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Chesapeake–Leopard affair

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ChesapeakeLeopard Affair
Part of the events leading to the War of 1812

HMS Leopard (right) fires upon the USS Chesapeake
Date22 June 1807
Location
Result British victory
Belligerents
 United Kingdom  United States
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom Salsbury Humphreys United States James Barron
Strength
1 4th rate 1 frigate
Casualties and losses
None 1 frigate damaged
4 killed
17 wounded
4 captured

The ChesapeakeLeopard Affair was a naval engagement that occurred off the coast of Norfolk, Virginia, on 22 June 1807, between the British warship HMS Leopard and American frigate USS Chesapeake, when the crew of Leopard pursued, attacked and boarded the American frigate looking for deserters from the Royal Navy.[1] Chesapeake was caught unprepared and after a short battle involving broadsides from Leopard, her commander, James Barron, surrendered his vessel to the British after firing only one shot. Four crew members were removed from the American vessel and were tried for desertion, one of whom was subsequently hanged. Chesapeake was allowed to return home where James Barron was court martialed and suspended from command.

The Chesapeake–Leopard Affair created uproar among Americans and strident calls for war with Great Britain, but these quickly subsided. President Thomas Jefferson initially attempted to use this widespread bellicosity to diplomatically threaten the British government into settling the matter. The United States Congress backed away from armed conflict when British envoys showed no contrition for the Chesapeake affair and delivered proclamations reaffirming impressment. Jefferson's political failure to coerce Great Britain led him toward economic warfare: the Embargo of 1807.[2]

Background

USS Chesapeake, depicted in a c.1900 painting by F. Muller

In the spring of 1807, during the Napoleonic Wars, several British naval vessels were on duty on the North American Station, blockading two French third-rate warships in Chesapeake Bay.[3] A number of Royal Navy seamen had deserted from their ships and local American authorities gave them sanctuary. One of the deserters, a Londoner named Jenkin Ratford, joined the crew of USS Chesapeake. Ratford had made himself conspicuous to British officers by shouting at them on the streets of Norfolk, Virginia.[4]

Other deserters were reported to be at the Gosport Navy Yard, then commanded by Stephen Decatur. Decatur received a letter from the British consul ordering him to turn over three men alleged to have deserted from HMS Melampus. The consul claimed the men had enlisted in the U.S. Navy, which was recruiting a crew for Chesapeake, then at the Washington Navy Yard outfitting for a voyage to the Mediterranean.[1][5]

Vice-Admiral Sir George Berkeley dispatched his flagship, the fourth-rate warship HMS Leopard, with written orders authorizing him to board and search the United States warship to recover any deserters.[4] Berkeley ordered Leopard's captain to search for deserters from HMS Belleisle, HMS Bellona, HMS Triumph, HMS Chichester, HMS Halifax, and the cutter HMS Zenobia.[6]

Chesapeake was off the coast of Norfolk, Virginia, commanded by Commodore James Barron, when Leopard, under Salusbury Pryce Humphreys, encountered and hailed her. Barron was not alarmed, and received Lieutenant John Meade on board, who presented Barron with the search warrant. After an inconclusive discussion, Meade returned to Leopard. Captain Humphreys, using a hailing trumpet, ordered the American ship to submit. When Chesapeake did not, Humphreys fired a round across her bow. This was followed immediately by Leopard firing broadsides into the American ship.[7] Her guns unloaded and her decks cluttered with stores in preparation for a long cruise, Chesapeake managed to fire only a single gun in reply. The humiliated Barron struck his colors and surrendered. Three of Chesapeake's crew had been killed and 18 wounded, including Barron, by the attack. However, Humphreys refused the surrender and sent a boarding party to Chesepeake to search for deserters.[8]

Scores of British nationals had signed on as crewmen of Chesapeake,[7] but Humphreys seized only the four Royal Navy deserters: Daniel Martin, John Strachan and William Ware, all from HMS Melampus, and Jenkin Ratford, formerly on HMS Halifax. Only Ratford was British-born. The others were American citizens — two of them demonstrably non-British because they were African-Americans, but they had been serving on British warships.[7]

The brig Columbine brought the first dispatches to Halifax in early July. Leopard followed with her prisoners for trial.[9] Jenkin Ratford, the sole British citizen, was sentenced to death and was hanged from the yardarm of Halifax on 31 August 1807.[10] The three Americans received sentences of 500 lashes each, but the sentences were later commuted.[citation needed]

The bloody encounter caused a storm of protest from the United States government, and the British government eventually offered to return the three American citizens and to pay reparations for the damage to Chesapeake.[11] The schooner HMS Bream returned the last two British deserters to Boston, one month after the outbreak of the War of 1812.

Aftermath

The incident outraged the American sense of honor.[12] Americans of every political stripe saw the need to uphold national honor, and to reject the treatment of the United States by Britain as a third class nonentity. Americans talked incessantly about the need for force in response.[13] President Thomas Jefferson noted: "Never since the Battle of Lexington have I seen this country in such a state of exasperation as at present, and even that did not produce such unanimity."[14] James Monroe, then a foreign minister acting under instructions from U.S. Secretary of State James Madison, demanded British disavowal of the deed, the restoration of the four seamen, the recall of Admiral Berkeley, the exclusion of British warships from U.S. territorial waters, and the abolition of impressments from vessels under the United States flag.[15]

The event raised tensions between the two countries and, while possibly not a direct cause, was one of the events leading up to the War of 1812. In fact, many Americans demanded war because of the attack, but President Jefferson turned to diplomacy and economic pressure in the form of the ill-fated Embargo Act of 1807.

The Federal government began to be concerned about the lack of war material. A tariff protective of gunpowder manufacture followed, which helped ensure the fortunes of the DuPont company.[16]

The humiliating incident had significant repercussions for the U.S. Navy. The public was shocked that Chesapeake had not been able to put up any resistance and surrendered so quickly, questioning the ability of the Navy to defend the country from a possible British invasion, despite the expensive and controversial frigate-building program. A court-martial blamed Barron and suspended him from service for five years as punishment.[17]

In 1820, Commodore Barron challenged and mortally wounded Commodore Stephen Decatur in a duel over remarks Decatur had made about Barron's conduct in 1807 (Barron was also wounded). Decatur had served on the court-martial that found Barron guilty of being unprepared and barred him from command for five years.

Chesapeake herself proved unlucky during the War of 1812, when on 1 June 1813, after a long and surprising series of naval victories over the Royal Navy, the British frigate HMS Shannon captured Chesapeake in a ship-to-ship action near Boston. The Royal Navy commissioned Chesapeake, but put her up for sale at Plymouth in July 1819.[18] Her timbers are now part of the Chesapeake Mill in Wickham, England.

In fiction

The fallout from the Chesapeake-Leopard affair is first mentioned in Desolation Island, the fifth novel in the Aubrey-Maturin series. The subsequent Chesapeake vs Shannon engagement in the War of 1812 features prominently in the sixth Aubrey-Maturin novel, The Fortune of War, both by Patrick O'Brian.

The ChesapeakeLeopard affair is mentioned in the Boston Jacky novel of the Bloody Jack Adventures series by L.A. Meyer.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Mackenzie, Alexander Slidell (1846). Life of Stephen Decatur: a commodore in the Navy of the United States. C. C. Little and J. Brown. p. 145.
  2. ^ Perkins, Bradford (1974) [1968]. Livy, Leonard (ed.). Embargo: Alternative to War, Chapter 8: Prologue to War: England and the United States, 1805-1812 (Essays on the Early Republic 1789-1815 ed.). Dryden Press. pp. 317–318. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  3. ^ Cooper, James Fenimore (1826). History of the navy of the United States of America. Stringer & Townsend, New York. p. 226.
  4. ^ a b Perkins, Bradford (1974) [1968]. Levy, Leonard (ed.). Embargo: Alternative to War, Chapter 8: Prologue to War: England and the United States, 1805-1812 (Essays on the Early Republic 1789-1815 ed.). Dryden Press. p. 315. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  5. ^ Cooper, James Fenimore (1826). History of the navy of the United States of America. Stringer & Townsend, New York. p. 224. OCLC 197401914.
  6. ^ James, William (1824). The Naval History of Great Britain, from the Declaration of War by France in 1793, to the Accession of George IV. Vol. 4. London: Baldwin, Chadock and Joy. p. 328.
  7. ^ a b c Perkins, Bradford (1974) [1968]. Levy, Leonard (ed.). Embargo: Alternative to War, Chapter 8: Prologue to War: England and the United States, 1805-1812 (Essays on the Early Republic 1789-1815 ed.). Dryden Press. p. 316. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  8. ^ Guttridge, Leonard F (2006). Stephen Decatur American Naval Hero, 1779–1820. New York, NY: Tom Doherty Associates, LLC,. pp. 96–98.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  9. ^ James, William (1824). The Naval History of Great Britain, from the Declaration of War by France in 1793, to the Accession of George IV. Vol. 4. London: Baldwin, Chadock and Joy. p. 236.
  10. ^ McMaster, John Bach (1914). A History of the People of the United States: 1803–1812. D. Appleton and company, New York & London. p. 259.
  11. ^ Dickon, Chris (2008). The enduring journey of the USS Chesapeake: ... The Hickory Press, Charleston, SC. p. 54. ISBN 978-1-59629-298-7.
  12. ^ Norman K. Risjord, "1812: Conservatives, War Hawks and the Nation's Honor." William and Mary Quarterly: A Magazine of Early American History (1961): 196-210. in JSTOR
  13. ^ Robert L. Ivie, "The metaphor of force in prowar discourse: The case of 1812." Quarterly Journal of Speech 68#3 (1982) pp: 240-253.
  14. ^ Foley, John P., ed. (1900). The Jeffersonian Cyclopedia: A Comprehensive Collection of the Views of Thomas Jefferson Classified and Arranged in Alphabetical Order Under Nine Thousand Titles Relating to Government, Politics, Law, Education, Political Economy, Finance, Science, Art, Literature, Religious Freedom, Morals, Etc. Funk & Wagnalls Company. p. 137. Retrieved June 19, 2012.
  15. ^ Toll, Ian W (2006). Six Frigates: The Epic of the Founding of the U.S. Navy. New York: W. W. Norton. pp. 303–304. ISBN 978-0-393-05847-5. OCLC 70291925.
  16. ^ Fagal, Andrew (2012). Foreign Capital, American Armament, and the Rise of E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Co. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  17. ^ Cooper, James Fenimore (1826). History of the navy of the United States of America. Stringer & Townsend, New York. p. 231. OCLC 197401914.
  18. ^ "No. 17494". The London Gazette. July 13, 1819.

Bibliography

Further reading