Synopsis
The story of the tiny Dutch island of St Eustatius
- the Golden Rock - in the Lesser Antilles, once the
richest trading centre in the Caribbean and a major
source of supply for arms and necessaries for the American
rebels in the War of Independence, will be known to
few, other than students of that war or British naval
history.
The events which followed
Britain's declaration of war on the Dutch in December
1780, to pre-empt a threatened alliance with Britain's
enemies, France and Spain, and the consequent seizure
of the island in February 1781, by Admiral Sir George
Brydges Rodney and Major-General Sir John Vaughn, reflect
little credit upon those joint-Commanders-inChief or,
indeed, upon the government of King George III.
After some years of extensive
and penetrating research, Ronald Hurst has pieced together
the whole story and given us a fascinating and wholly
authentic account of the rape of St Eustatius and its
aftermath. He has laid bare the shameful conduct of
those who busied themselves with the stripping of the
assets of the island and its people: not least we are
given an intriguing view of the activities of Lieutenant-Colonel
James Cockburn of the 35th Regiment of Foot, Vaughan's
Quartermaster-General and, later Governor of the island.
For the highly controversial surrender to the French
over which he presided, he would ultimately be court-martialled
and cashiered.
With what can only be described
as poetic justice, the British spoils of the operation
were brilliantly snatched by the French Admiral La Motte
Picquet even as the Prize Convoy approached home waters,
leaving Rodney and Vaughan with nothing but a public
tongue-lashing from Burke in the Commons and a mountain
of law suits to combat.
It is one of the quirks
of history that both should survive this episode to
have honours conferred upon them for later deeds - Rodney,
who became a peer in 1782, for his crushing victory
over the French in the Battle of the Saints in April
of that year and Vaughan to be promoted to Lieutenant
General and appointed Governor of the Leeward Islands,
where he died in 1795.
Ronald Hurst's natural
gift as a story-teller and his deep knowledge of the
period have produced a tale that is brilliantly told
and has not a dull line in it.
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