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{{short description|Part of the War of the Austrian Succession}}
{{For|other battles in Toulon|Battle of Toulon (1707)|Siege of Toulon}}
{{For|other battles in Toulon|Battle of Toulon (1707)|Siege of Toulon}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2023}}
{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict=Battle of Toulon
|conflict = Battle of Toulon
|image=[[File:Action off toulon 4.jpg|300px]]
|image = Action off toulon 4.jpg
|image_size = 300px
|caption=Engraving of the Battle (1796) Naval museum of Madrid.
|caption = A Spanish illustration of the battle, [[Naval Museum of Madrid]]
|partof=the [[War of the Austrian Succession]]
|partof = the [[War of the Austrian Succession]]
|date=22 February 1744
|date = 21 to 22 February 1744 [[New Style]] <br /> 11 to 12 February [[Old Style]]
|place=Mediterranean, near [[Toulon]], [[Early Modern France|France]]
|place = Off [[Toulon]], [[Mediterranean Sea]]
|result=Tactically indecisive<ref name="Alastair/Callo p. 268">Alastair/Callo p. 268</ref><br>
Strategic Franco-Spanish victory<ref name="Alastair/Callo p. 268"/>
|result = Franco-Spanish victory {{Sfn|Wilson|Callo|2004|p=268}}
|combatant1={{flagicon|Spain|1701}} [[Enlightenment Spain|Kingdom of Spain]]<br>{{flagcountry|Kingdom of France}}
|combatant1 = {{flagdeco|Spain|1701}} [[History of Spain (1700–1810)|Spain]] <br /> {{flagcountry|Kingdom of France}}
|combatant2={{flagcountry|Kingdom of Great Britain}}
|combatant2 = {{flagcountry|Kingdom of Great Britain}}
|commander1={{flagicon|Spain|1701}} [[Juan José Navarro]]<br>{{flagicon|Kingdom of France}} [[Claude-Élisée de Court de La Bruyère|de Court de La Bruyere]]
|commander1 = {{flagdeco|Spain|1701}} [[Juan José Navarro|Juan Navarro]] <br /> {{flagdeco|Kingdom of France}} [[Claude-Élisée de Court de La Bruyère|Claude Bruyère]]
|commander2={{flagicon|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Thomas Mathews]]<br>{{flagicon|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Richard Lestock]]<br>{{flagicon|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Rear-Admiral William Rowley|William Rowley]]
|commander2 = {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Thomas Mathews]] <br /> {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Richard Lestock]] <br /> {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[William Rowley (Royal Navy officer)|William Rowley]]
|strength1=27 ships of the line<br>3 frigates<br>3 others<br>(1,806 guns)
|strength1 = 27 ships of the line <br /> 3 frigates <br /> 3 smaller warships
|strength2=30 ships of the line<br>3 frigates<br>6 others<br>(2,280 guns)
|strength2 = 30 ships of the line <br /> 3 frigates <br /> 6 smaller warships
|casualties1 = 149 killed, 467 wounded <br/> 3 ships damaged, 1 scuttled
|casualties1=149 dead<br>467 wounded<br>1 ship of the line [[Scuttling|scuttled]]<ref name="books.google.es">''Lestock, however, still hung back; and all that was to get sufficiently near the flying enemy to retake the Poder, which, however, its crew(the French that recaptured her) had already abandoned and set on fire.'' [[Charles Duke Yonge]], ''The history of the British navy: from the earliest period to the Present Time...'' p.207 [http://books.google.es/books?id=Hl5GAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Charles+Duke+Yonge+british+navy&hl=es&ei=EsuPTejbI4SWswayws2UCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CC4Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref><ref name="casualties">Carlos Martínez-Valverde (1983): [http://www.todoababor.es/articulos/sicie.htm ''La campaña de don Juan José Navarro en el Mediterráneo y la batalla de Sicié (1742-1744)''] ''Revista de Historia Naval'' {{es icon}}</ref><ref>The Spanish ship Poder being unable to keep up with the British ships that captured her, was rataken in the night by the French squadron. The French perceiving the British fleet coming fall up with them, cast off and abandoned the Poder, first setting fire to her, and she shortly after blew up.</ref>
|casualties2 = 133 killed, 223 wounded, 17 captured {{Sfn|Allen|1842|pp=327,329}} <br/> 5 ships damaged, 1 fireship sunk {{Sfn|Allen|1842|pp=327,329}}
----
|campaignbox = {{Campaignbox War of the Austrian Succession:Sea battles}}
149 killed or wounded
}}
|casualties2=142 dead<br>196 wounded<ref>Allen, Joseph: ''Admirals Mathews and Lestock.'' [http://books.google.com.ar/books?id=BGnfJ9VHVaIC&dq=%22The+loss+of+the+Namur+has+already+been+stated%22&lr=&hl=en&source=gbs_navlinks_s The United service magazine], part 2, pp. 327-329. H. Colburn, 1842</ref><ref>Biggs, William: ''[http://books.google.com.ar/books?id=cgoMAAAAYAAJ&dq=%22anne+galley%22+%22fire+ship%22&lr=&hl=en&source=gbs_navlinks_s The military history of Europe: from the commencement of the war with Spain in 1739, to the treaty of Aix-la Chapelle in 1748]'' R. Baldwin, 1755, page 272</ref><br>10 ships damaged<ref name="DNB45">{{cite book | chapter=Mathews, Thomas (1676-1751) | title=Dictionary of National Biography|volume=37|page=45}}</ref><br>1 fireship sunk<ref name="casualties"/>
----
700 killed or wounded (Spanish claim)<ref name="casualties"/>
|}}
{{Campaignbox War of the Austrian Succession:Sea battles}}


The naval '''Battle of Toulon''' or '''Battle of Cape Sicié''' took place on 22 February 1744 in the Mediterranean off the coast of [[Toulon]], France. A combined Franco-Spanish fleet fought off Britain's [[Royal Navy|Mediterranean fleet]]. The French fleet, not officially at war with Great Britain, only joined the fighting late, when it was clear that the greatly outnumbered Spanish fleet had gained the advantage over its foe. With the French intervention, the British fleet was forced to withdraw.<ref>Black, p 94</ref>
The '''Battle of Toulon''', also known as the '''Battle of Cape Sicié''', took place on 21 and 22 February 1744 [[new style|NS]]{{Efn|The dates of the battle were 21 to 22 February 1744 [[new style|(New Style (NS))]] according to the [[Gregorian calendar]] then used by France and Spain. The British still used the [[Julian calendar]], which gave dates of 10–11 February 1744 ([[Old Style|OS]])}} near the French [[Mediterranean]] port of [[Toulon]]. Although [[Kingdom of France|France]] was not yet at war with the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain]], ships from their [[Levant Fleet]] sailed out to support a [[History of Spain (1700–1810)|Spanish]] fleet, which was attempting to break through a two-year-old [[United Kingdom of Great Britain|British]] [[naval blockade]].


The initial engagement on 21 February was largely indecisive and the British continued their pursuit until midday on 22nd before their commander, Admiral [[Thomas Mathews]], called off the chase. With several of his ships in need of repair, he withdrew to [[Menorca]], which meant the British [[Royal Navy]] temporarily lost control of the waters around [[Italy]] and allowed the Spanish to take the offensive against [[Savoyard state|Savoy]].{{Sfn|Dull|2009|p=52}}
In Britain the battle was regarded as the most mortifying defeat;<ref>''In England, however, this disputed success was considered as the most mortifying defeat, and the complaints of the people knew no bounds.'' - The history of England from the earliest times to the death of George the Second, Vol III.[http://books.google.es/books?id=VhMZAAAAYAAJ] Goldsmith/Coote p.73</ref><ref name="Lindsay, p 430">Lindsay, p 430</ref> the Franco-Spanish fleet successfully ended the British blockade<ref>Hattendorf, page 36</ref> and inflicted considerably more damage to the British than they received, causing the British to withdraw to [[Minorca]] in need of heavy repairs. The retreat of Admiral [[Thomas Mathews|Mathews]]' fleet left the Mediterranean Sea temporarily under Spanish control, allowing the Spanish navy to deliver troops and supplies to the [[Spanish army]] in Italy, decisively swinging the war there in their favour.<ref>Dull, p.52</ref><ref>Mathews, Thomas (1676-1751). Dictionary of National Biography. 37. p. 45.</ref>


In his report, Mathews blamed his subordinate [[Richard Lestock]] for the failure and the issue was hotly debated in [[Parliament of Great Britain|Parliament]]. At the subsequent [[court-martial]], Mathews was held responsible and dismissed from the navy in June 1747, while Lestock's political connections meant he was cleared of all charges.{{Sfn|Baugh|2004}} Another seven [[Captain (Royal Navy)|captains]] were removed from command for failing to engage the enemy and the investigation led to changes that required individual captains to be far more aggressive.
Thomas Mathews was tried by court-martial in 1746 on charges of having brought the fleet into action in a disorganised manner, of having fled the enemy, and of having failed to bring the enemy to action when the conditions were advantageous.<ref name="DNB45"/> He was one of seven ship [[Captain (Royal Navy)|captains]]<ref>The rest of captains dismissed from service were Captain George Burrish of ''HMS Dorsetshire'', John Ambrose of ''HMS Rupert'', Edmund Williams of ''HMS Royal Oak'', Richard Norris of ''HMS Essex'', Thomas Cooper of ''HMS Stirling Castle'', James Lloyd of ''HMS Nassau'', and William Dilkes captain of ''HMS Chichester''. See ''A political index to the histories of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol I''. [http://books.google.es/books?id=njYJAAAAQAAJ] Beatson p. 329/330</ref> dismissed from service.<ref name="DNB45"/>


France declared war on Britain shortly after the battle but it led to recriminations with the Spanish, who suffered most of the casualties and complained of a lack of support from the French fleet during the battle. The French admiral, [[Claude-Élisée de Court de La Bruyère|Claude Bruyère]], was removed from command while the resulting ill-feeling limited further co-operation between the two sides.{{Sfn|Anderson|1995|pp=138-139}} The Spanish commander [[Juan José Navarro]] and his ships spent the rest of the war blockaded in [[Cartagena, Spain]] by Mathews' successor [[William Rowley (Royal Navy officer)|William Rowley]].
In English-language literature the battle is viewed as indecisive at best<ref>Waldegrave Head, p. 289</ref><ref>Roskill, p. 60</ref> and a fiasco at worst.<ref>Willis, p. 62</ref>


==Engagement==
==Background==
[[File:Combate de Tolón.jpg|thumb|The British [[fire-ship]] ''Anne Galley'' blows up after being hit by a broadside from the 64-gun Spanish warship ''Hércules''.]]
[[File:Admiral Thomas Mathews.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.8|British commander, Admiral [[Thomas Mathews]], whose poor relationship with his subordinate [[Richard Lestock]] affected the battle]]
The outbreak of war with Spain and the imminent threat of war with France during the early stages of the [[War of the Austrian Succession]] led to Mathews' return to active service after seven years of effective retirement, with a promotion directly to vice-admiral of the red on 13 March 1741.<ref name="DNB44">{{cite book | chapter=Mathews, Thomas (1676-1751) | title=Dictionary of National Biography|volume=37|page=44}}</ref> He was given a command in the Mediterranean, and made plenipotentiary to [[Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia|Charles Emmanuel III]], king of [[Kingdom of Sardinia|Sardinia]], and the other courts of Italy.<ref name="DNB44"/> The appointment was somewhat unexpected, Mathews was not especially distinguished, and had not served in the navy for a number of years.<ref name="DNB44"/> His second in command in the Mediterranean was Rear-Admiral [[Richard Lestock]], a man Mathews knew from his time as commissioner at Chatham, when Lestock had commanded the [[guardship]]s stationed in the [[River Medway|Medway]].<ref name="DNB44"/> The two had not been on good terms, and on receiving the Mediterranean posting, Mathews requested that Lestock be recalled, a request the [[Admiralty]] declined to act upon.<ref name="DNB44"/>


The immediate cause of the [[War of the Austrian Succession]] was the death in 1740 of [[Emperor Charles VI]], last male [[House of Habsburg|Habsburg]]. This left his eldest daughter, [[Maria Theresa]], as heir to the [[Habsburg monarchy]], {{efn|Often referred to as 'Austria', this included [[Archduchy of Austria|Austria]], [[Kingdom of Hungary|Hungary]], [[Kingdom of Croatia (Habsburg)|Croatia]], [[Crown of Bohemia|Bohemia]], the [[Austrian Netherlands]], and [[Parma]]}} whose [[Salic law|laws excluded women]] from the succession. The [[Pragmatic Sanction of 1713|1713 Pragmatic Sanction]] waived this and allowed her to inherit, but this was challenged by [[Charles Albert of Bavaria]], the closest male heir.{{sfn|Anderson|1995|p=3}}
The two men continued their disagreements during their time in the Mediterranean, though Mathews' continued distractions with diplomatic duties meant that they did not break out into an open argument.<ref name="DNB44"/> In 1742 Mathews sent a small squadron to [[Naples]] to compel [[Charles III of Spain|King Charles]], later the King of Spain, to remain neutral. It was commanded by Commodore [[William Martin (Royal Navy officer)|William Martin]], who refused to enter into negotiations, and gave the king half an hour in which to return an answer. The Neapolitans were forced to agree to the British demands.<ref name="DNB300">{{cite book | chapter=Martin, William (1696-1756) | title=Dictionary of National Biography|volume=37|page=300}}</ref>


While the [[House of Habsburg]] was the largest single component of the [[Holy Roman Empire]], its pre-eminent position was challenged by rivals like [[Electorate of Bavaria|Bavaria]], [[Electorate of Saxony|Saxony]] and [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]]. With the help of France, these states turned a dynastic dispute into a European conflict and in January 1742 Charles of Bavaria became the first non-Habsburg [[Holy Roman Emperor|Emperor]] in nearly 300 years. He was opposed by Maria Theresa and the so-called Pragmatic Allies, which in addition to Austria included Britain, [[Electorate of Hanover|Hanover]] and the [[Dutch Republic]].{{sfn|Black|1999|p=82}}
In June 1742 a squadron of Spanish galleys, which had taken refuge in the Bay of [[Saint Tropez]], was burnt by the fire ships of Mathews' fleet. In the meantime a Spanish squadron had taken refuge in [[Toulon]], and was watched by the British fleet from [[Hyères]]. On 21 February 1744 ([[New Style|N.S.]], 10 February O.S.) the Spaniards put to sea in company with a French force.<ref name="DNB44"/> Mathews, who had now returned to his flagship, followed, and an engagement took place on 22 and 23 February.<ref name="DNB44"/>


Although French and British troops fought against each other at [[Battle of Dettingen|Dettingen]] in June 1743, the two kingdoms were not yet formally at war. In contrast, Spain and Britain had been fighting the [[War of Jenkins' Ear]] since 1739, primarily in [[Caribbean]] but also in the Mediterranean, where in 1742 a Spanish squadron led by [[Juan José Navarro]] took refuge in the French naval base of [[Toulon]] and were prevented from leaving by the British [[Mediterranean Fleet]] under Admiral [[Thomas Mathews]]. In the 1743 Treaty of Fontainebleau, [[Louis XV]] of France and his uncle [[Philip V of Spain]], agreed to a joint [[Planned French invasion of Britain (1744)|invasion of Britain]] and by late January 1744, more than 12,000 French troops and transports had been assembled at [[Dunkirk]].{{sfn|Harding|2013|p=171}}
The fleets had become scattered in the light winds as they approached, and as they began to form up for the battle on 22 February, Mathews signalled for the formation of the [[line of battle]].<ref name="DNB45"/> The line had still not been formed as night fell, leading Mathews to hoist the signal to come to, intending for his ships to first finish forming the line.<ref name="DNB45"/> The van and centre squadrons did so, but Lestock, commanding the rear, obeyed the order to come to without having formed the line. By daybreak on 23 February, the rear of the British fleet was separated by a considerable distance from the van and centre.<ref name="DNB45"/> Mathews signalled for Lestock to make more sail, reluctant to start the attack with his ships still disorganised, but the slowness of Lestock to respond caused the Franco-Spanish force to start to slip away to the south.<ref name="DNB45"/> Mathews feared that they would escape him and pass through the [[Straits of Gibraltar]] to join the French force gathered at [[Brest, France|Brest]] for the [[Planned French Invasion of Britain (1744)|planned invasion of Britain]].<ref name="DNB45"/>


In an attempt to divert British naval resources from the invasion route, Navarro was ordered to force his way out of Toulon and make for the [[Atlantic]], supported by the French [[Levant Fleet]] under [[Claude-Élisée de Court de La Bruyère|Claude Bruyère]].
Knowing that his duty was to attack, Mathews hoisted the signal to engage the enemy aboard his [[flagship]] {{HMS|Namur|1697|6}}, and at one o'clock left the line to attack the Spanish rear, followed by Captain James Cornewall aboard [[HMS St Michael (1669)|HMS ''Marlborough'']].<ref name="DNB45"/> In doing so, the signal to form the line of battle was left flying. The two signals flying simultaneously created confusion, though a number of British commanders, including Captain [[Edward Hawke, 1st Baron Hawke|Edward Hawke]], followed Mathews' example.<ref name="DNB45"/> Heavily outnumbered and unsupported, with his other commanders either too uncertain, or in the case of Lestock, possibly pleased to see Mathews in difficulty and unwilling to help him, ''Namur'' and ''Marlborough'' managed to successfully engage their opposite numbers in the enemy line, but suffered considerable damage.<ref name="DNB45"/> At the rear of the ships being attacked, five more Spanish ships followed, at some distance due to the slow speed of the one ahead: ''Brillante, San Fernando, Halcon, Soberbio'' and ''Santa Isabel''. There was some exchange of fire between these and the lead ships of the English rear. Most of Lestock´s ships in the rear remained inactive during the battle. The main action was being fought around ''Real Felipe'', Navarro´s flagship. ''Marlborough'' purposefully crossed the Spanish line, but suffered such severe damage that she was deemed to be on the verge of sinking. The ''Hercules'', astern of the ''Real Felipe'', vigorously fought off three British ships, while the ''Constante'', immediately ahead of the flagship, repelled the attack of a British ship-of-the-line, which was promptly replaced by two more, with which she continued to fight for nearly three hours. The French ships came about at 5 o'clock to aid the Spanish, a manoeuvre interpreted by some of the British commanders to be an attempt to double the British line and surround them.<ref name="DNB45"/> With no orders from Mathews and a lack of clear instructions or command structure, the British line broke, and began to flee to the northwest.<ref name="DNB45"/> The Spanish, still on the defensive, neglected to capture the defenceless ''Marlborough'', though they did retake the ''Poder'', which had previously surrendered to the British.<ref name="DNB45"/> The Franco-Spanish fleet then resumed their flight to the southwest, and it was not until 23 February that the British were able to regroup and resume the pursuit. They caught up with the enemy fleet again, which was hampered by towing damaged ships, and the unmanoeuvrable ''Poder'' was abandoned and scuttled by the French.<ref name="books.google.es"/> By now the British had closed to within a few miles of the enemy fleet, but Mathews again signalled for the fleet to come to. The following day, 24 February, the Franco-Spanish fleet was almost out of sight, and Mathews returned to Hyères, and sailed from there to [[Mahón|Port Mahon]], where he arrived in early March.<ref name="DNB45"/>
Their opponent, Thomas Mathews, had entered the Royal Navy in 1690 and enjoyed a solid if unspectacular career before being appointed Commander-in-chief of the Mediterranean in 1742. He had a poor relationship with his deputy [[Richard Lestock]], a fact recognised by both officers who had each separately requested that Lestock be reassigned, a request ignored by the [[Admiralty (United Kingdom)|Admiralty]]. The tension between the two men meant Mathews failed to properly discuss tactics with his subordinate prior to the battle, a factor which partially contributed to the later confusion over orders.{{Sfn|Baugh|2004}}
[[File:Plan descriptif de la bataille de Toulon 1744.jpg|thumb|left|300px|'''Battle of Toulon''']]


==Battle==
==Enquiry and dismissal==
[[File:Toulon, 1744 RCIN 729009.jpg|right|thumb|upright=1.0|Map of the battle]]
The failure of the British fleet to bring a decisive action against a foe of such an inferior number had significant consequences. The opposing fleet was able to deliver troops and supplies to the Spanish army in Italy, decisively swinging the war there in their favour.<ref name="DNB45"/> This was widely remarked on in Britain. The [[House of Commons of Great Britain|House of Commons]] petitioned [[George II of Great Britain|King George II]] for a public enquiry, and a dozen captains were tried by court-martial and [[Cashiering|cashiered]].<ref name="DNB45"/> Lestock was also tried, but was able to place the blame on Mathews, and with the help of powerful supporters in government, was acquitted and offered further employment.<ref name="DNB45"/> Mathews was tried by court-martial in 1746, on charges of having brought the fleet into action in a disorganised manner, of having fled the enemy, and of having failed to bring the enemy to action when the conditions were advantageous.<ref name="DNB45"/> In his defence it was shown that he had fought bravely, but in June 1747 the court judged the charges were proven, and Mathews was dismissed from the service.<ref name="DNB45"/>


On 21 February 1744, the combined Franco-Spanish fleet of twenty-seven [[ships of the line]] and three [[frigate]]s put to sea with Mathews in pursuit. The British ships were generally larger and more heavily armed than their opponents, carrying over 25% more cannons overall.{{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=325}} Both fleets adopted the traditional formation of [[vanguard]], centre and rear, with Navarro and the Spanish ships in front, followed by two French squadrons.{{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=324}} On the British side, Mathews led the van, [[William Rowley (Royal Navy officer)|William Rowley]] the centre and Lestock the rear.{{Sfn|Allen|1842|pp=323-324}}
The court-martial was hampered by interference from politicians and civilian courts, so in 1749 [[Parliament]] amended the 1661 [[Articles of War]] to enhance the autonomy of naval courts. It also amended the section that read:


Light winds made manoeuvring difficult and caused the two fleets to become spread out but around 11:30 early in the evening of 21 February, the fleets began to approach each other and prepare for battle, with Mathews signalling his ships to form [[line of battle]].<ref name="DNB45">{{cite book | chapter=Mathews, Thomas (1676–1751) | title=Dictionary of National Biography|volume=37|page=45}}</ref> The line had still not been properly formed as night fell, leading Mathews to hoist the signal to [[Glossary of nautical terms (A-L)#come to|come to]] (halt by turning into the wind), intending for his ships to first finish forming the line.<ref name="DNB45"/> The van and centre squadrons did so, but Lestock, commanding the rear, obeyed the order to come to immediately, without having formed the line.<ref name="DNB45"/>
{{Quote|text=Every Captaine and all other Officers Mariners and Souldiers of every Ship Frigott or Vessell of War that shall in time of any fight or engagement withdraw or keepe backe or not come into the fight and engage and do his utmost to take fire kill and endamage the Enemy Pirate or Rebells and assist and relieve all and every of His Majesties Ships shall for such offence of cowardice or disaffection be tried and suffer paines of death or other punishment as the circumstances of the offence shall deserve and the Court martiall shall judge fitt to require "paines of death" in '''all''' such cases.<ref>From: 'Charles II, 1661: An Act for the Establishing Articles and Orders for the regulateing and better Government of His Majesties Navies Ships of Warr & Forces by Sea.', Statutes of the Realm: volume 5: 1628-80 (1819), pp. 311-314. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=47293 Date accessed: 8 June 2010.</ref>}}


By daybreak on 23 February, the rear of the British fleet was separated by a considerable distance from the van and centre.<ref name="DNB45"/> Mathews signalled for Lestock to make more sail, reluctant to start the attack with his ships still disorganised, but the slowness of Lestock to respond caused the Franco-Spanish force to start to slip away to the south.<ref name="DNB45"/> Mathews feared that they would escape him and pass through the [[Strait of Gibraltar]] to join the French force gathered at [[Brest, France|Brest]] for the [[Planned French invasion of Britain (1744)|planned invasion of Britain]].<ref name="DNB45"/>
These events were followed by a French declaration of war on Britain and Hanover in March; in May came a French declaration of war on Maria Theresa and invasion of the Netherlands.<ref name="Lindsay, p 430"/> The Spanish admiral Juan José Navarro was created ''[[Marquess]] of Victory'' after his conduct of the battle.<ref>O'Donnell Duque de Estrada y Conde de Lucena, Hugo: ''El primer Marqués de La Victoria, personaje silenciado en la reforma dieciochesca de la Armada''. Real Academia de la Historia, 2004, p. 63. ISBN 84-96849-08-2 {{es icon}}</ref><ref>Vaca de Osma, José: ''Carlos III''. Ediciones Rialp, 1997, p. 63. ISBN 84-321-3141-5 {{es icon}}</ref>

Knowing that his duty was to attack, Mathews hoisted the signal to engage the enemy aboard his [[flagship]] {{HMS|Namur|1697|6}}, and at one o'clock left the line to attack the Spanish rear, followed by Captain [[James Cornewall]] aboard {{HMS|Marlborough|1706|6}}.<ref name="DNB45"/> In doing so, the signal to form the line of battle was left flying. The two signals flying simultaneously created confusion. A number of British commanders, including Captain [[Edward Hawke, 1st Baron Hawke|Edward Hawke]], followed Mathews' example, but many did not.<ref name="DNB45"/> His other commanders were either too uncertain, or in the case of Lestock, unwilling to cooperate with him.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lecky |first=William Edward Hartpole |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LMAxAQAAIAAJ&q=lestock |title=A History of England in the Eighteenth Century |date=1892 |publisher=Longmans, Green |location=London |pages=19 |language=en}}</ref>

[[File:Combate de Tolón.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.0|The British [[fire ship]] {{HMS|Anne Galley}}, aflame and sinking short of her intended target, the Spanish flagship ''Real Felipe'']]

Heavily outnumbered and unsupported, ''Namur'' and ''Marlborough'' managed to successfully engage their opposite numbers in the enemy line, but suffered considerable damage.<ref name="DNB45"/> At the rear of the ships being attacked, five more Spanish ships followed, at some distance due to the slow speed of the one ahead: ''Brillante, San Fernando, Halcon, Soberbio'' and ''Santa Isabel''. There was some exchange of fire between these and the lead ships of the British rear. Most of Lestock's ships in the rear remained inactive during the battle.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Martínez-Valverde |first=Carlos |date=2005-10-06 |title=La batalla de Cabo Sicié (Tolón), 1744 |url=https://www.todoababor.es/historia/la-batalla-de-cabo-sicie-tolon-1744/ |access-date=2022-11-01 |website=Todo a babor |language=es}}</ref>

The main action was being fought around ''Real Felipe'', Navarro's flagship. ''Marlborough'' purposefully crossed the Spanish line, but suffered such severe damage that she was deemed to be on the verge of sinking. The ''Hercules'', astern of the ''Real Felipe'', vigorously fought off three British ships. The ''Constante'', immediately ahead of the flagship, repelled the attack of a British ship-of-the-line, which was promptly replaced by two more, with which she continued to fight for nearly three hours.<ref name=":0" />

The French ships came about at 5 o'clock to aid the Spanish, a manoeuvre interpreted by some of the British commanders to be an attempt to double the British line and surround them.<ref name="DNB45"/> The Spanish, still on the defensive, neglected to capture the defenceless ''Marlborough'', though they did retake the ''Poder'', which had previously surrendered to the British.<ref name="DNB45"/> The Franco-Spanish fleet then resumed their flight to the southwest, and it was not until 23 February that the British were able to regroup and resume the pursuit. They caught up with the enemy fleet again, which was hampered by towing damaged ships, and the unmanoeuvrable ''Poder'' was abandoned and scuttled by the French. By now the British had closed to within a few miles of the enemy fleet, but Mathews again signalled for the fleet to come to. The following day, 24 February, the Franco-Spanish fleet was almost out of sight, and Mathews returned to Hyères and sailed from there to [[Mahón|Port Mahon]], where he arrived in early March.<ref name="DNB45"/>

==Aftermath==
[[File:Cour martiale en 1745 pour les capitaines anglais battus en 1744 devant Toulon.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.2|Naval officers attending the 1746 [[court martial]]; note the crowds gathered to attend the proceedings, a mark of the level of public interest]]

Tactically, the battle was indecisive while the invasion of Britain was abandoned soon after, but Mathews' withdrawal to Menorca temporarily lifted the blockade of the [[France–Spain relations|Gallispan]] army in Northern Italy, allowing them to take the offensive.{{Sfn|Dull|2009|p=54}} It also led to recriminations among the victors; [[Philip V of Spain]] made Navarro ''Marqués de la Victoria'', or "Marquis of Victory", a title reflecting domestic opinion that the battle was a Spanish success negated by the poor performance of the French. He also insisted de la Bruyère be removed from command. The resulting ill-feeling minimised future co-operation between the Spanish and French navies, with Navarro and his ships blockaded at [[Cartagena, Spain]] for the rest of the war by Rowley, who had succeeded Mathews as commander in the Mediterranean.{{Sfn|Anderson|1995|pp=138–139}}

France declared war on Britain and [[Electorate of Hanover|Hanover]] in March, then invaded the [[Austrian Netherlands]] in May.{{sfn|Lindsay|1957|p=430}} These were significant consequences, allegedly resulting from the failure of the British fleet to win a decisive action against an inferior opponent, {{Efn|Modern historians argue these actions had been agreed in October 1743 and were unaffected by Toulon {{Sfn|Anderson|1995|pp=130–132}}}} and [[Parliament of Great Britain|Parliament]] demanded a public enquiry. At the subsequent [[court-martial]], seven captains present at the battle were [[Cashiering|cashiered]] for failing to do their "utmost" to engage the enemy as required by the [[Articles of War]], another two were acquitted while one died before trial.{{Efn|These were; (1) George Burrish; HMS ''Dorsetshire'' (2) John Ambrose; HMS ''Rupert'' (3) Edmund Williams; HMS ''Royal Oak'' (4) Richard Norris; HMS ''Essex'' (5) Thomas Cooper; HMS ''Stirling Castle'' (later restored) (6) James Lloyd; HMS ''Nassau'' (7) William Dilkes; HMS ''Chichester''}} {{Sfn|Beatson|1788|pp=329–330}}

Mathews was also court-martialled on charges of having brought the fleet into action in a disorganised manner and failing to attack the enemy when the conditions were advantageous. Although his personal courage was not in question, he was found guilty of failing to comply with the official "Fighting Instructions" which required him to engage in "[[Line of battle]]", and dismissed from the navy in June 1747. Despite ignoring his commander's orders, Lestock was acquitted because in doing so he followed the precise letter of the instructions and was promoted [[Admiral of the Blue]], although he died shortly afterwards in December 1746.{{Sfn|Bruce|1998|p=224}}

[[File:Richard Lestock.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.8|[[Richard Lestock]], whose acquittal was widely criticised and led to changes in the "Fighting Instructions"]]

The judgements were unpopular with the public, a contemporary declaring "The nation could not be persuaded...Lestock should be pardoned for not fighting, and Mathews cashiered for fighting".{{Sfn|Hervey|2018|p=270}} His acquittal was largely due to his political connections, {{Sfn|Baugh|2004}} and recognising the inquiry had been hampered by political and civilian interference, in 1749 Parliament updated the 1661 [[Articles of War]] to enhance the autonomy of naval courts. It also amended the section that read:

{{Blockquote|text=Every Captaine and all other Officers Mariners and Souldiers of every Ship [[frigate|Frigott]] or Vessell of War that shall in time of any fight or engagement withdraw or keepe backe or not come into the fight and engage and do his utmost to take fire kill and endamage the Enemy Pirate or Rebells and assist and relieve all and every of His Majesties Ships shall for such offence of cowardice or disaffection be tried and suffer paines of death or other punishment as the circumstances of the offence shall deserve and the Court martiall shall judge fitt.<ref>[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=47293 'Charles II, 1661: An Act for the Establishing Articles and Orders for the regulateing and better Government of His Majesties Navies Ships of Warr & Forces by Sea.'], Statutes of the Realm: volume 5: 1628–80 (1819), pp. 311–314. Date accessed: 8 June 2010.</ref>}}

Article XII in the 1749 version was changed to permit the court far less discretion in terms of punishment, wording that would result in the 1757 [[execution of Admiral Byng]].{{Sfn|Ware|2009|pp=151–153}} It now read;

{{Quote|text=Every Person in the Fleet, who thro’ Cowardice, Negligence or Disaffection, shall in Time of Action withdrawn, or keep back, or not come into the Fight or Engagement, or shall not do his utmost to take or destroy every Ship which it shall be his Duty to engage, and to assist and relieve all and every of his Majesty's Ships, or those of his Allies, which it shall be his Duty to assist and relieve, every such Person so offending and being convicted thereof by the Sentence of a Court Martial, shall suffer Death.<ref>'Admiral Byng's defence, as presented by him, and read in the Court January 18, 1757, ... Containing a very particular account of the action on the 20th of May, 1756, off Cape Mola,...' John Byng, 1757, pp. 10–11.</ref>}}


==Order of battle==
==Order of battle==
===Franco-Spanish===
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable" width=100%
|-valign="top"
|-valign="top"
!colspan="5" bgcolor="white"|Franco-Spanish fleet
!colspan="5" bgcolor="white"|Franco-Spanish fleet<ref name=allen/>
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
! width=15%; align= center | <small> Ship </small>
! width=15%; align= center | <small> Ship </small>
Line 68: Line 94:
!colspan=5 align=center |'''Van'''
!colspan=5 align=center |'''Van'''
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Boreé''
| align= left | [[French ship Borée (1734)|''Borée'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 64
| align= center | 64
| align= left | Captain Marqueu
| align= left | Captain Marqueu
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Tolouse''
| align= left | ''Toulouse''
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain Dárton
| align= left | Captain Dárton
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Tigre''
| align= left | [[French ship Tigre (1724)|''Tigre'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 50
| align= center | 50
| align= left | Captain Saurin
| align= left | Captain Saurin
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Eole''
| align= left | [[French ship Éole (1733)|''Éole'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 64
| align= center | 64
| align= left | Captain D'Alver
| align= left | Captain {{ill|Charles d'Albert du Chesne|fr}}
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Alcyon''
| align= left | [[French ship Alcyon (1726)|''Alcyon'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 56
| align= center | 56
| align= left | Captain Lancel
| align= left | Captain Lancel
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Duc D'Orléans''
| align= left | [[French ship Duc d'Orléans (1722)|''Duc D'Orléans'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 68
| align= center | 68
| align= left | Captain Dornés
| align= left | Captain Dornés
Line 105: Line 131:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Espoir''
| align= left | ''Espoir''
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 74
| align= center | 74
| align= left | Captain D'Hericourt (Ensign of Gavaret)
| align= left | Captain D'Hericourt (Ensign of Gavaret)
Line 112: Line 138:
! colspan=8 align=center |'''Centre'''
! colspan=8 align=center |'''Centre'''
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Trident''
| align= left | [[French ship Trident (1742)|''Trident'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 64
| align= center | 64
| align= left | Captain Caylus
| align= left | Captain Caylus
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Heureux''
| align= left | [[French ship Heureux (1730)|''Heureux'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain Gramier
| align= left | Captain Gramier
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Achileon''
| align= left | [[French ship Aquilon (1733)|''Aquilon'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain [[Louis-Philippe de Rigaud, Marquis of Vaudreuil|Louis-Philippe de Rigaud, Marquis de Vaudreuil]]
| align= left | Captain Vaudevil
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Solide''
| align= left | [[French ship Solide (1722)|''Solide'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 64
| align= center | 64
| align= left | Captain Chateauneuf
| align= left | Captain Chateauneuf
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Diamant''
| align= left | [[French ship Diamant (1733)|''Diamant'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 50
| align= center | 50
| align= left | Captain Manak
| align= left | Captain [[Claude Louis d'Espinchal, marquis de Massiac|Claude Louis d'Espinchal, Marquis de Massiac]]
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Ferme''
| align= left | [[French ship Ferme (1723)|''Ferme'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain Gorgues
| align= left | Captain Gorgues
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Terrible''
| align= left | [[HMS Terrible (1747)|''Terrible'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 74
| align= center | 74
| align= left | [[Claude-Élisée de Court de La Bruyère|Vice-Admiral De Court]]<br>Captain Jonquiere
| align= left | Vice-Admiral '''[[Claude-Élisée de Court de La Bruyère]]'''<br/>Captain [[Jacques-Pierre de Taffanel de la Jonquière, Marquis de la Jonquière]]
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Sancti Espiritus''
| align= left | [[French ship Saint Esprit (1726)|''Saint Esprit'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 68
| align= center | 68
| align= left | Captain Poison
| align= left | Captain Poison
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Serieux''
| align= left | [[HMS Intrepid (1747)|''Sérieux'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 64
| align= center | 64
| align= left | Captain Cahyla
| align= left | Captain {{ill|Alexandre de Cheylus|fr}}
| align= left |
| align= left |
|-
|-
! colspan=8 align=center |Rear
! colspan=8 align=center |Rear
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Oriente''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Oriente (1740)|''Oriente'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain Joaquín Villena
| align= left | Captain {{ill|Joaquín Manuel de Villena y Guadalfajara|es}}
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''América''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship America (1736)|''América'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain Aníbal Petrucci
| align= left | Captain Aníbal Petrucci
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Neptuno''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Neptuno (1740)|''Neptuno'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain Enrique Olivares{{KIA}}
| align= left | Captain Enrique Olivares{{KIA}}
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Poder''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Poder (1740)|''Poder'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain Rodrigo de Urrutia.{{POW}}
| align= left | Captain Rodrigo de Urrutia y de la Rosa {{POW}}
| align= left | Captured by the British<br>Recaptured and scuttled by the French
| align= left | Captured by the British <br/> Recaptured and scuttled by the French
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Constante''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Constante (1732)|''Constante'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain Agustín Iturriaga{{KIA}}
| align= left | Captain {{ill|Agustín de Iturriaga|es}}{{KIA}}
| align= left |
| align= left | Badly damaged and taken under tow
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Real Felipe''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Real Felipe (1732)|''Real Felipe'']]
| align= center | [[First rate]]
| align= center | [[First-rate]]
| align= center | 110
| align= center | 110
| align= left | Admiral [[Juan José Navarro, 1st Marquis of la Victoria|Jose Navarro]]<br>Captain Nicolas Geraldino{{KIA}}
| align= left | Admiral '''[[Juan José Navarro, 1st Marquis of la Victoria|Juan José Navarro]]'''<br/>Captain Nicolas Geraldino{{KIA}}
| align= left |
| align= left | Badly damaged and taken under tow
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Hércules''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Hércules (1729)|''Hércules'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 64
| align= center | 64
| align= left | Captain Cosme Álvarez
| align= left | Captain Cosme Álvarez
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Brillante''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Brillante (1740)|''Brillante'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain don Blas de la Barreda
| align= left | Captain Blas Clemente de Barreda y Campuzano
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Alcón''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Halcón (1740|''Halcón'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain José Rentería
| align= left | Captain José Rentería
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''San Fernando''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship San Fernando (1724)|''San Fernando'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 64
| align= center | 64
| align= left | Count of Vegaflorida
| align= left | Captain Nicolas de la Rosa, Count de Vega Florida
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Soberbio''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Soberbio (1740|''Soberbio'']]
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 50
| align= center | 50
| align= left | Captain Juan Valdés
| align= left | Captain Juan Valdés
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Santa Isabel''
| align= left | [[Spanish ship Santa Isabel (1739)|''Santa Isabel'']]
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain Ignacio Dautevil
| align= left | Captain Ignacio Dauteville
| align= left |
| align= left |
|-
|-
Line 245: Line 271:
4 fire ships<ref name="Schomberg, I. pp. 36"/>
4 fire ships<ref name="Schomberg, I. pp. 36"/>


===British===
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable" width=100%
|-valign="top"
|-valign="top"
!colspan="5" bgcolor="white"|British Fleet
!colspan="5" bgcolor="white"|British Fleet<ref name=allen>''Battles of the British Navy'' by Joseph Allen, Vol. I, p.&nbsp;150. and Schomberg, I., Naval Chronology, App. 36, London, 1802</ref>
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
! width=15%; align= center | <small> Ship </small>
! width=15%; align= center | <small> Ship </small>
Line 256: Line 283:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
!colspan=5 align=center |'''Van'''
!colspan=5 align=center |'''Van'''
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Chatham|1691|6}}
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | 50
| align= left | Captain [[Sir Richard Hughes, 1st Baronet|Richard Hughes]]
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Nassau|1699|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Nassau|1699|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain James Lloyd
| align= left | Captain James Lloyd
Line 270: Line 291:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Chichester|1695|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Chichester|1695|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain William Dilkes
| align= left | Captain William Dilkes
| align= left |
| align= left | Dilkes court-martialled and dismissed, later restored
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Boyne|1692|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Boyne|1692|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain Rowland Frogmore
| align= left | Captain Rowland Frogmore
| align= left | Frogmore died before being court-martialled {{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=327}}
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Barfleur|1697|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Barfleur|1697|6}}
| align= center | [[Second-rate]]
| align= center | [[Second-rate]]
| align= center |90
| align= center |90
| align= left | Rear-Admiral [[William Rowley (Royal Navy officer)|William Rowley]] (Red)<br>Captain Meyrick de L'Angle
| align= left | Rear-Admiral '''[[William Rowley (Royal Navy officer)|William Rowley]]'''<br/>Captain Meyrick de L'Angle
| align= left |
| align= left | Damaged; 25 killed, 20 wounded {{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=331}}
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Ranelagh|1697|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Ranelagh|1697|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain [[Henry Osborn (Royal Navy officer)|Henry Osborn]]
| align= left | Captain [[Henry Osborn (Royal Navy officer)|Henry Osborn]]
Line 294: Line 315:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Berwick|1743|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Berwick|1743|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain [[Edward Hawke, 1st Baron Hawke|Edward Hawke]]
| align= left | Captain [[Edward Hawke, 1st Baron Hawke|Edward Hawke]]
| align= left | 17 members of the [[prize crew]] taken prisoner when the French recaptured the ''Poder'' {{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=330}}
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Stirling Castle|1742|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Stirling Castle|1742|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain Thomas Cooper
| align= left | Captain Thomas Cooper
Line 306: Line 327:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Bedford|1698|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Bedford|1698|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain [[George Townshend (Royal Navy officer)|Hon. George Townshend]]
| align= left | Captain [[George Townshend (Royal Navy officer)|Hon. George Townshend]]
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Feversham}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Feversham|1696|6}}
| align= center | [[Fifth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fifth-rate]]
| align= center | 40
| align= center | 40
| align= left |
| align= left | Captain John Watkins
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Winchelsea}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Winchelsea|1740|6}}
| align= center | [[Sixth rate]]
| align= center | [[Sixth-rate]]
| align= center | 20
| align= center | 20
| align= left |
| align= left | Captain William Marsh
| align= left |
| align= left |
|-
|-
Line 326: Line 347:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Dragon|1736|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Dragon|1736|6}}
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain [[Charles Watson (Royal Navy officer)|Charles Watson]]
| align= left | Captain [[Charles Watson (Royal Navy officer)|Charles Watson]]
Line 332: Line 353:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Royal Oak|1674|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Royal Oak|1674|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain Edmund Williams
| align= left | Captain Edmund Williams
| align= left |
| align= left | Williams court-martialled and dismissed
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Princess|1740|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Princess|1740|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain Robert Pett
| align= left | Captain Robert Pett
| align= left |
| align= left | Damaged; 8 killed, 20 wounded {{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=329}}
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Somerset|1731|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Somerset|1731|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain George Slater
| align= left | Captain George Slater
Line 350: Line 371:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Norfolk|1693|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Norfolk|1693|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain [[John Forbes (Royal Navy officer)|Hon. John Forbes]]
| align= left | Captain [[John Forbes (Royal Navy officer)|Hon. John Forbes]]
| align= left |
| align= left | Damaged; 12 killed, 25 wounded {{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=329}}
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|St Michael|1669|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Marlborough|1706|6}}
| align= center | [[Second-rate]]
| align= center | [[Second-rate]]
| align= center | 90
| align= center | 90
| align= left | Captain James Cornwall{{KIA}}
| align= left | Captain [[James Cornewall]]{{KIA}}
| align= left | Badly damaged; 53 killed, 138 wounded {{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=329}}
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Dorsetshire|1694|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Dorsetshire|1694|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain George Burrish
| align= left | Captain George Burrish
| align= left |
| align= left | Burrish court-martialled and dismissed
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Essex|1679|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Essex|1679|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain Richard Norris
| align= left | Captain Richard Norris
| align= left |
| align= left | Norris court-martialled and dismissed
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Rupert|1666|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Rupert|1666|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain [[John Ambrose]]
| align= left | Captain [[John Ambrose (Royal Navy officer)|John Ambrose]]
| align= left |
| align= left | Ambrose court-martialled and suspended for a year
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Namur|1697|6}} ([[Flagship]])
| align= left | {{HMS|Namur|1697|6}} ([[Flagship]])
| align= center | [[Second-rate]]
| align= center | [[Second-rate]]
| align= center | 90
| align= center | 90
| align= left | Admiral [[Thomas Mathews]] (Blue)<br>Captain John Russell{{KIA}}
| align= left | Admiral '''[[Thomas Mathews]]'''<br/> Captain John Russell{{KIA}}
| align= left |
| align= left | Damaged; 8 killed, 20 wounded {{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=327}}
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | HMS ''Dursley Castle''
| align= left | [[HMS Dursley Galley (1719)|HMS ''Dursley Galley'']]
| align= center | [[Sixth rate]]
| align= center | [[Sixth-rate]]
| align= center | 20
| align= center | 20
| align= left |
| align= left | Captain Giles Vanbrugh
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | HMS ''Anne Galley''<ref>''Ships of the Royal Navy:The Complete Record of All Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy'' J. Colledge, Ben Warlow p.17</ref>
| align= left | [[HMS Anne Galley|HMS ''Anne Galley'']]<ref>''Ships of the Royal Navy:The Complete Record of All Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy'' J. Colledge, Ben Warlow p. 17</ref>
| align= center | [[Fireship]]
| align= center | [[Fire ship]]
| align= center | 8
| align= center | 8
| align= left | Captain Mackay{{KIA}}
| align= left | Commander James Mackie{{KIA}}
| align= left | Blew up by a broadside of ''Hércules''
| align= left | Blew up, 25 killed {{Sfn|Allen|1842|p=329}}
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | ''Sutherland''
| align= left | [[HMS Reserve (1704)|HMS ''Sutherland'']]
| align= center | Hospital ship
| align= center | Hospital ship
| align= center | 18
| align= center | 18
| align= left |Lieutenant [[Alexander Colville, 7th Lord Colville of Culross|Lord Colville]]
| align= left |
| align= left |
| align= left |
|-
|-
! colspan=5 align=center |'''Rear'''
! colspan=5 align=center |'''Rear'''
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Salisbury|1707|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Salisbury|1707|6}}
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 50
| align= center | 50
| align= left | Captain Peter Osborne
| align= left | Captain Peter Osborne
Line 412: Line 433:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Romney|1708|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Romney|1708|6}}
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 50
| align= center | 50
| align= left | Captain Henry Godsalve
| align= left | Captain Henry Godsalve
Line 418: Line 439:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Dunkirk|1651|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Dunkirk|1651|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain Charles Wager Purvis
| align= left | Captain [[Charles Wager Purvis]]
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Swiftsure|1673|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Swiftsure|1673|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain George Berkeley <!-- capt. 1728; d. 15 Jan 1746 -->
| align= left | Captain George Berkeley
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Cambridge|1695|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Cambridge|1695|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain Charles Drummond
| align= left | Captain Charles Drummond
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Neptune|1683|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Neptune|1683|6}}
| align= center | [[Second rate]]
| align= center | [[Second-rate]]
| align= center | 90
| align= center | 90
| align= left | Vice-Admiral [[Richard Lestock]] (White)<br>Captain George Stepney
| align= left | Vice-Admiral '''[[Richard Lestock]]'''<br/>Captain George Stepney
| align= left |
| align= left |
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Torbay|1693|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Torbay|1693|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain John Gascoigne
| align= left | Captain John Gascoigne
Line 448: Line 469:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Russell|1692|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Russell|1692|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 80
| align= center | 80
| align= left | Captain Robert Long
| align= left | Captain Robert Long
Line 454: Line 475:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Buckingham|1731|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Buckingham|1731|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain John Towry
| align= left | Captain John Towry
Line 460: Line 481:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Elizabeth|1706|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Elizabeth|1706|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 70
| align= center | 70
| align= left | Captain Joshua Lingen
| align= left | Captain Joshua Lingen
Line 466: Line 487:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Kingston|1697|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Kingston|1697|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain John Lovatt
| align= left | Captain John Lovatt
Line 472: Line 493:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Oxford|1674|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Oxford|1674|6}}
| align= center | [[Fourth rate]]
| align= center | [[Fourth-rate]]
| align= center | 50
| align= center | 50
| align= left | Captain [[Harry Powlett, 6th Duke of Bolton|Harry Powlett]]
| align= left | Captain [[Harry Powlett, 6th Duke of Bolton|Harry Powlett]]
Line 478: Line 499:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Warwick|1733|6}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Warwick|1733|6}}
| align= center | [[Third rate]]
| align= center | [[Third-rate]]
| align= center | 60
| align= center | 60
| align= left | Captain [[Temple West]]
| align= left | Captain [[Temple West]]
Line 484: Line 505:
|- valign="top"
|- valign="top"
| align= left | {{HMS|Mercury}}
| align= left | {{HMS|Mercury}}
| align= center | [[Fireship]]
| align= center | [[Fire ship]]
| align= center | 8
| align= center | 8
| align= left |
| align= left | Commander Moses Peadle
| align= left |
| align= left |
|-
|colspan=8 align=center |<small>Table information is from ''Battles of the British Navy'' by Joseph Allen, Vol. I, p.&nbsp;150. and Schomberg, I., Naval Chronology, App. 36, London, 1802</small>
|}
|}


== Notes ==
[[File:HMS Marlborough apres bataille de Toulon 1744 anonyme.jpeg|thumb|right|250px|The 90-gun [[HMS St Michael (1669)|HMS ''Marlborough'']], heavily damaged after the battle]]
{{notelist}}


==Notes==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==References==
==Sources==
* {{cite journal|last=Allen|first=Joseph|title=Admirals Mathews and Lestock|journal=United Service Magazine|year=1842|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BGnfJ9VHVaIC}}
*{{EB1911}}
* {{cite book|last=Anderson|first=M.S|title=The War of the Austrian Succession 1740–1748|publisher=Longman|year=1995|isbn=978-0582059511}}
*Wilson, Alastair / F. Callo Joseph. ''Who's Who in Naval History, From 1550 to the present'' (Kindle Edition). Taylor & Francis Publishing (2004). ISBN 978-0-415-30828-1
* {{cite odnb|last=Baugh|first=Daniel|id=18332|title=Mathews, Thomas (1676–1751)|year=2004}}
* R. Dull Jonathan. ''The Age of the Ship of the Line: The British and French Navies, 1650–1815 (Studies in War, Society, and the Military)''. University of Nebraska Press 2009. ISBN 080321930X
* {{cite book|last=Beatson|first=Robert|title=A political index to the histories of Great Britain and Ireland|publisher=J.J. Robinson|year=1788|url=https://archive.org/details/apoliticalindex04beatgoog/page/328/mode/2up}}
* Black, Jeremy. ''Britain as a military power 1688&ndash;1815''. UCL Press, 1998. ISBN 978-0-203-17355-8
* {{cite book|last=Black|first=Jeremy|title=Britain as a military power 1688–1815|publisher=UCL Press|year=1998|isbn=978-0-203-17355-8}}
* J. O. Lindsay. ''The New Cambridge Modern History'', Vol VII. "The Old Regime 1713-63". ISBN 0-521-04545-2
* {{cite book|last1=Black|first1=Jeremy|title=From Louis XIV to Napoleon: The Fate of a Great Power|date=1999|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1857289343}}
* [[John Hattendorf|Hattendorf, John]]: ''Naval policy and strategy in the Mediterranean: past, present, and future.'' Taylor & Francis, 2000, ISBN 0-7146-8054-0
* {{cite book |last1=Browning |first1=Reed |title=The War of the Austrian Succession |date=1995 |publisher=Griffin |isbn=978-0312125615 }}
* {{cite book|last=Bruce|first=Anthony|title=An encyclopedia of naval history|publisher=Dearborn Press|year=1998|isbn=978-1579581091}}
* {{cite book|last=Dull|first=Jonathan R|title=The Age of the Ship of the Line: The British and French Navies, 1650–1815 (Studies in War, Society, and the Military)|publisher=University of Nebraska Press|year=2009|isbn=978-0803219304}}
* {{cite book |last1=Harding |first1=Richard |title=The Emergence of Britain's Global Naval Supremacy: The War of 1739–1748 |date=2013 |publisher=Boydell Press |isbn=978-1843838234 }}
* {{cite book|editor-last=Lindsay|editor-first=J.O|title=The New Cambridge Modern History, Vol VII; The Old Regime 1713–63|year=1957|publisher=CUP|isbn=0-521-04545-2}}
* [[John B. Hattendorf|Hattendorf, John]]: ''Naval policy and strategy in the Mediterranean: past, present, and future.'' Taylor & Francis, 2000, {{ISBN|0-7146-8054-0}}
* {{cite book|last=Hervey|first=Frederick|title=The Naval, Commercial, and General History of Great Britain, Volume IV|publisher=Creative Media|orig-year=1779|year=2018|isbn=978-1385772720}}
* Clowes, W. Laird. ''The Royal Navy : a history from the earliest times to the present'', Vol III. London : S. Low, Marston and Company (1897).
* Clowes, W. Laird. ''The Royal Navy : a history from the earliest times to the present'', Vol III. London : S. Low, Marston and Company (1897).
* {{cite book|last=O'Donnell|first=Duque de Estrada y Conde de Lucena, Hugo|title=El primer Marqués de La Victoria, personaje silenciado en la reforma dieciochesca de la Armada|publisher=Real Academia de la Historia|year=2004|isbn=84-96849-08-2|language=ES}}
* {{cite book|last=Ware|first=Chris|title=Admiral Byng: His Rise and Execution|year=2009|publisher=Pen and Sword Maritime|isbn=978-1-84415-781-5}}
* {{cite book|last1=Wilson|first1=Alastair|last2=Callo|first2=Joseph F|title=Who's Who in Naval History, From 1550 to the present|publisher=Routledge|year=2004|isbn=978-0415308281}}


== Further reading ==
==Bibliography==
* Browning, Reed. ''The War of the Austrian Succession''. Alan Sutton, 1994.
* Browning, Reed. ''The War of the Austrian Succession''. Alan Sutton, 1994.
* Rodger N.A.M. ''Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649-1815''. Penguin Books, 2006.
* Rodger N. A. M. ''Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649–1815''. Penguin Books, 2006.
*Roskill, Stephen Wentworth: ''H. M. S. Warspite: the story of a famous battleship''. Collins, 1957.
*Roskill, Stephen Wentworth: ''H.M.S. Warspite: the story of a famous battleship''. Collins, 1957.
*Waldegrave Head, Frederick: ''The fallen Stuarts''. Issue 12 of Cambridge historical essays. Prince consort prize essays. Cambridge University Press, 1901.
*Waldegrave Head, Frederick: ''The fallen Stuarts''. Issue 12 of Cambridge historical essays. Prince consort prize essays. Cambridge University Press, 1901.
*[[John Knox Laughton|Laughton, J. K.]] (1894). "Mathews, Thomas (1676-1751)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 37. Oxford University Press.
*White, Henry: ''History of Great Britain and Ireland''. Oxford University, 1868.
*White, Henry: ''History of Great Britain and Ireland''. Oxford University, 1868.
*Williams Damer Power, John: ''Bristol privateers and ships of war''. J. W. Arrowsmith Ltd., 1930.
*Williams Damer Power, John: ''Bristol privateers and ships of war''. J. W. Arrowsmith Ltd., 1930.
*Garner Thomas, Peter: ''Politics in eighteenth-century Wales''. University of Wales Press, 1998. ISBN 0-7083-1444-9
*Garner Thomas, Peter: ''Politics in eighteenth-century Wales''. University of Wales Press, 1998. {{ISBN|0-7083-1444-9}}
*Crofts, Cecil H.: ''Britain on and Beyond the Sea - Being a Handbook to the Navy League Map of the World''. Read Books, 2008. ISBN 1-4437-6614-3
*Crofts, Cecil H.: ''Britain on and Beyond the Sea Being a Handbook to the Navy League Map of the World''. Read Books, 2008. {{ISBN|1-4437-6614-3}}
*Willis, Sam: ''Fighting at sea in the eighteenth century: the art of sailing warfare''. Boydell Press, 2008. ISBN 1-84383-367-0
*Willis, Sam: ''Fighting at sea in the eighteenth century: the art of sailing warfare''. Boydell Press, 2008. {{ISBN|1-84383-367-0}}


==External links==
==External links==
* {{Commons category-inline|Battle of Toulon (1744)}}
*[http://32.1911encyclopedia.org/T/TO/TOULON.htm "Toulon"] 1911 ''Encyclopædia Britannica''
*[http://www.todoababor.es/articulos/sicie.htm ''La campaña de don Juan José Navarro en el Mediterráneo y la batalla de Sicié (1742-1744)''] {{es icon}}
*[http://www.todoababor.es/articulos/sicie.htm ''La campaña de don Juan José Navarro en el Mediterráneo y la batalla de Sicié (1742–1744)''] {{in lang|es}}


{{Coord|42|46|45.39|N|5|41|27.30|E|display=title|type:event}}
{{Coord|42|46|45|N|5|41|27|E|display=title|type:event}}

{{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Toulon 1744}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Battle of Toulon (1744)}}
[[Category:Conflicts in 1744]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1744]]
[[Category:Naval battles of the War of the Austrian Succession|Toulon 1744]]
[[Category:Naval battles of the War of the Austrian Succession involving Spain]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving Great Britain|Toulon 1744]]
[[Category:Naval battles of the War of the Austrian Succession involving Great Britain]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving France|Toulon 1744]]
[[Category:Naval battles of the War of the Austrian Succession involving France]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving Spain|Toulon 1744]]
[[Category:Var (department)]]
[[Category:Toulon]]
[[Category:1744 in France]]
[[Category:1744 in France]]

{{Link GA|es}}

Latest revision as of 14:43, 14 September 2024

Battle of Toulon
Part of the War of the Austrian Succession

A Spanish illustration of the battle, Naval Museum of Madrid
Date21 to 22 February 1744 New Style
11 to 12 February Old Style
Location
Result Franco-Spanish victory [1]
Belligerents
Spain
 France
 Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
Juan Navarro
Claude Bruyère
Thomas Mathews
Richard Lestock
William Rowley
Strength
27 ships of the line
3 frigates
3 smaller warships
30 ships of the line
3 frigates
6 smaller warships
Casualties and losses
149 killed, 467 wounded
3 ships damaged, 1 scuttled
133 killed, 223 wounded, 17 captured [2]
5 ships damaged, 1 fireship sunk [2]

The Battle of Toulon, also known as the Battle of Cape Sicié, took place on 21 and 22 February 1744 NS[a] near the French Mediterranean port of Toulon. Although France was not yet at war with the United Kingdom of Great Britain, ships from their Levant Fleet sailed out to support a Spanish fleet, which was attempting to break through a two-year-old British naval blockade.

The initial engagement on 21 February was largely indecisive and the British continued their pursuit until midday on 22nd before their commander, Admiral Thomas Mathews, called off the chase. With several of his ships in need of repair, he withdrew to Menorca, which meant the British Royal Navy temporarily lost control of the waters around Italy and allowed the Spanish to take the offensive against Savoy.[3]

In his report, Mathews blamed his subordinate Richard Lestock for the failure and the issue was hotly debated in Parliament. At the subsequent court-martial, Mathews was held responsible and dismissed from the navy in June 1747, while Lestock's political connections meant he was cleared of all charges.[4] Another seven captains were removed from command for failing to engage the enemy and the investigation led to changes that required individual captains to be far more aggressive.

France declared war on Britain shortly after the battle but it led to recriminations with the Spanish, who suffered most of the casualties and complained of a lack of support from the French fleet during the battle. The French admiral, Claude Bruyère, was removed from command while the resulting ill-feeling limited further co-operation between the two sides.[5] The Spanish commander Juan José Navarro and his ships spent the rest of the war blockaded in Cartagena, Spain by Mathews' successor William Rowley.

Background

[edit]
British commander, Admiral Thomas Mathews, whose poor relationship with his subordinate Richard Lestock affected the battle

The immediate cause of the War of the Austrian Succession was the death in 1740 of Emperor Charles VI, last male Habsburg. This left his eldest daughter, Maria Theresa, as heir to the Habsburg monarchy, [b] whose laws excluded women from the succession. The 1713 Pragmatic Sanction waived this and allowed her to inherit, but this was challenged by Charles Albert of Bavaria, the closest male heir.[6]

While the House of Habsburg was the largest single component of the Holy Roman Empire, its pre-eminent position was challenged by rivals like Bavaria, Saxony and Prussia. With the help of France, these states turned a dynastic dispute into a European conflict and in January 1742 Charles of Bavaria became the first non-Habsburg Emperor in nearly 300 years. He was opposed by Maria Theresa and the so-called Pragmatic Allies, which in addition to Austria included Britain, Hanover and the Dutch Republic.[7]

Although French and British troops fought against each other at Dettingen in June 1743, the two kingdoms were not yet formally at war. In contrast, Spain and Britain had been fighting the War of Jenkins' Ear since 1739, primarily in Caribbean but also in the Mediterranean, where in 1742 a Spanish squadron led by Juan José Navarro took refuge in the French naval base of Toulon and were prevented from leaving by the British Mediterranean Fleet under Admiral Thomas Mathews. In the 1743 Treaty of Fontainebleau, Louis XV of France and his uncle Philip V of Spain, agreed to a joint invasion of Britain and by late January 1744, more than 12,000 French troops and transports had been assembled at Dunkirk.[8]

In an attempt to divert British naval resources from the invasion route, Navarro was ordered to force his way out of Toulon and make for the Atlantic, supported by the French Levant Fleet under Claude Bruyère. Their opponent, Thomas Mathews, had entered the Royal Navy in 1690 and enjoyed a solid if unspectacular career before being appointed Commander-in-chief of the Mediterranean in 1742. He had a poor relationship with his deputy Richard Lestock, a fact recognised by both officers who had each separately requested that Lestock be reassigned, a request ignored by the Admiralty. The tension between the two men meant Mathews failed to properly discuss tactics with his subordinate prior to the battle, a factor which partially contributed to the later confusion over orders.[4]

Battle

[edit]
Map of the battle

On 21 February 1744, the combined Franco-Spanish fleet of twenty-seven ships of the line and three frigates put to sea with Mathews in pursuit. The British ships were generally larger and more heavily armed than their opponents, carrying over 25% more cannons overall.[9] Both fleets adopted the traditional formation of vanguard, centre and rear, with Navarro and the Spanish ships in front, followed by two French squadrons.[10] On the British side, Mathews led the van, William Rowley the centre and Lestock the rear.[11]

Light winds made manoeuvring difficult and caused the two fleets to become spread out but around 11:30 early in the evening of 21 February, the fleets began to approach each other and prepare for battle, with Mathews signalling his ships to form line of battle.[12] The line had still not been properly formed as night fell, leading Mathews to hoist the signal to come to (halt by turning into the wind), intending for his ships to first finish forming the line.[12] The van and centre squadrons did so, but Lestock, commanding the rear, obeyed the order to come to immediately, without having formed the line.[12]

By daybreak on 23 February, the rear of the British fleet was separated by a considerable distance from the van and centre.[12] Mathews signalled for Lestock to make more sail, reluctant to start the attack with his ships still disorganised, but the slowness of Lestock to respond caused the Franco-Spanish force to start to slip away to the south.[12] Mathews feared that they would escape him and pass through the Strait of Gibraltar to join the French force gathered at Brest for the planned invasion of Britain.[12]

Knowing that his duty was to attack, Mathews hoisted the signal to engage the enemy aboard his flagship HMS Namur, and at one o'clock left the line to attack the Spanish rear, followed by Captain James Cornewall aboard HMS Marlborough.[12] In doing so, the signal to form the line of battle was left flying. The two signals flying simultaneously created confusion. A number of British commanders, including Captain Edward Hawke, followed Mathews' example, but many did not.[12] His other commanders were either too uncertain, or in the case of Lestock, unwilling to cooperate with him.[13]

The British fire ship HMS Anne Galley, aflame and sinking short of her intended target, the Spanish flagship Real Felipe

Heavily outnumbered and unsupported, Namur and Marlborough managed to successfully engage their opposite numbers in the enemy line, but suffered considerable damage.[12] At the rear of the ships being attacked, five more Spanish ships followed, at some distance due to the slow speed of the one ahead: Brillante, San Fernando, Halcon, Soberbio and Santa Isabel. There was some exchange of fire between these and the lead ships of the British rear. Most of Lestock's ships in the rear remained inactive during the battle.[14]

The main action was being fought around Real Felipe, Navarro's flagship. Marlborough purposefully crossed the Spanish line, but suffered such severe damage that she was deemed to be on the verge of sinking. The Hercules, astern of the Real Felipe, vigorously fought off three British ships. The Constante, immediately ahead of the flagship, repelled the attack of a British ship-of-the-line, which was promptly replaced by two more, with which she continued to fight for nearly three hours.[14]

The French ships came about at 5 o'clock to aid the Spanish, a manoeuvre interpreted by some of the British commanders to be an attempt to double the British line and surround them.[12] The Spanish, still on the defensive, neglected to capture the defenceless Marlborough, though they did retake the Poder, which had previously surrendered to the British.[12] The Franco-Spanish fleet then resumed their flight to the southwest, and it was not until 23 February that the British were able to regroup and resume the pursuit. They caught up with the enemy fleet again, which was hampered by towing damaged ships, and the unmanoeuvrable Poder was abandoned and scuttled by the French. By now the British had closed to within a few miles of the enemy fleet, but Mathews again signalled for the fleet to come to. The following day, 24 February, the Franco-Spanish fleet was almost out of sight, and Mathews returned to Hyères and sailed from there to Port Mahon, where he arrived in early March.[12]

Aftermath

[edit]
Naval officers attending the 1746 court martial; note the crowds gathered to attend the proceedings, a mark of the level of public interest

Tactically, the battle was indecisive while the invasion of Britain was abandoned soon after, but Mathews' withdrawal to Menorca temporarily lifted the blockade of the Gallispan army in Northern Italy, allowing them to take the offensive.[15] It also led to recriminations among the victors; Philip V of Spain made Navarro Marqués de la Victoria, or "Marquis of Victory", a title reflecting domestic opinion that the battle was a Spanish success negated by the poor performance of the French. He also insisted de la Bruyère be removed from command. The resulting ill-feeling minimised future co-operation between the Spanish and French navies, with Navarro and his ships blockaded at Cartagena, Spain for the rest of the war by Rowley, who had succeeded Mathews as commander in the Mediterranean.[5]

France declared war on Britain and Hanover in March, then invaded the Austrian Netherlands in May.[16] These were significant consequences, allegedly resulting from the failure of the British fleet to win a decisive action against an inferior opponent, [c] and Parliament demanded a public enquiry. At the subsequent court-martial, seven captains present at the battle were cashiered for failing to do their "utmost" to engage the enemy as required by the Articles of War, another two were acquitted while one died before trial.[d] [18]

Mathews was also court-martialled on charges of having brought the fleet into action in a disorganised manner and failing to attack the enemy when the conditions were advantageous. Although his personal courage was not in question, he was found guilty of failing to comply with the official "Fighting Instructions" which required him to engage in "Line of battle", and dismissed from the navy in June 1747. Despite ignoring his commander's orders, Lestock was acquitted because in doing so he followed the precise letter of the instructions and was promoted Admiral of the Blue, although he died shortly afterwards in December 1746.[19]

Richard Lestock, whose acquittal was widely criticised and led to changes in the "Fighting Instructions"

The judgements were unpopular with the public, a contemporary declaring "The nation could not be persuaded...Lestock should be pardoned for not fighting, and Mathews cashiered for fighting".[20] His acquittal was largely due to his political connections, [4] and recognising the inquiry had been hampered by political and civilian interference, in 1749 Parliament updated the 1661 Articles of War to enhance the autonomy of naval courts. It also amended the section that read:

Every Captaine and all other Officers Mariners and Souldiers of every Ship Frigott or Vessell of War that shall in time of any fight or engagement withdraw or keepe backe or not come into the fight and engage and do his utmost to take fire kill and endamage the Enemy Pirate or Rebells and assist and relieve all and every of His Majesties Ships shall for such offence of cowardice or disaffection be tried and suffer paines of death or other punishment as the circumstances of the offence shall deserve and the Court martiall shall judge fitt.[21]

Article XII in the 1749 version was changed to permit the court far less discretion in terms of punishment, wording that would result in the 1757 execution of Admiral Byng.[22] It now read;

Every Person in the Fleet, who thro’ Cowardice, Negligence or Disaffection, shall in Time of Action withdrawn, or keep back, or not come into the Fight or Engagement, or shall not do his utmost to take or destroy every Ship which it shall be his Duty to engage, and to assist and relieve all and every of his Majesty's Ships, or those of his Allies, which it shall be his Duty to assist and relieve, every such Person so offending and being convicted thereof by the Sentence of a Court Martial, shall suffer Death.[23]

Order of battle

[edit]

Franco-Spanish

[edit]
Franco-Spanish fleet[24]
Ship Rate Guns Commander Notes
Van
Borée Third-rate 64 Captain Marqueu
Toulouse Fourth-rate 60 Captain Dárton
Tigre Fourth-rate 50 Captain Saurin
Éole Third-rate 64 Captain Charles d'Albert du Chesne [fr]
Alcyon Fourth-rate 56 Captain Lancel
Duc D'Orléans Third-rate 68 Captain Dornés
Espoir Third-rate 74 Captain D'Hericourt (Ensign of Gavaret)
Centre
Trident Third-rate 64 Captain Caylus
Heureux Fourth-rate 60 Captain Gramier
Aquilon Fourth-rate 60 Captain Louis-Philippe de Rigaud, Marquis de Vaudreuil
Solide Third-rate 64 Captain Chateauneuf
Diamant Fourth-rate 50 Captain Claude Louis d'Espinchal, Marquis de Massiac
Ferme Third-rate 70 Captain Gorgues
Terrible Third-rate 74 Vice-Admiral Claude-Élisée de Court de La Bruyère
Captain Jacques-Pierre de Taffanel de la Jonquière, Marquis de la Jonquière
Saint Esprit Third-rate 68 Captain Poison
Sérieux Third-rate 64 Captain Alexandre de Cheylus [fr]
Rear
Oriente Fourth-rate 60 Captain Joaquín Manuel de Villena y Guadalfajara [es]
América Fourth-rate 60 Captain Aníbal Petrucci
Neptuno Fourth-rate 60 Captain Enrique Olivares 
Poder Fourth-rate 60 Captain Rodrigo de Urrutia y de la Rosa  (POW) Captured by the British
Recaptured and scuttled by the French
Constante Third-rate 70 Captain Agustín de Iturriaga [es]  Badly damaged and taken under tow
Real Felipe First-rate 110 Admiral Juan José Navarro
Captain Nicolas Geraldino 
Badly damaged and taken under tow
Hércules Third-rate 64 Captain Cosme Álvarez
Brillante Fourth-rate 60 Captain Blas Clemente de Barreda y Campuzano
Halcón Fourth-rate 60 Captain José Rentería
San Fernando Third-rate 64 Captain Nicolas de la Rosa, Count de Vega Florida
Soberbio Fourth-rate 50 Captain Juan Valdés
Santa Isabel Third-rate 80 Captain Ignacio Dauteville

4 frigates[25]
4 fire ships[25]

British

[edit]
British Fleet[24]
Ship Rate Guns Commander Notes
Van
HMS Nassau Third-rate 70 Captain James Lloyd
HMS Chichester Third-rate 80 Captain William Dilkes Dilkes court-martialled and dismissed, later restored
HMS Boyne Third-rate 80 Captain Rowland Frogmore Frogmore died before being court-martialled [26]
HMS Barfleur Second-rate 90 Rear-Admiral William Rowley
Captain Meyrick de L'Angle
Damaged; 25 killed, 20 wounded [27]
HMS Ranelagh Third-rate 80 Captain Henry Osborn
HMS Berwick Third-rate 70 Captain Edward Hawke 17 members of the prize crew taken prisoner when the French recaptured the Poder [28]
HMS Stirling Castle Third-rate 70 Captain Thomas Cooper
HMS Bedford Third-rate 70 Captain Hon. George Townshend
HMS Feversham Fifth-rate 40 Captain John Watkins
HMS Winchelsea Sixth-rate 20 Captain William Marsh
Centre
HMS Dragon Fourth-rate 60 Captain Charles Watson
HMS Royal Oak Third-rate 70 Captain Edmund Williams Williams court-martialled and dismissed
HMS Princess Third-rate 70 Captain Robert Pett Damaged; 8 killed, 20 wounded [29]
HMS Somerset Third-rate 80 Captain George Slater
HMS Norfolk Third-rate 80 Captain Hon. John Forbes Damaged; 12 killed, 25 wounded [29]
HMS Marlborough Second-rate 90 Captain James Cornewall  Badly damaged; 53 killed, 138 wounded [29]
HMS Dorsetshire Third-rate 80 Captain George Burrish Burrish court-martialled and dismissed
HMS Essex Third-rate 70 Captain Richard Norris Norris court-martialled and dismissed
HMS Rupert Third-rate 60 Captain John Ambrose Ambrose court-martialled and suspended for a year
HMS Namur (Flagship) Second-rate 90 Admiral Thomas Mathews
Captain John Russell 
Damaged; 8 killed, 20 wounded [26]
HMS Dursley Galley Sixth-rate 20 Captain Giles Vanbrugh
HMS Anne Galley[30] Fire ship 8 Commander James Mackie  Blew up, 25 killed [29]
HMS Sutherland Hospital ship 18 Lieutenant Lord Colville
Rear
HMS Salisbury Fourth-rate 50 Captain Peter Osborne
HMS Romney Fourth-rate 50 Captain Henry Godsalve
HMS Dunkirk Third-rate 60 Captain Charles Wager Purvis
HMS Swiftsure Third-rate 70 Captain George Berkeley
HMS Cambridge Third-rate 80 Captain Charles Drummond
HMS Neptune Second-rate 90 Vice-Admiral Richard Lestock
Captain George Stepney
HMS Torbay Third-rate 80 Captain John Gascoigne
HMS Russell Third-rate 80 Captain Robert Long
HMS Buckingham Third-rate 70 Captain John Towry
HMS Elizabeth Third-rate 70 Captain Joshua Lingen
HMS Kingston Third-rate 60 Captain John Lovatt
HMS Oxford Fourth-rate 50 Captain Harry Powlett
HMS Warwick Third-rate 60 Captain Temple West
HMS Mercury Fire ship 8 Commander Moses Peadle

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The dates of the battle were 21 to 22 February 1744 (New Style (NS)) according to the Gregorian calendar then used by France and Spain. The British still used the Julian calendar, which gave dates of 10–11 February 1744 (OS)
  2. ^ Often referred to as 'Austria', this included Austria, Hungary, Croatia, Bohemia, the Austrian Netherlands, and Parma
  3. ^ Modern historians argue these actions had been agreed in October 1743 and were unaffected by Toulon [17]
  4. ^ These were; (1) George Burrish; HMS Dorsetshire (2) John Ambrose; HMS Rupert (3) Edmund Williams; HMS Royal Oak (4) Richard Norris; HMS Essex (5) Thomas Cooper; HMS Stirling Castle (later restored) (6) James Lloyd; HMS Nassau (7) William Dilkes; HMS Chichester

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Wilson & Callo 2004, p. 268.
  2. ^ a b Allen 1842, pp. 327, 329.
  3. ^ Dull 2009, p. 52.
  4. ^ a b c Baugh 2004.
  5. ^ a b Anderson 1995, pp. 138–139.
  6. ^ Anderson 1995, p. 3.
  7. ^ Black 1999, p. 82.
  8. ^ Harding 2013, p. 171.
  9. ^ Allen 1842, p. 325.
  10. ^ Allen 1842, p. 324.
  11. ^ Allen 1842, pp. 323–324.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Mathews, Thomas (1676–1751)". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 37. p. 45.
  13. ^ Lecky, William Edward Hartpole (1892). A History of England in the Eighteenth Century. London: Longmans, Green. p. 19.
  14. ^ a b Martínez-Valverde, Carlos (6 October 2005). "La batalla de Cabo Sicié (Tolón), 1744". Todo a babor (in Spanish). Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  15. ^ Dull 2009, p. 54.
  16. ^ Lindsay 1957, p. 430.
  17. ^ Anderson 1995, pp. 130–132.
  18. ^ Beatson 1788, pp. 329–330.
  19. ^ Bruce 1998, p. 224.
  20. ^ Hervey 2018, p. 270.
  21. ^ 'Charles II, 1661: An Act for the Establishing Articles and Orders for the regulateing and better Government of His Majesties Navies Ships of Warr & Forces by Sea.', Statutes of the Realm: volume 5: 1628–80 (1819), pp. 311–314. Date accessed: 8 June 2010.
  22. ^ Ware 2009, pp. 151–153.
  23. ^ 'Admiral Byng's defence, as presented by him, and read in the Court January 18, 1757, ... Containing a very particular account of the action on the 20th of May, 1756, off Cape Mola,...' John Byng, 1757, pp. 10–11.
  24. ^ a b Battles of the British Navy by Joseph Allen, Vol. I, p. 150. and Schomberg, I., Naval Chronology, App. 36, London, 1802
  25. ^ a b Schomberg, I., Naval Chronology, App. 36, London, 1802
  26. ^ a b Allen 1842, p. 327.
  27. ^ Allen 1842, p. 331.
  28. ^ Allen 1842, p. 330.
  29. ^ a b c d Allen 1842, p. 329.
  30. ^ Ships of the Royal Navy:The Complete Record of All Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy J. Colledge, Ben Warlow p. 17

Sources

[edit]
  • Allen, Joseph (1842). "Admirals Mathews and Lestock". United Service Magazine.
  • Anderson, M.S (1995). The War of the Austrian Succession 1740–1748. Longman. ISBN 978-0582059511.
  • Baugh, Daniel (2004). "Mathews, Thomas (1676–1751)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18332. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Beatson, Robert (1788). A political index to the histories of Great Britain and Ireland. J.J. Robinson.
  • Black, Jeremy (1998). Britain as a military power 1688–1815. UCL Press. ISBN 978-0-203-17355-8.
  • Black, Jeremy (1999). From Louis XIV to Napoleon: The Fate of a Great Power. Routledge. ISBN 978-1857289343.
  • Browning, Reed (1995). The War of the Austrian Succession. Griffin. ISBN 978-0312125615.
  • Bruce, Anthony (1998). An encyclopedia of naval history. Dearborn Press. ISBN 978-1579581091.
  • Dull, Jonathan R (2009). The Age of the Ship of the Line: The British and French Navies, 1650–1815 (Studies in War, Society, and the Military). University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0803219304.
  • Harding, Richard (2013). The Emergence of Britain's Global Naval Supremacy: The War of 1739–1748. Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1843838234.
  • Lindsay, J.O, ed. (1957). The New Cambridge Modern History, Vol VII; The Old Regime 1713–63. CUP. ISBN 0-521-04545-2.
  • Hattendorf, John: Naval policy and strategy in the Mediterranean: past, present, and future. Taylor & Francis, 2000, ISBN 0-7146-8054-0
  • Hervey, Frederick (2018) [1779]. The Naval, Commercial, and General History of Great Britain, Volume IV. Creative Media. ISBN 978-1385772720.
  • Clowes, W. Laird. The Royal Navy : a history from the earliest times to the present, Vol III. London : S. Low, Marston and Company (1897).
  • O'Donnell, Duque de Estrada y Conde de Lucena, Hugo (2004). El primer Marqués de La Victoria, personaje silenciado en la reforma dieciochesca de la Armada (in Spanish). Real Academia de la Historia. ISBN 84-96849-08-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Ware, Chris (2009). Admiral Byng: His Rise and Execution. Pen and Sword Maritime. ISBN 978-1-84415-781-5.
  • Wilson, Alastair; Callo, Joseph F (2004). Who's Who in Naval History, From 1550 to the present. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415308281.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Browning, Reed. The War of the Austrian Succession. Alan Sutton, 1994.
  • Rodger N. A. M. Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649–1815. Penguin Books, 2006.
  • Roskill, Stephen Wentworth: H.M.S. Warspite: the story of a famous battleship. Collins, 1957.
  • Waldegrave Head, Frederick: The fallen Stuarts. Issue 12 of Cambridge historical essays. Prince consort prize essays. Cambridge University Press, 1901.
  • White, Henry: History of Great Britain and Ireland. Oxford University, 1868.
  • Williams Damer Power, John: Bristol privateers and ships of war. J. W. Arrowsmith Ltd., 1930.
  • Garner Thomas, Peter: Politics in eighteenth-century Wales. University of Wales Press, 1998. ISBN 0-7083-1444-9
  • Crofts, Cecil H.: Britain on and Beyond the Sea – Being a Handbook to the Navy League Map of the World. Read Books, 2008. ISBN 1-4437-6614-3
  • Willis, Sam: Fighting at sea in the eighteenth century: the art of sailing warfare. Boydell Press, 2008. ISBN 1-84383-367-0
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42°46′45″N 5°41′27″E / 42.77917°N 5.69083°E / 42.77917; 5.69083