Soon afterward, Souham's pursuit slackened when General of Division
Marie-François Auguste de Caffarelli du Falga reclaimed 12,000
Army of the North troops and returned to the
Bay of Biscay coast to deal with a new outbreak of Spanish guerilla attacks. Following instructions from Wellington, Hill evacuated Madrid on 31 October 1812. Hill's 4,000-man rear guard held off Soult's advance guard at the
Aranjuez bridge on the 30th. A week later, he linked up with Wellington near
Alba de Tormes. Meanwhile, Souham joined Soult on 8 November. On 10 and 11 November the two armies sparred along the
Tormes River near Alba. Twelve
voltiguer (light infantry) companies and the 45th Line Infantry Regiment of the French 5th Division were repelled by Brigadier General
Kenneth Howard's brigade of the
2nd Division. This unit included the 1st Battalions of the
50th Foot,
71st Foot, and
92nd Foot and was supported by 2nd and 14th Portuguese Line Infantry Regiments. Casualties amounted to 158 French, 69 British, and 44 Portuguese. Disappointed here, Soult's army crossed the Tormes farther south and Wellington fell back. On 15 November, 80,000 French troops faced 65,000 Allied soldiers on the old Salamanca battlefield. To the fury of the French soldiers and officers, Soult failed to order an attack. Instead, Wellington began retreating that afternoon. As the Allies marched away, rain began to fall continuously. As the supplies in the Salamanca depots were feverishly packed up and sent away, Wellington's logistical arrangements collapsed completely. Fortunately for the Allies, Joseph had forbidden all but his cavalry to pursue. On 16 November at
Matilla de los Caños del Río, Brigadier General
Charles Alten with 1,300 men clashed with 2,000 French cavalry consisting of the 2nd
Hussar, 5th and 27th
Chasseurs à Cheval and 7th
Lancer Regiments. Alten had the 1st and 2nd Hussars of the
King's German Legion and the
14th Light Dragoons, as well as two cannons and the light company of the 1st Battalion of the
28th Foot. The French lost 50 men, almost all of whom were wounded and captured, while Alten's command suffered 34 casualties. Already demoralized by having to retreat, the Allied soldiers were soon forced to survive on acorns when the inept Quartermaster General
James Willoughby Gordon directed the supply trains onto the wrong road. On 17 November, Gordon sent the cavalry rear guard off to a flank and for a time the retreating infantry were directly exposed to the attentions of the French cavalry. On this day, Wellington's second-in-command
Edward Paget was made a prisoner by the French horsemen. The misery of the hungry foot soldiers was intense as they struggled to march on muddy roads in the cold weather. During the retreat three of Wellington's division commanders took matters into their own hands. Lieutenant General
William Stewart and two others decided to disobey the army commander's direct order to retreat by a certain road. Stewart was joined by Lieutenant General
George Ramsay, Lord Dalhousie and either Major General
John Oswald or Lieutenant General
Henry Clinton. When Wellington found them in the morning, the three divisions were in complete confusion. Later the army commander was asked what he said in the situation and he replied, "Oh, by God, it was too serious to say anything." On 16 November, the French cavalry rounded up 600 stragglers and the following day, they captured even more. The Allies staggered into their base at
Ciudad Rodrigo on 19 November. Two-fifths of the army's soldiers were either ill or missing. The humor of the rank and file was not improved when Wellington issued a nasty letter to his division and brigade commanders and it was leaked to the press. A total of 5,000 men were missing. While many of the missing were on the way to French prison camps, the majority had died from starvation or hypothermia. Though the Allied army had apparently been defeated, in fact much had been accomplished in 1812. The French had been ejected from the cities of Ciudad Rodrigo,
Badajoz,
Seville, and
Astorga, and the provinces of Andalusia,
Extremadura, and
Asturias. ==Notes==