Good afternoon Captain…, sorry for not getting back to you sooner. (I must have a look at my settings)
And once again…, congratulations. That must have taken years to do !
Lol…, pity about the cabbages !! In fact, there were no vegetables in the formal garden, just flower beds and shrubs. Although, according to satellite radar images, there’s a hint of what could have been a large rectangle of raspberries or the like to the north of the flower beds, with a hedgerow dividing it from the orchard strip. Lol…, who knows; perhaps the gardener Van Cutsem had his famous strawberries there ?
In fact, there were two vegetable gardens, one where the French are fighting in your last image, and the other along the western wall with the western lane and a line of poplar trees separating them both. The southern kitchen garden stretched east-west the full length of the formal garden wall before meeting up with the great orchard. Perhaps not easy to visualize as that part of the farm is a little complicated.
To get a good idea about the layout, the best sketch is Adkin’s ‘Waterloo Companion,’ page 332.
Note…, the whole farm was surrounded by one single hedge. (“with trunks as thick as your arm”)
Three aspects not well indicated in this drawing is the sunken lane. (ease-west at the top) It should turn abruptly northwards just above the pond. Also, the southern area is just as important as the top half and he has eliminated the two paddocks on the right. In addition, on the left, the western kitchen garden extends south before turning into a third orchard which envelopes a good part of the wood to the south.
He also has an error there where the lane junction near where your cabbages should be…, he just has a simple fork, however, there was another lane from that fork leading SW that headed for Genappe. The one visible moving down SE and cutting the wood in two, led towards La Belle Alliance at Plancenoit. (and on that corner is where all the French entered…, this was at 10h00 and before the French Pioneers started using horses to uproot the great orchard’s eastern hedgerow)
I know absolutely nothing about this type of model making and I find it amazing to see how each soldier is positioned differently, depending on the situation.
However, as seen in that last image, it’s a pity the soldiers aren’t slightly smaller (or vice versa) as they are the same height as the wall. Don’t forget that the Nassau, Jaegers and the Coldstreamers needed to build platforms to shoot over that wall.
Oh ! And please don’t forget that the farm had two haystacks ! The second was smaller and was at the northern tip of the western kitchen garden. When the Scots Guards were retreating from the wood, Privates Matthew Clay and Robert Gann stopped behind it to return fire. From here, they could see the Northern Gate, noticed that it was open so ran over to gain entry. Clay then tells us that he saw Col Macdonnell carrying the log to help close the gates.
http://blidworthhistoricalsociety.co.uk/10501.htmlGreat work…, Kind Regards…, Iain.
PS I’m working with ‘Waterloo Uncovered’ for the time being. (traumatized soldiers doing archaeology) I think I’ve discovered a cellar under the chateau; so I contacted a friend of mine Christian Deglas. About 25 years ago, I bought a copy of a Belgian beer book he had just published and he signed it for me…, however, it’s been in the attic ever since. In the meantime, I was convinced that with all the cereal surrounding the farm, the gentleman farmer Antoine Dumonceau surely produced Lambic beer. (for the model; in those days the height of the corn was much higher than it is today – shoulder high)
As such, I wrote to Christian (surprise) and he contacted Anthony Martin (of ‘John Martin’) who produces the Waterloo beer at the Mont Saint Jean farm/brasserie. Anthony wrote back saying that there is no evidence of Hougoumont producing beer, but there is the possibility that they produced cider. With over 1000 apple trees, they must have needed a cellar.
I mention all that simply to say that we now know there is a possibility that the contents of the northern outhouses didn’t just have carts…, there could also have been cider-making equipment.
Will keep you updated.