It began as a diversion to a diversion, an ill
planned and worse executed scheme
to draw British troops from Continental Europe where they were
engaged in the struggle with revolutionary France known as the War of the First Coalition. But for Wolfe
Tone and the United Irishmen,
the tawdry affair was the beginning of a collapse of a great dream of Irish Independence secured with the assistance of French Arms.
At the instigation of Tone, an Anglo-Irish idealist then serving as an
officer in the French Army while
trying to lead from exile the
growing United Irishmen movement he had founded in his homeland, the French Directory authorized a complex and ambitious plan put forward by General
Louis Lazare Hoche. Tone
had promised the French that 30, 000 United Irishmen would lead a mass popular uprising with the support
of a fairly modest French invasion. As a diversion to the main effort in Ireland,
Hoche planned two more limited raids
on the British home island. The most significant
would land in Wales and then
march to Bristol to sack and burn the city.
Tone issued bloodthirsty manifestos smuggled
into Ireland calling for the uprising and urging no quarter to British troops.
The stage was set for the great adventure.
On December 15, 1796, 43 ships carrying about 14,450 men and an arsenal war material for distribution
in Ireland sailed from Brest. Tone accompanied Hoche under the nom
du guerre Adjutant General Smith, a thin disguise meant to protect
him should he be captured by the
British.
The planned three prong operation had already fallen apart. The main force for the actual invasion of
Ireland arrived off Bantry Bay on
the west coast but was prevented by high winter seas from attempting
a landing. The naval and troop carrier commanders were, in Tone’s acid opinion, largely incompetent. After a heavy
gale nearly destroyed the fleet, it had to limp back to France.
La Légion des Francs, under General
Quantain, was instructed to attack Newcastle
upon Tyne and destroy local shipping.
It had set out from Dunkirk in
November of 1796 but turned back in Dutch
waters after bad weather had swamped
several of the invasion barges. The troops, mostly impressed convicts and even British prisoners of war, mutinied back in port and refused to re-embark for a second attempt.
Astoundingly, the third force, a flotilla of French warships, now with no main effort to support, left Brest flying Russian colors on February 16, 1797 headed for
Britain.
The second diversionary force was La
Légion Noire (The Black Legion),
a fierce sounding name for a rag-tag brigade sized force of 1,400
men and 46 officers. Like the ill-fated Légion des Francs, it was also made up
mostly of half-trained conscripts
described, charitably, as irregulars. But at the was a core of the force were 600 Grenadiers
of the line. The unit took its name from its uniforms, which were captured
English redcoats that had been poorly died to a range of colors from muddy
brown to a sooty black. Their trousers were a ludicrous and unmilitary The poor
condition of their outfits was an indication
that the French command saw them as doomed pawns. The unit was under the command of an Irish American, chef de brigade (colonel)
William Tate who could not speak French and had to communicate
with his men through translators. Several of his subordinate officers were Irish, as well.
At least the warships under the
command of Commodore Castagnier were
first rate. They included the frigates La Vengeance and La
Resistance on her maiden voyage,
the corvette La Constance, and Le
Vautour a smaller lugger. The plan was to provide cover for and land troops near Bristol, then to dash north to rendezvous with Hoche’s shattered fleet to provide them cover and
protection on the limp home. Of course,
that meant that the small invasion force would be abandoned on the home island
of the enemy. What could possibly go wrong?
Apparently,
a lot.
The same high seas and winds that had scattered Hoche’s fleet prevented
a landing as originally planned.
Castagnier was forced to turn around and try to land at secondary choice, Cardigan Bay on the west coast of Wales. Making its way
through the Bristol Channel, the flotilla was spotted from land and despite now flying English colors was identified as hostile. Surprise
was gone.
At 2 in the morning of on February
22, 1797, the French landed 17 boatloads of troops, 47 barrels of gunpowder, 50 tons of cartridges and grenades, and 2,000
stands of arms. One boat was lost in the surf and sank, with the critical loss of artillery
and ammunition.
Lieutenant-Colonel
Thomas Knox of the 400-man local Fishguard & Newport Volunteer Infantry
had already been alerted of the invasion force and was mobilizing his troops. In addition,
other units in the region were rushing to the invasion site including Lord Cawdor’s Castlemartin
Troop of the Pembroke Yeomanry
Cavalry the along with the Pembroke
Volunteers and the Cardiganshire
Militia. Lieutenant-Colonel Colby of the Pembrokeshire Militia assembled 250 men. A Royal
Navy pressgang, tough thugs usually employed
in emptying sea side pubs of drunken
sailors and swooping up un-alert
farm lads from the fields, 150 strong also landed with several pieces of
artillery. All began converging on the threat. Lord Cawdor assumed overall command.
At dawn after a three-mile forced march from the landing site, Tate’s men looked down from the surrounding hills at the small port of Fishguard. They observed it bustling with activity, no doubt stirred by the fast flying word of the invasion.
A good many woman were assembled in the market dressed in a traditional local costume which included high black hats and scarlet
shawls. From the distance they
apparently were mistaken for Redcoats in black shakos sending some of the ill trained irregulars into a near panic.
None-the-less the French began to push inland, capturing several farm houses. Some of the
irregulars broke loose and began pillaging the farmsteads and rural hamlets for loot, dashing the
unrealistic hopes that the Celtic
Welsh might see the invasion as liberators
and rise up against English rule.
Tate was left with only a handful of
his irregulars, mostly Irish exiles, and his regular Grenadiers. He set
up a headquarters and occupied
strong defensive positions on the high
rocky outcrops of Garnwnda and Carngelli.
On February 23 the two hundred or so
local militia at Fishguard under colonel Knox, re-enforced by an influx of angry civilian volunteers
armed with scythes, pitch forks, pikes, and other odd
implements, began a retreat from
the port after realizing that they
were facing a much larger force. But they encountered
Lord Cawdor’s hastily assembled force and turned around to join his march
to meet the enemy.
As they advanced, Tate’s forces
began to fall apart. Conscripts discovered a warehouse of Portuguese
wine and began drinking heavily. Many, especially impressed English prisoners
of war, simply deserted. Most of the rest were soon drunk and or sick
in farm houses scattered about.
One local farm wife, Jemima
Nicholas, armed only with a pitchfork rounded up 12 of the drunken
conscripts and locked them in St. Mary’s Church in the town.
That evening Cawdor and 600 men
advanced from Fishguard on the French strong points but turned back fearing ambush.
But Tate’s men saw the size of the well-armed forces against them,
including artillery. Knowing that the
fleet had already abandoned them, his officers
began to council surrender.
The morning of the 24 two French officers entered Cawdor’s
camp under a white flag to attempt
to negotiate an honorable surrender with safety
guaranteed Irish officers. Cawdor refused the terms and set a 10 am deadline for unconditional surrender or he would attack. Part of that was bluff. Cawdor still believed he was outnumbered and planned
to await further reinforcements before
an all-out assault.
The Pembroke Yeomanry and and other British toops form on the sands to accept the formal French surrender on February 24. |
The deadline passed, but Tate realized his position was hopeless and
announced his unconditional surrender at 2 pm.
Tate and his men were taken
prisoner, although rounding up all
the deserters and stragglers took time. Eventually Tate and most of the others were paroled and returned to France. Some of
the conscripts simply agreed to switch
uniforms, some for the second time.
But the disaster was not over for the French. On March 9 La Resistance, which had been crippled
by the adverse weather in the Irish
Sea and La Constance were captured
after a short but bloody engagement
with HMS
St Fiorenzo and HMS Nymphe.
Both were re-fitted
and commissioned in the Royal Navy. Commodore Castagnier on board La Vengeance managed to escape to France.
This tinted British print compared the damage to the French fleets to the destruction of the Spanish Armada more than 200 years before. Perfect war time propaganda. |
As for Wolfe Tone, well he pressed for another invasion. His ardent
supporter Hoche died of tuberculosis
and he found ascending French
authorities, including Napoléon
Bonaparte less enamored of his Irish schemes. But when open rebellion broke out in Ireland
and with Napoléon off on his Egyptian adventure,
he persuaded the government to back a
second expedition.
This time a force under General Humbert succeeded in landing near Killala,
County Mayo and marching through the countryside gathering United Irishmen with
“their pikes upon their shoulders” before it was smashed. A second force
broke up again in the raging seas, and the third, accompanied by Tone himself
was intercepted by the Royal
Navy. Tone was taken prisoner. He died
of wounds of a botched suicide
attempt after several days, but in time to cheat the hangman.
The pitiful and fruitless so-called
Battle of Fishguard is now remembered as the last invasion of Great Britain.
The Guidon of the Pembroke Yeomanry commemorates their famous victory. |
In 1853 the Pembroke Yeomanry was awarded the battle honor “Fishguard” to be attached as a ribbon to their colors. It is the only regiment in the British Army, regular or territorial, that bears a battle honor for an engagement on the British mainland and the first battle honor awarded to a volunteer unit.
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