"Valor and Defiance: The Clash of USS Chesapeake and HMS Shannon (1813)"
USS Chesapeake was one of the original six frigates authorized by Congress as part of the newly established United States Navy in 1794.
The ship
served in the brief naval war with France known as the Quasi-War and in the
First Barbary War in the Mediterranean. In 1807 it was involved in an incident
with the British Frigate Leopard, in which Leopard fired into Chesapeake when
the latter failed to allow itself to be boarded and searched for British
deserters. This event helped foster the War of 1812.
In December
of 1812, Chesapeake commenced a cruise which resulted in the ship inflicting
almost a quarter of a million dollars of damage to British commerce (almost
$4.5 million today), through the capture and destruction of British shipping.
In May of 1813 James Lawrence assumed command of the ship in Boston, where it
was refitting. Lawrence had difficulty filling his crew for the next voyage and
Chesapeake was manned by sailors from many nations, many of them inexperienced
in a man-of-war.
Outside
of Boston patrolled HMS Shannon, a crack British frigate which had been
commanded by Philip Broke since 1806. When Lawrence heard of Shannon’s presence
he sailed from Boston determined to capture the English ship, motivated in part
by the series of successes by American ships against their British adversaries
the previous year.
In the
engagement in the early evening of May 31, 1813, Shannon quickly outgunned
Chesapeake, and after rendering his opponent unmanageable Broke personally led
a boarding party to effect its capture. Both Broke and Lawrence were severely
wounded during the battle, with Lawrence giving his final order, “Don’t give up
the ship,” before being carried below. He died while his captured ship was
being escorted to the British naval base at Halifax. Broke survived and was
knighted for his victory.
The loss
of Chesapeake changed the approach of the US Navy, which up until then had
enjoyed a string of victories against the British. American frigates largely
remained in port for the remainder of the war, rather than being sent out on
commerce raiding cruises. Chesapeake remained in British service until 1819.
After the ship was sold some of its timbers were used to build the Chesapeake
Mill, still standing in Wickham, England.
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