CHAPTER VIII
THE COMMAND OF THE SEA.
The chief
causes which led to the renewal of war between Great Britain and France in 1803
have been described in a previous chapter. Various occurrences which preceded
the actual outbreak of hostilities appeared to indicate a design on the part of
the French Government to invade England. In December, 1802, instructions sent
by the First Consul to his so-called commercial agents in the British ports had
been intercepted, and were found to point to such an intention. On February 18,
1803, in an interview with Lord Whitworth, he assumed a threatening attitude,
and declared that, in case of war, he would risk his life and reputation in an
attempt to invade England, though he did not underrate the danger of such an
adventure. “He acknowledged” (said Lord Whitworth) “that there were a hundred
chances to one against him”, but he went on to state that he could find army
after army for the enterprise.
This violent
talk alarmed the British Government, the more so as, according to Lord
Whitworth’s despatches, it was accompanied by naval preparations. Several
French sail of the line had embarked troops in the Mediterranean; there was a
considerable movement of French troops in Belgium towards Havre and Dunkirk; in
the Batavian Republic, then under French control, a small naval expedition was
fitting out. The British ministry saw in these things indications that some
treacherous attack was intended, and at once made counter-preparations. A royal
message to Parliament (March 8) stated that the military preparations of France
rendered it expedient to adopt additional measures of precaution; bounties were
offered to seamen for enlistment in the fleet; there was a “hot press” in
London for likely men; all seamen and officers in foreign employment were
recalled; and the militia were embodied. The number of men voted for the navy
by the estimates had been only 50,000; 10,000 more were voted on March 14, and
40,000 in addition when war became certain.
In reality,
the British Government seems to have been misinformed as to the French
armaments. The French archives do not reveal any threatening movements either
by land or sea, which is the more surprising, as it was not Bonaparte’s habit
to use threats without force to back them. The probable explanation is that he
expected a long period of diplomatic correspondence to elapse before the
outbreak of hostilities—a conjecture which receives support from the fact that,
on March 6, General Decaen was permitted to sail for the French East Indies
with a small force, with instructions drawn up in such a manner as to make it
clear that war was not anticipated till about September, 1804. If Bonaparte had
thought that hostilities were imminent, he would scarcely have risked the loss
of this detachment. His irritation was great when, on March 11, he learnt that
the British Government had taken his threats seriously, and, instead of giving
way, was arming. On the same day he wrote a large number of orders and letters,
all having war in view, and constituted two “national flotillas”, with head-quarters
at Dunkirk and Cherbourg. Two days later occurred the famous scene with Lord
Whitworth, with its demand of “Malta or war”, indicating that a conflict was
inevitable. Yet, after this threat, Bonaparte once more drew back, perhaps to
gain time for armaments and to permit Decaen to reach India. War, however, was
declared by Great Britain on May 18, 1803. Bonaparte’s first measure of
retaliation was to seize and imprison every British subject within his reach.
At the
outbreak of war the French navy consisted of 23 ships of the line ready for
service or in commission, 25 frigates, and 107 corvettes or smaller vessels,
with 167 small craft belonging to the invasion flotilla of 1800. The best part
of the fleet was in the West Indies, where twelve battleships, eight frigates,
and 28 smaller vessels were covering the operations against San Domingo. In the
home ports or in European waters only five ships of the line and ten frigates
were actually ready for sea; but this force, after two months’ delay, could be
raised to nine ships of the line and thirteen frigates, and in six months to 21
battleships (including those from the West Indies) and 19 frigates; while 45
sail of the line were under construction in the French ports. There was the
same want of seamen as in the previous war; and timber and naval stores were
again lacking. Of the Batavian fleet, comprising fifteen sail of the line, all
small, only six were in commission. Five others were new and in good condition;
while four stood in need of extensive repairs. The storehouses were empty, and
money scarce.
The
personnel of the French navy was still disorganised and insufficient. It had
not recovered from the demoralisation caused by the Revolution and by the
terrible defeat of the Nile. The admirals were too old, and, according to
Bonaparte, lacked energy and decision. They were unduly depressed by the
prospects of a naval conflict, and seem to have feared Nelson with an almost
superstitious dread. Service with the fleet was unpopular and inglorious; the best
men went into the army rather than into the navy. The Dutch navy was in no
better plight, and was more than ever ill-disposed to France, the Batavian
Government being suspected of intriguing with England. Bonaparte was credited
with the intention of gradually creating a French navy of 130 sail of the line,
to be supported by 60 Spanish, 20 Dutch, and 15 Genoese ships; but the
execution of these vast plans demanded time, and could not have been completed
in less than ten years. The alliance of Spain was guaranteed to France by
treaty, but was of so little value that, though Bonaparte demanded of the
Spanish Government the twelve sail of the line and the 24,000 men with whom it
was bound to support France, he accepted, in lieu of this, an annual subsidy of
£2.880.CU0.
Against the
numerically weak and badly manned squadrons of France, England could place on
the high seas a powerful force commanded by the men who had made their names
famous in the war of 1793-1801. The fleet in commission in January, 1803, numbered
34 sail of the line with 86 50-gun ships and frigates, and numerous small
craft. Besides the ships in commission, there were in reserve 77 ships of the
line and 49 50-gun ships and frigates. In numbers the British navy was superior
to any combination of two or even three Powers. Fresh ships were rapidly
commissioned, as the tension between England and France increased; the sail of
the line in service rose in May to 52, and in June to 60, with corresponding
additions to the force of frigates. Excellent officers were appointed by Lord
St Vincent, then at the head of the Admiralty. For the Mediterranean, Nelson
was chosen, as this was the post of the greatest danger, and would make the
highest demands upon a commander’s activity. In the North Sea and the Straits
of Dover Lori Keith was stationed with a small fleet. The main force in waters
near home was the squadron off Brest, which was to maintain a close blockade of
that port; it was commanded by Cornwallis, who was probably, after Nelson, the
ablest of British admirals.
The
strategic position of England in the Mediterranean had been improved, as
compared with that during the revolutionary war, by the acquisition of Malta.
But, for the purpose of watching Toulon, Malta was of little importance; and it
was scarcely used by Nelson, who would have preferred the island of Minorca in
exchange. In the later stages of the war, during the operations in the Adriatic
and the Levant, Malta proved of greater service. The main object of the British
commanders was to interpose a superior force between the French fleets at
Toulon and Brest; and Malta lay out of the direct course between these ports.
Until the battle of Trafalgar, the British forces in the Mediterranean made
Gibraltar their chief base, and used the harbours in the north of Sardinia as a
“flying base” for action against Toulon.
Throughout
the war the British fleets acted on interior lines, blockading the different
French detachments in the various ports and preventing their junction—a
strategic plan which was comparatively simple in days when the movements of
ships depended on conditions of wind and weather, and could never be calculated
with exactitude beforehand. For this reason the French fleets were seldom able
to combine effectively. But the difficulty of blockading both Brest and Toulon
was great. Toulon, in particular, was so remote that any British force watching
it was entirely out of touch with the Channel; and the blockaded squadron, if
it escaped, could not be pursued immediately, since there was always doubt as
to whether it would sail east or west; and this had to be ascertained before
the British could move to the Channel. Bonaparte’s Egyptian schemes were
well-known, and had been emphasised by Sebastiani’s report. When Spain ceased to be neutral in 1804, the difficulties of the
British admirals were much augmented, as Cadiz and Cartagena both contained
fleets and had to be masked or blockaded. But it was not necessary, as it had
been when Spain joined France in the previous war, that the British navy should
evacuate the Mediterranean.
The Italian
ports, with the exception of Naples and Sicily, were under French influence or
in the hands of the French, while the coastline under French domination in the
north of Europe extended beyond the limits of France proper as far as Hamburg
and Bremen, which were more or less subject to French influence, through the
French occupation of Hanover in 1803. As the war proceeded, practically the
whole northern littoral of the Mediterranean became French, while in northern
Europe French influence penetrated to the Baltic; so that, from the Niemen to
Corfu, French bayonets repelled the British flag.
Since the
British navy was far better trained and prepared for war in 1803 than in 1793,
the strategy adopted was bolder and mere determined. On the outbreak of war,
the British fleets moved up to the hostile ports in the Atlantic and the
Channel, and closely blockaded them. A force was at once directed against the
French in San Domingo, whence the French Admiralty had already recalled most of
their ships of the line. The British forces sufficed to defeat the French on
the island, weakened as they were by disease and pressed on all sides by the
negroes; and a naval blockade of the ports soon reduced them to starvation.
The first
hostile movement in European waters was made by Cornwallis, who on May 17, the
day before the declaration of war, put to sea with ten sail of the line, and
moved towards Brest. Next day, acting under an Order in Council of May 16,
directing reprisals to be made against France, one of his cruisers captured a
French vessel. The situation of the French fleet at this moment was critical,
as nine sail of the line were on their way to France from San Domingo; of these
one was captured in the West Indies; the remainder were expected by the British
to sail for the Mediterranean, and preparations were made to meet them off Cape
St Vincent. Contrary to expectation, they steered for the Bay of Biscay; two
reached Rochefort; five more entered the Spanish harbour of Corunna; and the
other stole into Cadiz. The British squadron detailed to attack them had
received too precise instructions; and thus the war opened with a strategic
check instead of with a naval victory. One reason for the British failure was the
want of frigates, which throughout the campaign of 1803-5, as in that of 1798,
hampered the British admirals at every turn. So many vessels were required for
the protection of commerce that the fighting fleets were deprived of their
necessary scouts; and Cornwallis was at times compelled to employ battleships
in doing frigates’ work.
The
distribution of the French forces, before the return of the San Domingo fleet,
was as follows. At Brest there were three ships of the line ready for sea, and
fifteen approaching completion. At Lorient and Rochefort there were six ships
completing. At Toulon there were three ready, and six nearing completion. Thus
the French battleships were so much scattered that a great fleet action at the
outset was impossible; and the blockade imposed by the British had to be
accepted, until the squadrons could be reinforced. At Brest, Truguet was placed in command, to be succeeded later by
Ganteaume, who at the outset commanded at Toulon. At an early date orders were
issued by Bonaparte, directing his admirals constantly to weigh and anchor, so
as to train the crews, or, if the enemy vanished, to put out for short cruises.
The real
offensive against England was to be directed by a flotilla of small craft,
capable of conveying an invading force across the Channel in a single night.
There were several stages in the development of the flotilla project. According
to the first plan, a comparatively simple one, 310 armed craft of small size
and light draft were to escort across the Straits of Dover a fleet of
fishing-boats, carrying 100,000 men, the central idea being that small vessels
could be rowed across in winter fogs or calms, when the sailing ships of the
period were useless. This plan, however, was open to so many difficulties and
dangers that good authorities have believed Bonaparte to have intended it
merely as a demonstration. Against this view, which is based ultimately on the
theory that he never made mistakes, many facts may be brought forward. The most
convincing of these is the lavish expenditure not only on the flotilla but also
on the construction of harbours of refuge along the northern coast of France.
Excavations, basins, moles, and sluices were begun at Ambleteuse,
Boulogne, Étaples, and Wimereux; and millions of
francs were lavished upon them at a time when the French treasury was
embarrassed for funds. Secondly, the French people looked anxiously to
Bonaparte to end the war as speedily as possible, for, while it lasted,
everything that had been won by the Revolution was at stake. Now the war could
be rapidly ended only by an invasion of England. Thirdly, an invasion of
England had frequently been contemplated before. That Bonaparte soon perceived
some of the dangers of his flotilla project is perfectly clear; but, while he
modified, he did not abandon his plans. He began to think out the means by
which he could obtain temporary command of the straits.
The idea of
a transport flotilla of unarmed fishing craft, accompanied by a few small armed
vessels, was given up almost at once; and the number of armed vessels was
steadily increased. In May, 1803, there were to be, as we have seen, only 310
fighting craft; in July the number rose to 1410, in August to 2008. It was
anticipated that the flotilla might be ready by November, and that the armed
vessels would be able to clear a way for it by driving off the British fleet.
These anticipations were not fulfilled. When Bonaparte visited Boulogne in
July, only fourteen vessels of the flotilla were ready at that place. Numerous
skirmishes with the British frigates and small craft went on along the coast,
the British showing persistent energy, and attacking the French boats whenever
they ventured beyond the shelter of their coast batteries. In these encounters,
the British almost always had the upper hand, thus revealing the grave military
weakness of the flotilla. The French soldiers complained bitterly of the
timidity and hesitation of their seamen; they did not see that the whole
project was absurd, and that to ask men in boats to attack well-armed and
skilfully handled ships was to demand impossibilities.
In June, in
a note to Decrès, his Minister of Marine, Bonaparte insisted on the necessity
of having twenty battleships ready at Brest by November, and gave instructions
for a large number of additional ships to be taken in hand. But he altogether
overestimated his forces; in November only eight vessels were actually ready,
so that Cornwallis had not the slightest difficulty in maintaining a close
blockade at Brest, while other detachments watched Ferrol, whither the French
vessels from Corunna and the West Indies had moved, and the Biscayan ports. It
would appear from Bonaparte’s order that, so early as June, 1803, he intended
his fleet to act in close concert with the flotilla, which was to be ready
before the winter for the attempt on England. The fleet was not to be actually
present in the Straits of Dover; it was to divert the attention of the British
admirals by raids in other directions.
In
September, 1803, Bonaparte saw that the flotilla could not be counted upon by
November, and postponed the date of action to January, 1804. At the same time
he ordered Ganteaume at Toulon to be ready to put to sea with ten battleships,
though as a matter of fact only seven were complete. In December Ganteaume was
asked to give his opinion on the flotilla. It was extremely unfavourable; but
he suggested that it might be possible for a handy, swift-sailing fleet to lead
the enemy astray by feints, and then, by suddenly appearing in the Channel, to
secure the command of the sea for two days, and so clear the way for the
flotilla. The enterprise would be extremely bold and very hazardous; and the
best way of accomplishing it would be either to sail round the north of Great
Britain or run up the Channel past Brest, and appear in the Downs. Here we have
the germ of the strategy subsequently pursued in the Trafalgar campaign. Six
days later, in a letter to the admiral, Bonaparte disclosed his projects,
giving a choice of three plans, all of which in substance involved a feint by
the Toulon squadron in the direction of Egypt to mislead Nelson, and a gradual
concentration of the French squadrons at Ferrol and Rochefort, to be effected
by the Toulon fleet moving out of the Mediterranean and successively setting
them free. The whole force thus concentrated was finally to appear off
Boulogne, while the Brest fleet was to make feints at Ireland, so as to occupy
Cornwallis’ attention. But, as Ganteaume shrewdly pointed out, the element of
surprise would probably be wanting in so complicated a plan; and for the French
to move into the Channel with anything larger than a flying squadron of a few
fast ships would be to court disaster. The British could detach in pursuit
forces “quadruple or quintuple” the strength of the French squadron.
As its
construction proceeded, the flotilla proved more and more untrustworthy and
expensive. In November, 1803, Bonaparte went in person to Boulogne and made
some unwelcome discoveries. If the plan of a surprise invasion was to be
carried out, it was essential that the boats should be able to put to sea at
the very shortest notice. But this involved keeping them outside the basin at
Boulogne, since at the most only 100 boats could pass from the basin in any one
tide. Outside the basin they were exposed to the British attacks and to injury
by weather. Under the eyes of the First Consul five boats were wrecked by a
storm; and the records prove that, for nearly six months, from November, 1803,
to May, 1804, the flotilla only went out of the basin thrice and remained
outside ten days in all. It had become a mere incumbrance, and had even ceased
to cause the British admirals any serious alarm, so long as it was unsupported
by a fleet of large ships. In April, 1804, the Boulogne flotilla was caught by
a storm when outside the basin, and forty vessels were driven to Staples.
Experience proved that at least six days would be required to get all the boats
out of harbour, so that for that period it would be necessary to command the
waters of the Channel; but, all through 1803-4, there was no period of six
days’ continued fine weather. Thus the original idea of a surprise passage of the
straits proved impracticable. Yet the outlay on the small craft and on the
harbours continued; and Bonaparte refused to abandon his project, though he
inclined more and more to the employment of the flotilla in conjunction with a
squadron of large ships. His army in 1804 was concentrated between Brest and
the Texel, waiting for the opportunity to embark; his fleets at Brest and
Toulon were steadily increasing.
Though the
British Government did not seriously believe in the possibility of invasion,
it neglected no precaution. In March, 1803, it had 250,000 men under arms on
land, of whom 110,000 were regulars. The volunteer movement developed rapidly,
though there was considerable doubt as to the military value of the forces
which it produced; and in December, 1803, there were 463,000 men available in
the three kingdoms belonging to this branch alone. Making heavy deductions, the
Government could dispose of about 500,000 troops of all sorts during the period
of danger, and could rapidly concentrate 100,000 of them against an invader
disembarking on the south-east coast. Thus, even had the fleet been drawn off,
as Bonaparte had originally contemplated, the position of Great Britain would
have been tolerably secure.
In the spring
of 1804, fresh instructions were sent to Latouche-Treville,
who had succeeded Ganteaume at Toulon, to put to sea. He was to elude Nelson by
feinting at Egypt, to pick up the French ship of the line which was blockaded
at Cadiz, then to make for Rochefort and set free the French ships in that
port; after which he was to sail far out into the Atlantic, finally making a
dash up the Channel past Cornwallis, as soon as the winds were favourable, and
putting into Cherbourg. Ferrol and Brest were to be left blockaded. This plan
contains all the characteristics of Napoleonic strategy: unexpected
concentration of superior force at the point where that force could be used to
the greatest advantage; feints to distract the enemy’s attention from that
point; disregard of minor considerations. Its defects were that it made insufficient
allowance for the energy of the British admirals, and that it assumed a degree
of training and seamanship in the French navy which that force did not possess.
Bonaparte counted confidently on the mismanagement of the British Admiralty, of
which he had a very poor opinion, and he underestimated the military genius of
Nelson.
The date at
which the French army of invasion was to cross was fixed by the First Consul
for September, 1804. Feints would no longer be necessary, if a French
battle-fleet could reach the Downs; but it was important to have good weather
and long days for the operation. All through the spring and summer of 1804 the
concentration of the flotilla in the neighbourhood of Boulogne was going painfully
forward, under the guns of the British cruisers, which watched every movement
of the French with lynx-eyed vigilance. But the sections of the flotilla which
had been constructed on the littoral of the Bay of Biscay found the British
fleet off Brest a fatal obstacle to their passage, and never succeeded in
effecting their junction with the Channel division. Of 231 small craft, only 35
reached the Channel from the Atlantic coast. In July, 1804, Bonaparte again
visited Boulogne and inspected the flotilla. For a second time a storm occurred
in his presence; the flotilla was scattered and thirteen vessels were lost;
while, of forty boats at Étaples, nine had to be run ashore and several others
were carried by the storm to various ports. The flotilla, even in summer, was
the sport of the winds and waves.
On the night
of October 2, 1804, an attack was made by the British forces upon the flotilla
in the Boulogne roads. Fire-ships and “catamarans”, a primitive kind of
torpedo, were employed. Their explosion caused confusion in the French
flotilla, but the loss of life was insignificant; and on the whole the French
were rather encouraged than alarmed by this affair. From this point onwards the
flotilla played but an unimportant part; and, though large sums were still
devoted to it, it became more and more a mere subsidiary to the French fleet.
The complete
inactivity of the French fleets during 1803 and the earlier months of 1804 must
in part be explained by the want of seamen and the lack of stores in the naval ports.
Even when the ships were ready, it was impossible to send them to sea. The
flotilla made heavy demands for funds and men; and thus its equipment militated
against the efficiency of the fleet, a fact which Bonaparte never seems to have
perceived. In May, 1804, complaining bitterly that Truguet remained immoveable at Brest, and allowed himself to be shut in by a small
British force, he removed this officer and replaced him by Ganteaume. When
Ganteaume took over the command at Brest in June, 1804, twenty ships were ready
for sea, but only seven were fully manned; and, to fill up the gaps, it was
necessary to put out of commission a large number of boats belonging to the
western section of the flotilla. In September, 1804, Ganteaume was directed to
report on the possibility of getting to sea in November, and carrying a force
of 16,000 men to Ireland; but the coronation of Bonaparte as Emperor
interrupted the project, and no answer from Ganteaume is recorded. As there
were accidents whenever his vessels weighed anchor, his reply is not likely to
have been favourable, though his force had now risen to twenty-one ships of the
line.
The strength
of the Toulon squadron steadily rose; it numbered nine ships early in 1804; ten
in the middle of that year; and eleven towards its close. On July 8, 1803,
Nelson had arrived off Toulon, and had taken charge of the blockade of the port
with a total force of nine ships, of which, however, four were frequently on
detached duty. Only seven ships of the line were at first available for the
blockade; and these were not in good condition, while their crews were weak,
and, it would seem, in some cases of inferior quality. Reinforcements
subsequently reached Nelson, raising the Mediterranean fleet to thirteen ships
of the line; but he could rarely collect more than six off Toulon, and was
always short of frigates. Owing to the inadequacy of this force, the blockade
was not a close one. From time to time Nelson withdrew altogether to fill up
his ships with water and provisions in Maddalena Bay, which was his real base.
On these occasions he generally left two frigates to watch the French. His
battleships were so few that it was unsafe for him to divide his squadron,
while this method of blockade gave the French a chance of coming out; and it
was his one wish to get them out and defeat them. The plan aroused great
misgivings among British officers, because it unquestionably afforded openings
for the escape of the French and a possible concentration of their forces in
the Atlantic. But it was the best adaptation of the available means to the end;
moreover, the escape of the French squadron from Toulon could not be so
dangerous to British interests as the escape of the far larger and more
formidable squadron in Brest. This last force was kept hermetically shut in by
the closest possible blockade; but, had it been thoroughly trained and
efficient, it might have found opportunities for escape. For, as Collingwood
said— and subsequent experience confirmed his judgment—ships are not like sentinels
standing at the door; there must be occasions when the greatest vigilance may
fail in preventing a sortie.
In the
Mediterranean, the French made no move during 1803 and the early part of 1804.
Nelson was now convinced that the French intended some fresh stroke against
Egypt; Bonaparte’s skilfully-devised false information had put him off the true
scent. The British Admiralty were receiving accurate information from their
agents in France as to French intentions, but they do not appear to have communicated
their intelligence to Nelson. St Vincent had been replaced as First Lord by
Lord Melville; and Admiral Gambier was now First Sea-Lord. Gambier was an
officer of inferior capacity and poor judgment; timid to excess, he prevented
Cornwallis from carrying out a daring plan, which had been matured by Captain
Puget, for an attack with fire-ships on the French fleet at Brest. Melville was
a good administrator and understood the general outline of Bonaparte’s plan. He
thought that a move against the West Indies was probable.
In the
autumn of 1804, relations between England and Spain became more than ever
strained. The blockade of the French force at Ferrol was carried on by Cochrane
with scant respect for Spain’s rights as a neutral. His haughty conduct was due
to the hostile attitude of the Spaniards, who had given constant assistance to
French privateers, and were reported to be fitting out a large number of ships
in their dockyards, while they had permitted French gunners to be sent from
France to the squadron blockaded at Ferrol. It was known that Napoleon was
drawing a large subsidy from Spain, exempting her in return from the fulfilment
of the other conditions of the Treaty of San Ildefonso, because he thought that
French interests would on the whole be better served by such an attitude of
benevolent neutrality on the part of the Spanish Government. This state of
affairs the British ministry had hitherto tolerated; but Spain was warned that
any serious armaments on her part would lead to war, and that without further
negotiations or notice. As Spanish hostility always diminished when the
treasure-ships from South America were drawing near to Europe, and increased
after their safe arrival, and as the British agents, in September, 1804,
reported great activity in the Spanish dockyards, the British Government
issued instructions to seize four of these ships which were due at Cadiz. The
British commander off Ferrol was also ordered to prevent Spanish vessels
leaving or entering that port and to communicate his instructions to the
Spanish authorities. On October 5 the treasureships were encountered off Cadiz by four British frigates. The Spanish commander was
summoned to surrender, and disregarded the summons, the forces being equal on
either side, though he was quite unprepared to resist. A short but furious
action followed, in which one of the Spanish vessels, with a number of
non-combatants on board, blew up; the other three were captured, with treasure
valued at £1,000,000. The act was denounced as one of piracy, but, in the
circumstances and in view of the plain warning given to Spain, it was
justifiable, the only mistake being that an inadequate force was employed.
War was
reluctantly declared by Spain on December 12, under pressure from Napoleon. In the
same month a Spanish official return gave the Spanish force available as
fifteen ships of the line at Cadiz, eight at Cartagena, and nine at Ferrol; but
two months would be required to get all these ships ready for sea. The arsenals
were empty; at Cadiz the plague was raging; and there was a dire want of funds.
The alliance
with Spain modified the strategic position, and led Napoleon to make important
changes in his plans. In September, 1804, he had appointed Villeneuve to the
command of the Toulon squadron, and had detailed 7,000 men under General
Lauriston to embark on board the fleet. To Decrès he sent instructions and
plans for several expeditions. In the first place, the Rochefort squadron was
to sail to the West Indies, in order to reinforce the French garrisons there
and seize Dominica and Santa Lucia. The bulk of the Toulon fleet was
simultaneously to seize Surinam, and afterwards to join the Rochefort squadron.
The whole force, thus concentrated, was then to appear off San Domingo, attack
Jamaica, return to Ferrol, and liberate the squadron in that port, finally
putting in to Rochefort with twenty sail of the line. Lastly, the Brest fleet
was to sail with 18,000 men for Ireland, and, after landing them, to move by
either the northern or the southern route to the Texel or Boulogne. These
plans, however, appear to have been intercepted by British agents, since they
disappeared for several days and eventually turned up in a damaged envelope,
with the postmark “Boulogne”. It has been suggested that Napoleon purposely
allowed them to fall into British hands in order to divert British attention to
Ireland; but this supposition is improbable, as the plans embodied many
features of the combination which Villeneuve afterwards attempted to execute.
On learning what had happened to his instructions, Napoleon ordered the Brest
ships not to embark any troops, but to remain in readiness for sea.
At the close
of the year 1804 the French fleets were at last ready to act, though they still
lacked trained seamen. The strain of continual watching was becoming very
serious for England; and only young and active officers could have supported
the hourly anxieties of such a blockade as was maintained. The strategy adopted
was simple, yet well-adapted to the requirements of the situation. Every effort
was concentrated upon the command of home waters. If the French fleets escaped,
the British blockading squadrons were to follow them and bring them to action,
or to fall back on the main force at the entrance to the Channel, thus securing
England against invasion. Unfortunately, however, it was not found possible to
secure an overwhelming preponderance in force in European waters; the British
fleet was scattered, and a large number of ships of the line were on distant
stations. The Allied force at the close of 1804 consisted of eleven ships ready
at Toulon, five at Cartagena, ten nearly ready at Cadiz, five French and four
Spanish at Ferrol, five at Rochefort, twenty-one at Brest, and three at the
Texel. These were faced by twelve British battleships in the Mediterranean,
thirty-seven under Cornwallis off Brest and in the Bay of Biscay, nine in the
North Sea, and five in British ports. On foreign oi' distant service were
twelve ships of the line. Thus the total battleship force of England was
seventy-five ; that of the Allies was sixty-four.
In European
waters the British preponderance was extremely slight; and the question arises
whether it was a wise disposition which placed seven ships of the line in the
East Indies and five in the West Indies, when, if used in Europe, they might
have prevented the escape of the French. The economic importance of the East and
West Indies was, however, very great at this period—a fact which explains both
Napoleon’s anxiety to conquer San Domingo, and the maintenance of so large a
British force in distant waters. The Mediterranean fleet was the weakest of all
the important British squadrons ; and Nelson was hampered in his work by the
appointment of an influential but inefficient senior officer, Orde, to command
off Cadiz. Orde impeded Nelson in various ways, and appropriated his cruisers
whenever they came within reach, which prevented Nelson from keeping a ship on
the look-out at Gibraltar.
In December,
1804, fresh instructions were sent by Napoleon to Missiessy,
his admiral commanding at Rochefort, and to Villeneuve at Toulon. Both were to
evade the British and immediately put to sea, the first standing for Martinique
and the second for Cayenne. After forming a junction and doing as much harm as
possible to the British possessions in the West Indies, they were to return to
Ferrol, proceeding thence to Rochefort. The ultimate intention was that this
concentrated force, in conjunction with the Spanish fleet and the Brest fleet,
should cover the invasion of England. On January 18, 1805, Villeneuve, with
eleven ships of the line and nine smaller craft, put to sea. His vessels were so
crowded with troops and so deeply laden with stores that lie expressed grave
fear as to their stability and the safety of their masts. Nelson had retired to
Maddalena to water his fleet, and had only left two frigates on the look-out;
so the way was open to the French. But, when Villeneuve had made one day’s sail
to the south, he was caught by a severe storm; two of his battleships and two
of the smaller craft lost masts or yards; and three frigates were accidentally
separated from the fleet.
Villeneuve,
recognising that a long voyage with damaged ships was out of the question,
decided to return to port and effect repairs. On his way back, he captured a
small craft carrying despatches for Nelson from England. If, as is probable,
the despatches contained the secret information as to the true intentions of
Napoleon which we know to have been reaching the British Admiralty, Nelson must
have been left in the dark as to the ulterior purpose of the French at the most
critical moment of the whole campaign. In March, 1805, he complained that he
had had no news from England of later date than November 2, 1804.
As soon as
he learnt that the enemy had put to sea, Nelson sailed from Maddalena Bay and
cleared for battle, with the fixed resolve to bring them instantly to action.
Learning from his cruisers that the French had been seen off Ajaccio, steering
south, he concluded that they must be making for Egypt, as the wind was strong
from the west, which would prevent their rapid movement through the Straits of
Gibraltar. He hurried to Alexandria, heard nothing of them, and returned,
overwhelmed with anxiety and fear, to discover that Villeneuve had been driven
back to port by bad weather. Nelson’s letters show that, then and afterwards,
he considered the various possible destinations of the French, and was
determined to follow them without further orders, whether to the West or the
East Indies. The danger to be apprehended from the arrival of a strong French
force in the West Indies was in his judgment very great. “If St Lucia, Grenada,
St Vincent, Antigua, and St Kitts... fall,” he had written, “in that case
England would be so clamorous for peace that we should humble ourselves”; and
this statement explains his subsequent action.
On his
return from Egypt, Nelson proceeded to the Gulf of Palma and provisioned there.
Meanwhile Villeneuve put to sea again on March 30. Again the French squadron
was followed and watched for some distance by the British cruisers; but again
it disappeared from view. Villeneuve learnt from a neutral vessel where Nelson
was, and avoiding him ran in to Cartagena, in order to join forces with the
Spaniards. The Spanish admiral, however, had received no orders to put to sea
with the French fleet, and declined to move till orders arrived. Unwilling to
wait, Villeneuve hastened to the Straits of Gibraltar, and on April 9 passed
through them, to the roar of the alarm-guns from the Rock. Nelson did not hear
of his escape till April 4. He then deployed his fleet between Sardinia and the
Algerian coast, in order to prevent any eastward movement on the part of the
French, and to cover Egypt and Naples, and waited for information before
sailing west or east.
The greatest
of Napoleon’s projects was now in train of execution. The complicated plans had
been further modified. Two squadrons were to escape from port, and open the
French movement. The proceedings of Villeneuve’s force have been described down
to the second sortie in March. Missiessy’s detachment, consisting of five ships of the line and five small craft, put to
sea from Rochefort on January 11, 1805, heavily laden with troops and stores,
and proceeded to the Antilles. On the way across, it suffered the usual mishaps
which befell French vessels whenever they moved; in three weeks the ships of his
squadron lost nine masts or important spars. On February 20 Missiessy reached Martinique, and at once attacked the British island of Dominica ; but,
though he took the British by surprise, he could not reduce the island. He
seized or destroyed thirty-three British merchantmen, levied contributions upon
the islets of St Kitts, Nevis, and Montserrat, and then returned to Martinique,
where, according to his original instructions, he was to await Villeneuve. But,
when Villeneuve was driven back after his first sortie, fresh orders were sent
from France, which directed Missiessy not to expect
help from Villeneuve, but to carry out his special mission independently: in
other words, he was to convey some reinforcements to San Domingo and then
return to Europe.
It was Missiessy’s anxiety to obey these orders that prevented him
from receiving a third despatch directing him, after all, to wait for
Villeneuve. Villaret-Joyeuse, who commanded at
Martinique, was desirous that Missiessy should assist
him in the reduction of the Diamond Rock, an islet off the Martinique coast,
where the British had a small post which annoyed passing French ships; and the
delay which such an operation would have involved would have given time for the
arrival of the third despatch. But Missiessy was
anxious to get away; he feared that superior British forces were following in
his wake; he thought, from the tone of his earlier orders, that his return to
France was urgently required; and he pointed out that he had already stayed in
the West Indies longer than had been intended. Accordingly he sailed off' to
San Domingo, where he landed a few men and some stores, and then returned to
Rochefort, making a very slow passage and reaching that port on May 20. He had
been five months at sea and, for all practical purposes, had done nothing
beyond causing great alarm in England and the British West Indies, and
obtaining some 60,000 by the sale of prizes and by contributions levied on the
British.
Through the
latter half of 1804 and the first weeks of 1805 embarrassments had been
accumulating about Napoleon’s path. The attitude of Austria was becoming more
and more threatening, as the general feeling in that country was that any
failure of the French to invade England would bring about a war on the Continent
by way of diversion. Relations between France and Russia were already broken
off in consequence of the execution of the Due d’Enghien;
and a personal appeal which the French Emperor addressed to George III, with
the probable object of strengthening the hands of the British Opposition, was
answered by a curt refusal to discuss terms of peace without consulting Russia
and the Continental Powers. Under these menacing conditions, Napoleon, early in
January, 1805, appears for a moment to have abandoned the invasion project.
Orders were sent recalling Missiessy; and
instructions were despatched to Villeneuve to undertake a movement against
India. But, just after these despatches had been forwarded, the situation
changed once more. A letter from the Austrian Emperor which arrived at Paris at
the end of January reassured Napoleon, and led him to resume the “immense
project”—his own term for the complicated plan of invasion. The orders to Missiessy were revoked; but the counterorder, as we have
seen, reached the West Indies too late.
A fresh
series of orders, dated March 2, 1805, directed Ganteaume to put to sea with
twenty-one battleships as speedily as possible, to sail to Ferrol and open that
port, capturing eight British vessels which were watching it, and to form a
junction with the ten or eleven French and Spanish ships now ready in the
harbour. He was then to stand away for Martinique, where the Rochefort and
Toulon fleets would be found; and then, instantly returning to Europe with at
least forty sail of the line, to beat the British fleet off Ushant and move up
to Boulogne, there to cover the passage of Napoleon’s army. On the same day
further instructions were sent to Villeneuve; and these are of great
importance, being the last he received before putting to sea for the second
time on March 30. They directed him to move from Toulon, pick up the Spaniards
at Cadiz, and proceed to Martinique, there to meet Ganteaume and Missiessy. If Villeneuve arrived before Ganteaume, he was
to remain at Martinique, ready to put to sea at a signal; after waiting forty
days, in case Ganteaume had not appeared, he was to move by San Domingo to the
Canaries, to cruise off the Canaries twenty days, and then to return to Cadiz,
in the event of nothing having been seen of Ganteaume. Though every precaution
was taken to keep these orders secret, they were known to the agents of England
and the Bourbons even before they had reached their destination. “The fleets”,
wrote the mysterious “fils d'ami”
of d’Antraigues, on March 1, “are to move against the
West Indies and to attack Jamaica. England will know in eight days the exact
facts which I tell you... She places entire faith in these sources of
information at Paris; she has found them too trustworthy in the past not to
show such faith”. Thus there is good contemporary evidence that the British
secret service was fully informed as to Napoleon’s intentions. But these facts
do not appear to have been communicated at once to the British admirals,
perhaps because of the confusion at the Admiralty at this juncture, owing to
the attack on Lord Melville, which culminated in the vote of censure of April
8.
Napoleon had
hitherto based all his plans on evading the British naval forces. His fleets
were ordered to leave port without fighting; but this, in the case of the Brest
force, was out of the question, so closely did the large British fleet watch
that place. Yet, at times, the blockading fleet fell much below the strength of
the blockaded ; and, had they been allowed to fight, the French had
opportunities, which in consequence of Napoleon’s orders they were unable to
use. On March 24 Ganteaume telegraphed to Napoleon that he was ready to sail
with twenty-one ships, and that there were only fifteen British ships outside;
there must be a battle if he went out, but his success was certain. Napoleon
replied, directing him to go out but forbidding him to fight a battle. This
reluctance to run an insignificant risk at one of the most critical moments
tied the Brest fleet thereafter to harbour. The lost opportunity never
recurred, though at a later date Ganteaume was ordered not to shrink from
fighting his way out. Dispirited by the threatening attitude of the British
admiral, who a few days later received large reinforcements, Ganteaume on March
29 retired from Bertheaume Bay to the interior of
Brest harbour; and, when inside, received too late the news that Villeneuve was
at sea, with pressing orders for himself to go out.
Meanwhile
Villeneuve, after passing the Straits of Gibraltar, appeared on April 9 off
Cadiz. There he was joined on the same day by one French ship of the line and
by six Spanish ships under Admiral Gravina, raising
his total force to eighteen vessels of the line. He was anxious to put as great
a distance as possible between his ships and Nelson’s, “as the enemy’s squadron
in the Mediterranean must be in pursuit of me, and may be able to effect a
junction with that which has been blockading Cadiz”. As a matter of fact Orde’s
squadron, consisting of four ships of the line, narrowly escaped capture, and
fled north without keeping touch with the Allies or sending information to
Nelson, thus rendering that officer’s task harder than ever, since he was left
to grope in the dark for the destination of the French. On April 11 Villeneuve
was well on his way to the West Indies, but with only one of the Spanish ships
in company. The Spaniards sailed wretchedly; and, if there had been any British
pursuit, they must have been captured one by one. Napoleon was filled with
satisfaction at the news that the junction with the Spaniards had been
effected, and sent off pressing orders for Admiral Magon to start with two ships of the line from Rochefort and join Villeneuve at
Martinique. He added further instructions which ordered Villeneuve to spend
thirty-five days, after Magon’s arrival, in the West
Indies, to employ the time in attacking the British inlands, and after that
interval to return to Ferrol if Ganteaume did not appear. From Ferrol he was to
go to Brest and there join Ganteaume, even at the risk of battle. Villeneuve
reached Martinique on May 14, having occupied more than a month on the passage,
and in conformity with his original orders, Magon had
not yet joined him, took in water and made ready to put to sea as soon as
Ganteaume should appear.
The alarm
was great in London at this juncture. The Admiralty was distracted by the
political attack which, at this moment, the Opposition were making upon the
purity of its financial management. The First Lord, Melville, had resigned on
April 9; and further complication followed, when, with utter disregard of
national interests, Lord Sidmouth claimed the office for one of his supporters
in the Ministry, and strongly opposed Pitt’s appointment of Admiral Sir Charles
Middleton (Lord Barham). Fortunately, Pitt stood firm; and his judgment was
vindicated by events. The precautionary measures taken by Barham were as
follows. Cochrane, with six battleships, had left in March for the West Indies,
where four British battleships were already stationed, in order to deal with Missiessy; and on April 27 a secret order was issued by the
Admiralty to Gardner, then in temporary command off Brest, to detach Admiral
Collingwood with five ships to Madeira. If Nelson with his fleet had not passed
that point going west, he was to move to the West Indies and effect a junction
with Cochrane, which would raise the force in the West Indies to fifteen
battleships. If Nelson had passed, Collingwood was to rejoin the Channel fleet. At the same time orders were sent to the ports to expedite
the fitting out of all available ships. A few days later, Orde was removed from
his command; and Collingwood was directed to make at once with eight sail for
Barbados. But, before he could leave, the news that Nelson was moving in pursuit
of the French led to counter-orders.
That admiral
had been searching the Mediterranean for Villeneuve; nor was it till April 18
that he heard that the enemy had passed through the Straits, steering west and
picking up the Spanish ships at Cadiz. The fact that the Spaniards, of whose
incapacity at sea Nelson was fully aware, were in Villeneuve’s company, seemed
to point to a move towards Ferrol and Brest and Ireland; and he at once decided
to make for the Scilly Isles, from which point he could cover the Channel. He
was detained for several days by unfavourable winds and by the necessity of
convoying 5000 British troops on their way from England to the Mediterranean;
but he used the delay to fill up with provisions and water. On May 10 he at
last received from Admiral Campbell, a British officer in the Portuguese
service, information which convinced him that the French were bound for the
West Indies. Sending in all directions the information that he was following
Villeneuve, he started with ten sail of the line “ to save the West Indies.” So
far was he from being “decoyed” away, that the mere news that he was on his
passage caused a feeling of immense relief in England.
Notwithstanding
the foul condition of his ships, so swiftly did Nelson make the passage that on
June 4 he was at Barbados, where he picked up two battleships, raising his
force to twelve. His arrival was speedily reported to Villeneuve, who in
obedience to his orders had waited at Martinique, utilising his stay to effect
the capture of the Diamond Rock. Receiving, however, from Magon Napoleon’s later instructions to drive the British from the Antilles, he set
sail for Barbados, intending to attack that island. On June 8 Villeneuve
captured a British convoy, and learnt from prisoners that Nelson was in the
neighbourhood with a force represented at from twelve to fourteen ships. This
intelligence filled him with something approaching panic; and, after a conference
with Gravina, he decided to return forthwith to
Ferrol. The Spanish crews were daily diminishing through sickness and
desertion; and a prolonged stay might have forced him to abandon some of the
Spanish ships. He sent back, in frigates, the troops embarked at Martinique and
Guadeloupe, and hurried off to Europe with twenty sail of the line. He was
fortunate in not being molested on his passage; but this he owed to the fact
that Nelson was led by false information to make a move to Trinidad. On June 12,
however, Nelson heard that the French had disappeared, and, with the judgment
of a consummate commander, at once divined their course of action—if indeed
definite information did not reach him from the British secret-service agents
at Martinique, where Villaret appears to have been
dangerously talkative. He sent off a fast vessel with news for the Admiralty,
and himself followed with his squadron. His fast ship sighted the Allies on her
passage, and was thus able to carry to London exact information of the enemy’s
movements.
Nelson was
off the Spanish coast on July 18, steering for Gibraltar, and, after
provisioning his ships and conferring with Collingwood, who had moved up to
Cadiz, sailed slowly northwards to the entrance of the Channel with his fleet,
being much delayed by unfavourable winds, so that he did not form his junction
with Cornwallis till August 15. His return to Europe had a disconcerting effect
on Napoleon, who at first flatly refused to credit it or to believe that the
start gained by Villeneuve- had been absolutely lost. Meanwhile the British
Admiralty, having received Nelson’s information as to the French movements,
issued orders to Cornwallis to reinforce the British fleet off Ferrol, under
Calder, by adding to it the squadron blockading Rochefort, after which Calder
was to move to the west of Ferrol with fifteen battleships, so as, if possible,
to intercept the allied fleet. It was a fresh complication and source of danger
to the British that Allemand, who had replaced Missiessy, put to sea from Rochefort on July 17, as soon as
the blockaders vanished, just missing orders which were sent him from Paris at
the last moment to sail direct for Ferrol, and acting on earlier instructions,
which ordered him to cruise on the parallel of Ferrol from July 29 to August 3,
and after this for ten days in the Bay of Biscay, when he was to put into Vigo.
It was unfortunate for the French that he sailed without knowing that
Villeneuve was expected back forthwith at Ferrol; and so it happened that he cruised
at no great distance from Calder, without being near enough to be present at
the battle of Finisterre.
On July 22,
in foggy weather, Calder sighted the allied fleet. He had but fifteen ships to
their twenty, though he had been given to understand that they would not have
more than sixteen, and he had good reason to fear that the Rochefort ships
might at any moment appear and form a junction with the enemy. He was a
mediocre commander, incapable of bold or decided action, and unequal to the
strain of so perilous a position.
He joined
battle, however, forming his fleet in a line in close order, while the enemy
also slowly formed a line. A confused, scrambling action resulted, ship
fighting ship in a thick fog that rendered unity of control impossible. As
darkness fell, two Spanish ships in the allied rear struck and were taken
possession of by the British, whose losses in killed and wounded amounted to
199, while the Allies lost 476. Thus, though the issue was not decisive, the
Allies had the worst of the battle. At daylight on the 23rd the two fleets were
still in sight of each other; but neither admiral would attack—Calder because
he wanted to cover and secure his prizes; Villeneuve, because, if his excuses
are to be believed, he thought he could not reach the British before nightfall,
and did not care to risk a night action. Thereupon, imagining that the British
would receive reinforcements, he decided to shape his course to Ferrol. Thus
the two fleets parted without decisive results, though the allied ships
received such injuries that they were compelled forthwith to make for a port.
Villeneuve asserted that Calder had fled before him; and this report, being
credited in England, led to a bitter outcry against the latter. Yet Calder had
fought fairly against considerable odds; his position was one of great anxiety;
and, if his success was not in the same class with Nelson’s victories, it was
at least worthy of comparison with Lord Howe’s victory of June 1 and Hotham’s
Mediterranean actions. He was subsequently court-martialled and severely
censured for his behaviour—such an effect had Nelson’s tactics produced on
public opinion.
After the
action, Calder proceeded to blockade Ferrol, but was perplexed by finding no
sign of Villeneuve there on July 29. The French admiral had sailed to Vigo, to
disembark his numerous sick and take on board food and water. Leaving behind
him three of his worst ships, he put to sea on July 31 with fifteen sail; and,
as Calder had been blown off the station by a storm, he managed to slip into
Corunna without a battle and form a junction with the fleet inside, now
fourteen strong. On August 9 Calder discovered that the French were inside
Corunna in great force; and, holding himself too weak to keep them in, he fell
back upon the Channel fleet, which, with Calder’s and Nelson’s ships, now
reached a total of thirty-seven sail of the line. Cornwallis, however, after
all his brilliant work in the blockade, committed at this point a blunder which
might have proved fatal against any antagonist but Villeneuve and the
disorganised Franco-Spanish fleet. He divided his force into two squadrons :
one, consisting of twenty ships, he sent to Ferrol to meet Villeneuve, who was
reported to be twenty-eight sail strong; the other, of seventeen ships, he kept
with his flag off Brest. Had Villeneuve put to sea and appeared off Brest with
the thirty-four effective sail which, including Allemand’s squadron, he could have collected, Cornwallis, caught between this force and Ganteaume’s twenty-one sail inside the port, must have been
compelled to retire or have sustained a great defeat.
But
Villeneuve did not proceed to Brest; nor did he even effect a junction with Allemand, for a cruiser sent off with instructions to the
latter’s rendezvous was snapped up by the British almost in sight of both the
French fleets. Allemand wandered aimlessly about the
Bay of Biscay, out of touch with his colleagues, and performing no useful
service. Villeneuve had been forbidden by Napoleon to go into Ferrol, and had
some difficulty in getting his ships out of Corunna; both he and Gravina now despaired of success. He complained that he had
“bad masts, bad sails, bad officers, and bad seamen... obsolete naval tactics;
we only know one manoeuvre, to form line, and that is just what the enemy wants
us to do”. When he started to move out of Corunna, his ships collided with each
other, and fresh trouble ensued. It took him five days, from August 8 to 13, to
get the fleets at Ferrol and Corunna to sea.
On his
moving westward, with a total force of twenty-nine sail of the line, fortune
once more played the French a cruel trick; on August 14 several of Allemand’s squadron were sighted to the north, and were
mistaken for British ships; at the same time Allemand mistook Villeneuve for his enemy. But for this mutual misunderstanding, the two
would have met; the French fleet would have risen to thirty-four sail of the
line; and the despondency of Villeneuve might have been removed by a real
success. As it was, feeling that he had no chance of carrying out “the immense
project,” and finding that the wind was dead against him, Villeneuve on the
15th turned south to Cadiz, in obedience to the express orders of Napoleon,
bearing date July 16, which directed him, in the event of unforeseen
circumstances, or if the position of the fleet did not permit him to attain the
main object, to concentrate an imposing force at Cadiz. These orders had been
subsequently cancelled; but news of the fact had not reached Villeneuve. He was
short of supplies, short of everything; and mishap succeeded mishap in the
Spanish contingent. On August 20 he drove off Collingwood and entered Cadiz,
where his force rose to thirty-five, counting the six Spanish ships already
inside that harbour. A few hours later, with stupefying audacity, the
imperturbable Collingwood once more closed in on the harbour, though his total
force was only three sail of the line; and Villeneuve accepted this truly
remarkable blockade. Powerful reinforcements for Collingwood were hurried
south; and Nelson, after a brief visit to England, was despatched to Cadiz to
take command in what was to be the last and greatest battle of his glorious
life.
For Napoleon
the summer of 1805 had been a period of great suspense, as he was obliged to face
at once towards Austria and England. On August 3 he arrived at Boulogne; five
days later he learnt of the battle of Finisterre, and at first expressed
satisfaction at Villeneuve having effected a junction with the Ferrol fleet. On
second thoughts, he despatched a letter to Villeneuve, blaming him for his weak
conduct; and on the 13th, supposing the admiral to be at Ferrol, ordered him to
attack the British, provided the Allies could oppose twentyeight ships to the British twenty-three or fewer. For the first time since he devised
“the immense project”, he contemplated a great naval battle. The explanation of
this sudden change in his designs is probably that he saw the extreme danger of
risking an invasion of England without the command of the sea, now that Nelson
was back and Austria was preparing for war. A naval engagement must be won
before he could cross the Channel; while, if the battle were lost, it would
justify his abandonment of the flotilla scheme without any loss of reputation,
since the blame of the disaster would naturally be laid on the unsuccessful
admiral. Subsequent orders, dated August 13 and 14, directed Villeneuve to
attack the enemy, who were supposed to have but twenty-four ships, and then to
move up to the Channel, where “we are ready everywhere ; his appearance for
twenty-four hours will suffice.
Napoleon had
imagined a picture of the British dispositions which was far from the truth.
Nelson and Collingwood were in the Mediterranean; a large British force was in
the West Indies; there could be nothing in Villeneuve’s way. But these messages
and orders did not reach the French admiral at Corunna; it was not till he was
at Cadiz that he knew he was expected to fight. Meanwhile Ganteaume was
directed to move his ships out of Brest and to be ready for a battle when
Villeneuve drew near. On August 22 a message was sent by semaphore, to be given
to Villeneuve when he appeared at Brest, urging him to come up Channel at once,
the army being embarked and England at his mercy. Napoleon directed that, if
Villeneuve, in obedience to the earlier orders, should have fallen back to
Cadiz, he was immediately to leave that port, with the Spanish ships there and,
if possible, with the ships at Cartagena, and sail for the Channel. Decrès,
however, filled with misgivings as to the invasion project, adjured the Emperor
not to bring the combined fleet north at that season of the year, but to regard
its arrival at Cadiz as “ the decree of destiny, which reserves the fleet for
other purposes”.
Written on
August 22, this letter appears to have decided Napoleon. Though he still wished
to wait fifteen days before moving against Austria, his cavalry began on the
24th to march off to the Rhine, and was followed on the 26th and 28th by other
portions of the array. On the 30th the flotilla was ordered to be concentrated
in the Liane—a fact which indicated the postponement of the invasion; on
September 1 letters were sent to Villeneuve criticising his conduct and
directing him to take on board six months’ provisions, to “dominate the coasts
of Andalusia”, and to attack the enemy, if of inferior force. On September 8 a
letter in Napoleon’s correspondence contains, for the first time, the
allegation that Villeneuve’s movement to Cadiz had defeated the project of
invasion. It is sufficient comment to point out that on August 28, before he
knew of Villeneuve’s move southward to Cadiz, Napoleon had written that the
“army is in full march” against Austria.
In reality,
it was Nelson’s swift movements, the Austrian diversion in Napoleon’s rear, and
the hopeless unseaworthiness of the flotilla, that dictated the abandonment of
the “immense project.”
The final
act in the great drama was yet to be played. On September 28 Nelson in the
Victory joined the fleet off Cadiz. He at once convened his captains and laid
before them his arrangement for the battle. Such enthusiasm did his plans
excite, so extraordinary was his influence, that some of his audience were
moved to tears. The whole fleet was filled with exultation at the fact that he
commanded it; a thrill of enthusiasm ran through the crews; and, as a small
token of their regard for him, the captains painted their ships the colour he
preferred. With true generalship, though he judged
his force adequate for victory, Nelson sought to obtain a fleet which would
secure “not victory but annihilation”. And, just as Napoleon at the opening of
his Italian campaign strove to attract to himself all available force, so
Nelson begged his Government to send him ships, more ships, so that he might
have the largest fleet possible at the vital point in contact with the enemy.
“It is only numbers that can annihilate”, he wrote to Lady Hamilton. Various
detachments, however, among others the despatch of a division to take in water
and provisions at Gibraltar, reduced his force, in mid-October, to twenty-seven
sail of the line.
The attack
which he meditated, and the details of which he had communicated to his
officers, was a double cutting of the enemy’s line and concentration upon its
centre and rear, leaving the van out of the fight. If reinforcements joined him
in time, he intended to attack in three separate columns and to effect a treble
severance; but, as the reinforcements had not reached him, he formed his fleet
in two divisions, the second led by Collingwood, who had full authority to
manage his own part of the battle. The central idea was that, having lured the
enemy out of Cadiz, he should pass through them with one division of his fleet
in line abreast, covered by the other in line ahead, get to leeward, and cut
them off from that port—a manoeuvre which would make a decisive engagement
certain. In order to mislead the Allies as to his strength, Nelson kept only a
small force close to the port; the bulk of his fleet cruised far away in the
offing, out of sight of the coast, linked to the squadron inshore by a chain of
cruisers and battleships.
On October
19 Villeneuve, having heard that Rosily had been sent to supersede him,
determined to obey the orders of Napoleon and issue forth, his intention being
to form a junction with the ships at Cartagena. His force comprised
thirty-three sail of the line; but the crews of the French ships were short of
their establishment by 2200 men, and the Spanish vessels were in even worse
plight. Provisions were so scarce, in consequence of the strict blockade, that
his crews were on the verge of starvation. Nelson made no premature attack when
he learnt that the Allies were moving. He fell back, trusting to his cruisers
to keep good touch, and headed for the Straits of Gibraltar to cut his enemy
off from the Mediterranean. On the 20th he was in sight of Gibraltar; and there
the last conferences were held on board the Victory.
At noon on
that day the allied fleet turned and steered south. Nelson watched them closely
all that afternoon and night; the 21st he had selected for the battle, as a day
glorious in the annals of his family. At 6.30 a.m. on the 21st he made the
signal to form line of battle in two divisions, the left or windward division
under his own personal command, eleven ships strong; the right or leeward one
under Collingwood, fifteen strong, while one ship was far off to the north. A
little later came the order to prepare for battle, followed by another to “bear
up east” towards the Franco-Spanish fleet. The British fleet mustered
twenty-seven sail of the line, with a broadside of 29,000 lbs.; the allied
fleet thirty-three ships, with a broadside of 30,000 lbs. The morning was grey
and cloudy; a light wind blew from the north-west; and a great swell rolled
booming in upon the cliffs of Cape Trafalgar, which showed to the eastward out
of the mists of morning.
As the
British drew nearer, Villeneuve, who had been heading southward, changed his
course and stood north, seeing that a battle was inevitable, and wisely
deciding to fight with a friendly port under his lee. His ships formed a long
line, bent at an obtuse angle, the ends inclining inwards to the approaching
British fleet. At the head of each British column sailed its admiral, Nelson to
the left in the Victory; Collingwood to the right in the Royal Sovereign. Under
Nelson’s leadership the spirit of the fleet had risen to a degree of exaltation
which was in itself the presage of victory. Nelson, as he went to battle,
declared to a friend that he looked for twenty prizes; the captains jested with
each other as to the ships which they should capture. The approach was slow and
tedious to excited nerves; while it proceeded, Nelson prepared the final
codicil to his will and wrote his last prayer, in which he asked for a great
and glorious victory, with no misconduct in his fleet. His final orders to the
frigates accompanying him show the sternness of his spirit and its remorseless
insistence upon gathering in the full fruits of victory. These lighter vessels
were not to save ships or men; they were to complete the enemy’s annihilation;
“capture was but a secondary object.”
As the
fleets drew nearer, Nelson was entreated by his personal friends to cover the
orders which he wore on his coat, since in naval actions of that date the
leader was exposed to the enemy’s fire at close quarters, and his decorations
would attract the aim of their marksmen. He refused to comply with this request
or to move to a light ship where the danger would be less, giving as his reason
the importance of a great example in the leader. About 11 o’clock, perceiving
that stormy weather was to be expected, he signalled to prepare to anchor, and
soon afterwards made the last great appeal of his life to those he led, in the
famous signal “England expects that every man will do his duty”. Originally he
had intended a different and perhaps warmer appeal, cast in a form which
expressed not expectation but certainty—“Nelson confides that everyman will do
his duty”. But, even in its altered form, the signal evoked a zeal and spirit
like his own; “it seemed like inspiration to most of them”. The last and
invariable order of the Nelson battle, “Engage more closely”, followed just
before the firing began. These, with the possible exception of an intimation to
Collingwood that he meant to feint against the allied van, were all the
important signals of that morning, illustrating the perfect forethought of the
admiral, the complete preparation for all contingencies.
The bands
played in the British ships as they went down to battle, in irregular lines,
with little precision of formation. Just before closing, Collingwood, whose
column, owing to the enemy’s formation, was now nearly parallel with the allied
rear, gave the signal to bear up together, i.e. to turn to the right and attack
as nearly simultaneously as possible. Nelson’s column was still in line ahead,
slightly converging on that of Collingwood. The first gun was fired by accident
in a British ship; the next shots were fired by the Allies about midday at the
Royal Sovereign, as she approached in advance of her line. A dense cloud of
smoke gathered round their line as it moved north; Collingwood reserving his
fire, headed for the twelfth ship from their rear, but at the last moment
swerved and made for the thirteenth, which was larger. The Allies were in the
closest possible order; but Collingwood was not to be denied. He drove straight
ahead, ready to carry away the bowsprit of the French vessel astern of his
quarry; and the Frenchman gave way before his unflinching tenacity.
From the
Victory the Royal Sovereign was seen to vanish amidst a tempest of firing in
the thick cloud of smoke; then her tall masts showed on the further side of the
line, and it was known that Collingwood had gloriously performed his task. Some
minutes followed before support reached her; but Nelson’s confidence in his
subordinate was justified. The Royal Sovereign's fire was deadly; it tore down
the stern of the Santa Ana, and caused great execution in the press of hostile
ships gathering round her. Her friends followed eagerly to her aid; there was
no hanging back in the line; and as, one by one, the other ships judiciously
brought their broadsides to bear, the battle in the rear began to go decisively
in favour of the British.
On the left,
Nelson watched with intense admiration Collingwood’s fierce onset, as the
Victory slowly covered the space between the fleets. He feinted towards the
French van, as he came within range, probably with the object of holding it
inactive, and then turned sharply to the right and, after passing some distance
down the enemy’s line, turned left and broke through, driving his flagship
through the smoke and flame, and suffering heavy loss as the French guns raked
him. He passed under the stern of the tenth ship in the allied line, the Bucentaure, pouring into her a raking fire, which
brought clouds of dust and splinters from her hull. Then, after penetrating the
allied line, he turned to starboard again and dropped on board a French 74, the Redoutable. It was about 12.20 p.m. when the
Victory broke the French line.
When the
leaders had struck the enemy’s line and passed through it without disabling
loss, the battle might be considered won. Of necessity, in such a scheme of
action, the heads of the British columns would suffer most heavily in the
approach; and this is doubtless the reason why Nelson led himself with
Collingwood, on whose iron nerve he could absolutely rely. But, when the line
was penetrated, generalship ceased for the moment;
the rest was the work of the captains, to whom full initiative had been
conceded. The logs prove that they too showed judgment and energy worthy of
their leaders, breaking boldly through the hostile line wherever they thought
their efforts would tell most, or moving without further orders to meet the
enemy’s van, when it at last began to threaten the British ships in the centre
of the fight. The battle of Trafalgar is the most perfect example of initiative
among subordinates, as it is of the leader’s scientific use of his weapons,
that is to be found in the whole naval war. Though the details of the attack
have been much disputed, especially in regard to the question whether the
method indicated in Nelson’s previous instructions was precisely followed or
not, there is no doubt that its greatest merit—what he himself called “the
Nelson touch”—consisted in the concentration of an overpowering force upon the
rear half of the enemy’s fleet, the bold occupation of the enemy’s van with a
force numerically inferior (under his immediate command) so as to leave his lee
column free to do its work, and the handling of both columns in such a way as
to prevent the enemy, till the last moment, from knowing how the attack was to
be made.
Villeneuve’s
tactics, on the other hand, were of the simplest description. He intermingled
the French and Spanish ships, to prevent misconduct on the part of the latter,
and then adopted a passive attitude, dictated, no doubt, by his officers’ want
of skill and practice in manoeuvring. As he had said at an earlier date, there
was but one evolution of which they were capable, and this was forming line.
But, if the leadership throughout the fleet was indifferent or bad, there was
no want of individual courage. The French and Spanish seamen displayed the
greatest bravery, and suffered terrible losses before they could be induced to
strike.
The first French
ship struck about 1 p.m., soon after the engagement had become general; it fell
to Collingwood. From this hour onward, the frigates watching the battle saw a
steady succession of surrenders; one two-decker at 1.35; two ships to the Victory and Téméraire at 1.50; “several” at 2 o’clock.
With each surrender the demoralisation of the allied fleet and the confidence
of the British increased. But these results were not won without great loss to
the British, both in officers and men. A few minutes before the resistance of
his antagonist in the French line was overcome, Nelson, while walking the
Victory's quarterdeck, was struck by a bullet from the Redoutable's top and mortally wounded. He fell with the words “They have done for me at
last”, and was borne below. His intellect remained unclouded for two hours,
during which, again and again, he urged his flag-captain to give the order to
anchor. About three he was told that a great and decisive battle had been
gained; that fifteen of the enemy had been taken, and that no British ship had
struck. The ruling spirit was strong even in death, and he cried that he had
looked for twenty prizes. A little later consciousness ebbed from him; and with
the last words “God and my country”, this great servant of England passed away.
His presence
was sorely needed in the last stage of the battle, to complete the victory
which his genius had gained. The French van, five ships strong, turned and
attacked the confused mass of British ships struggling with the allied centre.
A large part of the British fleet was still intact, and might have been used to
crush this detachment. But Collingwood, though incomparable as a subordinate,
did not possess the force and decision of Nelson, and let the opportunity slip.
Again, when the shattered French and Spanish ships in the centre and rear fled
towards Cadiz, no general pursuit was ordered or attempted. Had Nelson been
alive, it is doubtful if one of them would have been permitted to escape. The
logs show continued signals at the end of the battle to the British ships,
which, acting on their own initiative, were attempting pursuit, to “close round
the admiral”; and, as night came down, Collingwood committed a final blunder in
refusing to anchor his prizes.
The serious
fighting ended with the repulse of the French van about three. Spasmodic firing
continued till five, when the French ship Achille blew up with a terrific
report. Of the allied fleet, thirty-three ships of the line strong, one French
ship blew up after she had struck, eight French ships and nine Spanish were
taken. Four French vessels escaped to the north; eleven, French and Spanish,
ran eastwards to Cadiz. After the battle a violent storm set in, in consequence
of which three of the prizes, with insufficient crews on board and in a
shattered condition, were either recaptured by their own men or handed over by
the British prize-crews, as the only way to keep them afloat and save the lives
of all, while ten were wrecked or destroyed by their captors; so that
ultimately only four ships remained in the hands of the victors. The British
loss was 449 killed, and 1241 wounded; while that of the Allies, though never
exactly ascertained, is stated to have reached the enormous figure of 5860; and
this estimate may probably be accepted, in view of the fact that, out of a crew
of 645 men, the Redoutable lost 522 in killed
and wounded.
The losses
of the Allies did not, however, end with the day of the great battle. On
October 23, Commodore de Cosmao Kerjulien put to sea from Cadiz with five battleships and five frigates, in the hope of
retaking some of the British prizes. His movements contributed to the recapture
of two of the vessels already mentioned. But his force was caught by a storm,
and three of its five ships were wrecked, so that there remained in Cadiz only
nine sail of the line, including the recovered ships. On November 4, four of
the ships which had escaped from the French van at Trafalgar, under
Rear-Admiral Dumanoir le Pelley, were overtaken
after a long chase and brought to action by a British squadron of five ships of
the line and four frigates, then cruising off Ferrol under the orders of
Captain Sir Richard Strachan, and after a prolonged resistance were taken and
carried into Plymouth. Strachan was looking for Allemand’s squadron, which however eluded the British fleets and returned safely to
Rochefort, having done great damage to British commerce.
Brilliant as
was the victory of Trafalgar—, the climax of the prolonged naval struggle with
France, and the last pitched battle of the war fought at sea between large
fleets, it caused at the moment little jubilation in England. So closely had
Nelson identified himself with the glory of the navy, so much had he endeared
himself to his countrymen, that his loss seemed to them to outweigh the virtual
annihilation of the enemy’s fleet. The news of Trafalgar brought sorrow rather
than rejoicing; and the British triumph seemed to be balanced by the French
victories at Ulm and Austerlitz. No immediate effect was perceptible, yet from
the close of 1805 the French navy ceased to cause serious anxiety in England ;
and, though more than once Napoleon attempted to repeat the combinations which
had ended thus disastrously, British predominance upon the seas was
henceforward beyond dispute.
Before the
battle of Trafalgar, but after his army had moved from Boulogne, Napoleon
issued orders to Rear-Admirals Willaumez and Leissegues, both of whom held commands in the Brest fleet,
to put to sea, the one with six ships of the line and the other with five, and
to wage relentless war on British commerce. Both squadrons managed to escape on
December 13, and soon parted company. But their exit was observed; and two
powerful squadrons, under Sir John Warren and Sir Richard Strachan, were sent
in pursuit. Willaumez sailed to the Cape, after a
narrow escape, from Admiral Sir John Duckworth, who saw him but, though almost
equal in force, showed no anxiety to attack him. As the Cape was in British
hands, the French admiral proceeded to Brazil and Martinique, off which island
he had another narrow escape from a British squadron under Rear-Admiral
Cochrane. While he was waiting at sea to catch a British convoy, storms
scattered his fleet; and he was compelled with only one ship to make for
Havana. He reached that port in safety, and returned to France early in 1807.
The results of the expedition were miserable —seventeen merchantmen taken at the
cost of two French ships of the line. Leissegues was
even more unfortunate. His five sail of the line were caught at anchor in San
Domingo roads, on February 6,1806, by Duckworth with eight sail of the line,
and sustained a crushing defeat. Three of his ships of the line were taken and
two destroyed; only the small craft with him managed to escape.
In January,
1806, Cape Colony was attacked by a small British expedition under Commodore
Sir Home Popham, and captured with but little difficulty. The results of this
conquest, and the subsequent failures of Popham and Whitelocke in their attempts upon Montevideo and Buenos Ayres, will be described in a
later chapter of this volume.
In 1807, two
important operations were undertaken by the British navy in European waters.
The first was against the Sultan, who had been induced by Napoleon to declare
war on Russia, with which Great Britain was still in alliance. A squadron of
eight ships of the line was assembled off the Dardanelles under Duckworth, with
orders to compel the Sultan, by a threat of bombardment, to surrender his
fleet. Duckworth viewed the project with something verging on alarm; but,
instead of either resigning his command or acting with celerity, though he knew
that the works commanding the Straits were being strengthened daily, he wasted
time. While he was waiting, one of his ships was accidentally burned with heavy
loss of life. At last, on February 19,1807, he forced his way past the forts in
the Dardanelles, destroying a small Turkish squadron on his progress and
suffering trivial loss. But, though he now had Constantinople at his mercy, his
indecision reasserted itself; and, instead of taking instant action, he spent days
in consultations with the British minister at Constantinople, while the Turks
recovered from their alarm and prepared to meet him. He was more than ever
uneasy when he found that vague threats had no effect on the Porte; and on
March 2, after showing himself off Constantinople, he returned to the
Dardanelles and repassed the Straits next day, suffering considerable loss and
damage in the transit. The whole expedition was mismanaged; and Duckworth was
fortunate in escaping a court-martial. An attempt on Egypt was equally
unsuccessful. The British took Alexandria, but were defeated at Rosetta, and in
September agreed to evacuate the country. The Russian Admiral Seniavin, who was in the Mediterranean with ten sail,
defeated the Turkish fleet in July; but, on hearing that peace had been made at
Tilsit, he concluded an armistice with the Sultan and hurried back towards the
Baltic. He succeeded in reaching the Tagus, but was blockaded by a British
squadron, and ultimately, in August, 1808, after Wellesley’s landing in
Portugal, was obliged to hand over his ships to the British Government.
The second
expedition of 1807 was the direct consequence of the Peace of Tilsit.
Information reached the British ministry that a secret article in this treaty
stipulated that Denmark, Sweden, and Portugal should be compelled by France and
Russia to close their ports to British ships and join in the war against Great
Britain. This would add to the naval force at Napoleon’s disposal twenty
Danish, eleven Swedish and nine Portuguese sail of the line, and would more
than repair the losses of Trafalgar. It was of the utmost importance that
Napoleon should be forestalled; and Canning, then Foreign Minister, had
sufficient daring to act at once. The weapon was ready to hand, as a large
force had recently been mobilised for service on the Continent.
On July 19,
eleven days after the signing of the secret articles, the resolution to seize
the Danish fleet was formed; and on July 26 Admiral Gambier sailed from
Yarmouth with seventeen sail of the line, subsequently raised to twenty-five,
and a large flotilla of gunboats and transports, carrying 27,000 troops under
Lord Cathcart. Though the Danes could not offer any serious resistance, when,
on August 3, Gambier appeared off Elsinore, they refused to surrender their
ships. The blockade of Zealand was therefore enforced by the British navy,
while the army disembarked and drew its lines round Copenhagen. On September 2
the bombardment of the town began. It was continued till the 5th with terrible
effect, when negotiations followed; and on the 7th the Danish Government
decided to surrender the fleet. Eighteen Danish ships of the line, ten
frigates, and forty-two smaller vessels were seized and most of them removed,
the others being destroyed. The operations were well planned and skilfully
carried out; and an ample force was wisely employed. That the attack was
necessary no one will now deny. England was fighting for her existence; and,
however disagreeable was the task of striking a weak neutral, she risked her
own safety if she left in Napoleon’s hand a fleet of such proportions. In Count
Vandal’s words, she “merely broke, before he had seized it, the weapon which
Napoleon had determined to make his own”. During the operations against Copenhagen,
Heligoland was occupied; it was used thenceforward as a depot for trade with
the Continent. The island of Anholt was seized in
1809, and held till the close of the war.
The natural
result of the seizure of the Danish fleet was that Denmark declared formal war,
and joined France against Great Britain. A British fleet and a small
expeditionary force were despatched to the Baltic early in 1808; and thus it
came to pass that, when the Spanish troops whom Napoleon had virtually interned
in Fünen, under the Marquis of Romana, heard of the
dethronement of their sovereign and showed signs of disaffection, a British
fleet was able to take off the greater portion and to convey them back to
Spain. During the later months of 1808 the British blockaded the Russian fleet,
which showed little inclination to cause trouble. This blockade continued
without intermission until 1812. From 1810 to 1812 Sweden was an unwilling
enemy; but the British and Swedish admirals mutually arranged not to attack
each other. As for the Portuguese fleet, Napoleon was not able to seize it,
since it withdrew to Brazil. At the same time the island of Madeira -was
temporarily handed over to British custody. In the autumn of 1812, on the
approach of the French army, Alexander I of Russia decided to send his fleet to
England for the winter, fearing that otherwise it might fall into the hands of
the French. Seventeen Russian sail of the line accordingly withdrew to England.
On his
return from Tilsit, Napoleon gave instructions for the flotilla at Boulogne to
be kept in readiness, and pressed forward the work of shipbuilding with greater
energy than ever. A powerful expedition was organised at Toulon to attack
Sicily. In January, 1808, Allemand put to sea from
Rochefort, evaded a British squadron which was watching him, entered the
Mediterranean unseen, and with five of his ships reached Toulon. Ganteaume, who
had been transferred to Toulon from Brest, was ready to put to sea, with
instructions to attack Sicily, or, if this were impossible, to revictual Corfu.
He sailed on February 7 with ten battleships, including Allemand’s force, and a number of smaller craft and transports, but was caught by a storm
in which one of his ships lost two topmasts, and four others parted company,
only rejoining him in the Adriatic. He reached Corfu
unmolested, and having thrown reinforcements and provisions into it, returned
to Toulon on April 10, again without opposition. The inferiority of Collingwood
to Nelson as a commander and a strategist was shown by his conduct of these
operations; with thirty sail of the line and fifty smaller ships, he failed to
cut off the French fleet which had ventured into the Adriatic. The blockade of
Toulon had been virtually abandoned, and the French were permitted to come and
go much as they liked. Collingwood’s failure at this juncture appears to have
preyed upon his mind ; he was old, ill, worn out by long years of devoted
service, and would willingly have relinquished the command to a younger man ;
but, entreated by his Government to remain at his post, he obeyed, to die in
harness in 1809.
In May,
1808, Napoleon formulated another “immense project”, from the execution of
which he was only diverted by the outbreak of the Spanish insurrection. It
embodied most of the features of the old plans formed before the battle of
Trafalgar. Great expeditions were to be made ready at Brest, Lorient,
Rochefort, Ferrol, Nantes, and Toulon, in order to menace England on every side
; while large forces were to encamp close to the squadrons, and to embark if
the British fleets relaxed their vigilance. Egypt, the West Indies, and Ireland
were to be perpetually threatened, with the purpose of wearing out England by
incessant alarms. Napoleon calculated that by midsummer, 1808, he would have 42
battleships available, and a year later, 77; which, added to 54 ships belonging
to his various allies, would give an effective fleet of 131 sail of the line.
But all these hopes and anticipations were shattered when it became clear that
a national war had to be faced in Spain, and that, instead of adding the
Spanish forces to his own, he would have to count them as hostile to him. In
June, 1808, he directed Decrès to delay his naval armaments and to diminish the
purchase of stores and supplies for the navy. Practically, this meant that the
project of invading England was again abandoned. In the same month, five French
sail of the line, the last remnant of Villeneuve’s fleet, which had been in
Cadiz harbour since Trafalgar, were captured by the Spanish insurgents; and a
French ship at Vigo shared their fate. As squadrons were no longer needed off
Cadiz, Ferrol, and Cartagena, large British forces were set free to watch
Toulon and other French ports. The Spanish insurrection therefore greatly
diminished the pressure on Great Britain, and, from the naval as well as the
military point of view, had an important influence on the course of the war.
In February,
1809, the British fleet blockading Brest was driven off the port by a storm;
and Willaumez, who commanded the French forces
inside, put to sea with eight sail of the line. Had he shown energy, he might
have captured in succession the small British detachments watching Lorient and
Rochefort, in each of which ports lay three French ships. His orders were to
pick up these squadrons and then proceed to Martinique. On February 24 he
anchored in Basque Roads with eleven ships of the line, three of which were in
no condition to put to sea; and, as he was at once blockaded by the British and
feared an attack, he moved into Aix Roads, where defence was easier. In this
operation one of his ships went ashore and became a total wreck. Napoleon
thereupon removed him from his command, and replaced him by Allemand.
The British Admiralty prepared fire-ships for an attack on the French; and Lord
Cochrane, a bold and enterprising officer, was selected for the conduct of the
operations, under Admiral Lord Gambier, who viewed the project with no
enthusiasm. The attack was delivered on April 11; and, with the smallest energy
on Gambier’s part, the whole French fleet must have been taken or destroyed.
The British fire-ships, it is true, did little damage, but they created a panic
in the French fleet, so that the vessels cut their cables and, drifting in the
strong tides, collided with each other or ran aground. At daybreak on the 12th,
all the French ships but two were ashore. All that was required to complete the
disaster was an attack by the heavy ships of the British fleet. But Gambier did
not move; and Cochrane was left to effect what he could with his light ships
and frigates. The result was that five of the eight stranded French vessels
eventually escaped, and only three of Allemand’s fleet were destroyed. But so low had the professional standard of the British
navy fallen since the loss of its great leaders, that Gambier was regarded as
having deserved well of the nation. Notwithstanding bitter protests from
Cochrane, he was “most honourably” acquitted by a packed court-martial, and was
even thanked by Parliament.
In the
disastrous Walcheren expedition, however, there was little fault to find with
the navy. This expedition was originally planned in March, 1809, to effect a
diversion in favour of Austria; and, had the plan been carried out immediately
after the defeat of Napoleon at Essling, it might
have brought about the fall of the Empire. But there was great delay in
completing the preparations; and the French had time to win the battle of
Wagram before the fleet and transports sailed (July 28). The naval force
consisted of 37 sail of the line and 600 other craft, under Sir R. Strachan.
The army was 39,219 strong, and was under Lieutenant-General Lord Chatham,
whose chief recommendation for command appears to have been that he was of
high rank, and had been seen “in person exercising eight or ten thousand men
much to his credit.” The unfortunate results of this expedition will be
described in another chapter of this volume. It must suffice to say here that
the failure was due to friction between the army and navy, the selection of an
incompetent general, and the despatch of the force at the wrong season of the
year.
The only
other naval event in Europe of any importance in the year 1809 was the
destruction of two French battleships and a convoy in the Gulf of Lyons
(October 26—November 1) by ships from Collingwood’s fleet. The French were
under the orders of Rear-Admiral Baudoin, who was
conveying supplies from Toulon to the French army in Spain. Though Ganteaume
had eighteen French and Russian ships in Toulon, he made no attempt to support
his subordinate. He was soon afterwards replaced by Allemand,
who was subsequently sent to Lorient. Thence, in March, 1812, Allemand managed to put to sea, but he went no further than
Brest.
In the
Adriatic the British navy slowly asserted its superiority. In October, 1809,
the Ionian Islands, with the exception of Corfu, were reduced by small conjoint
expeditions, which gave the navy a base in those distant waters. This was
followed by a victory gained by Captain Hoste off
Lissa (March, 1811) over a strong French squadron of frigates, and by the
capture of a French battleship, the Rivoli, in 1812.
From the
date of the first despatch of a British expeditionary force to Spain, the
British navy was called upon to protect the passage of transports and
storeships, and to cooperate in the military operations. The best work in this
quarter was achieved by Cochrane, who late in 1808 harried Duhesme in Catalonia. There were many complaints of the navy when Wellington was
commanding in Spain. He blamed it in 1813 for insufficient support in the siege
of San Sebastian, but not, it would appear, with good reason. He asked
impossibilities, and, in the words of the First Lord of the Admiralty, appeared
to consider “a large ship within a few yards of the shore...as safe in its
position and as immoveable by the winds or waves as one of the Pyrenean
mountains.”
Throughout
the later years of the war the main French squadrons remained inactive; and
this though their numbers were steadily growing, and though, from 1812 onwards,
Great Britain was at war with the United States. As a general feature of the
war from 1803 to 1814, it may be said that the French fleets never deliberately
attacked; they only accepted battle when it was forced upon them.
Outside
Europe, the reduction of the French possessions continued steadily all through
the war, though it was not effected with the rapidity which might have been
expected after the British navy had asserted its command of the sea. Numerous
examples, and, in particular, the cruises of Missiessy,
showed how easy it was, down to 1805, for French squadrons to put to sea, and
to throw reinforcements into the French colonies. In the West Indies, Santa
Lucia, Tobago, and Demerarm were reduced in 1803;
Surinam in 1804; the Dutch island of Curaçoa in 1807;
Marie Galante and Désirade in 1808; Martinique and
Cayenne in 1809; and in 1810 Guadeloupe, the last of the French West Indian
possessions, and the Dutch islands of St Martin, St Eustatius, and Saba. In the
East the British were equally successful; Pondicherry and the other French
colonies in India had not been evacuated by the British troops when war broke
out, and were retained; Amboyna and Banda Neira, in
the Dutch East Indies, were captured in 1810; in the same year Bourbon and Mauritius,
the head-quarters of the French privateers in the Indian Ocean, were reduced;
and in 1811 the valuable island of Java was taken from the Dutch. In Africa,
the French colony of Senegal succumbed in 1809. Reference has already been made
to the occupation of Cape Colony in 1806. Thus France and her allies were
stripped of all their colonial possessions. Yet the loss of these bases did not
render attacks upon British commerce altogether impracticable. At that date
there were many weak neutrals, on whose coasts it was possible for cruisers to
refit and obtain provisions.
After the
failure of his project of invading England, Napoleon determined to prohibit
British trade on the Continent. As an answer to his efforts, a blockade of the
French coast from Brest to the Elbe, with certain reservations, was proclaimed
by the British Government in May, 1806. Napoleon’s replies to this measure,
embodied in the Berlin, Milan, and other decrees, which jointly established
what is known as the Continental System, are described elsewhere in this
volume. The political effects of these measures fall outside the province of
this chapter. As to their economic effects, though practically the entire coast
of Europe was under Napoleon’s control from the opening of 180S to the close of
1811, and though British trade at sea was attacked by numerous French
privateers and cruisers, the results were far less disastrous than might have
been anticipated. The measures directed by Napoleon against neutrals
contributed to the success of British shipping, by providing it with freight.
Probably it would have been a wiser proceeding on his part, had he given all
possible encouragement to American shipping, and sought to reduce British
exports by a heavy differential tariff. The following figures, giving the
clearances of British and foreign shipping engaged in the foreign trade of
Great Britain (exclusive of Ireland), will illustrate the effect of Napoleon’s
Decrees and the British Orders in Council:
Clearances
outwards, in thousands of tons, for years ending January 5.
1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807
1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1814
British,
1626 1453 1463 1495 1486 1424 1372 1531 1624
1507 1665 1875
Foreign,
461 574 587 605 568 631 282 699 1138 696 550 571
The records
of 1813 have been destroyed. The remaining figures prove that, while British
shipping slightly decreased in the earlier period of the war, and neutral
shipping distinctly increased, from 1808 onwards British shipping gained
ground, though the heavy demand for transports during the Peninsular War must
be taken into account after 1808. The sudden increase of neutral shipping in
the nominal year 1810, really in 1809, was due to the repeal of the American
embargo, to the expansion of the Baltic trade when Napoleon’s attention was
concentrated upon crushing Austria, and to the fact that he intimated that he
would permit the entry of neutral shipping, even if laden with British goods;
while, in their anxiety to obtain markets for unsaleable produce, the British
authorities were even more tolerant towards neutral shipping. But, when the
neutral vessels put into French ports, their cargoes were seized and sold or
destroyed by the French authorities.
There is a
tendency to regard the Continental System as a disastrous failure; but the
economic history of England suggests that it inflicted upon her industrial
population fearful suffering and loss, and came perilously near to effecting
its object. The attempt of Napoleon to cut off the supply of raw material from
the British manufacturers was so far successful that in England wool, silk,
timber, and hemp rose enormously in price—silk, for example, from 30s. per lb.
to 112s., and most other materials in proportion. The control of the Baltic by
Napoleon, especially in 1810-11, shook England to her foundations. In 1812 the
British people were face to face with actual famine, owing to the demands of
the French army for wheat and corn, the export duty levied at Danzig, and a
general bad harvest. Wheat, in places, rose from 10s. a bushel to 25s.; and the
foreign sources of supply failed. The trade was virtually free, but the cost of
licences, freight, and insurance was prohibitive. According to Tooke, these
charges, on a vessel of 100 tons burden, occasionally amounted to £50,000 for
the voyage to Calais from London and back.
It has been
calculated (by Captain Mahan) that the average annual loss to British shipping
by capture was 524 vessels, or an average of about 2.1/5- per cent, on the
annual number of British vessels entering and clearing from ports in the United
Kingdom. Such insurance figures as are obtainable suggest that the percentage
of pecuniary loss was much greater, since, even when neutrals were included,
the average rate of insurance during the war was more than 5 per cent. To the
Mediterranean, during the third quarter of the year 1805, the risk varied from
6 to 25 guineas, the lower figure being probably that paid for neutral ships.
In 1811 the average rate out to the Baltic was £18, and home from that sea,
£22. Outside European waters, however, the risk steadily diminished during the
war, with the reduction of the French colonies and the capture of French
cruisers and privateers. The voyage to the West Indies was insured at 13J
guineas in 1805, while Villeneuve was at sea; the rate in 1810 was £9. To the
East Indies the rate was about 16 guineas in 1805, and £8 in 1810. Freight rose
in a ratio corresponding with the advance in insurance. According to Tooke, the
freight and insurance on hemp rose during 1809-12 to twelve times the cost of
the same items in 1837, a normal year; on tallow it was nearly fourteen times
the normal; on wheat eleven times, and on timber ten times—all being cargoes from
the Baltic. In 1809 as much as £?30 was occasionally paid for the freight of a
ton of hemp alone. The value of a ton in time of peace was only from £20 to
£30; that price was now quadrupled.
Except in
the Mediterranean, where throughout the war France retained a certain amount of
coasting trade, French shipping was annihilated. After their brief recovery
during the Peace of Amiens, the French Channel ports reverted to the lamentable
condition in which the earlier war had plunged them; and at Havre a large
number of houses were uninhabited. Metternich, in 1810, speaks of the French
people as “ruined by the entire destruction of their commerce”; but this was an
exaggeration, as France enjoyed internal prosperity and a considerable expert
trade by land. Between 1802 (a year of peace) and 1811, when the Continental
System was at its height, French exports increased slightly, while British
exports declined. On the other hand, the allies of France suffered lamentably ;
the strain upon their population was severer than had been the strain on France
in 1796-1800; and they had no compensation for their losses. Their growing
exasperation led eventually to the great explosion of national hatred which
overthrew Napoleon.
The
following figures, given by Captain Norman, indicate the intensity of the
French attack upon British commerce, showing as they do the British merchantmen
captured year after year by the French, and the French privateers taken
annually by the British:
The evidence
of the insurance rates would seem to show that the peril was greatest in 1805,
when two strong French fleets were at large on the Atlantic. In the closing
years of the war with France, the simultaneous conflict with the United States,
described in a previous volume, complicates the calculations.
The losses
of the French and their allies in the war were enormous. While the British navy
did not lose a single vessel of the line in action or by capture, thirty-one
French ships of the line were captured or destroyed by the British, while six
more were captured by the Spanish insurgents; Spain lost twelve sail of the
line, Holland three, Denmark nineteen, and Russia one. But the British losses
from storms and shipwrecks were numerous throughout the war, as was to be
expected in a fleet which was constantly forced to keep at sea.
The renewal
of war in 1815 led to a fresh blockade of the French coast; and, when the news
reached the British authorities that Napoleon would probably endeavour to
escape to America, the British cruisers in the Bay of Biscay were ordered to
show the utmost vigilance. Napoleon, however, speedily gave up the attempt as
hopeless, and surrendered himself to Captain Maitland of the Bellerophon on
July 15. It was not inappropriate that the navy, which had frustrated two of
the Emperor’s greatest projects: the intended invasion of England and the
attempted conquest of Spain, should also receive his final surrender. At the
close of the war, the navy had reached a point of strength which has never
before or since been surpassed or even equalled. In 1814 it counted 240 ships
of the line, 317 frigates, and 611 small craft, a total of 1168 pennants; and,
though all of these ships were not fit for sea, they represented a force which
was more than equivalent to the navies of all the other European Powers
combined.
The service
which the British navy rendered in this Titanic conflict both to England and to
Europe can scarcely be overestimated. It saved England from invasion, and
perhaps from conquest; it enabled her to continue her efforts unceasingly, and
thus, after she had, in Pitt’s famous words, “saved herself by her exertions”,
to “save Europe by her example”. British successes at sea proved to the world
that the great conqueror was not invincible, and this at a time when his
prestige on land was undimmed by failure. Consequently, throughout the
struggle, Great Britain remained the one centre of hope and encouragement to
the Continental Powers; her endurance and success bred in them something of her
own dauntless and indomitable spirit; and Trafalgar was the really decisive
battle of the Napoleonic War.
CHAPTER IX.
THE THIRD COALITION.