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Action of 9 August 1780

Action of 9 August 1780
Part of the American Revolutionary War

The British convoy of 63 merchant ships with all but 8 ships captured by the fleet under Luis de Cordova, Unknown author
Date9 August 1780[1]
Location35°50′1″N 13°14′0″W / 35.83361°N 13.23333°W / 35.83361; -13.23333
Result Franco-Spanish victory[2]
Belligerents
Spain
 France
 Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
Luis Córdova
Jose Mazarredo
Antoine Beausset
John Moutray
Strength
32 ships of the line[1]
6 frigates
1 ship of the line
2 frigates
63 merchantmen
Casualties and losses
None 3,144 prisoners
55 merchantmen captured[1][3][4][5][6][7]

The action of 9 August 1780 was a naval engagement of the American Revolutionary War, in which a Spanish fleet, led by Admiral Luis de Córdova y Córdova, along with a squadron of French ships, encountered a large British convoy. The Spanish and French force captured almost all the merchant vessels in the convoy, which dealt a severe blow to the commerce of Great Britain.[8][9][10]

The British convoy, escorted by HMS Ramillies (74 guns, under Captain Sir John Moutray) and two frigates - Thetis (36 guns) and Southampton (36 guns), sailed from Portsmouth on 27 July. On 9 August, they encountered the Spanish fleet.

The Franco-Spanish fleet captured 55 of the 63 merchant vessels present, making it one of the most complete naval captures ever made.[11] The losses, were, in total 80,000 muskets, equipment for 40,000 troops, 294 cannons, and 3,144 men. The financial impact of the losses were estimated to be around £1,500,000[12] (£1,000,000 in gold and £500,000 – £600,000 in equipment and ships). The action also helped to derail a secret British diplomatic effort to make peace with Spain.[13] The loss was still remembered in Great Britain (by then the United Kingdom) 30 years later, at the height of the Napoleonic Wars.[12]

Background edit

The British convoy sailed from Portsmouth, and consisted of 63 merchant vessels. The convoy included East Indiamen, West Indiamen, 18 victuallers, military storeships, and transports carrying the 90th Regiment of Foot.[2] The troops were intended for service in the West Indies, and they had tents and camp equipment with them. Besides arms, ammunition, and a train of artillery, the five East India vessels carried a large quantity of naval-stores to supply the British squadron in that area.

On the morning of 2 August, the convoy fell in with the Channel Fleet. The Channel Fleet accompanied the convoy for several hours, to a point 112 leagues off the Isles of Scilly, where the two groups of ships parted company.[1]

Interception edit

Following the instructions given to Luis de Córdova by Don Jose Moñino, count of Floridablanca, the Spanish fleet set sail from Cádiz and sailed as far as Madeira and the Canary Islands, where Don Luís deployed several frigates to spot the convoy. One of these frigates intercepted the convoy on the night of 8 August.[14]

The news was greeted with caution, because there was doubt as to whether the ships were the Channel Fleet or the British convoy. The deputy Spanish commander, José de Mazarredo, called for an immediate attack.[15] He concluded that there was no reason for the British fleet to be sailing so far from the Channel, and argued that all the suspected ships had to be a convoy under escort.

When strange sails (those of the Spanish fleet) were spotted, Captain Moutray signalled his ships to alter course and follow him close to the wind. The two frigates (Thetis and Southampton) and eight of the convoy followed the Ramillies and so escaped, but the rest of the British convoy mistook the lanterns at mast head of the Santísima Trinidad for those of their own commander, and fooled by a ruse of war,[14] they steered accordingly.[16] At daybreak, they found themselves intermingled with the Spanish fleet.[16] Admiral de Cordova enveloped them, and hoisted signals to launch a general chase.[1][16]

de Córdova's fleet captured 50 West Indiamen, including those chartered by the crown, and the five East Indiamen, Gatton, Godfrey, Hillsborough, Mountstuart and Royal George, totaling to 55 captured ships. The British loss was the worst disaster in the history of the East India Company.[17] The 120-gun ship of the line Santísima Trinidad, the flagship of Admiral de Córdova, fired on Mountstuart and Godfrey to induce them to strike. Gatton was also attacked by the Purísima Concepción and set on fire, but the fire was later brought under control, and the ship was seized. A frigate flotilla, commanded by Santiago de Liniers, and part of the Concepción squadron, captured the 30-gun East Indiaman Hillsborough.[18]

The captured British ships were brought to Cádiz, which was an unusual spectacle since the capture of such a great enemy convoy by any navy was an uncommon event; de Córdova's fleet did this on two occasions. All the ships, including the five East Indiamen, were incorporated into the Spanish merchant fleet.[19] This was a major intelligence failure, for the British Admiralty did not learn of the presence of an enemy fleet at sea until 4 August, and neither did Geary nor Captain John Moutray.[1]

Aftermath edit

 
The Indiaman Royal George in Three Positions in the Downs by Francis Holman, 1779. Royal George was one of the five East Indiamen the Spanish fleet captured.

We received fourteen shot from one of the seventy-four's had two men killed and six wounded, our bowspirit shot and shivered up as far as the gammoning, when we struck to the Ferme, a 74. (The Spanish Firme) We were all, except the ladies and their husbands, the captains, first and second officers, and about six other gentlemen, ordered on board the Ferme: but on going on board, had it in our option to return; which we all did; and we met with the greatest civility, humanity, and generosity on board [...] The great kindness of the Spaniards makes our situation scarcely felt, as everything is done by them to alleviate our misfortune; and we have never yet felt that we were prisoners

— Officer of East Indiaman Hillsborough, Cádiz, August 25, 1780.[20]

The Spaniards behaved with great humanity to their prisoners, repaying the generous treatment which their countrymen had been given by Admiral Rodney.[20]

This Spanish victory, compounded by the serious storm losses in the Caribbean, produced a financial crisis among marine insurance underwriters throughout Europe.[21] Many went bankrupt, and war insurance rates, already remarkably high due to the presence of privateers, were driven to intolerable levels. It also increased and made increasingly public the dissatisfaction which prevailed against the ministry, and against the conduct and government of the Royal Navy.

This successful interception shows that the English fleet, dispersed in too many theaters of operations, lost control of the Atlantic routes in 1780.[22]

The five British East Indiaman were brought into Spanish service. The Spanish navy commissioned the 30-gun Hillsborough as the 12-gun store-ship Santa Clotilde, the 28-gun Mountstuart as the 34-gun Santa Balvina, the 28-gun Royal George as the 40-gun Real Jorge, the 28-gun Godfrey as the 34-gun Santa Biviana and the 28-gun Gatton as the 34-gun Santa Paula.[23]

Among the British merchantmen who managed to escape were British Queen and Fanny, whose copper sheathing helped distance their pursuers.[24]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Syrett p. 136
  2. ^ a b Volo p.77
  3. ^ Campbell p.36
  4. ^ Campbell p.56
  5. ^ Gordon p.4
  6. ^ The scots magazine. MDCCLXXXIII. p.170
  7. ^ Rusell p.131
  8. ^ Guthrie p.354
  9. ^ Ramsay p.184
  10. ^ Bisset p.46
  11. ^ The encyclopaedia of London, p.483
  12. ^ a b Parkinson p.38
  13. ^ Syrett pp.136–137
  14. ^ a b Listado de presas británicas capturadas por la escuadra de Luis de Córdoba en 1780 Revista de Historia Naval del Ministerio de Defensa – An incomplete list of the British ships captured by Admiral Luis de Córdova in 1780 (in Spanish)
  15. ^ Fernández de Navarrete p.84
  16. ^ a b c Botta p.449
  17. ^ Bowen, H V (2006). The business of empire: the East India Company and imperial Britain, 1756–1833. Cambridge University Press, p. 156. ISBN 978-0-521-84477-2
  18. ^ Santísima Trinidad, orgullo de la Armada española, by Pedro Amado (in Spanish)
  19. ^ Guthrie/Ferguson p.360
  20. ^ a b The Scots Magazine. October 1780, p.547
  21. ^ Volo p.78
  22. ^ André Zysberg, La monarchie des Lumières: 1715-1786, Paris, Éditions du Seuil, coll. Points Histoire, 2002, page 387 (ISBN 2-02-019886-X)
  23. ^ Vela, pp. 120-122.
  24. ^ Cunat, p.42

References edit

  • Syrett, David. The Royal Navy in European Waters during the American Revolutionary War. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-57003-238-7
  • Botta, Carlo. History of the war of the independence of the United States of America New Haven : N. Whiting publishing (1837) ASIN B002XXBVAU
  • Cunat, Charles (1852). Histoire du Bailli de Suffren. Rennes: A. Marteville et Lefas. p. 447.
  • Parkinson N, C. The Trade Winds: A Study of British Overseas Trade during the French wars, 1793–1815. Routledge; Reprint edition. ISBN 978-0-415-38191-8
  • Volo, M. James. Blue Water Patriots: The American Revolution Afloat, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. (2008) ISBN 978-0-7425-6120-5
  • Guthrie, William. A New Geographical, Historical And Commercial Grammar And Present State Of The World.Complete With 30 Fold Out Maps – All Present. J. Johnson Publishing (1808) ASIN B002N220JC
  • Ramsay, David. Universal History Americanized, or an Historical View of the World from the Earliest Records to the Nineteenth Century, with a Particular Reference to the State of Society, Literature, Religion, and Form of Government of the United States of America. Vol. VI (1819)
  • Bisset, Robert. The History of the Reign of George Iii. to Which Is Prefixed, a View of the Progressive Improvement of England, in Prosperity and Strength, to the Accession of His Majesty. Vol III (1820)
  • Gordon, William. The history of the rise, progress, and establishment of the Independence of the United States of America, Books for Libraries Press (1969) ISBN 978-0-8369-5024-3
  • The London Encyclopaedia, Or Universal Dictionary Of Science, Art, Literature And Practical Mechanics, Comprising A Popular View Of The Present State Of Knowledge, Vol X. Thomas Tegg Publishing. London (1829).
  • Campbell, Thomas. Annals of Great Britain from the ascension of George III to the peace of Amiens, Printed by Mundell and co., for Silvester Doig and Andrew Stirling (1811).
  • The London Encyclopaedia[clarification needed]
  • The Scots Magazine. MDCCLXXXIII. Volume XLV, Edinburgh: Printed by Murray and Cochran.
  • Guthrie, William & Ferguson, James. A new geographical, historical, and commercial grammar and present... J & J House Booksellers, London. (1806)
  • (in Spanish) Fernández de Navarrete, Martín. Biblioteca marítima española: obra póstuma del excmo: Vol. 2
  • (in Spanish) José Montero y Aróstegui. Historia y descripción de la Ciudad y Departamento naval del Ferrol (Google Ebook)
  • (in Spanish) Vela Cuadros, Rubén. Presas de la Armada Española 1779-1828: listado de buques apresados e incorporados a la Real Armada por apresamiento. 2017.
  • (in Spanish) Rodríguez González, Agustín Ramón. Victorias por mar de los Españoles. Biblioteca de Historia. Madrid 2006.

action, august, 1780, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, spanish, august, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, tr. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish August 2022 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Accion del 9 de agosto de 1780 see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Accion del 9 de agosto de 1780 to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Action of 9 August 1780Part of the American Revolutionary WarThe British convoy of 63 merchant ships with all but 8 ships captured by the fleet under Luis de Cordova Unknown authorDate9 August 1780 1 LocationOff Cape St Vincent Atlantic Ocean35 50 1 N 13 14 0 W 35 83361 N 13 23333 W 35 83361 13 23333ResultFranco Spanish victory 2 BelligerentsSpain France Great BritainCommanders and leadersLuis Cordova Jose Mazarredo Antoine BeaussetJohn MoutrayStrength32 ships of the line 1 6 frigates1 ship of the line 2 frigates 63 merchantmenCasualties and lossesNone3 144 prisoners 55 merchantmen captured 1 3 4 5 6 7 The action of 9 August 1780 was a naval engagement of the American Revolutionary War in which a Spanish fleet led by Admiral Luis de Cordova y Cordova along with a squadron of French ships encountered a large British convoy The Spanish and French force captured almost all the merchant vessels in the convoy which dealt a severe blow to the commerce of Great Britain 8 9 10 The British convoy escorted by HMS Ramillies 74 guns under Captain Sir John Moutray and two frigates Thetis 36 guns and Southampton 36 guns sailed from Portsmouth on 27 July On 9 August they encountered the Spanish fleet The Franco Spanish fleet captured 55 of the 63 merchant vessels present making it one of the most complete naval captures ever made 11 The losses were in total 80 000 muskets equipment for 40 000 troops 294 cannons and 3 144 men The financial impact of the losses were estimated to be around 1 500 000 12 1 000 000 in gold and 500 000 600 000 in equipment and ships The action also helped to derail a secret British diplomatic effort to make peace with Spain 13 The loss was still remembered in Great Britain by then the United Kingdom 30 years later at the height of the Napoleonic Wars 12 Contents 1 Background 2 Interception 3 Aftermath 4 Footnotes 5 ReferencesBackground editThe British convoy sailed from Portsmouth and consisted of 63 merchant vessels The convoy included East Indiamen West Indiamen 18 victuallers military storeships and transports carrying the 90th Regiment of Foot 2 The troops were intended for service in the West Indies and they had tents and camp equipment with them Besides arms ammunition and a train of artillery the five East India vessels carried a large quantity of naval stores to supply the British squadron in that area On the morning of 2 August the convoy fell in with the Channel Fleet The Channel Fleet accompanied the convoy for several hours to a point 112 leagues off the Isles of Scilly where the two groups of ships parted company 1 Interception editFollowing the instructions given to Luis de Cordova by Don Jose Monino count of Floridablanca the Spanish fleet set sail from Cadiz and sailed as far as Madeira and the Canary Islands where Don Luis deployed several frigates to spot the convoy One of these frigates intercepted the convoy on the night of 8 August 14 The news was greeted with caution because there was doubt as to whether the ships were the Channel Fleet or the British convoy The deputy Spanish commander Jose de Mazarredo called for an immediate attack 15 He concluded that there was no reason for the British fleet to be sailing so far from the Channel and argued that all the suspected ships had to be a convoy under escort When strange sails those of the Spanish fleet were spotted Captain Moutray signalled his ships to alter course and follow him close to the wind The two frigates Thetis and Southampton and eight of the convoy followed the Ramillies and so escaped but the rest of the British convoy mistook the lanterns at mast head of the Santisima Trinidad for those of their own commander and fooled by a ruse of war 14 they steered accordingly 16 At daybreak they found themselves intermingled with the Spanish fleet 16 Admiral de Cordova enveloped them and hoisted signals to launch a general chase 1 16 de Cordova s fleet captured 50 West Indiamen including those chartered by the crown and the five East Indiamen Gatton Godfrey Hillsborough Mountstuart and Royal George totaling to 55 captured ships The British loss was the worst disaster in the history of the East India Company 17 The 120 gun ship of the line Santisima Trinidad the flagship of Admiral de Cordova fired on Mountstuart and Godfrey to induce them to strike Gatton was also attacked by the Purisima Concepcion and set on fire but the fire was later brought under control and the ship was seized A frigate flotilla commanded by Santiago de Liniers and part of the Concepcion squadron captured the 30 gun East Indiaman Hillsborough 18 The captured British ships were brought to Cadiz which was an unusual spectacle since the capture of such a great enemy convoy by any navy was an uncommon event de Cordova s fleet did this on two occasions All the ships including the five East Indiamen were incorporated into the Spanish merchant fleet 19 This was a major intelligence failure for the British Admiralty did not learn of the presence of an enemy fleet at sea until 4 August and neither did Geary nor Captain John Moutray 1 Aftermath edit nbsp The Indiaman Royal George in Three Positions in the Downs by Francis Holman 1779 Royal George was one of the five East Indiamen the Spanish fleet captured We received fourteen shot from one of the seventy four s had two men killed and six wounded our bowspirit shot and shivered up as far as the gammoning when we struck to the Ferme a 74 The Spanish Firme We were all except the ladies and their husbands the captains first and second officers and about six other gentlemen ordered on board the Ferme but on going on board had it in our option to return which we all did and we met with the greatest civility humanity and generosity on board The great kindness of the Spaniards makes our situation scarcely felt as everything is done by them to alleviate our misfortune and we have never yet felt that we were prisoners Officer of East Indiaman Hillsborough Cadiz August 25 1780 20 The Spaniards behaved with great humanity to their prisoners repaying the generous treatment which their countrymen had been given by Admiral Rodney 20 This Spanish victory compounded by the serious storm losses in the Caribbean produced a financial crisis among marine insurance underwriters throughout Europe 21 Many went bankrupt and war insurance rates already remarkably high due to the presence of privateers were driven to intolerable levels It also increased and made increasingly public the dissatisfaction which prevailed against the ministry and against the conduct and government of the Royal Navy This successful interception shows that the English fleet dispersed in too many theaters of operations lost control of the Atlantic routes in 1780 22 The five British East Indiaman were brought into Spanish service The Spanish navy commissioned the 30 gun Hillsborough as the 12 gun store ship Santa Clotilde the 28 gun Mountstuart as the 34 gun Santa Balvina the 28 gun Royal George as the 40 gun Real Jorge the 28 gun Godfrey as the 34 gun Santa Biviana and the 28 gun Gatton as the 34 gun Santa Paula 23 Among the British merchantmen who managed to escape were British Queen and Fanny whose copper sheathing helped distance their pursuers 24 Footnotes edit a b c d e f Syrett p 136 a b Volo p 77 Campbell p 36 Campbell p 56 Gordon p 4 The scots magazine MDCCLXXXIII p 170 Rusell p 131 Guthrie p 354 Ramsay p 184 Bisset p 46 The encyclopaedia of London p 483 a b Parkinson p 38 Syrett pp 136 137 a b Listado de presas britanicas capturadas por la escuadra de Luis de Cordoba en 1780 Revista de Historia Naval del Ministerio de Defensa An incomplete list of the British ships captured by Admiral Luis de Cordova in 1780 in Spanish Fernandez de Navarrete p 84 a b c Botta p 449 Bowen H V 2006 The business of empire the East India Company and imperial Britain 1756 1833 Cambridge University Press p 156 ISBN 978 0 521 84477 2 Santisima Trinidad orgullo de la Armada espanola by Pedro Amado in Spanish Guthrie Ferguson p 360 a b The Scots Magazine October 1780 p 547 Volo p 78 Andre Zysberg La monarchie des Lumieres 1715 1786 Paris Editions du Seuil coll Points Histoire 2002 page 387 ISBN 2 02 019886 X Vela pp 120 122 Cunat p 42References editSyrett David The Royal Navy in European Waters during the American Revolutionary War University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 57003 238 7 Botta Carlo History of the war of the independence of the United States of America New Haven N Whiting publishing 1837 ASIN B002XXBVAU Cunat Charles 1852 Histoire du Bailli de Suffren Rennes A Marteville et Lefas p 447 Parkinson N C The Trade Winds A Study of British Overseas Trade during the French wars 1793 1815 Routledge Reprint edition ISBN 978 0 415 38191 8 Volo M James Blue Water Patriots The American Revolution Afloat Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc 2008 ISBN 978 0 7425 6120 5 Guthrie William A New Geographical Historical And Commercial Grammar And Present State Of The World Complete With 30 Fold Out Maps All Present J Johnson Publishing 1808 ASIN B002N220JC Ramsay David Universal History Americanized or an Historical View of the World from the Earliest Records to the Nineteenth Century with a Particular Reference to the State of Society Literature Religion and Form of Government of the United States of America Vol VI 1819 Bisset Robert The History of the Reign of George Iii to Which Is Prefixed a View of the Progressive Improvement of England in Prosperity and Strength to the Accession of His Majesty Vol III 1820 Gordon William The history of the rise progress and establishment of the Independence of the United States of America Books for Libraries Press 1969 ISBN 978 0 8369 5024 3 The London Encyclopaedia Or Universal Dictionary Of Science Art Literature And Practical Mechanics Comprising A Popular View Of The Present State Of Knowledge Vol X Thomas Tegg Publishing London 1829 Campbell Thomas Annals of Great Britain from the ascension of George III to the peace of Amiens Printed by Mundell and co for Silvester Doig and Andrew Stirling 1811 The London Encyclopaedia clarification needed The Scots Magazine MDCCLXXXIII Volume XLV Edinburgh Printed by Murray and Cochran Guthrie William amp Ferguson James A new geographical historical and commercial grammar and present J amp J House Booksellers London 1806 in Spanish Fernandez de Navarrete Martin Biblioteca maritima espanola obra postuma del excmo Vol 2 in Spanish Jose Montero y Arostegui Historia y descripcion de la Ciudad y Departamento naval del Ferrol Google Ebook in Spanish Vela Cuadros Ruben Presas de la Armada Espanola 1779 1828 listado de buques apresados e incorporados a la Real Armada por apresamiento 2017 in Spanish Rodriguez Gonzalez Agustin Ramon Victorias por mar de los Espanoles Biblioteca de Historia Madrid 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Action of 9 August 1780 amp oldid 1211740999, wikipedia, 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