Armchair Dragoons Forums

News:

  • Origins Game Fair 2024 – featuring the Wargame HQ with the Armchair Dragoons – will be held 19-23 June, 2024 ~~ More Info here
  • SAVE THE DATE!  The Armchair Dragoons Fall Assembly will be held 11-13 October 2024 in Raleigh/Cary, NC

News

Origins Game Fair 2024 – featuring the Wargame HQ with the Armchair Dragoons – will be held 19-23 June, 2024 ~~ More Info here

Recent Posts

1
Arts & Crafts & 3D Printing / Re: Bison's Tales of Hobby Crafting
« Last post by thecommandtent on May 11, 2024, 09:10:13 PM »
:bigthumb: They look great!

Thanks, Bob!

I am working on several VTT maps on Campaign Cartographer. Unfortunately, I cannot share them here just yet. I don't want to ruin TheCommandTent's experience during our group's next VTT session.

 :dreamer:
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Saturday Night Fights & Tabletop Simulator / Re: Eggmuhl Week
« Last post by bayonetbrant on May 11, 2024, 08:02:00 PM »
"Eggmuhl Week" is stretching into "Eggmuhl Month" (and coming soon "Eggmuhl Season")

The current game right now is General D'Armee 2


https://wp.me/pae4WL-90p
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Intel Dump / Re: Whats on Your Table?
« Last post by Putraack on May 11, 2024, 04:53:06 PM »
On My table: Saipan: the bloody rock, from Compass Games one of the Company Scale Series. This has been suspended for a month, as we prepare for running Brazen Chariots at Origins. That's just been set up on someone else's table.

Also on my table: Kesselring's War, as a solitaire exploration. I've played 7 of 8 turns, and have learned a few things, but not quite how to make a big amphibious landing in this system. I pulled off the Sicily landings and the Italian "toe" landing, but my Salerno attempt was thrown back by the Germans. I think I learned a few things, as I followed with Sardinia and Corsica landings, which led to a landing adjacent to Rome instead of Anzio. As it uses alternate impulses, I think it would run better as an opposed game than a solitaire one.
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Intel Dump / Re: Whats on Your Table?
« Last post by bob48 on May 11, 2024, 04:19:18 PM »
I'm having a break from some pretty intensive games of LHY, and I'm now playing 2nd Battle of Kernstown, one of the ACW Blind Sword series from Revolution Games.
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Arts & Crafts & 3D Printing / Re: Bison's Tales of Hobby Crafting
« Last post by Bison on May 11, 2024, 02:52:55 PM »
:bigthumb: They look great!

Thanks, Bob!

I am working on several VTT maps on Campaign Cartographer. Unfortunately, I cannot share them here just yet. I don't want to ruin TheCommandTent's experience during our group's next VTT session.
6
History and Tall Tales / Re: This Day in History
« Last post by besilarius on May 11, 2024, 08:12:05 AM »
0.   Saint Gangulphus of Burgundy, Patron of Unhappily Married Husbands.  (A possible patron of ACDs.)

1678         French Admiral Jean d'Estrées' fleet wrecked off Curaçao, 30 ships lost, hundreds drown

1809. Cptn. Thomas Cochrane leads fireship raid on the French fleet in the Aix roads/Basque roads.  A smashing success over a French fleet, one highlight was the tiny sloop, Beagle, anchoring astern of a grounded ship of the line.  She spent the rest of the day raking the behemoth with her tiny 4lbrs.

1849         Lts W. S. Hancock & Henry Heth play cards with Maj Gen Winfield Scott, and tactfully lose

1862  CSS Virginia is destroyed by Confederates off Craney Island to prevent capture.

1864         Skirmish at Yellow Tavern: J.E.B. Stuart mortally wounded

1870. Upon the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, 26-year old Friedrich Nietzsche attempted to volunteer to fight, only to discover that, having taken Swiss citizenship in order to accept a professorship in classical philology at the University of Basel, he was not eligible, and so joined the military nursing service.

1881         Attempted assassination of Russian Crown Prince Nicholas (II), in Otsu, Japan, by a Japanese police officer; a bloody shirt from the incident preserved in the Hermitage will later provide DNA used to identify the late Tsar's remains

1943         RMS 'Queen Mary' arrives at New York with Winston Churchill and the British Chiefs of Staff, en route to Washington, as well as 5,000 Afrika Korps veterans bound for P/W camps, and the 300 troops guarding them
     the Attu Operation, Task Force 16, commanded by Rear Adm. Thomas C. Kinkaid, landed a force of 3,000 US Army troops of the 7th Division in the cold and the mist of the Aleutians.  Intended to engage the Afrika Korps, the 7th had been meticulously trained for desert operations.
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History and Tall Tales / Re: This Day in History
« Last post by bayonetbrant on May 11, 2024, 07:15:25 AM »
During World War II the Red Army deployed some 108,700 tanks, of which 83,500 - 76.8-percent - were lost in combat

that's been coloring their approach to doctrine ever since
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History and Tall Tales / Re: This Day in History
« Last post by besilarius on May 10, 2024, 08:19:01 PM »
207 BC.    the Romans annihilated Hannibal's brother and his army in the Battle of the Metaurus (Julian
218 B.C. Hannibal Barca brought an army of mercenaries overland from Spain into Italy, and soon proved himself one of the premier captains of history.  After three successive massive defeats (the Trebbia, Lake Trasimenus, and Cannae) the Romans decided to ignore him and fight the Carthaginians where they were weak, which was everywhere Hannibal wasn't.  For more than a decade Hannibal ravaged and plundered in Italy, winning an occasional battle and taking an occasional city, while being constantly harassed by Roman forces.  Hannibal's army was unbeatable on the battlefield, but he could not capture and hold enough of the fortified cities in Italy, nor could he be everywhere at once.  The Romans would not quit and Hannibal was not as able a diplomat as he was a general.  Gradually the Romans bottled him up in the heel of Italy, neutralized (at great expense) but not eliminated.
Meanwhile, the Romans proceeded with the conquest of Spain, thereby cutting Hannibal off from his base.  Hannibal needed reinforcements if he was to continue his campaign in Italy, and sent to Spain for them.  This set the stage for the decisive engagement of the war, the Battle of the Metaurus, in 207 B.C.  The road to the Metaurus began with a brilliant campaign to reinforce Hannibal by his brother, Hasdrubal.  Eluding the Roman armies in Spain, Hasdrubal followed his brother’s old route from Spain, across what is now southern France, over the Alps, into the Po Valley, and then marched down the east coast of Italy. 
As Hasdrubal marched south, Hannibal endeavored to move north.  But the Roman Consul Gaius Claudius Nero out-maneuvered him, keeping him confined to Apulia, the “heel” of Italy and some adjacent areas.  Then, by a stroke of fortune, Claudius intercepted a message from Hasdrubal to Hannibal outlining the full details of his proposed line of march.  With this information in hand, Claudius decided upon a daring plan.  He would march half his army north to reinforce the two legions confronting Hasdrubal, under his co-consul, Marcus Livius Salinator, while the balance of his forces remained behind to keep Hannibal bottled up.  But how to execute this bold maneuver without risking defeat at the hands of the resourceful Hannibal?  Sextus Julius Frontinus, a Roman public official and soldier who lived during the latter portion of the first century, tells us what Claudius did in his Frontinus: Stratagems. Aqueducts of Rome. (Loeb Classical Library No. 174) . 
"Desiring that his departure should go unnoticed by Hannibal, whose camp was not far from his own, Claudius . . . gave orders to the commanders whom he left behind that the established pattern of patrols and sentries be maintained, that the number of camp fires lighted be the same each night, and that the existing appearance of the camp be maintained, so that Hannibal might not become suspicious and attempt to attack the small number of troops left behind." 
Claudius was soon on the march with 6,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry, Romans and allies together. while the rest of his troops did twice their normal duties, thereby misleading Hannibal, who continued to believe that the whole Roman force was still before him.  Meanwhile, Claudius and his troops marched some 240 miles in seven days, one of the more heroic forced marches in history, to join Livius along the Metaurus, a small river flowing from central Italy northeast of Rome into the Adriatic.  Upon arrival, Claudius again resorted to deception.  As Frontinus notes, "When he joined Livius in Umbria, Claudius forbade any enlargement of the Roman camp, lest this give some indication of the arrival of additional forces."
Thus the Romans used two deceptions. One to keep Hannibal from realizing that half the Roman troops confronting him had marched off, and the second to deceive Hasdrubal as to the size of the Roman forces facing him.
Within a day or so of combining their forces, which now amounted to some 20,000 men, Claudius and Livius offered battle, apparently on June 22, 207 BC (May 19th by the highly peculiar Roman calendar).
Although he had a river at his back, Hasdrubal, an able and experienced commander, deployed his forces rather well.  Holding his cavalry in the rear, he placed his most reliable troops, his Spanish infantry, on his southern, or right flank, with his less reliable Ligurian infantry in the center, and his formidable, but brittle Gallic mercenaries on the left, where the terrain was most favorable to the defense.  Across his front Hasdrubal posted his light infantry and about a dozen elephants.  The Romans posted some cavalry on their right (northern) flank, facing Hasdrubal's Gauls.  To the left of these were Claudius and his legion from Apulia, while the Roman center and left flank were held by Livius' two legions and their supporting allied contingents, with the balance of the Roman cavalry posted on the extreme left, and their light infantry spread across their front.
The battle began with a series of small clashes between the light forces.  The Carthaginian elephants soon panicked, fleeing into a gully, where they were all captured.  Meanwhile, the battle quickly became very intense in the center and on the southern end of the lines, where the Roman left became heavily engaged with the Carthaginian right.  At the other end of the front, however, Claudius found the terrain extraordinarily difficult, so that it proved impossible for him to come to grips with the Gallic troops to his front.  Reasoning that if the ground prevented him from getting at the enemy, it would also prevent the enemy from getting at him, Claudius decided to take his troops and reinforce the Roman left.  Leaving his cavalry to screen the Roman right, he made a rapid march with his legionaries behind the rear of the entire Roman army, passing beyond its southern flank before turning and deploying so as to strike Hasdrubal's exposed right.  The resulting attack demoralized the enemy.  After a vain attempt to rally his men, Hasdrubal plunged into the midst of a Roman cohort and died fighting.  His army perished with him, perhaps 10,000 falling and the rest being taken or fled: only 2,000 Romans and allies fell.
The Metaurus was a brilliant victory, but the war was not yet won.  With only a day or so of rest, Claudius' weary troops were once again on the march, heading south, where Hannibal was still inactive.  After another grueling march, Claudius and his army returned to their original camp, near the modern Canosa de Puglia.  Hannibal had been so completely fooled that the first news he received of the disaster on the Metaurus came when his brother’s head was hurled into his camp.  As Frontinus put it, “By the same plan, Claudius stole a march on one of the two sharpest Carthaginian generals and crushed the other.”

1781 a French Army under the Comte de Rochambeau, came to the support of George Washington's Continental Army as it besieged Yorktown. The pay for this army, some 800,000 livres in gold and silver coins, was deposited on the ground floor of a farmhouse, under the watchful eye of a proven soldier.
What happened next was recorded by a French officer,
In the course of the night the floor . . . broke under the weight . . . and both treasure and sentry were precipitated into the cellar, without, however, any loss of the former nor injury to the latter.

1794. Training Maj. Gen. "Mad" Anthony Wayne's "Legion of the United States" in 1793-1794 involved firing 162,056 rounds in target practice, for a total of 3510.9 pounds of powder and 3231.2 of lead.

During World War II the Red Army deployed some 108,700 tanks, of which 83,500 - 76.8-percent - were lost in combat

1864. The Battle of Heligoland. The Danish North Sea Squadron under Cptn. Edouard Suensson, frigates Niels Juel and Jylland, and the corvette Heimdal, defeat an Austrian squadron under Linienschiffskapitän von Tegetthoff, frigates Schwarzenberg and Radetzky, and the 3 Prussian paddle steamer gunboats Preussischer Adler, Blitz and Brasilisk.

1972         Vietnam War: USN aviators Randy "Duke" Cunningham & Willie Driscoll score their 3rd, 4th, & 5th MiGs, are then shot down by an SA2, but rescued
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Intel Dump / Re: The PODCAST now known as "Mentioned in Dispatches" !
« Last post by bayonetbrant on May 10, 2024, 07:36:30 PM »
Did anyone have a particular favorite moment or highlight from season 12 that they enjoyed?
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Arts & Crafts & 3D Printing / Re: Bison's Tales of Hobby Crafting
« Last post by bob48 on May 10, 2024, 05:48:50 PM »
 :bigthumb: They look great!