British from time to time. During the Tirah campaign of 1897-1898, it was planned to
occupy a series of forts, originally built by Maharaja Ranjit Singh, ruler of the Sikh
empire, to control and dominate the area.
Fort Lockhart on Samana range, Fort Gulistan on the Sulaiman range and as a
heliographic communication post, Fort Saragarhi, was created midway. It was
situated on a rocky edge, with a small block house, loopholes on the ramparts and a
signalling tower. On Apr 20, 1897, 36 SIKH was raised under Col J Cook. In Aug
1897 under Lt Col John Houghton five companies were dispatched to occupy these
forts. A general uprising began in 1897 and between Aug 27 and Sep 11, vigorous
efforts by the Pashtuns to capture these forts, which were thwarted. On 03 & 09 Sep,
the Afridi tribes attacked Fort Gulistan. A relief column from Fort Lockhart, on its
return trip reinforced the signal detachment at Saragarhi. The total strength at
Saragarhi along with this relief column rose to 1 NCO and 20 OR.
Hav Ishar Singh, The Commander
Sep12, 1897, a 10,000 strong Pashtun, Afridi and Orakzai tribes attacked the
signalling post to cut off communication between the forts. The details of the Battle
are considered accurate as Sep Gurmukh Singh signalled the events to Fort
Lockhart. Lt Col John Houghton, watched from Fort Lockhart, with his own eyes, and
counted at least 10 enemy standards (each representing 1,000 tribesmen) facing
Saragarhi.
What happened thereafter is what makes it a folklore. At around 9 am, Gurmukh
signals to Fort Lockhart, “Enemy approaching Main Gate. Need Reinforcements”.
Lt Col Houghton states he cannot send help to Saragarhi “and to hold on”. In the
Saragarhi post the bugle was sounded and in a flash the troops formed up two line
abreast, one row in front, in a squatting firing position and the other standing as per
the bugle’s tone. He speaks to the soldiers and gives them an option to move out