Map/Chart > The Caribbean
A Chart of Martinique, shewing the facility by which it may be completely blockaded by four ships of war
This beautiful, coloured and previously unpublished plan for the blockade of Martinique tells a fascinating story
| Technical Information |
| Reference: |
A510 |
| Date |
1803-1804 |
| Hydrographer/Surveyor/Artist: |
Unknown |
| Size Of Original: |
w 21.5" x h 17" |
| Paper Type |
German Hahnemuhle Etching Paper 310gms |
Description
This delightful little chart is in fact a plan for the
British blockade of the French controlled island of Martinique during the
Napoleonic War made toward the end of 1803. The inscription, or explanation, makes for interesting reading as
to the proposed plan of how to use the ships to patrol.
Once the British commander, Commodore Samuel Hood, decided
to implement the blockade of the Island he was able to curtail the operations
of privateers and intercept supplies destined for the French garrison. His next move was
to fortify the rock off the southern coast of the island. Hood recognized that if the Island were fortified it would effectively allow the British to control
the shipping approaching the ports on the western side of the island, as well
as navigation between Martinique and its southern neighbour, St Lucia.
This chart (and the inscription), was made before the
fortification of Diamond Rock was started.
It talks of the benefit of the view afforded from the top of the masts of the patrolling frigates, which was estimated at 15
miles and that the view from the top of the rock was 25 miles. Once Hood, thanks to the efforts of his First Lieutenant
James Wilkes Maurice, had finished the fortification (which included two 18
pounder cannons installed on the summit of the Rock, along with a garrison of 120 men) on the
7th February 1804, he wrote to the Admiralty to inform them that he had
commissioned the rock as a sloop called 'Fort Diamond'.
Elsewhere on the rock the British established a hospital in one of the
caves and built several more gun batteries and transformed it into a formidable bastion which was later to be a major thorn in the side of the French and the Spanish.
The chart itself is beautifully drawn and coloured but it pays
little attention to details of the island, presumably on the basis that there
was never any intention, during this campaign, to invade. |