Nelson and Trafalgar Vice-Admiral Nelson hoisted his flag in
Victory on 18 May 1803, with Samuel Sutton as his
flag captain. Nelson's orders were to meet with Cornwallis off Brest, but after 24 hours of searching failed to find him. Nelson, anxious to reach the Mediterranean without delay, decided to transfer to
Amphion off Ushant. On 28 May,
Victory captured the 32-gun French frigate , bound for
Rochefort. Reuniting with Nelson off Toulon, on 31 July, Sutton swapped ships with the captain of
Amphion,
Thomas Masterman Hardy and Nelson raised his flag in
Victory once more. While off the island of Toro, near
Majorca, on 4 April 1805, word was received from the 36-gun that the French fleet under
Pierre-Charles Villeneuve had left Toulon. Nelson, thinking it likely that the French were sailing for Egypt, set a course for
Sicily but Villeneuve was in fact intending to merge with the Spanish fleet at
Cádiz. On 9 May, the 32-gun brought the news that the combined Franco-Spanish fleet of 17 ships had entered the
Atlantic a month ago. The British fleet of ten ships-of-the-line and three frigates revictualled at
Lagos Bay, Portugal before sailing west on 11 May in pursuit. On arrival in the
West Indies it was discovered that the Villeneuve had returned to Europe, where he was expected by French invasion forces at
Boulogne-sur-Mer. The Franco-Spanish fleet had encountered Admiral Sir Robert Calder's squadron on 22 July and fought an indecisive action in the fog at the
Battle of Cape Finisterre before seeking safety in
Vigo and
Ferrol.
Admiral Cornwallis's Channel Fleet was joined off Ushant by Calder on 14 August and Nelson the day after. The latter sailed home in
Victory, leaving his remaining ships with Cornwallis whose force now numbered thirty-three ships-of-the-line. Twenty of these were sent under Calder to hunt for the combined fleet, last seen at Ferrol. On 21 August news came that the enemy had arrived back at Cádiz where Lord Nelson joined
Lord Collingwood on the 28 September.
Battle of Trafalgar (oil on canvas, 1856) Villeneuve, on learning he was to be replaced in command, was galvanised into action, setting sail for the Mediterranean on 19 October. At about 19:00 hours British frigates were spotted and the order was given to form line of battle. The British fleet, aware of Villeneuve's presence was in the meantime on a parallel course some 10 miles away over the horizon and on the morning of 21 October, turned to intercept. Nelson had already decided to break the enemy line in two places and destroy the middle and rear sections before the van could turn about and come to their aid. At 06:00 hours, Nelson ordered his fleet into two columns. Because of light winds it was six hours before the 100-gun , leading the British lee column, was able to open fire on
Fougueux of 74 guns. Around 30 minutes later,
Victory broke the line between the 80-gun French flagship
Bucentaure and 74-gun
Redoutable, and fired her guns at such close range that the flames from the ignited powder singed the windows of the French flagship before the shockwave and cannonballs arrived.
Victorys port guns unleashed a devastating broadside, raking
Bucentaure and blowing a huge hole in her side. The maelstrom of cannonballs and grapeshot dismounted the French ship's guns and killed and wounded between 300 and 450 of her 750 to 800 complement almost immediately, putting her out of action. At 13:15, a musket ball entered Nelson's left shoulder and lodged in his spine. The shot was fatal and he died at 16:30. So much death had occurred on
Victorys quarterdeck that ''Redoutable's'' crew attempted to board. The action was checked by the timely intervention of
Eliab Harvey in the 98-gun , unleashing a destructive broadside into the French ship. Nelson's last order was for the fleet to anchor, but this was countermanded by Vice-Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood.
Victory had been badly damaged in the battle and suffered 57 killed and 102 wounded. Unable to move under her own power, towed her to Gibraltar for repairs. On 4 November, with Nelson's body on board,
Victory left for England under a
jury rig but was in such poor condition and leaking so badly, she had to be taken in tow once more. Arriving at Portsmouth on 4 December, the ship underwent emergency repairs before continuing to Sheerness on 11 December. She did not reach her destination until 22 December however, having been delayed by strong winds. Nelson was taken upriver to
Greenwich in the port commissioner's yacht where he lay in state before his burial in
St. Paul's Cathedral on 9 January 1806. On 15 January,
Victory paid off, with the majority of her crew being reassigned to the recently commissioned of 98 guns.
Victorys rigging, guns and stores were taken off while a preliminary inspection revealed the need for a dry dock. The necessity for a
spring tide and other delays prevented this until 6 March when she was moved into number two dock at Chatham, where she had been built 47 years earlier. After repairs to the hull,
Victory was recoppered and rerigged with new masts and spars before being refloated on 3 May. She was after moored in the Medway where she was aired out and periodically inspected until 23 April 1807, when she was again dry docked for further repairs.
Baltic service The Admiralty Board considered
Victory too old, and in too great a disrepair, to be restored as a first-rate. To decrease the strain on her hull and in response to an Admiralty order issued in November 1807, the 68-pound carronades were replaced with 32-pounders, two of the 32-pounder cannon were removed altogether and all the 24-pound cannon replaced with 18-pounders, relegating her to second-rate in the process and cutting the number of crew required to operate her. Her refit at Chatham also required her masts to be stepped on the lower deck rather than the keel; an initiative introduced in January to save timber. In 1808,
Victory was brought back into service as the flagship of Vice-Admiral
Sir James Saumarez, who had been ordered to take command of Royal Navy forces in the Baltic. Samuel Hood, assisted by Rear-Admiral
Sir Richard Keats, was already in the area operating a fleet of nine 74-gun and two 64-gun ships-of-the-line, five frigates, together with various bomb vessels, sloops and gunbrigs. Since the
Treaties of Tilsit, the Baltic fleet had mainly been concerned with convoy protection, the Russian invasion of
Swedish Finland and the threat of a second invasion of Sweden's territory from an army across the
Oresund in Denmark. To deter such a move, a proposal to station 10,000 British troops in
Skane was being brokered by Sir
John Moore. Negotiations with the King of Sweden,
Gustav IV Adolf, went badly, the plan was rejected and Moore put under house arrest.
Victory eventually arrived at Gothenburg on 9 May having been further delayed by the weather. During the evening of 29 June, while
Victory was anchored off the city, Saumarez hosted a ball for a few of its citizens. During the event, Moore arrived aboard, having escaped from captivity four days previous. The following morning,
Victory withdrew to
Vinga where Saumarez' main force was kept, and Moore transferred to the 74-gun which was due to escort a convoy to
Yarmouth. After arriving in England, Moore was sent to Portugal in July, where he took command of the British forces there. After Moore's escape, Saumarez was freed of the need to remain in the Lieutenant-General's vicinity. Hitherto having only been able to send small squadrons under Hood or Keats, he was now able to move the bulk of his fleet into the Baltic Sea where he could aid the Swedes fighting in Finland and bring the Russian fleet to action if the chance occurred.
Victorys progress was slow, the winds were unfavourable and extra care had to be taken manoeuvring such a large ship in shallow waters. She eventually made
the Danish island of Mon on 25 July where she rendezvoused with Hood's ships. Saumarez had a large subsidy on board that the British government had promised to the Swedish king, and on 31 July, sailed on to Stockholm. When Napoleon deposed the King of Spain in August and placed his brother on the throne there was widespread revolt. In Holstein, 12,000 Spanish troops under
Marques de la Romana, refused to swear an oath of allegiance and appealed to the British for passage home.
Victory was at
Karlskrona on 4 August, while Saumarez paid a visit to heads of the dockyard and dined with the officers there. Seven days later he received a communication from King Gustav requesting British ships be sent to participate in a combined operation off the
Hanko Peninsula, where the
Swedish port was being held by the Russians. While waiting to be resupplied, another letter arrived, from which Saumarez learned that
Romana's soldiers were awaiting evacuation and sailed instead to the
Little Belt strait. Saumarez' squadron arrived off the coast of Estonia at 14:00 where the ships of Hood and Nauckhoff had the Russians trapped in port. On 1 September, after boarding one of his smaller ships, an 18-gun
sloop-of-war, for a close-up inspection of the enemy's position, Saumarez decided to test their defences by giving them a broadside from
Victory as she passed as near to the western shore as was prudent. The fire was returned by the batteries protecting the harbour.
Bomb vessels were then employed in an attempt to either destroy the Russian ships or compel them to come out and fight but this failed in both respects and a plan to use
fireships was rejected when it was discovered that a strong, well protected boom had been placed across the entrance. The Anglo-Swedish force therefore had to be content with maintaining its blockade, which it did until the end of September, when the threat of being trapped by ice forced Saumarez to retreat to Karlskrona. When the
Mars was sent to check on Khanykov's fleet on 4 November, the harbour was found empty. Saumarez then sailed his ships to Gothenburg, arriving on 28 October, where he received orders to return home. On 3 November,
Victory,
Implacable and
Centaur escorted a large convoy to England, anchoring in
The Downs on 8 November. When Moore's troops were obliged to withdraw to
Corunna towards the end of the year,
Victory with
Ville de Paris and three 74-gun ships, escorted transports to the north-west of Spain for an evacuation. Uncertainty over the army's location meant that the rescue party was initially dispatched to Vigo where, on learning of the mistake, the transports had to be towed out of the harbour because of light winds. British troops were still engaging the enemy on the heights above the town when
Victory reached Corunna on the night of 14 January 1809, dropping anchor outside the port at 11:30 the following day. On the afternoon of 16 January, the remnants of Moore's army entered the town and boat crews began taking them from the beach to the awaiting transports in the harbour. The construction of a French gun battery forced the British to move their ships further out but the last troops were embarked on the morning of 18 January and the convoy set sail for England. It arrived in
Cawsand Bay near Plymouth on 23 January and
Victory was back in the Baltic by 8 May, when she dropped anchor off Gothenburg. Following the death of the Swedish
heir presumptive in January 1810, Napoleon's cousin by marriage,
Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte was selected as the new heir and regent, automatically allying Sweden to France. Bernadotte however, was determined to act in the interests of Sweden and maintain the flow of trade, and Saumarez allowed him to cross the Oresund to his new realm later that year unimpeded. Despite this cordial start, Sweden, under pressure from Napoleon, declared war on Britain on 17 November. When reinforcements were required by Wellington's army in the
Iberian Peninsula,
Victory was withdrawn from the Baltic, converted to a
troopship and used to convey soldiers to Lisbon. On her return to Vinga on 2 May,
Victory was visited, under a flag of truce, by Gothenburg's military commander. He assured Saumarez that the declaration of war had been a formality, there would be no hostile action and that the Swedish Government wished to remain on the best of terms with Britain. Nevertheless, Saumarez' ships were henceforth additionally employed in a blockade of the Swedish navy at Karlskrona. In September, Saumarez received news of two Danish gunboats to the south, between Vinga and
Anholt, waiting to ambush merchant ships bound for England. He immediately sent two of
Victorys boats in a
cutting out expedition. Despite having less than a fifth of the numbers, the British crew managed to board and capture both Danish vessels. Towards the end of the year, Saumarez decided to sail his ships to England for much needed repairs rather than remain for the harsh winter when trade routes were closed due to ice. Bad weather at first prevented the withdrawal until 17 December and then hampered its progress. Several ships were lost on the journey including the 98-gun and 74-gun .
Victory, under a single reefed sail, crossed the
North Sea by running before the wind until she was off the coast of
Suffolk on 24 December. She limped into
The Solent two days later. When she returned to Gothenburg on 3 May 1812, relations between France and Russia had soured and an official peace treaty with Sweden was impending. By the time Napoleon had begun his
march on Moscow, there was no need for a large Royal Navy presence in the Baltic.
Victory returned home at the end of the year, arriving off Spithead on 7 November. == Final years afloat ==