Sand and Steve:
The 'one shot was your offense' was the weakness of Morgan's Riflemen at Freeman's Farm at Saratoga. Though they were devastatingly effective early in the battle by shooting from cover, they eventually moved onto the field where the British quickly negated their advantage by charging with bayonets at the riflemen. I think it was Fraser who led the attack against Morgan's Riflemen who could not load/shoot in the face of British bayonets and were pushed back into the woods.
This was the advantage of the bayonet and the iron discipline of the British colonial troops. They could volley fire and lay a lot of shot into an area using fast loading muskets. The nature of the musket meant you could load it while moving (no rifling or tight patches) and the willingness of the British to play a 'numbers game' by charging at an enemy with bayonets meant they could negate rifle fire relatively quickly. This was the real basis of British field tactics... right into WW1.
And, for one thing, they had seen no need to change their tactics? Since Waterloo, these tactics had remained remarkably effective. And between the early 1800's and the outbreak of WW1, most of the British Army's experience had been in beating ill-equipped natives, Indian insurrections and other 'fuzzy wuzzies' to use the pejorative term. For the most part, these "Small Wars" (to quote Callwell) made the British feel rather invincible and generations of officers believed in iron discipline and bayonet charges... even in the era of the Maxim Gun.
The problems arose when the British, French, Germans, etc... used to their easy victories against colonial triblas started using these same tactics against each other. They found out quite quickly that industrialized nations and Maxim Guns made things like bayonet charges rather insane.
There is a great poem by Hilaire Belloc called the Modern Traveller... it's one I love to quote when discussing the mechanization of the battlefield as it shows how the British were locked in a mindset that 'warfare' was one of their technological prowess against, well, everyone else! I think it sums up the British attitudes towards warfare not only with 'natives' but with everyone on the eve of WW1:
And Sin and I consulted ;
Blood understood the Native mind.
He said : " We must be firm but kind."
A Mutiny resulted.
I never shall forget the way
That Blood upon this awful day
Preserved us all from death.
He stood upon a little mound,
Cast his lethargic eyes around,
And said beneath his breath :
Whatever happens we have got
The Maxim Gun, and they have not."
The poem is a bit long to post here... but for those so inclined, here it is in its entirety:
Full text of "The modern traveller"
For anyone looking to understand why British officers marched their men into machine guns in WW1... I find Belloc's little verse more enlightening than a lot of historical tomes with thick bibliographies. When we keep asking 'how could the officer class do that..." we should look to fields like sociology for answers, not just to military history and the study of dead generals... WW1 was shaped by attitudes, prejudices and hubris more than by a lot of factors one would normally associate with warfare (such as conquest or the idea of war as armed-robbery, writ large.)
Cheers,
Sirhr
P.S. I can't believe I just posted poetry on SH... I'm either in an extra snobby mood today or I need to have my man-card suspended.