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{{Short description|1854 naval bombardment during the Crimean War}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2016}}
{{npov|date=April 2024|reason=Written entirely from the Anglo-French perspective. Would benefit from input from the corresponding articles in Russian and Ukrainian.}}
{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict=Bombardment of Odessa
|conflict=Bombardment of Odessa
|partof=the [[Crimean War]]
|partof=the [[Crimean War]]
|image=[[File:Bombardment of Odessa.jpg|300px]]
|image=Bombardment of Odessa.jpg
|image_size=300px
|caption=Bombardment of Odessa, showing the explosion of the Imperial Mole
|caption=Bombardment of Odessa, showing the explosion of the Imperial Mole
|date=22 April 1854
|date=22 April 1854
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==Background and formation==
==Background and formation==
On 6 April 1854, soon after the declaration of war by Britain and France on Russia, the British steam frigate {{HMS|Furious|1850|2}}, under the command of Captain [[William Loring (Royal Navy officer)|William Loring]], sailed to Odessa and sent a boat into the port under a [[flag of truce]] to collect the [[Consul (representative)|British Consul]] there. When leaving the port the boat was fired upon by the Russians. The British naval commander Vice-Admiral [[James Whitley Deans Dundas|James Dundas]] demanded an explanation from Lieutenant-General [[Dmitri Osten-Sacken]], the military governor of Odessa, for this breach of the [[laws of war]]. His reply was considered unacceptable, so a squadron was quickly selected to mount a [[punitive expedition]].<ref name="LG21552">{{London Gazette |issue=21552 |date=12 May 1854 |startpage=1473 |endpage=1476}}</ref>
On 6 April 1854, soon after the declaration of war by Britain and France on Russia, the British steam frigate {{HMS|Furious|1850|2}}, under the command of Captain [[William Loring (Royal Navy officer)|William Loring]], sailed to Odessa and sent a boat into the port under a [[flag of truce]] to collect the [[Consul (representative)|British Consul]] there. When leaving the port the boat was fired upon by the Russians. The British naval commander Vice-Admiral [[James Whitley Deans Dundas|James Dundas]] demanded an explanation from Lieutenant-General [[Dmitri Osten-Sacken]], the military governor of Odessa, for this breach of the [[laws of war]]. His reply was considered unacceptable, so a squadron was quickly selected to mount a [[punitive expedition]].<ref name="LG21552">{{London Gazette |issue=21552 |date=12 May 1854 |pages=1473–1476 }}</ref>


An article by [[Karl Marx]], printed in the ''[[New York Daily Tribune]]'' of 16 May 1854, reported that the Russians had claimed that the ''Furious'' was actually carrying out a covert reconnaissance of the port, as the ''Retribution'' had done some time earlier, entering the port of [[Sevastopol]] under the pretext of delivering dispatches, but also making a survey of the defences, as had been admitted by the British press. Marx also pointed out the "ridiculousness" of the Allies requiring such justifications for launching an attack on an enemy naval base in a time of war.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://marxengels.public-archive.net/en/ME1889en.html |title=The Bombardment of Odessa |first=Karl |last=Marx |date=16 May 1854 |newspaper=[[New York Daily Tribune]] |accessdate=7 November 2015}}</ref>
An article by [[Karl Marx]], printed in the ''[[New York Daily Tribune]]'' of 16 May 1854, reported that the Russians had claimed that the ''Furious'' was actually carrying out a covert reconnaissance of the port, as the ''Retribution'' had done some time earlier, entering the port of [[Sevastopol]] under the pretext of delivering dispatches, but also making a survey of the defences, as had been admitted by the British press. Marx also pointed out the "ridiculousness" of the Allies requiring such justifications for launching an attack on an enemy naval base in a time of war.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://marxengels.public-archive.net/en/ME1889en.html |title=The Bombardment of Odessa |first=Karl |last=Marx |date=16 May 1854 |newspaper=[[New York Daily Tribune]] |access-date=7 November 2015}}</ref>


The squadron consisted of eight [[Steam frigate|steam paddle-wheel frigates]]; the French ''Descartes'', ''Mogador'' and ''Vauban'', and the British {{HMS|Furious|1850|2}}, {{HMS|Retribution|1844|2}}, {{HMS|Sampson|1844|2}}, {{HMS|Terrible|1845|2}} and {{HMS|Tiger|1849|2}}, supported by the British screw frigate {{HMS|Highflyer|1851|2}}, [[fourth-rate]] [[sailing frigate]] {{HMS|Arethusa|1849|2}}, and steam ship {{HMS|Sans Pareil|1851|2}},
The squadron consisted of eight [[Steam frigate|steam paddle-wheel frigates]]; the French ''Descartes'', ''Mogador'' and ''Vauban'', and the British {{HMS|Furious|1850|2}}, {{HMS|Retribution|1844|2}}, {{HMS|Sampson|1844|2}}, {{HMS|Terrible|1845|2}} and {{HMS|Tiger|1849|2}}, supported by the British screw frigate {{HMS|Highflyer|1851|2}}, [[fourth-rate]] [[sailing frigate]] {{HMS|Arethusa|1849|2}}, and steam ship {{HMS|Sans Pareil|1851|2}},
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==The bombardment==
==The bombardment==
[[File:Francis Hustwick - The Bombardment of Odessa, 22 April 1854.jpg|thumb|The Bombardment of Odessa, 22 April 1854, a painting by Francis Hustwick]]
On 22 April the Anglo-French fleet arrived off Odessa, and lay offshore. At 5 a.m. the first division (''Descartes'', ''Sampson'', ''Tiger'' and ''Vauban'') sailed in, and opened fire on the Russian positions from a range of about {{Convert|2000|yd|m}}, though with little effect. ''Vauban'' was hit by a [[Heated shot|red-hot shot]] that started a fire aboard and was obliged to temporarily withdraw.{{sfnp|Clowes|1901|pp=399–401}} She soon returned, bringing the screw corvette ''Caton'' with her.{{sfnp|Troude|1868|p=340}} The second division (''Furious'', ''Terrible'', ''Retribution'' and ''Mogador'') then joined the attack, while ''Arethusa'', ''Highflyer'' and ''Sans Pareil'' remained further offshore as a reserve. The attacking ships now anchored closer in, and it was not long before a shot from ''Terrible'' hit a [[Magazine (artillery)|magazine]] on the Imperial [[Mole (architecture)|Mole]], which exploded causing great damage.{{sfnp|Clowes|1901|pp=399–401}} About 24 Russian ships in the military port were set on fire, and several British and French merchant ships detained there took advantage of the confusion to escape. Meanwhile, the rocket-boats set fire to the dockyard storehouses. Late in the action the ''Arethusa'', under the command of Captain [[William Robert Mends]], engaged [[Artillery battery|batteries]] on the south side of the Quarantine Mole, until recalled. As numerous fires were now threatening the town, the attack was ended at 5.30 p.m., and the squadron withdrew.{{sfnp|Clowes|1901|pp=399–401}}
On 22 April the Anglo-French fleet arrived off Odessa, and lay offshore. At 5 a.m. the first division (''Descartes'', ''Sampson'', ''Tiger'' and ''Vauban'') sailed in, and opened fire on the Russian positions from a range of about {{Convert|2000|yd|m}}, though with little effect. ''Vauban'' was hit by a [[Heated shot|red-hot shot]] that started a fire aboard and was obliged to temporarily withdraw.{{sfnp|Clowes|1901|pp=399–401}} She soon returned, bringing the screw corvette ''Caton'' with her.{{sfnp|Troude|1868|p=340}} The second division (''Furious'', ''Terrible'', ''Retribution'' and ''Mogador'') then joined the attack, while ''Arethusa'', ''Highflyer'' and ''Sans Pareil'' remained further offshore as a reserve. The attacking ships now anchored closer in, and it was not long before a shot from ''Terrible'' hit a [[Magazine (artillery)|magazine]] on the Imperial [[Mole (architecture)|Mole]], which exploded causing great damage.{{sfnp|Clowes|1901|pp=399–401}} About 24 Russian ships in the military port were set on fire, and several British and French merchant ships detained there took advantage of the confusion to escape. Meanwhile, the rocket-boats set fire to the dockyard storehouses. Late in the action the ''Arethusa'', under the command of Captain [[William Robert Mends]], engaged [[Artillery battery|batteries]] on the south side of the Quarantine Mole, until recalled. As numerous fires were now threatening the town, the attack was ended at 5.30 p.m., and the squadron withdrew.{{sfnp|Clowes|1901|pp=399–401}}


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==Effects==
==Effects==
As a result of this "affair of honour", Odessa was essentially neutralised as a naval base, and remained so for the rest of the war, allowing the Allies to operate in the [[Black Sea]] with impunity and to thus maintain their supply lines following the subsequent invasion of the [[Crimean Peninsula]] in September.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://dawlishchronicles.blogspot.co.uk/2015/06/the-bombardment-of-odessa-1854.html |title=The Bombardment of Odessa 1854 |first=Antoine |last=Vanner |work=The Dawlish Chronicles |date=12 June 2015 |accessdate=6 November 2015}}</ref>
As a result of this "affair of honour", Odessa was essentially neutralised as a naval base, and remained so for the rest of the war, allowing the Allies to operate in the [[Black Sea]] with impunity and to thus maintain their supply lines following the subsequent invasion of the [[Crimean Peninsula]] in September.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://dawlishchronicles.blogspot.co.uk/2015/06/the-bombardment-of-odessa-1854.html |title=The Bombardment of Odessa 1854 |first=Antoine |last=Vanner |work=The Dawlish Chronicles |date=12 June 2015 |access-date=6 November 2015}}</ref>


==Order of battle==
==Order of battle==
{{multicol}}
{{Col-begin}}
{{Col-break}}
;First Division
;First Division
* HMS ''Sampson'' (6 guns), Captain [[Lewis Jones (Royal Navy officer)|Lewis Tobias Jones]].
* HMS ''Sampson'' (6 guns), Captain [[Lewis Jones (Royal Navy officer)|Lewis Tobias Jones]].
* HMS ''Tiger'' (16 guns), Captain Henry Wells Giffard.
* [[HMS Tiger (1849)|HMS ''Tiger'']] (16 guns), Captain [[Henry Wells Giffard]].
* ''Vauban'' (20 guns), Captaine de Poucques d'Herbinghem.
* ''Vauban'' (20 guns), Captaine de Poucques d'Herbinghem.
* ''Descartes'' (20 guns), Captaine Darricau.
* ''Descartes'' (20 guns), Captaine Darricau.
;Boat Division
;Boat Division
* Six [[ship's boat]]s armed with 24-pounder rockets, Commander J. B. Dickson.
* Six [[ship's boat]]s armed with 24-pounder rockets, Commander J. B. Dickson.
{{multicol-break}}
{{Col-break}}
;Second Division
;Second Division
* HMS ''Furious'' (16 guns), Captain [[William Loring (Royal Navy officer)|William Loring]].
* HMS ''Furious'' (16 guns), Captain [[William Loring (Royal Navy officer)|William Loring]].
Line 60: Line 66:
;Reserve
;Reserve
* HMS ''Arethusa'' (50 guns), Captain [[William Robert Mends]].
* HMS ''Arethusa'' (50 guns), Captain [[William Robert Mends]].
* HMS ''Sans Pareil'' (70 guns), Captain [[Sidney Colpoys Dacres]].
* [[HMS Sans Pareil (1851)|HMS ''Sans Pareil'']] (70 guns), Captain [[Sidney Colpoys Dacres]].
* HMS ''Highflyer'' (21 guns), Captain John Moore.
* HMS ''Highflyer'' (21 guns), Captain John Moore.
* ''Caton'' (8 guns<ref>{{cite web |url= http://shipscribe.com/marvap/332a.html |title=2nd class screw corvettes |first=Stephen S. |last=Roberts |work=French Navy Ships by Type, 1816-1859 |year=2015 |accessdate=6 November 2015}}</ref>), Captaine [[Louis Pierre Alexis Pothau|Pothuau]].
* ''Caton'' (8 guns<ref>{{cite web |url= http://shipscribe.com/marvap/332a.html |title=2nd class screw corvettes |first=Stephen S. |last=Roberts |work=French Navy Ships by Type, 1816-1859 |year=2015 |access-date=6 November 2015}}</ref>), Captaine [[Louis Pierre Alexis Pothau|Pothuau]].
{{multicol-end}}
{{col-end}}


==References==
==References==
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{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
;Bibliography
;Bibliography
* {{cite book |ref=harv |last=Clowes |first=William Laird |authorlink=William Laird Clowes |title=The Royal Navy: A History From the Earliest Times to the Present |url=https://archive.org/details/royalnavyhistory06clow |accessdate=6 November 2015 |volume=VI |date=1901 |publisher=Sampson Low, Marston & Company |location=London}}
* {{cite book |last=Clowes |first=William Laird |author-link=William Laird Clowes |title=The Royal Navy: A History From the Earliest Times to the Present |url=https://archive.org/details/royalnavyhistory06clow |access-date=6 November 2015 |volume=VI |date=1901 |publisher=Sampson Low, Marston & Company |location=London}}
* {{cite book |ref=harv |title=Batailles Navales de la France |first=Onésime-Joachim |last=Troude |authorlink=Onésime-Joachim Troude |volume=IV |location=Paris |year=1868 |language=French |url=https://archive.org/details/bataillesnavale00trougoog |accessdate=6 November 2012}}
* {{cite book |title=Batailles Navales de la France |first=Onésime-Joachim |last=Troude |author-link=Onésime-Joachim Troude |volume=IV |location=Paris |year=1868 |language=French |url=https://archive.org/details/bataillesnavale00trougoog |access-date=6 November 2012}}


[[Category:Naval battles of the Crimean War]]
[[Category:Naval battles of the Crimean War|Odessa]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving the United Kingdom|Odessa]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving France]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving France|Odessa]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving Russia]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving the Russian Empire|Odessa]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1854]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1854|Odessa]]
[[Category:1854 in Russia]]
[[Category:1854 in the Russian Empire]]
[[Category:Kherson Governorate]]
[[Category:Kherson Governorate]]
[[Category:April 1854 events]]
[[Category:Military history of Odesa]]

Latest revision as of 15:17, 4 May 2024

Bombardment of Odessa
Part of the Crimean War

Bombardment of Odessa, showing the explosion of the Imperial Mole
Date22 April 1854
Location
Result Franco-British victory
Belligerents
Russian Empire Russia United Kingdom United Kingdom
Second French Empire France
Commanders and leaders
Russian Empire Dmitri Osten-Sacken United Kingdom James Dundas
Strength
Shore batteries and troops
Casualties and losses
5 killed, 15 wounded

The Bombardment of Odessa was an action during the Crimean War in which a joint Anglo-French squadron of warships attacked the Russian port of Odessa.

Background and formation

[edit]

On 6 April 1854, soon after the declaration of war by Britain and France on Russia, the British steam frigate Furious, under the command of Captain William Loring, sailed to Odessa and sent a boat into the port under a flag of truce to collect the British Consul there. When leaving the port the boat was fired upon by the Russians. The British naval commander Vice-Admiral James Dundas demanded an explanation from Lieutenant-General Dmitri Osten-Sacken, the military governor of Odessa, for this breach of the laws of war. His reply was considered unacceptable, so a squadron was quickly selected to mount a punitive expedition.[1]

An article by Karl Marx, printed in the New York Daily Tribune of 16 May 1854, reported that the Russians had claimed that the Furious was actually carrying out a covert reconnaissance of the port, as the Retribution had done some time earlier, entering the port of Sevastopol under the pretext of delivering dispatches, but also making a survey of the defences, as had been admitted by the British press. Marx also pointed out the "ridiculousness" of the Allies requiring such justifications for launching an attack on an enemy naval base in a time of war.[2]

The squadron consisted of eight steam paddle-wheel frigates; the French Descartes, Mogador and Vauban, and the British Furious, Retribution, Sampson, Terrible and Tiger, supported by the British screw frigate Highflyer, fourth-rate sailing frigate Arethusa, and steam ship Sans Pareil, and the French screw corvette Caton. There were also six ship's boats armed with 24-pounder rockets; two from Britannia, and one each from Agamemnon, Trafalgar, Sans Pareil and Highflyer.[1]

The bombardment

[edit]
The Bombardment of Odessa, 22 April 1854, a painting by Francis Hustwick

On 22 April the Anglo-French fleet arrived off Odessa, and lay offshore. At 5 a.m. the first division (Descartes, Sampson, Tiger and Vauban) sailed in, and opened fire on the Russian positions from a range of about 2,000 yards (1,800 m), though with little effect. Vauban was hit by a red-hot shot that started a fire aboard and was obliged to temporarily withdraw.[3] She soon returned, bringing the screw corvette Caton with her.[4] The second division (Furious, Terrible, Retribution and Mogador) then joined the attack, while Arethusa, Highflyer and Sans Pareil remained further offshore as a reserve. The attacking ships now anchored closer in, and it was not long before a shot from Terrible hit a magazine on the Imperial Mole, which exploded causing great damage.[3] About 24 Russian ships in the military port were set on fire, and several British and French merchant ships detained there took advantage of the confusion to escape. Meanwhile, the rocket-boats set fire to the dockyard storehouses. Late in the action the Arethusa, under the command of Captain William Robert Mends, engaged batteries on the south side of the Quarantine Mole, until recalled. As numerous fires were now threatening the town, the attack was ended at 5.30 p.m., and the squadron withdrew.[3]

Casualties were very light; two killed and one wounded in Vauban, three wounded in Retribution,[3] six wounded in Sampson, and one killed and four wounded in Terrible.[1]

Effects

[edit]

As a result of this "affair of honour", Odessa was essentially neutralised as a naval base, and remained so for the rest of the war, allowing the Allies to operate in the Black Sea with impunity and to thus maintain their supply lines following the subsequent invasion of the Crimean Peninsula in September.[5]

Order of battle

[edit]

References

[edit]
Notes
  1. ^ a b c "No. 21552". The London Gazette. 12 May 1854. pp. 1473–1476.
  2. ^ Marx, Karl (16 May 1854). "The Bombardment of Odessa". New York Daily Tribune. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d Clowes (1901), pp. 399–401.
  4. ^ Troude (1868), p. 340.
  5. ^ Vanner, Antoine (12 June 2015). "The Bombardment of Odessa 1854". The Dawlish Chronicles. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  6. ^ Roberts, Stephen S. (2015). "2nd class screw corvettes". French Navy Ships by Type, 1816-1859. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
Bibliography