Following the British capture and demolition of the French outpost at
Chandernagore in 1757,
Mir Jafar, the
Nawab of Bengal, opened secret negotiations with representatives of the
Dutch East India Company to bring troops into Dutch holdings in the area with the goal of using them against the British. Britain and the
Dutch Republic were at peace, although tensions were high due to the
Seven Years' War, and
British East India Company administrator
Robert Clive was preoccupied with fighting the French. The Dutch directors of the outpost at
Chinsurah, not far from Chandernagore, seeing an opportunity to expand their influence, agreed to send additional troops to Chinsurah. A fleet of seven ships, containing more than fifteen hundred European and Malay troops, came from
Batavia and arrived at the mouth of the
Hooghly River in October 1759, while the Nawab was meeting with Clive in
Calcutta. The Nawab had been forced to ask the British for assistance against threats on his northern border in the interim, and told Clive that he would return to
Hooghly, summon the Dutch directors, and demand the departure of their ships. After meeting with the Dutch, he informed Clive that he had granted the Dutch some privileges, and that they would leave as soon as circumstances permitted. This news, combined with reports that the Dutch were recruiting in and around Chinsurah, led Clive to treat the situation as a real military threat. Of four ships he had available, Clive sent one out in an attempt to request assistance from
Admiral Cornish, who was patrolling the coast. The Dutch captured this ship when they seized several smaller British vessels on the Hooghly River. Clive called out the militia and put out calls for volunteers, increased the fortifications on the river batteries, and sent Colonel
Francis Forde with five hundred men toward Chandernagore with an eye toward capturing the Dutch outpost at
Baranagore and intercepting the Dutch should they try to take Chandernagore. The Dutch landed their troops on the northern shore of the Hooghly on 21 November, just beyond the range of the British river batteries, and marched for Chinsurah. ==Battle==