Blockade of Western Cuba
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The Blockade of Western Cuba, also known as the Watts' West Indies Expedition of 1591, was an English privateering naval operation that took place off the Spanish colonial island of Cuba in the Caribbean during the Anglo–Spanish War. The expedition along with the blockade took place between May and July 1591 led by Ralph Lane and Michael Geare with a large financial investment from John Watts and Sir
Walter Raleigh Sir Walter Raleigh (; – 29 October 1618) was an English statesman, soldier, writer and explorer. One of the most notable figures of the Elizabethan era, he played a leading part in English colonisation of North America, suppressed rebelli ...
. They intercepted and took a number of Spanish ships, some of which belonged to a Spanish plate convoy of Admiral Antonio Navarro, and protected by the Spanish navy under Admiral Diego de la Ribera intending to rid English privateers. The English took or burnt a total of ten Spanish ships including two galleons, one of which was a valuable prize.Marley p 124 With this success and the loss of only one ship the blockade and expedition was terminated for the return to England. The blockade was one of the most successful English expeditions to the
Spanish Main During the Spanish colonization of America, the Spanish Main was the collective term for the parts of the Spanish Empire that were on the mainland of the Americas and had coastlines on the Caribbean Sea or Gulf of Mexico. The term was used to di ...
during the war militarily and financially.Nichols/Williams p 66


Background

In early 1591 an English fleet had been organised for a raiding expedition to the
Spanish West Indies The Spanish West Indies or the Spanish Antilles (also known as "Las Antillas Occidentales" or simply "Las Antillas Españolas" in Spanish) were Spanish colonies in the Caribbean. In terms of governance of the Spanish Empire, The Indies was the d ...
. The expedition had been financed in a joint stock venture and was organised into three fleets. The first and main fleet was financed largely by John Watts, but also had investment from Walter Raleigh, Paul Bayning, and Sir Francis Drake. The expedition's captain was
William Lane William Lane (6 September 1861 – 26 August 1917) was an English-born journalist, author, advocate of Australian labour politics and a utopian socialist ideologue. Lane was born in Bristol, England into an impoverished family. After showin ...
of the 120-ton ''Centaur'', while second-in-command was Captain Michael Geare in the 150-ton ''Little John'', and the 80-ton ''Pegasus'' under Captain Stephen Michell and the pinnace ''Fifth Part''. The back up fleet was composed of two ships – ''Margaret'' of 60 tons under Captain Christopher Newport and the 50-ton ''Prudence'' under Captain John Burough. The other part of the fleet had been financed largely by Sir George Carew – the 200-ton ''Hopewell'' (alias ''Harry and John'') of Captain William Craston, the 130-ton bark ''Burr'' of under Captain William Irish, the 35-ton ''Swallow'' under Ralph Lee, and the 30-ton ''Content'' under Captain Nicholas Lisle.Southey p 389 They were to attack and raid any Spanish or Portuguese shipping in the area of Hispaniola and Cuba with the aim of making a profit.


Expedition

They set out from Plymouth in the Spring of 1591, swinging by way of the coast of Spain as a
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to fool the Spanish as to their real destination. In April 1591 while off Cadiz ''Margaret'' under Newport and ''Prudence'' caught site of a large Spanish ship; a large barque which was soon captured. Newport found in the prize bullion, money, hides,
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s,
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, and other valuables. Newport sent the prize home and the fleet proceeded west toward Cuba and rendezvoused with some of the fleet between
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and
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in May 1591. Despite the weather separating many ships they all arrived in the
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a week later.Andrews pp 165–66 The expedition's first success came in late May when a 150-ton Spanish merchantman ''Rosario'' of Master Francisco González was captured by ''Marageret'' and ''Prudence'' near La Yaguana off Hispaniola. Rosario's crew was released but their vessel was pillaged for any valuables of which some were found. The prisoners informed the English that a Spanish fleet of seven galleons, two galleys, and two pinnaces with 2,000 men in total were destined to arrive in the area of Western Cuba. This force was under the command of Admiral Don Diego de la Ribera in command of the Tierra Firme fleet. He had left Havana in early June to sweep any English privateers from the designated area as this was in anticipation of a plate fleet led by Antonio Navarro de Prado.


Blockade

The English therefore decided on a
blockade A blockade is the act of actively preventing a country or region from receiving or sending out food, supplies, weapons, or communications, and sometimes people, by military force. A blockade differs from an embargo or sanction, which are leg ...
of Western Cuba and risked the confrontation with Ribera. The English took up position near
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in mid-June to await the arrival of Spanish ships.


Corrientes

On 23 June ''Burr'', ''Hopewell'', ''Swallow'', and ''Content'' arrived between Cape Corrientes and Cape San Antonio and soon sighted six sail. Having believed they might have been treasure ships from Cartagena the English closed, only to discover the force was Ribera's 700-ton flagship
Galleon Galleons were large, multi-decked sailing ships first used as armed cargo carriers by European states from the 16th to 18th centuries during the age of sail and were the principal vessels drafted for use as warships until the Anglo-Dutch W ...
''Nuestra Señora del Rosario'', Vice Admiral Aparicio de Arteaga's 650-ton ''Magdalena'', two other large galleons, and a pair of galleys. Despite being heavily outnumbered the English stood formation and a long-range exchange commenced at 7:00 am. This lasted for the next three hours, after which the English formation scattered. During this time ''Burr'' exploded from a catastrophic fire in the magazine either from a stray Spanish shot or by complete accident. Irish and sixteen survivors were rescued by the ''Swallow'' which soon after withdrew from the area. Soon after the 100-ton galleys ''San Agustín'' and ''Brava'' then closed in on the two remaining English vessels and attempted to board by grappling. They were however repelled by heavy gunfire from ''Hopewell'' and ''Content'' in a defensive position. The Spanish galleys, unable to make an impression and suffering considerable damage then stood off and rejoined de la Ribera's galleons. Soon after the English ships departed and sailed to Cape San Antonio but sighted nothing of value. ''Content'' got lost during the night and was unable to find any other ships and may have headed all the way to
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. On 29 June ''Hopewell'' and ''Swallow'' returned to Cape Corrientes to find no sign of any Spanish ships under de la Ribera. Both ships soon met up with ''Centaur'', ''Pegasus'', ''Little John'', ''Prudence'', and ''Fifth Part''. They were joined by Captain John Oker's ''Lion'', a lone ship from
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operating independently. On 3 July while part of the formation was watering inshore off Corrientes; ''Pegasus'' and ''Centaur'' caught sight of a number Spanish ships. After a quick pursuit they overhauled and captured the 150-ton Spanish armed merchantmen ''Santa Catalina'' under Captain Martín Francisco de Armendáriz, and the 100-ton escorting frigata ''Regalo de Dios''. At the same time the other escorting frigata was trapped and captured by ''Lion'' and ''Swallow''. The Spanish ships had been bound from
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to Havana carrying valuables which included precious stones and hides.


Havana

On 5 July, the English agreed to all sail together with their prizes until they passed the Cuban capital. Upon having reached Matanzas; ''Prudence'' and ''Lion'' continued up the
Old Bahama Channel The Old Bahama Channel ( es, Canal Viejo de Bahama) is a strait of the Caribbean region, between Cuba and the Bahamas. Geography The strait/channel is located off the Atlantic coast of north-central and northeastern mainland and the Sabana-Camag ...
toward England with their prizes. The next day ''Centaur'', ''Pegasus'', ''Hopewell'', ''Little John'', ''Swallow'', and ''Fifth Part'' reversed course to take up station to blockade the west of Havana. Despite the risk of the more heavily armed galleons of Ribera aimed at destroying them, the six English ships awaited incoming Spanish ships. On the morning of 15 July ''Pegasus'' and ''Little John'' sighted a large Spanish ship. The English sailed towards her, attacked the ship, and after heavy hand-to-hand combat and a number of casualties, they boarded and overwhelmed the Spaniard forcing its surrender. The captured Spanish ship was the 300-ton Spanish galleon which turned out to be the ''San Juan''; her captain Agustín de Paz was heading from
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to Havana. The ''San Juan'' was thoroughly pillaged, after which she was then burned with the prisoners taken ashore. From the prisoners and documents they learned that a Spanish convoy was behind the ''San Juan''. On the same day more success came to the English as ''Swallow'', ''Centaur'', ''Hopewell'', and ''Fifth Part'' pursued four Spanish coastal ships which were surrounded and captured. They were pillaged and two were used as store ships while the other two were burned. Early the next day, the first elements of the main Spanish convoy had arrived in the area from Veracruz under Admiral Navarro. The English took watch and an opportunity came about when one of the lookouts spotted a lone ship; noted as being too far ahead of the rest of the convoy. At midday ''Centaur'' and ''Little John'' attacked and boarded the vessel from the rear, while the ''Pegasus'' pounded the starboard side of the ship. After a sharp half an hour fight in which William Lane was injured, the ship was taken. The captured prize was a 240-ton armed merchant galleon from
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, the ''Santa Trinidad'' under Captain Alonso Hidalgo. The ''Santa Trinidad'' prize proved so rich that Lane immediately ordered the English to quit their watch outside Havana and protect the ship at all costs. They sailed home before the rest of the Spanish plate fleet along with Ribera sortied on its homeward leg.


Aftermath

The English fleet arrived at Plymouth a few months later with the eight captured ships amid much rejoicing. In all Watt's expedition was a huge success – eight prizes were taken in all worth a total of £40,000 which produced on investment of at least 200 per cent regardless of embezzlement and pillage which crew members committed to supplement their normal one third share granted in lieu of wages. Half of this went to
Queen Elizabeth I Elizabeth I (7 September 153324 March 1603) was Queen of England and Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death in 1603. Elizabeth was the last of the five House of Tudor monarchs and is sometimes referred to as the "Virgin Queen". El ...
, the Lord Admiral Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham with the rest shared between Watts and Raleigh. The ''Trinidad'' was the richest yielding £20,000 alone with
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, hides, and
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. Watt's had taken most of the prizes and the money, and Carew who funded a small part asked
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to intervene on a matter of fair distribution.Andrews p 26 The Spanish on the other hand had been frustrated – de La Ribera had failed to clear any of the English from Western Cuba and could do little about the blockade. The Spanish Governor of Cuba Juan de Tejeda complained bitterly particularly as the English had sent him letters and compliments during the blockade: The blockade of Western Cuba was one of the most successful English expeditions of the war militarily and financially. The following year more expeditions were launched by the English led by Christopher Newport and funded again by Watts and Lane. Although they didn't repeat the huge success of the previous year's expedition, their operations forced the Spanish to delay the departure of two Treasure fleets. As a result, they only reached Spain in the Spring of 1593.Bradley p 100


References

;Citations ;Bibliography * * * * * * * * * * {{cite book, last1=Wagner, first1=John, title=Historical Dictionary of the Elizabethan World: Britain, Ireland, Europe and America, date=2013, publisher=Routledge, isbn=9781136597619 Naval battles of the Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604) Conflicts in 1591 16th century in the Caribbean 1591 in the British Empire 1591 in the Spanish Empire