An exact and perfect relation relation [sic] of the terrible, and bloudy fight: between the English and Dutch fleets in the Downs, on Wednesday the 19 of May, 1652. Relating, how Martin Van Trump the Dutch Admiral, upon General Blagues friendly salutation, set forth his bloudy flag of defiance; with the whole particulars of the fight, and the manner of the engagement. Also, a list of our admirals ships that engaged in the aforesaid fight; and the names of those those [sic] that lost men in this service, with the namber [sic] of them that were slain and wounded on both sides; together wth [sic] the sinking of one of the Hollanders, the taking of 3, and the total spoiling of their whole fleet; with their flight to deep in France, and what hapned [sic] to the English in the pursuit. Being the true copy of a letter sent to Mr. Richard Bostock of London, Merchant. Published according to order, and printed for the satisfaction of all that desire to be truly informed, White, Thomas, fl. 1652. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A96374 of text R206838 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E665_11). Textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. The text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with MorphAdorner. The annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). Textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. This text has not been fully proofread Approx. 10 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 5 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. EarlyPrint Project Evanston,IL, Notre Dame, IN, St. Louis, MO 2017 A96374 Wing W1855 Thomason E665_11 ESTC R206838 99865941 99865941 118197 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A96374) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 118197) Images scanned from microfilm: (Thomason Tracts ; 102:E665[11]) An exact and perfect relation relation [sic] of the terrible, and bloudy fight: between the English and Dutch fleets in the Downs, on Wednesday the 19 of May, 1652. Relating, how Martin Van Trump the Dutch Admiral, upon General Blagues friendly salutation, set forth his bloudy flag of defiance; with the whole particulars of the fight, and the manner of the engagement. Also, a list of our admirals ships that engaged in the aforesaid fight; and the names of those those [sic] that lost men in this service, with the namber [sic] of them that were slain and wounded on both sides; together wth [sic] the sinking of one of the Hollanders, the taking of 3, and the total spoiling of their whole fleet; with their flight to deep in France, and what hapned [sic] to the English in the pursuit. Being the true copy of a letter sent to Mr. Richard Bostock of London, Merchant. Published according to order, and printed for the satisfaction of all that desire to be truly informed, White, Thomas, fl. 1652. 8 p. Printed for Robert Wood, London : 1652. Dated and signed on page 6: Dover, May, 22 1652. Thomas White. Annotation on Thomason copy: "25 may"; and following 'Merchant', which is underlined: "of ye post House". Reproduction of the original in the British Library. eng Anglo-Dutch War, 1652-1654 -- Early works to 1800. Netherlands -- History -- 1648-1714 -- Early works to 1800. Great Britain -- History, Naval -- Stuarts, 1603-1714 -- Early works to 1800. A96374 R206838 (Thomason E665_11). civilwar no An exact and perfect relation relation [sic] of the terrible, and bloudy fight: between the English and Dutch fleets in the Downs, on Wednes White, Thomas 1652 1857 3 0 0 0 0 0 16 C The rate of 16 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words. 2007-05 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2007-05 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2007-06 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2007-06 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion An Exact and Perfect Relation RELATION Of the TERRIBLE , and BLOUDY FIGHT : BETWEEN The English and Dutch Fleets in the Downs , on Wednesday the 19 of May , 1652. RELATING , How Martin Van Trump the Dutch Admiral , upon General Blagues friendly salutation , set forth his bloudy Flag of Defiance ; With the whole particulars of the Fight , and the manner of the Engagement . Also , A List of our Admirals ships that engaged in the aforesaid Fight ; and the Names of those those that lost men in this service , with the namber of them that were slain and wounded on both sides ; Together wth the sinking of one of the Hollanders , the taking of 3 , and the total spoiling of their whole Fleet ; with their flight to Deep in France , and what hapned to the English in the pursuit . Being the true Copy of a Letter sent to Mr. Richard Bostock of London , Merchant . Published according to Order , and Printed for the satisfaction of all that desire to be truly informed , London : Printed for Robert Wood , 1652. A more particular and exact Relation of the bloudy fight that happened in the Downs , between the English and the Hollanders . Worthy Sir , MY Service to you , wishing all happinesse ; On the 18 of May instant , the Hollanders Fleet consisting of 42 sayl of stout ships , all men of war ) came by the Eastward , and lay by the Lee of the South-fore-land , and from thence sent two of their Fleet into the Downs to Major Bourn , who was then Admiral ( Gen. Blague being absent ) the Captains of those ships comming aboard our Admirals ship , desired leave of him to anchor their ships in the Downs ; the Admiral asked them why they came into our seas with their Flags up , so near our Navy ; they answered they had orders not to strike their flags to any they should meet with ; whereupon , the Major answered them , that within two days time they should know whether there was room enough for them to anchor in or not ; yet notwithstanding this , the Hollanders anchored in Dover Road , and rode there till the 19th . About two of the clock in the afternoon , Major Bourn came out of the Downs into Dover Road with 10 sail , and Col. Blague from the rest with 13 sail more ; the Dutch Fleet seeing this weighe anchor , and stood up to the coast of France with their Flaggs up , near upon two hours , and then bore up to Gen. Blague , each ship having a man at the top mast head , as if they intended to have struck their Flags , when they came within shot of our Admirall , he made one shot at them for to strike but they refused still coming towards him , whereupon he made two shot more at them , and then the Hollanders gave him one shot , still making nearer to h●m , and comming up to him , saluted our Admirall with a whole volley of small shot and a broad side of gunshot , and Col. Blague returned him the like , and bearing up after him they two charged three or four broadsides at each other , 1 , of the Hollanders gave our Admirall each of them a broad side , before any of our ships came up to second him ; then the Generall of Foulston came up between the Hollanders and our Admirall , and gave them a breathing time ; and in an hours time the ship called the Triumph came up to them , and fell up into the whole Fleet . About sixe of the clock at night the Dutch Admirall bore away , and Gen. Blague after him ; but Van Trump went better then our Admirall , insomuch that he could not come up with them but followed them within shot till nine of the clock , in which time , the Hollanders had so shattered our Generals sails and rigging , that they had neither sheets , tacks , nor brace , and his fore-sail was all torn in pieces ; by means whereof Van Trump sailed away , and all his Fleet after him ; onely one of our Frigots boarded one of them , who had 150 in her ; whereof 50 were slain , and the rest wounded and taken : we also shot another Dutch ship main Mast over board , and took her , she having 37 guns in her , but finding sixe foot of water in her hold , we onely took out the Captain , and two more and left her not able to swim , but sunk shortly afterwards . In this fight we had but 18 sail engaged , because some could not get up time enough ; also one of our fleet had but two guns , the Grey-hound was of no great foree , and two more were but Catches would do no good . Our Admirall received 200 shot , some of which did execution , and many of their own shot ; we lost 8 men in the Admiral , five slain out right , three dead since ; and had twenty wounded ; In the Reuben there was three men slain ; in the Centurian two ; in the Victory two , and in the Fairfax one , the Garland Entrance , and the Worcester frigot lost not one man , but the Dutch lost four times our number in the two ships that were taken ; besides what they lost in that which was sunk . The Generall saith some men did not ingage at all , and therefore deserve to be looked upon as undeserving men . Our ships are all now ( God be praised ) safe in the Downs , and have brought in two Hollanders , one of them thought to be an Adviser . I was aboard our fleet in the Downs and there came six Hollanders that were Marchant men , within a league of our fleet , whereupon a Frigot of ours came up to the Admiral , and asked leave to fetch them in ; but the Admirall answered that they were men about honest occasions , and he had no order from the Councell of State to meddle with them , and so let them passe about their occasions . While I was aboard the Admiral , there came a Dutchman of War , supposing it to be Van Trump , but the Speaker Frigot quickly fetcht him up , and brought him in to our Fleet . There are 36 of the Hollanders ships that engaged with our Fleet in the aforesaid fight , that ride about Deep , every one of them being about ▪ 1000. or 1500. Tun , most of them pittifully torn and battered , and many of them without either Mast , Sails , or Flags ; having lost the company of their Admiral . Dover , May , 22. 1652. Sir , Your assured Friend , Thomas White . The Copy of another Letter from Dover of the same Date . SIR , I Cannot but intimate unto you some Particulars of a bloudy beginning of an unhappy Breach between the English and the Dutch Fleet , though perhaps you may have it more fully then we , yet I shall impart what I have seen . Tuesday , Martin Vantrump came before this Town , and rode in the Road at anchor with his Fleet , being 41 sail of good ships of War , not a small ship amongst them till Wednesday at noon , with his Flag on the main top , at which time some shot was sent from the Castle and Fort , to cause him to strike ( as is the custome ) but he would not . At which time General Blake with his Fleet appeared , being in all 25 good ships , of which , 7 of the old Navy ships , and the rest were Frigots , and other ships of good defence . On sight of them , the Dutch tack'd about , and stood in with the English Fleet , and Trump himself very boldly stood up with Gen. Blake with his Flag aloft , and comming near , the Admiral shot at a distance from him ( as is the custome ) to make him strike , and so at second and third time shot at him and hit him . To whom Trump answered with one Gun without shot ; then our Admiral shot ▪ 3. or 4. upon which , Trump came up and gave him a whole broad side , and in stead of pulling down his Flag , put up a red Flag under the former , and having received the like salute from the English General , the Fleets on both sides did desperately engage , so that there was the hottest dispute for the time , that hath been this many years , between two such Fleets , and was conceived by knowing men that it would not end so long as a ship on both sides could swim on the water . But it pleased God better to dispose thereof ; for it began at 4 of the clock in the afternoon , and ended at past 9 at night , it being dark that they could not know one another . The Flemming stood off towards the French Coast , and our ships anchored about the place , and in the morning the Dutch were gone . Our ships came up this morning with their whole Fleet , having not lost one , and have taken one from the Dutch , and have sunk another ; It was thought their Admiral could not but sink : Just now is come a collier from France that met them last night ; He saith , That they have never an Admiral amongst thew , nor any Flag or Ensign out amongst them all . A List of those ships of the Parliaments side that chiefly engaged , and the number of men that were slain out of each ship . In the Admiral , 20 wounded , and 8 slain . In the Reuben , three slain . In the Centurion , two , In the Victory , two . In the Fairfax one . The Garland , Entrance , and Worcester Frigots lost not a man out of them . What loss the Enemy received is not certainly known ; but we sunk one of them , took three , and totally shattered and spoiled their whole Fleet . FINIS .