Into the Valley of Death rode the six hundred...

I’ll put the Fetterman Massacre up against both as far as foolishness goes.

“Give me 80 men and I can ride through the whole Sioux nation.”

The major difference is the Taffy 3 (the US task unit) won against all odds. Whereas the Light Brigade could only console themselves with the glory of the attempt, since they were unable to accomplish their mission.

They did accomplish their mission. They captured the Russian guns. There was no follow on plan to exploit the success. If they stayed with the guns without relief, they’d be slaughtered. Back through the gauntlet they rode.

Did they at least spike the guns? Because a skilled tap & die technician charges up the wazoo for an outcall.

I was specifically referring to the sacrificial charges of the group’s destroyers such as Johnston during that action.

https://destroyerhistory.org/actions/index.asp?pid=4583

I need to edit what I wrote.

My only contribution to this thread is that the event inspired one of the best heavy metal songs of all time, and when I saw Maiden live in 2014 they did an absolutely stellar rendition of it with Bruce Dickinson wearing a ragged redcoat and waving a Union Flag while he sang about the Russians shooting him and his horse to death.

When I was a kid in the 60’s I first learned about the charge of the Light Brigade in an odd place. I had been reading a book series about a nurse named Sue Barton. In one book she was tending a very elderly man on one of her wards. He had a slight British accent and it turns out that when he was a young boy he’d been a drummer in the British army and witnessed the charge. I’m not sure just when the books were written but likely in the late 40’s or early 50’s, judging by pictures and other events mentioned. I checked out an encyclopedia to read about the incident.

Sometimes even that kind of fiction can help you learn new things.