The Rest of the Colossus - Carlos Parilla Penagos https://www.carlosparrillapenagos.es/ |
The work continues on the current project of 1:700th ship builds as the focus shifts from the British Royal Navy to the Spanish Royal Navy and my first model in this new collection of ships, Nuestra Senora de la Santisima Trinidad or 'The Most Holy Trinity', the mighty Spanish first rate of 136 guns.
Designed by the Irish naval architect Mathew Mullen, named Mateo Mullan after his emigration to Spain, the ship was built and launched on 3rd March 1769 in the Spanish naval base at Havana in Cuba.
The mighty Santisima Trinidad as she might have looked at Trafalgar flying the pennant of Rear Admiral Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros on her mizzen mast. |
The ship was constructed from cedar wood and originally designed to carry 112 - 116 guns but a refit in 1795 saw the joining of her quarterdeck and forecastle to produce another fourth deck and thereby greater gun capacity, seeing her carrying 136 - 140 guns in her latter years, depending on which source you prefer to follow, making her unique for the largest number of guns carried by a ship of her type at the time.
Santisima Trinidad - Geoff Hunt https://www.artmarine.co.uk/default.aspx |
The weight of all those guns and her size brought issues with her sailing qualities, and despite a height reduction in 1778 and a reduction in guns carried to 130, she is reported to have constantly veered to leeward and heeled too much in any sort of a sea and was not particularly quick, gaining the nickname 'El Poderoso' in Spanish naval circles.
During the American War of Independence, Spain declared war on Great Britain in July 1779 and the Santisima Trinidad became the flagship of Admiral Luis de Cordova commander of the Spanish fleet.
Admiral Luis de Cordovaa |
Santisima Trinidad took part in several key actions during the Anglo-Spanish war which saw the Spanish fleet operating in close cooperation with the French to take on the badly stretched Royal Navy, very much concerned with supporting British forces in America as well as defending the British mainland and other core interests.
A three view picture of the East Indiaman Royal George one of the fifty-five ships in the British convoy captured on the 9th August 1780. Francis Holman circa 1779. |
On the 9th of August 1780 this overstretch was laid bare when a Franco-Spanish squadron of 31 ships of the line and 6 frigates, led by Cordova in the Santisima Trinidad, intercepted a British convoy of 63 troop transports and East and West Indiamen in the Atlantic, six days after their escort from the Channel Squadron parted company leaving them with an escort of just one ship of the line and two frigates.
Only eight ships in the convoy escaped, with the Santisima Trinidad firing on the Indiamen 'Godfrey' and 'Mountstuart' forcing them to strike, with all the captured ships being escorted into Cadiz.
With the Spanish navy very much on the offensive, a key objective was the recapture of Gibraltar which resulted in a land and sea blockade of the British possession, that forced the Royal Navy to conduct two relief convoys in 1780 and 1781 to keep the garrison supplied and able to hold out.
In 1782, another such convoy was assembled to be escorted by elements of the Channel Fleet with 35 ships of the line, under Admiral Richard Howe, to be opposed by Cordova aboard the Santisima Trinidad and 49 Franco-Spanish ships of the line assembled in the Bay of Gibraltar.
Between the 11th and 18th of October, the British convoy was successfully shepherded into the Gibraltar harbour and on the 19th Cordova did his best to make best use of the wind gage to press an attack on Howe's retiring fleet, in what became known as the Battle of Cape Spartel, with the Allied van opening fire at 17.45, before the British made sail and broke contact, with it seems their newly coppered hulls giving them the speed advantage over the slower Spanish ships.
The American War of Independence was concluded in 1783 and with Revolution in France, Spain was initially allied to Britain when the French Revolutionary War started in 1793.
However the alliance was over in 1796 and Spain declared war in August, joining forces with France forcing the Royal Navy to evacuate the Mediterranean through a combination of numbers of ships opposed against them and lost bases and allies through successful French action on land.
In November Admiral Jervis and the Mediterranean fleet were operating out of Lisbon, without a single British warship east of the Straits of Gibraltar.
In February 1797, Santisima Trinidad was now the flagship of Tiente General (Vice Admiral) Jose de Cordoba y Ramos who had become the third commander of the Spanish fleet in Cartagena within the previous six weeks.
Vice Admiral Jose de Cordoba - Naval Museum of Madrid |
The new Spanish Admiral was under considerable pressure, from the new Spanish Chief Minister Manuel de Godoy, who now exercised dictatorial control over the army and navy but, being a former guards officer, seemed to have little concept of matters naval and thus the navy found itself starved of men and material with Cordoba's predecessors sacked for voicing their concerns.
These effects were marked, particularly in the numbers and experience of men that crewed the Spanish ships, with Santisima Trinidad having a crew of 900 men only able to muster 60 men who the Royal Navy would have rated as 'able-seamen', thus the 27 ships of the line and 8 frigates in Cordoba's fleet had crews packed with a preponderance of 'landsmen' and soldiers lacking in the skills, training and experience required to fight and manoeuvre their ships at sea.
The original figurehead had been a representation of the Holy Trinity, but not considered war like enough the figurehead was changed in a pre-Trafalgar refit to the Castile Lion. |
Spain's new ally was pressing them to muster their fleet and join those of the French in Brest in preparation for the Combined Fleet to overcome the British Channel Squadron and potentially force the British to come to terms or face an invasion.
However before Cordoba could comply with that demand he was tasked with an additional mission to escort four urcas (merchantmen) carrying vital supplies of mercury used in the production process of refining silver and these were waiting at Malaga for an escort to Cadiz.
Nelson onboard HMS Minerve at Gibraltar - Gordon Frickers https://www.frickers.co.uk/art/marine-art/the-trafalgar-collection/nelson-at-gibraltar/ |
Cordoba collected his charges and by the 5th of February was sailing through the Straits of Gibraltar, detaching the 74- gun Bahama, Neptuno and Terrible to escort 28 gunboats to Algiciras as he proceeded with the Terrible later rejoining his fleet, not before chasing the 42-gun frigate HMS Minerve commanded by a certain young Commodore, Horatio Nelson returning from a secret mission from Admiral Jervis to rescue Sir Gilbert Elliot and the British garrison left on the island of Elba after the British retreat from the Mediterranean, after which he started to make a bit of a nuisance of himself before finally detecting the position of Cordoba's Spanish fleet, and sending him on his way back to Admiral Jervis, now patrolling off Cape St Vincent, to report his information.
Sadly for Cordoba, just as his plans to drop off his charges in Cadiz seemed to have reached a conclusion, his fleet including the four Urcas were blown away from Cadiz out into the Atlantic in a violent easterly gale which lasted nearly a week, leaving his inexperienced crews exhausted and desperate to get into Cadiz themselves, to recover.
On the 13th of February, Nelson found Jervis and confirmed previous reports that the Spanish fleet was at sea, but this time Nelson was able to give the Admiral a more precise indication of their position and at 08.00 the next morning, the 14th of February the British frigates accompanying Jervis's fleet fired signal guns as the Spanish fleet came into sight through a thinning mist.
Map of the Battle of Cape St Vincent from The History of Seapower by William Oliver Stevens and Allan Westcott |
In a battle that Jervis was determined to turn into a pell-mell melee in which he expected superior British sailing and gunnery would prevail, the British fleet of 15 ships of the line managed to separate the Spanish van of 5 ships of the line and the 4 Urcas under Vice Admiral Don Joaquin Moreno aboard the Principes de Astaurias 112-guns, from the remaining 18 ships under Cordoba; now a disorganised gaggle after Cordoba had tried to make a 180 degree turn to bring his ships into line on a northerly course keeping the wind and looking to enable a turn to the east behind the British line on a course for Cadiz.
After cutting in and separating Moreno's squadron, Jervis signaled for the following British ships behind HMS Britannia to tack together rather than in succession and thus close individually on the other Spanish ships to prevent their escape, supporting each other as best they could.
HMS Britannia, with Vice Admiral Thompson commanding, failed to acknowledge the signal and continued following the Victory, seemingly prepared to turn on the same point, and Cordoba looked likely to escape until Nelson, on his own initiative, conformed with Jervis's signal, and wore round to intercept the Spanish, forcing them to meet his attack long enough for the other British ships to come up and complete the victory.
At 15.00 the Santisima Trinidad found herself engaged by HMS Culloden and Captain each of 74-guns and joined by the Spanish 112-gun San Josef and the 84-gun San Nicolas, coming to the support of their flagship engaged in an hour long battle leaving both sides with serious damage.
As other British ships came up and entered the melee, the Santisima Trinidad found herself at bay surrounded by several British ships and in the closing stages of the battle she was still putting up fierce resistance against HMS Excellence 74 guns, Blenheim 98-guns and Orion 74-guns but, with her fore and mizzen masts down and close to 200 casualties from the battering, was close to striking, but was most fortunate in that having put up a white flag, then a British flag over her own, she was ignored as Jervis signaled his fleet to cease action and regroup on the starboard tack, at which the Spanish ship rehoisted her own colours and was escorted away by other less damaged Spanish ships.
HMS Captain capturing the San Nicolas and San Josef at Cape St Vincent - Nicholas Pocock |
The Spanish lost four ships of the line, two of which fell, the San Josef 112-guns and San Nicolas 84-guns, to a joint boarding by Captain Nelson on HMS Captain, added to which they also suffered 800 dead and wounded and another 3,000 prisoners aboard the captured ships. The British casualties amounted to just 73 dead and 227 wounded.
The Santisima Trinidad would live to fight another day, and would meet Nelson commanding a British fleet at Trafalgar on the 21st October 1805, her final action.
Santisima Trinidad was in the centre division of the Combined Fleet at Trafalgar, flying the pennant of Rear Admiral Baltasar Hidalgo Cisneros, astern of the French ship Heros 74-guns and ahead of the French and Combined Fleet flagship Bucentaure 74-guns, making her an obvious target as Nelson, identified Vice Admiral Villeneuve's flagship once he hoisted his pennant at 11.45 am and signaled the Combined Fleet to open fire.
Rear-Admiral Baltasar Hidalgo Cisneros flew his pennant aboard the Santisima Trindad at the Battle of Trafalgar |
HMS Victory cut the enemy line at about 12.30 delivering stern and bow rakes to the Bucentaure 74-guns and Redoutable 74-guns respectively, taking fire from the Santisima Trinidad as she passed on her port side, to turn in behind the Bucentaure sailing behind.
Closely behind the Victory was HMS Neptune 98-guns in close support which, following the flagship in, penetrated between the Bucentaure and the Santisima Trinidad, bow and stern raking them respectively, as she passed to swing around to engage the Santisima Trinidad from the starboard side; later to be joined by the Conqueror 74-guns and Africa 64-guns as the three British ships set about battering the Spanish leviathan into submission.
Her fight with the three British ships was a valiant one, but the cost from the battering she took was high, with some 30% of her crew being hit with 205 killed and 108 wounded among which were Admiral Cisneros and her commander Captain Don Francisco Javia de Uriate y Borja.
The Lion against the Pack - Carlos Parilla Penagos Carlos Parilla's excellent artwork captures the drama of the last battle of the Santisima Trinidad battered by HMS Neptune 98-guns to starboard, Conqueror 74-guns astern and Africa 64-guns to port https://www.carlosparrillapenagos.es/ |
Don Peres Galdos book 'Trafalgar' contained a realistic account of what it was like aboard the Santisima Trinidad during the height of the action, and was based on authentic accounts drawn from official records held in the National Archive in Madrid;
'The scene on board the Trinidad was a hellish one. No attention was paid to the sails. The vessel indeed was unmanageable. The energy of all was concentrated upon the business of working the guns as quickly as possible....
The English shot had torn our sails to tatters, It was if huge invisible talons had been dragging at them. Fragments of spars, splinters of wood, thick hempen cables cut as corn is cut by the sickle, shreds of canvass, bits of iron and hundreds of other things that had been wrenched away by the enemy's fire, were piled along the deck, where it was scarcely possible to move about....
The Aftermath of Trafalgar - Thomas Butterworth |
Blood ran in streams about the deck; and in spite of the sand, the rolling of the ship carried it hither and thither until it made strange patterns on the planks. The enemy's shot, fired as they were, from very short range, caused horrible mutilations. ...
The ship creaked and groaned as she rolled - and through a thousand holes and crevices in her strained hull the sea spurted in, and began to flood the hold.'
The ship itself was left dismasted, but it was the damage to her hull that proved to be her end with a large number of her crew that were still standing forced to man the pumps, battling water rising at 18 inches an hour and would leave fifteen foot of water in her hold when, after striking, her British captors abandoned the attempts to keep her afloat.
Santisima Trinidad was armed at Trafalgar and likely St Vincent with 136 guns with 34 x 36 pounder long guns on her lower deck, 34 x 24 pounders on her middle deck, 34 x 12 pounders on her upper deck, 18 x 8 pounders on her quarterdeck and 6 x 4 pounders augmented by 10 x 24 pounder obusiers (carronades).
Printed Sources referred to in this post:
The Trafalgar Companion - Mark Adkin
Fleet Battle and Blockade - Chatham Pictorial History
Next Up - Steve M and I concluded our game of Breakout Normandy this week and I will cover the last two days of battle we played out using Vassal, plus, with the current ship models all done and a pause whilst new models arrive on the stocks I have an update on my AWI Mohawk collection last covered back in October last year and further play in Tonnage Solitaire with the first three days of combat for Slow Convoy 48 in October 1941.
Simply stunning, your work is an inspiration!
ReplyDeleteHi Anton,
DeleteThanks for your comment, very much appreciated
JJ
Fantastic blog posts, very informative. I am just about to start on master and commander from warlord and was wondering where you got those lovely acrylic bases from?
ReplyDeleteHi and welcome to the blog.
DeleteYou should find the information at the bottom of the post which I have linked to here.
https://jjwargames.blogspot.com/2020/02/all-at-sea-on-stocks-in-jjs-dockyard.html
Most other stuff I have done around this project can be found in the 'All at Sea' tab at the top of the page and there is a rigging tutorial in the 'My Resources & Downloads' section in the right hand column.
Hope that helps and I hope you have fun with your new box of toys.
JJ
I really enjoyed this one JJ. Did you notice in the Cape St. Vincent painting The Santisima Trinidad is painted in the Spanish regulation standard yellow and black? One of the few paintings I have seen like that.
ReplyDeleteGreat, thank you.
DeleteYes I did, but I didn't make a reference to it because I was not sure of its source. Some of the artwork is very obviously modern or painted in the same century but not necessarily by an artist able to base their illustration on first hand accounts or actually being present at the battle.
There are some reliable accounts of the various looks of ships based on eye witnesses and the Santisima Trinidad is one of them and some artists like Nicholas Pocock and to a lesser extent his son William Innes Pocock, produced first hand sketches from the battles or of prizes captured in them and then produced accurate paintings based on them which are excellent references.
If you are interested in this aspect the Chatham Pictorial Series of books, some of which I highlighted in a recent book review, are excellent value as references, using as they do many of these first hand illustrations throughout the books in the collection of the National Maritime Museum, see the link below for the review.
https://jjwargames.blogspot.com/2020/01/chatham-pictorial-histories-fleet.html
JJ
The painting is The Battle of Cape St Vincent, 14 February 1797
Deleteby Robert Cleveley
Robert Cleveley (1747, Deptford – 28 September 1809, Dover) was an English maritime painter. He was in the Royal Navy and a contemporary. Probably knew participants of the battle. I knew the ST was in fact painted according to the Spanish Admiralty regulation standards. By 1805 those standards were expanded to allow the red and white variations.
The Painting I have used is attributed Antonio de Brugada who was born in 1804 and the painting was completed in 1858, and is held in the Naval Museum of Madrid, thus not being contemporary and unaware of the reference Senor Brugada was using I refrained from making a specific reference to the look of the ship. As you will see the artist has shown the Spanish 74 Infante de Pelayo, that was not at the battle, so that only added to my caution.
DeleteI'm aware of Cleverley's work, but I don't think he shows the ST. The two pictures of his that I know of that he did of the Battle of Cape St Vincent are held by the National Maritime Museum and I've linked below to make sure we are talking about the same picture/s, with the first showing the start of the battle with Victory raking Salvador del Mundo.
https://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/11977.html
The second shows several Spanish ships at the close of the battle including the Salvador del Mundo, San Ysidro, San Josef and the San Nicolas
https://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/11978.html
If there is one I am unaware of that you are referring to, I stand corrected, and am disappointed for not including it.
Hope that clarifies
JJ
No Jonathan, I stand corrected! You are absolutely correct! I was mistaken. The painting in question is indeed an Antonio de Brugada. So sorry. My wife tells me I'm just too argumentative. Please ignore the rantings of this old man. 😕
DeleteNot to worry, the last man who was perfect died over 2,000 years ago, and I like it when readers keep me me on my toes as I know there is a genuine and keen interest in the subject at hand.
DeleteJJ
Hello Jonathan,
ReplyDeleteWhere do you obtain your clear acrylic bases? I am having difficulty finding them with Google Search.
Regards,
Vol
Hi Vol,
DeleteYou should find the information at the bottom of the post which I have linked to here.
https://jjwargames.blogspot.com/2020/02/all-at-sea-on-stocks-in-jjs-dockyard.html
All the different size bases are listed by link there.
Cheers
JJ
Got it thank you. Now just one more, I promise! What are you using for glue? I am hearing that super glue, plastic cement, pva, etc. doesn't work well with acrylic bases. I have no experience myself with them.
ReplyDeleteThe glue I use is an all purpose adhesive, sold here in the UK as UHU, carefully applied to the centre of the hull base on the resin models or lightly on the inside curvature of the underside of the plastic models. Wipe of any excess as you don't want any on the base outside of the model. Then gently apply pressure and leave to stick for at least 12 hours for a secure bond.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't use any of those others you mention. Superglue can cause the acrylic to mist if any should get on the base around the model.
If you are a little heavy-handed with the all purpose stuff I have found it relatively easy to remove any that bubbles out from under the model with a cocktail stick. The other thing to watch for is any stringy threads from the nozzle of the tube getting on to parts you don't want it on, but again if you don't squeeze it out to heavily that's not a problem.
Hope that helps
JJ
Alright, sounds like what we call "Goop". I use it to repair all the glass or ceramic that my wife and daughters break 😕
ReplyDeleteIt never occurred to me to use it on my modeling. Thank you JJ
nice history brief
ReplyDeleteThat model looks great! Just assembled mine. What colour did you use for the red? I find that the ones I have tried so far are either too light or to dark. I don't like the army painter dragon read recommanded by Warlord either.
ReplyDeleteHi and thank you.
DeleteI use in the main Vajello Model Colour range to paint my models and I have all their shades of red and tend to choose them on the basis of the particular artwork that has inspired the look of the model.
Looking at this one, I reckon I probably used the straight 926 red on top of an undercoat of 859 black red, but don't quote me as a lot has happened in the last three years.
Cheers
JJ
Can i ask what colour red was used for the hull?
ReplyDeleteJust got my own trinidad and i realy like this colour.
Hi,
DeleteFrom memory I seem to recall using a base coat of Vallejo Black Red (859) finished off with a top coat of VJ Flat Red 957.
Hope that helps
JJ