Battle of Anguilla

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Date21 May 1745
Location18°10′37″N 63°06′45″W / 18.17694°N 63.11250°W / 18.17694; -63.11250
Result British victory[1]
Battle of Anguilla
Part of the War of the Austrian Succession

Modern-day view of the site of the French landing
Date21 May 1745
Location18°10′37″N 63°06′45″W / 18.17694°N 63.11250°W / 18.17694; -63.11250
Result British victory[1]
Belligerents
 Great Britain  France
Commanders and leaders
Arthur Hodge Le Touché
Strength
150 soldiers[2] 2 frigates
3 privateers
2 ship's tenders
759 soldiers[1]
Casualties and losses
7 killed or wounded[3] 35 killed or drowned
65 wounded[4]
50 captured[5]

The Battle of Anguilla was a military engagement that took place on the British controlled Caribbean island of Anguilla on 1 June 1745 during the War of the Austrian Succession. A French force landed 760 men and marched inland but were repulsed with heavy losses by the British who then counter-attacked forcing the French to flee causing the loss of 100 casualties as well as fifty captured.[3][4]

The War of the Austrian Succession had brought the fighting over to the rest of the French and British colonial territories in India and the Caribbean. Convoys and holdings of each nation were a target or a threat.[1]

In 1744, a 300-strong British colonial force consisting of militia, slaves and regulars accompanied by two privateers from Saint Kitts invaded the French half of neighbouring Saint Martin, holding it until the 1748 Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle.[2] In late May 1745 two French royal frigates of 36 and 30 guns respectively under Commodore La Touché, plus three privateers sailed from Martinique in retaliation to invade and capture Anguilla.[5]

The British on Anguilla were aware of the threat and thus readied themselves with around 150 militia and regulars from the islands small garrison.[3]

Assault

Aftermath

References

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