The French Atlantic Fleet, blockaded in Brest…
April 1809 CE
Sighted and chased by British blockade squadrons, the French had been unable to escape the Bay of Biscay and eventually anchored in the Basque Roads, near the naval base of Rochefort.
Here they had been kept under observation during March by the British fleet under the dour Admiral Lord Gambier.
The Admiralty, desiring an attack on the French fleet, had ordered Lord Cochrane, an outspoken and popular junior captain, to lead an attack, over the objections of a number of senior officers.
Cochrane organizes an inshore squadron of fireships and bomb vessels, including a converted frigate, and personally leads this force into the narrow Basque Roads on the evening of April 11.
The British Royal Navy defeats the French fleet at the battle in the mouth of the Charente on the Biscay coast of France from April 11 to April 25, 1809, although officers on both sides face subsequent courts-martial.
The attack causes little direct damage, but in the narrow waters of the channel the fireships panic the sailors of the French fleet and most of their ships ground and are left immobile.
Cochrane expects Gambier to follow his attack with the main fleet, which could then destroy the vulnerable French force, but Gambier refuses.