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Pierre François Étienne Bouvet de Maisonneuve

Pierre-François-Henri-Étienne Bouvet de Maisonneuve[1] (28 December 1775, in Saint-Benoît, Réunion[2][note 1] – 18 June 1860, in Saint-Servan[3][4]) was a French Navy officer and privateer.

Pierre François Étienne Bouvet de Maisonneuve
Born28 December 1775
Saint-Benoît, Réunion
Died18 June 1860(1860-06-18) (aged 84)
Saint-Servan
Allegiance France
Service/branchFrench navy
RankCaptain
Battles/warsFrench Revolutionary Wars

Napoleonic Wars

Born to a Navy captain, Bouvet started sailing at the age of 11, He served under his father on various ships between France and the Indies. He was taken prisoner by the British during their occupation of Toulon.

Released, Bouvet served on the frigate Amazone in Linois's squadron, which raided commerce in the Indies. After Amazone was wrecked at Cape of Good Hope, he attempted to return to Mauritius and inform the governor, but was captured en route by a British frigate.

Released on parole, Bouvet designed a patamar or felucca of Indian pattern that he named Entreprenant. After he was exchanged, he cruised off the Malabar Coast undetected amongst indigenous shipping. Appointed to a 16-gun brig also named Entreprenant, Bouvet sailed to Manila and rescued the crew of Mouche n° 6 from detention.

Embarked in Duperré's squadron, Bouvet was given command of the prize Minerve, on which he took part in a battle against three large East Indiamen, of which the squadron captured two. On their return to Mauritius, the squadron met four British frigates, which it defeated in the Battle of Grand Port. Duperré, having been wounded, Bouvet commanded the French forces for the second half of the battle.

Returned to France after the fall of Mauritius, Bouvet was given command of a two-frigate squadron, with his flag on Aréthuse. His other frigate was wrecked in a storm, and soon after, Aréthuse battled HMS Amelia in a bloody action that resulted in a stalemate. Bouvet never fought again, and devoted his late life to politics and writing.

Career edit

Early life edit

Born to Pierre-Servais-René Bouvet, Pierre Bouvet enlisted in the French Navy as a volunteer at the age of 11, on 13 December 1786,[5] and enlisted on the fluye Nécessaire,[5] commanded by his father and bound for the Indies.[6] He returned to France in May 1789.[5] On 18 March 1791, he enlisted as a helmsman on the brig Goéland, returning in June.[5][7] He then transferred on the 74-gun Tourville for a patrol the same month in June

In 1792, he became a midshipman,[note 2] and served on the brand-new frigate Aréthuse in Toulon,[8] under his father who had recently been promoted to captain.[7] On Aréthuse, Bouvet took part in Truguet's raid on Sardinia[8] from February to March 1793,[7] before transferring on the 80-gun Languedoc on 3 April 1793.[8]

On 1 July 1793, Bouvet was promoted to Ensign, and served on the 120-gun Commerce de Marseille.[8] On 25 August, Royalist parties surrendered the harbour and arsenal of Toulon to the British and Spanish, along with all the ships anchored there. Bouvet was taken prisoner with his father,[6] and expelled to Brest in September the Patriote, whose armament had been removed; Patriote reached Brest on 16 October.[8] There, he was arrested on the spot by agents of the French Convention, transferred to Paris,[7] and detained until 3 March 1795.[6][8][note 3]

Service in the English Channel edit

In June 1795, Bouvet was appointed to the frigate Rassurante, on which he roamed the English Channel until September.[8] In November, he transferred on the corvette Foudroyante in Brest, on which he served until December. Then, he embarked on the frigate Bravoure, patrolling the English Channel until July 1796.[8]

At the Thermidorian Reaction, the Convention reestablished the practice of Letters of marque and privateer commerce raiding.[7] Bouvet obtained a release from Navy duty to enlist on a privateer, the Triton.[8] She departed on 10 November 1797 and preyed on British merchantmen until 17 February 1798, when she was captured by the frigate HMS Melpomene.[8] Bouvet was taken prisoner.

Released on 20 November 1798, Bouvet served in Brest harbour, before taking command of the 14-gun[9] privater Furet on 16 December 1799. On the 26th at 10:15, Furet was intercepted by HMS Viper[10] under Lieutenant John Pengelly,[11] After a running chase of over two hours, Viper caught on Furet and delivered two broadsides that compelled her to strike her colours.[9] Furet had four killed and six wounded,[9][note 4] including Bouvet, who suffered an injury and was again taken prisoner.[8]

Released from captivity on 9 February 1800,[note 5] Bouvet was appointed to the inspection of signals on the coasts near Brest; he held this position until 14 March 1801, when he was appointed to the frigate Consolante.[8] He left Consolante in November 1801, and was appointed to Romaine in February 1802.[8] In March, he transferred to the 74-gun Redoutable.[8]

On 1 March,[note 6] Redoutable departed for Guadeloupe,[8] attached to a division under Rear-Admiral Bouvet de Précourt.[12] During the journey, on 24 April, Bouvet was promoted to Lieutenant.[6][8] He left Redoutable on 20 August 1802.[8]

Service on Amazone in Linois's squadron edit

On 17 February 1803,[8] Bouvet was appointed to the frigate Atalante,[6] under Captain Gaudin-Beauchêne,[8][12] in the division of Rear-Admiral Linois sent to recover the French colonies of the Indies according to the terms of the Treaty of Amiens, under the overall command of General Decaen.[6] The division, comprising four frigates and two fluyts,[12] departed Brest on 6 March 1803, and arrived at Mauritius on 21 August.[8] Upon arrival, it was informed of the outbreak of the War of the Third Coalition.[6]

In the course of October, the division sailed to Batavia[6] and Atalante detached to ferry the new commercial attaché,[12] Jean-Baptiste Cavaignac, to Muscat, in Oman; she rejoined the division after the Battle of Pulo Aura.[12] After a port call in Batavia. Belle-Poule and Atalante detached and conducted independent commerce raiding cruises, while Linois returned to Mauritius;[12] They notably captured the East Indiamen Athia, Princess Royal and Heroism.[8]

On his return to Mauritius, Bouvet married his cousin Henriette Périer d'Hauterive on 1 June 1804, before departing on the 20th.[13] With Linois' division, he cruised in the Gulf of Bengal, took part in the Battle of Vizagapatam on 15 September 1804,[8] and returned to Mauritius in October with several prizes.[13] Bouvet took part in another commerce raiding expedition between December 1804 and April 1805.[13]

Governor Decaen having sent Linois back to France, the division departed in May 1805;[13] while attempting to rejoining it, on 3 November 1805, Atalante was washed ashore by a gust of wind and wrecked near the Cape of Good Hope.[14] Captain Gaudin-Beauchêne sent Bouvet to Mauritius with despatches for governor Decaen,[8] and he embarked on the American brig Charles,[13] but was taken prisoner by a British cruiser,[6] HMS Pitt, and taken to Mumbai.[8] Bouvent was released on parole on 15 September 1806,[note 7] and sailed to La Réunion to visit his family.[15]

Service on Entreprenant and the rescue of Mouche n° 6 edit

At Mauritius, Bouvet requested the construction of a patamar to which Decaen agreed.[8] Formally exchanged in spring 1807,[6][8] he named the ship Entreprenant on 30 November 1807, and on 7 December, he departed with a 40-man crew to cruise off the Western coast of India.[8] With her unassuming indigenous appearance, Entreprenant sailed undetected amongst Indian patamars off the Malabar Coast; on 8 February,[8] she captured the British mercantile brig Marguerite after a 3-hour battle.[8] Bouvet then abandoned Entreprenant to his captives,[16] and returned to Mauritius on his prize, which she renamed Entreprenant.[8]

After this reconnaissance, Bouvet had a second Entreprenant constructed at Mauritius.[17] She was a "brig gourable",[18][note 8] of 16 guns,[18] or 12 guns.[15]

Bouvet departed for Ormuz on the new Entreprenant on 4 October 1808 to ferry despatches for General Gardane, ambassador in Theran. He then cruised off Malabar coast, where he captured nineteen prizes.[15] On 30 November 1808, he battled the East indiamen Benares and the schooner Wasp, and made a number of other prizes.[17] During a port call at the Maldives in February 1809, Bouvet had to repress a mutiny;[15] he returned to Mauritius, on 16 March 1809,[17] where the mutineers were shot.[15]

On 24 May 1809, Decaen promoted him to acting Commander[6][17] He was then tasked with a mission to Manila to investigate the fate of Mouche n° 6, under Lieutenant Ducrest de Villeneuve,[20][21] disappeared there a few months before.[8] On 28 August,[8] Entreprenant reached Manila and learned that Borneo had sided for the Allies and interned the crew of Mouche n° 6. Furthermore, the 14-gun HMS Antelope was anchored at Cavite. Anchoring his ship off shore under a flag of truce, Bouvet sent a delegation to demand the release of the crew of Mouche n° 6, with orders to return to Entreprenant as soon as the message was delivered. However, the delegation had still not returned the next morning.[22]

In order to obtain a clear casus belli, Bouvet anchored his ship at the entrance of Manila Bay, but stayed ready to set sail. Soon, Antelope and shore batteries opened up on Entreprenant, which promptly retreated. Bouvet sailed to Corregidor Island and endeavored to blockade all shipping bound for Manila. After collecting enough prisoners in this way, on 3 September, he released them on parole under promise not to navigate at sea before Mouche n° 6 would be released. Bouvet had them convey his ultimatum that if his conditions were not met the next day, he would attack the coasts of the island. The French crew detained in Manila was promptly released and returned to Entreprenant.[22]

On her return journey, Entreprenant was chased by HMS Modeste, which she evaded, and anchored at Con Dao to repair her rigging.[23] On 20 October, sailing through Malacca Strait, Entreprenant encountered a British convoy and detected an isolated sail, which she intercepted by 23:00. The ship was the 18-gun Ovidor, of the Dutch East India Company.[8] She surrendered after the first broadside and was brought to Isle de France with a valuable cargo of Chinese goods, and 200,000 Piastres. Ovidor, a 550-tonne ship built in Portugal, was brought into French service as the fluyt Loire.[24]

Service on Minerve, Duperré's squadron, and the Battle of Grand Port edit

Bouvet relinquished command of Entreprenant in late January 1810,[17] was formally promoted to Commander on 1 February,[17] and appointed to the frigate Minerve,[6] after her capture on 22 November.[25] On Minerve, he took part in the action of 3 July 1810, where he single-handedly engaged the East Indiamen Ceylon, Windham and Astell for one hour before the rest of Duperré's squadron rejoined him.[17][26] The squadron then returned to Mauritius where it encountered four British frigates, leading to the Battle of Grand Port, from 20 to 27 August 1810.

 
Combat de Grand Port by Pierre-Julien Gilbert. Bouvet commanded the French forces (on the right of the painting) during the second half of the battle.

At the Battle of Grand Port, Bouvet replaced Duperré as chief of the French squadron on Bellone when he was wounded and carried below deck.[6] After the battle, on 3 September,[17] Bouvet was promoted to acting Captain[6] and appointed to the frigate Iphigénie,[17] formerly HMS Iphigenia, one of the prizes surrendered during Battle of Grand Port.

Service on Iphigénie and the Fall of Mauritius edit

Since the Invasion of Île Bonaparte and consequent fall of La Réunion in early 9 July 1810, the British had planned the complete their conquest of the French possessions in the Indian Ocean by also invading Mauritius. In September, Iphigénie scrambled from Port-Nord-Ouest, along with Lemarant's Astrée, to intercept a British troop convoy.[17] While in transit, they met HMS Africaine off Saint Denis;[27] in the subsequent Action of 13 September 1810, Astrée and Iphigénie subdued Africaine, but had to abandon her when the rest of Rowley's frigate division arrived on the scene.[28] Astrée and Iphigénie sailed to Mauritius for resupply and repair, captured the British East India Company's Bombay Marine's 14-gun sloop-of-war Aurora en route, and arrived at Port-Nord-Ouest on 22 September.[28]

The Invasion of Isle de France eventually occurred on 29 November 1810, and Decaen surrendered to the British on 2 December.[28] Under the terms of the capitulation, the French garrison was repatriated[29] and on 11 April 1811, Bouvet embarked on the cartel Adèle, bound for France where he arrived on 14 August, landing in Morlaix.[28]

Service on Aréthuse and battle with HMS Amelia edit

On 20 December 1810, Bouvet was formally promoted to captain, and was appointed Knight of the Legion of Honour.[4] He planned an expedition to Batavia to carry out another campaign in the Indian Ocean, but his plans were rendered moot by the British Invasion of Java.[30] After one year, on 6 December 1811, he was appointed to command the frigate Clorinde,[31] on which he embarked on 5 January 1812.[28] He relinquished this command on 7 October to transfer to the frigate Aréthuse[32] and lead a frigate squadron also comprising Rubis, under Commander Louis-François Ollivier.[28][33]

On 25 November 1812, Bouvet's division departed from Nantes, sailed to Cape Verde and Guinea, and anchored at Îles de Los;[28] on its way, on 27 January, it destroyed HMS Daring[33] and released her crew on parole. In the night of 4 February, a violent storm struck the island;[28] Rubis broke her cables and was thrown aground on the shore of Tamara;[33] deeming her impossible to refloat and recover, her crew scuttled her by fire the next day.[28] Aréthuse suffered less, but still lost her rudder and required repairs.[28]

 
HMS Amelia in action with the French Frigate Aréthuse, 1813, by John Christian Schetky, 1852

On 7 February 1813, the frigate HMS Amelia, warned by the crew of Daring, arrived on the scene. A furious four-hour engagement ensued before the frigates parted, both with heavy casualties.[3][28] Without delay, Amelia returned to England and Aréthuse to France, carrying the crew of Rubis. She arrived in Saint-Malo on 19 April 1813, having captured ten prizes during her campaign.[28]

At Bouvet's return, Navy Minister Decrès criticised him for the loss of Rubis and near-loss of Aréthuse in the storm of February, while praising his conduct in the action of 7 February 1813 against Amelia[28] and requesting that a painting be commissioned to commemorate the event.[34] Probably because of these mixed reviews, Bouvet was appointed Officer of the Legion of Honour, on 2 July, but was neither promoted to Rear-Admiral, nor made a Baron of the Empire, as had been requested in his favour.[4]

Later life edit

 

On 1 October 1813, Bouvet was relieved from duty due to ill health and replaced by Captain Le Bozec,[33] and transferred the harbour service in Brest.[4] It was not until after the Bourbon Restoration, on 21 June 1814, that he sailed again, at the command of the frigate Flore,[4] and was sent for a mission in Antwerp[3] to escort eleven transport ships to Brest,[34] and to Senegal to ferry ammunitions.[35] The new regime appointed him Knight of the Order of Saint Louis on 5 July 1814.[4]

Bouvet relinquished command of Flore on 25 August 1815 and was given a leave of absence until 31 December, after which he was given no duty[4] On 1 November 1817, he was finally ordered to Brest for harbour service,[4] but started requesting his retirement to care for his ailing wife, who was almost blind.[34] Promoted to Captain 1st class on 16 February 1820 and promoted Commander of the Legion of Honour on 5 July,[4] he published his Observations sur la Marine in 1821;[34] the year after, he finally obtained permission to retire from the Navy, and was granted the honorific rank of Rear-Admiral,[3] effective on 30 October 1822.[4]

On 30 July 1830, Bouvet's wife died, at the age of 45.[34] After the July Revolution in 1830, Bouvet turned to politics and was elected on 28 October as Deputy for Ille-et-Vilaine at the Chamber of Deputies of the July Monarchy. On 26 April 1831, he was promoted Grand Officier of the Legion of Honour.[4] Bouvet did not seek reelection and relinquished his office after the general elections of 5 July 1831.[4] However, he continued to serve as conseiller général for Ille-et-Vilaine.[34]

In 1833, Bouvet resigned as a member of the Council for Colonies for La Réunion,[4] and in June, he married Marie-Thérèse Le Muey in Granville.[34] He wrote a bitter account of his campaign,[3] Précis des campagnes du capitaine de vaisseau Pierre Bouvet, which he published in 1840.[36]

In 1852, Napoléon III reinstated Bouvet as titulary Rear-Admiral in the reserve corps;[3] he also offered him a senatorship in 1858, but Bouvet declined over his age.[37]

Works edit

  • Bouvet, Pierre (1821). Observations sur la Marine (in French). Paris: J.-G. Dentu.
  • Bouvet, Pierre (1840). Précis des campagnes du capitaine de vaisseau Pierre Bouvet (in French). Paris: F. Didot.

Honours edit

Notes, citations, and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Quintin (p.83) says 28 November 1775
  2. ^ "aspirant entretenu" (Levot, p.58; Quintin p.83)
  3. ^ Granier (p.341) says on 1 January 1795.
  4. ^ James (vol.2 p.373) states that the captain of Furet was killed, contradicting Quintin (p.84) who says that Bouvet was in command. Likewise, James names the captain of Furet as "Louis Bouvet".
  5. ^ Granier (p.342) states that Bouvet was not released until the Treaty of Amiens in 1802
  6. ^ Granier (p.342) says 5 March.
  7. ^ Granier (p.345) says in May 1806.
  8. ^ A gourable (or grab (ship)) was an Indian-Ocean design, having a massive, high stern and a pointed, low bow, the widest point being at the beam, and being rigged similarly to a ketch.[19]

Citations edit

  1. ^ or "Bouvet de la Maisonneuve", as inscribed on his tomb at Saint-Servan.
  2. ^ Levot, p.57
  3. ^ a b c d e f Levot, p.59
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Quintin, p.87
  5. ^ a b c d Quintin, p.83
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Levot, p.58
  7. ^ a b c d e Granier, p.341
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Quintin, p.84
  9. ^ a b c Naval History, vol.2 p.373
  10. ^ HMS Viper, Naval Database
  11. ^ Naval History, vol.2 p.372
  12. ^ a b c d e f Granier, p.342
  13. ^ a b c d e Granier, p.343
  14. ^ Roche, p.55
  15. ^ a b c d e Granier, p.345
  16. ^ Fonds Marine, p.377.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Quintin, p.85
  18. ^ a b Roche, p.176
  19. ^ Jal (1848), p.795).
  20. ^ Ducrest de Villeneuve, Journal du voyage de "la Mouche n°6", sous le commandement du lieutenant de vaisseau Ducrest de Villeneuve, expédiée pour l'Ile de France et Manille, en 1808.
  21. ^ Fonds Marine, p. 377
  22. ^ a b Troude, p. 72
  23. ^ Granier, p.346
  24. ^ Troude, op. cit., p. 73
  25. ^ Troude, p.87
  26. ^ James, p. 264
  27. ^ Granier, p.353
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Quitin, p.86
  29. ^ Troude, p.115
  30. ^ Granier, p.354
  31. ^ Fonds Marine, vol.2, p.450
  32. ^ Fonds Marine, vol.2, p.467
  33. ^ a b c d Fonds Marine, p.476
  34. ^ a b c d e f g Granier, p.355
  35. ^ Fonds Marine, vol.2, p.497
  36. ^ Bouvet, Précis des campagnes..."
  37. ^ a b Granier, p.356

References edit

  • Jal, August (1848). Glossaire nautique:répertoire polyglotte de termes de marine anciens et modernes (in French). Firmin-Didot frères.
  • Granier, Hubert (1998). Histoire des Marins français 1789–1815. illustrations by Alain Coz. Marines éditions. ISBN 2-909675-41-6.
  • Levot, Prosper (1866). Les gloires maritimes de la France: notices biographiques sur les plus célèbres marins (in French). Bertrand.
  • Quintin, Danielle; Quintin, Bernard (2003). Dictionnaire des capitaines de Vaisseau de Napoléon (in French). S.P.M. ISBN 2-901952-42-9.
  • Troude, Onésime-Joachim (1867). Batailles navales de la France (in French). Vol. 3. Challamel ainé.
  • Troude, Onésime-Joachim (1867). Batailles navales de la France (in French). Vol. 4. Challamel ainé.
  • Roche, Jean-Michel (2005). Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours. Vol. 1. Group Retozel-Maury Millau. ISBN 978-2-9525917-0-6. OCLC 165892922.
  • Fonds Marine. Campagnes (opérations ; divisions et stations navales ; missions diverses). Inventaire de la sous-série Marine BB4. Tome deuxième : BB4 1 à 482 (1790–1826)

pierre, françois, Étienne, bouvet, maisonneuve, pierre, françois, henri, Étienne, bouvet, maisonneuve, december, 1775, saint, benoît, réunion, note, june, 1860, saint, servan, french, navy, officer, privateer, born28, december, 1775saint, benoît, réuniondied18. Pierre Francois Henri Etienne Bouvet de Maisonneuve 1 28 December 1775 in Saint Benoit Reunion 2 note 1 18 June 1860 in Saint Servan 3 4 was a French Navy officer and privateer Pierre Francois Etienne Bouvet de MaisonneuveBorn28 December 1775Saint Benoit ReunionDied18 June 1860 1860 06 18 aged 84 Saint ServanAllegianceFranceService wbr branchFrench navyRankCaptainBattles warsFrench Revolutionary WarsBattle of VizagapatamNapoleonic Wars Action of 3 July 1810 Battle of Grand Port Action of 13 September 1810 Action of 7 February 1813Born to a Navy captain Bouvet started sailing at the age of 11 He served under his father on various ships between France and the Indies He was taken prisoner by the British during their occupation of Toulon Released Bouvet served on the frigate Amazone in Linois s squadron which raided commerce in the Indies After Amazone was wrecked at Cape of Good Hope he attempted to return to Mauritius and inform the governor but was captured en route by a British frigate Released on parole Bouvet designed a patamar or felucca of Indian pattern that he named Entreprenant After he was exchanged he cruised off the Malabar Coast undetected amongst indigenous shipping Appointed to a 16 gun brig also named Entreprenant Bouvet sailed to Manila and rescued the crew of Mouche n 6 from detention Embarked in Duperre s squadron Bouvet was given command of the prize Minerve on which he took part in a battle against three large East Indiamen of which the squadron captured two On their return to Mauritius the squadron met four British frigates which it defeated in the Battle of Grand Port Duperre having been wounded Bouvet commanded the French forces for the second half of the battle Returned to France after the fall of Mauritius Bouvet was given command of a two frigate squadron with his flag on Arethuse His other frigate was wrecked in a storm and soon after Arethuse battled HMS Amelia in a bloody action that resulted in a stalemate Bouvet never fought again and devoted his late life to politics and writing Contents 1 Career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Service in the English Channel 1 3 Service on Amazone in Linois s squadron 1 4 Service on Entreprenant and the rescue of Mouche n 6 1 5 Service on Minerve Duperre s squadron and the Battle of Grand Port 1 6 Service on Iphigenie and the Fall of Mauritius 1 7 Service on Arethuse and battle with HMS Amelia 1 8 Later life 2 Works 3 Honours 4 Notes citations and references 4 1 Notes 4 2 Citations 4 3 ReferencesCareer editEarly life edit Born to Pierre Servais Rene Bouvet Pierre Bouvet enlisted in the French Navy as a volunteer at the age of 11 on 13 December 1786 5 and enlisted on the fluye Necessaire 5 commanded by his father and bound for the Indies 6 He returned to France in May 1789 5 On 18 March 1791 he enlisted as a helmsman on the brig Goeland returning in June 5 7 He then transferred on the 74 gun Tourville for a patrol the same month in JuneIn 1792 he became a midshipman note 2 and served on the brand new frigate Arethuse in Toulon 8 under his father who had recently been promoted to captain 7 On Arethuse Bouvet took part in Truguet s raid on Sardinia 8 from February to March 1793 7 before transferring on the 80 gun Languedoc on 3 April 1793 8 On 1 July 1793 Bouvet was promoted to Ensign and served on the 120 gun Commerce de Marseille 8 On 25 August Royalist parties surrendered the harbour and arsenal of Toulon to the British and Spanish along with all the ships anchored there Bouvet was taken prisoner with his father 6 and expelled to Brest in September the Patriote whose armament had been removed Patriote reached Brest on 16 October 8 There he was arrested on the spot by agents of the French Convention transferred to Paris 7 and detained until 3 March 1795 6 8 note 3 Service in the English Channel edit In June 1795 Bouvet was appointed to the frigate Rassurante on which he roamed the English Channel until September 8 In November he transferred on the corvette Foudroyante in Brest on which he served until December Then he embarked on the frigate Bravoure patrolling the English Channel until July 1796 8 At the Thermidorian Reaction the Convention reestablished the practice of Letters of marque and privateer commerce raiding 7 Bouvet obtained a release from Navy duty to enlist on a privateer the Triton 8 She departed on 10 November 1797 and preyed on British merchantmen until 17 February 1798 when she was captured by the frigate HMS Melpomene 8 Bouvet was taken prisoner Released on 20 November 1798 Bouvet served in Brest harbour before taking command of the 14 gun 9 privater Furet on 16 December 1799 On the 26th at 10 15 Furet was intercepted by HMS Viper 10 under Lieutenant John Pengelly 11 After a running chase of over two hours Viper caught on Furet and delivered two broadsides that compelled her to strike her colours 9 Furet had four killed and six wounded 9 note 4 including Bouvet who suffered an injury and was again taken prisoner 8 Released from captivity on 9 February 1800 note 5 Bouvet was appointed to the inspection of signals on the coasts near Brest he held this position until 14 March 1801 when he was appointed to the frigate Consolante 8 He left Consolante in November 1801 and was appointed to Romaine in February 1802 8 In March he transferred to the 74 gun Redoutable 8 On 1 March note 6 Redoutable departed for Guadeloupe 8 attached to a division under Rear Admiral Bouvet de Precourt 12 During the journey on 24 April Bouvet was promoted to Lieutenant 6 8 He left Redoutable on 20 August 1802 8 Service on Amazone in Linois s squadron edit On 17 February 1803 8 Bouvet was appointed to the frigate Atalante 6 under Captain Gaudin Beauchene 8 12 in the division of Rear Admiral Linois sent to recover the French colonies of the Indies according to the terms of the Treaty of Amiens under the overall command of General Decaen 6 The division comprising four frigates and two fluyts 12 departed Brest on 6 March 1803 and arrived at Mauritius on 21 August 8 Upon arrival it was informed of the outbreak of the War of the Third Coalition 6 In the course of October the division sailed to Batavia 6 and Atalante detached to ferry the new commercial attache 12 Jean Baptiste Cavaignac to Muscat in Oman she rejoined the division after the Battle of Pulo Aura 12 After a port call in Batavia Belle Poule and Atalante detached and conducted independent commerce raiding cruises while Linois returned to Mauritius 12 They notably captured the East Indiamen Athia Princess Royal and Heroism 8 On his return to Mauritius Bouvet married his cousin Henriette Perier d Hauterive on 1 June 1804 before departing on the 20th 13 With Linois division he cruised in the Gulf of Bengal took part in the Battle of Vizagapatam on 15 September 1804 8 and returned to Mauritius in October with several prizes 13 Bouvet took part in another commerce raiding expedition between December 1804 and April 1805 13 Governor Decaen having sent Linois back to France the division departed in May 1805 13 while attempting to rejoining it on 3 November 1805 Atalante was washed ashore by a gust of wind and wrecked near the Cape of Good Hope 14 Captain Gaudin Beauchene sent Bouvet to Mauritius with despatches for governor Decaen 8 and he embarked on the American brig Charles 13 but was taken prisoner by a British cruiser 6 HMS Pitt and taken to Mumbai 8 Bouvent was released on parole on 15 September 1806 note 7 and sailed to La Reunion to visit his family 15 Service on Entreprenant and the rescue of Mouche n 6 edit At Mauritius Bouvet requested the construction of a patamar to which Decaen agreed 8 Formally exchanged in spring 1807 6 8 he named the ship Entreprenant on 30 November 1807 and on 7 December he departed with a 40 man crew to cruise off the Western coast of India 8 With her unassuming indigenous appearance Entreprenant sailed undetected amongst Indian patamars off the Malabar Coast on 8 February 8 she captured the British mercantile brig Marguerite after a 3 hour battle 8 Bouvet then abandoned Entreprenant to his captives 16 and returned to Mauritius on his prize which she renamed Entreprenant 8 After this reconnaissance Bouvet had a second Entreprenant constructed at Mauritius 17 She was a brig gourable 18 note 8 of 16 guns 18 or 12 guns 15 Bouvet departed for Ormuz on the new Entreprenant on 4 October 1808 to ferry despatches for General Gardane ambassador in Theran He then cruised off Malabar coast where he captured nineteen prizes 15 On 30 November 1808 he battled the East indiamen Benares and the schooner Wasp and made a number of other prizes 17 During a port call at the Maldives in February 1809 Bouvet had to repress a mutiny 15 he returned to Mauritius on 16 March 1809 17 where the mutineers were shot 15 On 24 May 1809 Decaen promoted him to acting Commander 6 17 He was then tasked with a mission to Manila to investigate the fate of Mouche n 6 under Lieutenant Ducrest de Villeneuve 20 21 disappeared there a few months before 8 On 28 August 8 Entreprenant reached Manila and learned that Borneo had sided for the Allies and interned the crew of Mouche n 6 Furthermore the 14 gun HMS Antelope was anchored at Cavite Anchoring his ship off shore under a flag of truce Bouvet sent a delegation to demand the release of the crew of Mouche n 6 with orders to return to Entreprenant as soon as the message was delivered However the delegation had still not returned the next morning 22 In order to obtain a clear casus belli Bouvet anchored his ship at the entrance of Manila Bay but stayed ready to set sail Soon Antelope and shore batteries opened up on Entreprenant which promptly retreated Bouvet sailed to Corregidor Island and endeavored to blockade all shipping bound for Manila After collecting enough prisoners in this way on 3 September he released them on parole under promise not to navigate at sea before Mouche n 6 would be released Bouvet had them convey his ultimatum that if his conditions were not met the next day he would attack the coasts of the island The French crew detained in Manila was promptly released and returned to Entreprenant 22 On her return journey Entreprenant was chased by HMS Modeste which she evaded and anchored at Con Dao to repair her rigging 23 On 20 October sailing through Malacca Strait Entreprenant encountered a British convoy and detected an isolated sail which she intercepted by 23 00 The ship was the 18 gun Ovidor of the Dutch East India Company 8 She surrendered after the first broadside and was brought to Isle de France with a valuable cargo of Chinese goods and 200 000 Piastres Ovidor a 550 tonne ship built in Portugal was brought into French service as the fluyt Loire 24 Service on Minerve Duperre s squadron and the Battle of Grand Port edit Bouvet relinquished command of Entreprenant in late January 1810 17 was formally promoted to Commander on 1 February 17 and appointed to the frigate Minerve 6 after her capture on 22 November 25 On Minerve he took part in the action of 3 July 1810 where he single handedly engaged the East Indiamen Ceylon Windham and Astell for one hour before the rest of Duperre s squadron rejoined him 17 26 The squadron then returned to Mauritius where it encountered four British frigates leading to the Battle of Grand Port from 20 to 27 August 1810 Main article Battle of Grand Port nbsp Combat de Grand Port by Pierre Julien Gilbert Bouvet commanded the French forces on the right of the painting during the second half of the battle At the Battle of Grand Port Bouvet replaced Duperre as chief of the French squadron on Bellone when he was wounded and carried below deck 6 After the battle on 3 September 17 Bouvet was promoted to acting Captain 6 and appointed to the frigate Iphigenie 17 formerly HMS Iphigenia one of the prizes surrendered during Battle of Grand Port Service on Iphigenie and the Fall of Mauritius edit Main article Invasion of Isle de France Since the Invasion of Ile Bonaparte and consequent fall of La Reunion in early 9 July 1810 the British had planned the complete their conquest of the French possessions in the Indian Ocean by also invading Mauritius In September Iphigenie scrambled from Port Nord Ouest along with Lemarant s Astree to intercept a British troop convoy 17 While in transit they met HMS Africaine off Saint Denis 27 in the subsequent Action of 13 September 1810 Astree and Iphigenie subdued Africaine but had to abandon her when the rest of Rowley s frigate division arrived on the scene 28 Astree and Iphigenie sailed to Mauritius for resupply and repair captured the British East India Company s Bombay Marine s 14 gun sloop of war Aurora en route and arrived at Port Nord Ouest on 22 September 28 The Invasion of Isle de France eventually occurred on 29 November 1810 and Decaen surrendered to the British on 2 December 28 Under the terms of the capitulation the French garrison was repatriated 29 and on 11 April 1811 Bouvet embarked on the cartel Adele bound for France where he arrived on 14 August landing in Morlaix 28 Service on Arethuse and battle with HMS Amelia edit On 20 December 1810 Bouvet was formally promoted to captain and was appointed Knight of the Legion of Honour 4 He planned an expedition to Batavia to carry out another campaign in the Indian Ocean but his plans were rendered moot by the British Invasion of Java 30 After one year on 6 December 1811 he was appointed to command the frigate Clorinde 31 on which he embarked on 5 January 1812 28 He relinquished this command on 7 October to transfer to the frigate Arethuse 32 and lead a frigate squadron also comprising Rubis under Commander Louis Francois Ollivier 28 33 On 25 November 1812 Bouvet s division departed from Nantes sailed to Cape Verde and Guinea and anchored at Iles de Los 28 on its way on 27 January it destroyed HMS Daring 33 and released her crew on parole In the night of 4 February a violent storm struck the island 28 Rubis broke her cables and was thrown aground on the shore of Tamara 33 deeming her impossible to refloat and recover her crew scuttled her by fire the next day 28 Arethuse suffered less but still lost her rudder and required repairs 28 Main article Action of 7 February 1813 nbsp HMS Amelia in action with the French FrigateArethuse 1813 by John Christian Schetky 1852On 7 February 1813 the frigate HMS Amelia warned by the crew of Daring arrived on the scene A furious four hour engagement ensued before the frigates parted both with heavy casualties 3 28 Without delay Amelia returned to England and Arethuse to France carrying the crew of Rubis She arrived in Saint Malo on 19 April 1813 having captured ten prizes during her campaign 28 At Bouvet s return Navy Minister Decres criticised him for the loss of Rubis and near loss of Arethuse in the storm of February while praising his conduct in the action of 7 February 1813 against Amelia 28 and requesting that a painting be commissioned to commemorate the event 34 Probably because of these mixed reviews Bouvet was appointed Officer of the Legion of Honour on 2 July but was neither promoted to Rear Admiral nor made a Baron of the Empire as had been requested in his favour 4 Later life edit nbsp On 1 October 1813 Bouvet was relieved from duty due to ill health and replaced by Captain Le Bozec 33 and transferred the harbour service in Brest 4 It was not until after the Bourbon Restoration on 21 June 1814 that he sailed again at the command of the frigate Flore 4 and was sent for a mission in Antwerp 3 to escort eleven transport ships to Brest 34 and to Senegal to ferry ammunitions 35 The new regime appointed him Knight of the Order of Saint Louis on 5 July 1814 4 Bouvet relinquished command of Flore on 25 August 1815 and was given a leave of absence until 31 December after which he was given no duty 4 On 1 November 1817 he was finally ordered to Brest for harbour service 4 but started requesting his retirement to care for his ailing wife who was almost blind 34 Promoted to Captain 1st class on 16 February 1820 and promoted Commander of the Legion of Honour on 5 July 4 he published his Observations sur la Marine in 1821 34 the year after he finally obtained permission to retire from the Navy and was granted the honorific rank of Rear Admiral 3 effective on 30 October 1822 4 On 30 July 1830 Bouvet s wife died at the age of 45 34 After the July Revolution in 1830 Bouvet turned to politics and was elected on 28 October as Deputy for Ille et Vilaine at the Chamber of Deputies of the July Monarchy On 26 April 1831 he was promoted Grand Officier of the Legion of Honour 4 Bouvet did not seek reelection and relinquished his office after the general elections of 5 July 1831 4 However he continued to serve as conseiller general for Ille et Vilaine 34 In 1833 Bouvet resigned as a member of the Council for Colonies for La Reunion 4 and in June he married Marie Therese Le Muey in Granville 34 He wrote a bitter account of his campaign 3 Precis des campagnes du capitaine de vaisseau Pierre Bouvet which he published in 1840 36 In 1852 Napoleon III reinstated Bouvet as titulary Rear Admiral in the reserve corps 3 he also offered him a senatorship in 1858 but Bouvet declined over his age 37 Works editBouvet Pierre 1821 Observations sur la Marine in French Paris J G Dentu Bouvet Pierre 1840 Precis des campagnes du capitaine de vaisseau Pierre Bouvet in French Paris F Didot Honours editFive ships were named after Bouvet See French ship Bouvet for a list Grand Officer of the Order of the Legion of Honour Knight of the Order of Saint Louis A statue was erected in front of the mairie of Saint Servan 37 Notes citations and references editNotes edit Quintin p 83 says 28 November 1775 aspirant entretenu Levot p 58 Quintin p 83 Granier p 341 says on 1 January 1795 James vol 2 p 373 states that the captain of Furet was killed contradicting Quintin p 84 who says that Bouvet was in command Likewise James names the captain of Furet as Louis Bouvet Granier p 342 states that Bouvet was not released until the Treaty of Amiens in 1802 Granier p 342 says 5 March Granier p 345 says in May 1806 A gourable or grab ship was an Indian Ocean design having a massive high stern and a pointed low bow the widest point being at the beam and being rigged similarly to a ketch 19 Citations edit or Bouvet de la Maisonneuve as inscribed on his tomb at Saint Servan Levot p 57 a b c d e f Levot p 59 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Quintin p 87 a b c d Quintin p 83 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Levot p 58 a b c d e Granier p 341 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Quintin p 84 a b c Naval History vol 2 p 373 HMS Viper Naval Database Naval History vol 2 p 372 a b c d e f Granier p 342 a b c d e Granier p 343 Roche p 55 a b c d e Granier p 345 Fonds Marine p 377 a b c d e f g h i j Quintin p 85 a b Roche p 176 Jal 1848 p 795 Ducrest de Villeneuve Journal du voyage de la Mouche n 6 sous le commandement du lieutenant de vaisseau Ducrest de Villeneuve expediee pour l Ile de France et Manille en 1808 Fonds Marine p 377 a b Troude p 72 Granier p 346 Troude op cit p 73 Troude p 87 James p 264 Granier p 353 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Quitin p 86 Troude p 115 Granier p 354 Fonds Marine vol 2 p 450 Fonds Marine vol 2 p 467 a b c d Fonds Marine p 476 a b c d e f g Granier p 355 Fonds Marine vol 2 p 497 Bouvet Precis des campagnes a b Granier p 356 References edit Jal August 1848 Glossaire nautique repertoire polyglotte de termes de marine anciens et modernes in French Firmin Didot freres Granier Hubert 1998 Histoire des Marins francais 1789 1815 illustrations by Alain Coz Marines editions ISBN 2 909675 41 6 Levot Prosper 1866 Les gloires maritimes de la France notices biographiques sur les plus celebres marins in French Bertrand Quintin Danielle Quintin Bernard 2003 Dictionnaire des capitaines de Vaisseau de Napoleon in French S P M ISBN 2 901952 42 9 Troude Onesime Joachim 1867 Batailles navales de la France in French Vol 3 Challamel aine Troude Onesime Joachim 1867 Batailles navales de la France in French Vol 4 Challamel aine Roche Jean Michel 2005 Dictionnaire des batiments de la flotte de guerre francaise de Colbert a nos jours Vol 1 Group Retozel Maury Millau ISBN 978 2 9525917 0 6 OCLC 165892922 Fonds Marine Campagnes operations divisions et stations navales missions diverses Inventaire de la sous serie Marine BB4 Tome deuxieme BB4 1 a 482 1790 1826 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pierre Francois Etienne Bouvet de Maisonneuve amp oldid 1186359178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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