Transport—yabus 1,592, mules and ponies 5,926, camels 400, donkeys 400.
| Meat | 4,000 lbs. |
| Bread-stuff | 40 maunds.* |
| Vegetables | 4,000 lbs. |
| Rice | 800 " |
| Salt | 133 " |
| Sugar | 600 " |
| Tea | 150 " |
| Rum, 25 per cent. | 80 gallons. |
| Atta | 320 maunds. |
| Dall | 51½ " |
| Ghee | 19¼ " |
| Salt | 8½ " |
| Grain | 700 " |
A. R. BADCOCK, Major,
Deputy Commissary-General. KELAT-I-GHILZAI,
24th August, 1880.
Note *: A maund is equivalent to 80 lbs. ]
[Footnote 4:] [The] effective garrison consisted of 1,000 British soldiers, 3,000 Native soldiers, and fifteen Field guns.]
[Footnote 5:] [One] and all bore testimony to the unfailing good behaviour and creditable bearing of the Royal Artillery and the Bombay Sappers and Miners, not only during the investment, but in the very trying time of the retreat from Maiwand.]
[Footnote 6:] [The] walls had an average height of 30 feet, and breadth of 15 feet on the north and east fronts.]
[Footnote 7:] [Two] Royal Artillery guns, 3rd Bengal Cavalry, and 15th Sikhs. Lieutenant-Colonel Chapman accompanied the party, and was of great assistance to Brigadier-General Gough.]
FOOTNOTES, CHAPTER [LXII]
[Footnote 1:] Brownlow's death was a great loss, for throughout the war he had frequently distinguished himself as a leader—at the Peiwar Kotal, during the operations round Kabul, and notably on the 14th December, when he won the admiration of the whole force by his brilliant conduct in the attack on the Asmai heights.]