Only off the coast of France, and placed on the principal sea-borne supply route to the French naval base at
Brest, the Channel Islands, including Jersey, was a location of strategic importance during any war between Britain and France. Large numbers of privateers operated out of the islands, causing chaos amongst French merchant shipping. Jersey privateers even operated off the coast of America. The French government decided to neutralise this threat. Furthermore, at the time,
Gibraltar was in the midst of the
Great Siege: contemporary British newspapers reported that the attack on Jersey was an attempt to distract British attention from Gibraltar and divert military resources away from the siege.
Defences in Jersey Aware of the military importance of Jersey, the British government had ordered that the island be heavily fortified. On 28 May 1778 the
Governor of Jersey, Field Marshal
Henry Seymour Conway, submitted plans to Lord Weymouth for the construction of 30
round towers to forestall, or at least impede French incursions on the island. King
George III granted approval and funding on 5 July 1778. Perhaps four towers had been completed by the time of the Battle of Jersey, none where the French would land. Gun batteries, forts and redoubts already existed around the coast, and were being improved and rearmed. All adult males had for centuries been required by law to serve in the
Jersey Militia which in 1780 comprised some 3,000 men in five regiments, including artillery and dragoons. British troops included: •
71st (Highland) Regiment of Foot (Fraser's Highlanders) •
78th (Highland) Regiment of Foot (Seaforth Highland) •
83rd Regiment of Foot (Royal Glasgow Volunteers) •
95th Regiment of Foot (Reid's) •
1st (Northwest) Regiment of Jersey Militia •
3rd (East) Regiment of Jersey Militia •
6th (South West) Regiment of Jersey Militia • 700 "Invalids" (semi-retired reservists) A total force amounting to about 6,250 troops of all types was available on Jersey. A naval force, the "Jersey Squadron", was also based in the island, but was on a cruise against the Dutch at the time of the invasion.
Previous Failed French attack (1779) On 1 May 1779, during the
Anglo-French War (1778–1783) a French force under the command of the French born
Prince of Nassau-Siegen attempted a landing at St Ouen's Bay. Early that morning lookouts sighted five large vessels and a great number of boats some three
leagues off the coast, proceeding towards the coast to effect a landing. Guns on the cutters and small craft supporting the landing fired
grapeshot at the defenders on the coast. The defenders, the half regiment of
78th Seaforth Highlanders and Jersey militia, together with some field artillery that they dragged through the sand of the beaches, had by fast marching arrived in time to oppose the landing. The defenders were able to prevent the landing, suffering only a few men wounded when a cannon burst. The French vessels withdrew, first holding off a league from the coast before leaving the area entirely. De Rullecourt was an adventurer and a colonel in the
French Army. King
Louis XVI had promised de Rullecourt the rank of
general and the
Cordon rouge as soon as he had control of the town of
Saint Helier, the island's capital. The second commander was an Indian prince named
Mir Sayyad, who had been an ally of France in the
Seven Years' War and moved to
Paris upon the war's conclusion. Sayyad participated in the invasion and advised Rullecourt to sack the town and massacre all the inhabitants. One British officer wrote of him: "If our fate has depended on him, it would not have been of the most pleasant; he advised the French General (Rullecourt) to ransack everything and to put the town to fire and to blood." Rullecourt ignored Sayyad's advice. Officially the expedition was a private affair. However, funding, equipment, transport and troops were provided by the French government. In order to conceal their involvement, the government went so far as to order the 'desertion' of several hundred regular troops to De Rullecourt's forces. On 5 January 1781 the expedition set out from
Granville, consisting of some 2,000 soldiers in four divisions. There was a storm which scattered some ships and only 1,200 initially made it to Jersey. Jersey still celebrated 6 January as 'Old Christmas Night', and the French landed undetected. The 800 men of the first division landed at La Rocque,
Grouville, on the south east coast and passed close by the guards without being noticed. A French officer even said that he had slept beneath the guards, but that the guards had not heard the French. The guards were subsequently put on trial, where it was found they had abandoned their post to go drinking. The French first division stayed there most of the night. The 400 men of the French second division landed amongst rocks and were entirely lost. The initial British report was that a privateer and four transport vessels had been lost, together with "upwards of 200 men". The boats that contained the third division, consisting of 600 men, separated from the rest of the fleet and were unable to join it. The fourth division, consisting of 200 men, landed early in the next morning at La Rocque. The total of the French troops landed on the island was therefore about 1,400. == Prelude ==