Action of 17 August 1779 | |||||||
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Part of the American Revolutionary War | |||||||
Combat des frégates françaises la Junon et la Gentille contre le vaisseau anglais Ardent et la frégate anglaise Fox, 17 août 1779, Auguste-Louis de Rossel de Cercy | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
France Spain | Great Britain | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Charles de Bernard de Marigny | Phillip Boteler | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
1 ship of the line 4 frigates | 2 ships of the line | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Light | 1 ship of the line captured |
The action of 17 August 1779 was a naval battle between a French and a British squadron in the English Channel on 17 August 1779.
In June 1779, Spain followed France declaring war on Britain and together formed a combined fleet aiming for British Isles' invasion. On 14 August, the fleet was off the Lizard and on 16 August the ships were off Plymouth with some of the enemy frigates anchored in the Cawsand Bay.[1]
In meantime, HMS Ardent was recommissioned under the command of Captain Phillip Boteler, and sailed from Plymouth on 14 August to join Sir Charles Hardy watching the much superior Franco-Spanish forces in the English Channel.[1] According to the ship's logs, as many as 4⁄5 of the crew were landmen, and neither Boteler nor the captain of HMS Marlborough, in whose company Ardent was sailing, was aware that a French fleet had put to sea. Ardent encountered the fleet two days after sailing, and after receiving the correct replies to the coded signal, both ships ran down to meet them and assumed that they were British. Instead, the fleet they encountered was French and Spanish in possession of a Royal Navy signal codebook, which permitted the correct response of Ardent's "who are you?" question.[2]
With Ardent within range, the French frigate Junon fired two broadsides before raising her colours. In response, Ardent offered sporadic and inaccurate return fire and after three further French frigates and a Spanish ship of the line, Princesa joined the action, she struck her colours. In the meantime, Marlborough sailed away from the action and escaped back to Britain unscathed.[1]
At his subsequent court martial Captain Boteler blamed his failure to return fire on an inadequate supply of gunpowder for Ardent's cannon, a statement that as denied by the ship's gunner. Archibald Macintyre provided evidence that there was enough powder for fifty minutes of engagement. The court martial rejected Boteler's appeals, found instead that the inexperience of the crew was the principal cause of the Ardent's capture and expelled him from the Navy for his failure to adequately defend his ship.[2]
Ardent was nevertheless recaptured by the British on 14 April 1782 after the Battle of the Saintes and recommissioned that month under Captain Richard Lucas. On 28 August 1783, the ship was renamed Tiger and was sold out of the service in June 1784.
Notes
References
- Cole, Gareth (August 2009). "Royal Navy Gunners in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars". The Mariner's Mirror. 95 (3). Greenwich, UK: Society for Nautical Research: 284–295. doi:10.1080/00253359.2009.10657104. S2CID 159545931.
- Michael Phillips. Ardent (64) (1764). Michael Phillips' Ships of the Old Navy. Retrieved 1 September 2008.
- Naval battles of the Anglo-French War (1778–1783)
- Naval battles of the American Revolutionary War involving France
- Naval battles of the American Revolutionary War involving Great Britain
- Naval battles of the American Revolutionary War involving Spain
- Naval battles of the Anglo-Spanish War (1779–1783)
- Events that led to courts-martial