History Daily - The Sole Survivor of the Retreat from Kabul

Episode Date: January 13, 2026

January 13, 1842. Assistant Surgeon William Brydon is the last man standing after a disastrous British army retreat during the First Anglo-Afghan War. This episode originally aired in 2025. Support th...e show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 It's the early hymuea and nappaxilitae only aterian Janky, Anna hymnsi loistathe. It's the early hours of November 2nd, 1841, at a mansion in Kabul, Afghanistan. 36-year-old diplomat Sir Alexander Burns peaks over the balcony and grimaces at what he sees below. A few dozen Afghan men carrying torches and large knives are marching along the street, and Sir Alexander is sure he knows their destination, his house.
Starting point is 00:00:51 The British invaded Afghanistan three years ago. Their plan was to install a puppet ruler in the country to safeguard their colonies in neighboring India. Ever since, the British have occupied Afghanistan to prop up their chosen leader. But the British are not popular here, and there have been whispers that the Afghans may rise up in revolution. As the most prominent British official in Kabul,
Starting point is 00:01:12 Sir Alexander knows he'll be at the top of any list of targets for retribution. At the sound of splintering wood, Sir Alexander risks another glance over the balcony. The mob has broken into the stables next door. Soon the accurate smell of burning timber fills the air. They've set fire to the stables. Knowing that his house might be next, Sir Alexander takes a deep breath, then stands up in full view. He hopes that showing himself will calm the crowd. And inspired by his bravery, another British official also steps forward from his hiding place
Starting point is 00:01:46 and join Sir Alexander on the balcony. Then Sir Alexander holds his hands up in the air, gesturing for calm, but the crowd isn't in the mood. Gunshot echoes through the street. The official next to Sir Alexander slumps to the ground, a bright red stain blossoming over his white shirt. Sir Alexander ducks and scurries back inside. All he can do now is arm himself
Starting point is 00:02:09 and hope that British soldiers are on their way. When British troops do arrive, they find Sir Alexander Burns' residence in ruins, and Sir Alexander himself hacked to death in the courtyard. The murder of the most senior British official in Kabul will mark a new low in the relationship between Britain and the Afghan people. But worse is still to come. Soon, the British will be forced out of the Afghan capital entirely, and of the thousands who flee the city, only a single man will survive to reach safety on January 13, 1842. When I first began thinking about a live show,
Starting point is 00:02:50 I knew I wanted it to be a little more special than just a podcast episode on stage. Something with a bit of theater to it, because after all, I'll be live on stage in a theater. So I put together a band to accompany the stories live. And because I can't resist, I'll be joining in on guitar. I mean, I wrote the History Daily theme song, you know. So come out to see me live. For information on tickets and upcoming dates, go to HistoryDailylive.com. That's HistoryDailylive.com.
Starting point is 00:03:17 And if you're in the North Texas area, buy your tickets now. historydaily live.com. every day. We tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is January 13, 1842, the sole survivor of the retreat from Kabul. It's July 1839, near Gansy, Afghanistan, two years before the death of Sir Alexander Burns. Fifty-eight-year-old British General Sir Willoughby Cotton dismounts from his horse and takes out a telescope. Peering through it, General Cotton examines the thick walls that surround the city of Gonsie. He turns to the officers accompanying him and shakes his head.
Starting point is 00:05:45 Thirteen years ago, Doss Muhammad Khan seized control of Afghanistan and installed himself as Emir. That was not a welcome development for the British. Doss Muhammad was aligned with Britain's rival power, Russia. The British feared that with him in charge in Afghanistan, their valuable colonies in neighboring India would be under threat. So the British government decided to invade Afghanistan and put a friendlier figure on the throne.
Starting point is 00:06:10 Eight months ago, an army under the command of... General Cotton crossed the border from India. Since then, General Cotton's troops have made slow but steady progress through Afghanistan, but the high walls protecting Ghanzi will be their toughest tests so far. General Cotton hands the telescope to his officers. They all take a look and come to the same conclusion. Launching an attack on Gonsie would toss thousands of lives, and General Cotton can't afford to lose so many men.
Starting point is 00:06:37 So the general returns to his camp feeling discouraged. But his mood improves later that evening. evening, when an Afghan deserter is brought in by British guards. The Afghan reveals that one of Gansi's city gates is in poor condition and won't withstand a prolonged assault. This gives General Cotton some hope that a prolonged siege could be avoided, and he orders his engineers to plant explosive charges by the gate under the cover of darkness. A few days later, on July 23rd, the explosives are in place and General Cotton's army is ready. On his command, the charges are detonated, and the gate crumbles.
Starting point is 00:07:12 With the enemy surprised and thrown into confusion by the devastating explosion, British troops flood into the city almost entirely unopposed. The fall of Ghanzi is the turning point of the war, because General Cotton now controls a fortified city less than 100 miles from Kabul, and he can use it as a staging point to attack the capital. Recognizing that Kabul won't withstand the British for long, Afghanistan's ruler Doss Muhammad Khan chooses to flee and eventually goes into exile. British troops then march into Kabul a few weeks later,
Starting point is 00:07:44 and they installed their chosen man Shah Shujha Durrani as the new emir. But Shah Shujah doesn't have a secure grip on the throne. Most Afghans were happy with Dulce Muhammad Khan as their ruler, while Shah Shujah is seen as little more than a puppet. And to the horror of the Afghans, the British seemed to be settling in for permanent occupation. Their officers are buying mansions in the capital, and even the mostly Indian rank-and-file soldiers of the British Army. army are soon allowed to bring their wives and children to join them.
Starting point is 00:08:14 And without the backing of his people, Shah Shujah relies on ruthless force to suppress opposition. He executes anyone he suspects of disloyalty. Even those who survive his purchase are subjected to Shah Shudja's favorite punishment, mutilation. He orders noses, ears, and hands to be cut off for even the most trivial of offenses. He increases taxes, leaving ordinary Afghans struggling to feed themselves. But no matter how bad things get in Kabul, Shah Shuja believes no one will try to overthrow him when he has the British army behind him. This confidence is misplaced.
Starting point is 00:08:49 The British are more vulnerable than they seem. In an attempt to ease tensions in Kabul, British forces have withdrawn from the city to a poorly fortified camp just outside the walls. And to reduce costs, the bribes the British previously paid to Afghan tribal leaders for their support have been scaled back. The conditions are now right for revolt. Soon Shah Shuja's opponents begin assembling in the mountains around Kabul. With Dost Mohammed Khan in exile, his son, Wazir Akbar Khan, takes his place as leader of the rebels,
Starting point is 00:09:21 and he's determined to avenge his father's defeat, while the British ignore the growing rumors of rebellion until it's too late. In November 1841, Wazir's rebels attacked the house of the most prominent British official in Kabul and slaughter everyone they find inside. But even after the gruesome death of Sir Alexander Burns, the British still fail to stamp down the rebellion, allowing it to spread further. A week after the attack on Sir Alexander,
Starting point is 00:09:48 the main British supply depot in Kabul is looted by the rebels. Then they occupy a strategic hill overlooking the British camp and begin peppering it with gunfire. The British will soon realize that their position in Kabul is unsustainable, and they will decide to evacuate their troops and all civilians who wish to accompany them. But that move won't only doom the unpopular regime of Shah Shuja. It will also lead to thousands of deaths
Starting point is 00:10:12 and one of the most devastating defeats ever suffered by the British Army. It's January 6, 1842, at the British camp outside Kabul, two months after the beginning of the uprising in Afghanistan. 59-year-old General Sir William Elphinstone watches from horseback as thousands of British and Indian soldiers, along with their servants, wives, and children trudge out of camp. They all have an arduous trek ahead of them. They must cross 100 miles of snowbound mountains to reach safety in the city of Jalalabad.
Starting point is 00:10:54 And as the most senior officer in camp, General Elphinstone feels it's his responsibility to be the last person to leave. The general has only been in his post a few months. He wasn't an obvious choice to take command in Kabul. The situation in the city was tense, and the camp needed a strong leader, but General Elphinstone is plagued by rheumatism and gout, and he often couldn't get out of bed due to the pain. So when the Afghan revolt began,
Starting point is 00:11:19 General Elphinstone was slow to react. And as the crisis worsened, he sent representatives to negotiate with the new rebel leader, Wazir Akbar Khan. But Wazir was not in the mood to talk and killed the British envoys. Only when General Elphinstone agreed to a series of humiliating conditions did Wazir offer him and his people safe passage out of Kabul. And today, that evacuation is beginning. By the time the last person leaves the British camp,
Starting point is 00:11:47 more than 16,000 people are on the march, and only a quarter of them are soldiers. General Elphinstone knows that the bloated column is vulnerable to attack. He just hopes that Wazir lives up to his part of the agreement and holds off the other Afghan fighters. But it doesn't take long before General Elphinstone realizes he's been duped. When his large group first stops for the night, just five miles from Kabul,
Starting point is 00:12:11 food, fuel, and tents that Wazir promised to supply the British are nowhere to be found. With no shelter, the British must scrape away snow and sleep on the bare ground. The following day, when they reach the first mountain pass, the column comes under attack from Afghan guerrillas. Snipers stationed in the foothills take aim at the slow-moving group. Terrified civilians who fall behind are cut down by sword-wielding warriors. Others are stripped of their clothing and left to freeze to death in the snow. Initially, Wazir feigns ignorance of the British suffering. He claims that the supplies didn't arrive because the British Army left Kabul earlier than he expected,
Starting point is 00:12:50 and he says he has no influence over the tribal chiefs attacking him in the mountain passes. But Wazir soon reveals that his true intention is to disrupt the British retreat. After several days on the road and thousands of British and Indian casualties, Wazir invites General Elphinstone and his second in command to discuss a ceasefire. But this is yet another trick. When the British officers arrive, they're swiftly disarmed, and Wazir announces they're now prisoners. Deprived of their two most senior commanders, the British column struggles on as best it can, but it's very difficult. When it reaches one very narrow pass, the remaining soldiers and civilians must squeeze through a gap just four yards wide.
Starting point is 00:13:31 It's the perfect spot for an ambush, which soon turns into a massacre. Less than a week after leaving Kabul, the main British force has dwindled to less than than 100 soldiers. Most of these men are killed or taken prisoner in a dramatic last stand, but a dozen men on horses and ponies managed to escape. This small group continues over the frozen mountains, but one by one they fall, either killed in close quarters during more ambushes or picked off at a distance by snipers. Eventually, only assistant surgeon William Briden is left alive. But William is still miles from safety when he's spotted by another Afghan-mounted warrior. Exhausted, William tries to duck out of the way of the warrior's swinging sword,
Starting point is 00:14:14 but he's not quick enough. The sword catches him on the side of the head, and he falls from his saddle, hitting the ground with a sickening thud. Satisfied that another British soldier has been accounted for, the Afghan warrior rides away to search for other stragglers, but William is not dead. Bleeding heavily, he'll drag himself up off the ground, back into the saddle, and resume his ride to Jalalabad, hoping that others in the column will join him there. But he'll soon discover that out of an army of thousands, he is the last man standing. It's January 13th, 1842, near Jalalabad Afghanistan, a week after the British evacuated their camp outside Knoll. 30-year-old assistant surgeon William Bryden swayes unsteadily in the saddle, his chin slumped on his chest,
Starting point is 00:15:12 as his pony slowly picks its way along a rocky track. Since becoming separated, from the rest of the British force and losing his comrades to enemy attacks, William has continued on the road to Jalalabad alone. But with the enemy hiding around every corner, he's had to stay alert. Only a few hours ago, William was spotted again, and he had to whip his pony into one last gallop to escape his armed pursuers. Now both he and his pony are exhausted. If another attack comes, neither of them will have the energy to resist. William's pace on the pony slows, and he thinks about resting for the night. But a distant sound rouses him.
Starting point is 00:15:50 He looks up, groggy and confused. Mounted soldiers galloped toward him, but William is too tired to react. So instead, he gives himself up to his fate, raising his arms as he sits in his saddle. When the soldiers rain into their horses, however, they address him in English. And with a start, William realizes they're British.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Then he looks in the direction they came from. He can see his destination, the city of Jalalabad. The soldiers carry William the rest of the way and rush him to the infirmary. There, medical officers ask him where the rest of the army is, and William replies weekly, I am the army. William will soon become famous as the only survivor of the catastrophic retreat from Kabul. But in fact, he is not the only soldier to make it out alive. In the weeks that follow, others will also stagger into Jalalabad.
Starting point is 00:16:41 Most will be Indian soldiers, forced to hide in the hills or play dead in front. until their Afghan pursuers moved on. But they will only number a handful, the vast majority of the 16,000 people who set off from Kabul are now either dead or prisoners of the Afghans. This humiliation will not go without response. The British will form an army of retribution,
Starting point is 00:17:03 and in the fall of 1842, it will return to Kabul, rescue the British soldiers and civilians in captivity, and then sack the city. But after that, the British won't stay in Afghanistan. Having achieved their objectives, they'll return to their colonies in India. And only then will the first Anglo-Afghan War come to an end, a conflict in which the British tried and failed to extend their empire to another nation, and an occupying army of thousands was reduced to a single man named William Bryden,
Starting point is 00:17:33 the Road to the Gates of Jalalabad on January 13, 1842. Next on History Daily, January 14, 1943. After months of fighting on Guadacanau, Japan begins a risky evacuation that reshapes the course of the Pacific War. From Noisar and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham. Audio editing by Mohamed Shazir, sound designed by Molly Bach, music by Thrun. This episode is written and research by Scott Reeves, edited by Dorian Marina. Managing producer Emily Burr, executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.

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