By the same author
Britannia’s Palette: The Arts of Naval Victory
Who’s Who of Nelson’s Navy: 200 Naval Heroes
Sea Power and the Control of Trade, Belligerent Rights from the Russian War to the Beira Patrol
The Age of Sail: The International Annual of the Historic Sailing Ship, 2002 and 2003.
The Naval Chronicle, Consolidated Edition, 5 volumes
The Collective Naval Defence of the Empire: 1900 to 1940
Manila Ransomed: The British Expedition to the Philippines in the Seven Years War
A Cruising Guide to the Bay of Fundy and the St. John River including Passamoquoddy Bay and the Southwestern Shore of Nova Scotia
Attack on Maritime Trade
Naval Warfare in the Age of Sail: The Evolution of Fighting Tactics 1680-1815
Navies, Deterrence, and American Independence
Copyright © Nicholas Tracy 1996 & 2008
This edition first published in Great Britain in 2008 by
Seaforth Publishing
An imprint of Pen & Sword Books Ltd
47 Church Street, Barnsley
S. Yorkshire S70 2AS
The right of Nicholas Tracy to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Published and distributed in the United States of America and Canada by Naval Institute Press
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Annapolis, Maryland 21402-5034
This edition is authorized for sale only in the United States of America, its territories and possessions and Canada.
First Naval Institute Press eBook edition published in 2015.
ISBN 978-1-61251-934-0 (eBook)
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
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Map by John Richards
Typeset and designed by MATS, Leigh-on-Sea, Essex
Print edition by Cromwell Press, Trowbridge (Great Britain)
Contents
Preface to Revised Edition
Foreword by David Brown
Map of Nelson’s Europe
Chapter 1: Nelson and Sea Power
Chapter 2: Guns, Ships and Battle Tactics
Chapter 3: Cape St Vincent and The Nile
Chapter 4: The Battle of Copenhagen
Chapter 5: The Battle of Trafalgar
Epilogue
Further Reading
Abbreviations
Notes
Index
AT THIS CRITICAL time in the life of the planet, there is an ironic twist to the story of the battle of Trafalgar. The engagement between the combined fleets of France and Spain, and that of Britain, in which thousands of lives were lost, and many people more were maimed, was fought as the surges of a mighty storm were driving in on the coast, with the anticipation of the great winds that were to be far more terrible to Vice Admiral Collingwood than was the battle itself. Two hundred years later, these nations are linked in the European Union, and all are turning to meet the peril caused by global warming.
This fact does not diminish the importance of Nelson’s victories. The naval battles won by the officers and men of the Royal Navy, led and inspired by Nelson’s commitment and courage, were fundamental to the outcome of the wars triggered by the French Revolution, and sustained by Napoleonic ambition. That victory, and the part played by the Royal Navy in the two world wars of the twentieth century that ensured the world would not be dominated by militarism and Nazi extremism, made the present era of democracy in Europe possible. There is an analogy between the tactical problems of fleet commanders, who must find effective ways of dealing with technical and human issues if they are to create a war machine, and the political sensitivities needed of statesmen if they are to address the climactic threats to life on earth. And in particular, the conflict that exists between effective action and individual human liberty, and the threat that diminishing economic resources lead to unparalleled competition between nations and within nations, is all too similar to the conflicts triggered by the French Revolution.
This revised edition has benefited from the work that has been done by dozens of scholars on the subject of Nelson, his battles, and the surrounding military history of the period. Ten years ago it might have been thought that everything that could be known about the subject had already been squeezed from the documents, but much has happened in those years, perhaps largely because 2005 was the 200th anniversary of the battle of Trafalgar. That generated a tremendous amount of interest in the subject, an interest stoked effectively by Peter Warwick and the 1805 Club. It would be invidious to single out one or two of the authors of the new biographies of Lord Nelson, but with seventy-one new Nelson titles since 1995 a revision of my Nelson’s Battles was in order. I am particularly grateful to Richard Harding for letting me read the papers from the 2005 Trafalgar conference which are to be published this year as A Great and Glorious Victory: New Perspectives on the Battle of Trafalgar, also by Seaforth.
Nicholas Tracy
Fredericton, New Brunswick, 2008
HORATIO NELSON exercises an enduring fascination. Put in today’s terms, he is the stuff of which tabloid headlines are made, combining heroism, charisma and tactical genius with very human faults, including what may be regarded as a loose approach to ‘traditional family values’. As the bicentenary of Trafalgar approaches, the one naval hero whose name remains generally familiar will doubtless become once again a household word.
Dr Tracy’s book is not a ‘mere biography’, nor is it hagiography. Nelson’s Battles is the vehicle for a study of the nature and conduct of war at sea during the first true ‘World War’ and it will stand as a most useful reference work for anyone who wishes to look beyond the man and his achievements. It is also an eminently suitable book for the lay reader or beginner in naval history, for scholarship is combined with a deft narrative style and nicely chosen contemporary comments by acquaintances and participants in the battles.
It is sometimes difficult to remember in these days of rapid change, 200 years after Nelson’s battles, that the essentials of sea warfare had not changed a great deal during the 200 years which preceded