Early life Accounts of Morant's life before the Boer War vary considerably, and it appears that Morant fabricated a number of these romantic legends. Morant is often described as being 'well-educated' and claimed to have been born in 1865 at
Bideford, Devon, England
[1] and to have been the illegitimate son of Admiral Sir
George Digby Morant of the
Royal Navy; a claim repeated as fact by later writers, although the admiral denied it.
[2][3] It is alleged that Morant entrusted his cigarette case and other personal belongings to Major Bolton, the prosecuting officer during the later
courts-martial with the words "see that my family gets them". Years later, when Bolton's daughter allegedly tried to hand them to the family of Sir George, she was sent away and told Morant was not related to them.
[citation needed] It has been suggested
[who?] that the young Morant came into the care of a wealthy Scottish author, soldier, hunt-master and golfer,
George Whyte-Melville. Like other stories there is no evidence for this theory.
The results of enquiries made in 1902 by both
The Northern Miner and
The Bulletin newspapers identified him as Edwin Henry Murrant who had arrived at Townsville in Queensland on the
SS Waroonga in 1883.
[4] Murrant was born at
Bridgwater in Somerset, England in December 1864, the son of Edwin Murrant and Catherine (née Riely).
[4][5] Edwin and Catherine were Master and Matron of the Union Workhouse at Bridgewater and after Edwin died in August 1864, four months before the birth of his son, Catherine continued her employment as Matron until her retirement in 1882.
[4][6] She died in 1899 when Morant was in Adelaide, South Australia, preparing to leave for South Africa.
Morant settled in outback
Queensland, and over the next 15 years, working in Queensland,
New South Wales and
South Australia, the charismatic roustabout made a name for himself as a hard-drinking, womanising bush poet and gained renown as a fearless and expert horseman. Harry
Breaker Morant was one of the few horsemen who managed to ride the notorious buckjumper,
Dargin's Grey, in a battle that became a roughriding legend.
[1]
Morant worked in a variety of occupations; he reportedly traded in horses in
Charters Towers, then worked for a time on a newspaper at
Hughenden in 1884, but there are suggestions
[who?] that he left both towns as a result of debts. He then drifted around for some time until he found work as a bookkeeper and storeman on the Esmaralda cattle station.
On 13 March 1884, Morant married Daisy May O'Dwyer, who later became famous in Australia as the anthropologist
Daisy Bates, but the couple separated soon after and never formally divorced; Daisy reportedly threw him out after he failed to pay for the wedding and then stole some pigs and a saddle. He then worked for several years as an itinerant drover and horse-breaker, as well as writing his popular bush ballads, becoming friendly with famed Australian poets
Henry Lawson,
Banjo Paterson and
William Ogilvie.
Military career At the time Morant volunteered for military service (in 1899), the formal federation of the
Commonwealth of Australia was still two years away. Australia consisted of separate self-governing colonies, each of which was still subject to the British Crown. Because the population included many British immigrants, most Australians still had strong ties to "The Mother Country". Consequently, thousands of Australian men volunteered to fight for Britain in the
Second Boer War, which pitted British colonial forces against the
Boers in
South Africa.
Evidently, seeing this as a chance to return to England and redeem himself in the eyes of the family he had left 16 years before, Morant enlisted with the Second Contingent of the
South Australian Mounted Rifles. While in
Adelaide, Morant was reportedly invited to visit the summer residence of the
South Australian governor,
Lord Tennyson. After completing his training, he was appointed
lance corporal and his
regiment embarked for the
Transvaal on 27 February 1900.
[7]
In many respects, the terrain and climate of
South Africa is remarkably similar to that of outback Australia, so Morant was in his element. His superb horsemanship, expert bush skills, and educated manner soon attracted the attention of his superiors. South Australian Colonel
Joseph Gordon recommended him as a dispatch rider to
Bennet Burleigh, the
war correspondent of the London
Daily Telegraph; the job reportedly provided the debonair Morant with ample opportunity to visit the nearby hospital and dally with the nurses.
The statement of service Morant tendered at his trial is quoted, apparently verbatim, in the book written by his friend and colleague,
George Witton. According to that account, Morant was commissioned as a
lieutenant in the
Bushveldt Carbineers (BVC) on 1 April 1901. Prior to that, he had served in the South Australian Second Contingent for nine months. During that duration, he was promoted to the rank of sergeant. Subsequently, he returned to Devon, England for a period of time.
In March 1900, Morant carried dispatches for the Flying Column to
Prieska, under Colonel Lowe, 7th D.G., who was in the general advance to
Bloemfontein and took part in the engagements of
Karee Siding and
Kroonstadt, and other engagements with
Lord Roberts until the entry into
Pretoria. Morant was at
Diamond Hill and was then attached to
General French's staff, Cavalry Brigade, as war correspondent with
Bennet Burleigh of the London
Daily Telegraph. He accompanied that column through Middelburg and Belfast to the occupation of
Barberton. At this point, he took leave and returned to Devon, England for six months. Here he became close friends with Captain Hunt, and the two of them became engaged to a pair of sisters. Hunt, who was still 'signed on', returned to South Africa to take command of a regiment in the Bushveldt Carbineers, whereas Morant (who had intended that his military service come to an end) followed him shortly after not having found the forgiveness he sought in England. Originally returning to take up a commission in
Baden Powell's Transvaal Constabulary, he was convinced by Hunt to instead accept a commission in the BVC.
Boer guerrilla campaign, 1901–1902 Following their defeats on the battlefield during 1899–1900, the Boer soldiers embarked on a
guerrilla campaign against the British. In response,
Lord Kitchener, the British commander in South Africa assembled and deployed a number of
irregular regiments to combat Boer
commando units and protect British interests in the region.
On his return from leave, Morant joined one of these irregular units, the Bushveldt Carbineers, a 320-strong regiment that had been formed in February 1901 under the command of an Australian, Colonel
R.W. Lenehan. Following his friend's lead, Captain Hunt joined the BVC soon after.
The regiment, based in
Pietersburg, 180 miles (290 km) north of Pretoria, saw action in the
Spelonken region of the
Northern Transvaal during 1901–1902. The region was remote, wild and dangerous and was also in a particularly unhealthy
malarial area. Because of this, the British had difficulty in finding troops and as a result, many colonial soldiers enlisted.
About forty percent of the men in the BVC were Australians, but the regiment also included about forty surrendered Boers ("joiners") who had been recruited from the
internment camps, and according to Witton, their presence was greatly resented by the Australians. The garrison was soon divided into two columns; one, under the command of Lieutenant Morant, operated in the Strydpoort district, about 30 miles (48 km) south-east of
Pietersburg.
Morant's unit was very successful in eliminating roving bands of enemy commandos from their area, forcing the Boers to transfer their activities to the
Bandolier Kop area, on the northern fringe of the Spelonken. In response, the BVC moved north under the command of British Captain
James Huntley Robertson and established a command post in a farmhouse about 90 miles (140 km) north of Pietersburg, which they renamed
Fort Edward.
The other ranking officer at the fort was Captain
Alfred Taylor, a special officer with the Army's Intelligence Department. He had been selected and sent to Spelonken by Kitchener himself because of his knowledge of "the natives". In his book, Witton wrote that as far as the Africans were concerned:
“ |
"...(Taylor) had a free hand and the power of life and death; he was known and feared by them from the Zambesi to the Spelonken, and was called by them 'Bulala', which means to kill, to slay."[8] |
” |
Taylor had the power to order out patrols and, according to Witton, it was generally understood that Taylor was the commander at Spelonken, and that Taylor admitted as much in evidence at the
court-martial. Taylor was, as Bleszynski notes, implicated in some of the killings in the case, yet was acquitted of all charges. His role is one of the most problematic aspects of the case.
By all accounts, Captain Robertson had great difficulty in maintaining discipline, and some of his troops ran wild — they looted a
rum convoy, kept seized Boer livestock for themselves, and appropriated liquor and
stills from the Boer farms they raided. According to George Witton's account, the situation was bordering on
mutiny by mid-year.
On 2 July 1901, Captain Taylor received word of a disturbing incident; a few days earlier, a group of six Boers had approached the fort, apparently intending to
surrender, but they were intercepted by a British patrol led by Sergeant Major Morrison, and on his orders they were all disarmed, taken prisoner, and subsequently shot dead.
When this news reached Pietersburg, the Fort Edward detachment was recalled; after an enquiry, Robertson and Morrison were allowed to resign unconditionally. His squadron was replaced by a new one under the command of Captain Hunt and it included Lieutenants Morant,
Handcock and Witton.