Villaret's retreat It was one of Warren's ships, the frigate
HMS Arethusa, which first discovered the French as Villaret led his fleet out from the sheltered anchorage. Lookouts on
Arethusa miscounted the French fleet, identifying 16 ships of the line and ten frigates; Warren immediately sent word to Bridport while ordering his convoy to turn away from the French. Villaret did not pursue Warren's force: he may not have gauged its true strength correctly, and his ships were running low on provisions having taken aboard only enough for 15 days in their haste to leave Brest a week earlier. On the morning of 20 June, Warren's force sighted Bridport's fleet to the south-east, the admiral sending orders to Warren to detach his three ships of the line to bolster Bridport's fleet in the face of the supposedly more numerous French force. Without waiting for these reinforcements, Bridport sailed back towards the coast against the wind, seeking to place his fleet between the Quiberon expedition and Villaret's ships. The adverse southeasterly winds frustrated both fleets, and it was not until 03:30 on 22 June that lookouts on Bridport's scouting frigates
HMS Nymphe and
HMS Astrea finally discovered the French in the distance to the southeast, On seeing the larger British fleet, to which Warren's detached ships had still not joined, Villaret ordered his fleet to turn back towards the land and Bridport followed, seeing that the French admiral did not intend to offer battle. Bridport followed in his 100-gun
first rate flagship
HMS Royal George, accompanied by the remainder of the fleet, which included another 100-gun ship
HMS Queen Charlotte and seven 98-gun
second rate ships. All day the chase continued: at 12:00 the French fleet were approximately distant, and all through the afternoon the British ships slowly gained on their opponents, both sides hampered by long periods of calm weather.
Alexandre had been a British ship until November 1794, when she had been captured in a
sharp engagement with a French squadron in which the ship had been badly damaged. The ship was a poor sailer, and its position was worsened by poor handling by Guillemet who did not follow Villaret's orders to form a
line of battle rapidly enough. Against expectation, Bridport's leading ship was
Queen Charlotte, which had attained an unusually fast speed for a first rate through the carefully planned sailing of Captain
Sir Andrew Snape Douglas. Immediately behind Douglas was Captain
Richard Grindall in
Irresistible, with
Orion,
Colossus,
Sans Pareil and
Russell a short distance behind the leaders and the rest of the fleet substantially to the rear.
23 June , 1812)|alt=Sea scene. On the proper right three sailing ships with tattered sails and twisted masts are in group, smoke billowing from their sides. On the proper left are two more ships in a similar condition. Other ships are less distinct in the background and in the centre of the background is a large fort with cannon emplacements. With
Alexandre now in danger of becoming isolated, Villaret sent the frigate
Régénérée to take the lumbering vessel under tow at 05:00. Just under an hour later, Douglas brought
Queen Charlotte within range, Guillemet firing his
stern-chasers at his three-decked opponent. Douglas responded with his bow-chasers, gradually bringing his main battery into range and joined by Captain
Sir James Saumarez in
Orion, which opened fire shortly after 06:00. The frigate captain, aware that his ship was powerless against two such opponents, abandoned the tow and sped ahead to rejoin the French fleet. Villaret's force had once more divided, with
Formidable under Captain
Charles Linois a little way ahead of
Alexandre and Villaret in his 120-gun flagship
Peuple ahead of
Formidable. With the French admiral were
Redoutable,
Mucius,
Wattignies,
Tigre and Vence's flagship
Nestor, while the remainder of the fleet had pushed on ahead and were now substantially advanced. At 06:15,
Queen Charlotte passed
Alexandre and began firing on
Formidable, Linois returning fire against his much larger enemy for fifteen minutes before a fire broke out on the
poop deck. As the French crew scrambled to extinguish it,
Sans Pareil, flagship of Rear-Admiral
Lord Hugh Seymour, reached the ship and fired a broadside in passing, causing
Formidable to lose speed and fall further back from the main body of the French. The fire from
Queen Charlotte had reduced Linois's ship to a wreck, with the rigging torn and more than 320 men killed or wounded from a crew of 717. As
Sans Pareil passed ahead of the battered ship, the mizzenmast on
Formidable collapsed over the side and Linois, seeing the rest of the British fleet rapidly approaching,
struck his colours and surrendered. As
Sans Pareil and
Queen Charlotte battled
Formidable,
Colossus and
Russell, joined by the second rates
HMS London and
HMS Queen, pushed on to the French centre where Villaret's ships were awaiting them, the French admiral repeatedly attempting to form his ships into a line of battle to receive the British attack, without success. At 07:00, four British ships and six French fought a confused melee while the French vanguard continued eastwards without pause and the slower portions of the British fleet struggled to come up in the light winds. Even as his ship fell back, Douglas continued to engage the French at long range, turning the guns on
Peuple and
Tigre, joined by
Sans Pareil which attacked
Tigre under Captain
Jacques Bedout and forced it out of the French formation with severe damage. Villaret again attempted to gather his forces in support of
Tigre, and even positioned his frigate ahead of his own fleeing ships in hope of cutting off their retreat and forcing them to imitate his own manoeuvres, but in vain; "they would have passed over my very body had not
representant Topsent taken command and prevented a collision", he wrote in his report. As
Tigre fell out of line,
Queen and
London joined the attack on the isolated ship, and Bedout was forced to surrender in the face of overwhelming odds. The French ship had been severely damaged, with of water in the hold, the masts and rigging badly torn and more than 130 men killed or wounded, including Bedout, who had been hit three times. At 07:57, Bridport's
Royal George reached the combat, Douglas falling in behind his ship in anticipation of a renewed attack, the crew of
Queen Charlotte having conducted enough hasty repairs to regain control of their ship. At 08:15 Bridport signaled
Colossus under Captain
John Monkton, the leading British ship more than ahead of the flagship, to return to the fleet. He repeated the order to Seymour in
Sans Pareil who was almost as far advanced in combat with the retreating
Peuple, Bridport then pulled ahead in the pursuit, catching the badly damaged
Peuple approximately west of Groix and firing one broadside at the French flagship and another at
Tigre, which Bridport was not aware had already surrendered. At 08:37, ignoring the nearby
Peuple and the remainder of the French fleet scattered between Groix and the
River Laïta, Bridport turned away to the south-west followed by the British fleet. ==Aftermath==