History & Society

Battle of Santo Domingo

Napoleonic Wars
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Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth
Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth
Date:
February 6, 1806
Location:
Hispaniola
West Indies
Participants:
France
United Kingdom
Context:
Napoleonic Wars

Battle of Santo Domingo, British naval victory over a French flotilla during the Napoleonic Wars, fought in the waters off the southern coast of what is now the Dominican Republic, in the Caribbean, on February 6. 1806. Although unwilling after the Battle of Trafalgar (1805) to face Britain in a full-scale fleet battle, the French navy was still able to attempt raids on British commerce and against distant colonies, as it did in the Battle of Santo Domingo. The British ended theseattempts with their decisive victory.

Much of the French fleet had been destroyed at Trafalgar and in its aftermath, but France’s Brest squadrons had taken no part in the campaign. At the end of 1805, two squadrons left Brest. One squadron, under Admiral Jean-Baptiste Philibert Willaumez, returned home in the late summer of 1806, having taken losses and achieved little. By contrast, within days of setting out, Vice Admiral Corentin-Urbain Leissègues and his two frigates and five ships of the line—one of them the exceptionally powerful 120-gun Impérial—were being pursued to the Caribbean by the British.

The six-ship British squadron was led by Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth, who annoyed his superiors by abandoning the blockade of Cádiz to take up the pursuit. The French had headed for the island of Santo Domingo, a Spanish colony then under French occupation. The British located the French fleet on February 1 and closed in on February 6, 1806.

In the battle that followed, the British outfought and captured three of the French ships and then concentrated on Impérial and its remaining consort. They were forced ashore and wrecked. Much of the combat took place at close range in a pall of gun smoke; there were several collisions and examples of ships being hit by "friendly fire." Casualties on both sides were severe, but French losses were near-total. Duckworth’s insubordination in leaving Cádiz might have resulted in disciplinary actions against him; instead, he was praised for saving Britain’s immensely valuable West Indies trade from a serious French attack.

Duckworth’s success effectively ended France’s attempts to launch further naval expeditions against their foe. The Battle of Santo Domingo was the last major naval battle of the Napoleonic Wars between French and British fleets.

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Losses: British, 340 dead or wounded; French, 1,500 dead or wounded, 5 ships captured or destroyed.

Donald Sommerville