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Coog
11-27-2012, 22:10
The Action of 28 November 1751 was a naval engagement of the Spanish-Algerian conflict, fought off Cape St Vincent between a squadron of two Spanish ships of the line under Captain Pedro Fitz-James Stuart and an Algerian squadron of equal strength. Captain Pedro Fitz-James Stuart's ships pursued one of the Algerian privateers and managed to force it to surrender it after a fierce exchange of fire. The ship, badly damaged, had to be scuttled, but its surviving crew and 50 Christian slaves were rescued and taken aboard Stuart's flagship.

In middle of the general peace obtained by the signature of the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, Marquis of Ensenada ordered to assemble two naval divisions with the aim of fight the Barbary corsairs and to prevent the seamen of the Spanish fleet remain inactive. Both divisions were dispatched to patrol the Barbary coast, where galliots and other minor vessels were frequently captured, but no significant engagement took place before November of 1751.

On 28 November, while cruising off Cape St. Vincent in command of the 60-gun ships of the line Dragón and América, Captain Pedro Fitz-James Stuart sighted two corsairs owned by the Regency of Algiers 52 leagues of the Cape. They were the 60-gun Danzik, flagship of the Algerian fleet, and the 54-gun Castillo Nuevo, being the first one under Arraez Mohammed Chirif. Stuart approached to inspect them at 5 p.m. Then the Danzik raised the Algerian colors and opened fire against his flagship, the Dragón, but always trying to avoid the action by sailing toward the southwest. The Castillo Nuevo took the opportunity to flee.

The Danzik was pursued for an entire day, succeeding Chirif in avoid combat taking advantage of the windward, which prevented the Spanish ships open the ports of their gundecks. However, she suffered damage to her rigging and sails, just as the Dragón. For a moment, she strike her colors, but Chirif, obliged by his crew, ordered it to be hoisted again and resumed the action until the sunset, when both himself and Stuart declined to continue fighting due to rough sea.

The next day the Spanish attacked again, inflicting heavy losses to the Danzik and causing irreparable damage to the ship. The loss on the Spanish side was negligible and amounted to be only 3 men killed and 25 wounded, compared to 194 killed and about 90 wounded on the Algerian ship, which, severely damaged, had to be set on fire after being transferred aboard Stuart's flagship 320 prisoners among who were Chirif, wounded during the battle, and 50 rescued Christian slaves, mostly Dutch.

Despite this defeat and some others such as the sinking of 3 xebecs off Benidorm or the capture of the Castillo Nuevo seven years later, the Barbary corsairs continued threatening the commercial traffic in the Mediterranean until 1786, when, after two successful Spanish expeditions under Antonio Barceló which bombarded Algiers inflicting heavy damage, the Dey of Algiers agreed to interrupt the actions of their privateers, being imitated shortly after by the Dey of Tunis.

David Manley
11-27-2012, 23:41
1803 - HMS Ardent (64) pursued and engaged the French corvette Bayonnaise (24), driving her ashore near Cape Finisterre Bayonnaise was set on fire and destroyed (her wreck has recently been discovered as part of the Finisterre project)

1808 - Boats from HMS Hereux attack shore batteries at Guadeloupe. Heureux was the former French corvette Lynx, captured in January that year by boats from HMS Galatea

From Wikipedia: "Heureux was commissioned in Antigua in April 1807 under [Lt.] Coombe [Coombe, who had lost a leg in a previous action was the officer who led the cutting out operation that captured her], who was killed in the early morning of 29 November 1808. He had received information that seven French vessels were lying under the protection of two batteries in the harbour at Mahaut, Guadeloupe and decided to attack them. Coombe took three boats and 63 men who rowed six hours to reach Mahaut at about midnight. The cutting out party then waited for four hours at their oars until just after the moon set at 4 am on 29 November. Coombe, with 19 men, boarded and carried a schooner armed with two guns and with a crew of 39 men. After a few minutes of desperate fighting the attackers prevailed. Meanwhile Lieutenant Daniel Lawrence and the remainder of the party landed and spiked three 24-pounders in the batteries, before boarding a brig. On the way out the prizes grounded, making the ideal targets for small arms fire and the three field pieces that the French had brought down to the shore. A 24-pound shot struck Coombe on the left side as he was about to abandon the prizes, killing him almost immediately. A musket ball wounded Lawrence in the forearm. Still, he extricated all the men without further casualties. In 1847 the Admiralty issued the Naval General Service Medal with clasp "28 Nov. Boat Service 1808" to all surviving claimants of the action."

Anav
11-28-2012, 16:12
1775 - Congress adopts first rules for regulation of the "Navy of the United Colonies."