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Short Ske t ch
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- of
t h e E n g l i s h
i n r o a d
_i n S e a l a n d
1 8 0 7 i .
;
L O N D O N-
-W/waS in-' the lbeginning of July,
Whens a division of the English fleet, *Withotranspbrts, < that'Were said'
ttticarry landvforces for Rngetlj made
itSi -appearahce-ih the Sounds confe
rences' between the commanders Were
held" about the Salutes to be taken and given 1 from/ the castle of Cron- burg, and the simple confident people ‘ni'T i * thought'
/
thought the Armada intended for
the British allies, and consequently
received the English with their won
ted hospitality.
About the middle
of July a Danish Frigate, stationed
at St, Thomas, on:her;.way home,'
had heard, that. all (England was big
with .the. news, that-the; expedition!
gone;iand to go was intended against)
Copenhagen; the Belt and: the smal-J;
ler passages were filled with vessels t
of every descriptions, and tlie people!
began to become suspicious.
f .
*
Tli*
, ' The better informed classes could
however not lend an ear to the ru
mours , and; would not admit the
possibility,,of real hostilities to be
undertaken against a nation, whose
government had steadily adhered to
the strictest neutrality, and had not
deviated since the eruption of the
revolution from the honest efforts
to preserve peace, against all temp
tation and intimidation offered; it
was expected, that when ihe articles
of the treaty of Tilsit would be
known and Russia would have in
vited
6
vited England to join in treating for a general”peace, all the-motives fo£ distrusting the ; sincerity ^ of little Denmark 'Would be laidnaside the people relying on; their bv?W honesty, and. British- honour, were 1 again quieted, . ' J ^ .
. In this, state of- srrspenGe came'
on the g of August, 'when- the arri**
val of Mr. Jachson at!:I£iel: Was re
ported in the- metropolis. The con - i
versation,. offers and menaces of this
man trith the prince Royal in a>
harsh language are hriowm
His*
up- •
upbraidings originated either from ’ \ fraud or ignorance : they where in
tended as a gross veil to cover be
fore the british nation the heinous
atrocity ' already determined to be
carried into execution, Or Mr.-Jack-
son, acted as the blind instrument of
Ministers, that were ignorant of
Denmark’s situation, resources and
finances: Denmark should, a^s it was
pretended, stand" in secret correspon
dence with trance , and' be about
arming its fleet ; but Denmark had •*r •*1 . ••> I( ;*1 V *** OX■ 1‘1 * r 3 £*O/ almost aE its .tana -Fo rces in Hol
stein
stein, and nothing could be .mors
preposterous, than assembling an
army, where not only no foe, but
an Ally was the neighbour; Den-,
mark' is not enabled on any short
warning to gather on its extended
but thinly inhabited coast a suffici
ent number of Seamen to man the
navigable part of the fleet; in win-.,
ter the people are registred; at any.
other Season they are scattered over
the Seas in marcantile employments
and■it was shown, that the metro
polis, contained.no more Sailors, than were
— — . were required to work a 74. gurh 9 .
Ship in service; the Finances of Den
mark could not even with the grea
test and consequently notorious ef
fort have been sufficient to fit out
the fleet for a warlike expedition,
and there is no surmise, that modern,
France did ev er pay any. subsidies,.
The absurdity of Mr. Jackson’s hy
pothesis was evident, but he did,
conclude. it by the insulting demand
of tailing, into custody the Danish
fleet, or the menace of war.
The ;
most aggravating calamity may soo ner
-be faced', than' the infamy of a
ftatiori, aii'd ad^uated the government'
. aif well as'lhe people, 1
• i r i s ’trite, the Island of Serilarid,
the'object 6f the attach, was defence
less, the passage over the Belt ift-”
t&rccpted, hardly- any regular troops
on the whole' Island,, and a question
whether the peasantry cbiild be ar
med expeditiously, or officers gottoi
putl'in motion the unwieldy bdcfy.
The" town contained about <2360 Ma-
r \ *O*' v* • rmes , * and* i 660 regular^ V the first ' * r ^ J r s ' * *»•,. >r. r . .
11
to mouht the Seabattcries, -and the
others to act, as required/ with the?
help of the citizens, and the volun^
teers ariibunting to about: 4000 men.:
A single rdnipart' and ditcli surfoiih-
ded the town, mounted with a ;f ewr
6 pounders, arid no outworchs whaft*' ✓ ever defended the appfoach.:; : l f the-' \ fate of States could be decided*sfrith- metically,- it ,waa demonstrated, that" *
the town arid; its nuftietbusr inhabit
tants would, have suffered Iefs ftotrt'
a surrender, and would haVe’ aWofc’
d'cdi calamities' by suliihissidh'i1 trut?
’sub-.
12
submission is the greatest of all car
lamities; though in respect to those
calamities it was impossible to ad
mit , that the English, who ;upon
landing on the 15 of August had
published a Manifesto, in which they,
declared their intention o f ; tailing,
into custody the fleet, would chuse,
the most aggravating, means to ob-;
tain it: for determined as the mini
sters must have been since the endj
ofJune, why should they trifle, away j
their time, and lose six weeks in a ,
dull suspence ? —- - In all July the;
, • .
three-
• T . —- three - crown - battery, that defends 1 3
the port,' had hardly a gun mounted,
and the' guard, consisting of 44 mehj
■ would have been overcome by a few
boats, arid Without the lofs of a men;
the1portr,atrd:Sea* Arsenal being1com**
plete: defericelefs would^have been
carried the same momenta What sig*
riified 'delays in execution, ' when the
plan was /adopted? ;Was it wanton
cruelty ? Was it pusillariimity,' that-
‘ de'cliiied an open attach ? Even after*
landing,1 and ‘ when the approaches5
on the ' 29 of August Were but about*'
$00
,rdist£}*qe .frqm ^the. raift*
■ JifB?2rcJKll^T-l1?^. b?f*ja I,teach > *ha$ ]spp#ld .lniye; bje/en.qqmjijisflted,, $, fewv (houfxS 0 and hayo, •yajtionaUy
a|xclrpu&tary; rcpmpeUed- th9.commas
$e£ J: q .
W'pndpr. ? Jnstefd'r:o£:..^hicH'
^}tl$ defined .cruelty.,jp^fsp^ta. ^pr
\vqtbdrawing, : ,Jrom . -tlip ,;scenes of
misery; $rei$ 0 fdpeady.
,,$re-
i*dAlSu§t by; /thepriti^Jv, .and idij^
Intention rto bombard became iny^r .
*idM?bo^bis yvyas begun0oft. thp. ;pyer, 1
q£ tber5; Septesnibre \ and^pontimpedT
for*j&ree.gnpcpeding nigbtf, pypnj^itJti:,
r . ■
btlt
but shqyt jnt.epjgfjs ;ift day timgj and..^i^^cjirplentlejs qrpelty, .tfipt tnp|'e ^ » r;iQ?.oQ.^.f s}^eysfT fireballs und, r|icbe^ .yyerei ; intpvtjbj|
, tp-yvp } tips,. r.^nglpy^Sf; (- attaph
our bppsesj pn the^defencelefS; ag$&
^.ompn. an;dr pbijdre^
.behind
the , yyplLtjS^^ed-,{ trendies,$ f *: tbfr
English, ,suqeedpd to ^Ujqfi a, horriijo
4 ®S feg;>.^#^lj.9He °Efiknt > ..e^egan^. town , inhabited,by, ,$ne 5 ,pf- tb ew p ^
pacific .peoplp , has been, i^opyerjt^
into, the tnpsit sorroiy/i^}, ,»iQ:uiappg$ •
place, of Europe.; ajiay; Jth$ ,shnepJ$jv
,
of
of the innocent sufferers, and tlie
ptospeet of their mangled bodies
haunt for ever the worthless, that 'prepared this butcher - scene; for we
can not explicitly accuse y6u,rXea-
. t ders of the forces and instruriients . ,
Of blind and vicious' nimisters,ns
We know, that the thinking part of
the army1 could 'but- censure the ex
pedition. * ; This butcher - scene was
ended by the surrender of the! fleetf
106 vefsels’ and boats of every de
scription, and the naval stores, con
tained in tlie Sea* Arsenalj but when
— — ■ the enemy, declared, that to take that , 1 7
fleet into custody was the aim of
the expedition, why; should the cdn-;
ditions not be hept, after we were
compelled to ^resignation? >-
r The bombarding :.of Copenhagen
destroyed two churches,., the cathe
dral, and 306 mansion-houses ^‘ere:
burnt, 11200 houses damaged,' and,
goo j people ; most -women V, and;
children slain and wounded. The in*
cendiary instruments; employed in
this horrid conflagration, are said; to
l
he
18
b#:o£ Ai new invention.
Had they
been, used against an -old enemy of
th.% English •; nation., the inveterate.
bate. of,.old enmities -would have
pleaded for .the atrocious incendia
ries. of Copenhagen y but since the
famous. .; defence I,of Valetta- against
Solymany.:wheh liberty and existence
wore at stah.es, nothing- in the' an
nals of history has occurred so ;druel,-
and. still, the English-boast, that they
had; .in reserve a fire, to slich toj
thie ,d o dies and ' thus burn aliv 6'
the; people, that did nothing but de
vil
'
fend
— — fend themselves, if the to\vnf:had i 9
not capitalized." ’ -
■
r ; , -:
:
After ^the capitulation the -Sea-
Arsenal and the doch - yard were
taken in. possession j the rapacity,
as principle o f English seamen, and
the precept of one Home Popham was
displayed in all its vigour; vessels
on the stocks, or those under' re
pairs that could not he brought of,
*were destroyed; a pleasure - bdutj a
‘gift of his, british Majesty in for
mes times, shared the same fate,
' 2 *
even
even the private property ' of the , i Carpenters were tahen: in ,short, no
thing left of whatever description.
.The victualling of the town was in
tercepted 3 the inhabitants of Copen
hagen ,yy ere pinched in the first ne
cessities by, the Securers in self-do- • ,Tr ’ . fence of their fleet. Frequent des
cents were made on the coast or on
the .smaller Islands for' the purpose
pf robbing the inhabitants of their
cattle,' or for burning; and 'destro
ying .the trading;,' .boats,: considered
only ..as , victuallers , of ,the i town V
the fire woods of the Island ofHes-
seloe, :were cut down and shipped
.of. ; All the vefsels of the confident
Danes were talien as in a trap, and
carried to England,* the place of new
doctrine,: where, no doubt , that
right in Self + preservation to rob
its of our property, will be exteh- ' ' - . v.x ded to the lieeping and dividing the
spoils. ‘ The environs of the town
have through circumstances, that at
tend a siege, but especially through
the presence: of an army during six
weeks been laid waste; no forage
nor
nor greens whatever} no residence
but through a special protection has
escaped; the marhs of spoliation and
depredation* are every where; even
the tombs. o f our friends in the
church-yard have been forced open:
and all this was ostensibly done for
the possession of the* Danish' flee V ;thc value of. whifch the carpenters
in , England w il l ; affix, and under
the protection ; of an Apology of
the cabinet of St. James for tramp
ling upon the sacred ties, of friend
ly professions, and the right of
— — Nations, with no other intent, tliarf 23
seizing in . self - preservation,-; What
never was intended and -probably
never could be detrimental to the
British.
This is the short sketch of the
fraudulous aspect of the Brittish,
when they appeared in the Sound,
of their unmilitary conquest of the
fleet, and of their wicked 6;nduct,
that yet may be crowned by the
pickings of the Danish properties,
and
~ » and;;thus,. in fearing tlifc;mash-,,;lay; 2,4 ^
open the tendency of English’; polir
ticks.; r— j, an W .lv i
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W h e n I sent you last the short sli'dtch of the Inroad of the Brittish Jn-Sealand, the facts of the few days before their departure and shipping; ’< dould hot be included. I then thought, "that the Officers 1 and Commanders coitlt not he accused implicitly; o£; the barbarous- execution of this* pro- % ten-
tended Politickal, and of course ex
pected., moderate Step .in. respect to
■ Individuals; but I have been cruelly
undeceived; the Comanders not to
mention one Popham, but even the
old Admiral Gambier was present,
when these Canihnls." broke r dbWn
With: a *brutal yell -ef. tnuinplx otb^.
last 'Ship on> the Stocks, 'gru&hingandi:
knowing tb pieces a l l ' t i m b e r s ; :
they have therefore -either :surpcased,
.theirInstructions and.-must be called
tb ainouht.for what- they: did not
take into Custody j or the whole brit*
tish Nation, after sanctioning sucfy
misdemeanour, must ’ descend from
the ranck; of civilired Nations, and
declare: their Island ;a den for thie-
res. and robbers* as-besides: these au
thorised crimen, the English and J Scotch oihciers Staff as well as Sub altern, have stole every ■ where^bed- ........ - / dings, furniture andlinnen. Their ves
sels have been crowded with stolen
good and of every description; the
troops from Hanover must however
be excepted, who are so distinguished
from English as gentlemen from
n»>»
g g
..•««*
Bloch guards'; -but I, propose to 'lay open before -the- whole:r world,land By naming the wretches, .what Europe is ’ fo expect' front great •Britain^ ft- - :Copenhagen ' 20 ; Octobrist i‘ 8 oy*t
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