Single ship actions, usually between frigates, are remembered
as some of the most dramatic actions of the age of fighting sail. They captured
the imagination of the public in their own time, making heroes of captains like
Pellew and Cochrane, who gained the sort of adulation reserved for pop-stars
today and they figure as central elements in the naval fiction of Forrester,
Pope, O’Brian and others. I am at present engaged in writing about single-ship
action of a much later period in the novel I currently have in hand and for
background and inspiration I've been looking at some of these actions in
detail. As always, the London Library is a fruitful source of information on
half-forgotten aspects of history. Perhaps the most dramatic of all
single-frigate action was fought not during the revolutionary or Napoleonic Wars,
but when France was locked in conflict with Britain during the American war of
Independence. I was sufficiently impressed by the ferocity of the action fought
by the British Frigate of the Quebec
against her French counterpart Surveillante
that I have made a précis of information on this now largely forgotten epic.
In the early summer of 1779 the Quebec, a small 32-gun frigate of 685 tons, armed with 12-pounders,
was sent to Guernsey, as a guard for the Channel Islands, with orders to glean
all the intelligence possible of French movements in and around Brest. Her
captain, George Farmer, was well thought of in the service. Nelson under him served
as midshipman in the frigate Seahorse,
and Farmer thought well enough of him to Nelson to allowing him the duty of a watch-keeping
lieutenant.
From Guernsey, Farmer sent a report on the 18th June that
the French fleet had sailed from Brest, and in early July he intercepted and
broke up a convoy of forty-nine French coasters, taking some and driving many
of the rest ashore. In the process however the Quebec ran on to a rock and Farmer only got her off by throwing all
his guns overboard. This necessitated a return to port, and the Quebec was lucky to reach Portsmouth in
safety. On arrival however no 12-pounders were to be had and farmer had no
option but to accept 9-pounders – a critical factor in the action to come – to
repair damage and to get to sea again as quickly as possible. By October 6th he
was off Ushant, in company with an armed cutter, the Rambler, Lieutenant James George, keeping a watch on Brest.
At daybreak Quebec
and Rambler sighted a large French
frigate and an armed cutter, and in another half hour the frigate opened fire
and hastened to investigate. The French
frigate proved to be the Surveillante,
commanded by the able Lieutenant Du Couëdic. She was a considerably larger and more powerful vessel than the under-gunned Quebec,
carrying 34 guns, apparently a
mix of 12 and 18-pounders. Due to the substitution of Quebec’s of 9-pounders for her previous 12-ppounders the French ship
was by at least thirty percent the more powerful fighting machine of the two,
She had a crew of 255 men as against the Quebec's
195.
The action opened in mid-morning and was fought in a heavy
swell, though little wind. Du Couëdic kept his ship close-hauled on the port
tack, while Farmer, sailing free on the same tack, edged down towards him. At ten
o'clock, or a few minutes after, the Quebec
hoisted her colours, hauled her wind, and began to return the enemy's fire at
short range . In the cannonading that followed, lasting a full hour, neither
side had the best of it. Then the Surveillante
drew ahead and Farmer, quickly backing his topsails, put his helm up and tried
to go under her stern and rake her. Du Couëdic bore up simultaneously to
frustrate the manoeuvre and both ships were before the wind, masts tottering
and sails in tatters.
Both vessels were taking heavy losses. Some of the Quebec's guns-crews were reduced from
seven men to three. Farmer had sustained a broken collarbone and a smashed
finger but he remained on deck to encourage his dwindling crew. The first lieutenant
had his arm shot away but when the surgeon had done with him he returned to the
quarter-deck. Twice the fire of the Surveillante
ceased, and the Quebec's crew cheered,
thinking they had her beaten – but each time, after a brief interval, the
French reopened fire with increased vigour.
The gunnery duel continued until about one o'cIock when the Surveillante's masts went overboard
together. They fell in the most fortunate manner for her, on the disengaged
port side, and her fire remained unimpeded. Five minutes, before Farmer could
take advantage of his enemy’s plight, the Quebec’s
masts followed suit, the fore and mainmast falling inboard, blocking the
gangways, and putting the guns on the forecastle and quarter-deck out of
action. Worst of all the mizzen-mast fell outward on the engaged side, and the
mizzen-topsail completely covered over the port-holes of several of the
broadside weapons forward the stern.
Neither vessel was now under control and they locked
together, Surveillante's bowsprit
becoming entangled in the wreckage of masts and sails which encumbered the Quebec’s decks amidships. Du Couëdic
called for boarders, but when preparing to launch an assault was struck down by
a musket ball –the third wound he had received during the action. His officers,
though momentarily shaken by his injury, were rallying the boarding-party, when
the issue was taken out of their hands.
The Quebec’s mizzen-topsail,
which had been masking the stern guns on the port-side, since the mast had
fallen, now caught fire. The guns crews continued to blaze away through the tattered
canvas hanging a few feet from the muzzles. The flames ran up the sail, took
fierce hold on the wreckage on the quarter-deck, and in an instant were roaring
over the after part of the ship. The French, abandoning all thoughts of boarding,
used every effort to get clear, fending the Quebec
off with spars and booms. They were only just in time, for the stump of their
bowsprit was a mass of flame, quenched with difficulty ere the two ships were
disentangled.
The engagement was over, and the Quebec was doomed. du Couëdic, wounded, gave orders that when
the flames in his own ship had been extinguished firing should cease and the Quebec’s
crew rescued - many had already jumped overboard to escape the flames. All Surveillante’s boats were too damaged to
float however and nothing could be done but to throw ropes to any survivors who
could swim alongside.
In the Quebec Captain
Farmer gave orders to flood the magazine, and took what measures he could to
fight the fire. This proved hopeless but Farmer refused to leave his ship. In
mid-afternoon the magazine exploded. The hull burnt fiercely for a considerable
time before it sank. Though accounts of the exact manner of Farmer's death differ
there is no doubt that he went down with the ship, her flag still flying.
Painting by British painter Richard Dodd shows the Surveillante keeping as far away as possible from the doomed Quebec - explosion imminent |
While the two frigates were locked in combat a separate
action was underway between the Rambler
and the French cutter Expedition, which
had been in company with the Surveillante.
These smaller vessels were fairly matched for each other and until the Quebec caught fire neither had much advantage.
The sight of the Quebec in flames,
and of the Surveillante locked to her of her, induced the Expedition to make off to the help of
her frigate. The Rambler’s commander,
Lieutenant George not unnaturally claimed that the Expedition made off because she was getting the worst of it. In his
late report he stated that owing to the damaged state of his rigging he was
unable to pursue; then, "seeing both the frigates dismasted and the Quebec on fire I endeavoured to get as
near the Quebec as possible in hopes
of saving some of her men, but there being but little wind and a large swell,
found I could assist her in no other way but by hoisting out our boat, which I
effected, and sent the master and five men armed in her, who picked up one
master’s mate, two young midshipmen, and fourteen more of the Quebec's people, the enemy’s frigate at the
same time firing at the boat.”
A French view of the action - almost photographic in detail |
The Surveillante saved
some of the Quebec's crew, the Rambler a few more and 13 were picked
off afterwards a mass of floating wreckage by a Russian ship that was in the
vicinity, and landed at Salcombe, in Devon. Another 14 were spotted on other flotsam
but as the Russian altered course to pick them up a heavy squall came on, and when
it lifted they were gone. Out of Quebec’s
company of 195 only 68 were saved.
The Surveillante
lost 115 killed and wounded out of 211 – a 50% casualty rate and she was towed to
Brest harbour by the Expedition in a
sinking condition. du Couëdic, was immediately promoted but died a few months
late as a result of his wounds.
The French behaved with the notable chivalry to the Quebec's survivors picked up the Surveillante. They were sent back free
to England on the grounds that the Minister of Marine "did not think it right to consider as prisoners of war
unfortunate men who had escaped the fight, the fire which blew up their ship,
and the watery gulf into which they had been hurled." It was
particularly touching that Du Couëdic, of the Surveillant, despite his own
ultimately wounds, took pains to see that they were made as comfortable as possible.
The surviving officers of the Quebec were tried by court-martial at Sheerness, and the court
found that everything possible was done to
save the ship, and that Captain Farmer, her officers and men, behaved in the
most spirited and gallant manner, and are of opinion that if the accident of fire
had not happened they would have taken the French man-of-war."
Those folk who ought to have been court-martialled for the loss of the Quebec, but were not, were the officials responsible for the lack of spare l2-pounders in Portsmouth dockyard. It is quite evident if Farmer could fight what was virtually a drawn battle without his proper armament, that victory might well have been his if he had had the guns for which his ship was designed. The extra weight of metal could well have won him the battle.
Farmer's eldest son was made a baronet, a pension of £200 per
annum was granted to his widow and pensions of £25 each to nine his children, including
one yet unborn. A Board-of-Admiralty Minute records that these honours were
paid in order "to excite an
emulation in other officers to distinguish themselves in the same manner, and
render Captain Farmer's fate rather to be envied than pitied, as it would give
them reason to hope that if they should lose their lives with the same degree
of stubborn gallantry, it would appear to posterity that their services had met
with the approbation of their Sovereign."
The accounts I have seen of this action make no reference to
the compensation or pensions paid to other members of Quebec’s crew. Nothing could have been too much for the men who
endured the hours of hell this ferocious battle lasted and one only hope that
the widows, orphans and dependents received some recompense, however small.
"Britannia’s reach is not just political or military alone. What higher interest can there be than consolidation of Britain’s commercial interests?” So says one of the key figures in this novel , which centres on the efforts of a British owned company to reassert control of its cattle-raising investment in Paraguay, following a revolt by its workers. The story of desperate riverine combat brings historic naval fiction into the age of Fighting Steam. Click on the image below to read the opening.
Britannia's Reach - Revenge and Reconquest in the Heart of South America
"Britannia’s reach is not just political or military alone. What higher interest can there be than consolidation of Britain’s commercial interests?” So says one of the key figures in this novel , which centres on the efforts of a British owned company to reassert control of its cattle-raising investment in Paraguay, following a revolt by its workers. The story of desperate riverine combat brings historic naval fiction into the age of Fighting Steam. Click on the image below to read the opening.
Fantastic piece as always. Rather unsporting of the French to fire on the Rambler's rescue boat!
ReplyDeleteIt is possible that orders had been given by du Couëdic or one of his officers on the Surveillante , that no boats were to be allowed to approach the ship. It must be remembered that there were already a number of British prisoners on board, picked out of the water, and it was not at all an inconceivable idea that a boat's crew from the Rambler, together with another from the Quebec, might make an attempt on the Surveillante, which had lost half her crew. Moreover, the crew of the Rambler's boat were armed, and the Quebec's colours were still flying. The fight, though actually, was not nominally, at an end.
ReplyDeleteHaving read Theodore Roosevelt's history of the naval part of the War of 1812, I have learned that captains on all sides were not above embroidery and even prevarication in their official reports.
ReplyDeleteHaving read Theodore Roosevelt's history of the naval part of the War of 1812, I have learned that captains on all sides were not above embroidery and even prevarication in their official reports.
ReplyDeleteParticularly when they lost!
Delete