In sea
battles from the 1780s to the end of the Napoleonic Wars a decisive factor was
often the use of the carronade. Few of these guns were carried on any one ship,
and they were not counted in a ship’s rated number of guns so that, in
practice, the actual number of weapons carried might be significantly higher
than the rating by which a ship was classed, such as a “74” or a “50”.
Carronade on slide mounting |
The word
“carronade” was an early, perhaps earliest, example of a trade-name becoming the
accepted term for an entire class of products, in this case a short smoothbore
cast iron cannon. It took its name from the original manufacturer, the Carron
Company, which had an ironworks in Falkirk, in Scotland. The short barrel
indicated that it was a short-range weapon, powerful against ships but even
more so against personnel in close actions. A carronade weighed a quarter as
much and used a quarter to a third of the gunpowder-charge for a long gun
firing the same size of roundshot. The lower recoil forces meant that slider
mountings, rather trucks, could be employed. The light weight of the carronade
made it especially attractive for mounting at higher levels – and important
factor when an enemy’s deck should be cleared by grapeshot before boarding.
They could also provide a very powerful punch for a small vessel such as a
gunboat or sloop. Though the basic concept remained unchanged, carronades were
manufactured for a huge range, from 6 to 42-pounders, and 68-pounder weapons
not unknown.
Antoine Vanner with 24-pdr Carronade |
When introduced into the Royal
Navy for trial in 1779, many captains had reported most unfavourably upon it,
owing to its short range and tendency to overheat when fired rapidly. The
comment on short range was justified for, devastating as a carronade could be
in action, its weakness was its short range. The analogy may be a sub-machine
gun which, if used at close quarters, can be murderous, but is useless against
an enemy armed with a sniper rifle who prefers to stay out of its range and
count on his accuracy. Only by luring the sniper closer can the man armed with
the sub-machine gun make use of its ability to unleash a devastating volume of
fire. In the case of sailing warships encountering each other at sea the
presence of carronades might not be immediately obvious and in many cases were
to provide a very unpleasant surprise as the ships closed. The first occasion
on which carronades were used in action, when the Royal Navy’s 36-gun frigate Flora encountered the French 36-gun
frigate Nymphe, was a good example.
Peere Williams by George Romilly |
In August 1780 the Flora
was under the command of Captain William Peere Williams (1742 – 1832). He was
to be one of the officers whose entire life spanned the classic Age of Fighting
Sail and who lived on to see the dawn of steam-power. As a junior officer he
had served at the Battle of Quiberon Bay in 1759 during the Seven Years' War. By
the time of the American War of Independence he had achieved command, first the
frigate HMS Venus, in American waters
and subsequently as the first captain of HMS Flora with the Channel Fleet. She was a new ship, commissioned in
1780 and her performance in action later that year indicates that Peere
Williams was relentless in training his crew to a high standard of gunnery.
The Flora’s rating
as “36 guns” was deceptive though she did indeed carry that number of long guns
– twenty-six long 18-pounders, and ten long 9-pounders – she also carried six
of the new 18-pounder carronades, giving her a 333-pound broadside weight. On
the afternoon of 10 August 1780 she was patrolling off Brest, a monotonous but
war-winning duty that was familiar to the crews of hundreds of Royal Navy vessels
for seven decades from the 1750s. The weather was hazy but two vessels were
sighted some four miles distant. The smaller vessel made off but the larger
stood her ground, obviously willing to accept battle. She was the French
frigate Nymphe, of the French Royal
Navy, her Captain the Chevalier de Runrain. She nominally superior to the Flora in everything but armament. She was
the bigger ship by about 70 tons (868 to 737, important as regards enduring
damage), sailed faster, and had the larger crew. She carried twenty-six long 12-pounders,
and six long 6 – pounders, giving a broadside weight of only 174 pounds, just
over half of the Flora’s.
The HMS Flora - Nymphe action by Dominic Serres |
Flora's log
summarised very clearly what happened in the resulting action:
"At 4.30 P.M. saw
a ship and a cutter in the S.W. quarter, standing to the northward under easy
sail. Made sail and stood for them, at which they tacked and stood towards the
shore for some minutes, and then brought to, having French colours flying. We
made the private signal to them, which we found they did not understand by the
ship hoisting a blue flag at the ensign staff. We cleared for action, hauled
down the signals of recognisance and hoisted our St George's ensign, hauled up
the fore-sail, bunted the main-sail and top-gallant-sai1, still running down on
her to windward.
"At 5.15, being
then about two cables, length distant from her, received her larboard
broadside. We ran within one cable's length of her and then began the action,
which continued very hot on both sides till 6.15, when we had our wheel and
tiller-rope shot away and fell alongside of her with our spare anchor hooking her
fore-shrouds. They then attempted to board us, but were repulsed with great loss,
we still keeping up a warm fire of great guns and musketry. At 6.80 boarded her,
cleared her decks, and burnt their colours for them."
The action was a punishing,
straightforward fight to a finish, with little attempt on either side at
finesse or manoeuvre. The total French loss was 60 killed and 71 severely
wounded. Many of these casualties resulted from the ineffectual attempt to
board and the havoc unleashed on them by six 18-pounder carronades mounted on
the poop and quarter-deck of the Flora.
In the heat of the action one of these weapons was manned only the boatswain
and a single boy. The French captain was killed by a musket ball just before the
two ships touched, the second-in-command fell on the deck of the Flora at the head of his boarders and
the first lieutenant fell between the two hulls and was crushed to death.
Almost every other French officer was wounded. The report by the Nymphe's dangerously wounded second
lieutenant, the Sieur de Taillard – written in Falmouth, to where the captured
frigate was taken – stated that "I
do not think it possible to speak too highly of the cool and collected courage
shown by all the officers. We were twice on fire, and there was an explosion of
cartridges”. The Flora lost fewer
dead – nine in total – but sustained the same number of wounded as the Nymphe and her total casualties amounted
to approximately one third of her crew.
HMS Flora’s later career was useful rather than spectacular. While
still commanded by Peere Williams she participated in the second naval relief
of the Siege of Gibraltar in 1781 and thereafter her most notable contribution was support of
Britain’s Egyptian campaign in 1801. She was wrecked in 1809. The Nymphe’s career in the Royal Navy – she
retained her name after the change of ownership – was to be much more
spectacular and we shall meet her again in another war and in a later blog.
Just published: Britannia’s Spartan
In April 1882 Captain Nicholas
Dawlish RN has just taken command of the Royal Navy’s newest cruiser, HMS Leonidas. Her voyage to the Far East is
to be a peaceful venture, a test of this innovative vessel’s engines and
boilers. Dawlish has no forewarning of the nightmare of riot, treachery,
massacre and battle he and his crew will encounter.
A new balance of power is
emerging in the Far East. Imperial China, weak and corrupt, is challenged by a
rapidly modernising Japan, while Russia threatens from the north. They all need
to control Korea, a kingdom frozen in time and reluctant to emerge from
centuries of isolation.
Dawlish finds himself a critical
player in a complex political powder keg. He must take account of a weak Korean
king and his shrewd queen, of murderous palace intrigue, of a powerbroker who
seems more American than Chinese and a Japanese naval captain whom he will come
to despise and admire in equal measure. And he will have no one to turn to for
guidance…
Click below for more details:
Kindle UK: http://amzn.to/1k0LBBn
Kindle US& elsewhere: http://amzn.to/1YeiPQz
Hard Copy UK: http://amzn.to/1k0LNR8
Hard Copy US & elsewhere: http://amzn.to/1m4Vb7A
Gret article Antoine, didn't know half of that about the history of the "smasher"
ReplyDeleteCongrats on the latest publication!
Thanks Paul - much appreciated - Antoine
ReplyDeleteEducational articles like this are GREATLY appreciated. I have always been interested in the age of sail but did not
ReplyDeleteknow the background of the "carronade" name 8)