Casualties at the Battle of Talavera, July 27 and 28, 1809.

Regiments.Officers.Men.
K.W.K.W.
3rd Drag. Gds.11--
4th Hussars-3-9
14th Hussars-637
16th Lancers-165
23rd Lt. Drag.244746
Royal Artillery13723
Roy. Engineers-2--
Coldstream Gds.2933253
Scots Guards5649261
3rd Buffs-26107
7th Royal Fus.13653
24th S. Wales Borderers-1045274
29th Worcesters-736140
31st E. Surrey1734190
40th S. Lancs-11790
45th Sherwood Foresters-313147
48th N'ampton-1234280
53rd Shropshire L.I.-2636
60th K.R.R.-71029
61st Gloucesters31146196
66th R. Berks-111688
83rd Royal Irish Rifles41138282
87th R. Irish Fus.11335170
88th Connaught Rangers331985
97th West Kent--625

Note.—There were two battalions of detachments at Talavera. The one composed of the flank companies of the 52nd, 79th, and 91st lost an officer, and 74 men killed and wounded. The other, made up from the 28th, 35th, 38th, 42nd, and 43rd, had 194 casualties.

The Cameron Highlanders lost 9 killed and 28 wounded at Talavera.

Busaco, September 27, 1810.

At Talavera Wellington realized that he was too weak to cope in the field with the immense forces that France had poured into the Peninsula. His plan of campaign now was to wear the enemy down until he should have organized the Portuguese and Spanish armies. He therefore retired once more into Portugal, and commenced that systematic defence of the kingdom which ultimately led to the destruction of French pretensions in the Iberian Peninsula. By the summer of 1810 Napoleon had 300,000 men in Spain. By that time Wellington had thrown up the famous lines of Torres Vedras, behind the shelter of which the task of reorganizing the Portuguese army proceeded apace. The winter of 1809-10 was passed without any open conflict. It was not until the end of September, 1810, that the next great fight was fought, when Wellington, with 50,000 men, barred Massena's advance at the Ridge of Busaco.

This battle honour has been conferred on the

Royal Scots.
Northumberland Fusiliers.
Royal Fusiliers.
Norfolks.
South Wales Borderers.
Gloucesters.
Royal Highlanders.
South Staffords.
Oxford Light Infantry.
Sherwood Foresters.
King's Royal Rifles.
Highland Light Infantry.
Cameron Highlanders.
Connaught Rangers.
Royal Irish Rifles.
Rifle Brigade.

Our losses are tabulated below. Those of the French amounted to 4,400 killed and wounded, including 5 General Officers.

Casualties at the Battle of Busaco, September 27, 1810.