Action of 21 July 1781 Combat naval en vue de Louisbourg |
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Part of the American Revolutionary War | |||||||
Naval battle off Cape Breton (Combat Naval A La Hauteur De Louisbourg) by Auguste-Louis de Rossel de Cercy |
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Belligerents | |||||||
France | Great Britain | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Latouche Tréville La Pérouse |
Captain Henry Francis Evans † Captain Rupert George |
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Strength | |||||||
2 frigates: Astrée (38) Hermione (34) |
6 warships: Charlestown (28) Allegiance (24) Vernon (24) Vulture (20) Jack (14) Thompson (18) (did not fight) 9 coal transports 4 supply ships |
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
6 killed 34 wounded |
~17 killed 48 wounded 2 warships and 3 merchantmen captured |
The Action of 21 July 1781 was a naval skirmish off the harbor of Spanish River, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia (present-day Sydney, Nova Scotia), during the American Revolution. Two French Navy frigates, led by Admiral Latouche Tréville and La Pérouse, engaged a convoy of 18 British ships and their escorts from the Royal Navy. The two French frigates captured two of the British escorts while the remainder of the British convoy escaped.
A possible motive for the French attack was to make advances to reclaim Louisburg, a strategic fortress which the British had seized during the French and Indian War.
The convoy, which consisted of eighteen ships, including nine coal-transporting and four supply ships, was bound for Spanish River on Cape Breton Island to pick up coal for delivery to Halifax. The escorting ships were the frigate Charlestown (28); the sloops Allegiance (24) and Vulture (20); an armed transport Vernon (14); and another small armed ship Jack (14).
Two French frigates Astrée (38), commanded by La Pérouse, and Hermione (34), commanded by Latouche Tréville, attacked the convoy. The French severely damaged Charlestown, which lost its mainmast and a number of its officers, including Captain Francis Evans. The French also significantly damaged Jack, which also lost its captain, and subsequently struck her colors. The engagement ended at nightfall. Captain Rupert George of Vulture led the damaged escorts into a safe harbor. Six French and seventeen British sailors were killed.