the
First Lord of the Admiralty who mobilised the
Royal Navy during the crisis. In June 1770, the Spanish governor of
Buenos Aires,
Francisco de Paula Bucareli y Ursua, sent five frigates under General Juan Ignacio de Madariaga to Port Egmont. On 4 June, a Spanish frigate anchored in the harbour; she was presently followed by four others, containing some 1400 marines. The small British force was under the command of Commander
George Farmer. Madariaga wrote to Farmer on 10 June that having with him fourteen hundred troops and a train of artillery, he was in a position to compel the English to quit, if they hesitated any longer. Farmer replied that he should defend himself to the best of his power; but when the Spaniards landed, after firing his guns, Farmer capitulated on terms, an inventory of the stores being taken, and the British were permitted to return to their country in the
Favourite.
Response When Parliament assembled in November, the MPs, outraged by this insult to national honour, demanded action from the
North government. Many were angered by what they saw as Britain's
failure to prevent France from annexing
Corsica in 1768 and feared a similar situation occurring in the Falklands. The Foreign Office "began to mobilise for a potential war". Amid this flurry of threats and counter-threats, the Spanish attempted to strengthen their position by winning the support of France, invoking the
Pacte de Famille between the two
Bourbon crowns. For a time it looked as if all three countries were about to go to war, especially as the
Duc de Choiseul, the French minister of war and foreign affairs, was in a militant mood (he had advised the Spanish government at the beginning of 1767 that France would not be ready for naval war before 1770). But
Louis XV took fright, telling his cousin
Charles III that "My minister wishes for war, but I do not." Choiseul was dismissed from office, retiring to his estates. Without French support Charles and his government were forced to back down and Louis even pressed Charles to make concessions to the British.
Compromise The crisis was resolved when
Lord North, now Britain's Prime Minister, secretly offered to abandon Port Egmont if Spain first restored it. This was satisfactory; both were done: On 22 January 1771, the
Prince of Masserano (ambassador of the Spanish Court) delivered a declaration, in which the King of Spain "disavows the violent enterprise of Bucareli," and promises "to restore the port and fort called Egmont, with all the artillery and stores, according to the inventory." The agreement also stated: "this engagement to restore port Egmont cannot, nor ought, in any wise, to affect the question of the prior right of sovereignty of the Malouine, otherwise called Falkland's islands." This concession was accepted by the
Earl of Rochford, who declared that he was authorised "to offer, in his majesty's name, to the King of Great Britain, a satisfaction for the injury done him, by dispossessing him of port Egmont;" and, having signed a declaration, expressing that Spain "disavows the expedition against port Egmont, and engages to restore it, in the state in which it stood before the 10th of June, 1770, his Britannick majesty will look upon the said declaration, together with the full performance of the engagement on the part of his catholick majesty, as a satisfaction for the injury done to the crown of Great Britain." ==Aftermath==