Barrington's Action at St Lucia, 15 December 1778
When France allied herself with the American rebels in 1778, during the American Revolutionary War, the naval commander-in-chief in the West Indies, Rear-Admiral Samuel Barrington, moved very swiftly against the French island of St Lucia. He had been joined by Commodore Hotham on 10 December whose squadron brought him 5000 troops. Sailing on 12 December he landed his men on the beaches of the Grand Cul de Sac on the west side of the island, which was lightly held by the French. Barrington disposed his ships at anchor in a defensive line off the mouth of the bay, to cover the landing and the transports. The troops made a rapid advance into the interior and most of the island was secured by the afternoon of the 15th.
This coincided with the arrival of Admiral d'Estaing and the French West Indies fleet, which included 12 ships of the line and which immediately attacked the anchored line of British ships in an effort to displace them and destroy the transports sheltering inshore. Barrington had, however, placed his ships well and had no difficulty rebuffing this brief assault. D'Estaing then landed 7000 troops on the 17th at a bay just north of the Grand Cul de Sac but his attempts to storm the higher British positions were repulsed with heavy loss of life. He then waited twelve days for conditions to favour a renewed attack on Barrington's ships, which improved their defensive positions in the interval. By 29 December the wind conditions were still unfavourable so d'Estaing quit the island and the embattled French governor surrendered the following day.
On the right is the southern point of the Grand Cul de Sac, with the 'Prince of Wales', in port-quarter view anchored off it, sternmost of the British line. Only the three leading British ships are in action and the wind conditions are forcing the French line to break away before they can engage the sternmost ships. In fact, the conditions did not permit the French to get as close to the British line as the picture indicates. On the left picture are several small vessels wearing the flag of the American rebel forces and early forms of the 'Stars and Stripes'.
This picture is one of a pair commissioned by Barrington and is signed and dated 'D Serres 1780'. The other, which shows the British fleet at anchor after the action, has recently been reunited with it in the Museum's collection (ZBA2204). Both were exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1780.
This coincided with the arrival of Admiral d'Estaing and the French West Indies fleet, which included 12 ships of the line and which immediately attacked the anchored line of British ships in an effort to displace them and destroy the transports sheltering inshore. Barrington had, however, placed his ships well and had no difficulty rebuffing this brief assault. D'Estaing then landed 7000 troops on the 17th at a bay just north of the Grand Cul de Sac but his attempts to storm the higher British positions were repulsed with heavy loss of life. He then waited twelve days for conditions to favour a renewed attack on Barrington's ships, which improved their defensive positions in the interval. By 29 December the wind conditions were still unfavourable so d'Estaing quit the island and the embattled French governor surrendered the following day.
On the right is the southern point of the Grand Cul de Sac, with the 'Prince of Wales', in port-quarter view anchored off it, sternmost of the British line. Only the three leading British ships are in action and the wind conditions are forcing the French line to break away before they can engage the sternmost ships. In fact, the conditions did not permit the French to get as close to the British line as the picture indicates. On the left picture are several small vessels wearing the flag of the American rebel forces and early forms of the 'Stars and Stripes'.
This picture is one of a pair commissioned by Barrington and is signed and dated 'D Serres 1780'. The other, which shows the British fleet at anchor after the action, has recently been reunited with it in the Museum's collection (ZBA2204). Both were exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1780.
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Object Details
ID: | BHC0422 |
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Collection: | Fine art |
Type: | Painting |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Serres, Dominic |
Events: | American War of Independence, 1775-1783 |
Vessels: | Nonsuch (1774) |
Date made: | 1780 |
People: | Barrington, Samuel; Royal Navy French Navy |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, Greenwich Hospital Collection |
Measurements: | Painting: 1041.4 x 1841.5 mm; Frame: 1264 x 2055 mm |