Action of 5 October 1804
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anglo-Spanish War | |||||||
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Part of the Napoleonic Wars | |||||||
The action of 5th October 1804, a painting by Francis Sartorius. |
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Belligerents | |||||||
Kingdom of Spain | United Kingdom | ||||||
Commanders | |||||||
Rear Admiral Jose Bustamante y Guerra | Commodore Graham Moore | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
4 frigates | 4 frigates | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
269 killed and 80 wounded 600 Spanish sailors captured |
2 killed and 7 wounded |
The Battle of Cape Santa Maria, also known as the La Batalla del Cabo de Santa María, was a naval action that took place off the southern Portuguese coast, in which a squadron commanded by Brigadier Don Jose Bustamante y Guerra fought a British squadron under the command of Commodore Graham Moore.
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[edit] Background
Under the terms of a secret convention Spain had to pay 72 million francs annually to France, until they declared war on Britain. The British had learned of the treaty, and knew it was likely that Spain would declare war on them soon after the arrival of the treasure ships. Since the British also knew that by law the fleet could only land at Cádiz, as well as its place and approximate time of departure from South America, it was not difficult to position a squadron to intercept it.
Bustamante had set sail from Montevideo on 9 August 1804 with four frigates loaded with gold and silver, as well as much other valuable cargo. On 22 September Vice Admiral Lord Collingwood ordered Captain Graham Moore, commanding the 44 gun frigate HMS Indefatigable, to intercept and detain the Spanish ships, peacefully, if possible.
Moore's ship arrived off Cadiz on 29 September and was joined on 2 October by Lively, and by Medusa and Amphion the day after. In line abreast they patrolled the approaches to Cádiz.
[edit] The battle
At dawn on 5 October, the Spanish frigates sighted the coast of Portugal. At 7 a.m. they sighted the four British frigates. Bustamante ordered his ships into line of battle, and within an hour the British came up in line, to windward of the Spaniards and "within pistol-shot".
Moore, the British Commodore, sent Lieutenant Ascott to the Spanish flagship Medea, to explain his orders. Bustamante naturally refused, and impatient of delays, at 10 a.m. Moore ordered a shot be fired ahead over the bows of Medea. Almost immediately a general exchange of fire broke out. Within ten minutes the Mercedes was destroyed when her magazine exploded, and only about 40 of her 240 crew were rescued. Within half an hour the Santa Clara and the Medea had surrendered, and the Fama broke away and attempted to flee, pursued by the Medusa. Moore ordered the faster Lively to pursue, and she was also captured a few hours later. The three frigates were taken to Gibraltar, and then to Gosport, England.
[edit] The results
Spain declared war on Great Britain on 14 December 1804, only to suffer a catastrophic defeat less than a year later at the battle of Trafalgar in October 1805. Napoleon, having crowned himself Emperor on 2 December, gained Spain as an ally in his war against Britain.
Under the terms of the Cruizers and Convoys Act of 1708 ships captured at sea were "Droits of the Crown" and became the property of their captors, who received the full value of the ships and cargo in prize money. However, since technically Britain and Spain were not at war at the time of the action, the Admiralty Court ruled that the three ships were "Droits of the Admiralty", and all revenues would revert to them. The four Spanish ships carried a total of 4,286,508 million Spanish dollars in silver and gold coin, as well as 150,000 gold ingots, 75 sacks of wool, 1,666 bars of tin, 571 pigs of copper, seal skins and oil, although 1.2 million in silver, half the copper and a quarter of the tin went down with the Mercedes. Still, the remaining ships and cargo were assessed at a value of £900,000. After much legal argument an ex gratia payment was made which, according to one account, amounted to £250,000. This would have given each of the four Captains around £23,500 each (equivalent to around £1.6 million today).
The Medea was taken into the Royal Navy as HMS Iphigenia (later renamed HMS Imperieuse), Santa Clara as HMS Leocadia and the Fama as HMS Fama.
[edit] Order of battle
[edit] Spain
- Medea (40), Flagship, commanded by Capitán Francisco de Piedrola y Verdugo
- Fama (34), Capitán Miguel Zapiain y Valladares
- Mercedes (36), Capitán Jose Manuel De Goicoa y Labart
- Santa Clara (34), Capitán Aleson y Bueno
[edit] Britain
- HMS Indefatigable (44), Commodore Graham Moore
- HMS Lively (38), Captain Sir Graham Eden Hamond
- HMS Amphion (32), Captain Samuel Sutton
- HMS Medusa (32), Captain John Gore
[edit] In popular fiction
- The action is portrayed in C. S. Forester's Hornblower and the Hotspur in which his hero Horatio Hornblower is attached to the squadron, but misses out on the captures while fending off a French ship.
- In Patrick O'Brian's novel Post Captain, Captain Aubrey is in temporary command of Lively, and captures the Santa Clara and the Fama.