Significant military activities of the
American Revolutionary War did not occur on the
Gulf Coast until 1779, when
Spain entered the war. Before then,
New Orleans, then the capital of
Spanish Louisiana, served as a semi-secret source of money and
materiel for the
Patriot cause. The cause was quietly supported by the Spanish governors before 1779, and often mediated by
Oliver Pollock, a prominent New Orleans businessman. Pollock effectively acted as an agent of the
Continental Congress, negotiating with the Spanish governor, and taking other actions, including spending some of his own fortune, on Patriot activities along the lower
Mississippi River. In 1778
James Willing led a
raiding expedition directed against targets in British
West Florida. One prize that he captured on the Mississippi River was a British ship,
Rebecca, which he brought into New Orleans. She was brought into the
Continental Navy and rechristened in honor of
Philadelphia financier
Robert Morris. The British province of West Florida extended from the Mississippi River in the west to the
Apalachicola River in the east. HMS
West Florida had been cruising
Lake Pontchartrain since 1776 under the command of George Burdon, stopping and searching all manner of shipping, including Spanish merchants destined for New Orleans, to the annoyance of the Spanish. Burdon was unsuccessful in tracking down Willing during his 1778 raid, and returned to
Pensacola, West Florida's capital, for refit and repair late in 1778. In January 1779 Burdon was replaced at her helm by Lieutenant John Payne, who had been engaged in survey duty along the West Florida coast and knew the area well.
West Florida was a
sloop-of-war armed, according to its captors, with several four- and six-pound
cannon and carrying a crew complement of about 30. (British accounts place the crew size at 15.) ==Prelude==