Great Siege of Gibraltar

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Great Siege of Gibraltar
Part of the American War of Independence

The Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar, September 1782, by John Singleton Copley
Date 24 June 1779 – 7 February, 1783
Location Gibraltar
Result Decisive British victory
Belligerents
Flag of the United Kingdom Kingdom of Great Britain Spain
Flag of France France
Commanders
George Augustus Eliott Duc de Crillon
Strength
5,500–7,000 men; 96 guns 70,000 men; 400 land guns
246 naval guns
50 ships & floating batteries
Casualties and losses
333 killed
911 wounded
536 died from disease
5,000 killed, wounded, captured, and missing (13 September 1782 assault)

The Great Siege of Gibraltar was an unsuccessful attempt by Spain and France to capture Gibraltar from the British during the American War of Independence. This was the largest action fought during the war in terms of numbers particularly on 18th September 1782 'Grand Assault'. It was also the longest siege ever endured in the history of the British armed forces, as well as being one of the longest continous sieges in the history of the world.

The Treaty of Paris (1763) that had ended the Seven Years War, saw France and Spain hand over a number of territories to the British. In the years of peace that followed both countries hoped for an opportunity to launch a war against Britain on more favourable terms and recover their lost colonial posessions. Following the outbreak of the American War of Independence, both states supplied arms to the American rebels, and drew up a strategy to intervene on the American side and defeat Britain.[1]

In June of 1779, Spain declared war on Great Britain, France having done so the year before. The French and Spanish not only wished to retrieve lost territory from Britain but needed to secure Gibraltar, which was a key link in Britain's control of the Mediterranean sea.[2] The capture of Gibraltar was expected to be relatively quick, and the precursor to a Franco-Spanish invasion of the British Isles.

The fortress was besieged for nearly four years by a combined naval and military force of Spain and France. When the Rock was first besieged, the garrison consisted of 5,382 troops; General Elliot was the Governor-General, and his determined handling of the defence inspired all the troops under him with the greatest confidence. All the defences were strengthened, and many of the infantry, including picked men assisted the artillery in serving the guns. The garrison included contingents of Hanoverian and Corsican troops.

The British had anticipated an attack for some time, and a number of ships had sailed to reinforce and supply the Rock.[3] They stepped up their preparations after France entered the conflict in 1778, although the French were initially more concerned with sending forces to America[4], and it was not until Spain joined the war that the long-expected siege commenced.

The combined Spanish and French fleets blockaded the Rock from the sea, while on the land side an enormous army was engaged in constructing forts, redoubts, entrenchments, and batteries from which to attack. General Elliot formed a corps of sharpshooters. Initially the Spanish sent twelve thousand troops, including four battalions of Royal Gaurds. The posting was considered both a comfortable and fashionable one, as opposed to being sent to serve in one of Spain's American colonies.

As the winter of 1779 came down the garrison began to suffer from want of fresh provisions, which became very scarce and dear. Bread was almost impossible to get, and was not permitted to be issued except to the sick and children. Salt meat and biscuits, and not much of that, soon became the food of the troops, with an occasional issue of four ounces of rice as a full day's ration. Fuel was exhausted, and fires were only made with difficulty, the salt-encrusted timbers of old ships broken up in the harbour for the purpose. To the rigours of the siege was added a violent outbreak of scurvy among the troops, due to the want of fresh vegetables and medicines. As the winter wore on, the scanty store of food grew so alarmingly low that the already meagre ration was reduced to just enough to keep life in the bodies of the men. But their morale remained high and the troops continued to take their turns at trench or battery, and endured the inclement weather and the shortage of food with fortitude.

The Spanish were forced to commit increasing number of troops and ships to the siege, postponing the planned Invasion of England, due to this and the failure of the Armada of 1779.

Admiral George Rodney, after defeating two enemy fleets at sea, reached Gibraltar in the following spring, bringing reinforcements of 1,052 men and an abundance of stores. This greatly heartened the garrison, who, as soon as Rodney's fleet left, found the fortress as closely besieged as ever. The defence was stubbornly maintained against every attempt to capture it by assault, and by the end of the summer provisions again began to run out and scurvy to reappear. While shot and shell were unceasingly exchanged between the opposing forces, scurvy and starvation rations made steady inroads into the effective strength of the garrison, but there was no thought of surrender. Through the use of small, fast-sailing ships that ran the blockade they were able to keep in touch with the British forces on Minorca, until that island fell in 1781.

Throughout the second winter the garrison faced foes, elements, disease, and starvation, until in the April of 1781 another British fleet succeeded in reaching the harbour with stores and food.

The French and Spanish, finding it was impossible to starve the garrison out, resolved to make further attacks by land and sea, and a large army and fleet was assembled to carry this out. But the night before the grand attack was to have been launched, half the British garrison filed silently out of their defence works and made surprise sortie.

The whole body of the enemy infantry in the trenches were routed, their batteries set on fire, and cannon blown up and spiked, their entrenchments destroyed, and a very large number of the enemy killed or taken prisoners. Damage to the extent of two million pounds was done to the besiegers stores and equipment that night. The loss to the British was 3 killed and 12 wounded[citation needed], nothing was lost apart from a kilt from a soldier of the 73rd Highlanders.[citation needed] Spanish losses were over 200; Governor Elliot claiming many were 'killed on the spot' as the surprise was very successful. As the Spanish recovered and prepared to launch a counter-attack, the British withdrew back inside their fortifications.

This reverse postponed the grand assault on the Rock for some time, but the siege was closely maintained.

Eventually on 13th September 1782 the Bourbon allies launched their great attack; the number involved nearly 70,000 fighting men both French & Spanish. On land an army of 40,000 which consisted of nearly a third of the entire Spanish metropolitan army, on top of this they were supported by 400 guns. On sea 50 ships which included newly engineered 'floating batteries' with 200 heavy guns as well as Spanish & French ships of the line which had nearly 30,000 men. An 'army' of over 75,000 spectators thronged the adjacent hills over the Spanish border, among them the highest families in the land, assembled to see the fortress beaten to powder and 'the British flag trailed in the dust'. The 200 guns opened fire from floating batteries in the Bay and the 400 guns on the land side, directed on the fortifications after weeks of preparatory artillery fire. But the garrison, replied with red-hot shot to set fire to and sink the enemy's floating batteries and warships in the Bay, and beating off many attempts to storm the fortress from the land side. The British redcoats fired in three ranks deep as wave after wave of Spanish troops tried desperately to get up the walls of the fort. In that great conflict, the British destroyed nearly all the enemy fleet, most of the floating batteries simply blew up as the 'red hot shot' did its job. In addition 5,000 men both on board the ships (many of whom drowned) & on land were casualties.

The siege was continued for some months longer, but in the spring of 1783 the enemy retired disheartened and defeated, leaving the British garrison victorious, after three years and seven months' conflict. The garrison sustained a loss of 1,231 men, and expended 8,000 barrels of gunpowder.

The current coat of arms of Gibraltar bears the motto commemorating The Great Siege.

Finally, in February of 1783 the siege was lifted. George Augustus Eliott was awarded the Knight of the Bath and was created 1st Baron Heathfield of Gibraltar. The Treaties of Versailles reaffirmed previous treaties.

The 39th, in common with the other regiments engaged in the defence, was given the badge of the Castle of Gibraltar with the motto 'Montis Insignia Calpe', in commemoration of the gallant part it took in the 'Great Siege'.

The Sortie from Gibraltar by Trumbull (1789).

In 1782 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart composed Bardengesang auf Gibraltar: O Calpe! Dir donnert's am Fusse a piece of music commemorating the Great Siege.[5] Mozart was known to have a favourable view of the British.[6]

The 1783 painting, The Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar, September 1782, was a work by an American artist John Singleton Copley which depicted the event. [7] A 1789 work by American painter John Trumbull, The Sortie Made by the Garrison of Gibraltar, 1789, covered the 1781 raid made by the garrison against the besiegers. [8]

  1. ^ Harvey p.362
  2. ^ "The Great Siege of Gibraltar". The Keep Military Museum. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
  3. ^ Sugden p.109-10
  4. ^ Harvey p.385-87
  5. ^ "List of musicians connected to Gibraltar". Mark Sanchez. Retrieved on 2007-08-05.
  6. ^ "Mozart's Tribute to Gibraltar". The Gibraltar Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-08-05.
  7. ^ "Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar". Collage. Retrieved on 2007-07-30.
  8. ^ "The Sortie Made by the Garrison of Gibraltar, 1789". Acquired Tastes-Trumbull. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.

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