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LTC Stephen F.
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Thank you my friend CW5 Jack Cardwell for sharing a documentary video focused on the Medway raid of 9-14/19-24 June 1667 as a Dutch fleet sailed into the Thames River and attacked the British fleet in its anchorage in the Medway, causing a panic in London and winning a victory that helped bring the Second Anglo-Dutch War to an end.
"The peace was short-lived. After a brief period in which Holland, Britain and Sweden allied together to oppose Louis XIV, the French king managed to bribe Charles II to change sides, only five years after the Peace of Breda, in 1672, the Third Anglo-Dutch War broke out"

Background on the Medway raid
The Medway raid of 9-14/19-24 June 1667 saw a Dutch fleet sail into the Thames and attack the British fleet in its anchorage in the Medway, causing a panic in London and winning a victory that helped bring the Second Anglo-Dutch War to an end.

At the end of the summer of 1666 the British controlled the Channel, after the victory on St James's Day and the devastating raid on Dutch shipping on 10 August ('Holmes's Bonfire'), but this was a short-lived success. The Great Plague of 1665 had already lowered Charles II's income, and this was followed by the Great Fire of London (2-5 September 1666). Over the winter of 1666-67 the British fleet was laid up in the Medway, and at the start of the campaigning season of 1667 only two small squadrons put out to sea. Peace negotiations had already begun, and to a certain extend Charles's decision was linked to this, while many in Britain believed that the Dutch would be unable to fund a powerful fleet of their own.

This was not the case. The Grand Pensionary, Johan de Witt, was opposed to peace on the terms then available, and decided to launch a daring raid into the Thames to attack the British at anchor. The Dutch slowly built up the strength of their fleet at sea. A relatively small fleet sailed north to raid Scotland before returning south, and by 4 June a fleet of 54 ships of the line was off the Thames. This increased to sixty four on 6 June, and finally, on 7 June, Michiel de Ruyter arrived with the rest of the fleet.

The Medway was very poorly defended in the summer of 1667. A strong iron chain supported by pontoons had been stretched across the river at Gillingham, and thirty pinnaces were available to fend off fireships. Only on 12 June, by which time the Dutch were already in the Medway, was George Monck ordered to build a gun battery at Gillingham.

De Ruyter decided to send a small squadron up the Thames as far as Northfleet Hope, at Tilbury. This squadron would then turn back and sail into the Medway, where it would attack British shipping and if possible seize the defences of Sheerness. Lieutenant-Admiral Van Ghent was given command of the squadron, which contained seventeen men-of-war of between 60 and 36 guns, most of the ten fireships in the fleet and all of the smaller galliots.

The Dutch attack began in 9 June, when Van Ghent made slow progress up the Thames against a south-westerly wind. The wind prevented the Dutch from attacking some British ships in the Hope and at Gravesend, and on the night of 9-10 June Van Ghent moored just below Gravesend.

On 10 June the Dutch entered the Medway and captured the fort at Sheerness. Charles II responded by sending George Monck, duke of Albemarle, to Kent to organise a defence. Only now was the iron chain put in place at Gillingham, and a small gun battery built at each end while the Unity was posted just below the chain.

The crucial moment of the raid came on 12 June when the Dutch reached the chain. The Vrede, under Captain Jan van Brakel, and with two fireships in support, led the attack. While the Vrede attacked and captured the Unity, the fireships attacked and broke the chain. One then destroyed the British guardship Matthias. Van Brakel then went on to capture the Charles V, and used her guns against the British coastal batteries.

The rest of the British fleet in the Medway was now virtually defenceless. The Royal Charles was quickly captured, and began Van Ghent's flagship for the day, before being towed across the Channel (as was the Unity). The Monmouth was also burnt during the day.

On 13 June the Dutch pushed further up the Medway. Although Upnor Castle and a battery on the opposite bank offered more resistance, the Dutch were still able to burn the Royal Oak, the Loyal London and the Old James, while a larger number of ships were forced to run aground to save themselves.

On 14 June, with most of his fireships gone, De Ruyter withdrew from the Medway and moored close to Queenborough, before moved into the mouth of the Thames. For a short period London was blockaded, and everything that normally arrived by sea was quickly in short supply (the price of coal rose from 15s to 140s per ton). De Ruyter considered mounting an attack up the Thames towards London, but a combination of improving British defences and the non-appearance of a French fleet forced him to abandon that plan. Finally, at the start of July, de Ruyter left the Thames and entered the Channel. An attack on Landguard Fort (2 July 1667) failed, ending a plan to attack Harwich.

The Dutch victory in the Medway forced Charles II to take the peace negotiations more seriously, and within a few weeks the war came to an end (Treaty of Breda, 31 July 1667). The Navigation Acts were modified to allow Dutch and German goods to enter Britain in Dutch ships, and most colonies taken during the war were returned, although the Dutch kept Surinam and Britain kept New York and New Jersey.

The peace was short-lived. After a brief period in which Holland, Britain and Sweden allied together to oppose Louis XIV, the French king managed to bribe Charles II to change sides, only five years after the Peace of Breda, in 1672, the Third Anglo-Dutch War broke out."
http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/battles_medway_1667.html

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SSgt Boyd Herrst
SSgt Boyd Herrst
6 y
Wow.. really intriguing.. in school in World Government/History .. we touched on different wars, touches.. that went on.. we had so much to get into and so little time to cover it. Teacher associate(Student teacher) would put the additional chapters we could cover on our own on the board (it really was a hint to get into it, a very good hint it may be included in a test.. it was hard to tell.. we’d do the extra reading.. and when the test didn’t have points from the extra read’g, students be disappointed that points from it would not be included... So some wouldn’t do the extra read’g and it would be on the test.. I passed on
To my class mates that they need to read/absorb the extra read anyway..
I wasn’t the best student and actually their getting a lower grade brought my average up..(maybe?)
Some of the real brainy ones that didn’t really study.. just scanned and absorbed like a sponge.. asked me why I passed hints on learn’g points.. I’ve had points passed to me.. good and not so good.
I and some other medium to mediocre students had got together to develop a study circle..
most were in JROTC a few were not but good supporters<~(they spoke good of it but didn’t get into it because some they hung with didn’t think it was that good of a thing to do(it might turn them into a war-monger.. ha-ha[conspiracy theorist]).. I tried telling those supporters to not let them naysayers Influence their thinking ...
Some I’ve managed (3 of 5)to pick up JROTC next semester . There were a couple I let another cadet have(it took 2 to get a Recruiting award certificate and 5 to get the
award rack ribbon and one didn’t
have to get all 5 at the same time or even the same marking period.. what was good is the commandant made sure we got awarded quick..
So if one picked up the rest needed early in next marking period he got them the military ribbon really quick. He seemed to have a multitude of every award in stock.
Some Cadets thought he had good Connections to get awards quickly.
We acquired a case for awards one half had trophies, plaques and the othe had promotion lists, and achievement lists.. (IMHO) the various achievement medals came from ROTC.. not as many points . Had to get more to get points to add to total test points, performance points, TIG/TIS points
I noticed that a deployment team goes some place and the whole team does real good. It starts at top
and gets watered down... the team leader gets the commendation, some get achievement medals and the rest get participation certificates.. I knew some who had gotten cerificates and should have gotten better.. The reasoning behind just getting the “been there” certificates was they were not designated as a ‘detail leader’
By the Team leader.. on a particular Deploy .. We had gone to Germany for staging and were going down to final point from there
The team got split and half went first to set up the site.. I went on that and we got our Food Services
Set up.. final clearing set and getting Connex Ctrs where we wanted and get hooked up, get the
Cook units and Clean’g area set.
We got some basic feeding going for the first other teams.. A immersion heater in a 30 Gal. Can
To heat the foil packs from MREs.
(I got one of the C.E. Metal guys to fashion a half perffed container to
Put the MRE packs and heat and pull up to get them out.. Had a indelible marker and marked initials
on them, when ready we could give back to those that gave to us). The Airmen I had that came up with additional ideas. I made note of.. even if they’d only get a certificate,
I got gold detail tape and noted on back the extra contribution they made.. in fact one of them got the
achievement medal instead of another detail leader.. stuff happens.. I made a mistake in picking detail leaders.. it happens!
Three got achievement medals and 5 got achievement certificates.
((IMHO) everybody made contributions and I though all on my team should have earned an achievement medal.. they all made substantial contributions to our contribution to the overall mission.
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Great history share.
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