Chalons and Arlon On 1 March 1792 Beauregard was promoted to
general of brigade. After an assignment at
Avignon he was given command of the 2nd Military Division at
Châlons-sur-Marne on 1 October 1792. One source described the troops at Châlons as an "unruly mob". Except for one battalion of regulars, the force was composed entirely of volunteers. Its commander was Alexandre Séraphin Joseph Magnus de Sparre who was unable to instill any discipline in this body of soldiers. On 28 February 1793, Beauregard replaced Sparre in command at Châlons. On 8 April he was sent to command troops at
Sedan. He was elevated in rank to
general of division in the
Army of the Ardennes on 15 May 1793. In June 1793,
Charles Edward Jennings de Kilmaine commanded the
Army of the Ardennes which only numbered about 8,500 men at Sedan. Kilmaine proposed moving north from
Givet against
Liège while Beauregard moved east toward
Arlon. In cooperation, the
Army of the Moselle would advance on Arlon and capture its Coalition supply magazine.
Jean Nicolas Houchard, the commander of the
Army of the Moselle agreed to send
Amable Henri Delaage with 10,500 men, but the force was only to hold the town for two days before withdrawing.
Adam Philippe de Custine cancelled Kilmaine's main offensive but allowed Beauregard to proceed with 2,000 soldiers. On 7 June Delaage's advanced guard appeared before Arlon but was repulsed. On the 8th Beauregard's column showed up and Delaage determined to try again. The French attacked on 9 June and defeated an Austrian division under Gottfried von Schroder. The Austrian force numbered 6,000 men in seven infantry battalions and eight cavalry squadrons. They sustained 600 casualties and lost five guns and four ammunition wagons. The French counted 900 killed and wounded out of 8,500 foot soldiers and 1,000 horsemen. On 10 October, an exasperated Kilmaine wrote to a friend, "Try in the name of heaven to rid me of this old general Beauregard, he is a true agent of the old regime, a dirty schemer who puts the entire division in confusion. I cannot do the Republic any good serving with him".
Wattignies On 30 September 1793, the 60,000-strong Coalition army under
Prince Josias of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld began the
Siege of Maubeuge. On 22 September,
Jean-Baptiste Jourdan was appointed commander of the
Army of the North. In the emergency, Jourdan began assembling a relief army at
Guise. Beauregard took command of a 4,263-man
Army of the Ardennes division cobbled together from units at Sedan,
Montmédy and the Camp of
Carignan. To these were added three volunteer battalions and the 5th
Dragoon Regiment from the
Army of the North. Aside from the above-named units and the 11th
Chasseurs à Cheval, the division was composed of 22 separate detachments, most numbering only 100 or 200 soldiers. Altogether, there were 5,016 infantry and 837 cavalry. At 7:00 am on 15 October, Beauregard's division left
Solre-le-Château to advance on the enemy positions. It was opposed by
Karl Joseph Hadik von Futak with two battalions and four squadrons, a total of 2,100 soldiers defending
Obrechies. Beauregard's column passed
Solrinnes at 10:00 am and soon was attacked by units from the
Coburg Dragoons Nr. 37 and
Blankenstein Hussars Nr. 16. The badly organised French division was driven back after losing three guns and two caissons. On 16 October the division advanced again, forming the extreme right flank of Jourdan's army. On this day, in addition to the two infantry battalions, Hadik was reinforced to four squadrons each of the
Coburg and
Blankenstein Regiments. At 8:00 am Beauregard began attacking Obrechies and Hadik was reinforced by an additional battalion. After several hours of fighting, Hadik posted four squadrons to the northwest and two to the northeast, both supported by infantry. As the French began breaking into Obrechies, Hadik ordered a counterattack from the village's defenders and the other two detachments. The three-pronged attack routed Beauregard's troops; they fled back to Solrinnes after abandoning five cannons and three caissons. According to one account, the soldiers did not stop running until they reached Solre-le-Château, putting the day's French successes at risk. Despite the French victory in the
Battle of Wattignies Beauregard was removed from command the next day and imprisoned on 20 October 1793. Released from confinement on 29 August 1794, he was retired from active duty on 15 November that year. On 30 April 1795 he was assigned to the
Army of the West to fight in the
War in the Vendée. He retired again on 1 January 1796. He was famous for his battle cry, "Heads high boys, the bullets are not shit". He died at
Saintes on 30 September 1799. ==Notes==