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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005. If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author directly. If you have questions about the archives, email rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, send email to [log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the body (drop the "").
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Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings David W. London Central Michigan University Department of Journalism 415 Moore Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858 Email: [log in to unmask] Phone: 989-779-0227 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings INTRODUCTION Seventeen ninety-seven was not a good year for Great Britain. It began with the news of an attempted invasion of Ireland. In February a major sea battle was fought off the coast of Spain, but the news didn't reach England for six weeks. In March a French raid on the tiny Welsh village of Fishgard led to a run on the banks and the suspension of gold payments. In late April government submitted a record budget and requested massive tax increases. Throughout the year the land war went badly as one ally after another gave up the fight against Revolutionary France. Rumors of troop buildups in northern France and Holland, the construction of flat-bottomed boats and sightings of an actual invasion fleet weighed heavily on the public mind. Yet, it was the news of the naval mutinies occurring between April and June that captured and held the public's attention. The naval historian Edward Brenton described them as "endangering the safety of the British Empire" and pronounced them to be the one crisis during the entire reign of George III that "occasioned a political paralysis" that could have produced its downfall. Both government and opposition sought to manipulate the news of the mutinies to their political advantage. Both discovered that, while newspapers could be manipulated, they could not be controlled. And to their mutual dismay, an aggrieved minority, the seamen of the Channel Fleet, proved capable and unusually adept at using the medium to win the battle for public sympathies. This paper considers how the press was used to influence public opinion during the mutiny. It seeks to prove (or disprove) a specific contemporary accusation of manipulation by tracing the story in question from its source to its appearance and interpretation in various newspapers. It examines the media's role in the events leading up to the critical moment of the mutiny, the moment where it threatened to slip out of control - including indiscretions in 1 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings the House of Lords, misrepresentations in newspapers and exaggerated threats of invasion. It compares the public, the private and the official records of those events. It avails a review of (1) the propaganda literature to posit questions related to manipulation of the media and its manifestations in coverage of the mutiny and (2) the historical record ships' logs, dispatches, letters, Admiralty minutes and, of course, newspapers. LITERATURE REVIEW Harold Lasswell defined propaganda as an act of intention, involving an effort to influence collective attitudes by manipulating words and symbols.1 He acknowledged public opinion's vital role in support of democracy and assigned propaganda the task of shaping it. Walter Lippmann stressed the importance of fictions and symbols in the machinery of human communication. He described how the pictures formed inside our heads formed the basis of public opinion and argued "public opinions must be organized for the press if they are to be sound."2 He believed the public should be provided with a selective presentation of the facts and led to form the desired conclusions, rather than being presented with all of the facts and allowed to form its own conclusions. Edward Bernays, of public relations fame, advocated a "leadership democracy" where an intelligent minority would regiment and guide the habits and opinions of the masses. He described propaganda as an "unseen mechanism of society" and propagandists as constituting "an invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country."3 Jacques Ellul saw propaganda more as a sociological phenomenon than an act of intention. He spotted a flaw in democratic theory that gave rise to the propaganda: "Democracy is 2 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings based on the concept that man is rational and capable of seeing clearly what is in his own interest, but the study of public opinion suggests this is a highly doubtful proposition."4 Anthony Pratkanis and Elliot Aronson argued that by guaranteeing freedom of speech and freedom of the press, our Constitution ensured that persuasion would be at the heart of our political process.5 In theory, the media keeps and eye on those in power and keeps the public informed. In practice, however, rather than informing the public, they have become the principal means for those in power to influence public opinion. The goal is no longer to enlighten, but to move the masses toward a desired point of view.6 In 1807, the great English media observer, William Cobbett, made the distinction between democratic theory and practice clear: The English Press, instead of enlightening, does, as far as it has any power, keep the people in ignorance. Instead of cherishing notions of liberty, it tends to the making of the people slaves; instead of being their guardian, it is the most efficient instrument in the hands of all those who would oppress or wish to oppress them.7 Fifty years later, the great American media observed, Henry Adams, observed: "The Press is the hired agent of a monied [sic] system, set up for no other reason than to tell lies where the interests are concerned."8 Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky argued that it serves "to amuse, entertain, and inform, and to inculcate individuals with the values, beliefs, and codes of behavior that will integrate them into the institutional structures of the larger society."9 In response to accusations of news bias, media professionals argue that it is unavoidable. The pressures of deadlines, limited space, human error, budgetary constraints, and the "difficulty of reducing a complex story into a concise report" make distortions and inaccuracies inevitable.10 They say that it is impossible to report everything. Selectivity is inherent to the process of mass communication. Michael Parenti acknowledges the need for selectivity, but questions the principles involved in its application. He argues that the bias is 3 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings not random. It consistently favors the dominant ideology. According to Parenti, the methods of media manipulation include omissions and suppression, lies, labeling, face value transmission, false balancing and framing. The result is propaganda. It is the means to an end. It short-circuits the rational process by replacing thoughts with feelings. It does not enlighten or elevate man, but makes him serve. It operates at an unconscious level agitating emotions, exploiting insecurities, capitalizing on the ambiguity of language and bending the rules of logic."11 Propaganda controls public sympathies, not through fabrication, but with a selective presentation of the truth. It moves its audience "to a predetermined point of view by using simple images and slogans that truncate thought by playing on prejudices and emotion."12 It communicates a point of view with the goal of having the audience accept it as its own.13 Today, we recognize propaganda in the form of advertising and political commentary, but often overlook the more insidious forms of media manipulation. While there is little doubt that the public is presented with only a selection of the facts, intentions are notoriously difficult to prove. While the dissemination of information may or may not be controlled, it is almost always guarded making motives extremely difficult to detect. The situation is aggravated by information overload. The volume of information and the need to process it quickly make mental shortcuts mandatory. The public is bombarded with persuasive communications. "These appeals persuade not through the give-and-take of argument and debate, but through the manipulation of symbols and of our most basic human emotions."14 This information overload also makes it difficult for researchers to identify a source or even an instance of manipulation. Readership surveys and content analysis can demonstrate that some news stories receive more attention than others, but they 4 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings are at best a crude measure. Simply by measuring the number of column inches devoted to stories sympathetic versus those opposed to government policy, Herman and Chomsky amassed a convincing case for media manipulation.15 They offered compelling examples, but failed to provide any proof. The struggle to define propaganda centers on the questions of cause and effect. Lasswell's argument that intent must be proved results in a restrictive definition where, absent access to the propagandists' deliberations, very little can be proved. Ellul's preoccupation with social phenomena and the psychological process suggests that almost anything that impacts public opinion should be considered propaganda. While most scholars who comment on the subject feel compelled to offer their own definitions of propaganda, Leonard W. Doob argued that "a clear-cut definition is neither possible nor desirable."16 RESEARCH QUESTIONS This study examines how the media is used to manipulate public opinion. It juxtaposes a narrative of the mutiny with the literature of propaganda. The complexity of the media today - the volume of news, the variety of news sources and the velocity at which news travels - makes it impossible to trace a story from its sources to its appearance in the media. The problems for researchers are compounded by the inaccessibility of government documents. This paper seeks to solve these dilemmas by examining a major news story occurring over 200 years ago the second mutiny at Spithead. It was a simpler time, a time far beyond the limitations of the Official Secrets Act, a time when the mass media were limited to newspapers; when newspapers were limited to four pages; when news sources were limited to a handful of eyewitnesses and government officials, and when the pace of the news was limited to the speed of a horse. Questions framed from the propaganda literature include: 5 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings (1) Was the public provided a selective presentation of the facts and led to form a conclusion? (2) Who manipulated the media? How did they do it and why? (3) Did newspapers in the late 18th century keep an eye on those in power and keep the public informed? (4) Was media bias in this instance unavoidable or did it favor the dominant ideology? (5) Was propaganda in this instance deliberate or accidental i.e. merely a sociological phenomenon? If it was accidental, was it propaganda? METHODOLOGY This paper constructs a narrative of the events leading to a second mutiny at Spithead by drawing on primary records located in the Public Record Office, the British Library, the National Maritime Museum and the Royal Naval Museum. A narrative inquiry offers the means to give public attention to private voices. These records demonstrate the various omissions and commissions and point to the choice of sources and facts in the dominant discourse of the mutiny (i.e. newspaper accounts) and how that discourse was used to influence public opinion. The primary documents examined include the following contemporary newspapers: The Times, the London Chronicle, the Morning Herald, the Morning Chronicle, the Morning Post, the Star, the Observer & Public Advertiser, and the True Briton. NARRATIVE At the height of the French Revolution, at a time when England stood alone against Europe and invasion seemed imminent, the kingdom's last defense appeared to collapse. On 15 April 1797, thirty thousand seamen of the Channel Fleet mutinied. They refused to weigh anchor "unless the French Fleet was sighted" until they received a pay increase to a shilling a day. Their refusal (the seamen never described it as a mutiny) occurred within sight of Portsmouth at the anchorage of Spithead. The mutiny (by naval law and tradition a refusal to obey orders cannot be described as anything else) was remarkably peaceful. Until 7 May, 6 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings all orders were obeyed (except weighing anchor) and discipline was maintained. Until 7 May, no violence occurred. Beyond its sheer size, its peaceful nature and its ultimate success (from the seamen's perspective), the Spithead Mutiny was unique in that it was very public. All navies, but especially the Royal Navy, abhor mutiny. It represents a breakdown in discipline. Over its long and celebrated history, hundreds of mutinies have occurred in the Royal Navy. Virtually all of them were contained or suppressed quickly, quietly and without any public discussion. This mutiny was the exception. Given Spithead's proximity to Portsmouth and the community's close identification with the seamen, the news could not be contained. As Revolutionary France appeared ready to invade and revolutionary ideas threatened to undermine England's delicate social structure, the crisis nearly brought down the government of William Pitt. Pitt's Secretary at War, William Windham, blamed the media: "If at the time the Mutiny prevailed in our fleets, any man had asked him what had been the cause, he would have answered, 'in a great measure the Newspapers'."17 He added that "had it not been providentially suppressed" the mutiny "would have ruined the Navy and laid our Country at the feet of France."18 Windham retreated slightly from suggesting newspapers actually caused the mutiny, but maintained his conviction that: "No man would be hard enough to doubt that what passed from that House to the fleets through the Newspapers, had certain, and great and pernicious effect on the minds of the seamen."19 Another overstatement perhaps, but what passed from the speeches made in the House of Lords on 4 May 1797 through the medium of newspapers to the seamen at Spithead did affect the mutiny's outcome. In describing its effect as pernicious, Windham assumed his colleagues in 7 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings Commons shared his opinion that the medium had breached Parliamentary Privilege, exacerbated a volatile situation and became involved in the messages they delivered. His assumptions were safe. A vital source of information and entertainment, eighteenth century newspapers were immensely popular and exerted an influence far beyond their modest circulations.20 It was an influence those in power and those aspiring to power necessarily employed, but found intrusive and inherently threatening. Windham assured the honorable gentlemen that "he never saw a man with a newspaper in his hand, without regarding him with the sensation that he was taking poison."21 Relishing the metaphor, he added "newspapers circulated poison every twenty-four hours and spread its venom down to the extremity of the Kingdom."22 Again, he offered the mutiny as proof of his point. While Pitt's Secretary of State at War, William Windham, railed against any representation of what passed in Parliament, Pitt's Secretary of State for War, Henry Dundas, could not afford to indulge in such sweeping generalizations. A master at manipulating the media to achieve political ends, Dundas restricted his criticism to misrepresentations, arguing the seamen had been misled. Referring to a time when the mutiny threatened to become violent, he argued: No jealousy ever appeared however, till some for whose extreme wickedness I can find no name sufficiently descriptive, insinuated to the seamen that the pardon which had been issued in their favour was a forgery. When the conversation which took place on the subject got into the public papers, a new mode of misrepresentation presented itself, and the diabolical malice which laboured to renew disturbance, changed its mode of attack. It was represented to them, with the most abominable wickedness, that their Bill had been thrown out by Parliament.23 While newspapers informed the public of what was happening in Portsmouth, they also informed the fleet of what was (or was not) happening in London. They enabled the seamen to follow the public discussion and gave them a measure of public sympathies. Admiral Sir Alan Gardner, who played a prominent, though not particularly distinguished, role in the proceedings, complained: "Public Newspapers are read by almost everybody in the fleet."24 8 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings If he was only half right and only half the fleet could read, the other half could and apparently did listen when the news was read aloud.25 Newspapers did more than present the news. How they presented and interpreted it influenced public opinion, a potential appreciated and exploited by opposition and government. With poor prospects in Parliament, opposition leaders found they could exaggerate their influence and advance their ambitions through the press. The politician and playwright Richard Sheridan proved particularly adept at exploiting his close connections with the press.26 However, in the struggle for public sympathies, government's needs were far more pressing. Given the demands of the war against revolutionary France, the ministers had no choice but to enlist public support. In January of 1793, the Morning Chronicle recognized that the nature of warfare had changed. It saw the war with Revolutionary France as being "fought over 'principles' and there was a danger that we must go on killing as long as there are any Frenchmen left to kill, or leave their opinion, as all who ever made war upon opinions have hitherto left them, invigorated and exasperated by the conflict."27 It was the advent of total war. The battles were real, but the conflict was also ideological. Twenty-two years later little had changed when The Times admitted: "We are engaged in a war - a war of no common description - a war of system against system, in which no choice is left to us but victory or expiration."28 Although the king and his ministers were determined to "keep our exertions within such bounds that we may continue the war for many years and thus by time overcome the enemy,"29 the expense involved, particularly those associated with creating and maintaining a navy of a thousand ships and 120,000 men, exceeded all expectations. In addition to requiring "large numbers of men from a wide range of social backgrounds to take up arms in 9 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings support of the British state,"30 those remaining in England paid the bill - both for the king's army and navy and those of his reluctant allies. On 27 April 1797, Pitt submitted a record budget of £42 million, over three-quarters of which could be attributed to the war effort. In the past government depended on private capital to fund its wars. Having borrowed £18 million in a loyalty loan in December of 1796 and more than £156 million since the war began, the supply of private capital was nearly exhausted. With bad news from the battlefields, creditors lost their enthusiasm for the war. When the solvency of the Bank of England came into question, Pitt suspended cash payments. Unwilling to countenance further debt or higher interest rates, he turned to England's taxpayers to make up the difference.31 He sought public support without public interference and used the press to get it. While Pitt may have sympathized with Windham, he took his lead from Dundas. Both government and opposition assumed the press could be used to political advantage. Government used it to influence public opinion and secure popular support. Opposition used it to undermine confidence in government to pave the way for an assumption of power. Neither government nor opposition considered the possibility that an aggrieved community within the public could usurp those advantages. They assumed they controlled the flow of information and failed to appreciate that, to satisfy the public's appetite for news, newspapers would print news from any source. Newspapers provided the seamen of the Channel Fleet with the means and the opportunity to capture public sympathies. Developing at a pace and intensity far beyond government's ability to manage, or opposition's ability to capitalize upon the news, the mutiny proved: "Perhaps the most important aspect of the history of the press in this period is the decline in the ability of governments to control it."32 10 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings The seamen of the Channel Fleet admitted the role of newspapers in keeping them informed. The crew of one of the ships at Spithead declared: We smile at the simplicity of our officers in attempting to divide us, we know the consequence of our oath and value it equal to our lives. Redress we will have. Saduced we will not be. We can Plainly foresee by the Papers that was Read on Yesterday on Board of our Ship it Seamed onely a desing to keep us in the Preasent state of Pay and Provisions unless Passed into an Act of Parlement for you might Plainly see by the act Passed in the Reing of King Charles the Second that Unless this is Passed Into an act of Parlement the Admiralty, the Parlement or the whole nation at large may promise to take our Grevences into Consideration and after that trample them and us under their feet when we are devided. So brothers we will never flinch from you in this Present Cause old and Young and never fear the Defiance.33 Their assurances of solidarity were directed at the delegates of the fleet the men elected by the crews of the 17 ships-of-the-line at Spithead to represent their interests. Their comments suggest that, far from being the semi-literate drunkards of popular prejudice, the seamen at Spithead were well aware of the importance and tenuous nature of public opinion. When his attempts to harangue and intimidate the men proved ineffective, Admiral Sir Alan Gardner wrote to Secretary of the Admiralty Evan Nepean that newspaper accounts of the speeches made in the House of Lords "have been eagerly perused, and have been productive of incredible mischief, by misleading & poisoning the minds of the Seamen of the Fleet who I believe are fully convinced that it is not the intention of Government to pay any attention to their petitions."34 Gardner, a staunch supporter of government, implied that the seamen were deliberately misled and that newspaper coverage of the speeches in the House of Lords on 3 May was inaccurate. On the contrary and given the practical limitations and difficulties in transcription, reports of speeches heard in the House of Lords on 4 May 1797 were remarkably consistent and accurate when compared with each other or the official record.35 The differences in coverage tended to be subtle more a matter of interpretation than fact. The differences, however, were significant. 11 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings Admiral Lord Howe, at the time England's most celebrated naval officer and, until 8 April, Commander-in-Chief of the Channel Fleet,36 appeared in the House of Lords to refute suggestions of having neglected the seamen of the Channel Fleet. Specifically, he was accused of ignoring the thirteen petitions sent to him in February. The petitions were formal, circumspect and made only one request: that the seamen of the Royal Navy might be granted a pay increase to a shilling a day.37 The petitions were virtually identical. All, but one, were posted on the 28th of February. And all of them were anonymous.38 Howe, who was unwell and out of touch with the fleet, concluded the petitions were forgeries. He made informal inquiries and forwarded the petitions to the Admiralty. When ordered to weigh anchor and put to sea on 15 April, the seamen of the Channel Fleet refused. Instead, they manned the yards and cheered. They elected delegates and sent more petitions this time signed by the crews of each ship - to both the Admiralty and Parliament. While the key issue remained pay, their grievances were expanded to include other issues related conditions of service. Significantly, the new petitions insisted that their pay increase should be confirmed by Parliament and a pardon issued by the King before they would weigh anchor.39 They did promise, however, to set aside their grievances and set sail if the French fleet was sighted. The seamen's complaints were now made public. Copies of their new petitions were sent to newspapers. The Morning Chronicle reported: "The Sailors, in one of their Petitions, complain of the inattention of Earl Howe to their interests in not laying, the Petition, which they delivered to him near two months ago, before the Board of Admiralty."40 As the leading opposition paper, it sought to transfer the blame from Howe to government by suggesting that the "old and gallant Commander [had] presented the Petition to one of the Lords 12 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings Commissioners of the Admiralty, accompanied with a strong recommendation to the Board to take it under immediate consideration."41 Seeking to undermine public confidence in government, the editors suggested that the blame and censure for the crisis "ought to be transferred from [Howe] to his Majesty's Ministers, who, with a consistent folly and stupidity, approaching to insanity, entirely neglected the prayer of a body of men on whom depend the hopes, the safety, and the very being of the Country."42 The Observer, another opposition newspaper, also invented a defense for the aged admiral that brought the blame back to government: "the Noble Earl
repeatedly urged, both the Admiralty Board and Mr. Pitt, of the justice of the Seamen's claims, their worth, and the consequences to be apprehended from resisting the prayer of their petitions."43 Both newspapers appeared to base their assurances on assumptions, rather than any knowledge of the facts. Howe's situation was untenable. He was a naval legend and one of England's greatest admirals, but he certainly had his faults. He rarely spoke without being misunderstood.44 Throughout his long and distinguished career, he managed to confuse, confound and alienate his officers. "Howe was an inarticulate man, who may have become interested in signaling systems because he had such difficulty conveying his intentions in any other way."45 An admirer described him as "too forbearing."46 The eminent naval historian John Laughton wrote that he was "a man universally acknowledged to be unfeeling in his nature, ungracious in his manner, and who, upon all occasions, discovers a wonderful attachment to the dictates of his own perverse, impenetrable disposition."47 During the fleet mutiny of 1783, the admiral negated the good effect of meeting every ship by promising each crew they would be the first to be paid off. According to one naval officer, "after the battle of the 1st June, Lord Howe hinted, if he did not actually promise, he would endeavour to get the seamen's pay increased."48 This officer, Lt. Phillip Beaver, who remained with the fleet in 1797, described 13 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings the petitions sent to Howe as similar to the ones sent "to the lords of the Admiralty, and others I believe to the minister; to none have they received any answer; they have been treated with contemptuous silence."49 After failing to intimidate or divide the Fleet, the Lords of the Admiralty conceded most of its demands. The seamen celebrated their victory and waited for confirmation of their pay increase to come from Parliament. There was little or no news from Portsmouth until May 8, when the Morning Herald announced the renewal of the mutiny at Spithead. It reported that it was now attended "with the most alarming violence." The editors blamed government for not satisfying the seamen's demands and bringing the matter before Parliament: The discontents which produced this unfortunate event originated, we understand, in a supposition that the promises held out to the Sailors by the Board of Admiralty were not meant to be fulfilled by Government; which no doubt was founded not only upon the unaccountable neglect of Ministers, in not bringing the affair immediately before Parliament, but also upon the language made use of in the House of Lords, a few evenings since, by one of his Majesty's Secretaries of State.50 Ministerial delays and procrastination quickly became the cause celθbre of the opposition press. However, Lord Grenville was a curious choice for criticism. His only contribution to the discussion was to plead with the peers not to discuss a matter of such delicacy. As a member of government, Pitt's Foreign Secretary, he could be criticized, while those who actually made the damaging remarks could not. The exchange began on 3 May when the Duke of Bedford rose to ask "whether any of his Majesty's Ministers had it in charge, from his Majesty, to make any communication upon the recent important transactions which had occurred in the Marine department?"51 According to the Morning Chronicle, Lord Spencer responded, "he had it not in charge to make any communication to the House, nor did he foresee, that any communication would be made upon that subject." Subtle variations were introduced in transcribing and editing his remarks. 14 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings Thus, the Morning Post added a note of arrogance by suggesting Spencer said, "he had it not in command from his Majesty to make any communication to the House on that head, nor did he believe he should have."52 The True Briton removed the sting and transferred the responsibility to an unimpeachable source by reporting, "he had it not in Command, from His Majesty to make any communication to the House on the subject, nor did it appear to him as likely that he should be ordered to do so."53 The Times simply reported: "he had nothing to specific at present, nor had he his Majesty's commands to bring the late transactions of the fleet at Spithead before that House."54 While Bedford's question was rhetorical, Spencer's refusal, particularly as it was presented in opposition newspapers, appeared to abrogate a ministerial responsibility. As First Lord of the Admiralty, Spencer was required to give the members of Parliament "the opportunity of obtaining from him in person an account and, if necessary, a defense both of his own administrative acts and of the naval policy of the Government."55 If Spencer's reticence aroused the seamen's suspicions, Lord Howe and the Duke of Clarence's ill-advised candor that followed it confirmed their worst fears. Howe, presumably still in full uniform, rose to defend his honor. While offering to postpone his comments, he proceeded to say what nearly everyone thought, but had the sense not to say in public. The Morning Chronicle reported that Howe had "expressed a wish, however, that for the sake of the service, the business had never brought under discussion, for the Legislature would be brought by it into a most delicate situation."56 Unfortunately, he went on to say that: Either they must approve of transactions which there was no man who did not wish had never happened, or they must withhold that approbation, and thus acknowledge that they have made concessions under the pressure of the moment which they think improper to confirm.57 Again transcriptions and interpretations varied. Ironically, the Morning Post reported Howe as entreating their Lordships to be cautious: 15 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings He begged them to consider that if they came to any resolution, approving of the demands of the Sailors, it would materially affect the future discipline of the Fleet, by conveying an acquiescence to their conduct. If they disapproved it by any resolution, it would convey to the Seamen of the fleet an idea that the promises which had been made to them were not meant to be performed.58 Irrespective of the phrasing, the comment should not have been made, certainly not in a forum that guaranteed publication. The fact that Howe added, "all engagements made to them should be punctually complied with" in no way compensated for the enormity of his error and was, in any case, lost in the ensuing controversy. Grenville was merely trying to limit the damage when he "agreed entirely with the Noble Earl of the inexpediency and impolicy of bringing the subject under discussion, and entreated their Lordships to allow matters to rest as they were."59 The Duke of Clarence, the youngest son of George III, also "rose to deplore further discussion," but tactlessly added that, in his opinion, it was "improper to have complied with the demands of the seamen, however the concession might have been politic or proper in other points of view."60 According to Admiral Phillip Patton, his comments "tended to excite a doubt whether the demands of the seamen should have been granted."61 Howe rose in appreciation, but again said the wrong thing. He declared the question before Parliament to be: "Will you agree to the terms made by the Admiralty with the Seamen, or not? If the terms were fully ratified, it would virtually be giving a sanction to their conduct. If refused, it would show the Seamen that no reliance was to be placed on the promises of Government."62 Following such statements, it required no misrepresentations for the seamen to suspect "the promises held out
by the Board of Admiralty were not meant to be fulfilled by Government."63 The seamen were well informed of the discussion as it was thoroughly, though variously, reported by the press. Admiral Gardner advised Nepean that newspaper accounts of the speeches made in the House of Lords were "eagerly perused" and had produced "incredible 16 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings mischief, by misleading & poisoning the minds of the Seamen who I believe are fully convinced that it is not the intention of Government to pay any attention to their petitions.64 While the opposition press focused on indiscretions and ministerial delays, government and its supporters insisted the second outbreak of mutiny was "wholly, or in a great degree, to be ascribed to misrepresentations" appearing in newspapers.65 The Times argued such misrepresentations were designed "to inculcate a notion abroad, that the Administration of the country was disposed to evade the promises made by Earl Spencer to the seamen."66 In its version of "what had passed in the House of Lords" no mention was made of Howe's awkward question and the royal duke was quoted as saying: "He entertained the highest opinion of the abilities and conduct of the Noble Admiral; at the same time that he could not but deprecate a discussion in that House of the late discontents of the fleet. It might do much harm, and could be productive of little, if any, good."67 To avoid misrepresenting the aged admiral or the future king, The Times chose not to represent them at all.68 Readers were left to wonder why there had been so many calls for silence - calls that came far too late. The first news of the second outbreak of mutiny began with a fleet sighting. The French fleet had been sighted at the outer road of Brest.69 The Morning Herald reported that "17 sail of the line and a number of transports appeared ready for sailing at a moment's notice."70 Orders were sent for the Channel Fleet to meet this invasion threat. However, instead of weighing anchor, the seamen "manned the yards and cheered" following which "boats were seen plying from ship to ship."71 The paper observed that "every mind on shore is agitated with the most poignant alarm and suspense" and reported the mutiny's first violence: "when the boats attempted to go on board Admiral Colpoys' ship, he and his officers resolved to 17 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings oppose their coming on board with force, and in the encounter seven of the boat's crew were killed, and nine wounded."72 The editors added their interpretation to the news: The refractory spirit of the Seamen on the present occasion has been manifested in a manner that reflects very little credit on their boasted loyalty and attachment to their country's cause. What! the natural defenders of Old England refuse to put to sea, and sluggishly remain in port, under a frivolous pretext, at a time when her coasts are menaced by a daring and enterprising foe! Such behaviour is surely unworthy of the character of British Seamen; and yet, if we are rightly informed, such has actually been their unfortunate instance to which we now allude.73 Whether they hoped to shame the seamen into submission or turn public opinion against them was unclear. However, their statement was untrue. At no point during the mutinies were the French, Dutch or Spanish fleets enterprising enough to put to sea let alone menace England's coasts. The True Briton offered a similar report with a similar comment: A report has been prevalent for these two or three days past, that the French Fleet consisting of seventeen sail of the line, with a considerable number of transports, were lying in the outer road of Brest ready for sea, and it was even stated yesterday, that this Fleet was actually at sea. If this be the case, our seamen will be furnished with an opportunity of evincing the sincerity of their return to their duty, by giving such an account of the Enemy as they have hitherto ever been accustomed to do; and we trust that they will soon atone for their present misconduct, by some great naval achievement.74 Throughout the mutiny, reports of enemy fleet sightings appeared in both government and opposition papers. Most were based on nothing more substantial than coffeehouse speculations. Others were gleaned from continental papers; and, having no foundation in fact, were either French exercises in propaganda (to bolster local morale) or disinformation (to deceive or dishearten the British). And some were so detailed that they could only have come from the Admiralty. Their motives, in releasing some reports and withholding others, were not stated, but were revealed in the patterns they followed. The British approach to manipulating the media was subtle. There was no need to falsify or fabricate news. A selective release of information provided the necessary impetus for propaganda. The Admiralty shared the following details regarding the sighting from a report submitted to it by Sir John Borlase Warren, commander of the blockading squadron: 18 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings 18 Sail of the Line, two of them getting their topmasts through [and] 6 or 7 Frigates. Most of the above ships have their sails bent, and are apparently ready for sea. It is reported that there are one hundred sail of Transports in the Harbour.75 However, the Admiralty chose not to share all that they knew about the fleet at Brest. They were aware that, despite Warren's report, the French fleet was in no condition to sail, that the French lacked the men and provisions needed to mount a major expedition. On 1 March Spencer advised Bridport: "it does not appear that they have either men or stores enough to enable them to go to Sea."76 Recognizing the opportunity provided by the mutiny, the French made every effort, but could manage no more than the show of force that Warren observed.77 Intelligence reports from Texel suggest similar activity and similar confusion. Plans were made and orders were issued, but not executed: I understand there are 14 sail of the line and 4 frigates in the Texel. All the officers were ordered to repair to their respective regiments on the 3rd inst. and that the troops had begun to embark. They were to be joined by a French Fleet for the purpose of attempting three different descents on this country. The public there laughed at the idea of such an invasion, as they are persuaded it will meet with the same fate as that attempted in Ireland.78 The same demands of total war and want of money that led to the crisis in England precluded the possibility of invasion.79 On 1 April Windham heard from Texel: "Orders have been given for 9 months provision to this Fleet, but no one is disposed to enter into the contracts. There is little to be apprehended from any active service of the marine force of this country during this year."80 The intelligent reports were consistent. In March the Admiralty learned from Captain d'Auvergne, its chief intelligence officer stationed in the Channel Islands, that there were ten line-of-battle ships at Brest, "all extremely ill-fitted and badly manned."81 D'Auvergne explained that "the extreme want of stores leaves great doubt whether those in the Road will be completed, much less those in the harbour refitted, without fresh supplies from either Holland or Spain" and added that "sailors continue to desert in crowds, insomuch that forced levies scarcely compensate for them."82 On 20 April 19 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings Sir Robert Strachan confirmed that "[t]here is said to be a great scarcity of seamen in France and that those they have in the Navy are continually deserting."83 Yet another report stated there were "16 to 17 ships-of-the-line at Brest," but "there was scarcely a sufficiency of seamen or marines on board to do the ordinary duty of the ships almost all having deserted from want of victuals, clothing, and pay." 84 The observer concluded that he did "not think it possible that they can send a Fleet to sea, and such seems to be the general opinion of people at Brest. Stores of all kinds are extremely deficient."85 On 29 April, d'Auvergne, confirmed that the situation in France had not changed: The desertions of the seamen continues in an excessive degree. The Bishoprick of Leon is full of them. They are supported by the peasants. Colonnes Mobiles have been marched in the country, but the soldiers either avoided taking them up or sent them notice to keep out of the way for their expedition has been fruitless. The ships in the Road are not above half manned.86 On 8 May the Star preceded its report of the second outbreak with the news: "It is very currently reported, that the French fleet are at sea, and have a fleet of transport with them."87 On 9 May the Morning Post denied the sailing, but confirmed the possibility: "It is stated that the French Fleet had worked out into the outer road of Brest, consisting of 17 sail of the line and a number of transports, which appeared ready for sailing at a moment's notice."88 That afternoon the Star linked the sighting with the situation at Portsmouth: In consequence of information having been received at the Admiralty, that the Brest fleet, consisting of 18 ships of the line, with a great number of transports having troops on board, was anchored at the outer roads of Brest, orders were transmitted to Lord Bridport, to put to sea immediately, and his instructions to that effect reached him on Sunday morning. His Lordship made signal for weighting and putting to sea, but not a crew would act. It seems they had read the late conversation in the House of Lords, in which silence on the subject of the Seamen's complaints was so strongly recommended by Ministers and their friends; and they suspected there was a design of deceiving them; they thought that the Ministers had no serious intention of having their demands sanctioned by Parliament. This was the reason they refused to weigh anchor on Sunday morning; and finding themselves, by the call made on them to put to sea, forced to a decisive line of conduct, they resolved to hold a Convention of Delegates on board the London lying at Spithead.89 Providing enough detail to identify an official source, The Times fuelled invasion fears by suggesting that at least double the number of ships observed by Warren were ready to sail: 20 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings THE FRENCH FLEET Although the reports made by the Galetea frigate to Sir J B Warren, and sent express by him to the Admiralty, mention their having counted but 17 ships of the line in Brest water, we are not to conclude that the enemy have no more ships equipped in the outer road of Brest and in the harbour than barely that number; but it is politic in them to suffer no more to be visible at one time to our cruisers off the harbour's mouth; whilst the rest may continue concealed within the intervening headland, which partly separates the outer road from the Brest water, in like manner as ships in Catwater or Hamoaze are most invisible to ships in Plymouth Sound. That they have double the above number the following statement will evince, and which must all be ready for sea at this instant, provided they have their complement of men. When our Seamen read this list, we hope they will not temporize a moment longer, but cheerfully weigh anchor in search of the enemy. Present state of the armament at Brest. May 1, 1797 Guns Guns Les Peuples 120 Le Republicain 110 La Convention Nationale 110 Le Terrible 110 Richery's Late Squadron; and three frigates Le Jupiter 80 Le Duquesne 74 La Victoire 80 Le Censeur 74 Le Resolution 74 Le Berwick 74 Le Barras 74 Villeneuve's Squadron from Toulon, which arrived at Brest about Christmas last; and two frigates Le Formidable 80 Le Tyrannicide 74 Le Rosseau 74 Le Morne Blanc 74 Le Jemappe 74 Returned in January from the Irish expedition and eleven frigates L'Indomptable 80 Le Fougeux 74 Le Trajan 74 Le Redoubtable 74 Le Nestor 74 Le Patriote 74 Le Cassud 74 Le Mutius 74 Le Tourville 74 Le Watigny 74 Le Ζote 74 La Constitution 74 Le Pluton 74 Le Revolution 74 Le Pegase 74 Arrived at Brest from Toulon the latter end of January, and two frigates Le Tonnant 80 Le Gillaume Tell 74 Total 33 of the Line and 18 Frigates To join immediately from Toulon 7 of the Line 40 Equipping at L'Orient 4 Ships of 76 guns Grand Total 44 Ships of the Line It is manifest, therefore, that their aim is to outnumber greatly our Grand Channel Fleet; which, if united and in harmony, would however be more than a match for all the combined forces of France and Spain.90 21 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings The qualification, "provided they have their complement of men," was lost in the announcement that the French were "ready for sea at this instant."91 Significantly, the list included the names of the ships, their armament, their captains, but not their condition. This was no oversight. The information was certainly available to the Admiralty. No intelligence report would have been meaningful without it. However, had the condition of the allied fleets been made public, it would have been obvious that virtually none of them were in a condition to sail. Of course, naval intelligence was not made public at least not until it was convenient. Once the Channel Fleet was safely at sea, The Times reported that the "French fleet is certainly in a very disorganized state." With no mention of their earlier alarm, the editors explained that the French government had "no money to pay the sailors in specie" and that "the desertions have been very great; and a large body of troops is drawn down towards Brest to stop their further progress."92 However, the unusual number of fleet sightings and the attempt to manipulate the press did not go unnoticed: The stories of the French being at sea are fortunately without foundation. Such falsehoods ought not to be circulated. God knows we have already suffered too much from the Jesuitical policy of false alarms! What might be the consequence to England, if by these very cunning alarms, we should prompt the impetuous seamen to hurry the fleet to sea, of their own accord, without instructions, without concert, without a rendezvous, and without auspices! If there was nothing material to the conduct of a Fleet, but bravery in the hour of action, we should have pleasure in seeing the British Seamen, self-organised, opposed to the enemy however numerous, but the detail of signals, the co-operation of the Admiralty at home, and with all the other stations of the service, the intelligence with respect to the enemy, and a thousand other considerations which depend on concert and establishment, must convince the sailors themselves that even their own strength, their importance, and their success must depend on system, on discipline, on duty, and that they can only hope to retain the glory they have acquired by returning to the order which has made them the pride of the Universe.93 22 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings FINDINGS & CONCLUSION The media of 200 years ago operated under many of the same constraints and pressures as they do today. They struggled with economic realities, limited access to sources and the impossibility of presenting all of the news. They engaged in perpetual self-criticism and ethical discussions. They pondered their role in democratic society and recoiled in selfrighteous indignation from all attempts to limit it. They suffered from an inherent bias and served as the principal means of influencing public opinion. One of the more important lessons to be learned from this analysis of news coverage of the mutiny was that there wasn't just one public. There were several one of which included the seamen of the Channel Fleet. Beyond question, that public was provided with a selective presentation of the facts with the object of leading them to believe that an invasion was imminent. Ironically, their loyalty was assumed. Their promise to weigh anchor if the French fleet was sighted was taken for granted as was their ignorance about the true condition of the French fleet. Upon reading the exaggerated details of the French fleet, the seamen were expected to "cheerfully weigh anchor in search of the enemy."94 While they later proved their loyalty beyond question, in this instance the seamen proved that they were determined and at least as well informed as the Lords of the Admiralty. Both government and opposition politicians used newspapers to influence public opinion. Government supplied the papers with information about the mutiny and opposition interpreted the news to their political advantage. Neither government nor opposition seemed particularly concerned with how the seamen of the Channel Fleet would react to their manipulations. While the issue was still debated, parliamentary privilege was breeched long before 1797. However, the mutiny demonstrated the dangers involved in unguarded 23 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings discussion of public affairs. Ultimately, the indiscretions of Admiral Howe and the Duke of Clarence, rather than the misrepresentation of their remarks, exacerbated the mutiny. While the media of the late 18th century reveled in the role of watchdog, they put far more effort into influencing the public than informing it. Newspapers of the era were no more or less independent then than they are now. They certainly reflected the bias and ideologies of those contending for political or commercial power; but, paradoxically, they also fulfilled their basic function in a democratic society. Though inconsistent, contradictory and confusing, they did inform the public and served to check those who would abuse their power. In addition to supplying the public with information, newspapers also gave the public a voice. They shaped public opinion, but they also reflected it. In this instance, they gave the seamen a forum in which to air their grievances and the opportunity to monitor government's progress in redressing them. The manner and timing of the fleet sightings reported by the press prove intent and the presence of propaganda. The incomplete and inaccurate reports of the French fleet sailing were linked with challenges of the seamen's character and loyalty. Information regarding the condition of the French fleet was clearly withheld until after the mutiny was settled. The reports do not, however, provide the identity of the propagandists. While government did withhold vital information, its manipulations primarily took the form of feeding the media's collective impulse for analysis, interpretation and speculation. 24 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings A SUGGESTION FOR FURTHER RESEARCH The temptation to compare fleet sightings that occurred 200 years ago with weapons inspections that occurred two years ago is nearly irresistible. Both involved the manipulation of the media in an effort to influence public opinion. Both involved an effort to justify unpopular policy with an ultimate fear the fear of invasion an invasion of not just troops, but of an ideology that had proved its ruthlessness in a Reign of Terror - or the fear of weapons of mass destruction falling into the hands of a madman a madman who had demonstrated his ruthlessness by using such weapons on his own people. The temptation is there, but this researcher is willing to leave such comparisons to other scholars. While they certainly would establish the relevance of this research to the current discussion of manipulation of the media, it would also dilute the analysis offered here. The depth of analysis offered here is possible only because the events studied occurred so long ago. Access to private and official records including critical naval intelligence documents is unrestricted. The amount of information available is staggering, but not overwhelming. And the events studied occurred long enough ago that the researcher's inherent bias in framing or filtering the records is a minor rather than a major problem. Still, the temptation remains and it is useful for scholars to occasionally remember that history follows patterns and that there is truth in the old adage: "The more things change, the more they stay the same." 1 H Lasswell, Democracy through Public Opinion (New York: George Banta Publishing, 1941), 1, 42-46 2 W Lippmann, Public Opinion (New York: Macmillan Company, 1961), 32 3 E Bernays, Propaganda (New York: Ig Publishing, 2005, originally published in 1928), 38 4 Jacques Ellul, Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes (New York: Vintage Books, 1973), 124 5 A Pratkanis & E Aronson, Age of Propaganda: The Everyday Use and Abuse of Persuasion (New York: W H Freeman & Company, 2001), 8 6 Ibid., 14 7 Cobbett's Political Register, 11 April 1807. Cobbett was known in the US as "Peter Porcupine" for his scathing attacks on Jeffersonian democracy. 25 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings 8 R McChesney, "Journalism, Democracy and Class Struggle," Monthly Review, November 2000 9 E Herman and N Chomsky, Manufacturing Consent (Pantheon Books, 1988), PAGE # 10 C Jensen and Project Censored, 20 Years of Censored News (New York: Seven Stories Press, 1997), 27-31 11 Ellul, 38. Historian, journalist and novelist, Henry Adams was also the grandson and great-grandson of US Presidents John and John Quincy Adams. 12 A Pratkanis & M Turner, "Persuasion and Democracy: Strategies for increasing deliberative participation and enacting social change," Journal of Social Issues, 52 (1996), 190 13 A Pratkanis & E Aronson, Age of Propaganda: The Everyday Use and Abuse of Persuasion (New York: W H Freeman & Company, 2001), 11 14 Ibid., 7 15 E Herman and N Chomsky, Manufacturing Consent (New York: Pantheon Books, 1988), PAGE # 16 E Barnouw, et al, International Encyclopedia of Communications (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989), 375; G Jowett and V O'Donnell, Propaganda and Persuasion (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1999), 4 17 The Times, 1 January 1799 18 Ibid. 19 Ibid. Windham's comments were made in response to George Tierney's complaints of a breach of Parliamentary privilege and libelous misrepresentations by The Times. 20 The combined circulation of the London dailies in the late 1790s did not exceed forty thousand. However, as each copy might be read by twenty or thirty people in coffee-houses, public-houses, pot-houses and circulating libraries, readership estimates run as high as 1.2 million. I Christie, Myth & Reality in Late Eighteenth Century British Politics and Other Papers (London: MacMillian, 1970), 325 21 Parliamentary History, xxxiv, 162-4 22 Ibid. 23 Star, 11 May 1797 24 PRO ADM1/107, Gardner to Nepean, 8 May 1797 25 Little is known about literacy amongst seamen. Estimates of functional literacy (ability to read, but not write) for the general population in the late 18th century range from half to two-thirds. J Feather, A History of British Publishing (London: Routledge, 1991), 85; F O'Gorman, The Long Eighteenth Century: British Political & Social History 1688-1832 (London: Arnold, 1997), 129; Webb, 22 26 Sheridan also owned the Drury Lane Theatre. Of the advantage, William Cobbett commented: 'I shall make a full exposure of your connexion with the newspaper press, shall show the reciprocal dependence which subsists between you and the persons concerned in the conducting of that press, and shall point out the mischiefs which have arisen, and which will yet arise, from this reciprocity.' Cobbett, Political Proteus, 11 27 Morning Chronicle, 30 January 1793 28 The Times, 15 February 1812 29 P Mackesy, War Without Victory, The Downfall of Pitt 1799-1802 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1984), 32 30 Colley, 287. While this may have been true of the army, militia and fencibles, the majority of those pressed or recruited into the naval service were already seamen. 31 Income taxes were introduced in 1798. 32 A Wadsworth, Newspaper Circulation: 1800-1954 (Manchester: Manchester Statistical Society Transactions, 1955), 11 33 ADM 1/5125, Letter from the Ship's Company of HMS Defiance to the Delegates, n.d. (filing suggests 18-22 April 1797) 34 ADM 1/107 268, Gardner to Nepean, 8 May 1797 26 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings 35 Journal of the House of Lords, xli, 1797 36 ADM 1/107 187, Howe to Nepean, 8 April 1797 37 The seamen had not received a pay increase since 1664. 38 The seamen's reluctance to sign the petitions was understandable. It was common for ringleaders to be selected for punishment from the names listed on any petition that was considered mutinous. 39 ADM 1/5125, A Detail of the Proceedings, 18-24 April 1797 40 Morning Chronicle, 22 April 1797 41 Ibid. 42 Ibid. 43 Observer & Public Advertiser, 23 April 1797 44 J G Bullocke commented: 'Those who have come across Lord Howe's letters ... know that their amazing circumlocution of style was matched in his conversation'. Bullocke, Sailors' Rebellion: a century of naval mutinies (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1938), 229 45 N Tracy, Nelson's Battles: The Art of Victory in the Age of Sail (London: Chatham, 1995), 73 46 Lady Bourchier, Memoir of the Life of Admiral Sir Edward Codrington (London: Longmans, Green, 1873), 32 47 Dictionary of National Biography, x, 97 48 J Laughton, ed., Naval Miscellany I (London: NRS, 1902), 408-409; E Hallam Moorhouse, ed., Letters of the English Seamen: 1587-1808 (London: Chapman & Hall, 1910), 180 49 Moorhouse, 180 50 Morning Herald, 8 May 1797 51 Morning Chronicle, 4 May 1797 52 Morning Post, 4 May 1797 53 True Briton, 4 May 1797 54 The Times, 4 May 1797 55 O Murray, 'The Admiralty', Mariner's Mirror, xxiii (1937), 22 56 Morning Chronicle, 4 May 1797 57 Ibid. 58 Morning Post, 4 May 1797 59 Morning Chronicle, 4 May 1797 60 Star, 4 May 1797 61 P Patton, "Account of the Mutinies at Spithead & St Helen's," Papers on Naval Affairs (Edinburgh: Murray & Cochrane, 1807), 7 62 True Briton, 4 May 1797 63 Morning Herald, 8 May 1797 64 PRO ADM1/107, Gardner to Nepean, 8 May 1797; see also P Patton, "Account of the Mutinies at Spithead & St Helen's," 8 65 London Chronicle, 6-9 May 1797. Sheridan artfully responded 'the second discontents were wholly to be ascribed to the procrastination of Ministers'. 66 The Times, 9 May 1797 67 Ibid., 4 May 1797 27 Manipulation of the Media: Misrepresentations, Indiscretions & Fleet Sightings 68 While the official version of what was said confirms the damaging remarks, the impressions created by newspapers were all that mattered. 69 Brest was the main French naval base on the Channel. 70 Morning Herald, 8 May 1797 71 Ibid. 72 Ibid. 73 Ibid. 74 True Briton, 11 May 1797 75 PRO ADM1/107, Warren to Nepean, 3 May 1797 76 BL Addl MS 35 197.85, Bridport Papers, Spencer to Bridport, 1 March 1797 77 PRO ADM1/4172, d'Auvergne, 23 April 1797; ADM1/4172, d'Auvergne, 16 May 1797; ADM1/107, Durham to Warren, 29 April 1797; ADM1/4172, d'Auvergne, 16 May 1797 78 PRO ADM 1/4172, Nagzinshi to Carter, 7 April 1797; ADM1/6033, Duncan, 17 April 1797; ADM1/3974, The Hague, 28 April 1797 79 The Spanish fleet had not recovered from its defeat at Cape St Vincent. 80 PRO ADM1/6033, Holland, 1 April 1797; PRO ADM1/4172, Secretary of State, 1 April 1797 81 Ibid., Brest 19 & 20 March 1797 82 Ibid. 83 Ibid., Strachan, 20 April 1797 84 Ibid., Brummell, 24 April 1797; BM Add MS 35197, Bridport Papers 85 Ibid. 86 PRO ADM1/4172, report from d'Auvergne, 16 May 1797 87 Star, 8 May 1797 88 Morning Post, 9 May 1797 89 Star, 9 May 1797 90 The Times, 12 May 1797 91 Ibid. 92 London Chronicle, 13-16 May 1797; The Times, 18 May 1797 93 Morning Chronicle, 10 May 1797 94 The Times, 12 May 1797 28
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