Anna, I’m not surprised you hadn’t heard of the specific signal quoted in the article in the
Telegraph, as it is pure fiction – or rather, it is a dramatic embellishment of the many much more detailed and prosaic telegraph signals made by Blackwood in the Euralyus to Nelson and repeated by the line of frigates, and which you commented on in the
Telegraph Signalling thread.
The wording of the signal in the Telegraph article seems to originate from a children’s book
‘Battles of the Nineteenth Century’, (1897) by Archibald Forbes, George Alfred Henty, Arthur Griffiths, et al. The chapter on Trafalgar is by C J Cutcliffe Hyne, and is full of invented dialogue. It even has Nelson
running along the deck
laughing while giving
eager orders to the officers in command of the sail-trimmers. Apparently C J Cutcliffe Hyne is better known for
‘The Adventures of Captain Kettle’ and
‘The Lost Continent: The Story of Atlantis’.
Examples of telegraph signals between Blackwood and Nelson include:
’19 under sail – all the rest top yards hoisted except rear(?) admiral and one line of battle ship’
‘notwithstanding little wind many of enemy persevere to get outward – the rest except one line ready yards hoisted’.
’13 ships without port – rest yards hoisted – enemy cannot see enemy fleet – all the rest coming out with expedition – the Spanish commander in chief coming out’
‘The enemy appears determined to push to westward; 30 ships’