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See also: call the See also: great See also: naval victory won by See also: Lord See also: Howe over the French See also: fleet of See also: Admiral Villaret-Joyeuse, on the 1st of See also: June 1794
.
No place name can be given to it, because the See also: battle was fought 429 M. to the west of See also: Ushant
.
The French See also: people were suffering much See also: distress from the See also: bad harvest of the previous See also: year, and a great See also: convoy of See also: merchant See also: ships laden with corn was expected from See also: America
.
Admiral Vanstabel of the French See also: navy had been sent to escort it with two ships of the See also: line in See also: December of 1793
.
He sailed with his See also: charge from the Chesapeake on the 11th of See also: April 1794
.
On the previous See also: day six French ships of the line See also: left See also: Brest to meet Vanstabel in See also: mid ocean
.
The See also: British force designed to intercept the convoy was under LordHowe,then in command of the channel fleet
.
He sailed from Spithead on the 2nd of May with 34 See also: sail of the line and 15 smaller vessels, having under his charge nearly a See also: hundred merchant ships which were to be seen clear of the Channel
.
On the 4th, when off the See also: Lizard, the convoy was sent on its way protected by 8 line of battle ships and 6 or 7 frigates
.
Two of the line of battle ships were to accompany them throughout the voyage
.
The other six under See also: Rear-admiral See also: Montagu were to go as far as Cape Finisterre, and were then to cruise on the look-out for the French convoy between Cape Ortegal and Belle Isle
.
These detachments reduced the force under Lord Howe's immediate command to 26 of the line and 7 frigates . On the 5th of May he was off Ushant, and sent frigates to reconnoitre the harbour of Brest . They reported to him that theSee also: main French fleet, which was under the command of Villaret-Joyeuse, and was of 25 sail of the line, was lying at anchor in the roads
.
Howe then sailed to the latitude on which the convoy was likely to be met with, knowing that if the French admiral came out it would be to meet the ships with the See also: food and cover them from attack
.
To seek the convoy was therefore the most sure way of forcing Villaret-Joyeuse to See also: action
.
Till the 18th the British fleet continued cruising in the See also: Bay of Biscay
.
On the 19th Lord Howe returned to Ushant and again reconnoitred Brest
.
It was then seen that Villaret-Joyeuse had gone to See also: sea
.
He had sailed with his whole force on the 16th and had passed close to the British fleet on the 17th, unseen in a See also: fog
.
On the 19th the French admiral was informed by the " Patriote
(74) that Nielly had fallen in with, and had captured, the British See also: frigate " See also: Castor " (32), under Captain See also: Thomas
See also: Troubridge, together with a convoy from See also: Newfoundland
.
On the same day Villaret-Joyeuse captured See also: part of a Dutch convoy of 53 sail from See also: Lisbon
.
On the 19th a frigate detached by Admiral Montagu joined Howe
.
It brought information that Montagu had re-captured part of the Newfoundland convoy, and had learnt that Nielly was to join Vanstabel at sea, and that their combined force would beg sail of the line . Montagu himself had steered to cruise on the route of the convoy between the 45th and 47th degrees ofSee also: north latitude
.
Howe now steered to meet his sub-See also: ordinate who, he considered, would be in danger from the main French fleet
.
On the 21st he recaptured some of the Dutch
ships taken by Villaret-Joyeuse
.
From them he learnt that on the 19th the French fleet had been in latitude 470 46' N. and in longitude 11° 22' N. and was steering westward
.
Judging that Montagu was too far to the See also: south to be in peril from Villaret-Joyeuse, and considering him strong enough to perform the duty of intercepting the convoy, Lord Howe decided to pursue the main French fleet
.
The See also: wind was changeable and the weather hazy
.
It was not till the 28th of May at 6.3o A.M. that the British fleet caught sight of the enemy in 47° 34 N. and 13° 39' W
.
The wind was from the south-See also: east, and the French were to windward
.
Villaret-Joyeuse See also: bore down to a distance of 10 m. from the British, and then hauled to the wind on the See also: port tack
.
It was difficult for the British fleet to force an action from leeward if the French were unwilling to engage
.
Lord Howe detached a See also: light See also: squadron of four ships, the " See also: Bellerophon " (74), " Russel " (74), " See also: Marlborough " (74), and " Thunderer " (74) under Rear-admiral Thomas Pasley, to attack the rear of the French line
.
Villaret-Joyeuse stood on and endeavoured to See also: work to windward
.
In the course of the afternoon Rear-admiral Pasley's ships began to come up with the last of the French line, the " Revolutionnaire " (11o)
.
A partial action took place which went on till after dark; other British vessels joined
.
The " Revolutionnaire " was so damaged that she was compelled to leave her fleet, and the British " Audacious " (74) was also crippled and compelled to return to port
.
The " Revolution-mire " was accompanied by another See also: liner
.
During the See also: night the two fleets continued on the same course, and next day Howe renewed his attempts to force an action from leeward
.
He tacked his fleet in succession—his first See also: ship tacking first and the rest in order—in the hope that he would be able to cut through the French rear and gain the weather-gage
.
Villaret-Joyeuse then turned all his ships together and again headed in the same direction as the British
.
This See also: movement brought him nearer the British fleet, and another partial action took place between the See also: van of each force
.
Seeing that the French admiral was not disposed to charge home, Howe at See also: noon once more ordered his fleet to tack in succession
.
His See also: signal was poorly obeyed by the van, and his See also: object, which was to cut through the French line, was not at once achieved
.
But the admiral himself finally set an example by tacking his See also: flagship, the " See also: Queen See also: Charlotte " (See also: loo), and passing through the French, two ships from the end of their line
.
He was followed by his fleet, and Villaret-Joyeuse, seeing the peril of the ships in his rear, wore all his ships together to help them . Both forces had been thrown into considerable confusion by these movements, but the British had gained the weather-gage . Villaret-Joyeuse was able to save the two ships cut off, but he had fallen to leeward and the power to force on a battle had passed to Lord Howe . During the 3oth the fleets lost sight of one another for aSee also: time
.
The French, who had four ships crippled, had been joined by four others, and were again 26 in number, including the " Patriote."
The 31st of May passed without a hostile meeting and in thick weather, but by the evening the British were close to windward of the French
.
As Howe, who had not full confidence in all his captains, did not wish for a night battle, he waited till the following See also: morning, keeping the French under observation by frigates
.
On the 1st of June they were in the same relative positions, and at about a quarter past eight Howe bore down on the French, throwing his whole line on them at once from end to end, with orders to pass through from windward to leeward, and so to place the British ships on the enemy's line of retreat
.
It was a very bold departure from the then established methods of fighting, and most honourable in a See also: man of sixty-eight, who had been trained in the old school
.
Its essential merit was that it produced a close melee, in which the better See also: average gunnery and See also: seamanship of the British fleet would tell
.
Lord Howe's orders were not fully obeyed by all his captains, but a signal victory was won,—six of the French line of battle ships were taken, and one, the " Vengeur," sunk
.
The convoy escaped capture, having passed over the spot on which the action of the 29th May was fought, on the following day, and it anchored at
Brest on the 3rd of June
.
Its safe arrival went far to console the French for their defeat
.
The failure to stop it was forgotten in See also: England in the pleasure given by the victory
.
See See also: James's Naval
See also: History, vol. i
.
(1837) ; and Tronde, Batailles navales de la See also: France (1867)
.
(D
.
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