MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
ByLandSeaorAir_AllUniformsWelcome[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome To Land, Sea or Air  
  25th Anniversary Falklands War  
  Disclaimer  
  OPSEC  
  Group Rules  
  Copyrights  
  Site Map  
  Going MIA?  
  Our Back Up Group  
  Meet the Managers  
  â™¥Side - Boy�?/A>  
  General Messages  
  Pictures  
  Photos from NZ 07  
  VOTE FOR US  
  Our Special Days - January  
  Our Days  
  In Memory of Cpl Mike Gallego  
  In Memory of Sgt. Nick Scott  
  In Memory  
  Pro Patria  
  All Military Pages  
  Our Heroes  
  Military/News Items  
  Remembering London 7/7  
  Remembering 9/11  
  Members Pages  
  Banner Exchange & Promoting  
  Our Sister Sites  
  Email Settings  
  Links  
  MSN Code of Conduct  
  
  
  Tools  
 
Trafalgar 200 : About Nelson
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 1 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameLettie011  (Original Message)Sent: 6/8/2005 7:46 PM

EACH October 21 sailors assemble aboard HMS Victory come rain or shine. They come to lay a wreath. They come to honour the Navy’s greatest hero, its greatest victory and the men who ensured Britannia did indeed rule the waves.

But why was the defeat so crushing? And why does Nelson’s spirit continue to imbue today’s Royal Navy?

Horatio Nelson was born in Burnham Thorpe, a small Norfolk village which has changed little in a quarter of a millennium, in 1758. The son of a clergyman, he joined the Royal Navy at the age of 12 in 1771 under the patronage of his uncle.

Before his teenage years were over, the young officer had sailed to the West Indies and the Arctic �?where he survived a scrape with a polar bear. Nelson impressed his superiors, such that by the time he was 21 he had been given his first command, a brig.

A succession of commands in smaller ships �?chiefly frigates �?followed and despite war between Britain and America raging during the War of Independence, the youthful captain saw little action.

It was only when war flared up between Britain and France once more in 1793 that Nelson’s star truly began to rise. The following year, commanding the 64-gun ship of the line HMS Agamemnon �?his favourite vessel �?he lost most of the sight in his right eye when he was struck in the face by a shower of gravel during an attack on the Corsican fortress of Calvi.

In 1795, his skill as a seafarer and warrior was demonstrated when Agamemnon captured the much more powerful French ship Ca Ira. The next year, he led successful amphibious assaults to capture the islands of Elba and Capraia.

These actions did not bring Nelson’s name to the public’s attention especially, but senior officers took note.

The 37-year-old commodore finally found public adulation in 1797 after victory over the Spanish at the Battle of Cape St Vincent. In command of HMS Captain, he hauled his ship out of the line to assist the vanguard of Sir John Jervis�?force grappling with the Spaniards.

In the ensuing maelstrom of broadsides, two Spanish ships �?San Nicolas and San José �?collided while trying to escape. Nelson ordered the enemy vessels seized, personally leading the boarding party from one ship to the next; it was almost unheard of that such a senior officer would take charge of such a raiding party.

Months later, however, his bravado bordered on the arrogant when he led an ill-judged assault on Tenerife. After a first assault was thwarted by the weather, Nelson’s blood was up and he stormed the citadel of Santa Cruz �?whose defenders were well prepared and determined.

In the ensuing clash, Nelson’s upper right arm was shattered by a musket ball as he led a landing party into a hail of fire. The overall attack was a bloody failure; one in four British sailors was a casualty.

Despite this personal and professional setback, Nelson �?by now a rear admiral �?was still held in high regard by the Admiralty, so much so that when Napoleon invaded Egypt in 1798, he was given command of a 14-strong battlefleet to hunt down and destroy the French force.

It wasn’t simply that Nelson had fine ships under his command, but also that they were commanded by some of the Navy’s ablest captains �?the legendary ‘Band of Brothers�?as the admiral later called them, quoting his favourite Shakespeare play, Henry V.

What followed was the overwhelming victory of the Nile on August 1 1798 when the French fleet of 17 vessels was destroyed at anchor in Aboukir Bay. The enemy had left enough space between the head of their line and the shoals on the landward side of the bay for the RN ships to squeeze through and attack them.

Nelson followed on the seaward side, so that the French were pummeled from both sides. At the height of the battle, the magazine of the French flagship L’Orient exploded �?such was the shock of the detonation that fighting temporarily ceased.

Once again Nelson was wounded �?he feared a shrapnel wound on his forehead was fatal; mercifully it was not.

As the British fleet, by now badly damaged, moved inexorably down the French line, just two enemy ships managed to escape. Dawn cast light on the blazing and smouldering remnants of Napoleon’s once proud Egyptian task force. “Victory is not a name strong enough for such a scene,�?Nelson later wrote. Seven battleships were captured, three were burned-out hulks, and L’Orient had been destroyed. The French suffered more than 5,000 casualties, for the loss of fewer than 900 Britons wounded or killed.

The Nile was much more than a naval victory; Napoleon’s armies in Egypt were cut off and subsequently surrendered to the British in 1801 �?although ‘Boney�?himself had long since fled to France.

More than 200 years on, historians regard the Nile as a stunning victory on a par with Trafalgar. At the time, the battle was justly celebrated not just in Britain but across Europe as the seemingly invincible forces of France were finally dealt a devastating blow.

It was three more years before the admiral joined a fleet in battle once more, this time at Copenhagen when the Navy was ordered to destroy the Danish fleet to ensure the Baltic remained open to British trade.

The clash on April 2 1801 proved to be Nelson’s hardest-fought victory �?and much closer than he was prepared to admit. So punishing was the Danish fire that Nelson’s superior ordered him to break off the action. The admiral famously raised the telescope to his blind eye and said ‘I really do not see the signal!�?�?not, as people regularly misquote ‘I see no ships�?�?and continued the battle, victoriously.

At the dawn of the 19th century, the Royal Navy had reached its zenith in the days of sail. It could call upon 950 warships and 150,000 men, whose skills had been honed by years of skirmishes and battles.

Promoted vice admiral after Copenhagen, Nelson was now placed in charge of the Mediterranean Fleet in 1803. The threat of invasion loomed over Britain�?a threat which would lead to the decisive clash off Cape Trafalgar.

News of victory off Spain coincided for the British public with news of Nelson’s death. His funeral in January 1806 was on a scale rarely witnessed.

His body was preserved aboard Victory in a large water cask, initially filled with brandy, later wine, until the ship reached England in December 1805.

The admiral’s corpse was removed, an autopsy performed, and the body laid to rest in a coffin made from the mainmast of the French flagship at the Nile, L’Orient.

The body lay in state in the famous Painted Hall in Greenwich for three days before being taken by barge up the Thames to Whitehall, and finally to the Admiralty. On January 9 1806, London ground to a halt for the state funeral. Nelson’s body was hauled on a unique funeral car through the capital’s streets, watched by hundreds of thousands of people, until it reached St Paul’s Cathedral for the service of committal.

“When the Coffin was brought out of the Admiralty,�?Nelson’s nephew wrote in his diary, “there seemed to be a general Silence and every one appeared to feel for the Death of so noble and such a good Man.�?/P>

Proceedings lasted long past dusk and as Nelson’s coffin was lowered into the crypt, Victory’s crew who had accompanied their admiral on his final journey, ripped up the ensign covering the coffin and stuffed the fragments in their pockets.

Two centuries after his death, Nelson continues to inspire the Navy and the general public alike.

What captures the imagination more than other military leaders �?only Wellington and Montgomery perhaps come close in the public’s memory �?is Nelson’s humanity. He was a larger than life character in his day, feted by the people. Bold and brave, willing to take risks, badly wounded in battle, an inspiring leader, Nelson was also vain, self-centered, at times overly confident, adulterous �?Emma Hamilton was not his only, though most famous, mistress �?and craved adulation. In short, he was more than a mere sailor.

Above all, Nelson and Trafalgar set the seal on the supremacy of the Royal Navy: its training, its professionalism, its technological advantage, its esprit de corps.

It is hardly surprising then that each Trafalgar Day Her Majesty’s Ships, Royal Naval Associations and maritime societies the world over hold commemorative dinners.

On Victory, aside from a morning ceremony, the legendary signal ‘England expects that every man will do his duty�?is hoisted, and a dinner is hosted in the admiral’s cabin.

And then, with the meals over, people toast ‘the Immortal Memory of Nelson and those who fell with him�?

In 2005 such toasts will resound with particular gusto.

Further reading:

Roy Adkins �?Trafalgar: Biography of a Battle
Geoffrey Bennett �?The Battle of Trafalgar
Tim Clayton and Phil Craig �?Trafalgar: The Men, the Battle, the Storm
Edward Fraser �?The Enemy at Trafalgar
Peter Goodwin �?Nelson’s Ships
David and Stephen Howarth �?The Immortal Memory
Brian Lavery �?Nelson and the Nile
Carola Oman �?Nelson
Tom Pocock �?Horation Nelson
Alan Schom �?Trafalgar
Oliver Warner �?Nelson’s Battle
Colin White �?The Nelson Encyclopaedia

 

NELSON’S final footsteps on British soil will be recreated in style this summer, 200 years to the moment the great leader left for the Fleet.

Re-enactors will don period costume for the short walk through Old Portsmouth, following the route �?as closely as possible �?that Nelson strode on the afternoon of September 14 1805.

Two hundred years ago, the admiral climbed into a post chaise after dark at his home in Merton, near Wimbledon, on September 13, then rode throughout the night to arrive in Portsmouth around 6am the following morning, a Saturday.

He stopped at the George Hotel in Portsmouth’s High Street �?subsequently flattened by the Luftwaffe �?visited the dockyard, then returned to the hotel where he was met by senior officials in William Pitt’s government, Vice President of the Board of Trade George Rose and Treasurer of the Navy George Canning.

From there, around 2pm that Saturday, he slipped out of the back door of the hotel to avoid the crowds gathered, wandered down Green Row �?today Pembroke Road �?then down an alley at the side of Governor’s Green, through a tunnel, under Long Curtain, across the moat and through the walls of Spur Redoubt on to the beach to be rowed out to Victory, anchored off St Helen’s in the Isle of Wight.

Two centuries on, enthusiasts have commissioned a replacement post chaise to haul Nelson �?played by actor Alex Naylor �?away from Merton and ride into Old Portsmouth (it won’t run the entire journey to spare the horses) as part of a day of commemorations aimed not merely at re-enacting the historic walk, but also at passing the Nelsonian spirit on to future generations.

Falklands veteran turned maritime researcher and historian Peter Green, helping to organise the last walk, hopes the re-enactment will capture something of the spirit of the times and the man.

“To almost step back in time 200 years will be quite something �?we will give people a flavour of what happened that day,�?said Mr Green.

“In 1805 there were large crowds outside the George and the sea front was topped up with people �?they knew Nelson was in town, they knew something was happening, the Fleet was preparing to sail. You could say the scenes were similar to the Fleet sailing for the Falklands.�?/P>

 



First  Previous  No Replies  Next  Last