THE RELIEF OF GRENADA, 1796 THE REPULSE AT PORTO RICO, 1797.
Grenada, like St. Vincent, had been
ravaged by the French and insurgent slaves since March,
1795, and the relief of that island was one of the
first cares of Sir R. Abercromby. On leaving St.
Lucia, the division of the troops intended for Grenada
was ordered to rendezvous at Cariacou, one of
the Grenadines; there Sir Ralph Abercromby met Major-General
Nicolls, then commanding in Grenada, and arranged with
him the general plan of operations. Before, however,
those operations are described, it will be necessary
to go back to the month of March, 1796, when a company
of the Carolina Corps arrived in Grenada from Martinique,
with detachments from the 8th, 63rd, and 3rd Regiments,
under Major-General Nicolls.
Shortly before the arrival of this
reinforcement, the French and insurgents had compelled
the British to evacuate Pilot Hill, in the neighbourhood
of Grenville, and had taken up a strong position at
Port Royal. On the 23rd of March, Major-General
Nicolls landed to the south of Port Royal; during
the night the guns were got in position, and at daybreak
opened on the enemy’s works. The post occupied
by the enemy was a hill of very steep ascent, particularly
towards the summit, upon which a fort was constructed,
and furnished with four six-pounders and some swivels.
The first object of the British commander was to gain
a position between the enemy and the open country,
and thus leave them no alternative but to surrender
at discretion, or precipitate themselves over a high
cliff; but they had established themselves so strongly
to protect their right that this failed. In the
meantime two large vessels full of troops to reinforce
the enemy arrived in the bay under Port Royal, from
Guadaloupe; and Brigadier-General Nicolls found it
necessary to storm the enemy’s post without
further delay. The troops employed in this service
were detachments from the 3rd, 29th, and 63rd Regiments,
under Brigadier-General Campbell; at the same time,
50 men of the 88th, with the company of the Carolina
Corps, Colonel Webster’s Black Rangers, and
Angus’ Black Corps, moved against the enemy’s
right flank, to dislodge some strong parties which
were posted on the heights.
Owing to the difficult nature of the
ground, it was nearly two hours before the latter
column could reach the enemy, when a heavy fire commenced
on both sides. The ascent was steep and difficult,
encumbered with rocks and loose stones and covered
with dense bush. From the summit of the ridge
the enemy poured in a destructive fire, to which the
British could only reply at a great disadvantage, and,
after losing heavily, the column commenced to retire.
Observing this retrograde movement, Major-General
Nicolls sent the 8th Regiment in support and ordered
Brigadier-General Campbell to proceed to the assault
of the redoubt.
Repulsed at the first attempt the
troops again pushed on, at length gained the summit
of the ridge, drove the enemy into their redoubt and
scrambled in after them through the embrasures.
The enemy then fled in all directions, some threw
themselves down the precipices, whilst others tried
to escape down the hill through the thick underwood;
but there was so heavy a fire kept up on them from
above by the British that they were forced to attempt
to escape along a valley, where they were charged by
a detachment of the 17th Light Dragoons, and cut to
pieces. The British loss consisted, in killed
and wounded, of 110 Europeans and 40 of the various
black corps. The Carolina Corps lost one man killed
and six wounded.
Affairs were thus situated when the
fall of St. Lucia enabled Sir R. Abercromby to send
reinforcements to Grenada. The troops, with whom
were Malcolm’s Rangers, disembarked at Palmiste,
on the 9th June, while Brigadier-General Campbell,
with the troops already in the island, advanced from
the windward side to take the enemy in rear. Captain
Jossey, the commandant of the French troops at Goyave,
near Palmiste, seeing that resistance must be
unavailing, surrendered that post, with those of Mabouia
and Dalincourt; but Fedon, the leader of the insurgent
slaves, who knew he could expect no mercy, retired
at the head of about 300 men to two strong and almost
unapproachable positions, called Morne Quaquo
and Ache’s Camp, or Foret Noir, in
the mountains of the interior.
In these recesses he did not despair
of being able to tire out his pursuers; but Major-General
Nicolls did not give him time to throw any additional
obstacles in the way of the troops. On the 18th
of June he despatched against him, from opposite quarters,
two divisions, under Brigadier-General Campbell and
Count d’Heillemer; while Lieutenant-Colonel
Gledstanes was posted with the 57th Regiment at the
head of Grand Roy Valley, and the grenadiers of the
38th Regiment, with the Carolina Corps and Malcolm’s
Rangers, advanced against a post which the enemy had
at the head of Beau Séjour Valley. The
dispositions were so admirably carried into effect,
that the whole of the enemy’s posts were captured,
nearly at the same moment, on the morning of the 19th.
“Many of the blacks were slain upon the spot,
and the remainder were promptly hunted down in the
woods by detachments of the military. No quarter
was given to these ruffians, nor was any deserved by
them, their last efforts having been marked by a foul
and wanton murder. When they saw that their position
at Morne Quaquo, which they had regarded as impregnable,
was on the eve of being forced, they led out twenty
white prisoners, stripped them, tied their hands behind
them, and put them to death. It was impossible,
after having witnessed this act of baseness and cruelty,
that anything short of their extermination should satisfy
the victors."
Fedon, and a number of his followers,
escaped to the woods; what became of the former was
never known, but the black corps were employed up to
December, 1796, in hunting down and capturing the stragglers,
and it was not until the end of that month that peace
was entirely restored to Grenada.
Whyte’s, or the 1st West India,
Regiment had remained at Martinique without any addition
to its strength during the operations in St. Lucia
and Grenada. It had, however, according to the
muster rolls for 1796, transferred, on the 24th of
March of that year, four sergeants and nine corporals
to Malcolm’s Rangers, probably in anticipation
of the speedy drafting of the whole of that corps
into its own ranks. In the Monthly Returns of
troops for March and April, 1796, Malcolm’s Royal
Rangers are shown as “under orders for drafting
into the 1st West India Regiment,” and in the
May Return the corps ceases to be shown separately,
and has no “state” of its own. As
we have seen, however, it continued to act separately
in St. Lucia in April and May, and in Grenada from
June to December; and it was not until its return
to Martinique on the 28th of December, 1796, that
the drafting was finally completed. Of the Carolina
Corps all the men fit for service were collected at
Martinique, the remainder being formed into an invalid
company at Grenada. It may be thought that the
process of forming the 1st West India Regiment was
being carried on very slowly, but it was more rapid
than that of any other West India Regiment, except
the 2nd; while the 3rd, even on the 24th of December,
1797, had no non-commissioned officers, no privates,
and only two drummers.
No military event worthy of note took
place in the year 1797, in which the Carolina Corps
or the 1st West India Regiment took part, except the
expedition to Porto Rico, in which the pioneers of
the former corps were engaged. Sir Ralph Abercromby,
with a force of 3000 men, sailed from Martinique on
the 8th of April, and, after a delay at St. Christopher’s,
for the purpose of procuring pilots and guides, reached
Porto Rico on the 17th and anchored off Cangrejos
Point. Next day the troops disembarked, and,
after a slight skirmish with the enemy, took up a
position before the town. The siege continued
for a fortnight without the British making any appreciable
progress, while the force of the enemy, originally
larger than that of the besiegers, was receiving continual
accessions from various parts of the island. Sir
Ralph Abercromby, therefore, determined to abandon
the attempt, and the troops were accordingly re-embarked
on the 30th of April.
In March, 1797, one company of the
Carolina Corps that was at Martinique, 78 strong,
was drafted into the 1st West India Regiment; and,
on the return of the expedition from Porto Rico, the
remaining company (Pioneer) was also drafted, and
the Carolina Corps ceased to exist.
The following is the list of the officers
who were serving in the 1st West India Regiment in
1797, and it may be observed that so many changes
had taken place that, out of 43 officers who were gazetted
to the regiment in 1795, only 22 were left in 1797:
During the active operations of the
year 1796 the West India colonists had offered no
objection to the scheme of raising five new black
regiments, but, in 1797, when the question of providing
for them was brought before the various Legislatures,
the plan met with the most determined opposition.
When, on the 17th of January, Governor Ricketts communicated
it to the House of Assembly in Barbados, and requested
the concurrence of that House, the Speaker, Sir John
Gay Alleyne, immediately rose and moved:
“That the design of five regiments,
etc. (as expressed in the message), will, as
far as such a design is likely to affect this island,
prove rather the means of its destruction than its
defence.”
This resolution was carried, with
two others, without a dissenting voice.
“The Assembly of Jamaica was
no less decided and unanimous in its opposition to
the measure. It refused to make any provision
whatever for the subsistence of the 6th West India
Regiment, which was commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel
Whitelocke. In this decision it was sanctioned
by the general voice of the white population.
Meetings were held in almost every parish of the island,
in all of which the scheme of raising black corps
was heavily censured, as being, in the first place,
unnecessary, the negroes being already compellable
to serve in case of emergency; and, in the second
place, as being of a nature to produce ultimately,
and perhaps at no distant period, the most destructive
effects to the persons and the property of the colonial
proprietors."
The British ministers were reluctant
to abandon that which appeared to be a cheap and ready
mode of recruiting in the western hemisphere, and
consequently persevered in their project, even increasing
the number of West India regiments in 1799 to twelve.
That the fears of the colonists were groundless time
soon showed. In 1801, at St. Martin’s, the
8th West India Regiment, “composed of new negroes,
who had never before faced a foe, behaved with the
utmost gallantry.” In 1803, the 3rd West
India Regiment did good service at the capture of
St. Lucia, as did the 6th at the reduction of Surinam
in 1804. In 1809, at the Saintes, where the 3rd
and 8th West India Regiments were engaged, “the
black troops distinguished themselves by their discipline
and valour.” How the 1st West India Regiment
remained true to its colours the succeeding chapters
will show.