The French fleet in Toulon is blockaded…
February 1809 CE
The French fleet in Toulon is blockaded by 1809 by several British squadrons of powerful ships of the line; direct surveillance of the harbor, however, has to be conducted by smaller and more agile frigates.
Threatening intervention from the battle squadrons against ships putting out to sea, the presence of the British frigates constricts the liberty of maneuver of the French ships, preventing not only an all-out sortie, but also navigation of individual ships or small squadrons, and even the training maneuvers necessary to maintain the fleet.
As a consequence, French commanders try to drive off British ships in order to disrupt the surveillance.
On February 27, two forty-four-gun frigates, Pénélope and Pauline, sortie from Toulon harbor to chase a British frigate, HMS Proserpine, which is conducting surveillance of French movements.
Pénélope, captained by Bernard Dubourdieu, first sneaking undetected and later trying to pass herself as a British frigate coming to relieve Proserpine, approaches within gun range before being identified.
With the help of Pauline, she subdues Proserpine and forces her to surrender after a one-hour fight.
Proserpine will be sailed to Toulon and commissioned in the French Navy, where she served until 1865.
Her Captain Otter will remain a prisoner in France until the end of the war; he will be court martialed on May 30, 1814, for the loss of his ship, and will be honorably acquitted.