Spanish ship Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación y Desengaño

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History
Flag of Spain (1785-1873 and 1875-1931).svgSpanish Empire
Namesake: Our Lady of the Incarnation and Disappointment
Owner: King Philip V of Spain
Operator: Viceroyalty of New Spain
Route: Flota de Manila - Manila, Acapulco de Juárez
In service: ?-1709
Out of service: 22 December 1709 or 1 January 1710[1]
Renamed: Bachelor
Struck: 1710
Homeport: Manila
Nickname(s): Desengaño
Captured: 22 December 1709 or 1 January 1710[1]
Fate: Captured by Woodes Rogers of the Duke
General characteristics
Class & type: Galleon
Type: Galleon
Propulsion: Sail
Range: Trans Pacific
Capacity: 150
Troops: 120
Armament: 20 guns

Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación y Desengaño, nicknamed Desengaño, was a Manila galleon which plied the trade routes between the Viceroyalty of New Spain and the Spanish Philippines. The ship was captured on 22 December 1709 by a British privateering expedition led by Woodes Rogers and renamed the Bachelor.

Commission and construction

The name Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación y Desengaño translates into English directly as Our Lady of the Incarnation and Disappointment, a religious reference to the creation or birth of a sentient being. The names of contemporary Spanish ships commonly had religious undertones as with general Spanish naming traditions of the period.

Desengaño was likely commissioned sometime in the mid 1600s, although the exact date is unknown.

Service record

The ship sailed the route between Acapulco de Juárez, Mexico, and Manila, Philippines, transporting treasure, troops, people, supplies and trade goods between Spain's North American and Asian possessions.

Capture by privateers

Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación y Desengaño, captained by Frenchman Jean Presberty, formerly a French official at Canton, left Manila with a crew of around 193 men, in a convoy as a consort tasked with the escort of the much larger Nuestra Señora de Begoña with a crew of around 450 men captained by Captain General Fernando De Angulo. That the Desengaño was captained by a Frenchman was somewhat of an oddity as Imperial Spanish ships of the period were rarely commanded by anyone other than a Spaniard, either a peninsular or a criollo, and is likely attributable to a lack of captains in Manila. Desengaño became separated from Begoña during the course of the passage across the Pacific Ocean. Desengaño continued the journey alone towards the convoy's intended destination at the port of Acapulco de Juárez.[1]

On 22 December 1709, a British flotilla sighted the Desengaño off Cabo San Lucas on its approach to New Spain. The British privateer fleet, commanded by Woodes Rogers, consisted of three ships: Rogers' flagship Duke, the Duchess and the Marquis, which had itself been captured by Rogers from the French in May of 1709. Their officers were William Dampier, pilot of Duke, Stephen Courtney, captain of Duchess, and Edward Cooke, captain of Marquis. The English had been lying in wait for around two months prior to the encounter anticipating that the Manila galleons would traverse the route.[1]

Desengaño was unprepared for battle, having placed all its heavy guns into its hold and therefore only able to respond with small arms and the light calibre guns on deck. The action was brief with the Spanish ship being taken after minimal resistance. At the end of the action, twenty Spanish and nine British lay dead. Several of the English suffered powder burns, with the most serious injury being sustained by Rogers himself when a musket round tore through his jawbone. The Spanish prisoners were all released except for twenty Filipino sailors who were retained as crew and Captain Jean Presberty who was kept as a hostage.[1]

The Desengaño's flagship, the Begoña arrived in the area a few days later on 25 December 1709 and was immediately engaged by Rogers' squadron. The British failed to take the much better defended Begoña, whose 450-man, 60-gun contingent nearly defeated its attackers. As a result, Rogers was forced to break off the engagement and beat an ignominious retreat. Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación y Desengaño was renamed the Bachelor, with Thomas Dover appointed captain and Alexander Selkirk sailing master. The British squadron, including the Duke, Duchess, and Bachelor sailed thereafter to England by way of Guam, a Spanish colony at the time.[1][2]

It is unclear if Desengaño is the same ship that participated in the Battle of La Naval de Manila in 1646.[3]

Consequences

The official inquiry into the incident was heard in 1714 by the Real Audiencia of Manila. The hearing found that Jean Presberty was an inexperienced tactician and mariner who should not have been given command of the vessel. The audiencia further found that a commission should not have been granted to a foreigner. Presberty was also found to be fully culpable for the ship's loss.

References

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