In the 18th century it became customary in the British army to recruit boys who were trained to become musicians (drummers, fifers, buglers & trumpeters) so they would be ready for the job when they were older.
And so the lists of those killed at Isandlwana on 22 January 1879 includes four or five soldiers of the 24th infantry with the rank of boy.
In another post made today, Mar. 04/05 2024, I quote from a mention of a boy killed at Waterloo.
And I have read a story about a young British drummer boy captured in Spain in 1808. Napoleon teased the boy by threatening to shoot him as a spy unless he could prove he was a soldier. The boy demonstrated he could play the charge on a drum and then was told to play retreat, but said he didn't know retreat because the British never retreated.
And there is a story about a British Infantryman who could couldn't make to his square when French cavalry charged at Waterloo and so hid. When the French cavalry retreated, he jumped up to say he was alright, and then a cannonball knocked off his head.
And there a version where that infantryman was the drummer boy from 1808, probably no longer a boy after 7 years.
I note that the Duchess of Richmond must not have been happy with the famous ending of her Ball in Brussels. One of her sons, Lord Henry Adam Lennox (1797-1812) joined the navy and drowned age 14. Three of her sons were officers in Wellington's army & were at Waterloo. Her 15-year-old son Lord William Lennox lost sight in one eye in a horse riding accident in the battle.
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