Three years ago, a remarkable letter was found that contained an eyewitness account of the battle of Trafalgar. Robert Hope was a sailmaker aboard the Temeraire and when his ship reached Portsmouth a fortnight after the battle, he wrote the letter to his brother, John, a carpenter in Kent.
The letter is now held in the collection of the National Maritime Museum and tells a nerve-wracking account of the Temeraire's role in the battle, fighting alongside Victory on that fateful, legendary day.
HMS Temeraire
Portsmouth Nov 4th 1805
Dear Brother
This is with my love to you hopeing
It will find you in good health As I bless god
I am at present, what do you think of us Lads
Of the Sea now, I think they wont send their fleets
Out Again in a hurry, I suppose you know more
About the Action than I can tell you, the first
Ship that we Engaged was the Santa Trinadada
The Spanish four Decker, we engage her three
Quarters of an hour when the Victory fell
Along side of him we dropt a Stern when five
More of the Enemy’s Ships came upon us and
Engage us upon every Quarter, for one hour and
Sixteen Minutes, when one Struck but being so
Closely Engaged that we could not take possession
Of her at that time, two more Seemed to be quite
Satisfied wh [error] with what they had got so Sheered
Of, But the Other two, was determined to Board
Us, So with that Intent. one Dropt on our Starboard
Side, Called the La Fue and other dropt on our
Larboard Side called Le Doubtable, they Kept
A Very hot fire for some time But we Soon
---
Cooled them for In the height of the smoke
Our, men from the upper decks Boarded them
Both at the same time, And soon Carried the
Day, at this time, at this time [error] I Counted when
Smoke Cleared away Seventeen Prizes and one
All on fire, But we have only got four Into
Gibraltar, for a Gale of wind Came on the day
following that we was Obliged to Scuttle them
for they was so very leaky, Taken & Destroyed
In twenty five, we had forty three Killed
And Eighty five wounded, And twenty Seven
Drowned In the Prizes, I sent a letter to my
Father from the Rock, So when you receive
this Please to let him know that I am arrived
In England for I long very much to hear
from him. And Give my love to my Sister
and your Answer upon the receipt of this will
Oblige your loveing Brother
Robert Hope
Thanks for sharing this! The tone is refreshingly direct. More modern that what an officer probably would have written -- but maybe that's my ignorance of this period.
ReplyDeleteIt struck me in the same way too; I do love reading these letters...
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