West Indies and Gulf Coast campaigns

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West Indies and Gulf Coast campaigns
Part of the American Revolutionary War

The area of action; the Gulf Coast of the Floridas is not fully shown
Date 1778–1782
Location West Indies and Gulf Coast
Result Treaty of Paris (1783)
Territorial
changes
Spain regains East and West Florida; France acquires Tobago
Combatants
Spain
France
United States
Great Britain
Commanders
Bernardo de Gálvez
Matías de Gálvez
Comte de Grasse
Comte d'Estaing
George Rodney
West Indies campaign
NassauSt. LuciaGrenadaMartiniqueFort RoyalSt. KittsThe Saintes
Gulf Coast campaigns
Fort ButeBaton RougeFort Charlotte – San Fernando – Fort San JuanSt. LouisMobilePensacola

The West Indies and Gulf Coast campaigns were operations during the American Revolutionary War in the general region of the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf Coast of North America. There was extensive action in the area, particularly after France and Spain entered the war on the side of the United States. Spain captured East Florida and West Florida during the war; most of the other action took place in and around the islands of the Lesser Antilles.

Contents

[edit] Nassau, 1776

Main article: Battle of Nassau

The Continental Congress authorized the creation of a small Continental Navy on October 13, 1775. On December 22, 1775, Esek Hopkins was appointed the naval commander-in-chief. With his small fleet, Hopkins led the first major naval action of the Continental Navy in early March 1776 against Nassau, Bahamas. Stores of much-needed gunpowder were seized for the use of the Continental Army. On April 6, 1776, the squadron unsuccessfully encountered the 20-gun HMS Glasgow in the first major sea battle of the Continental Navy.

[edit] France enters the war, 1778–1779

The approach of winter made a naval campaign on the coast of North America dangerous. The operations of naval forces in the New World were largely dictated by the facts that from June to October are the hurricane months in the West Indies, while from October to June includes the stormy winter of the northern coast.

On November 4, 1778, French Admiral Charles Hector, comte d'Estaing sailed for the West Indies, to the surprise and consternation of the Americans, who hoped to launch operations against Halifax and Newfoundland. On the same day, Commodore William Hotham was dispatched from New York to reinforce the British fleet in the West Indies. On September 7, the French governor of Martinique, the Marquis de Bouille, had surprised the British troops on Dominica. Admiral Samuel Barrington, the British admiral in the Leeward Islands, had retaliated by seizing Santa Lucia on December 13 and 14 after the arrival of Hotham from North America. D'Estaing, who followed Hotham closely, was beaten off in two feeble attacks on Barrington at the Cul-de-Sac of Santa Lucia on December 15.

On January 6, 1779, Admiral Byron reached the West Indies. During the early part of the year, the naval forces in the West Indies were mainly employed in watching one another. But in June, while Byron had gone to Antigua to guard the trade convoy on its way home, d'Estaing first captured St Vincent, and on July 4, he captured Grenada. Admiral Byron, who had returned, sailed in hopes of saving the island but arrived too late. An indecisive action was fought off Grenada on the July 6, 1779. Afterwards, the war died down in the West Indies. Byron returned home in August. D'Estaing, after co-operating unsuccessfully with the Americans in an attack on Savannah, also returned to Europe.

[edit] San Juan expedition, 1780

Captain Horatio Nelson in 1781, with Fort San Juan in the background.
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Captain Horatio Nelson in 1781, with Fort San Juan in the background.

After Spain entered the war, Major General John Dalling, the British governor and commander-in-chief of Jamaica, proposed in 1780 an expedition to the Spanish province of Nicaragua. The goal was to sail up the San Juan River to Lake Nicaragua and capture the town of Granada, which would effectively cut Spanish America in half as well as provide potential access to the Pacific Ocean. Because of disease and logistical problems, the expedition proved to be a costly debacle.[1]

The expedition sailed from Jamaica on February 3, 1780, escorted by twenty-one year-old Captain Horatio Nelson in the Hinchinbroke. Nelson was the highest ranking officer present, but his authority was limited to naval operations. The overall commander was Captain (local rank of major) John Polson of the 60th Regiment, who recognized young Nelson's abilities and worked closely with him. Polson had about three to four hundred regulars of the 60th and the 79th Regiments, about 300 men of the Loyal Irish Corps raised by Dalling, as well as several hundred local recruits, including blacks and Miskito Indians.

After many delays, the expedition began to move up the San Juan River on March 17, 1780. On April 9, Nelson—in the first hand-to-hand combat of his career—led an assault which captured a Spanish battery on the island of Bartola. Five miles (8 km) upstream was Fort San Juan, with about 150 armed defenders and 86 others, which was besieged beginning on April 13. Because of poor planning and lost supplies, the British soon began to run low on ammunition for the cannons as well as rations for the men. After the tropical rains started on April 20, men began to sicken and die, probably from malaria and dysentery, and perhaps typhoid fever.

Nelson was one of the first to become ill, and he was shipped downriver on April 28, the day before the Spanish surrendered the fort. About 450 British reinforcements arrived on May 15, but the blacks and the Indians abandoned the expedition because of illness and discontentment. Although Dalling persisted in trying to gather reinforcements, sickness continued to take a heavy toll, and the expedition was abandoned on November 8, 1780. The Spanish reoccupied the remains of the fort after the British blew it up on departure. In all, more than 2,500 men died, which "made the San Juan expedition the costliest British disaster of the entire war."[2]

[edit] Spain seizes the Gulf Coast

Bernardo de Gálvez
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Bernardo de Gálvez

Before entering the war, Spain had quietly provided supplies and finances to the American rebels. Aid was also given to George Rogers Clark in his attempt to defeat the British in the Mississippi River Valley.

After Spain declared war against Great Britain in June 1779, Count Bernardo de Gálvez, the Spanish governor of Louisiana, seized three British outposts on the Mississippi: Manchac, Baton Rouge, and Natchez. Gálvez then captured Mobile on March 14, 1780, and forced the surrender of the British outpost at Pensacola, Florida in May 1781. On May 8, 1782, Gálvez captured the British naval base at New Providence in the Bahamas.

[edit] 1781–1782

In the West Indies, Rodney, having received news of the breach with the Netherlands early in the year, took the island of Sint Eustatius, which had been a great depot of contraband of war, on February 3, 1781. The British admiral was accused of applying himself so entirely to seizing and selling his booty that he would not allow his second in command, Sir Samuel Hood, who had recently joined him, to take proper measures to impede the arrival of French forces known to be on their way to Martinique. The French admiral, the count de Grasse, reached the island with reinforcements in April. Until July, he was engaged in a series of skillful operations directed to menacing the British islands while he avoided being brought to battle by Rodney. In July, he sailed for the coast of North America, whither he was followed in August by Hood; Rodney had returned home in ill-health.

The Battle of the Saintes, April 12, 1782: surrender of the Ville de Paris by Thomas Whitcombe, painted 1783, shows Samuel Hood's Barfleur, center, attacking the French flagship Ville de Paris, right.
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The Battle of the Saintes, April 12, 1782: surrender of the Ville de Paris by Thomas Whitcombe, painted 1783, shows Samuel Hood's Barfleur, center, attacking the French flagship Ville de Paris, right.

French admiral Comte de Grasse, having rendered a vital service to the Americans in the Battle of the Chesapeake, now returned to the West Indies, whither he was followed by Hood, and resumed the attacks on the British islands. In January and February 1782, he conquered St Christopher, in spite of the most determined opposition of Hood, who with a much inferior force first drove him from his anchorage at Basseterre, and then repulsed his repeated attacks. The next purpose of the French was to combine with the Spaniards for an attack on Jamaica. Sir George Rodney, having returned to his command with reinforcements, baffled this plan by the series of operations which culminated in the Battle of the Saintes of April 12, 1782. No further operations of note occurred in the West Indies.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ This account follows John Sugden, Nelson: A Dream of Glory, 1758–1797, ch. VII.
  2. ^ Sugden, p. 173

[edit] References

  • Sugden, John. Nelson: A Dream of Glory, 1758–1797. New York: Holt; London: Jonathan Cape, 2004. ISBN 0-224-06097-X.

[edit] Further reading

  • Chavez, Thomas E. Spain and the Independence of the United States: An Intrinsic Gift. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8263-2793-1.
  • Tuchman, Barbara. The First Salute: A View of the American Revolution. New York: Knopf, 1988. ISBN 0-394-55333-0.

[edit] External links