Though mention warfare in the Age of Fighting Sail so often conjures
up images of major fleet actions such as Camperdown, The Nile, and Trafalgar, single-ship
actions between small vessels represented the vast majority of combats at sea.
One of the most remarkable of these – stranger than fiction indeed - occurred
in the Indian Ocean, off Madagascar in 1806. It did not involve ships of the official
British and French navies but rather two privateers – privately owned vessels which
had been issued “letters of marque”
by their governments and thereby authorised to wage war on their behalf. The
profit motive was powerful in such cases and where possible the objective was
to capture enemy commerce rather than to risk combat.
A classic image of small-ship action in the Napoleonic era -
A brig chasing a privateer by Thomas
Buttersworth (1768-1842)
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A John Myers (I have no information on his previous or
subsequent career) was serving as first lieutenant on the privateer Tamar in September 1806. Close to Madagascar
this vessel captured a small French privateer, the Bon Fortune, which was operating out of the French island stronghold,
the Isle de France, now known as Mauritius. The crew was removed to the Tamar and Myers took over the Bon Fortune with a prize crew of fourteen
men. The two vessels separated in the night but the following morning Myers saw
a strange sail approaching at speed and her general appearance indicated that
she was La Brave, a large privateer
carrying 16 guns and 130 men, which had been operating in the area with
considerable success.
Myers recognised that he had no hope of escaping this enemy vessel
or of defeating her in straight combat but he settled on a stratagem that was
as audacious as it was dangerous. La
Brave had a reputation for capturing her prizes by boarding with almost her
entire crew, a manoeuvre that avoided damage and potential loss of valuable
cargos. Myers accordingly brought the Bon
Fortune’s two portside guns across to supplement the two on the starboard
side, on which La Brave was
approaching. He had them all loaded and the remaining gunpowder was then dumped
overboard. His vessel carried one boat only and this he had lowered from the stern,
filled with small-arms and secured close to the cabin’s portside port. He then
briefed his crew on what he wanted of them and waited. As La Brave closed to “within pistol shot” Bon Fortune opened fire and received a broadside in return. The
French ship then crashed into her, her bowsprit lodging in the Bon Fortune’s rigging. Briefly locked together, La Brave repeated the manoeuvre for
which she was known – the greater part of her crew, all but four men, swarming across
to take the prize. They met no opposition. Myers and his crew had retreated to the
stern cabin and had locked themselves in. The French placed guards on the door
to prevent a sally.
No illustrations seem to exist of the Bon Fortune vs. La Brave action but it might have looked like this: In 1797 HMS Nimble captured the French privateer cutters Bonheur, and L'Impromptu |
The ships had by now drifted apart and Myers and his crew
piled out of the cabin and into the boat secured alongside. They cut the rope
that secured it and rowed frantically away towards La Brave. As they boarded her the four Frenchmen left on board ran
to opposed them. Two were killed and the other two secured. Myers’ men now had
control of La Brave and he brought
her around under the stern of the vessel he had just vacated, bringing all guns
to bear on it. Under threat of raking by the ship he had just lost, La Brave’s captain surrendered on
promise of his crew’s treatment as prisoners of war.
Now with both La Brave
and the Bon Fortune under his
command, Myers set out to search for his parent ship, the Tamar. He found her three days later but the appearance of La Brave in the Bon Fortune’s company raised fears that both ships were under
French control. The Tamar made every
preparation to open fire and Myers lowered his topsails in sign of capitulation
and sent his men below decks to minimise the risk of casualties. Disaster was
thus avoided.
Myers continued in command of La Brave for several months until she in turn was captured by the
French frigate Tamise. He was
received honourable treatment as a prisoner at Port Louis, on the Isle de
France. It would be interesting to know what became of him subsequently. Would
any of this blog’s readers know?
Britannia’s Reach by Antoine Vanner
Historic naval
fiction moves on into the age of Fighting Steam. Click here for more details ofthis story of desperate riverine combat.
Unfortunately, there are quite a lot of Cpt. John Myers out there, one serving with Brother Jonathan's artillery in Virginia in 1812, others around the turn of the century, likewise, and one obviously celebrated a sort of Christmas Truce during the Battle of the Bulge back in '44.
ReplyDeleteHowever, there seems to be a book called "The Life, Voyages, and Travels of Captain John Myers", published in 1817 and one served with Cochrane in the Brazilian Navy during the 1820s in the good ship "Meridian" (cf: https://goo.gl/wlQjXo ) - I'm quite sure there are more wonderful tales to be told about him!
... just as wonderful as this one - thank you, Antoine!
Thanks for this Dirk - the 1817 book deserves tracking down and I can imagine the Myers of the Bon Fortune / La Brave incident being a man after Cochrane's own heart!
DeleteAbsolutely - and I'll keep my eyes open for Myers' Travels as well!
DeleteAn ingenious officer, fortune favours the brave.
ReplyDeleteI agree Stephen - it was an inspired trick!
DeleteWell done! I hadn't heard of this one, and this sounds straight from a Patrick O'Brian novel.
ReplyDeleteIt's teh sort of thing that any author would hesitate to put in a book as it sounds so unlikely!
ReplyDelete