Hms Macedonian

olspan="2" align="center"|
olspan="2" style="color: white; height: 30px; background: navy url(/upload/4/4a/Rnensign.png) no-repeat scroll top left;"|Career
rdered: ?
aid down: 1809
aunched: 2 June 1810
ommissioned: July(?) 1810
ate: captured by United States 1812
olspan="2" style="color: white; height: 30px; background: navy url(/upload/4/4a/Rnensign.png) no-repeat scroll top left;"|General Characteristics
isplacement: 1,325 tons
ength: 161.5 ft (49.23 m)
eam: 40 ft (12 m)
raught: 18.3 ft (5.58 m)
omplement: 306 officers and men
HMS ''Macedonian'' was a 38-gun sailing frigate in the Royal Navy, later captured by the United States during the War of 1812. Macedonian was built at Woolwich, England, in 1809, launched on 2 June 1810, and commissioned soon thereafter, Lord William FitzRoy in command. Among the original crew was the 13-year-old Samuel Leech, who later wrote a memoir of his experiences. Macedonian first delivered a company of soldiers to Lisbon, Portugal, then remained in the area, guarding against the possibility of French naval attack. During this period, FitzRoy made personal profit by falsification of records of ships' stores, for which he was court-martialled in March 1811 and dismissed from the service (he was quietly reinstated in August, presumably due to his aristocratic rank). FitzRoy's replacement, William Waldegrave, was an interim appointment whose command lasted for only a few weeks before he was himself replaced by John Carden. One of Carden's first actions was to hire a band, a move popular with the crew, but he did not get along with the first lieutenant David Hope. In January 1812, Macedonian was ordered to secretly deliver some bills of exchange to Norfolk, Virginia, and to bring back an equivalent quantity of gold and silver specie, as part of a scheme to keep the Bank of England solvent. During the visit, Carden socialized with the notables of Norfolk, including Commodore Stephen Decatur (whom he was soon to meet under much less friendly circumstances), but bungled the mission by inadvertently revealing what was planned, and had to return to Lisbon emptyhanded. In September, Macedonian was ordered to accompany an East Indiaman as far as Madeira, then to cruise in search of prizes as long as his supplies permitted. The frigate left Madeira on 22 October, but only a few days later, on the morning of 25 October, encountered USS United States, commanded by none other than his erstwhile dinner host Decatur. The United States had just declared the War of 1812 on Britain, and both captains were eager to achieve personal glory in a fight. Unfortunately for Macedonian, United States was one of the new 44-gun frigates, and her broadside was 864 pounds of metal, vs Macedonian's 528 pounds. Within a few minutes of closing, United States brought all three of Macedonian's masts, and riddled the hull, but then pulled away temporarily, leaving Carden and Hope time to contemplate their lack of options. Finally, avoid his ship being sunk and costing the lives of all his crew, Carden became the first British frigate captain in history to surrender to an American. Decatur was careful to preserve Macedonian, sending over a detail to help repair it, and he brought the captured ship into Newport, Rhode Island, on 4 December 1812, immediately causing a national sensation. USS Constitution had previously beaten HMS Guerriere, but it was too badly damaged to save; while Decatur's capture of a seaworthy warship was a sizeable and welcome addition to the then-tiny US Navy. The US took Macedonian into the United States Navy immediately, retaining the name; see USS Macedonian for the further history of this ship. As of 2004, no other Royal Navy ship has been named Macedonian.

References

  • James T. de Kay, Chronicles of the Frigate Macedonian (W.W. Norton, New York, 1995)
Macedonian

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
html kit
funcom
lead acid battery
sango
social status
1894 in literature
william wetmore
monocular
free isp
social studies
mae jemison
roma music
coal gas
symphony no. 44 (haydn)
chicago (disambiguation)
chicago (2002 movie)
escurial
chicago (movie)
pluralism
xvid
uss underhill (de 682)
wikinfo
romy and michele's high school reunion
egyptian calendar
mare ingenii
mare anguis
mare crisium
anatta
mare tranquillitatis
polisario
white tailed eagle
ofnr
uss macedonian
narashino, chiba
kano eitoku
lark voorhies
new religious movement
battle of neerwinden (1793)
1 e9 j
uss princeton
gordon r. dickson
linda nagata
ain't it cool news
haman