The gale moderates on the 22nd, and …
Years: 1759 - 1759
November
The gale moderates on the 22nd, and three of Duff's ships are sent to destroy the beached ships.
Conflans sets fire to Soleil Royal while the British burn Heros, as seen in the right of Richard Wright's painting.
Hawke tries to attack the ships in the Villaine with fireboats, but to no effect.
The power of the French fleet is broken, and will not recover before the war is over; in the words of Alfred Thayer Mahan (The Influence of Sea Power upon History), "The battle of 20 November 1759 was the Trafalgar of this war, and [...] the English fleets were now free to act against the colonies of France, and later of Spain, on a grander scale than ever before".
For instance, the French will be unable to follow up their victory at the land Battle of Sainte-Foy in what is now Canada in 1760 for want of reinforcements and supplies from France, and so Quiberon Bay may be regarded as the battle that determined the fate of New France and hence Canada.
Hawke's commission will be extended and followed by a peerage (allowing him and his heirs to speak in the House of Lords) in 1776.
France experiences a credit crunch as financiers recognize that Britain can now strike at will against French trade.
The French government is forced to default on its debt.
Conflans sets fire to Soleil Royal while the British burn Heros, as seen in the right of Richard Wright's painting.
Hawke tries to attack the ships in the Villaine with fireboats, but to no effect.
The power of the French fleet is broken, and will not recover before the war is over; in the words of Alfred Thayer Mahan (The Influence of Sea Power upon History), "The battle of 20 November 1759 was the Trafalgar of this war, and [...] the English fleets were now free to act against the colonies of France, and later of Spain, on a grander scale than ever before".
For instance, the French will be unable to follow up their victory at the land Battle of Sainte-Foy in what is now Canada in 1760 for want of reinforcements and supplies from France, and so Quiberon Bay may be regarded as the battle that determined the fate of New France and hence Canada.
Hawke's commission will be extended and followed by a peerage (allowing him and his heirs to speak in the House of Lords) in 1776.
France experiences a credit crunch as financiers recognize that Britain can now strike at will against French trade.
The French government is forced to default on its debt.
Locations
People
- Edward Boscawen
- Edward Hawke, 1st Baron Hawke
- Louis XV of France
- Étienne-François, comte de Stainville, duc de Choiseul
