Captain Arenas` Last Stand
Mount Arruit, Morocco, 29th July 1921
Painting by Ferres-Dalmau of Capt. Arenas last stand
Félix Luís Arenas
Gaspar was born in Puerto Rico on 13th December 1891, the son of an artillery
captain of the same name. The family returned to Spain to Molina de Aragon and this is where young Félix grew up until in 1906, aged fourteen, he entered the Academy of Engineers
of Guadalajara. At the age of eighteen he is promoted to lieutenant. He served
as a lieutenant in the Aerostation Service and Engineer Material Workshops of
Guadalajara, until October 1913 when he was temporarily sent with troops to
North Africa. In Africa he was part of the Aerostation Company in Tetouan which
was supporting the troops fighting the Riffi rebels.
At twenty one he was promoted to Captain and in 1919 he was transferred to the Engineers Command of
Melilla and put in command of the 2nd Company of Zapadores, with whom he
carried out numerous campaign fortification works. In November 1920 he took
command of the Telegraph Company of the Permanent Network of Melilla and its
territory. As part of his new command, he had to travel out on inspection tours
to make sure the equipment was working and set-up properly. During these tours
he sometimes found himself under enemy fire, or that the positions had moved without
informing his command!
When the collapse of
the Melilla Command occurred on 23rd July 1921, Captain Arenas was under the
command of Lieutenant Colonel Ugarte who was moving towards Dar Dríus. Upon
arriving at Batel they found a squadron of the Alcantara Cavalry Regiment,
retreating from Ben Tieb who informed the Colonel that the road to Dar Drius
was cut by the enemy.
On Friday, July 29,
General Navarro ordered a general withdrawal of Spanish troops to Mount Arruit.
Captain Arenas asked permission to command of the rear guard, made up of about
200 men. As the main straggling column retreated towards the base and hopefully
safety, Capt. Arenas organises his rear guard. His command forms an orderly
withdrawal covering the rear of the column, Arenas is noted moving among the
various rear guard positions encouraging his men; he always seemed to be at the
point where danger threatened. He calmness and clearheaded command is credited
as being one of the main reasons Gen. Navarro`s column safely reached Mount
Arruit. Most troops from the rear guard were lost, dead, wounded or prisoners,
but they managed to contain the enemy long enough for the tail of the column to
get to the relative safety of the base.
Mount Arruit held out against the Riffians until August 9th when Navarro surrendered his command.
In 1928 a monument was erected to Captain Arenas in Molina de Aragón.
Another interesting skirmish type
scenario which could be fought on a table top.
First we have the rear guard delaying
the Riffi from falling on the straggling column, I`d set a time limit for the
rear guard to hold out against randomly arriving harkas of Riffi. You could add
a random element to allow for the Riffi to use their better field craft to
arrive on the flanks or even behind the various rear guard positions. Give
Capt. Arenas a bonus effect on those men he is with boosting both their morale
and fire discipline.
As I write this Baraka Miniatures of Madrid have produced a special miniature based on Ferres-Dalmau painting of Capt. Arenas last stand to go with their Spanish infantry figures, this figure is only available as part of special deal. Baraka are continuing to expand their impressive range for the period which includes: Legionnaires, Riffi and Spanish cavalry & infantry with soon to be released Regulares Indgenes. These figures would of course be perfect for recreating this action on a tabletop.
Images of Monte Arruit after it was retaken by the Spanish on October 24th
That sounds especially fierce. Plenty of bravery shown in the face of overwhelming odds ⚔️⚔️
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Geoff
"El Desastre" as Spanish history calls the retreat from Annual in 1921 is littered with stories like this one. Unfortunately only rare Spanish officers showed this kind of leadership and courage (a few have already been written about on this blog). I have more stories to tell of Spanish courage and my table is already set-up for one such story :)
DeleteI do like reading these slices of history you post. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks Shaun more to come
DeleteAnother beautifully written, short story, on action from the Spanish-Rif war. And a mini figure review thrown in too, for 28mm gamers!
ReplyDeleteWhat is there not too like!! Some years ago I was nearly tempted to do a model of that arch as a focal point for a game!! Nearly...
CarlL
Cheers Carl, this piece has been on the to finish list for ages, getting the special figure from Baraka just allowed me to complete it. More Rif War stuff to come.
ReplyDelete