Battle of Grand Port, naval battle between France and Britain on August 22–27, 1810, at Île de France (Mauritius), which was one of the last French overseas possessions to be captured by Britain. The Indian Ocean island was used as a base for raids on British trade into 1810, as well as to support French troops fighting the British in India, and its harbor, Grand Port, was the scene of a rare heavy naval defeat for Britain, with four frigates lost. It was Britain’s worst defeat at sea during the Napoleonic Wars.
France’s possessions in the Indian Ocean, then known as the Île Bonaparte and Île de France (now Réunion and Mauritius, respectively) had been used throughout the Napoleonic Wars as bases from which to launch attacks on Britain’s valuable trade with India and the East. After various naval skirmishes and ships captured and recaptured on each side, Île Bonaparte was taken by the British in July 1810, and the remaining fighting then focused around Île de France.
The British began with a series of attacks on Grand Port in the south of the island. Before long, a French squadron of three warships slipped into the anchorage following a brief combat. The British commander, Captain Samuel Pym, decided to attack the French, even though he knew that his ships would only be able to move in one at a time through the narrow, twisting channel.
The attack, on August 22, turned into a complete fiasco. One British warship ran aground on a sandbar, and two others, having following French buoys laid out in a ruse, sailed into a coral reef and were set afire to deny the French their capture. The one British ship that managed to get close to the French could not get most of its guns to bear and consequently was battered into wreckage. On August 27 the last ship, which had still been trying to escape out of the bay, surrendered when French reinforcements arrived. Nesbit Josiah Willoughby, captain of the British warship HMS Nereid, and the French commander, Guy-Victor Duperré, were both severely wounded in the battle and recuperated together in a private home that now serves as Mauritius’s National History Museum,
The French success was ultimately short-lived. The British soon sent an armada of 60 ships and landed a combined British-Indian force numbering 10,000 troops. The far smaller French force surrendered the Île de France on December 3, 1810, and Mauritius became a British possession, remaining so until gaining independence in 1968.
Losses: British, 4 frigates, nearly 300 dead or wounded; French, one ship lost, 150 dead or wounded.