Battle at The Lizard explained

Conflict:Battle at the Lizard
Partof:the War of the Spanish Succession
Date:21 October 1707
Place:Off Lizard Point, Atlantic Ocean
Coordinates:near 49.9535°N -5.2096°W
Result:French victory
Commander2: Richard Edwards
Commander1: René Duguay-Trouin
Claude de Forbin
Strength2:5 warships
130 merchant ships
Strength1:12 warships
Casualties2:800 killed and wounded
1,500 captured
1 warship destroyed
3 warships captured
15 merchant ships captured
Casualties1:300 killed and wounded
No ships lost

The naval Battle of the Lizard (French: Combat du Cap Lézard) took place on 21 October 1707 during the War of the Spanish Succession near Lizard Point, Cornwall between two French squadrons under René Duguay-Trouin and Claude de Forbin and an English convoy protected by a squadron under Commodore Richard Edwards.[1]

Duguay-Trouin and Forbin were two of the most successful French naval commanders and they caused much damage to the allied merchant fleet.

Battle

On 20 October 1707 a large merchant fleet consisting of 80 to 130 English ships left Plymouth for Portugal with supplies for the war in Spain. There were five escorting English ships under command of Commodore Edwards.

The next day near Lizard Point they were spotted by 2 French squadrons of 6 ships each. Technically Forbin was the senior French officer, but Duguay-Trouin was the more aggressive, and his ships led the attack and suffered most of the damage, after Forbin had discovered the British convoy.

This battle was almost a complete victory for the French; the 80-gun Cumberland and the 50-gun ships Chester and Ruby were taken, but Royal Oak escaped into Kinsale with a few merchantmen. The 80-gun Devonshire defended herself for several hours against seven French ships until she caught fire and blew up, only three men escaping out of 500.[2]

There is no unanimity on the number of merchant ships captured. French sources speak of 60 ships out of 80, some British of none at all. The fact that René Duguay-Trouin and Claude de Forbin quarrelled for many years about which of the two squadrons had the biggest role in the victory, points to a considerable number of ships captured. Probably the truth is somewhere in between: Polak in "Bibliographie maritime française" speaks of 15 merchant ships captured.

Order of battle

Britain (Edwards)

style=Shipstyle=Gunsstyle=Commanderstyle=Notes
Cumberland80Commodore Richard EdwardsSurrendered to Lys
Devonshire80Captain John WatkinsExploded, two survivors
Royal Oak76Captain Baron WyldeEscaped to Kinsale
Chester50Captain John BalchenSurrendered to Jason
Ruby50Captain the Hon. Peregrine BertieSurrendered to Amazone

France (Forbin)

style=Shipstyle=Gunsstyle=Commanderstyle=Notes
Mars54Rear-Admiral Claude de Forbin
Blackwall54Captain Jean Alexandre de TourouvreLost bowsprit in collision with Devonshire
Salisbury52Captain Kerlo de l'Isle
Protée48Captain the Comte de Illiers
Jersey46Captain François Cornil Bart
Griffon44Captain the Comte de Nangis
Dauphine44Captain the Comte de Roquefeuil
Fidèle44Captain Hennequin
Dryade32Captain Joris van Crombrugghe

France (Duguay-Trouin)

style=Shipstyle=Gunsstyle=Commanderstyle=Notes
Lys72Captain René Duguay-Trouin
Achille64Captain the Chevalier de BeauharnoisLost bowsprit in collision with Royal Oak
Poopdeck destroyed in cartridge explosion
Jason54Captain the Chevalier de Coursérac
Maure50Captain Thomas Auguste Moinerie-Miniac
Amazone40Lieutenant
Gloire38Captain the Chevalier de La JailleLost bowsprit in collision with Lys

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Allen p. 103
  2. Web site: Devonshire . Pastscape . English Heritage . 6 January 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160312123812/http://pastscape.org/hob.aspx?class1=9&county=1306804&district=1306804&hob_id=920068&parish=none&period=none&place=&rational=a&recordsperpage=10&rnumber=&rtype=&sort=2&source=text&type=&typeselect=c&yearfrom=1707&yearto=1707 . 12 March 2016 .