Winter weather and a deteriorating supply of…
November 1854 CE
Sevastopol remains invested by the allies, while the allied armies are hemmed in by the Russian Army in the interior.
On November 14 the "Balaklava Storm" sinks thirty allied ships, including HMS Prince, which is carrying a cargo of winter clothing, and including nineteen British transport ships, with the loss of at least two hundred and eighty-seven men.
The storm and heavy traffic cause the road from the coast to the troops to disintegrate into a quagmire, requiring engineers to devote most of their time to its repair including quarrying stone.
A tramway is ordered.
It will arrive in January with a civilian engineering crew, but it will be March before it is sufficiently advanced to be of any appreciable value.
An electrical telegraph is also ordered, but the frozen ground will delay its installation until March, when communications from the base port of Balaklava to the British HQ is established.
The pipe-and-cable-laying plow will fail because of the hard frozen soil, but nevertheless twenty-one miles of cable will be laid.
Locations
Groups
Christians, Eastern Orthodox
View →
Austria, Archduchy of
View →
Ottoman Empire
View →
Moldavia (Ottoman vassal), Principality of
View →
Wallachia (Ottoman vassal), Principality of
View →
Prussia, Kingdom of
View →
Russian Empire
View →
Greece, Kingdom of
View →
France, Second Empire of
View →
Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland)
View →