Lieutenant General
Garnet Wolseley was placed in charge of a large force with the aim of destroying Urabi's regime and restoring the nominal authority of the
Khedive Tawfiq. The total force was 24,000 British troops, which concentrated in
Malta and
Cyprus, and a force of 7,000 Indian troops which staged through
Aden. Wolseley first tried to reach
Cairo directly from Alexandria. 'Urabi deployed his troops at
Kafr El Dawwar between Cairo and Alexandria and prepared very substantial defences. There, attacks by British troops were repelled for five weeks at the
Battle of Kafr El Dawwar.
Securing the canal Wolseley then decided to approach Cairo from a different route. He resolved to attack from the direction of the Suez canal. 'Urabi knew that Wolseley's only other approach to Cairo was from the canal, and he wanted to block it.
Ferdinand de Lesseps, upon knowing of Urabi's intentions, assured him the British would never risk damaging the canal, and would avoid involving it in operations at all costs according to Lutsky, he even "gave his word of honour to Urabi not to permit the landing of British troops in the Canal Zone, and Urabi trusted de Lesseps. By so doing, Urabi committed a grave military and political mistake". 'Urabi listened to his advice and did not block the canal, leaving it open for an invasion by British forces. When Wolseley had arrived at Alexandria on 15 August he immediately began to organise the movement of troops through the
Suez Canal to
Ismaïlia. This was accomplished so quickly, Ismailia was occupied on 20 August without resistance. Ismailia was quickly reinforced with 9,000 troops, with the engineers put to work repairing the railway line from Suez. A small force was pushed along the
Sweet Water Canal to the
Kassassin lock arriving on 26 August.
Egyptian attack at Kassassin 'Urabi attempted to repel the advance and attacked the British forces near
Kassassin on 28 August. The British troops were caught by surprise, as they did not expect an attack. Fighting was intense but the two British battalions, with their 4 artillery pieces, held their position. The British Heavy Cavalry, composed of the
Household Cavalry and the
7th Dragoon Guards had been following the infantry and were encamped away. When the cavalry arrived, the British went onto the offensive and causing heavy casualties on the Egyptians, forced them to retreat . The exact circumstances of his capture are unclear - according to one account, he had changed into civilian clothes due to the heat, and had gone for a walk accompanied by only one other officer when he was ambushed by a group of British cavalrymen. The loss of Fehmy was "a blow to the defence of Tel-el-Kebir for which there was no remedy", for the highly-regarded General had only recently arrived to oversee the construction of fortifications at the site. ==Battle==