Buller was handicapped by a shortage of competent staff officers, as most of them had been dispersed from his corps, like the corps itself, to the various distant fronts throughout South Africa. He also lacked information on the geography of the area, and possessed only a sparsely detailed blueprint map based on railway and farm surveys, and a crude sketch map made by an artillery officer. The British force in Natal had been grouped under Major-General
Francis Clery's
2nd Division, and Buller allowed Clery to plan the attack. The
5th (Irish) Brigade, was to cross at the Bridle Drift. The brigade consisted of the 1st
Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, the 1st
Connaught Rangers, 2nd
Royal Dublin Fusiliers, and the 1st
Border Regiment, and was commanded by the confident Major General
Arthur Fitzroy Hart. The 7th Battery of the
Royal Artillery under Colonel L.W. Parsons was to support Hart's attack. Meanwhile, the
2nd Brigade under Major-General
Henry J. T. Hildyard would occupy the village itself (where there was another ford and two bridges across the Tugela, although one bridge had already been demolished). Hildyard's brigade consisted of the 2nd
Devonshire Regiment, the 2nd
Queen's Royal Regiment (West Surrey), the 2nd
West Yorkshire Regiment, and the 2nd
East Surrey Regiment. Its attack was to be supported by artillery (the 14th and 66th Field Batteries of the Royal Artillery and a battery of six naval 12-pounder guns) under Colonel C.J. Long. A regiment of regular cavalry, the
1st Royal Dragoons, under Colonel J.F. Burn-Murdoch, protected the left flank. On the right flank, Buller intended that a brigade of colonial light horse and mounted infantry under
Lord Dundonald, would capture Hlangwane. Although Buller recognised that Hlangwane was a difficult position to assault, he anticipated that once Hart's and Hildyard's troops had established bridgeheads on the north bank of the Tugela, the Boers would abandon the hill for fear of being isolated. Dundonald's brigade consisted of Bethune's Mounted Infantry (three companies), Thorneycroft's Mounted Infantry (three companies), the
South African Light Horse (three squadrons) and a composite regiment made of one squadron of the
Imperial Light Horse, one squadron of the
Natal Carbineers and two companies of mounted infantry detached from British infantry units. Two more infantry brigades were in reserve: they were the
4th (Light) Brigade under Major General
Neville Lyttelton (consisting of the 2nd
Cameronians (Scottish Rifles), the 1st
Rifle Brigade (Prince Consort's Own), the 3rd
King's Royal Rifle Corps and the 1st
Durham Light Infantry), and the
6th (Fusilier) Brigade under Major General
Geoffrey Barton (consisting of the 2nd
Royal Fusiliers, the 2nd
Scots Fusiliers, the 1st
Royal Welch Fusiliers, and the 2nd
Royal Irish Fusiliers). Buller also had another two batteries of field artillery (63rd and 64th), and another battery of eight naval 12-pounder guns and two
4.7-inch naval guns to support the flanking mounted troops or in reserve. ==Battle==