Britain has been attacking the Spanish colonies…
March 1748 CE
The War of Austrian Succession had spread to the Caribbean and French colonies had soon became a target also and islands such as Guadeloupe, Martinique and Saint Domingue were under a close blockade by the Royal Navy.
After Knowles finished his stint as governor of Louisbourg he had been promoted to rear-admiral of the white on July 15, 1747, and appointed as commander in chief on the Jamaica station.
Knowles had initially intended to take his squadron and attack the Spanish at Santiago de Cuba, but contrary winds led to him deciding instead to attack the French Fort Saint Louis de Sud at Saint Domingue.
Shortly before midday on March 22, 1748 in HMS Elizabeth, Knowles leads his squadron into the harbor of Port Saint Louis, completely surprising its defenders.
An imposing seventy-eight gun island castle guards the road stead, manned by three hundred and ten troops and a company of black gunners under Governor Étienne Cochard de Chastenoye behind a twenty four foot-high stone walls.
The first French guns open fire at 12:05 pm but Knowles’s ships remain silent until all of them have anchored beneath the ramparts.
As soon as this strategy is coming to form, Knowles orders his ships to open fire in a volley of broadsides at point blank range.
A heated exchange ensues for the next three hours, the British ships pounding the French fort.
The desperate defenders send a fire-ship down from the inner roads, which compels Elizabeth to cut her cable and warp out of danger.
The remaining Royal Navy ships, however, maintain a fierce pressure, so much so that the fort is starting to crumble and French counter fire is becoming slacker.
Many guns and gun crews have been knocked out by British cannon fire and French casualties are heavy.
Seeing the destruction that lies before him and British cannon fire not letting up, Chastenoye has no choice but to send out an officer out at 3:00 pm to suggest terms.
Knowles makes a counteroffer, and half an hour later the French commander accepts.
The terms for the French are to surrender and that the fort will be occupied by the British without molestation.
The garrison has suffered one hundred and sixty casualties in all, compared to nineteen killed and fifty wounded among the British warships.
The French garrison surrenders under the terms, but are soon released and marched away to the safety of the nearest settlement but keeping their firearms and not to fight against any of the British forces for a year and a day.
British sailors and marines now occupy the fort and set about dismantling it.
Over the course of the week the castle is set for demolition and destroyed.
Knowles stands away on March 30 with victory complete, heading off again hoping to assault Santiago de Cuba.
This time, however, he is repelled by the Spanish defenders.