The second dispatch By 28 October Collingwood had transferred his flag to
Euryalus and was able to send a second dispatch containing this information from some of the ships. Lieutenant
Robert Benjamin Young, commanding the cutter , (the smallest vessel present at the Battle of Trafalgar), took this dispatch to
Faro on the Portuguese Algarve where it was handed to the British consul who delivered it to the British Embassy in
Lisbon. From there it sailed on 4 November aboard the next routine packet vessel, the
Lord Walsingham, which reached Falmouth on 13 November. A special carriage carried the mails over the route Lapenotière had followed, and reached the Admiralty in London on Friday 15 November. The casualty lists appeared in
The Times on Monday the 18th, thus ending the eleven days of anxiety for the families of the men of
Royal Sovereign,
Mars,
Dreadnought,
Bellerophon,
Minotaur,
Ajax,
Defiance,
Leviathan,
Defence, and
Revenge.
The third dispatch By 4 November, order was being restored to the damaged British ships and Collingwood had shifted his flag from
Euryalus to , a ship of the line of the Mediterranean squadron that had rejoined Collingwood after the battle. Considerable progress was also being made with the task of repatriating the Spanish prisoners to Spain. He was now able to dispatch the
Euryalus to England with his third dispatch, and she sailed from off Cape Trafalgar on 7 November with the captured French Commander in Chief, Admiral
Pierre de Villeneuve, on board. On Sunday 24 November, it was reported from Falmouth that " The hon.
Capt. Blackwood landed here this evening, from his majesty's ship Euryalus, which he left off the Lizard this morning, and came up in his 8-oared cutter; he went off express for London immediately". Blackwood followed in Lapenotière's steps, reaching London late on 26 November, and
The Times of Thursday the 28th carried Collingwood's assessment of the condition and whereabouts of the ships of the defeated French and Spanish fleets, the prize list. The same dispatch also contained further casualty lists that now included first details from
Victory,
Britannia,
Temeraire,
Prince,
Neptune,
Agamemnon,
Spartiate,
Africa,
Bellisle,
Colossus,
Achille,
Polyphemus, and
Swiftsure. The prize list reported that during the battle four French ships had "hauled to the Southward and escaped", and their whereabouts were still unknown to Collingwood as he wrote his third dispatch.
Further dispatches The Admiralty, however, was not concerned because it had already received very satisfactory reports of the whereabouts of the escaped French ships from another messenger who rode into London from the West Country. On Saturday 9 November, the frigate
Aeolus had sailed into Plymouth with the news that they had been taken as prizes by Captain
Sir Richard Strachan off
Cape Ortegal on Monday 4th. The captain of
Aeolus, Lord Fitzroy, "set off with dispatches at 10 A.M. for the Admiralty, (the horses decorated with laurels) in a post-chaise and four". The following day Captain Baker of the
Phoenix arrived in Plymouth and took another chaise to London with further details of the Ortegal action, including the British casualty lists. The details carried by these officers were published in London on 11 and 12 November. Although both Lord Fitzroy and Captain Baker travelled from Plymouth, they joined The Trafalgar Way at Exeter and followed it to London.
Collingwood's fourth dispatch The final news from Trafalgar contained the casualty list from the
Tonnant which was published in London on 4 December. It had not reached Collingwood until 9 November, when
Queen anchored off
Cape Spartel after the departure of
Euryalus. The dispatch containing this report was sent to Lisbon and from there by the routine packet
Townshend, arriving at Falmouth on Friday 29 November. The mails she carried were taken up the same well-worn route to the Admiralty. == 2005 Bicentenary ==