Capture of the Veloz Passagera explained

Conflict:Capture of Veloz Passagera
Partof:the Suppression of the Slave Trade
Date:7 September 1830
Place:near Prince's Island, West Africa, Atlantic Ocean
Result:British victory
Combatant1: United Kingdom
Combatant2:Slave Trader
Commander1: William Broughton
Commander2:Jozé Antonio de la Vega
Strength1:1 sloop-of-war
Strength2:1 ship
Casualties1:3 killed
12 wounded
1 sloop-of-war damaged
Casualties2:43 killed
20 wounded
1 ship captured

The Capture of Veloz Passagera was a single-ship action that occurred during the British Royal Navy's anti-slavery blockade of Africa in the early and mid 19th century. The sloop-of-war, of 18 guns, under Captain William Broughton, captured the 20-gun Spanish slave ship Veloz Passagera, Jozé Antonio de la Vega, master.[1]

Capture

Veloz Pasajera, of 408 tons (bm), Jayme Tinto, owner, sailed from Havana on 25 August 1828 with a crew of 100 men. She acquired her slaves at Jacquin and sailed on 7 September 1830.[2]

Primrose encountered Veloz Passagera off Prince's Island, West Africa, in the evening of 6 September 1830. The British attacked early in the morning of 7 September. A severe single-ship action ensued in which the British ultimately boarded Veloz Passagera, capturing her. Forty-three slavers out of 150 were killed in action and another 20 were wounded; the British lost three killed and 12 wounded. The engagement was one of the few fought during several decades of anti-slavery operations off the African coast, and was the most significant in terms of casualties and the strength of the opposing forces.

Veloz Passagera had 556 slaves aboard her when Primrose opened fire. Five died as a result of the broadsides from Primrose, and another 21 died before the court condemned Velos Passagera and emancipated the slaves.

Primrose sent Veloz Passagera to Sierra Leone for adjudication by the Anglo-Spanish Court of Mixed Commission. She arrived on 9 October,[2] and the Court condemned her on 16. The British wanted to try 24 of surviving crew in England with piracy. Captain Broughton sailed Primrose back to England as well, leaving Africa in December to follow up on the court proceedings.[1] He took with him the 24 crew men. However, Lord Palmerston, the Foreign Secretary, decided that British courts had no jurisdiction and that charges of piracy were not appropriate. He had the 24 men transported to Spain, where they stood trial in 1831.

The proceeds of the bounty granted for 551 slaves and a moiety of the hull, etc., were deposited in the Registry of the High Court of Admiralty on 16 June 1831.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: HMS Primrose. www.pbenyon.plus.com.
  2. https://www.slavevoyages.org/voyage/2423/variables Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Database – Veloz Pasajera voyage #2423.