Siege of Lucknow, sustained assault on the British “Residency,” or governmental headquarters, from May 25 to November 27, 1857, in India’s northern city of Lucknow. It was carried out by sepoys (Indian soldiers in service to the British East India Company) who were driving the rebellion of 1857, which was itself part of the broader Indian Independence Movement. The relief of Lucknow consisted of two attempts by the British to rescue Sir Henry Lawrence and a contingent of British and Indian troops, along with several hundred civilians, from the center of Lucknow, where they held out under siege conditions for six months.
As the sepoys’ uprising spread to several cities in northern India after March 1857, Commander Lawrence ordered all women and children of Lucknow to take cover in the Residency, the city’s chief fortress, on May 25. Lawrence himself retreated there on June 30. The Residency was protected by battery positions but was vulnerable because a number of buildings surrounding it were occupied by rebel snipers and artillery. Despite this precarious position, and Lawrence’s death early in the siege, the troops and civilians managed to hold out thanks to the actions of a number of soldiers who were later awarded the Victoria Cross.
The first relief attempt occurred on September 25 when a force under the command of Major General Sir Henry Havelock fought its way across rebel-held territory to Lucknow. However, by the time he reached the Residency on his fourth attempt at breaking through the lines, Havelock had lost so many troops that he considered it too risky to attempt to evacuate the civilians. The relief force joined the garrison, improved the defenses, and waited for a second relief.
On November 16, a much larger force approached Lucknow, led by Lieutenant General Sir Colin Campbell. The force stormed the Secundra Bagh, a walled enclosure blocking Campbell’s route to the Residency. By now, the British soldiers had learned of the rebels’ massacre of British troops, women, and children at what is today Kanpur; they responded in kind at Lucknow, killing rebel soldiers as well as many civilians. The British reached the Residency on November 19 and began evacuations. By November 27, the residents had been removed and relocated to safe locations. Campbell would return in March 1858 and recapture Lucknow.
The Siege of Lucknow was a turning point in Britain’s colonial administration of India. Whereas before much of that work had been done by the private East India Company, afterward it was relieved of its duties, which were assumed by the imperial government and army.
Losses: British, 2,500 casualties of 8,000 troops; Indian, unknown number of casualties of some 30,000 rebels.