The British, under Hawke, maintain a close …

Years: 1759 - 1759
November
The British, under Hawke, maintain a close blockade on the French coast in the vicinity of Brest during 1759.

In this year the French have made plans to invade England and Scotland, and have accumulated transports and troops around the Loire estuary.

The defeat of the Mediterranean fleet at the Battle of Lagos in August makes the invasion plans impossible, but Choiseul still contemplates a plan for Scotland, so the fleet is ordered to escape the blockade and collect the transports assembled in the Gulf of Morbihan.

During the first week of November a westerly gale comes up and, after three days, the ships of Hawke's blockade are forced to run for Torbay on the south coast of England.

Robert Duff is left behind in Quiberon Bay, with a squadron of five 'fifties' (ships of the line with fifty cannons) and nine frigates to keep an eye on the transports.

In the meantime, a small squadron from the West Indies joins Hubert de Brienne, Comte de Conflans, in Brest and, when an easterly wind comes on the fourteenth, Conflans slips out.

He is sighted by HMS Actaeon, which had remained on station off Brest despite the storms but which failed to rendezvous with Hawke, by HMS Juno and Swallow which try to warn Duff but are apparently chased off by the French, and by the victualler Love and Unity returning from Quiberon, which sights the French fleet at 2 pm on the fifteenth, seventy miles west of Belle-Isle.

She meets Hawke the next day and he sails hard for Quiberon into a SSE gale.

Meanwhile, HMS Vengeance had arrived in Quiberon Bay the night before to warn Duff and he has put his squadron to sea in the teeth of a WNW gale.

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