Order of battle in the Atlantic campaign of 1806

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Duckworth's action off San Domingo, 6 February 1806, painted by Nicholas Pocock. Duckworth's action off San Domingo, 6 February 1806, Nicholas Pocock.jpg
Duckworth's action off San Domingo, 6 February 1806, painted by Nicholas Pocock.

The Atlantic campaign of 1806 was one of the most important and complex naval campaigns of the post-Trafalgar Napoleonic Wars. [1] Seeking to take advantage of the withdrawal of British forces from the Atlantic in the aftermath of the Battle of Trafalgar, Emperor Napoleon ordered two battle squadrons to sea from the fleet stationed at Brest, during December 1805. [2] Escaping deep into the Atlantic, these squadrons succeeded in disrupting British convoys, evading pursuit by British battle squadrons and reinforcing the French garrison at Santo Domingo. The period of French success was brief: on 6 February 1806 one of the squadrons, under Vice-Admiral Corentin Urbain Leissègues, was intercepted by a British squadron at the Battle of San Domingo and destroyed, losing all five of its ships of the line. [3]

Contents

The second French squadron, under Vice-Admiral Jean-Baptiste Willaumez, cruised in the South Atlantic and the Caribbean during the spring and summer of 1806, conducting several successful raids on British islands in the West Indies. His ability to affect British trade was hampered by the deployment of British squadrons against him and the disobedience of Captain Jérôme Bonaparte, the Emperor's brother. [4] On 18 August an Atlantic hurricane dispersed his ships, causing severe damage and forcing them to take shelter in friendly or neutral harbours in the Americas. Waiting British ships destroyed one vessel, and several others were so badly damaged that they never sailed again, the four survivors limping back to France individually over the next two years. [5] The various British squadrons deployed against him failed to catch Willaumez, but their presence had limited his ability to raid British trade routes. [6]

The campaign included a number of subsidiary operations by both British and French ships, some taking advantage of the campaign to conduct smaller operations while the main enemy forces were distracted, others operating as diversions to the principal campaign to attack undefended areas or lure British ships away from the principal French squadrons. Among these operations was the return of the squadron under Contre-Admiral Charles-Alexandre Durand Linois from the Indian Ocean, which was captured at the action of 13 March 1806; [7] the raiding cruises of L'Hermite's expedition and Lamellerie's expedition, which captured a number of merchant ships but each lost a frigate breaking through the blockade of the French coast; [1] and the destruction of a convoy of seven French ships destined with supplies for the French West Indies at the action of 25 September 1806. [8]

French squadrons

Admiral Leissègues' squadron

Both of the principal French squadrons departed Brest on 13 December, remaining together for the first two days before dividing in pursuit of separate British merchant convoys on 15 December. The squadron under Leissègues clashed with the convoy's escort, before breaking off and sailing south for the French Caribbean, where Leissègues was intending to land the 1,000 soldiers carried aboard as reinforcements for the garrison at Santo Domingo, via the Azores. [9] The voyage was long and difficult, Leissègues struggling through winter storms that divided his squadron and inflicted severe damage to his ships. Arriving at Santo Domingo on 20 January, Leissègues disembarked his troops and began extensive repairs to his ships in preparation for raiding cruises in the Caribbean. [9] [10]

On 6 February, Leissègues was surprised at anchor by a squadron under Vice-Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth, which had been taking on fresh supplies at Basseterre when news of Leissègues' arrival reached him. Joined by ships from the West Indian squadron, Duckworth's force was larger than Leissègues' and also had the advantage of the wind that prevented the unprepared French squadron from escaping. [11] Sailing westwards along the coast in a line of battle, Leissègues' flagship Impérial was the first to be attacked, eventually driving ashore along with the next in line, while three others surrendered at the Battle of San Domingo. [12] Leissègues himself escaped ashore; the only surviving ships of his squadron were the frigates, all of which eventually returned to France later in the spring. [13]

Admiral Leissègues' squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Impérial 120Vice-Admiral Corentin Urbain Leissègues
Captain Julien-Gabriel Bigot
Driven ashore and destroyed at the Battle of San Domingo
Alexandre 80Captain Pierre-Elie Garreau Captured at the Battle of San Domingo
Brave 74Commodore Louis-Marie Coudé Captured at the Battle of San Domingo
Diomède 74Captain Jean-Baptiste Henry Driven ashore and destroyed at the Battle of San Domingo.
Jupiter 74Captain Gaspard Laignel Captured at the Battle of San Domingo
Comète 40Returned to France in 1806
Félicité 40Returned to France in 1806
Diligente 20Captain Raymond CocaultReturned to France in 1806
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 184, Gardiner, The Victory of Seapower, p. 23

Admiral Willaumez's squadron

Veteran reaching the French port of Concarneau, Michel Bouquet Veteran mg 8190c.jpeg
Vétéran reaching the French port of Concarneau, Michel Bouquet

After separating from Leissègues on 15 December, Willaumez sailed south, capturing a number of vessels from a British troop convoy and sending the prizes, with the frigate Volontaire, to Tenerife. [14] Willaumez's intention was to raid the China Fleet, a large convoy of valuable East Indiamen that sailed from the Far East to Britain every year. However, on 23 December he was pursued by Duckworth and driven far off course, so that by the time he reached the Cape of Good Hope, where he planned to resupply his ships, it had already been captured by a British expeditionary force. Turning westwards, Willaumez raided shipping in the South Atlantic until April, when he anchored at Salvador in neutral Brazil. By early May, Willaumez was at sea again, stopping at Cayenne and then splitting his force to raid shipping in the Leeward Islands prior to reuniting at Fort-de-France on Martinique in June. [15]

On 1 July, Willaumez sailed again, attacking shipping at Montserrat, Nevis and St. Kitts before sailing to Tortola in preparation for an attack on the Jamaica convoy. Before he could reach the convoy, Willaumez was intercepted off the Passage Islands by a squadron under Rear-Admiral Sir Alexander Cochrane and driven northwards into the Bahamas. [4] There he waited for the Jamaica convoy to pass, seizing any ship of any nationality that came within sight, in case they should reveal his position. After several weeks of waiting, Captain Bonaparte, the Emperor's brother and commander of the ship Vétéran, decided that he would no longer submit to Willaumez's command and sailed north during the night of 31 July, without orders or even notifying the admiral. [16] Vétéran eventually returned to France on 26 August, after destroying six ships from a Quebec convoy. Panicked by the unexplained disappearance of one of his ships and its illustrious captain, Willaumez struck north in search of the vessel and as a result missed the passage of the Jamaica convoy, also narrowly avoiding an encounter with the squadrons under Warren and Strachan. On 18 August a hurricane dispersed his ships, severely damaging them and scattering them along the Atlantic Seaboard of the Americas. One was destroyed by a British patrol, two others were too badly damaged to be repaired and were broken up, and three of his ships successfully made the journey back to France over the next two years. [5]

Admiral Willaumez's squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Foudroyant 80Vice-Admiral Jean-Baptiste Phillibert Willaumez
Captain Antoine Henri
Badly damaged in an August hurricane, sheltered in Havana. Returned to France in early 1807.
Cassard 74Commodore Gilbert-Amable Faure Separated in August hurricane, returned to Brest on 13 October.
Impétueux 74Commodore Alain-Joseph Le Veyer-Belair Badly damaged in an August hurricane, driven ashore and destroyed by British ships on 14 September 1806.
Patriote 74Commodore Joseph-Hyacinthe-Isidore Khrom Badly damaged in an August hurricane, sheltered in Annapolis. Returned to France in January 1808.
Éole 74Captain Louis-Gilles Prévost de Lacroix Badly damaged in an August hurricane, sheltered in Annapolis. Eventually broken up as beyond repair.
Vétéran 74Captain Jérôme Bonaparte Separated without orders on 31 July, returning to France alone on 26 August.
Valeureuse 40Badly damaged in an August hurricane, sheltered in Philadelphia. Eventually broken up as beyond repair.
Volontaire 40Captain BretelDetached in December 1805 to Tenerife. Captured on 4 March 1806 at Cape Town.
Also two corvettes, names unknown
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 185

Admiral Linois's squadron

One of the minor French squadrons that participated in the campaign was the force under Contre-Admiral Linois, who had sailed for the Indian Ocean with a ship of the line and four frigates in March 1803 during the Peace of Amiens. After brief stops at Puducherry and Île de France, Linois sailed on a raiding cruise to the South China Sea only to be driven off by a British merchant convoy at the Battle of Pulo Aura. [17] Despite subsequent minor success against merchant ships, including the Battle of Vizagapatam, Linois's failure to inflict significant damage to British trade in the Far East enraged Napoleon, and in late 1805, with supplies running low and his ships in need of repair, Linois began the return journey to Europe with just his flagship and a single frigate remaining. [18]

By the early morning of 13 March 1806 he was in the Mid-Atlantic when his lookouts spotted sails in the distance. Turning his force around to investigate, Linois hoped to encounter a merchant convoy but instead discovered the large British second rate HMS London looming out of the darkness ahead. [19] Unable to escape, Linois fought until his ships were battered and he himself was badly wounded, but he eventually surrendered to the squadron under Admiral Warren that had followed London. Napoleon's fury at Linois was unabated and the French admiral remained a prisoner of war for the next eight years. [20]

Admiral Linois's squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Marengo 74Contre-Admiral Charles-Alexandre Léon Durand Linois
Captain Joseph-Marie Vrignaud
Captured at the action of 13 March 1806.
Belle Poule 40Captain Alain-Adélaïde-Marie BruilhacCaptured at the action of 13 March 1806.
Source: James, Vol. 3, p. 176, Clowes, p. 58

Commodore L'Hermite's squadron

One of the principal French diversionary operations during 1806 was by a force that had been sent to sea in October 1805 as a diversion during the Trafalgar campaign, which by then was almost over. Sailing from Lorient to West Africa, L'Hermite was supposed to have been reinforced by a squadron under Jérôme Bonaparte and attack and capture British forts on the West African coast, thus forcing the detachment of British forces from the main campaign in pursuit. [6] The events of the end of the Trafalgar campaign cancelled these plans, and the scheduled reinforcements were instead attached to Willaumez's squadron. Despite this setback, L'Hermite continued with elements of the original plan and attacked British merchant ships and slave ships off West Africa during the spring of 1806, inflicting some local damage but failing to capture a trading post or to affect the wider strategic situation. [21] In June, L'Hermite sailed to Cayenne for supplies and then returned to Europe the following month, encountering part of the British blockade squadron under Rear-Admiral Thomas Louis on his return and losing the frigate Président. [22]

Commodore L'Hermite's squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Régulus 74Commodore Jean-Marthe-Adrien L'Hermite Returned to Brest on 5 October
Président 40Captain LabrosseCaptured by a British squadron in the Bay of Biscay on 27 September 1806
Cybèle 40Damaged in a hurricane on 20 August, forced to shelter in Hampton Roads. Returned to Rochefort in 1807.
Surveillant corvette Returned to France in January 1806
Favourite 18Captured off West Africa on 6 January and attached to squadron. Remained in the Caribbean and was captured by HMS Jason on 27 January 1807.
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 264

Commodore La Meillerie's squadron

One of the French squadrons that operated in the Atlantic campaign of 1806 was the result of opportunity rather than strategy. After the Battle of Trafalgar, most of the French survivors had retreated to Cadiz, where they remained until Duckworth's blockade squadron abandoned the port in November 1805. Although Duckworth's ships were replaced by forces under Lord Collingwood, the replacements were inadequate and on 26 February 1806, while the blockade squadron, which had been pulled back in the hope of luring the French out of the port, had been blown off station, four frigates and a brig escaped. [23] Chased by the British frigate HMS Hydra, Commodore Louis La-Marre-la-Meillerie refused battle and abandoned the brig Furet to the British in his haste to escape. [24]

Sailing to Senegal and then Cayenne, La Meillerie's operations had little effect and by 18 May he was already on the return journey to France, hoping to anchor in the Biscay port of Rochefort. On 27 July, the frigates were spotted by HMS Mars, a ship of the line of the British blockade squadron, and chased with the frigate Rhin rapidly falling behind. Declining to support the straggler, La Meillerie ran on towards France while Mars took possession of Rhin, and the surviving ships found safe ports along the Biscay coast. [25]

Commodore La Meillerie's squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Hortense 40Commodore Louis La-Marre-la-Meillerie Returned to Bordeaux on 28 July
Rhin 40Captain Michel-Jean-André Chesneau Captured on 28 July by HMS Mars
Hermione 40Captain Jean-Michel Mahé Returned to Bordeaux on 28 July
Thémis 36Commodore Nicolas Jugan Returned to Rochefort on 28 July
Furet 18Lieutenant Pierre-Antoine-Toussaint Demai Captured on 28 February by HMS Hydra
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 253, Clowes, p. 387

Commodore Soleil's squadron

The final French operation in the Atlantic during the campaign was an attempt to send seven frigates and corvettes to the French West Indies in September, laden with supplies to help maintain the strength and morale of the garrisons. [26] With Willaumez believed to be still at sea, September 1806 seemed a good time to send a squadron into the Atlantic, but in fact the force was spotted within hours of leaving Rochefort by the British blockade force under Commodore Sir Samuel Hood. [27] Hood's force gave chase and the large ships of the line soon caught up the frigates in heavy weather. Sending four of his ships off in different directions, Soleil attempted to give them cover with his three largest vessels, but after a hard-fought battle in which Hood lost an arm, four of the French frigates were captured. [28]

Commodore Soleil's Squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Gloire 40Commodore Eleonore-Jean-Nicolas Soleil Captured at Action of 25 September 1806
Minerve 40Captain Joseph Collet Captured at Action of 25 September 1806
Armide 40Captain Jean-Jacques-Jude Langlois Captured at Action of 25 September 1806
Infatigable 40Captain Joseph-Maurice Girardias Captured at Action of 25 September 1806
Thétis 36Captain Jacques Pinsum
Lynx 16
Sylphe 16
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 262, Clowes, p. 390, Woodman, p. 226, "No. 15962". The London Gazette . 30 September 1806. p. 1306.

British squadrons

Admiral Warren's squadron

The London Man of War capturing the Marengo Admiral Linois, 13 March 1806, Contemporary engraving by "W. C I" Battle of 13 March 1806.jpg
The London Man of War capturing the Marengo Admiral Linois, 13 March 1806, Contemporary engraving by "W. C I"

The squadron under Admiral Warren prepared at Spithead in December 1805 included one second rate, one 80-gun ship of the line and five 74-gun ships of line, but no frigates or smaller vessels to operate as scouts. [29] Prevented from sailing during December by high winds, Warren remained off St Helens on the Isle of Wight until the middle of January, when the winds lifted and he set a course for Madeira. There he was to search for information of the French squadrons and, if no information was forthcoming, to sail for Barbados and augment the squadrons in the Caribbean. [30] For the next two months, Warren remained in the central eastern Atlantic Ocean, aware that Willaumez was cruising to the south and that Leissègues had been destroyed off San Domingo. During February his force was joined by the independently sailing frigate HMS Amazon. [29]

On 13 March 1806, Warren's squadron sighted and pursued two sails to the northeast, which were eventually recognised as the squadron under Admiral Linois, returning to France from an extended cruise in the Indian Ocean. [18] In the ensuing Action of 13 March 1806, London and Amazon were able to defeat and capture the French ships Marengo and Belle Poule, the resulting damage and prizes prompting Warren to return to Britain. During the return journey his squadron was struck by a spring storm and several ships suffered damage and were separated, eventually rejoining Warren's main force and returning to Spithead. [20] In Britain, Warren's ships underwent repairs and London and Repulse were detached, replaced by HMS Fame under Captain Richard Bennet. In late June Warren's squadron sailed again, under orders to intercept Willaumez off the Bahamas. Arriving in the Caribbean on 12 July, Warren narrowly missed intercepting Willaumez's squadron, which had sailed to the north in search of Vétéran. [16]

Admiral Warren's first squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
HMS London 98Captain Sir Harry Burrard Neale Engaged at the action of 13 March 1806
HMS Foudroyant 80Rear-Admiral Sir John Borlase Warren
Captain John Chambers White
HMS Ramillies 74Captain Francis Pickmore Badly damaged in the storm of 23 April 1806
HMS Hero 74Captain Alan Gardner
HMS Namur 74Captain Lawrence Halsted
HMS Repulse 74Captain Arthur Kaye Legge
HMS Courageux 74Captain James Bissett
HMS Amazon 38Captain William Parker Joined the squadron during February. Engaged at the action of 13 March 1806.
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 185
Admiral Warren's second squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
HMS Foudroyant 80Rear-Admiral Sir John Borlase Warren
Captain John Chambers White
HMS Ramillies 74Captain Francis Pickmore
HMS Hero 74Captain Alan Gardner
HMS Namur 74Captain Lawrence Halsted
HMS Fame 74Captain Richard Bennet
HMS Courageux 74Captain James Bissett
HMS Amazon 38Captain William Parker
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 185

Admiral Strachan's squadron

Admiral Strachan's squadron was ordered to prepare for sea during December at Plymouth, but like Warren's force, Strachan was trapped by strong winds in Cawsand Bay and could not sail until mid-January. Strachan's orders were to sail for Saint Helena and search for signs of the French squadrons. If their whereabouts could not be discovered, Strachan was to join the squadron under Admiral Sir Home Riggs Popham detailed to invade the Dutch colony at the Cape of Good Hope. [30] During February and March Strachan searched in vain, eventually receiving the news that Willaumez had anchored in neutral Salvador in Brazil during April. Steering northwest in the hope of intercepting the French squadron, Strachan was hampered by the presence of HMS St George, which proved too slow for a flying squadron. Returning to Plymouth, Strachan detached St George and Centaur, which had been made the flagship of the Rochefort blockade squadron and was given HMS Belleisle, HMS Audacious and HMS Montagu as replacements, as well as two frigates. [31]

Departing Plymouth on 19 May, Strachan sailed for the Caribbean, passing Madeira and the Canary Islands before anchoring at Carlisle Bay, Barbados on 8 August. Five days later Strachan sail northwards in pursuit of Willaumez and on 18 August was caught in the same hurricane that dispersed Willaumez's squadron slightly to the north. [32] During August and September, Strachan's scattered ships gathered off the rendezvous point at Chesapeake Bay in the hope of intercepting any French vessels seeking shelter in American ports. On 14 September, Belleisle, Bellona and Melampus sighted the limping French ship Impétueux off Cape Henry and drove her ashore, burning the wreck in violation of American neutrality. [33]

Admiral Strachan's first squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
HMS St George 98Captain Thomas Bertie Detached in May at Plymouth
HMS Caesar 80Rear-Admiral Sir Richard Strachan
Captain Charles Richardson
HMS Centaur 74Captain Sir Samuel Hood Detached in May at Plymouth
HMS Terrible 74Captain Lord Henry Paulet
HMS Triumph 74Captain Henry Inman
HMS Bellona 74Captain John Erskine Douglas
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 207
Admiral Strachan's second squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
HMS Caesar 80Rear-Admiral Sir Richard Strachan
Captain Charles Richardson
HMS Belleisle 74Captain William Hargood Participated in the destruction of Impétueux on 14 September
HMS Terrible 74Captain Lord Henry Paulet
HMS Triumph 74Captain Sir Thomas Hardy
HMS Bellona 74Captain John Erskine Douglas Participated in the destruction of Impétueux on 14 September
HMS Audacious 74Captain Thomas Gosselyn
HMS Montagu 74Captain Robert Otway
HMS Melampus 36Captain Stephen Poyntz Participated in the destruction of Impétueux on 14 September
HMS Decade 36Captain John Stuart
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 210, Clowes, p. 196

Admiral Duckworth's squadron

The third principal British squadron deployed during the campaign was never intended to take part in it. Admiral Duckworth had been ordered to lead the blockade of Cadiz in November 1805, following the destruction of the French and Spanish fleets at the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October. [34] Finding the blockade of the survivors at Cadiz dull, Duckworth sailed south in search of Allemand's expedition, leaving just two frigates to watch the Spanish port. Allemand escaped Duckworth, but on 23 December he was informed of the depredations by Willaumez's squadron and sailed to intercept him. On 25 December he discovered Willaumez but was unable to catch him eventually abandoning the chase and retiring to St. Kitts in the West Indies to take on fresh supplies. [35] There he was joined by several ships of the Leeward Islands squadron under Admiral Cochrane and also learned of the arrival of Leissègues at Santo Domingo. Sailing to intercept the French squadron, Duckworth successfully encountered them on 6 February 1806 and in the ensuing Battle of San Domingo, captured or destroyed all five of the ships of the line, carrying his prizes to Jamaica. [36] Duckworth then returned to Britain, leaving Cochrane with a number of vessels to patrol the Eastern Caribbean in anticipation of the arrival of Willaumez. [25]

Admiral Duckworth's squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
HMS Canopus 80Rear-Admiral Thomas Louis
Captain Francis Austen
Engaged at the Battle of San Domingo
HMS Superb 74Vice-Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth
Captain Richard Goodwin Keats
Engaged at the Battle of San Domingo
HMS Spencer 74Captain Robert Stopford Engaged at the Battle of San Domingo
HMS Donegal 74Captain Pulteney Malcolm Engaged at the Battle of San Domingo
HMS Powerful 74Captain Robert Plampin Detached to the Indian Ocean on 2 February 1806
HMS Agamemnon 64Captain Sir Edward Berry Engaged at the Battle of San Domingo
HMS Acasta 40Captain Richard Dalling Dunn
HMS Amethyst 36Captain James William Spranger Detached to Britain on 26 December 1805
Admiral Cochrane's reinforcements
HMS Northumberland 74Rear-Admiral Alexander Cochrane
Captain John Morrison
Joined at Basseterre on 21 January 1806. Engaged at the Battle of San Domingo.
HMS Atlas 74Captain Samuel Pym Joined at Basseterre on 21 January 1806. Engaged at the Battle of San Domingo.
HMS Magicienne 32Captain Adam Mackenzie Joined off Santo Domingo on 5 February 1806
HMS Kingfisher 16Commander Nathaniel Day Cochrane Joined at Basseterre on 1 February 1806
HMS Epervier 14Lieutenant James Higginson Joined off Saint Thomas on 3 February 1806
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 187

Admiral Cochrane's squadron

Following the Battle of San Domingo, Rear-Admiral Sir Alexander Cochrane, newly knighted, gathered a small squadron in anticipation of the arrival of the second French force under Willaumez. Based at Carlisle Bay, Barbados, Cochrane's forces patrolled the Leeward Islands for the French force during the spring, eventually locating Willaumez's ships at Fort-de-France on Martinique on 14 June 1806. [15] An attempt to blockade the port ended in failure as several ships were damaged in high winds, but when Willaumez sailed on 1 July, Cochrane had planned ahead, and brought his squadron to Tortola, blocking the passage through which Willaumez would have to sail to attack the valuable Jamaica convoy, then gathering off Saint Thomas. With his squadron, Cochrane successfully drove off Willaumez on 4 July without a fight, and the French admiral retired to the Bahama Banks to await the convoy's passage northwards. Cochrane spent the next month preparing the convoy for its voyage, which it began during August while Willaumez was out of position to the north. [4]

Admiral Cochrane's squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
HMS Northumberland 74Rear-Admiral Sir Alexander Cochrane
Captain John Spear
HMS Elephant 74Captain George Dundas
HMS Canada 74Captain John Harvey
HMS Agamemnon 64Captain Jonas Rose
HMS Ethalion 36Captain Charles Stuart
HMS Seine 36Captain David Atkins
HMS Galatea 32Captain Murray Maxwell
HMS Circe 32Captain Hugh Pigott
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 204

Rochefort blockade squadrons

Although other British forces were deployed during the year, most were engaged on other operations incidental to the main Atlantic campaign, such as the expeditionary force to the Cape of Good Hope under Commodore Home Riggs Popham. In addition, a number of blockade squadrons were deployed to the major ports of the French Atlantic coast. These forces contained the French warships still at anchor in the ports and restricted the return of French warships from service at sea during the campaign. [6] These forces included a Channel squadron under Rear-Admiral Thomas Louis, whose ships intercepted and captured a frigate of Commodore Jean-Marthe-Adrien L'Hermite's squadron on 27 September, and blockade forces off Cadiz under the distant command of Vice-Admiral Lord Collingwood and Brest under Admiral William Cornwallis. Cornwallis in particular was particularly effective: under his watch, only one French ship of the line successfully entered or departed Brest harbour during the year. [37]

There was one blockade force that played a particular role in the campaign, the force deployed to the waters off Rochefort, initially under the command of Commodore Richard Goodwin Keats. Under Keats, the French squadron under Louis La-Marre-la-Meillerie was intercepted on 17 July, HMS Mars capturing a frigate and chasing the others into port. [38] In August, Keats was replaced by Commodore Sir Samuel Hood, who was to achieve one of the more notable victories of the year at the action of 25 September 1806, when a French convoy of seven ships sailing to the West Indies was intercepted and defeated. Although Hood's force captured four large modern frigates, the French fought hard and Hood himself was seriously wounded by musket fire, losing an arm. [39]

Commodore Keats' squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
HMS Superb 74Commodore Richard Goodwin Keats
HMS Mars 74Captain Robert Dudley Oliver Captured frigate Rhin on 17 July
HMS Africa 64Captain Henry Digby
Keats' squadron also included two other ships of the line.
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 253
Commodore Hood's squadron
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
HMS Monarch 74Captain Richard Lee Engaged at the action of 25 September 1806
HMS Centaur 74Commodore Sir Samuel Hood Engaged at the action of 25 September 1806
HMS Mars 74Captain William Lukin Engaged at the action of 25 September 1806
HMS Windsor Castle 98Captain Charles Boyles
HMS Achille 74Captain Richard King
HMS Revenge 74Captain Sir John Gore
HMS Atalante 16Commander John Ore Masefield
Source: James, Vol. 4, p. 262

Notes

  1. 1 2 Gardiner, The Victory of Seapower, p. 18
  2. Clowes, p. 184
  3. "No. 15902". The London Gazette . 24 March 1806. p. 372.
  4. 1 2 3 Clowes, p. 194
  5. 1 2 Woodman, p. 218
  6. 1 2 3 Gardiner, The Victory of Seapower, p. 17
  7. Adkins, p. 191
  8. Woodman, p. 227
  9. 1 2 Clowes, p. 189
  10. James, Vol. 4, p. 198
  11. James, Vol. 4, p. 191
  12. Woodman, p. 217
  13. Gardiner, The Victory of Seapower, p. 24
  14. James, Vol. 4, p. 186
  15. 1 2 Clowes, p. 193
  16. 1 2 James, Vol. 4, p. 207
  17. Woodman, p. 195
  18. 1 2 James, Vol. 4, p. 222
  19. Gardiner, The Victory of Seapower, p. 29
  20. 1 2 Adkins, p. 192
  21. James, Vol. 4, p. 265
  22. Clowes, p. 392
  23. Gardiner, The Victory of Seapower, p. 25
  24. Woodman, p. 219
  25. 1 2 "No. 15943". The London Gazette . 5 August 1806. p. 1009.
  26. Clowes, p. 390
  27. "No. 15962". The London Gazette . 30 September 1806. p. 1306.
  28. Gardiner, The Victory of Seapower, p. 27
  29. 1 2 Woodman, p. 215
  30. 1 2 Clowes, p. 185
  31. Clowes, p. 196
  32. James, Vol. 4, p. 210
  33. Adkins, p. 193
  34. Rodger, p. 546
  35. Clowes, p. 188
  36. James, Vol. 4, p. 197
  37. Clowes, p. 197
  38. Clowes, p. 254
  39. Clowes, p. 371

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The Battle of Pulo Aura was a minor naval engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, fought on 14 February 1804, in which a large convoy of Honourable East India Company (HEIC) East Indiamen, well-armed merchant ships, intimidated, drove off and chased away a powerful French naval squadron. Although the French force was much stronger than the British convoy, Commodore Nathaniel Dance's aggressive tactics persuaded Contre-Admiral Charles-Alexandre Durand Linois to retire after only a brief exchange of shot. Dance then chased the French warships until his convoy was out of danger, whereupon he resumed his passage toward British India. Linois later claimed that the unescorted British merchant fleet was defended by eight ships of the line, a claim criticised by contemporary officers and later historians.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Action of 25 September 1806</span> Minor naval engagement during the Napoleonic Wars

The action of 25 September 1806 was a naval battle fought during the Napoleonic Wars off the French Biscay port of Rochefort. A French squadron comprising five frigates and two corvettes, sailing to the French West Indies with supplies and reinforcements, was intercepted by a British squadron of six ships of the line that was keeping a close blockade of the port as part of the Atlantic campaign of 1806. The British ships, under the command of Commodore Sir Samuel Hood, spotted the French convoy early in the morning of 25 September, just a few hours after the French had left port, and immediately gave chase. Although the French ships tried to escape, they were heavily laden with troops and stores, and the strong winds favoured the larger ships of the line, which caught the French convoy after a five-hour pursuit, although they had become separated from one another during the chase.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles-Alexandre Léon Durand Linois</span> French admiral (1761–1848)

Charles-Alexandre Léon Durand, Comte de Linois was a French admiral who served in the French Navy during the reign of Napoleon Bonaparte. He commanded the combined Franco-Spanish fleet during the Algeciras Campaign in 1801, winning the First Battle of Algeciras before losing the Second Battle of Algeciras. He then led an unsuccessful campaign against British trade in the Indian Ocean and South China Sea in 1803, being defeated by a harmless fleet of the East India Company during the Battle of Pulo Aura and ending his cruise and sea-going career being bested in battle by John Warren in the action of 13 March 1806. Following the Bourbon restoration, Linois was appointed Governor of Guadeloupe. He supported Napoleon during the Hundred Days and so, on his return to France, he was forced to resign and was court martialled. Although acquitted, he was placed in retirement and never served again.

French ship <i>Vengeur</i> (1803) Ship of the line of the French Navy

Vengeur ("Avenger") was a first-rate 118-gun ship of the line of the French Navy, of the Océan type, designed by Jacques-Noël Sané. She was the first ship in French service to sport 18-pounder long guns on her third deck, instead of the lighter 12-pounder long guns used before for this role.

French ship <i>Diomède</i> (1803) Ship of the line of the French Navy

Diomède was a Téméraire-class 74-gun ship of the line of the French Navy built at Lorient and launched in 1799 as Union. She was renamed Diomède in 1803.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jean-Baptiste Philibert Willaumez</span>

Jean-Baptiste Philibert Willaumez was a French naval officer and nobleman who served during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars. Willaumez joined the French Navy at the age of 14, and proved to be a competent sailor. Having risen to the rank of pilot, he started studying navigation, attracting the attention of his superiors up to Louis XVI himself. Willaumez eventually became an officer and served under Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux in his expedition to rescue Jean-François de Galaup, comte de Lapérouse and explore the Indian Ocean and Oceania.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Linois's expedition to the Indian Ocean</span> Commerce raiding operation launched by the French Navy during the Napoleonic Wars.

Linois's expedition to the Indian Ocean was a commerce raiding operation launched by the French Navy during the Napoleonic Wars. Contre-Admiral Charles-Alexandre Durand Linois was ordered to the Indian Ocean in his flagship Marengo in March 1803 accompanied by a squadron of three frigates, shortly before the end of the Peace of Amiens. When war between Britain and France broke out in September 1803, Marengo was at Pondicherry with the frigates, but escaped a British squadron sent to intercept it and reached Isle de France. The large distances between naval bases in the Indian Ocean and the limited resources available to the British commanders in the region made it difficult to concentrate sufficient forces to combat a squadron of this size, and Linois was subsequently able to sustain his campaign for three years. From Isle de France, Linois and his frigates began a series of attacks on British commerce across the Eastern Indian Ocean, specifically targeting the large convoys of East Indiamen that were vital to the maintenance of trade within the British Empire and to the British economy. Although he had a number of successes against individual merchant ships and the small British trading post of Bencoolen, the first military test of Linois squadron came at the Battle of Pulo Aura on 15 February 1804. Linois attacked the undefended British China Fleet, consisting of 16 valuable East Indiamen and 14 other vessels, but failed to press his military superiority and withdrew without capturing a single ship.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Vizagapatam</span> Naval battle of the Napoleonic Wars

The Battle of Vizagapatam was a minor naval engagement fought in the approaches to Vizagapatam harbour in the Coastal Andhra region of British India on the Bay of Bengal on 15 September 1804 during the Napoleonic Wars. A French squadron under Contre-Admiral Charles-Alexandre Léon Durand Linois in the ship of the line Marengo attacked the British Royal Navy fourth rate ship HMS Centurion and two East Indiaman merchant ships anchored in the harbour roads. Linois was engaged in an extended raiding campaign, which had already involved operations in the South China Sea, in the Mozambique Channel, off Ceylon and along the Indian coast of the Bay of Bengal. The French squadron had fought one notable engagement, at the Battle of Pulo Aura on 15 February 1804, in which Linois had attacked the Honourable East India Company's (HEIC) China Fleet, a large convoy of well-armed merchant ships carrying cargo worth £8 million. Linois failed to press the attack and withdrew with the convoy at his mercy, invoking the anger of Napoleon when the news reached France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Action of 13 March 1806</span> Minor naval engagement during the French Revolutionary Wars

The action of 13 March 1806 was a naval engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, fought when a British and a French squadron met unexpectedly in the mid-Atlantic. Neither force was aware of the presence of the other prior to the encounter and were participating in separate campaigns. The British squadron consisted of seven ships of the line accompanied by associated frigates, led by Rear-Admiral Sir John Borlase Warren, were tasked with hunting down and destroying the French squadron of Contre-Admiral Jean-Baptiste Willaumez, which had departed Brest for raiding operations in the South Atlantic in December 1805, at the start of the Atlantic campaign of 1806. The French force consisted of one ship of the line and one frigate, all that remained of Contre-Admiral Charles-Alexandre Durand Linois' squadron that had sailed for the Indian Ocean in March 1803 during the Peace of Amiens. Linois raided British shipping lanes and harbours across the region, achieving limited success against undefended merchant ships but repeatedly withdrawing in the face of determined opposition, most notably at the Battle of Pulo Aura in February 1804. With his stores almost exhausted and the French ports east of the Cape of Good Hope that could have offered him replenishment eliminated, Linois decided to return to France in January 1806, and by March was inadvertently sailing across the cruising ground of Warren's squadron.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Atlantic campaign of 1806</span> 1806 campaign during the Napoleonic Wars

The Atlantic campaign of 1806 was a complicated series of manoeuvres and counter-manoeuvres conducted by squadrons of the French Navy and the British Royal Navy across the Atlantic Ocean during the spring and summer of 1806, as part of the Napoleonic Wars. The campaign followed directly from the Trafalgar campaign of the year before, in which the French Mediterranean fleet had crossed the Atlantic, returned to Europe and joined with the Spanish fleet. On 21 October 1805, this combined force was destroyed by a British fleet under Lord Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar, although the campaign did not end until the Battle of Cape Ortegal on 4 November 1805. Believing that the French Navy would not be capable of organised resistance at sea during the winter, the First Lord of the Admiralty Lord Barham withdrew the British blockade squadrons to harbour. Barham had miscalculated – the French Atlantic fleet, based at Brest, had not been involved in the Trafalgar campaign and was therefore at full strength. Taking advantage of the reduction in the British forces off the port, Napoleon ordered two heavy squadrons to sea, under instructions to raid British trade routes while avoiding contact with equivalent Royal Navy forces.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Order of battle at the Battle of San Domingo</span>

The Battle of San Domingo was the last fleet engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, contested off the Southern coast of the Spanish colonial Captaincy General of Santo Domingo, then under French occupation, on 6 February 1806. A British squadron of seven ships of the line under Vice-Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth surprised and destroyed a French squadron of five ships of the line led by Contre-amiral Corentin Urbain Leissègues as the French sailed westwards along the San Domingo coast. Using his superior numbers and speed, Duckworth struck at the head of the French line with his leading ships while the slower eastern division of his squadron intercepted and captured the French stragglers. The only French ships to escape were two frigates and a corvette – three ships of the line were captured and two destroyed, including Leissègues' flagship, the 120-gun Impérial. French casualties were estimated as more than 1,500 men killed and wounded and the British suffered nearly 350 casualties in the engagement, which lasted for just over two hours.

Lamellerie's expedition was a French naval operation launched in February 1806. Four French Navy frigates and a brig, all survivors of the Battle of Trafalgar in October 1805, attempted to break past the British blockade of Cadiz on 23 February 1806, taking advantage of the withdrawal of the principal blockade squadron several months earlier at the start of the Atlantic campaign of 1806. Although the squadron was intercepted by elements of the British blockade force, Captain Louis-Charles-Auguste Delamarre de Lamellerie escaped with the four frigates by abandoning the slower brig, which was captured. During the next six months, Lamellerie's squadron cruised the Atlantic, visiting Senegal, Cayenne and the West Indies but failing to cause any significant disruption to British trade.

L'Hermite's expedition was a French naval operation launched in 1805 during the Napoleonic Wars. The operation was intended as both a commerce raiding operation against the British trading posts of West Africa and as a diversion to the Trafalgar campaign. Sailing from Lorient in October 1805 with one ship of the line, two frigates and a corvette, Commodore Jean-Marthe-Adrien L'Hermite was under orders to intercept and destroy British traders and slave ships off the West African coast and await reinforcements under Jérôme Bonaparte which were to be used in the invasion and capture of one of the British trading forts for use as a permanent French naval base from which further raiding operations could be conducted. It was also hoped by the French naval command that L'Hermite might draw some of the large British fleet maintained off Cadiz away from the blockade to allow the French and Spanish allied fleet trapped in the harbour to escape.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Allemand's expedition of 1805</span> French naval expedition during the Napoleonic Wars

Allemand's expedition of 1805, often referred to as the Escadre invisible in French sources, was an important French naval expedition during the Napoleonic Wars, which formed a major diversion to the ongoing Trafalgar Campaign in the Atlantic Ocean. With the French Mediterranean Fleet at sea, Emperor Napoleon I hoped to unite it with the French Atlantic Fleet and together form a force powerful enough to temporarily displace the British Royal Navy Channel Fleet for long enough to allow an invasion force to cross the English Channel and land in Britain. In support of this plan, the French squadron based at Rochefort put to sea in July 1805, initially with the intention that they would join the Atlantic Fleet from Brest. When this fleet failed to put to sea, the Rochefort squadron, under Contre-Admiral Zacharie Allemand, went on an extended raiding cruise across the Atlantic, both to intercept British trade left lightly defended by the concentration of British forces in European waters and with the intention of eventually combining with the French Mediterranean Fleet then blockaded in Spanish harbours.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Action of 9 July 1806</span> Minor naval engagement during the French Revolutionary Wars

The action of 9 July 1806 was a minor engagement between a French privateer frigate and British forces off Southern Ceylon during the Napoleonic Wars. French privateers operating from the Indian Ocean islands of Île Bonaparte and Île de France were a serious threat to British trade across the Indian Ocean during the Wars, and the British deployed numerous methods of intercepting them, including disguising warships as merchant vessels to lure privateers into unequal engagements with more powerful warships. Cruising near the Little Basses Reef on the Southern coast of Ceylon, the 34-gun privateer Bellone was sighted by the 16-gun British brig HMS Rattlesnake, which began chasing the larger French vessel. At 15:15, a third ship was sighted to the south, which proved to be the 74-gun ship of the line HMS Powerful, disguised as an East Indiaman.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Action of 18 October 1806</span> Minor naval engagement during the French Revolutionary Wars

The action of 18 October 1806 was a minor naval engagement during the Napoleonic Wars, fought between the British Royal Navy frigate HMS Caroline and a Dutch squadron at the entrance to Batavia harbour on Java in the Dutch East Indies. During the battle the Dutch frigate Maria Riggersbergen was left unsupported by the remainder of the squadron and, isolated, was forced to surrender. Captain Peter Rainier, the British commander, was subsequently free to remove his prize from within sight of the Dutch port when the remainder of the Dutch squadron refused to engage Caroline and their crews deliberately grounded the ships to avoid capture. He also returned many prisoners taken previously in a captured brig.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Action of 26 July 1806</span> Minor naval engagement during the French Revolutionary Wars

The action of 26 July 1806 was a minor naval engagement of the Napoleonic Wars fought off the southern coast of the island of Celebes in the Dutch East Indies. During the battle, a small British squadron attacked and defeated a Dutch force defending a valuable convoy, which was also captured. The British force—consisting of the frigate HMS Greyhound and brig-sloop HMS Harrier under the command of Captain Edward Elphinstone—was initially wary of the Dutch, mistaking the Dutch East Indiaman merchant ship Victoria for a ship of the line. Closer observation revealed the identity of the Dutch vessels the following day and Elphinstone led his frigate against the leading Dutch warship Pallas while Harrier engaged the merchant vessels and forced them to surrender. Only the corvette William escaped, taking no part in the engagement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Java campaign of 1806–1807</span> Military campaign in Netherlands East Indies

The Java campaign of 1806–1807 was a minor campaign during the Napoleonic Wars by British Royal Navy forces against a naval squadron of the Kingdom of Holland, a client state of the French Empire, based on the island of Java in the Dutch East Indies. Seeking to eliminate any threat to valuable British merchant convoys passing through the Malacca Straits, Rear-Admiral Sir Edward Pellew determined in early 1806 that the Dutch naval forces based at Java, which included several ships of the line and three frigates, had to be defeated to ensure British dominance in the region. Lacking the forces to effect an invasion of the Dutch colony, Pellew instead sought to isolate and blockade the Dutch squadron based at Batavia in preparation for raids specifically targeting the Dutch ships with his main force.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Algeciras campaign</span> 1801 Campaign during the War of the Second Coalition

The Algeciras campaign was an attempt by a French naval squadron from Toulon under Contre-Admiral Charles Linois to join a French and Spanish fleet at Cadiz during June and July 1801 during the French Revolutionary Wars prior to a planned operation against either Egypt or Portugal. To reach Cadiz, the French squadron had to pass the British naval base at Gibraltar, which housed the squadron tasked with blockading Cadiz. The British squadron was commanded by Rear-Admiral Sir James Saumarez. After a successful voyage between Toulon and Gibraltar, in which a number of British vessels were captured, the squadron anchored at Algeciras, a fortified port city within sight of Gibraltar across Gibraltar Bay. On 6 July 1801, Saumarez attacked the anchored squadron, in the First Battle of Algeciras. Although severe damage was inflicted on all three French ships of the line, none could be successfully captured and the British were forced to withdraw without HMS Hannibal, which had grounded and was subsequently seized by the French.

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