Capture of the Bahamas (1782) explained

Conflict:Capture of the Bahamas
Partof:the American Revolutionary War
Date:May 1782
Place:Nassau, Bahamas
Coordinates:25.06°N -77.345°W
Result:Spanish victory
Combatant2: Spain
Commander1: John Maxwell
Commander2: Juan Manuel Cagigal y Monserrat
Francisco de Miranda
Strength1:23 ships
1,400+[1]
Strength2:59 ships
1,500 sailors
1,588 regulars
50 light infantry
202 militia[2]
Casualties1:1,412 captured
77 merchant ships captured
1 frigate captured
4 brigantines captured
5 schooners captured
2 sloops captured
11 privateer ships captured[3] [4]
Casualties2:none[5]

The Capture of the Bahamas took place in May 1782 during the American Revolutionary War when a Spanish force under the command of Juan Manuel Cagigal arrived on the island of New Providence near Nassau, the capital of the Bahamas. The British commander at Nassau, John Maxwell decided to surrender the island without a fight when confronted by the superior force.

Background

Spain had entered the American War of Independence in 1779 and launched a campaign to drive the British out of the Gulf of Mexico, overrunning the British colony of West Florida, and seizing its major outposts at Mobile and Pensacola. The Spanish commander Bernardo de Gálvez planned an attack against Nassau, the capital of the Bahamas which served as a major British privateering base. Gálvez authorised an expedition against the islands in late 1781, but this was postponed during the Yorktown Campaign, which led to the surrender of a British army in October 1781.[6] In early 1782 the scheme was revived and command of it was given to Juan Cagigal, the Governor of Havana.

Capture

In spite of receiving orders from Gálvez to abandon the previously planned expedition so his forces could be used for an invasion of Jamaica, Cagigal pressed ahead with his scheme and sailed from Havana on 18 April 1782.[7] He had 2,500 troops, leaving the garrison of Havana very low, and unable to send troops to support Gálvez's Jamaican expedition. He had managed to secure additional ships and transports from the South Carolina Navy led by Alexander Gillon.

On 6 May Cagigal's ships came into view of Nassau. He convinced the British commander, Vice Admiral John Maxwell, to surrender without opening a formal siege of the town. Maxwell offered twelve articles of surrender, a list which was mildly revised by Cagigal before he accepted the surrender. Spanish forces then occupied the town, taking the 600-strong British garrison as prisoners and capturing several ships, including a frigate.[8]

Aftermath

Gálvez was angered that Cagigal had not followed his orders to abandon the attack, and was also frustrated because the British naval victory at the Battle of the Saintes had forced him to abandon the planned Franco-Spanish invasion of Jamaica.[9] Gálvez arranged to have Cagigal arrested for his alleged mistreatment of a British general, John Campbell, following the Siege of Pensacola in 1781. Cagigal was imprisoned in Cadiz and his military career was thus ruined. One of his associates, Francisco de Miranda, was also charged with a similar offence, which may have motivated his later career as an advocate of independence for Spain's American colonies. Miranda later explained Gálvez's actions as stemming from jealousy of Cajigal's success.[10] Ultimately, it was Gálvez who was to receive credit for the capture of the Bahamas despite the fact he had tried to cancel the project.[11] An American Loyalist named Andrew Deveaux set forth to recapture Nassau, which he achieved on 17 April 1783, with only 220 men and 150 muskets to face a force of 600 trained soldiers. By this time, however, the Spanish crown had already recognized British sovereignty over the Bahamas in exchange for East Florida under the Treaty of Paris.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Marley p. 346
  2. Marley p. 346
  3. Marley p. 346
  4. E. Beerman pp. 89–102
  5. Marley p. 346
  6. Chavez p. 203
  7. Chavez p. 207
  8. Chavez p. 208
  9. Chavez pp. 208–09
  10. Book: William Spence Robertson . Francisco de Miranda and the Revolutionizing of Spanish America . U.S. Government Printing Office . 1909 . 240–242.
  11. Chavez p. 209