Fight in the Channel explained

Conflict:Fight in the Channel
Partof:the Eighty Years' War
Date:1639
Place:Near Calais(present-day France)
Result:Inconclusive
Combatant2: Spain
Commander1:Maarten Tromp
Commander2:Antonio de Oquendo
Strength1:Day 1
17 ships
500 guns
Day 2
29 ships
Strength2:67 ships
2,500 guns
Casualties1:1 ship exploded
Casualties2:1 ship captured and severe damage to the Galleons

The Fight in the Channel took place on 16 and 17 September 1639 when a Dutch squadron under Admiral Maarten Tromp and Admiral Witte Corneliszoon de With, met with a much larger but poorly led Spanish fleet under Antonio D'Oquendo, consisting of 40 to 45 men–of–war and 40 to 50 transport vessels filled with some 13,000 Spanish soldiers who were being transported to Dunkirk. Tromp with 12 ships spotted the Spanish fleet on the 16th, but waited for de With to arrive with five more ships before attacking. Despite his numerical inferiority Tromp got the upper hand in a running fight which lasted into the night. The next day, Zeeland Commodore Joost Banckert arrived to reinforce the Dutch with 12 more ships. Fighting continued until the Dutch ran out of gunpowder when D'Oquendo retreated to the roadstead of the Downs hoping for English protection which would eventually lead to the Battle of the Downs, where D'Oquendo was decisively defeated.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Panhuysen, Luc . Het monsterschip: Maarten Tromp en de armada van 1639 . 2021 . Atlas Contact. 978-9045040714.