The 57th Field Regiment, Royal Artillery "Stables" In Camp At Bara, Circa 1897.
The Picture Is Taken From The Top Of Bara Fort. In Background One Can See Besai Feature Or Besai Wali Ghar. The Location Of Stable Is Now Bara Water Reservoir In District Khyber.
57th Field Battery At“ Stables” Under The Walls Of Fort Bara. The Battery Belongs To The Peshawar Column, And It Is More Than Likely That, By The Time These Lines Are In Print, It Will Have Been Heavily Engaged.
Incidentally It Maybe Remarked That Among The Most Striking Features Of These Frontier Operations Has Been The Free Use Of Field Artillery.
In Most Of Our Little Indian Wars It Has Been The Fashion To Use Mountain Guns, Which, Although Able To Climb The Most Difficult Hills And To Come Into Action From Apparently Impossible Nooks And Crannies , Have Not, Of Course, The Range Of The Beautiful 12 Pounder, And Only Half The Explosive Effect.
On Several Occasions During The Past Four Months, Field Batteries Have Been Employed, With Brilliant Results, And, In Addition To Pulverising The Enemy, Have, By Covering The Infantry Attack, Rendered Our Own Losses Much Less Heavy Than They Might Have Been.
Source - Navy & Army Illustrated, Issue December 24th, 1897.