Bombardment of Algiers (1816)
Bombardment of Algiers | |
---|---|
Deylik of Algiers | |
Result |
Anglo-Dutch victory
|
Netherlands
David Milne[1]
Frederick Capellen
Ali Khodja
Hussein Khodja
10 frigates (5 Dutch)
1 corvette
8 sloops
4 bomb ketchs
1 aviso
Britain: 887-900 dead and wounded, Netherlands: 13 dead, 52 injured
Half of the Anglo-Dutch fleet severely damaged[6][7]500[8]-5,000 total military and civilian casualties (including 300-2,000 killed)
4 frigates destroyed
5 corvettes destroyed
28 gunboats sunk
12 gunboats beached[9]
The Bombardment of Algiers was an attempt on 27 August 1816 by Britain and the Netherlands to end the slavery practices of Omar Agha, the Dey of Algiers. An Anglo-Dutch fleet under the command of Admiral Edward Pellew, 1st Viscount Exmouth bombarded ships and the harbour defences of Algiers.
There was a continuing campaign by various European navies and the American navy to suppress the
Background
Following the end of the
As a result, Exmouth was ordered to sea again to complete the job and punish the Algerians. He gathered a squadron of five
Prelude
The day before the attack, the frigate Prometheus arrived and its captain W. B. Dashwood attempted to secretly rescue the British Consul and his wife and infant. Some of the rescue party were discovered and arrested.
The plan of attack was for the larger ships to approach in a column. They were to sail into the zone where the majority of the Algerian guns could not be brought to bear. Then, they were to come to anchor and bombard the batteries and fortifications on the mole to destroy the defences. Simultaneously,
Battle
Exmouth in Queen Charlotte anchored approximately 80 yd (73 m) off the mole, facing the Algerian guns. However, a number of the other ships anchored out of position, notably Admiral Milne aboard HMS Impregnable, who was 400 yards from where he should have been. This error reduced the effectiveness of these ships and exposed them to fiercer Algerian fire. Some of the other ships sailed past Impregnable and anchored in positions closer to the plan. The unfortunate gap created by the misplaced HMS Impregnable was closed by the frigate HMS Granicus and the sloop Heron.[15]
In their earlier negotiations, both Exmouth and the Dey of Algiers had stated that they would not fire the first shot. The Dey's plan was to allow the fleet to anchor and then to sortie from the harbour and board the ships with large numbers of men in small boats. But Algerian discipline was less effective and one Algerian gun fired a shot at 15:15. Exmouth immediately began the bombardment. The Algerian flotilla of 40 gunboats made an attempt to board Queen Charlotte while the sailors were aloft setting sail, but twenty-eight of their boats were sunk by broadsides, and the remaining ran themselves on shore.[14]: 395 After an hour, the cannon on the mole were effectively silenced, and Exmouth turned his attention to the shipping in the harbour, which was destroyed by 19:30. One unmanned Algerine frigate was destroyed after being boarded by the crew of Queen Charlotte's barge, who then set it on fire. Three other Algerine frigates and five corvettes were destroyed by the fire of mortars and rockets.[9] The burning shipping drifting in the harbour forced some bombarding ships to manoeuvre out of their way.[14]: 392 Impregnable was isolated from the other ships and made a large and tempting target, attracting attention from the Algerian gunners who raked her fore and aft, severely damaging her. 268 shots hit the hull, and the main mast was damaged in 15 places, with 50 killed and 164 wounded.[14]: 393
One sloop had been fitted out as an explosion vessel, with 143 barrels of gunpowder aboard, and Milne asked at 20:00 that it be used against the "Lighthouse battery", which was mauling his ship. The vessel was exploded, but to little effect, and against the wrong battery.[16]
Despite this, the Algerian batteries could not maintain fire and, by 22:15, Exmouth gave the order for the fleet to weigh anchor and sail out of range, leaving HMS Minden to keep firing to suppress any further resistance. The wind had changed and was blowing from the shore, which helped the fleets depart.[14]: 395 By 01:30 the next morning, the fleet was anchored out of range. The wounded were treated, and the crew cleared the damage caused by the Algerian guns. Casualties on the British side were more than 900 killed and wounded,[14]: 394 a casualty rate that was most sanguinary. For comparison, British casualties at the Battle of Trafalgar had been only 9 percent of those engaged.[17] The allied squadron had fired over 50,000 round shot using 118 tons of gunpowder, and the bomb vessels had fired 960 explosive mortar shells.[18] The Algerian forces had 308 guns and 7 mortars.[14]: 396 The translator of the letter Exmouth sent to the Dey left an eye-witness account of the damage done to the city, which he saw when he accompanied the letter under a flag of truce. The construction of the mole could not be discerned, neither could the positions where the batteries had been sited. No more than four or five guns that were still mounted were visible. The bay was filled with the smoking hulks of the remains of the Algerine navy and by many floating bodies.[19]
Aftermath
The following day at noon, Exmouth sent the following letter to the Dey:
"Sir, for your atrocities at Bona on defenceless Christians, and your unbecoming disregard of the demands I made yesterday in the name of the Prince Regent of England, the fleet under my orders has given you a signal chastisement, by the total destruction of your navy, storehouse, and arsenal, with half your batteries. As England does not war for the destruction of cities, I am unwilling to visit your personal cruelties upon the unoffending inhabitants of the country, and I therefore offer you the same terms of peace which I conveyed to you yesterday in my Sovereign's name. Without the acceptance of these terms, you can have no peace with England."
He warned that if they were not accepted, then he would continue the action. The Dey accepted the terms, not realising that they were a bluff, as the fleet had already fired off almost all of its ammunition.[20] A treaty was signed on 24 September 1816. The room it was signed in had been hit by nine round shot and was a perfect ruin.[14]: 395 The Dey freed 1,083 Christian slaves and the British Consul and repaid the ransom money taken in 1816, about £80,000. Over 3,000 slaves in total were later freed. Drescher notes Algiers as 'the sole case in the sixty years of British slave trade suppression in which a large number of British lives were lost in actual combat.'[6] However, despite British naval efforts, it has been difficult to assess the long-term impact of the Bombardment of Algiers, as the Dey reconstructed Algiers, replacing Christian slaves with Jewish labour, and the Barbary slave trade continued under subsequent Deys (see Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle (1818)).
See also
- Algiers expedition (1541)
- Bombardment of Algiers (1683)
- Bombardment of Algiers (1784)
- Djidjelli expedition
- Invasion of Algiers (1775)
- Invasion of Algiers in 1830
References
- doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18783. Retrieved 12 January 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membershiprequired.)
- ^ Agnew, John Holmes; Bidwell, Walter Hilliard; Steele, Henry T. (1867). Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature. Leavitt, Throw and Company.
- ^ Daniel Panzac: Barbary Corsairs. The End of a legend 1800–1820. Brill, Leiden und Boston 2005. S. 282.
- ^ Salamé, pp. 30-32
- ^ Northcote Parkinson (1977), p. 161
- ^ a b Seymour Drescher (2009), p. 235
- ^ Micheal Clodfelter, Warfare and Armed Conflicts, page 198
- ^ Brett p. 315
- ^ a b Brett, p. 315
- ^ (in French) Documents turcs inédits sur le bombardement d'Alger en 1816, Abdeljelil Temimi, Revue de l'Occident musulman et de la Méditerranée, 1968, Volume 5, Numéro 5, pp. 111–133
- ^ Northcote Parkinson (1977), p. 160
- ^ Otridge et al., p. 233
- ^ Northcote Parkinson (1977), p. 162-164
- ^ a b c d e f g h Porter, Maj Gen Whitworth (1889). History of the Corps of Royal Engineers Vol I. Chatham: The Institution of Royal Engineers.
- ^ Northcote Parkinson (1977), p. 164-
- ^ Northcote Parkinson (1977), p. 166-
- ^ Northcote Parkinson (1977), p. 167
- ^ Northcote Parkinson (1977), pp. 166–167
- ^ Salamé, p. 63.
- ^ Northcote Parkinson (1977), p. 166
Bibliography
- Edwin John Brett, Brett's Illustrated Naval History of Great Britain, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time: A Reliable Record of the Maritime Rise and Progress of England (1871), Publishing Office, London.
- C. Northcote Parkinson, Britannia Rules: The Classic Age of Naval History 1793–1815 (1977), Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
- William Osler, The Life of Admiral Viscount Exmouth (1841)
- C. Northcote Parkinson, Edward Pellew, Viscount Exmouth (1934)
- Mariner's Mirror (1941)
- Otridge, J. et al. (1817), "Dispatches from Admiral Lord Exmouth, G.C.B., addressed to John Wilson Croker, Esq," in:The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and Literature for the Year 1816, pp. 230–240; and "Dutch official account of the battle", ibid., pp. 240–243
- Salamé, A. (1819) A Narrative of the Expedition to Algiers in the Year 1816, John Murray, London.
- Seymour Drescher, Abolition: A History of Slavery and Antislavery (2009), Cambridge University Press.
- Porter, Maj Gen Whitworth (1889). History of the Corps of Royal Engineers Vol I. Chatham: The Institution of Royal Engineers.
External links
"Extract from Log book of HMS Severn". Archived from the original on 25 November 2018. Retrieved 24 November 2018.