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Capture of Grenada (1779)

Capture of Grenada
Part of the American Revolutionary War

View of the French assault on the island of Grenada, 4 July 1779. Prise de l'île de la Grenade, 4 juillet 1779 by Jean-François Hue
Date2–4 July 1779
Location
Result French victory
Belligerents
 France  Great Britain
Commanders and leaders

Comte D'Estaing

Arthur Dillon
Lord Macartney (POW)
Strength
2,100 men
25 ships of the line[1]
125 regulars
436 militia and volunteers[2]
Casualties and losses
114 killed
200 wounded[3]
about 700 prisoners
118 artillery pieces 200 merchantmen[4]

The Capture of Grenada was an amphibious expedition in July 1779 during the American Revolutionary War. Charles Hector, comte D'Estaing led French forces against the British-held West Indies island of Grenada. The French forces landed on 2 July and the assault occurred on the night of 3–4 July. The French forces assaulted the British fortifications on Hospital Hill, overlooking the island's capital, Saint George's. The British cannons were captured and turned against Fort George. British Governor Lord Macartney opened negotiations to surrender.

Admiral d'Estaing controversially rejected Macartney's terms of capitulation, instead insisting on him adopting the harsher terms he had written. Macartney rejected those terms, choosing to surrender unconditionally. D'Estaing thereafter permitted his forces to loot the town, and Macartney was sent to France as a prisoner of war.

On 5 July, French forces re-embarked when word arrived that a British fleet under Admiral John Byron was approaching. The two fleets battled the next day. The French severely damaged several British ships; however, both fleets successfully returned to their bases. Under the terms of the Treaty of Paris, France returned Grenada to British control at the end of the war.

Background edit

Following the entry of France into the American War of Independence as an American ally in early 1778, French Admiral the comte D'Estaing arrived in the West Indies in early December 1778 commanding a fleet of twelve ships of the line and a number of smaller vessels.[5] At about the same time a British fleet under Admiral William Hotham also arrived, augmenting the West Indies fleet of Admiral Samuel Barrington.[6] The British then captured French-held St. Lucia, despite d'Estaing's attempt at relief. The British used St. Lucia to monitor the French on Martinique, where d'Estaing was based.[7]

The British fleet was further reinforced in January 1779 by ten ships of the line under Admiral John Byron, who assumed command of the British Leeward Islands station.[8] Throughout the first half of 1779, both fleets received additional reinforcements, after which the French fleet was superior to that of the British.[9] Byron departed St. Lucia on 6 June in order to provide escort services to British merchant ships gathering at St. Kitts for a convoy to Europe, leaving d'Estaing free to act. D'Estaing and the French governor-general at Martinique, François Claude Amour, marquis de Bouillé, seized the opportunity to begin a series of operations against nearby British possessions.[10]

Their first target, the isle of Saint Vincent, fell on 18 June, and d'Estaing turned his attention to other islands. He had hoped to capture Barbados, a key British possession, but after making no progress against the prevailing easterly trade winds, he turned his attention instead to Grenada.[11]

British defences edit

 
Plan of the French attacks

Grenada was one of Britain's richest colonies, producing significant quantities of sugar on its plantations.[12] Lord Macartney, the British governor, had been alerted to the possibility of a French attack. He made repeated requests for support to Admiral Byron and the British commander at St. Kitts, but was told that Saint Vincent was the principal French interest. However, Byron stated he would bring relief should Grenada be attacked.[13]

Macartney had at his disposal 101 soldiers drawn from the 48th Regiment of Foot and 24 artillery men. He also had over 400 militia and volunteers, but did not consider these forces dependable because one third of them were of French extraction.[2] He ordered the construction of significant fortifications on Hospital Hill, a prominence overlooking the island capital St. George's. The steep hillsides were fortified by stone walls, and the hilltop had a palisade surrounding a series of entrenchments.[14]

French capture edit

 
Hand-colored 1779 engraving depicting d'Estaing's capture of the heights

The French fleet anchored off the Grenada coast just north of St. George's on 2 July.[15] The troops that d'Estaing landed that day consisted of the 1,400-man Irish Dillon Regiment and 700 troops drawn from the regiments Champagne, Foix, Auxerrois, and Hainault.[14] With the arrival of the French, Macartney ordered his forces to withdraw behind the fortifications of Hospital Hill. D'Estaing spent 3 July reconnoitring the British position.[16] Concerned that Byron might appear at any time, he decided to launch an attack on Hospital Hill.[1] He first sent a parley flag to Macartney demanding his surrender; the British governor rejected the demand.[17]

D'Estaing's plan of attack called for three columns to attack the back side of the fortifications with bayonets, while a small fourth detachment made a demonstration from a location where the British might more reasonably expect an attack, in other words a decoy or distraction. On the evening of 3 July these formations moved out. The columns, each numbering 300 men, were led by Arthur Dillon, Édouard Dillon, and the comte de Noailles. Arthur Dillon's column was accompanied by an advance guard of 180 under the comte de Durat, and the demonstration force numbered just 200. At 4:00 am on the 4th the demonstration force opened fire, while the other three columns charged up Hospital Hill. The British defenders panicked and most fled down the hill to the apparent safety of Fort George.[17]

The British, in their haste to leave the premises, neglected to spike some of the cannons (driving a metal spike into the touchhole, rendering the cannon inoperative). They also abandoned many valuables that had been brought up on the heights for safekeeping. The French used the captured cannons to fire upon Fort George. Realizing the situation was hopeless, Macartney raised the white flag.[18] The French took about 700 prisoners, and claimed casualties of 36 killed and 71 wounded. British reports, however, claimed the French casualties numbered closer to 300.[19] The French also claimed as prizes 200 merchant ships anchored in the harbour.[20]

Admiral d'Estaing rejected Macartney's proposed terms of capitulations, countering with a list of articles that he had drafted. Macartney found d'Estaing's proposed articles "not merely unprecedented and humiliating, but so ensnaring and uncertain in their nature, extent, and aim that they might at any time supply a pretext for taking away the lives, together with the fortunes, of the capitulants."[21] His council was unanimous in rejecting the proposed capitulation, and the British chose to surrender unconditionally instead. As a consequence, d'Estaing permitted his troops to pillage St. George's.[22] Among the items taken or destroyed were most of Macartney's silver and plate, much of his clothing, and his personal papers. The latter came as a particularly harsh blow to the governor, for copies of those papers sent to St. Lucia with his wife for safeguarding were destroyed by fire.[23] When d'Estaing invited Macartney to dine with him, the governor apologised for his garb, noting that the coat he was wearing was the only one left him. Macartney and other leading Grenadians were also refused parole, and were sent to France as prisoners of war.[22]

Aftermath edit

 
French political cartoon acclaiming d'Estaing for his successes

Admiral Byron had been alerted to the capture of Saint Vincent on 1 July, and was en route with a force to retake it when he learned of the attack on Grenada. He immediately sailed there, arriving on the morning of 6 July. D'Estaing, alerted to Byron's intentions on the 5th, embarked most of the troops and weighed anchor at 4:00 am on the 6th. The fleets battled off Grenada, with d'Estaing prevailing over Byron's disorganised attack.[24] There were no further major actions in the West Indies before d'Estaing sailed north and led an unsuccessful siege of British-held Savannah, Georgia in September.[25]

D'Estaing's successes in capturing Grenada and defeating Byron made him immensely popular in France.[26] Playwright and actor Pierre-Germain Parisau wrote Veni, Vidi, Vici, ou La Prise de Grenade containing a re-enactment of the capture. D'Estaing did not see the popular work, but John Paul Jones attended a performance during a visit to Paris.[27]

During their occupation, the French began construction of a series of fortifications on Richmond Hill. Designed to defend against an attack like theirs, its cannons pointed to the landward rather than seaward side. These defences were completed by the British after 1783.[19]

Both Grenada and Saint Vincent remained in French hands until the end of the war, when they were returned to Britain under the terms of the 1783 Treaty of Paris.[28] The rule of the comte de Durat, who was appointed governor by d'Estaing, was reported by British residents to be harsh and oppressive.[29] After the British resumed control, they cracked down on the predominantly Roman Catholic French-speaking population, leading to discontent and an exodus of French Grenadians to Trinidad.[30] These religious and cultural divisions in Grenadian society contributed to the rise of local resistance which culminated in the nearly-successful Fédon Rebellion in 1795–96.[31]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Colomb, p. 390
  2. ^ a b Barrow and Macartney, p. 56
  3. ^ Barrow and Macartney, p. 59
  4. ^ Marley p.321
  5. ^ Mahan, pp. 429–431
  6. ^ Mahan, p. 429
  7. ^ Mahan, pp. 429–432
  8. ^ Colomb, p. 388
  9. ^ Colomb, pp. 388–389
  10. ^ Colomb, p. 389
  11. ^ Colomb, pp. 389–390
  12. ^ O'Shaughnessy, p. 60
  13. ^ Barrow and Macartney, pp. 55–56
  14. ^ a b A Brief Historical Sketch, p. 827
  15. ^ Colman-Maison, p. 263
  16. ^ Colman-Maison, p. 264
  17. ^ a b Brizan, p. 44
  18. ^ Brizan, p. 45
  19. ^ a b Brizan, p. 46
  20. ^ Mahan, p. 434
  21. ^ Robbins, pp. 109–110
  22. ^ a b Robbins, p. 110
  23. ^ Barrow and Macartney, pp. 62, 408
  24. ^ Colomb, p. 391
  25. ^ Mahan, pp. 440–443
  26. ^ Doniol, p. 421
  27. ^ Campardon, p. 210
  28. ^ Black, p. 59
  29. ^ Brizan, p. 48
  30. ^ Brizan, p. 49
  31. ^ Brizan, pp. 50–52

References edit

  • "A Brief Historical Sketch of the Irish Infantry Regiment of Dillon and the Irish Stuart Regiments in the Service of France, 1690–1791". Journal of the Royal United Service Institution. 49. July–December 1905.
  • Barrow, John; Macartney, George (1807) [1807]. The Public Life of the Earl of Macartney. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-1-108-02619-2. OCLC 754156804.
  • Black, Jeremy (2006). A Military History of Britain: From 1775 to the Present. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-99039-8. OCLC 70483433.
  • Brizan, George (1984). Grenada: Island of Conflict. London: Zed Books. ISBN 978-0-86232-230-4. OCLC 11793093.
  • Campardon, Émile (1877). Les Spectacles de la Foire, Volume 2 (in French). Geneva: Berger-Levrault et Cie. OCLC 493703871.
  • Chartrand, Rene (1992). The French Army in the American War of Independence. London: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85532-167-0. OCLC 635271744.
  • Colman-Maison, Jean Joseph Robert (1910). L'Amiral d'Estaing (1729-1794) (in French). Paris: Calmann-Lévy. OCLC 2677381.
  • Colomb, Philip (1895). Naval Warfare, its Ruling Principles and Practice Historically Treated. London: W. H. Allen. p. 386. OCLC 2863262.
  • Doniol, Auguste (1902). Histoire du XVIe Arrondissement de Paris (in French). Paris: Hachette. p. 421. OCLC 123166366.
  • Mahan, Alfred Thayer (1898). Major Operations of the Royal Navy, 1762–1783: Being Chapter XXXI in The Royal Navy. A History. Boston: Little, Brown. OCLC 46778589.
  • Marley, David (2008). Wars of the Americas: a Chronology of Armed Conflict in the Western Hemisphere, 1492 to the Present, Volume 1. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-100-8. OCLC 166373121.
  • O'Shaughnessy, Andrew Jackson (2000). An Empire Divided: the American Revolution and the British Caribbean. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-3558-6. OCLC 185896684.
  • Robbins, Helen Henrietta Macartney (1908). Our First Ambassador to China: An Account of the Life of George, Earl of Macartney. London: J. Murray. p. 109. OCLC 3430917.

12°03′N 61°45′W / 12.05°N 61.75°W / 12.05; -61.75

capture, grenada, 1779, capture, grenada, redirects, here, 1983, invasion, united, states, invasion, grenada, capture, grenadapart, american, revolutionary, warview, french, assault, island, grenada, july, 1779, prise, île, grenade, juillet, 1779, jean, franço. Capture of Grenada redirects here For the 1983 U S invasion see United States invasion of Grenada Capture of GrenadaPart of the American Revolutionary WarView of the French assault on the island of Grenada 4 July 1779 Prise de l ile de la Grenade 4 juillet 1779 by Jean Francois HueDate2 4 July 1779LocationGrenada West IndiesResultFrench victoryBelligerents France Great BritainCommanders and leadersComte D Estaing Arthur DillonLord Macartney POW Strength2 100 men25 ships of the line 1 125 regulars436 militia and volunteers 2 Casualties and losses114 killed200 wounded 3 about 700 prisoners118 artillery pieces 200 merchantmen 4 The Capture of Grenada was an amphibious expedition in July 1779 during the American Revolutionary War Charles Hector comte D Estaing led French forces against the British held West Indies island of Grenada The French forces landed on 2 July and the assault occurred on the night of 3 4 July The French forces assaulted the British fortifications on Hospital Hill overlooking the island s capital Saint George s The British cannons were captured and turned against Fort George British Governor Lord Macartney opened negotiations to surrender Admiral d Estaing controversially rejected Macartney s terms of capitulation instead insisting on him adopting the harsher terms he had written Macartney rejected those terms choosing to surrender unconditionally D Estaing thereafter permitted his forces to loot the town and Macartney was sent to France as a prisoner of war On 5 July French forces re embarked when word arrived that a British fleet under Admiral John Byron was approaching The two fleets battled the next day The French severely damaged several British ships however both fleets successfully returned to their bases Under the terms of the Treaty of Paris France returned Grenada to British control at the end of the war Contents 1 Background 2 British defences 3 French capture 4 Aftermath 5 Notes 6 ReferencesBackground editFollowing the entry of France into the American War of Independence as an American ally in early 1778 French Admiral the comte D Estaing arrived in the West Indies in early December 1778 commanding a fleet of twelve ships of the line and a number of smaller vessels 5 At about the same time a British fleet under Admiral William Hotham also arrived augmenting the West Indies fleet of Admiral Samuel Barrington 6 The British then captured French held St Lucia despite d Estaing s attempt at relief The British used St Lucia to monitor the French on Martinique where d Estaing was based 7 The British fleet was further reinforced in January 1779 by ten ships of the line under Admiral John Byron who assumed command of the British Leeward Islands station 8 Throughout the first half of 1779 both fleets received additional reinforcements after which the French fleet was superior to that of the British 9 Byron departed St Lucia on 6 June in order to provide escort services to British merchant ships gathering at St Kitts for a convoy to Europe leaving d Estaing free to act D Estaing and the French governor general at Martinique Francois Claude Amour marquis de Bouille seized the opportunity to begin a series of operations against nearby British possessions 10 Their first target the isle of Saint Vincent fell on 18 June and d Estaing turned his attention to other islands He had hoped to capture Barbados a key British possession but after making no progress against the prevailing easterly trade winds he turned his attention instead to Grenada 11 British defences edit nbsp Plan of the French attacks Grenada was one of Britain s richest colonies producing significant quantities of sugar on its plantations 12 Lord Macartney the British governor had been alerted to the possibility of a French attack He made repeated requests for support to Admiral Byron and the British commander at St Kitts but was told that Saint Vincent was the principal French interest However Byron stated he would bring relief should Grenada be attacked 13 Macartney had at his disposal 101 soldiers drawn from the 48th Regiment of Foot and 24 artillery men He also had over 400 militia and volunteers but did not consider these forces dependable because one third of them were of French extraction 2 He ordered the construction of significant fortifications on Hospital Hill a prominence overlooking the island capital St George s The steep hillsides were fortified by stone walls and the hilltop had a palisade surrounding a series of entrenchments 14 French capture edit nbsp Hand colored 1779 engraving depicting d Estaing s capture of the heights The French fleet anchored off the Grenada coast just north of St George s on 2 July 15 The troops that d Estaing landed that day consisted of the 1 400 man Irish Dillon Regiment and 700 troops drawn from the regiments Champagne Foix Auxerrois and Hainault 14 With the arrival of the French Macartney ordered his forces to withdraw behind the fortifications of Hospital Hill D Estaing spent 3 July reconnoitring the British position 16 Concerned that Byron might appear at any time he decided to launch an attack on Hospital Hill 1 He first sent a parley flag to Macartney demanding his surrender the British governor rejected the demand 17 D Estaing s plan of attack called for three columns to attack the back side of the fortifications with bayonets while a small fourth detachment made a demonstration from a location where the British might more reasonably expect an attack in other words a decoy or distraction On the evening of 3 July these formations moved out The columns each numbering 300 men were led by Arthur Dillon Edouard Dillon and the comte de Noailles Arthur Dillon s column was accompanied by an advance guard of 180 under the comte de Durat and the demonstration force numbered just 200 At 4 00 am on the 4th the demonstration force opened fire while the other three columns charged up Hospital Hill The British defenders panicked and most fled down the hill to the apparent safety of Fort George 17 The British in their haste to leave the premises neglected to spike some of the cannons driving a metal spike into the touchhole rendering the cannon inoperative They also abandoned many valuables that had been brought up on the heights for safekeeping The French used the captured cannons to fire upon Fort George Realizing the situation was hopeless Macartney raised the white flag 18 The French took about 700 prisoners and claimed casualties of 36 killed and 71 wounded British reports however claimed the French casualties numbered closer to 300 19 The French also claimed as prizes 200 merchant ships anchored in the harbour 20 Admiral d Estaing rejected Macartney s proposed terms of capitulations countering with a list of articles that he had drafted Macartney found d Estaing s proposed articles not merely unprecedented and humiliating but so ensnaring and uncertain in their nature extent and aim that they might at any time supply a pretext for taking away the lives together with the fortunes of the capitulants 21 His council was unanimous in rejecting the proposed capitulation and the British chose to surrender unconditionally instead As a consequence d Estaing permitted his troops to pillage St George s 22 Among the items taken or destroyed were most of Macartney s silver and plate much of his clothing and his personal papers The latter came as a particularly harsh blow to the governor for copies of those papers sent to St Lucia with his wife for safeguarding were destroyed by fire 23 When d Estaing invited Macartney to dine with him the governor apologised for his garb noting that the coat he was wearing was the only one left him Macartney and other leading Grenadians were also refused parole and were sent to France as prisoners of war 22 Aftermath editMain article Battle of Grenada nbsp French political cartoon acclaiming d Estaing for his successes Admiral Byron had been alerted to the capture of Saint Vincent on 1 July and was en route with a force to retake it when he learned of the attack on Grenada He immediately sailed there arriving on the morning of 6 July D Estaing alerted to Byron s intentions on the 5th embarked most of the troops and weighed anchor at 4 00 am on the 6th The fleets battled off Grenada with d Estaing prevailing over Byron s disorganised attack 24 There were no further major actions in the West Indies before d Estaing sailed north and led an unsuccessful siege of British held Savannah Georgia in September 25 D Estaing s successes in capturing Grenada and defeating Byron made him immensely popular in France 26 Playwright and actor Pierre Germain Parisau wrote Veni Vidi Vici ou La Prise de Grenade containing a re enactment of the capture D Estaing did not see the popular work but John Paul Jones attended a performance during a visit to Paris 27 During their occupation the French began construction of a series of fortifications on Richmond Hill Designed to defend against an attack like theirs its cannons pointed to the landward rather than seaward side These defences were completed by the British after 1783 19 Both Grenada and Saint Vincent remained in French hands until the end of the war when they were returned to Britain under the terms of the 1783 Treaty of Paris 28 The rule of the comte de Durat who was appointed governor by d Estaing was reported by British residents to be harsh and oppressive 29 After the British resumed control they cracked down on the predominantly Roman Catholic French speaking population leading to discontent and an exodus of French Grenadians to Trinidad 30 These religious and cultural divisions in Grenadian society contributed to the rise of local resistance which culminated in the nearly successful Fedon Rebellion in 1795 96 31 Notes edit a b Colomb p 390 a b Barrow and Macartney p 56 Barrow and Macartney p 59 Marley p 321 Mahan pp 429 431 Mahan p 429 Mahan pp 429 432 Colomb p 388 Colomb pp 388 389 Colomb p 389 Colomb pp 389 390 O Shaughnessy p 60 Barrow and Macartney pp 55 56 a b A Brief Historical Sketch p 827 Colman Maison p 263 Colman Maison p 264 a b Brizan p 44 Brizan p 45 a b Brizan p 46 Mahan p 434 Robbins pp 109 110 a b Robbins p 110 Barrow and Macartney pp 62 408 Colomb p 391 Mahan pp 440 443 Doniol p 421 Campardon p 210 Black p 59 Brizan p 48 Brizan p 49 Brizan pp 50 52References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Capture of Grenada 1779 A Brief Historical Sketch of the Irish Infantry Regiment of Dillon and the Irish Stuart Regiments in the Service of France 1690 1791 Journal of the Royal United Service Institution 49 July December 1905 Barrow John Macartney George 1807 1807 The Public Life of the Earl of Macartney Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 62 ISBN 978 1 108 02619 2 OCLC 754156804 Black Jeremy 2006 A Military History of Britain From 1775 to the Present Westport CT Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 275 99039 8 OCLC 70483433 Brizan George 1984 Grenada Island of Conflict London Zed Books ISBN 978 0 86232 230 4 OCLC 11793093 Campardon Emile 1877 Les Spectacles de la Foire Volume 2 in French Geneva Berger Levrault et Cie OCLC 493703871 Chartrand Rene 1992 The French Army in the American War of Independence London Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 167 0 OCLC 635271744 Colman Maison Jean Joseph Robert 1910 L Amiral d Estaing 1729 1794 in French Paris Calmann Levy OCLC 2677381 Colomb Philip 1895 Naval Warfare its Ruling Principles and Practice Historically Treated London W H Allen p 386 OCLC 2863262 Doniol Auguste 1902 Histoire du XVIe Arrondissement de Paris in French Paris Hachette p 421 OCLC 123166366 Mahan Alfred Thayer 1898 Major Operations of the Royal Navy 1762 1783 Being Chapter XXXI in The Royal Navy A History Boston Little Brown OCLC 46778589 Marley David 2008 Wars of the Americas a Chronology of Armed Conflict in the Western Hemisphere 1492 to the Present Volume 1 Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 100 8 OCLC 166373121 O Shaughnessy Andrew Jackson 2000 An Empire Divided the American Revolution and the British Caribbean Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 3558 6 OCLC 185896684 Robbins Helen Henrietta Macartney 1908 Our First Ambassador to China An Account of the Life of George Earl of Macartney London J Murray p 109 OCLC 3430917 12 03 N 61 45 W 12 05 N 61 75 W 12 05 61 75 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capture of Grenada 1779 amp oldid 1216471435, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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