In early 1780, Gálvez embarked on an expedition to capture
Mobile, which was one of only two major British military establishments left in
West Florida; the other was the capital,
Pensacola. Assembling 750 men in
New Orleans, he sailed for Mobile on January 11, reaching Mobile Bay on February 9 after being delayed by storms. He was joined on February 20 by a supporting force of 450 from
Havana, but did not begin siege operations until March 1. After
14 days of bombardment, Fort Charlotte's walls were breached, and its commander, Captain
Elias Durnford, surrendered. Gálvez in the fall of 1780
sought to capture Pensacola, launching his naval force from Mobile, but the fleet was dispersed by a major hurricane. Its tattered remnants made their way back to either Havana or New Orleans, and planning began again for an expedition in 1781. British authorities in Pensacola had, when war with Spain was imminent, attempted to shore up West Florida's defenses, but the meager resources allocated to the region meant that General
John Campbell, the military commander at Pensacola, had been able to do little to stop Gálvez's advance. By late 1780, he received some reinforcements, and managed to recruit a significant force of local Indians to bolster Pensacola's defenses. The destruction of Gálvez's expedition emboldened him to attempt the recapture of Mobile. In January 1781 he dispatched more than 700 men under the command of the Waldecker Colonel Johann von Hanxleden to go overland. This force was
defeated when it attacked one of the forward Spanish defenses of Mobile, and Colonel Hanxleden was killed. The attack prompted Spanish authorities in Cuba to enlarge the Mobile garrison. ==Pensacola==