This Day in History- September 29
from history.com
LORD NELSON BORN:
September 29, 1758
Horatio Nelson, Britain's most celebrated naval hero, is born in Burnham Thorpe,
England. In the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars, he won a series of
crucial victories and saved England from possible invasion by France.The son of
the village rector, he entered the British navy as a midshipman at the age of
12. He traveled the world's oceans and at age 20 was made a captain. After Spain
joined France in its alliance with the rebellious American colonies, he raided
Spanish holdings in Central America and the West Indies. In the years after the
American Revolution, his zealous enforcement of the Navigation Acts, which
restricted England's carrying trade to English ships, made him unpopular.
Between 1787 and 1792, he received no new naval commission. In 1793, however,
war broke out with Revolutionary France, and he was immediately given command of
the 64-gun Agamemnon.He served in the Mediterranean, fighting at the port of
Toulon and helping to capture Corsica. While ashore on Corsica assisting in the
siege of Calvi, he lost the sight in his right eye after being injured by debris
from a French shot. Four years later, on February 14, 1797, he acted boldly and
without orders and single-handedly took on an entire squadron of Spanish ships
that were about to surprise a British fleet off Portugal's Cape St. Vincent. For
his heroic contribution to British victory at the Battle of Cape St. Vincent,
Nelson was knighted and made a rear admiral. Later that year, he led the
unsuccessful British assault on Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canary Islands and
was shot in the right arm, forcing its amputation.After his recovery, he pursued
a French expeditionary force to Egypt and succeeded in destroying the French
fleet at the Battle of the Nile in August 1798, thereby stranding French General
Napoleon Bonaparte and his army in Egypt. Nelson was hailed as a great hero and
went with his squadron to Naples, where he began an affair with the wife of a
British minister. Nelson had a wife in England. He aided Ferdinand, king of
Naples, in his struggles against republican revolutionaries but later was
recalled to England after he refused an order to take his ships to Minorca. Due
to his overwhelming public popularity, however, Nelson was made a vice admiral
instead of being punished when he returned to England.In April 1801, Nelson
engaged Danish naval forces at the Battle of Copenhagen. Ordered to withdraw by
his superior officer during the fiercely contested battle, Nelson put his
telescope to his blind eye and said, "I really do not see the signal." An hour
later, victory was his. He was made an admiral and viscount and instructed to
return to England to protect the Channel against an expected French invasion. In
1802, a brief interlude of peace with the French began, and Nelson lived with
the minister's wife in the countryside.Upon the renewal of war in 1803, he was
given command of the Mediterranean fleet, and he blockaded the French port of
Toulon, trapping a French fleet for nearly two years. Meanwhile, French Emperor
Napoleon planned an invasion of Britain. He induced Spain to declare war against
England and in 1805 ordered the French and Spanish fleets to break out of the
British blockades and then converge as a single enormous fleet in the West
Indies. The Franco-Spanish fleet, Napoleon hoped, would then win control of the
English Channel, and an invasion force of 350,000 could cross to the British
isle.In March 1805, French Admiral Pierre de Villeneuve's fleet broke through
Nelson's blockade at Toulon under cover of bad weather. Nelson set off in
pursuit, chasing the French to the West Indies, where Villeneuve found himself
alone at the appointed meeting place in the Antilles. Not daring to attack
Nelson, he recrossed the Atlantic and retreated to the Spanish port of Cýdiz,
where a Spanish fleet lay. Napoleon called off his English invasion for the time
being, and the British blockaded Cýdiz.In October, Napoleon ordered Villeneuve
to run the blockade and sail to Italy to assist a French campaign. On October
19, Villeneuve slipped out of Cýdiz with a Franco-Spanish force of 33 ships, but
Nelson caught him off Cape Trafalgar on October 21. Nelson divided his 27 ships
into two divisions and signaled a famous message from the flagship Victory:
"England expects that every man will do his duty." In five hours of fighting,
the British devastated the enemy fleet, destroying 19 enemy ships and capturing
Villeneuve. No British ships were lost, but 1,500 British seamen were killed or
wounded in the heavy fighting. The battle raged at its fiercest around the
Victory, and a French sniper shot Nelson in the shoulder and chest. The admiral
was taken below and died about 30 minutes before the end of the battle. Nelson's
last words, after being informed that victory was imminent, were "Now I am
satisfied. Thank God I have done my duty."Victory at the Battle of Trafalgar
ensured that Napoleon would never invade Britain. Nelson, hailed as the savior
of his nation, was given a magnificent funeral in St. Paul's Cathedral in
London. A column was erected to his memory in the newly named Trafalgar Square,
and numerous streets were renamed in his honor. The HMS Victory, where Nelson
won his most spectacular victory and drew his last breath, sits preserved in
dry-dock at Portsmouth.
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