Battle Of Sadras
Background
France had entered the American Revolutionary War in 1778, and Britain had declared war on the Dutch Republic in late 1780 after the Dutch refused to stop trading with the French and the Americans. The British had rapidly gained control over most French and Dutch outposts in India when news of these events reached India, spawning the Second Anglo-Mysore War in the process.
The French admiral Bailli de Suffren was dispatched for military assistance to French colonies in India, leading a fleet of five ships of the line, seven transports, and a corvette to escort transports from Brest in March 1781. Suffren was involved in a happenstance battle with a British fleet at Porto Praya in the Cape Verde Islands in April. In October, he left reinforcement troops at the Dutch-controlled Cape of Good Hope to assist with colonial defense. Suffren added some ships to his fleet and sailed on to the Île de France (present-day Mauritius), arriving at Port Louis in December.
After further additions at Port Louis, Suffren's fleet sailed for India under the command of the elderly Navy Brigadier General Thomas d'Orves, accompanying transports carrying nearly 3,000 men under the command of the Comte du Chemin. D'Orves died in February 1782, shortly before the fleet arrived off the Indian coast, and Suffren once again took command.
Suffren first sailed for Madras, hoping to surprise the British stronghold there. Encountering Hughes's fleet anchored in Madras on 15 February 1782, Suffren turned south. He intended to land troops at Porto Novo, march up the coast and recapture French and Dutch holdings on the way. Hughes raised anchor and sailed after Suffren.
Battle
Suffren was hampered with protecting his troop convoys from Hughes, whose goal he presumed was to prevent the troops from landing. Detaching one corvette to protect the convoy and detailing another to watch the British fleet, Suffren attempted to draw Hughes away. However, under cover of night Hughes managed to slip between Suffren's squadron and the convoys. The signal was raised on the morning of 17 February, and Suffren gave chase to force battle.
When the fleets closed for action around 15:30, some of Suffren's ships had not properly formed the line of battle. Only five of the French ships engaged at first. Of the remaining six, only two joined the action later, with the other four apparently violating Suffren's orders and hanging back. Suffren, leading in Héros, exchanged a broadside with Exeter before targeting Hughes's flagship Superb. The battle lasted for over three hours, with Exeter sustaining the most damage. She was nearly sunk, but two French ships were recalled (for reasons unknown) before they could inflict enough damage to cause her to sink. Superb also suffered significant damage. The battle came to end with the onset of night.
Aftermath
Suffren summoned his captains for council and chastised those who had chosen to stay out of the battle before following the troop convoy to Porto Novo. There the French army had landed, and Suffren met with the Mysorean ruler Hyder Ali to plan strategy. After making repairs, Suffren set off to find Hughes again. The French and Mysorean forces captured Cuddalore, just north of Porto Novo, on 4 April. Hughes sailed for Trincomalee, where he made repairs.
Order of battle
Captain Suffren's squadron | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ship | Rate | Guns | Navy | Commander | Casualties | Notes | ||||
Killed | Wounded | Total | ||||||||
Bizarre | Third rate | 64 | Captain Chevalier de la Landelle-Roscanvec | |||||||
Orient | Third rate | 74 | Captain Jean Baptiste Christy de La Pallière | |||||||
Sphinx | Third rate | 64 | Captain Charles Louis du Chilleau de La Roche | |||||||
Vengeur | Third rate | 64 | Captain Charles Gaspard Hyacinthe de Forbin La Barben | |||||||
Héros | Third rate | 74 | Chef d'Escadre Pierre André de Suffren Captain Félix d'Hesmivy de Moissac |
|||||||
Hannibal | Fourth rate | 50 | Captain Justin Bonaventure Morard de Galles | |||||||
Annibal | Third rate | 74 | Captain Bernard Boudin de Tromelin | |||||||
Sévère | Third rate | 64 | Captain Chevalier de Villeneuve-Cillart | |||||||
Artésien | Third rate | 64 | Captain François-Joseph-Hippolyte Bidé de Maurville | |||||||
Ajax | Third rate | 64 | Captain René Joseph Bouvet de Précourt | |||||||
Brillant | Third rate | 64 | Captain Armand de Saint-Félix | |||||||
Flamand | Fourth rate | 50 | Captain Louis-Hyacinte de Cavelier de Cuverville |
British squadron | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ship | Rate | Guns | Navy | Commander | Casualties | Notes | ||||
Killed | Wounded | Total | ||||||||
HMS Eagle | Fourth rate | 64 | Captain Ambrose Reddall | |||||||
HMS Monmouth | Fourth rate | 64 | Captain James Alms | |||||||
HMS Worcester | Fourth rate | 64 | Captain George Talbot | |||||||
HMS Burford | Fourth rate | 64 | Captain Peter Rainier | |||||||
HMS Superb | Third rate | 74 | Vice-Admiral Sir Edward Hughes Captain William Stevens |
|||||||
HMS Hero | Third rate | 74 | Captain Charles Wood | |||||||
HMS Isis | Fourth rate | 50 | Captain Thomas Charles Lumley | |||||||
HMS Monarca | Third rate | 68 | Captain John Gell | |||||||
HMS Exeter | Fourth rate | 64 | Commodore Richard King Captain Henry Reynolds |
Notes
Citations
- ^ Malleson, p. 24
- ^ de Meuron (1982), p. 53
- ^ Castex (2004), pp. 340–44
- ^ Cunat (1852), p. 111.
References
- Castex, Jean-Claude (2004). Dictionnaire des batailles navales franco-anglaises. Presses Université Laval. ISBN 978-2-7637-8061-0.
- Cunat, Charles (1852). Histoire du Bailli de Suffren. Rennes: A. Marteville et Lefas. p. 447.
- de Meuron, Guy (1982). Le Régiment Meuron, 1781–1816. Editions d'En bas. ISBN 978-2-8290-0028-7.
- Killion, Howard R (1972), The Suffren Expedition: French Operations in India during the War of American Independence [Duke U. Ph.D. dissertation]
- Malleson, George Bruce (1884). Final French Struggles in India and on the Indian Seas. W.H. Allen.