Strength
120 men ~200 Boers
Casualties and losses
2 killed
20 wounded
80 captured
Unknown

The Battle of Chieveley took place on 15 November 1899, and was an ambush on a British armored train travelling from Estcourt to Colenso in a reconnaissance mission. Boer forces under the command of Louis Botha, which comprised primarily the Italian Volunteer Legion, ambushed the armored train, and derailed it, taking most of the British soldiers prisoner. Commanding the British forces on the armored train was Colonel Charles James Long, who had received reports a day earlier about Boers in the area, hence the reason for sending out the armored train.