Action of 13 August 1780 | |||||||
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Part of the American Revolutionary War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Great Britain | France | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
John MacBride | Robert Sutton de Clonard | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
2 ships | 1 Ship of the line Privateer | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
3 killed & 21 wounded |
1 ship of the line captured 21 killed & 35 wounded 590 captured[1] |
The action of 13 August 1780 was a minor naval battle fought off the Old Head of Kinsale (County Cork, Ireland) in which the 64-gun French "private man of war" (privateer) Comte d'Artois fought two British Royal Navy ships, Bienfaisant and Charon, during the American Revolutionary War.
After Royal Navy admiral George Rodney successfully brought relief to the defenders of Gibraltar, capturing a Spanish convoy off Cape Finisterre and eight days later winning the Battle of Cape St. Vincent, his fleet returned to Britain in March 1780. One of the ships of his fleet, HMS Bienfaisant, under John MacBride, sailed back with them and kept a watch of the Irish coast in order to report if there were any movements by Spanish and French fleets in the area.[1]
Reports arrived in early August 1780 of a large French privateer, the 64-gun Comte d'Artois, which had sailed from Brest to cruise off the Irish south coast, and was at once to be dealt with.[2] MacBride was ordered to sail together with the 44-gun HMS Charon to capture Comte d'Artois.[2] After several days in search of the vessel, a mysterious sail was finally sighted early on 13 August, chasing after some of the ships of a British convoy departing from Cork.[3]