This post first appeared on Today in Alternate History.
June 8, 1708
The incomparable
Spanish Navy admiral José de Santillán was placed in command of a large
treasure fleet that comprised fourteen merchant ships, a lightly armed
hulk, and three escorting warships.
From onboard the flagship San
José, he master-minded his infinitely dangerous assignment to safely
transport over two hundred tons of gold, silver, and emeralds extracted
from holdings in South America to Europe in order to fund the ongoing
effort for the War of the Spanish Succession.
The situation was
going very badly for his once-great nation because the Bourbon King
Louis XIV had conquered swathes of the Spanish Empire on the continent.
Eventually, he succeeded in placing his grandson Philip on the Spanish
throne via diplomacy. He sought to reverse the decline of Spanish power
as a stepping stone to establishing a united Europe under a single Bourbon
monarch.
The Grand Alliance of England, the Netherlands and Austria
stood in his way, and they had the great fortune to have John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, as commander of the Army of Europe. It was at
this vital juncture that a major hurricane decimated the Royal Navy
squadron in the Caribbean led by Charles Wager. His greatly reduced
forces were swept aside by the treasure fleet in a desperately one-sided
affair in Cartagena, fought off the northern coast of Colombia in the
Caribbean coastal region.
The safe arrival of the treasure fleet
radically changed both the fortunes of war and the recovery of Spanish
prestige. Ever since the overwhelming Anglo-Dutch victory at Blenheim
three year earlier, it seemed likely that the reconstituted Grand
Alliance would defeat the French and Spanish Bourbons. Instead, the
Alliance would be defeated long before the death of Louis XIV in 1715.
His son Louis XV survived a smallpox scare to eventually establish the
Bourbon super-state that Wager, Churchill, & co. had fought so hard
to prevent. One unintended consequence of this success was that the
rivalry with French colonies in the Eastern Hemisphere sowed the seeds
of another Iberian War.
Author's Note:
In
reality, de Santillán decided to sail from Portobelo to Cartagena on 28 May
because he could not wait much longer as the hurricane season was
approaching. The rest of the fleet, plus their escort under Jean Du
Casse, were waiting in Havana and threatened to leave without him. The
battle ended in a British victory over the Spanish fleet. Lost at sea
the greatest treasure ship starting the hunt for the legendary
shipwreck and its $20 billion worth of treasure. Wager, the hero of the hour, later served as First Lord of the Admiralty from 1733 to 174.
Provine's Addendum
With the Dutch suppressed, the British navy depleted, and Spain effectively a puppet of Paris, Portugal was France's main overseas rival for valuable colonies. Bourbon merchant fleets swiftly scooped up the Dutch territories in India and the East Indies, reinvesting the income in building their naval defense. Rivalries broke out in India and Africa, and when the War of the Austrian Succession in 1740 offered a chance for the Bourbons to be militarily distracted, the Portuguese launched a campaign to reestablish dominance of trade in the Indian Ocean. Unfortunately, with the Bourbon's new ally Prussia switching sides from the previous Grand Alliance, the distraction did not last long as Austria, the Netherlands, and Great Britain were dealt another round of serious blows. Portugal, too, this time felt costly invasion. Through the coming decades, the Bourbons redoubled their efforts at dominating the Far East trade at sea while encouraging a Prussian-led German state as a buffer against the growing powers of Sweden and Russia as the Hapsburgs declined. Great Britain, meanwhile, had enough of continental wars and determined focus on its colonies in the Western Hemisphere, ensuring loyalty against potential expansion of New France or New Spain.
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