British capture of Senegal | |||||||
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Part of Seven Years' War | |||||||
A map depicting the various kingdoms of Senegambia in 1707, by Guillaume Delisle. In the 18th century, France only controlled the city of Saint-Louis and the island of Gorée. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Great Britain | France | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Henry Marsh James Sayer | |||||||
Strength | |||||||
200 marines Light artillery 6 Royal Navy vessels: * HMS Harwich * HMS Nassau * HMS Rye (1745) * HMS Swan (1745) * HMS London (1756) * HMS Portsmouth (1756) 5 hired armed vessels |
232 officers and soldiers 92 guns A brig 6 sloops |
The British capture of Senegal took place in 1758 during the Seven Years' War with France, as part of a concerted British strategy to weaken the French economy by damaging her international trade. To this end, a succession of small British military expeditions landed in Senegal and captured Gorée and Fort Saint Louis, the French slave fort located at Saint-Louis, seizing French vessels and supplies. By late 1758 the whole of the French colony on the Senegalese coast had been captured by the British, with administrative matters being handled by the first (and only) British Governor of Senegal, Lieutenant Colonel Richard Worge.