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Action of 5 October 1804

Coordinates: 36°53′48″N 7°53′42″W / 36.89663°N 7.895033°W / 36.89663; -7.895033
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36°53′48″N 7°53′42″W / 36.89663°N 7.895033°W / 36.89663; -7.895033

Anglo-Spanish War
Part of the Napoleonic Wars

The action of 5 October 1804, Francis Sartorius
Date5 October 1804
Location
Result British victory
Belligerents
 United Kingdom Spain
Commanders and leaders
Graham Moore José de Bustamante  Surrendered
Strength
4 frigates 4 frigates
Casualties and losses
9 killed and wounded 349 killed and wounded
600 captured
3 frigates captured
1 frigate destroyed

The Battle of Cape Santa Maria was a naval engagement that took place off the southern Portuguese coast, in which a British squadron under the command of Commodore Graham Moore attacked and defeated a Spanish squadron commanded by Brigadier Don José de Bustamante y Guerra.

Background

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Under the terms of a secret convention Spain had to pay 72 million francs annually to France until it declared war on Britain. The British had learned of the treaty, and knew it was likely that Spain would declare war soon after the arrival of the treasure ships. Since the British also knew that by law the fleet could only land at Cádiz, as well as its place and approximate time of departure from South America, it was not difficult to position a squadron to intercept it.

Bustamante had set sail from Montevideo on 9 August 1804 with four frigates loaded with gold and silver, as well as much other valuable cargo. On 22 September Admiral Cornwallis ordered Captain Graham Moore, commanding the 44-gun razee frigate HMS Indefatigable, to intercept and detain the Spanish ships, peacefully, if possible.[1]

Moore's ship arrived off Cadiz on 29 September and was joined on 2 October by HMS Lively, and by HMS Medusa and HMS Amphion the day after. In line abreast they patrolled the approaches to Cádiz.

Battle

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5 October 1804, the battle of Cabo de Santa María

At dawn on 5 October, the Spanish frigates sighted the coast of Portugal. At 7 a.m. they sighted the four British frigates. Bustamante ordered his ships into line of battle, and within an hour the British came up in line, to windward of the Spaniards and "within pistol-shot".

Moore, the British Commodore, sent Lieutenant Ascott to the Spanish flagship Medea, to explain his orders. Bustamante naturally refused to surrender and, impatient of delays, at 10 a.m. Moore ordered a shot be fired ahead over the bows of Medea. Almost immediately a general exchange of fire broke out. Within ten minutes the magazine of the Mercedes exploded destroying the ship, and killing all but 40 of her 240 crew, including almost the entire family of the future Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, Carlos María de Alvear, who (being 16 years old at the time) witnessed the explosion alongside his father from the Medea. Within half an hour the Santa Clara and the Medea had surrendered. Fama broke away and tried to flee; Medusa quickly followed. Moore ordered the faster Lively to pursue, capturing Fama a few hours later.[2] The three frigates were taken to Gibraltar, and then to Gosport, England.

Aftermath

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Sir Graham Moore's Action, 5 October 1804. HMS Medusa, Indefatigable, Amphion, and Liveley. Thomas Whitcombe.

In practical terms, the British interception of the four Real Armada frigates represented the end of an era for Bourbon Spain and regular specie shipments from the Spanish Empire's New World mines and mints. The squadron to which Mercedes belonged was the last of its kind that the world would see: a Spanish treasure fleet moving bullion from the New World Viceroyalties to the Iberian kingdoms.

Under the terms of the Cruizers and Convoys Act 1708 (6 Ann. c. 65) ships captured at sea were "Droits of the Crown" and became the property of their captors, who received the full value of the ships and cargo in prize money. Technically Britain and Spain were not at war at the time of the action, so the seizure of the ships and their cargo was an act of piracy and the Admiralty Court ruled that the three ships were "Droits of the Admiralty", and all revenues would revert to them. The four Spanish ships carried a total of 4,286,508 Spanish dollars in silver and gold coin, as well as 150,000 gold ingots, 75 sacks of wool, 1,666 bars of tin, 571 pigs of copper, seal skins and oil, although 1.2 million in silver, half the copper and a quarter of the tin went down with the Mercedes. Still, the remaining ships and cargo were assessed at a value of £900,000 (equivalent to £69,103,000 in 2023).[3] After much legal argument an ex gratia payment was made amounting to £160,000,[4] of which the four Captains would have received £15,000 each (equivalent to £1,152,000 in 2023).[3] Captain Gore had previously received an even greater sum as captain of HMS Triton in the similar Action of 16 October 1799.[5]

Medea was taken into the Royal Navy as HMS Iphigenia (later renamed HMS Imperieuse), Santa Clara as HMS Leocadia and Fama as HMS Fama.

Spain declared war on Great Britain on 14 December 1804, but suffered a catastrophic defeat less than a year later at the Battle of Trafalgar in October 1805. Napoleon, having crowned himself Emperor on 2 December, gained Spain as an ally in his war against Britain.

Order of battle

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Spain

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  • Medea 40-gun frigate, Flagship carrying Admiral Bustamante, commanded by Capitán Francisco de Piedrola y Verdugo
  • Fama 34-gun frigate, Capitán Miguel Zapiain y Valladares
  • Mercedes 36-gun frigate, Capitán Jose Manuel De Goicoa y Labart
  • Santa Clara 34-gun frigate, Capitán Aleson y Bueno

Britain

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References

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  1. ^ Publications of the Navy Records Society, Volume 21 at Google Books
  2. ^ "No. 15747". The London Gazette. 20 October 1804. pp. 1309–1310.
  3. ^ a b UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  4. ^ "No. 15861". The London Gazette. 9 November 1805. p. 1402.
  5. ^ "Gore, Sir John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11094. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
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