Edward Archives - Today in Naval History https://navalhistorytoday.net/tag/edward/ Naval History Stories Wed, 18 Dec 2024 14:17:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 214743718 The Indomitable LEXINGTON https://navalhistorytoday.net/2024/12/20/the-indomitable-lexington/ https://navalhistorytoday.net/2024/12/20/the-indomitable-lexington/#respond Fri, 20 Dec 2024 10:13:00 +0000 https://navalhistorytoday.net/?p=1038                                              20 DECEMBER 1776                                   THE INDOMITABLE LEXINGTON Many of the original thirteen colonies organized their own navies during the Revolutionary War.  For example, in February of 1776 the Maryland Committee for Safety sent Abraham Van Bibber to St. Eustatius in the Dutch Read More

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                                             20 DECEMBER 1776

                                  THE INDOMITABLE LEXINGTON

Many of the original thirteen colonies organized their own navies during the Revolutionary War.  For example, in February of 1776 the Maryland Committee for Safety sent Abraham Van Bibber to St. Eustatius in the Dutch West Indies to secure a ship.  He purchased a brigantine Wild Duck and filled her with precious gunpowder for the Maryland militia.  But within a week of reaching Philadelphia on the 9th of March, Wild Duck was purchased by the Marine Committee of the Continental Congress and fitted out as the Continental Navy’s 14-gun sloop-of-war LEXINGTON.  CAPT John Barry commanded her, but before he could get to sea, the British slapped a blockade on their rebellious colonies.  Barry eluded that blockade, however, and on April 7th, off the Virginia Capes, he met the sloop/tender HMS EDWARD, 6.  A fiery one-hour battle resulted in EDWARD’s defeat and transfer to Philadelphia.  LEXINGTON next raced south to meet ADM Sir Peter Parker’s attack on Charleston, where Barry barely escaped capture.

LEXINGTON marked that summer with her sisters; REPRISAL, 18; HORNET, 10; and WASP, 8, at Cape May behind the blockade of HMS LIVERPOOL, 32.  When the Pennsylvania Navy brig NANCY grounded while sneaking into that harbor on June 28th, boats from the four Yankee ships lightered all but 100 of the 386 barrels of gunpowder she carried.  Barry rigged those remaining 100 barrels to detonate just as a British party boarded the next morning.  LEXINGTON slipped to sea again in July and captured the Tory privateer, LADY SUSAN.  Seven of the privateer’s crew signed on with Barry, one of these was Richard Dale, who quickly became Master’s Mate of LEXINGTON.

Under a new commander, CAPT William Hallock, the brigantine eluded the British blockade again in the autumn of 1776–this time bound for Cap Francois, Hispaniola, to secure a cargo of military provisions.  When LEXINGTON returned to the Delaware Capes on this day, a sail belonging to the British frigate HMS PEARL, 32, appeared on the horizon.  Shortly the frigate overhauled LEXINGTON.  The enemy prevailed in the duel that followed, and the brigantine’s hold was used to imprison the American officers and 70 crewmen.  But as the British prize crew secured the ship for the night, the captive Colonials began baiting them with promises of rum.  Their story seemed all the more believable to the British, who knew the ship had just returned from the Caribbean.  When the thirsty captors opened the hatches to investigate, the Continentals sprang forth and retook the ship.  Led by Master’s Mate Dale (who later served as mate to John Paul Jones on BONHOMME RICHARD) they resumed their mission to deliver LEXINGTON’s invaluable cargo to Baltimore.

Watch for more “Today in Naval History”  25 DEC 24

CAPT James Bloom, Ret.

Department of the Navy, Naval History Division.  Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Vol 4 “L-M”.  Washington, DC: GPO, 1969, p. 100.

Fischer, David Hackett.  Washington’s Crossing.  New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2004, 156-57.

Fowler, William M., Jr.  Rebels Under Sail:  The American Navy during the Revolution.  New York, NY: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1976, p. 252.

Miller, Nathan.  Sea of Glory:  A Naval History of the American Revolution.  Annapolis, MD: USNI Press, 1974, p. 118.

ADDITIONAL NOTES:  We are so used to thinking of the United States as a whole that it may seem strange that many of the original 13 colonies commissioned their own navies.  But each colony had been founded independently, each was governed independently, and the idea that all 13 would unite under one government seemed just as strange in that day.

Despite her successes above, LEXINGTON did not finish the war in American hands.  She ultimately fell to the enemy in a controversial battle with a weaker British sloop.  She nevertheless became the inspiration for five subsequent US warships named in her honor, including the WWII carrier CV-2 and her replacement CV-16.  The latter served as our training carrier, AT-16, in the 1990s.

African-Americans are widely believed to have served aboard many Continental Navy warships, however LEXINGTON, PROVIDENCE, and RANGER are the only three documented to have had black crewmembers.

Continental Navy Brigantine LEXINGTON

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