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Coog
01-15-2013, 22:51
The naval Battle of Cape St Vincent, took place off the southern coast of Portugal on 16 January 1780 during the American War of Independence. A British fleet under Admiral Sir George Rodney defeated a Spanish squadron under Don Juan de Lángara. The battle is sometimes referred to as the Moonlight Battle, because it was unusual for naval battles in the Age of Sail to take place at night. It was also the first major naval victory for the British over their European enemies in the war, and proved the value of copper sheathing the hulls of warships.

Admiral Rodney was escorting a fleet of supply ships to relieve the Spanish siege of Gibraltar with a fleet of about twenty ships of the line when he encountered Lángara's squadron south of Cape St. Vincent. When Lángara saw the size of the British fleet, he attempted to make for the safety of Cadiz, but the copper-sheathed British ships chased his fleet down. In a running battle that lasted from mid-afternoon until after midnight, the British captured four Spanish ships, including Lángara's flagship. Two other ships were also captured, but their final disposition is unclear: some Spanish sources indicate they were retaken by their Spanish crews, while Rodney's report indicates the ships were grounded and destroyed.

After the battle Rodney successfully resupplied Gibraltar and Minorca before continuing on to the West Indies station. Lángara was released on parole, and was promoted to lieutenant general by King Carlos III.

For the full story:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Cape_St._Vincent_(1780)

1792

Comte de Brueys
01-16-2013, 04:40
Thank you for the information, Coog.


... Lángara was released on parole, and was promoted to lieutenant general by King Carlos III.

Must be a very victorious defeat for the Spanish if they promoted their Admiral after the Battle.:p

1793/1794 Revolutionary France upgraded their unsuccessful army leaders to the Guillotine

csadn
01-16-2013, 16:40
Must be a very victorious defeat for the Spanish if they promoted their Admiral after the Battle.:p

For what it's worth: The Spaniard was outnumbered 2:1; and outclassed in both technology (particularly the coppered hulls) and quality (Spanish crews were never exactly renowned for being top-shelf). That any ships survived at all is a minor miracle.


1793/1794 Revolutionary France upgraded their unsuccessful army leaders to the Guillotine

Note the date -- this is the "Cape St. Vincent" of the American Revolution period; the better-known one occurred 17 years later.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spain_in_the_American_Revolutionary_War .