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Friday, March 8, 2024

K Company for Yellow Ribbon

 


Here is Lieutenant Edward Godfrey and K  Company 7th Cavalry.  They are intended for Yellow Ribbon.  



Above, you see them mounted.  Below they are dismounted.

 


Set tactics required a skirmish line spaced about 5 yards apart to minimise incoming damage.  The troopers would then volley or fire at will.  Mostly it worked.  



Mounted charges were mainly reserved for when the Indians were caught napping.  Fighting with mounted troopers against Indians who were ready rarely paid dividends.

Dismounted troops need horse holders.



Otherwise the Indians will run off with the horses.  Even with horse holders they might do so.  Your first decision personating Godfrey is who your horse holders should be. Use picked men with proven skills and you weaken the skirmish line.  Use ordinary troopers and the Indians might best them and take your horses.  Yellow Ribbon demands lots of decisions.  Constantly.

What can we say about K Company?  Yellow Ribbon requires you to rate your cavalry units.  The various skill levels do impact on the game.  Let us rate K Company.

K Company

US 7th Cavalry

Lieutenant Edward Godfrey

Movement Foot

Dismounted Cavalry

 

Movement Mounted

Average

 

Exhaustion Foot

10

 

Exhaustion Mounted

9

 

Field Craft

Average

 

Close Combat

Average

 

Marksmanship

Average

 

Weapon

.45, Sharps Carbine

 

Ammunition

() () () () () () () () () () () ()

 

Morale

14

 

 

 Not a bad outfit.  Average was pretty good for the cavalry in those days.  Godfrey is assisted by three non commissioned officers, First Sergeant, Sergeant, and Corporal.  Godfrey was a little deaf.  There must have been a more than average amount of shouting in K Company.

There are also two troopers who count as picked men.  These might be the Bugler and the Guidon-but need not be.

The rest are ordinary troopers.  As was usual in the US Cavalry of the day there were many Germans and Irish and some other newly arrived fellows.  The temptation to do the "Grand Bounce" was high.  Custer exerted an influence on that.  Once he took over desertion sky rocketed.

We have glimpses of Godfrey the man in the accounts that survive. Amidst the massacre at Washita he lamented the fact that he was ordered to destroy a particularly fine example of a decorated buckskin Cheyenne Wedding Dress.  Betimes he mentioned it for the rest of his days. This was noted and so I relay it to you.  It bespeaks of a man not entirely comfortable with what he was doing.

Godfrey and K Company survived the Little Big Horn.  Lt. Godfrey went on to become General Godfrey.



There is also a train of two mules with a Packer.  This is where the extra ammunition is carried.  



Godfrey might need it so the Mules are important.


Should any of K Company be seriously wounded Godfrey needs to detail men to get them to safety.  Failure to do so will cause K Company’s Morale to collapse.  Everyone knows what happens to those left behind.  Those detailed cannot help the fight.

Lieutenant Edward Godfrey has a lot to get right.  He has to find the Indians, fight them, keep hold of his horses and pack train, not exhaust his men, minimise casualties and succour the wounded.

The figures you see, except the Peter Pig wounded, are the original castings of the dedicated range made to support Yellow Ribbon.  They are still available from QRF.  I recall Geoff and Chas re-did the moulds so todays castings may well be sharper.  You can get a pdf of Yellow Ribbon from QRF too. 

Back in the day Geoff and Chas intended to do a reprint illustrated with painted figures from the QRF Range.  That would have been nice.  Doubtless other business priorities precluded it.  A sound idea all the same.


10 comments:

  1. The real Lt Godfrey must have done a decent job, if he ended up a general! The rules sound interesting but perhaps TOO detailed for my personal tastes - I don't like having to keep count of expended bullets etc I would rather that was just "inferred" form poor shooting rolls! But many others doubtless enjoy that level of detail. The figures look lovely, that's for sure!

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    1. From what we see of him he comes across as sane and capable.
      Yeah, I can see the complication thing. At one player per Company it is manageable, beyond that maybe not. I'll learn as I go along.

      Glad you like the figures. I'm pleased with how they came out.

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  2. Replies
    1. Thanks Ray. Its the Crow next and then the Sioux and Cheyenne.

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  3. Excellent work there and reminds of all those John Ford westerns:).

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    Replies
    1. Thanks Steve. We were big on John Ford in my childhood home. He was made an honorary Cheyenne for Cheyenne Autumn.

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  4. Replies
    1. Cheers Neil. There will be a smallish HQ Company and another full Company to come. Not sure which one to do.

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  5. They look great. Interesting to read the background and gaming thoughts.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks Richard. I have just received Powder River and Rosebud by Hendren so more period detail to come.

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