Capture of Grenada (1779)

Capture of Grenada
Part of the American Revolutionary War and the Anglo-French War (1778–1783)

Capture of the island of Grenada, 4 July 1779
Jean-François Hue, 1787
Date2–4 July 1779
Location
Result French victory
Belligerents
France Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
Count of Estaing
Arthur Dillon
Lord Macartney (POW)
Strength
2,100 men
25 ships of the line
125 regulars
436 militia and volunteers
Casualties and losses
114 killed
200 wounded
Unknown killed or wounded
700 captured

The capture of Grenada was an amphibious expedition in July 1779 during the American Revolutionary War. A French fleet under Admiral Charles Henri Hector, Count of Estaing captured the island of Grenada from the British. The French landed on 2 July and the assault occurred on the night of 3–4 July. The French forces assaulted the British fortifications on Hospital Hill, overlooking the island's capital, Saint George's. The fortification's cannons were captured and turned against Fort George. British Governor Lord Macartney opened negotiations to surrender.

Estaing controversially rejected Macartney's terms of capitulation, instead insisting on him adopting the harsher terms he had written. Macartney rejected those terms, choosing to surrender unconditionally. Estaing thereafter permitted his forces to loot the town, and Macartney was sent to France as a prisoner of war. On 5 July, French forces re-embarked when word arrived that a British fleet under Admiral John Byron was approaching. The two fleets battled the next day. The French severely damaged several British ships; however, both fleets returned to their bases fully intact. Under the terms of the 1783 Treaty of Paris, France returned Grenada to British control.