(Redirected from Last Invasion of Britain)
Royal Oak Pub in Fishguard
The 'Last Invasion of Britain' was a
French attack on Britain in 1797. A
French force of 1,400 troops (making up "La Legion Noir", or the Black Legion) in four
warships, under the command of the Irish-American Colonel
William Tate landed on
22 February 1797 at
Carregwastad Head (or possibly
Llanwnda), near
Fishguard, Wales.
Their aim was to start an uprising against the English and march onwards to Bristol and London. The initial plan was to land near Bristol but adverse weather and tides forced the fleet to turn around and attempt a landing on the coast of Wales. On their way through the Bristol channel the fleet was spotted from
Ilfracombe. The fleet was spotted off the coast of Pembrokeshire as it attempted to enter Fishguard harbour. A single shot from the cannons at Fishguard fort was all that was needed to turn the fleet around and it landed on a nearby beach instead as Tate did not know that the defenders had hardly more ammunition than this.
[1]
Many of the French troops carried for the invasion were conscripted prisoners and discipline and morale were low. The invasion soon lost momentum when the convicts discovered the locals' supply of whiskey (a Portuguese ship had just called locally with alcohol) and was concluded with little harm done on either side - a few fatalities and some
looting. The local heroine of the invasion was
Jemima Nicholas, who with her pitchfork single-handedly rounded up 12 invaders.
It is thought the French troops may have mistaken local women like her, in their tall black hats and red cloaks, for British grenadiers.
The surrender took place on
25 February, signed in the Royal Oak pub in Fishguard and conducted on Goodwick sands. The Frenchmen were soon exchanged for British PoWs, there was a run on the pound, and George III patriotically sacked his French chef.
A shipwreck belonging to the invasion fleet was believed to be found in 2003 and lies off
Strumble Head.
[2]
References
1.
★ ''The Last invation of Britain by Jon Latimer
2. BBC News
★ E. H. Stuart-Jones, ''The Last Invasion of Britain'', Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1950
★ Jon Latimer, ''Deception in War'', London: John Murray, 2001, pp.21-3.
External links
★
www.historic-uk.com