Rear-Admiral Jean-Baptiste Perrée (19 December 1761[1][2] – 18 February 1800[3]) was a French Navy officer who served in the French Revolutionary Wars.

Jean-Baptiste Perrée
Born19 December 1761
Saint-Valery-sur-Somme
Died18 February 1800(1800-02-18) (aged 38)
Allegiance Kingdom of France
Kingdom of France
 French First Republic
Service / branchFrench Navy
Years of service1793–1800
RankRear-Admiral
Battles / wars
AwardsSabre of honour from General Bonaparte

Career

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Born to a family of sailors in Saint-Valery-sur-Somme, Perrée started sailing in 1773 at the age of twelve as a boy on the merchantman Glorieuse, under his father.[2] In the course of the following twenty years, he steadily rose in rank in the merchant navy, took part in a campaign on the fluyt Boulonnaise in the French Navy as an aid-pilot, and earned his commission of Sea captain in 1785.[4]

Commerce raiding on Proserpine

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In 1793, when France declared war on Britain during the War of the First Coalition, Perrée enlisted in the Navy as an acting Ensign.[note 1] In September 1793, he was reported to be commanding a frigate squadron in the Western Mediterranean, fighting the inconclusive Action of 22 October 1793 against Captain Horatio Nelson.

Promoted to acting Lieutenant in May 1794,[4][note 2] and took command of the frigate Proserpine in April 1794[5] to conduct Commerce raiding operations; in his eight-month campaign, he captured over 63 British merchantmen and a 32-gun Dutch States Navy frigate[2] on 21 May.[6][note 3]

On 13 September 1794,[note 4] Perrée was Captain, and was appointed to command a naval division in the Mediterranean, comprising the frigate Alceste, under Lieutenant Lejoille, and the 18-gun brig Hazard, under Lieutenant Leduc.[7] The division returned to Toulon on 10 October.[7]

He set sail for another mission on 15 November, this time on Minerve, in consort with Alceste and the 20-gun corvette Brune, under Ensign Deniéport. The division cruised in the Mediterranean and sailed for a diplomatic mission to Tunis before returning to Toulon on 29 December.[7]

On 4 February 1795, Perrée cruised again on Minerve, this time in consort with the frigate Sérieuse, under Lieutenant Saunier. The two frigates cruised in the Mediterranean together until Sérieuse detached to ferry funds to Algiers. Minerve returned to Toulon on 24 February, and Sérieuse, on 20 May.[8]

In September 1795, was given command of a four-frigate and two-corvette squadron to prey on British shipping off the West African coast and raid their trading posts; during the campaign, he captured 54 merchantmen.[4]

On 26 April 1796, Perrée departed with the Mediterranean squadron, commanding the brand-new frigate Diane and ferrying diplomats, supplies and ammunitions to Constantinople until 14 November.[9]

In early 1797, Perrée took command of the naval division of the Adriatic Sea as a Rear-Admiral. The division comprised the frigate Diane, under Lieutenant Hubert; the corvette Brune, still under Deniéport, who was promoted to Commander; the gunboat Frimaire, under Ensign Suply; and the brig Jason, under Lieutenant Sénéquier.[10]

In early 1799, Perrée commanded the naval station of the Syrian coasts,[11] part of the Mediterranean squadron,[12] with his flag on the frigate Junon.[13]

Campaign in Egypt and the action of 18 June 1799

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In the Mediterranean squadron, Perrée took command of the 74-gun Mercure, but was replaced by Lieutenant Cambon after the landing of the troops.[14]

With the rank of captain, Perrée acted as a chief of division during the French expedition to Egypt: General Bonaparte appointed him to the Nile flotilla, where he commanded a squadron of shebeks and other light craft.[2] On 13 July,[14] the flotilla fought against Egyptian fluvial ships and forts while supplying food and ammunition to the French Army, and Perrée managed to captured some of these ships and ward off the others.[15] Wounded during the prelude of the Battle of Shubra Khit, Perée was promoted to Rear-admiral on the insistence of Bonaparte,[2] and received a sabre of honour inscribed "Bataille de Chabreis" on one side of the blade, and "Donné par le général Bonaparte" on the other.[14]

When the French campaign in the Middle East turned to Syria, Perrée took command of a squadron of three frigates and two brigs, survivors of the Battle of the Nile, to ferry supplies and artillery for the Army past Ottoman and British blockades. The squadron comprised the frigates Junon (Commander Pourquier[16]), Courageuse (Captain Trullet[17]) and Alceste (Captain Barré), and the brigs Salamine (Lieutenant Landry[18]) and Alerte (Demay[19]).[7] Arrived at Jaffa, the frigates unloaded their cargo, and furthermore shared their own ammunition, leaving the frigates with only 15 shots per gun; Junon also landed four of her 18-pounder long guns.[19]

The division then established a blockade to complete the Siege of Acre.[19] On 14 May, it was chased by two enemy ships of the line and a frigate, under Sidney Smith,[20] which it quickly eluded. In spite of specific orders to land in Europe only if he could not possibly do otherwise,[19] Perrée conferred with his officers and decided that his low supplies made it necessary for him to return to Toulon, by way of Lampedusa, where he would replenish his water.[21]

At 60 miles from Toulon, on 18 June 1799, Perrée's division met a 30-ship fleet under Lord Keith; a 28-hour chase started and in the ensuing Action of 18 June 1799, all of Perrée's ships were captured.[3][22]

Perrée was taken prisoner and exchanged almost immediately.[3] Court-martialled from 6 October to 25 November 1799 for the loss of his ships by a court presided by Vice-admiral Thévenard,[23] the court found that the superior Ottoman and British forces off Syria, the partial disarmament of the frigates and their low food and water supplies had been legitimate reasons for Perrée to return to Toulon.[21] Perrée was then honourably acquitted[3] on a unanimous decision of the council.[21]

Battle of the Malta Convoy

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From 28 November,[11] he took command of a naval division tasked to ferry food supplies from Toulon to Malta, with his flag on the 74-gun Généreux.

From 28 November, Perrée was appointed to command a small naval division tasked with supplying Malta.[3] The division was composed of the 74-gun Généreux (under Captain Cyprien Renaudin) as flagship, the 20-gun corvettes Badine and Fauvette, the 16-gun Sans Pareille and the fluyt Ville de Marseille (under Joseph Allemand).[24][25]

Perrée's division departed on 26 January 1800, but soon after, Généreux broke her mizzen tops and her main topgallant off Hyères, and had to double back for repairs.[25] The division set sail again on 10 February 1800 and arrived off La Valette only a week later, due to adverse weather. On 18, off Lampedusa, Généreux investigated a strange sail which turned out to be a British ship rejoining two sails on the horizon. Perrée ordered his squadron to flee, but Ville de Marseille was overhauled by the 74-gun HMS Alexander in the next morning, and struck her colours at 8:30.[25]

The rest of the British squadron, comprising the 74-gun HMS Alexander, Northumberland and Foudroyant, and the 32-gun frigate HMS Success, part of Keith's fleet blockading the Malta,[3] continued the chase.[26]

In the afternoon, Perrée spotted two further ships, HMS Audacious and Lion, in the North-North-West; he ordered his corvettes to adjust course, Sans-Pareille sustaining a broadsite from Alexander in the process, and gave liberty of maneuver to his captains.[26] Généreux headed East, but found herself surrounded from all directions. Perrée had anchors, boats and forage supplies throwned overboard, but at 3:15, the frigate HMS Success audaciously intercepted and engaged the much more powerful Généreux, hoping to delay her enough for the British ships of the line to catch up.[26] By 4:30, the British 74-guns had overhauled Généreux and were raking her.

A shot from the first broadside threw splinters into Perrée's left eye, temporarily blinding him. Remaining on deck, he called to his crew "Ce n'est rien, mes amis, continuons notre besogne" ("It is nothing, my friends, continue with your work") and gave orders for the ship to be turned, when a cannonball from the second broadside from Success tore his right leg off at the thigh. Perrée collapsed unconscious on the deck.[27] Généreux continued to resist until 5:30, when, overpowered, she struck her colours.[26][28]

Perrée died of his wounds in the evening.[26] On Nelson's orders, he was interred in Saint Lucy church[29] in the Dominican convent of Syracuse.[3]

Notes and references

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Notes

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  1. ^ Enseigne non entretenu (Granier, p. 162)
  2. ^ Granier (p. 162) states that Perrée was confirmed in the rank of Lieutenant in October; however, according to the Fonds Marine, he appears to have held the rank of Captain since September at least.
  3. ^ Troude names her as Vigilante in the French Navy, but she does not appear in Roche's Dictionnaire des Bâtiments.
  4. ^ Granier (p. 162) says 1795

References

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  1. ^ Étienne Taillemite, Dictionnaire des marins français, Tallandier, 2002, p. 416
  2. ^ a b c d e Levot, p. 394 in 1866 write 19 April 1761
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Levot, p. 395
  4. ^ a b c Granier, p. 162
  5. ^ Fonds Marine, p. 76
  6. ^ Troude, vol. 2, p. 330
  7. ^ a b c d Fonds Marine, p. 81
  8. ^ Fonds Marine, p. 137
  9. ^ Fonds Marine, p. 172
  10. ^ Fonds Marine, p. 190
  11. ^ a b Fonds Marine, p. 225
  12. ^ Fonds Marine, p. 228
  13. ^ Fonds Marine, p. 229
  14. ^ a b c Granier, p. 164
  15. ^ Troude, vol. 2, p. 94
  16. ^ Roche, p. 269
  17. ^ Roche, p. 131
  18. ^ Roche, p. 420
  19. ^ a b c d Troude, vol. 3, p. 163
  20. ^ Granier, p. 168
  21. ^ a b c Troude, vol. 3, p. 164
  22. ^ Guérin, p. 181
  23. ^ Fonds Marine, vol. 1, p. 229
  24. ^ Bradford, p. 246
  25. ^ a b c Troude, vol. 2, p. 198
  26. ^ a b c d e Troude, vol. 2, p. 199
  27. ^ James, Vol. 3, p. 15
  28. ^ "No. 15242". The London Gazette. 25 March 1800. pp. 296–297.
  29. ^ Garnier, p. 171

Bibliography

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