THE EXPEDITION TO MARTINIQUE, 1793 THE CAPTURE OF MARTINIQUE, ST.
LUCIA, AND GUADALOUPE, 1794 THE DEFENCE OF FORT MATILDA, 1794.
In February, 1789, all three companies
of the “Black Corps of Dragoons, Pioneers, and
Artificers” were stationed in Grenada, and from
that date until June, 1793, they are shown in every
monthly return, with a strength varying from 279 to
268, and an increase of four first lieutenants.
In February, 1793, the news of the
French declaration of war was received in the West
Indies, and orders were soon after transmitted from
England to the Commander-in-Chief in the Windward and
Leeward Islands to attempt the reduction of the French
islands. Tobago was taken on the 17th of April
without much trouble, the majority of the planters
in that island being English; and an attack on Martinique
was next meditated. The whole of the British
force in the West Indies was known and acknowledged
to be inadequate to the reduction of that island; but
such representations had been spread throughout the
army, concerning the disaffection of the greater part
of the inhabitants of all the French islands towards
the Republican Government lately established, as to
create a very general belief that the appearance of
a British armament before the capital of Martinique
would alone produce an immediate surrender. Major-General
Bruce, on whom the chief command of the troops had
devolved, was assured by a deputation from the principal
planters of the island that “a body of 800 regular
troops would be more than sufficient to overcome all
possible resistance.”
These representations induced Major-General
Bruce, in conjunction with Admiral Gardner, to undertake
an expedition; and the troops having been embarked
at Grenada in the men-of-war, the armament arrived
off Cape Navire, Martinique, on
the 11th of June, 1793. There the general met
the officer commanding the French Royalists, and, as
the latter proposed an attack upon the town of St.
Pierre, the 21st Regiment was landed at Cape
Navire on the 14th, and there posted, to enable
the Royalists to concentrate in the neighbourhood
of St. Pierre, where the remainder of the British
force joined them on the 16th. “The British
troops consisted of the Grenadiers, Light Infantry,
and Marines from the fleet, with the Black Carolina
Corps, amounting in all to about 1100 men." The
Royalists were said to number 800.
On the afternoon of the 17th, the
enemy made an attack, but were driven back by the
pickets, with the loss of one officer and three men
killed on the part of the British. An attack
on the two batteries which defended St. Pierre was
planned for the morning of the 18th, but failed, owing
to the want of discipline on the part of the Royalists.
Major-General Bruce says: “The morning of
the 18th was the time fixed for the attack, and we
were to move forward in two columns, the one consisting
of the British troops, the other of the French Royalists;
and for this purpose the troops were put in motion
before daybreak; but, unfortunately, some alarm having
taken place amongst the Royalists, they began, in
a mistake, firing on one another, and their commander
being severely wounded on the occasion, the whole
body, refusing to submit to any of the other officers,
retired to the post from which they had marched.”
This conduct showed the general that
no reliance could be placed on the Royalists, and
that the attack on St. Pierre, if carried out at all,
would have to be done by the British troops alone,
whose numbers were not equal to the task. He,
consequently, ordered the troops to return to their
former positions, and on the 19th they re-embarked.
As to have left the Royalists in Martinique would
only have been to leave them to be massacred by the
Republicans, those unfortunate people were embarked
on the 19th and 20th, and the 21st Regiment being taken
on board at Cape Navire on the 21st, the
expedition returned to Grenada.
It may be wondered whence came the
Black Carolina Corps mentioned by Major-General Bruce,
but it is evident that by that designation the Black
Corps of Dragoons, Pioneers, and Artificers was locally
known; for in the monthly return, dated May 1st, 1794,
the “state” of the corps is headed, “Return
of the Black Carolina Corps,” and the title,
“Black Corps of Dragoons, Pioneers, and Artificers”
ceases, from that date, to be used in any official
document. The strength of the corps in that return
is 258 of all ranks.
The failure of Major-General Bruce’s
attempt on Martinique induced the British Ministers
to send out an armament under Sir Charles Grey for
the reduction of all the French West India Islands;
and, until the arrival of this force at Barbados,
in January, 1794, the Black Carolina Corps remained
quietly in garrison at Grenada. The troops from
the various islands and amongst them all
three companies of that corps were collected
at Barbados during the remainder of January, and, on
the 4th of February, the expeditionary force, 6085
strong, set sail from Carlisle Bay. The army,
in three divisions, landed at three separate points
in Martinique; the first at Gallion Bay, on the northern
side of the island, on the evening of the 5th of February;
the second at Cape Navire, nearly opposite
on the south, on the 8th of February; and the third
at Trois Rivières, towards the south-east.
The British were so rapidly successful that, by the
17th of February, the whole of the island, except
the two fortresses of Bourbon and Fort Royal, were
in their hands. The services of the Black Carolina
Corps up to that date are not known in detail, but
the return of killed and wounded shows the Dragoons
as having had one rank and file killed.
On the 20th of February, Forts Bourbon
and Fort Royal were completely invested, and the pioneers
and artificers of the Carolina Corps were busily engaged
on the siege works. On the north-east side the
army broke ground on the 25th of February; and on
the western side, towards La Caste, fascine batteries
were erected with all possible expedition. By
the 16th of March, the advanced batteries were pushed
to within 500 yards of Fort Bourbon, and 200 yards
of the enemy’s nearest redoubt. On the
20th of March, the fortress of Fort Royal was carried
by Captain Faulkner, of the Zebra; and General
Rochambeau at once sent a flag from Fort Bourbon offering
to capitulate. The terms were accordingly adjusted
on the 23rd, and on the 25th, the garrison, reduced
to 900 men, marched out prisoners of war.
Martinique being now entirely conquered,
Sir Charles Grey left there, as a garrison under General
Prescott, five regiments, and one company of the Carolina
Corps; and proceeded, on the 31st of March, with the
remainder of the force to the attack of St. Lucia.
That island had no means of defence against so considerable
an invading force; and, on the 4th of April, the British
colours were hoisted on the chief fortress of Morne
Fortune; the garrison, consisting of 300 men,
having surrendered on the same terms of capitulation
that had been granted to General Rochambeau.
The 6th and 9th Regiments, with a company of the Carolina
Corps, being left as a garrison for St. Lucia, Sir
Charles Grey returned to Martinique, and commenced
his preparations for an expedition to Guadaloupe.
Guadaloupe really consists of two
islands, separated from each other by a narrow arm
of the sea, called La Riviere Salee, which is navigable
for vessels of fifty tons. The eastern island,
or division, which is flat and low-lying, is called
Grandeterre; while the western, which is rugged and
mountainous, is named Basseterre.
On the 8th of April, the troops, with
the remaining company of the Carolina Corps, sailed
from Fort Royal, Martinique; and, about one o’clock
in the morning of the 11th, a landing was effected
at Grosier Bay. Before daybreak on the 12th,
the fort of La Fleur d’Epee was carried by assault,
and the greater part of the garrison put to the sword.
Fort St. Louis, the town of Point a Pitre, and a new
battery upon Islet a Cochon being afterwards abandoned,
the possession of Grandeterre was complete. The
reduction of Basseterre was effected on the 21st of
the same month; and the company of the Carolina Corps,
with other troops, being left in garrison in Guadaloupe,
the general returned to Martinique.
The British, however, were not permitted
to remain long in peaceable possession of their most
recent conquest; for on the 3rd of June, a considerable
French armament arrived off Point a Pitre. Fort
Fleur d’Epee was taken by storm, and the place
not being tenable after this loss, the British crossed
over to Basseterre. Several prisoners were taken
by the French, and amongst them were some of the Carolina
Corps, for in the return of that corps for February,
1795, dated March 1st, there is the following note:
“Some of the corps are prisoners at Point a
Pitre, but their number cannot be ascertained.”
In a later return, however, we find that they consisted
of one sergeant and eight rank and file.
On the 2nd of July, the British made
an ineffectual attempt to recover Point a Pitre, and
soon after established their head-quarters at Berville,
in Basseterre. The camp at Berville was invested
in September, and on the 6th of October it was compelled
to capitulate. Thus the whole of Guadaloupe,
with the exception of Fort Matilda, situated above
the town of Basseterre, and which was still held by
a British garrison, was recovered by the French.
At the surrender of Berville, 300 French Royalists,
who were in the British camp, were massacred by the
orders of Victor Hugues, the French commander.
Fort St. Charles, Basseterre, had
been rechristened Fort Matilda by the British on its
surrender on the 21st of April, 1794, and against it
Victor Hugues now moved all his forces. The fort
was commanded by Lieutenant-General Prescott with
a garrison of 610 men, including the company of the
Carolina Corps which had come to Guadaloupe. General
Prescott, in his despatch, dated “On board H.M.S.
Vanguard, at sea, December 11th, 1794,”
says: “To enter into a minute detail of
the siege, which commenced on the 14th of October,
and terminated by evacuating it on the 10th of December,
would not only too much occupy your time, but might
be deemed equally unnecessary. It may be sufficient
to remark that on entering the fort I found it totally
out of repair, the materials composing the wall-work
thereof being of the worst kind, and having apparently
but little lime to cement them properly. By the
middle of last month the works were very much injured
by the daily and frequent heavy fire of the enemy,
and almost all the carriages of our guns rendered
useless. These were in general in a very decayed
state, but even the new ones for the brass mortars
that were made during the siege gave way from the
almost incessant fire we kept up; so that upon the
whole, what from the nature of our defences and the
small number of our garrison, we were in a very unfit
state to resist the very vigorous exertions of our
enemy, who began to prepare additional forces about
the 20th of last month, but who, from a number of
causes, and especially from heavy and continued rains,
could not open their new batteries till the 6th of
this month. On that day they began to fire from
twenty-three pieces of cannon, four of which were
thirty-six-pounders, and the rest twenty-four-pounders,
and from eight mortars, two of thirteen inches and
two of ten. The fire was very heavy and continued
all day and night, and by it all the guns on the Gallion
bastion were dismounted, and the bastion itself a
heap of ruins. Every day after this grew worse
until the 9th, on the evening of which day I went
into the ditch accompanied by the engineer, when we
were both but too well convinced of the tottering
state of the works from the Gallion along the curtain,
and indeed the whole, from the east to the north-east.
I could not hesitate a moment about the necessity
of evacuating the fort. I therefore sent off
immediately to Rear-Admiral Thompson, who commanded
the detachment of the squadron left for our protection,
to acquaint him with the necessity of evacuating the
fort next evening, and to request that he would have
the boats ready to take off the garrison at seven o’clock.
I kept this my design a profound secret until half-past
six o’clock of the evening of the 10th, when
I arranged the march of the garrison.... The
embarkation continued with little or no interruption,
and was happily completed about ten o’clock
at night, without its being discovered by the enemy,
who continued firing as usual on the fort till two
or three o’clock on the morning of the 11th,
as we could plainly perceive from the ships.
My satisfaction was great at having thus preserved
my brave garrison to their king and country.”
During the siege of Fort Matilda,
the Carolina Corps lost 1 killed and 3 wounded, 2
of whom afterwards died of their wounds. In the
“State of the Garrison of Fort Matilda, as embarked
on the 10th of December, 1794,” the strength
of the company of the Carolina Corps is shown as 1
captain, 1 lieutenant, 4 sergeants, and 30 rank and
file. After the evacuation, this company was
stationed at Martinique; so that at the close of the
year 1794, two companies were in that island, and one
in St. Lucia.