Raid on Griessie | |||||||
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Part of the Java campaign of 1806–1807 | |||||||
![]() 1800 map of Java | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United Kingdom |
Holland Dutch East Indies | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Edward Pellew | William Cowell | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
2 ships of the line 2 frigates 4 sloops-of-war |
3 ships of the line 1 merchant ship 1 gun battery | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
1 killed 4 wounded |
3 ships of the line scuttled 1 merchant ship scuttled 1 gun battery destroyed |
The raid on Griessie was a British attack on the port of Griessie in the Dutch East Indies on December 1807 during the Java campaign of 1806–1807. It was the final action in a series of engagements fought by the British squadron based in the Indian Ocean against the Dutch navy's forces in Java. It completed the destruction of the Dutch squadron with the scuttling of three ships of the line, the last Dutch warships in the region. The British squadron—under the command of Rear-Admiral Sir Edward Pellew—sought to eliminate the Dutch to safeguard the trade route with China, which ran through the Straits of Malacca and were in the range of Dutch raiders operating from the principal Javan port of Batavia.
In mid-1806, British frigates reconnoitred Javan waters and captured two Dutch frigates, encouraging Pellew to lead a major attack on Batavia that destroyed the last Dutch frigate and several smaller warships. Before the Batavia raid, Dutch Vice-Admiral Pieter Hartsinck had ordered his ships of the line to sail eastwards, where they took shelter at Griessie, near Surabaya. On the morning of 5 December 1807, a second raiding squadron under Pellew appeared off Griessie and demanded that the Dutch squadron in the harbour surrender. The Dutch commander, Captain William Cowell, refused and seized the boat party carrying the message. Pellew responded by advancing up the river and exchanging fire with a Dutch gun battery on Madura Island. At that point, the governor in Surabaya overruled Cowell, released the seized boat party, and agreed to surrender the ships at anchor in Gresik harbour.
By the time Pellew reached the anchorage, Cowell had scuttled all the ships in shallow water, and Pellew could only set the wreckage on fire. Landing shore parties, the British destroyed all military supplies in the town and demolished the battery on Madura. With the destruction of the force in Griessie, the last of the Dutch naval forces in the Pacific were eliminated. British forces returned to the region in 1810 with a large-scale expeditionary force that successfully invaded and captured Java in 1811, temporarily removing the last Dutch colony east of Africa.