The French are eager to improve their…
1768 CE to 1779 CE
The French are eager to improve their position in the South Atlantic with the conclusion of the Seven Years War.
Louis de Bougainville had landed in the Falklands, establishing a base at Port Louis.
At the same time, the one unbeknown to the other, the British under John Byron had made their own landing at Port Egmont in the west.
Responding to Spanish objections, the French had handed over Port Louis to their closest ally, though neither party was as yet aware of the proximity of the British, until a chance sighting of some ships in December 1769.
The Spanish governor of Buenos Aires had sent five frigates to Port Egmont in June 1770, landing some sixteen hundred marines.
The small British force present promptly surrendered.
When Parliament assembled in November, the MPs, outraged by this insult to national honor, demanded action from the Pitt government.
The Foreign Office "began to mobilize for a potential war".
Amid this flurry of threats and counter-threats, the Spanish attempt to strengthen their position by winning the support of France, invoking the Pacte de Famille between the two Bourbon crowns.
For a time it looks as if all three countries are about to go to war, especially as the Duc de Choiseul, the French minister of war and foreign affairs, is in a militant mood.
But Louis XV takes fright, telling his cousin Charles III that "My minister wishes for war, but I do not."
Choiseul is dismissed from office, and without French support the Spanish are obliged to seek a compromise with the British.
As a result of economic pressures stemming from the upcoming American War of Independence, Britain unilaterally chooses to withdraw from many overseas settlements in 1774.
On May 20, 1776, the British forces under the command of Lt. Clayton formally take their leave of Port Egmont, while leaving a plaque asserting Britain's continuing sovereignty over the islands.