Hi to all ,
A great way to relax for me is not only to paint but to be able to share my thoughts on releases through the Review threads .
The one I have in front of me now was first announced just prior to Euro this year it is from a company run by a PF member ......Graham Scollick aka Gra 30 ....the company :
Details are as follows:
Title: Black Watch , Indian Mutiny
Scale: 1/9th
Reference: MC 03 (Limited Edition of 75 pieces)
Material: Resin
No of pieces: 13
Sculptor: Maurice Corry (Moz)
Box Art: Mark Bennett (Gothicgeek)
Casting : Graham Scollick (Gra 30)
As with all my reviews lets have some background information but this time we will concentrate on one individual ...a VC winner in the Mutiny:
Name MACKAY, David Rank Private Service 93rd Regiment, Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders
Theatre where VC won Secundra Bagh, Lucknow, Indian Mutiny, 16 November 1857 Recorded in London Gazzette 24 December 1858
Place & Date of Birth Alterwall, Howe, Lyth, Caithness, 23 November 1831
Place & Date of Death Lesmahagow, Lanarkshire, 18 November 1880 Burial Ground Lesmahagow Cemetery, headstone erected 1998
Current Location of VC Not in the public domain
He enlisted in the 93rd Highlanders (which became the 93rd Sutherland Highlanders) at Thurso on the 23rd December 1850. He would have signed on for 10 years, with the option of signing on for another 11 years and completing 21 years "colour service". If he survived the 21 years he would be entitled to a pension.
Scene of Action:
Secundra Bagh is a villa and country estate on the outskirts of Lucknow, India. It was built as a summer house for the nawab of Awadh, Wajid Ali Shah. The estate was named after the nawab's favourite wife, Begum Sikander Mahal.
During the siege of Lucknow in the Indian Mutiny of 1857, Secundra Bagh was used as a refuge by hundreds of sepoys who were under siege by British and colonial troops. The villa was breached on 16 November 1857 and 2000 sepoys were killed by British troops.
He won the Victoria Cross at Secundra Bagh, Lucknow on 16th November 1857 during the Indian Mutiny. He was one of the first 93rd Highlanders and subsequently one of the first Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders to win the V.C. He won this for capturing a colour of the 2nd "Loodhiana" Indian Sikhs Regiment and was nominated by the 93rd Highlanders to receive the award.
He received the Victoria Cross from Queen Victoria at Hyde Park 1879. He received an annual pension of £10 for winning the V.C.
His V.C. was sold to a private collection for £75 in June 1901 at an auction in Debenhams, Tueson & Hicks, London.
London Gazette 24th December 1858 - extract:
David MacKay Pte 93rd Rgt. Date of act of bravery 16 Nov 1857 :--
"For great personal gallantry in capturing an enemy colour after a most obstinate resistance, at the Secundra Bagh, Lucknow, on the 16th of November 1857. He was severely wounded afterwards at the capture of the Shah Nujjif. (Elected for the VC by the private soldiers of the regiment)."
Pte MacKay would have been awarded these medals :-
He was medically discharged from the Army on 24th January 1861 when his 10 year service was completed. He had enlisted as a Sergeant in the 1st Kincardineshire Volunteers by 1863.
Other VC Winners included:
Captain William George Drummond Stewart
Lt(Adjt) William McBean
Colour Sgt James Munro
Sgt John Paton
LCpl John Dunlay
Pte Peter Grant
ALL won at Lucknow between 16th Nov 1857 and 11 March 1858 and ALL from the 93rd ..truely a brave Regt .
This is the memorial to those killed from the Regt in the Mutiny found in St Giles Cathedral Edinburgh .
The Regt is of course well known for actions in the Crimea as well including at the battle of Alma
......"The Thin Red Line" ......
.....the Regt continues its proud traditions in todays conflicts worldwide .
Many books are avaialable but of course a good starting point would be the Osprey range :
Continued in next post:
Nap
A great way to relax for me is not only to paint but to be able to share my thoughts on releases through the Review threads .
The one I have in front of me now was first announced just prior to Euro this year it is from a company run by a PF member ......Graham Scollick aka Gra 30 ....the company :
CGS Miniatures
For me this was one of the best pieces to be released amongst the torrent of others during the build up to Euro this year
Whats on the review bench for me today :
BLACK WATCH -INDIAN MUTINY

Details are as follows:
Title: Black Watch , Indian Mutiny
Scale: 1/9th
Reference: MC 03 (Limited Edition of 75 pieces)
Material: Resin
No of pieces: 13
Sculptor: Maurice Corry (Moz)
Box Art: Mark Bennett (Gothicgeek)
Casting : Graham Scollick (Gra 30)
As with all my reviews lets have some background information but this time we will concentrate on one individual ...a VC winner in the Mutiny:
Name MACKAY, David Rank Private Service 93rd Regiment, Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders
Theatre where VC won Secundra Bagh, Lucknow, Indian Mutiny, 16 November 1857 Recorded in London Gazzette 24 December 1858
Place & Date of Birth Alterwall, Howe, Lyth, Caithness, 23 November 1831
Place & Date of Death Lesmahagow, Lanarkshire, 18 November 1880 Burial Ground Lesmahagow Cemetery, headstone erected 1998
Current Location of VC Not in the public domain
He enlisted in the 93rd Highlanders (which became the 93rd Sutherland Highlanders) at Thurso on the 23rd December 1850. He would have signed on for 10 years, with the option of signing on for another 11 years and completing 21 years "colour service". If he survived the 21 years he would be entitled to a pension.
Scene of Action:
Secundra Bagh is a villa and country estate on the outskirts of Lucknow, India. It was built as a summer house for the nawab of Awadh, Wajid Ali Shah. The estate was named after the nawab's favourite wife, Begum Sikander Mahal.
During the siege of Lucknow in the Indian Mutiny of 1857, Secundra Bagh was used as a refuge by hundreds of sepoys who were under siege by British and colonial troops. The villa was breached on 16 November 1857 and 2000 sepoys were killed by British troops.
He won the Victoria Cross at Secundra Bagh, Lucknow on 16th November 1857 during the Indian Mutiny. He was one of the first 93rd Highlanders and subsequently one of the first Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders to win the V.C. He won this for capturing a colour of the 2nd "Loodhiana" Indian Sikhs Regiment and was nominated by the 93rd Highlanders to receive the award.
He received the Victoria Cross from Queen Victoria at Hyde Park 1879. He received an annual pension of £10 for winning the V.C.
His V.C. was sold to a private collection for £75 in June 1901 at an auction in Debenhams, Tueson & Hicks, London.
London Gazette 24th December 1858 - extract:
David MacKay Pte 93rd Rgt. Date of act of bravery 16 Nov 1857 :--
"For great personal gallantry in capturing an enemy colour after a most obstinate resistance, at the Secundra Bagh, Lucknow, on the 16th of November 1857. He was severely wounded afterwards at the capture of the Shah Nujjif. (Elected for the VC by the private soldiers of the regiment)."
Pte MacKay would have been awarded these medals :-
- Victoria Cross
- Crimea Medal 1854-56 with bars "Alma, Balaclava & Sevastopol"
- Turkish Crimea Medal 1854-56
- Indian General Service Medal 1854-1895
- Indian Mutiny Medal 1857-1858 with bar "Relief of Lucknow"
He was medically discharged from the Army on 24th January 1861 when his 10 year service was completed. He had enlisted as a Sergeant in the 1st Kincardineshire Volunteers by 1863.
Other VC Winners included:
Captain William George Drummond Stewart
Lt(Adjt) William McBean
Colour Sgt James Munro
Sgt John Paton
LCpl John Dunlay
Pte Peter Grant
ALL won at Lucknow between 16th Nov 1857 and 11 March 1858 and ALL from the 93rd ..truely a brave Regt .



The Regt is of course well known for actions in the Crimea as well including at the battle of Alma

.....the Regt continues its proud traditions in todays conflicts worldwide .
Many books are avaialable but of course a good starting point would be the Osprey range :


Continued in next post:
Nap