The men of the Fifth Division ('The Pioneers') were among the workhorses
of the British Peninsular army. Lacking both the kudos and the wealth of
letters, journals and memoirs of divisions like the Third and the Light,
it is easy to overlook the part they played in the struggle that finally
drove the French out of Spain and Portugal. Yet they were the first
troops into the streets of Badajoz. They, along with the Third Division,
played a crucial part in the great victory at Salamanca. And they made
up the bulk of the troops that finally took San Sebastian after a
protracted and bloody siege. There is also a surprisingly wide range of
material that records both their exploits and the experience of serving
in the war, extending from the voices of men in the ranks to company and
staff officers, brigade commanders, and the journal of the aide-de-camp
of the general most associated with the division, James Leith. Looking
at one division in detail also allows analysis of the divisional system
as it functioned in Wellington's Peninsular Army.
The purpose of this study, therefore, is to retell a familiar story from
a less familiar perspective and thus demonstrate the strategic
relationship between the parts and the whole while also emphasizing that
wars are fought by individuals - and no two individuals react in the
same way. Each man's experience is his own.