News Update May 11th, 2026 - 20th Anniversary Special (7 Viewers)

Julie

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JJDESIGNS NEWS UPDATE 11th MAY 2026
THE 20th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION SERIES
THE FIRST ANGLO AFGHAN WAR 1842.
THE LAST STAND AT GANDAMAK, 13th JANUARY 1842


The Battle of Gandamak on 13th January 1842 was a defeat of British forces by Afghan tribesmen in the 1842 retreat from Kabul of General Elphinstone’s army, during which the last survivors of the force, mainly of the 44th East Essex Regiment, were killed.

GAN1-X3.jpg


The surviving members of the army found themselves surrounded on a snowy hillock near the village of Gandamak. With only about 20 working muskets and two shots per weapon, the troops refused to surrender. A British sergeant is said to have cried out “Not Bloody Likely!” when the Afghans tried to persuade the soldiers to surrender.

After a period of sniping followed by a series of rushes the hillock was overrun by the tribesmen.

An officer named Captain Thomas Alexander Souter was mistaken by the Afghans as a high ranking officer because they thought he was wearing a general’s yellow waistcoat. In fact the officer had wrapped the regimental colours of the 44th Foot around his body. He was dragged into captivity along with a sergeant named Fair and seven privates. The remaining troops were killed.

Traces of weapons and equipment from the battle could be seen in the 1970’s and as late as 2010. The bones of the dead still cover the hillside.

THE 20th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION SERIES

In May 2006, JJD released its first sets under their own name.
The set BM-01 was part of a limited edition series of the 44th Regiment of foot at the Battle of Monongahela 1755.
To celebrate this 20th year anniversary, JJD will be releasing a Special Limited Edition Series of 250 sets, based on the 44th Regiment of Foot’s Last Stand At Gandamak, 13th January 1842.
These sets will be released throughout this twentieth year, with the final set being released in May 2027.

THE FIRST SET, COMMEMORATING THE LATE Bt. Capt. Thomas Collins, WILL BE AVAILABLE IN JUNE.

Each set will include a traditional JJD Limited Edition numbered Certificate … and a small bag of Woodland Scenic Snow to sprinkle over the base.

GAN2-X2.jpg


Bt.Capt. THOMAS C. COLLINS

Out of those men who struggled through to that small windswept hill above the little village of Gandamak, there was an officer of the 44th by the name of Thomas C. Collins. He was perhaps, as indistinct as the hill itself, lost to history… a nameless figure in a Wollen painting, his only legacy an inscription on the wall of Mumbai’s Afghan Church.

Thomas Collins was born in Bristol in 1801. His father was a lieutenant and Adjutant of the 2nd Dragoon guards, which no doubt helped his son’s prospects, for at the age of eighteen he was commissioned into his father’s regiment as Cornet. Marriage and promotion came, but no children, and he soon found himself in India, perhaps to look over his younger brother who had gone east to join the 6th Madras Light Cavalry in 1828. This, of course, required a transfer into the 89th Regiment of Foot, recently returned from Burma and now in Madras.

His desire to stay in India was evidently strong, for when the 89th returned to England, he stayed and transferred to the ill-fated 44th (East Essex) Regiment of Foot. He was promoted to Captain (unattached Company) in 1841, with the regiment in Kabul, but requested to stay with the 44th even though he could only remain as Lieutenant.
Soon the Kabul insurrection was upon them, and the 44th found itself in various skirmishes culminating in the sharp action on the Beymaru Heights. The subsequent rout contributed to the poor morale of the garrison and with winter upon them and supplies running out, the remnants of the Army of the Indus rode out, towards India and towards its end.

Brevet-Captain Collins, having survived the horrors of the Khord Kabul pass, was injured in his left arm at Kutter Sung on the 11th. He struggled through the infamous holly oak barrier at the Jagdalak Pass, only to meet his end at Gandamak alongside his brother officers and men.

His widow Emma petitioned the government for his pension. This was duly granted with the signature of the Colonel of the 44th, allowing her to live out her days in a little cottage near Norwich, saddened by the knowledge that her husband’s body would never see England again. Indeed, it would never leave Afghanistan, and would remain forever upon that windswept hill above Gandamak.

CAPTAIN THOMAS ALEXANDER SOUTER

Captain T. A. Souter (11th December 1796 -10th June 1848) was the sole surviving officer of the Last Stand of the British Army, composed mostly of men from the 44th (East Essex) Regiment of Foot, near Gandamak, Afghanistan, at the close of the First Anglo Afghan War in 1842.

GAN3-X2.jpg


Souter was born in Guildford, Surrey, to a career army officer father, Major Thomas Souter of Derbyshire.
The younger Souter was promoted to the 44th Regiment of Foot, as a Lieutenant in 1835 after serving in the 57th Regiment of Foot.
During the 1842 retreat from Kabul, he and a sergeant had donned the somewhat bedraggled colours of the 44th under their coats to protect them from further deterioration.
The sergeant was killed before the remnants of the British Army, arrived near Gandamak, on the morning of 13th January.
According to Souter’s account in a letter to his wife, which was written in captivity, only he, a mess sergeant, and seven men were spared while the rest were slaughtered.
“In the conflict my posteen flew open and exposed the colour: thinking I was some great man from looking so flash, I was seized by two fellows who…. Took my clothes from me, except my trousers and cap, led me to a village…and I was made over to the head man”.
After a month, Souter was handed over to Akbar Khan, a son of Dost Mohammad Khan, whom the British had deposed in 1839 but who was later restored to power.

Souter and the other prisoners were finally released in September 1842. On his return to England, Souter served as a Captain in the 22nd Regiment. He resigned on 26th May 1848 and died two weeks later.
The regiment’s colour endured a complicated fate. It was returned to Souter by one of his original captors, thought stripped of its tassels, then became the possession of various men and officers of the 44th Regiment.
In recent times, it has been displayed at the National Army Museum, London, England, along with a life sized mannequin of Souter and the paining depicting the Last Stand At Gandamak, by William Barnes Wollen (1898), in which Souter is prominently positioned wearing the colour.

GAN4-X2.jpg


The Limited Series inspired by the William Barnes Wollen painting, will include 24 figures which will be released over the next 10 months.

GAN5-X2.jpg


The final set is also based on another famous oil painting depicting Dr. William Brydon arriving at the gates of Jalalabad, which is titled “Remnants of An Army”, painted by the renowned Victorian military artist Elizabeth Thompson, Lady Butler.
This final set will be released in May 2027.

Dr. WILLIAM BRYDON

GAN6-X2.jpg


William Brydon (10th October 1811 – 20th March 1873) was a British doctor who was assistant surgeon in the Bengal Army during the First Anglo-Afghan War, famous for reportedly being the only member of an army of 4,500 men, plus 12,000 accompanying civilians to reach safety in Jalalabad at the end of the 1842 retreat from Kabul.

GAN7-M.jpg


Surgeon Brydon was one of twelve mounted officers who had become separated from the remnants of the main column before the final stand at Gandamak.
This small group had ridden to Futtehabad, but half had been killed there, while six escaped.
All but Brydon were killed, one by one, further along the road as their horses became exhausted.
Both Brydon and his pony were wounded in the course of encounters with small Afghan parties.
On the afternoon of the 13th January 1842, the British troops in Jalalabad, watching for their comrades of the Kabul garrison, saw a single figure ride up to the town walls. It was Brydon.
Part of his skull had been damaged by an Afghan sword, and he survived the blow because he had stuffed a copy of the Blackwood Magazine into his hat to help fight off the intense cold weather. The magazine took most of the blow, saving the doctor’s life.

THE LAST STAND AT GANDAMAK, DISPLAY STAND

GAN8-X4.jpg


JJD is pleased to announce, that after working closely with LEE SMITHSON of SHEFFIELD MINIATURES, there will be a custom made display stand for this series.

S51. The LAST STAND AT GANDAMAK DISPLAY STAND,
Dimensions 13 ¾” x 9 ¾” x ¼”

Each figure in each set will be numbered, which will correspond to a number inscribed into the display stand.

PLEASE CONTACT LEE SMITHSON OR ANY OF HIS DISTRIBUTORS TO INQUIRE ABOUT THE DISPLAY STAND AVAILABILITY AND PRICE.

PLEASE NOTE THE DISPLAY STAND IS NOT AVAILABLE FROM JJD.

Best wishes,

john jenkins
 
Good question. I guess I’d get my order in pdq.
With each release, you wouldn't want to miss out on some of the figures having already purchased some.

Not sure what John's normal production runs are but this may be higher than some of his normal releases.
 
- I think we need more info on how the ordering process will work. - Do you pay for the whole thing up front, and then await the figures to be released throughout the upcoming year?
 
I hope theres some Afghans too…
Looking at the photo of the sculpts of this Special Edition of Twenty four figures, none of them are Afghans, perhaps if these prove popular, John would consider expanding from a special edition to a regular Afghan wars line !?
I imagine the Captain Souter figure will be the most sought after. I think Del Prado or was it Hachette did this figure a few years ago ?
 
Very nice. And I was around in 2006 to collect those first releases. I still remember seeing them for the first time at the Gettysburg Antique Center and thinking wow. Fun times.
 
JJDESIGNS NEWS UPDATE 11th MAY 2026
THE 20th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION SERIES
THE FIRST ANGLO AFGHAN WAR 1842.
THE LAST STAND AT GANDAMAK, 13th JANUARY 1842


The Battle of Gandamak on 13th January 1842 was a defeat of British forces by Afghan tribesmen in the 1842 retreat from Kabul of General Elphinstone’s army, during which the last survivors of the force, mainly of the 44th East Essex Regiment, were killed.

GAN1-X3.jpg


The surviving members of the army found themselves surrounded on a snowy hillock near the village of Gandamak. With only about 20 working muskets and two shots per weapon, the troops refused to surrender. A British sergeant is said to have cried out “Not Bloody Likely!” when the Afghans tried to persuade the soldiers to surrender.

After a period of sniping followed by a series of rushes the hillock was overrun by the tribesmen.

An officer named Captain Thomas Alexander Souter was mistaken by the Afghans as a high ranking officer because they thought he was wearing a general’s yellow waistcoat. In fact the officer had wrapped the regimental colours of the 44th Foot around his body. He was dragged into captivity along with a sergeant named Fair and seven privates. The remaining troops were killed.

Traces of weapons and equipment from the battle could be seen in the 1970’s and as late as 2010. The bones of the dead still cover the hillside.

THE 20th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION SERIES

In May 2006, JJD released its first sets under their own name.
The set BM-01 was part of a limited edition series of the 44th Regiment of foot at the Battle of Monongahela 1755.
To celebrate this 20th year anniversary, JJD will be releasing a Special Limited Edition Series of 250 sets, based on the 44th Regiment of Foot’s Last Stand At Gandamak, 13th January 1842.
These sets will be released throughout this twentieth year, with the final set being released in May 2027.

THE FIRST SET, COMMEMORATING THE LATE Bt. Capt. Thomas Collins, WILL BE AVAILABLE IN JUNE.

Each set will include a traditional JJD Limited Edition numbered Certificate … and a small bag of Woodland Scenic Snow to sprinkle over the base.

GAN2-X2.jpg


Bt.Capt. THOMAS C. COLLINS

Out of those men who struggled through to that small windswept hill above the little village of Gandamak, there was an officer of the 44th by the name of Thomas C. Collins. He was perhaps, as indistinct as the hill itself, lost to history… a nameless figure in a Wollen painting, his only legacy an inscription on the wall of Mumbai’s Afghan Church.

Thomas Collins was born in Bristol in 1801. His father was a lieutenant and Adjutant of the 2nd Dragoon guards, which no doubt helped his son’s prospects, for at the age of eighteen he was commissioned into his father’s regiment as Cornet. Marriage and promotion came, but no children, and he soon found himself in India, perhaps to look over his younger brother who had gone east to join the 6th Madras Light Cavalry in 1828. This, of course, required a transfer into the 89th Regiment of Foot, recently returned from Burma and now in Madras.

His desire to stay in India was evidently strong, for when the 89th returned to England, he stayed and transferred to the ill-fated 44th (East Essex) Regiment of Foot. He was promoted to Captain (unattached Company) in 1841, with the regiment in Kabul, but requested to stay with the 44th even though he could only remain as Lieutenant.
Soon the Kabul insurrection was upon them, and the 44th found itself in various skirmishes culminating in the sharp action on the Beymaru Heights. The subsequent rout contributed to the poor morale of the garrison and with winter upon them and supplies running out, the remnants of the Army of the Indus rode out, towards India and towards its end.

Brevet-Captain Collins, having survived the horrors of the Khord Kabul pass, was injured in his left arm at Kutter Sung on the 11th. He struggled through the infamous holly oak barrier at the Jagdalak Pass, only to meet his end at Gandamak alongside his brother officers and men.

His widow Emma petitioned the government for his pension. This was duly granted with the signature of the Colonel of the 44th, allowing her to live out her days in a little cottage near Norwich, saddened by the knowledge that her husband’s body would never see England again. Indeed, it would never leave Afghanistan, and would remain forever upon that windswept hill above Gandamak.

CAPTAIN THOMAS ALEXANDER SOUTER

Captain T. A. Souter (11th December 1796 -10th June 1848) was the sole surviving officer of the Last Stand of the British Army, composed mostly of men from the 44th (East Essex) Regiment of Foot, near Gandamak, Afghanistan, at the close of the First Anglo Afghan War in 1842.

GAN3-X2.jpg


Souter was born in Guildford, Surrey, to a career army officer father, Major Thomas Souter of Derbyshire.
The younger Souter was promoted to the 44th Regiment of Foot, as a Lieutenant in 1835 after serving in the 57th Regiment of Foot.
During the 1842 retreat from Kabul, he and a sergeant had donned the somewhat bedraggled colours of the 44th under their coats to protect them from further deterioration.
The sergeant was killed before the remnants of the British Army, arrived near Gandamak, on the morning of 13th January.
According to Souter’s account in a letter to his wife, which was written in captivity, only he, a mess sergeant, and seven men were spared while the rest were slaughtered.
“In the conflict my posteen flew open and exposed the colour: thinking I was some great man from looking so flash, I was seized by two fellows who…. Took my clothes from me, except my trousers and cap, led me to a village…and I was made over to the head man”.
After a month, Souter was handed over to Akbar Khan, a son of Dost Mohammad Khan, whom the British had deposed in 1839 but who was later restored to power.

Souter and the other prisoners were finally released in September 1842. On his return to England, Souter served as a Captain in the 22nd Regiment. He resigned on 26th May 1848 and died two weeks later.
The regiment’s colour endured a complicated fate. It was returned to Souter by one of his original captors, thought stripped of its tassels, then became the possession of various men and officers of the 44th Regiment.
In recent times, it has been displayed at the National Army Museum, London, England, along with a life sized mannequin of Souter and the paining depicting the Last Stand At Gandamak, by William Barnes Wollen (1898), in which Souter is prominently positioned wearing the colour.

GAN4-X2.jpg


The Limited Series inspired by the William Barnes Wollen painting, will include 24 figures which will be released over the next 10 months.

GAN5-X2.jpg


The final set is also based on another famous oil painting depicting Dr. William Brydon arriving at the gates of Jalalabad, which is titled “Remnants of An Army”, painted by the renowned Victorian military artist Elizabeth Thompson, Lady Butler.
This final set will be released in May 2027.

Dr. WILLIAM BRYDON

GAN6-X2.jpg


William Brydon (10th October 1811 – 20th March 1873) was a British doctor who was assistant surgeon in the Bengal Army during the First Anglo-Afghan War, famous for reportedly being the only member of an army of 4,500 men, plus 12,000 accompanying civilians to reach safety in Jalalabad at the end of the 1842 retreat from Kabul.

GAN7-M.jpg


Surgeon Brydon was one of twelve mounted officers who had become separated from the remnants of the main column before the final stand at Gandamak.
This small group had ridden to Futtehabad, but half had been killed there, while six escaped.
All but Brydon were killed, one by one, further along the road as their horses became exhausted.
Both Brydon and his pony were wounded in the course of encounters with small Afghan parties.
On the afternoon of the 13th January 1842, the British troops in Jalalabad, watching for their comrades of the Kabul garrison, saw a single figure ride up to the town walls. It was Brydon.
Part of his skull had been damaged by an Afghan sword, and he survived the blow because he had stuffed a copy of the Blackwood Magazine into his hat to help fight off the intense cold weather. The magazine took most of the blow, saving the doctor’s life.

THE LAST STAND AT GANDAMAK, DISPLAY STAND

GAN8-X4.jpg


JJD is pleased to announce, that after working closely with LEE SMITHSON of SHEFFIELD MINIATURES, there will be a custom made display stand for this series.

S51. The LAST STAND AT GANDAMAK DISPLAY STAND,
Dimensions 13 ¾” x 9 ¾” x ¼”

Each figure in each set will be numbered, which will correspond to a number inscribed into the display stand.

PLEASE CONTACT LEE SMITHSON OR ANY OF HIS DISTRIBUTORS TO INQUIRE ABOUT THE DISPLAY STAND AVAILABILITY AND PRICE.

PLEASE NOTE THE DISPLAY STAND IS NOT AVAILABLE FROM JJD.

Best wishes,

john jenkins
Awesome!
 
Wow, John is going all out on this one. Sheffield do make lovely terrain pieces, so expect this to be no different. The 10 month time allows for budgeting for collectors and knowing what they will end up with, very helpful. Robin.
 
Looks awesome. Not for me but so ething many have been waiting on. Looks like it has been worth the wait. Love the base
 
The announcement says to contact Sheffield or his distributors about the base but his distributor is Treefrog so the likelihood (perhaps intentional) is that if you want the base, you’ll purchase the figures from Treefrog. I wonder what the figure allotment is for dealers.
 
I have to admit, I've never heard of the battle of Gandamak. JJD forces me to delve into my history lessons and learn. I love it! I am fascinated by this range of figures! I'm all in if there are plans afoot to introduce Afghan tribesmen. I believe you almost have too include them.
 
Looks awful and Rubbish, waste of money. I think none of you should buy it, you should wait until i have bought it and then i promise you all i will give an honest review.

I got the above plan from my Private Baldrick Cunning Plan Book, he wrote in collaboration with the Wiley Coyote Acme Company.

Think these will be very popular and cannot see a dud figure, as collectors will want the lot. You know what it is like when you look at your collection and you, normally only you, can still see the missing gaps/sets. I feel this range will be great standalone centrepiece for many collectors.
 
I hope theres some Afghans too…
I can see some scope for the dead and wounded from the picture, laying amongst the rocks. There will some imagination required to complete the 360 degree diorama, as the picture is, ofcourse, two dimensional and we have no representation [i know of!] from the back or you could say the 'dark side' of the picture. If there are any Afgans they would need to be designed to fit in amongst the rocky outcrop from Sheffield Minitures, so they can stand or lay down on the rocky surface.

For those that get the board and start populating it as the figures are released, there will be some fraut times wondering if you will get the figures to fill the gaps.
 

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