Defense of the cutterEagle | |||||||
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Part of theWar of 1812 | |||||||
![]() Defense of the Cutter Eagle, a painting by theWorks Progress Administration | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
![]() ![]() | J. R. Lumley[1] | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
United States Revenue Marine
| Royal Navy
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
1 injured USRCEagle captured | 1 injured | ||||||
Location of the battle off ofLong Island, New York |
Thedefense of the cutterEagle was a battle on and aroundLong Island New York, that took place from October 10 to 13, 1814, between the BritishRoyal Navy and the United States'Revenue Marine. Early on in the engagement, the United States' only involved vessel, USRCEagle, was beached near Negro Head. Despite the loss of their ship, her crew continued fighting the Royal Navy vessels from shore using cannon recovered from their wrecked vessel.Eagle's crew was ultimately able to repair and refloat her, but unsuccessful in their attempts to drive the British ships away. Once more she was beached, but after exhausting their ammunition over three days of fighting, theEagle's crew was unable to prevent her from being towed off by the Royal Navy, which then sailed her back past the shoreline for avictory lap. Though there were no fatalities on either side in the battle, a cow grazing in the area died after being hit by a 32-pound (15 kg) round shot fired by one of the Royal Navy ships.
USRCEagle, along with two of the involved British shipsHMSNarcissus andHMSDispatch, are among six vessels celebrated in the lyrics of "Semper Paratus", the service march of the Revenue Marine's successor force, theU.S. Coast Guard.
At the outset of the War of 1812, the United States' diminutive naval forces consisted of 30 armed ships, 16 of which were sailed by the United States Navy with the remainder operated by the United States Revenue Marine.[2] Throughout the war, ships of the Revenue Marine suffered from poor provisioning, theUnited States Department of the Treasury, to whom the force answered, insisting that the war was not its responsibility to fight—except in cases where tax collection was threatened—and that any extra appropriations needed to bring Revenue Marine cutters up to battle-ready condition should come out of theDepartment of the Navy's budget.[1]
On May 26, 1813, the United Kingdom announced the closure of New York harbor andLong Island Sound to almost all outgoing shipping, the closure to be enforced by means of a blockade.[2] The blockade was not total; American merchantmen carrying certain foodstuffs to Europe were issued transit passes by theBaron Hotham due to theBritish Army's provisioning needs for its forces engaged inSpain during the concurrentWar of the Sixth Coalition.[2] Nonetheless, by 1814, according to historian Melvin Jackson, the entire American seaboard "lay all but deserted" to maritime traffic leaving the United States essentially cut-off from the rest of the world.[3]
The American cutterEagle, thesecond Revenue Marine ship to bear that name, was a 130-ton schooner outfitted with six cannon and sailing with a normal complement of twenty-five. Home ported inNew Haven, Connecticut, she was under the command of Frederick Lee.[3][4]
On October 9, 1814, the American packet shipSusan left New York bound forNew Haven, Connecticut, hugging the coast so as to avoid violating the British blockade. The next morning she was approached by a similarly sized vessel which—once within gun range—ran up the British colors and orderedSusan to surrender, which she promptly did. This vessel, theLiverpool Packet, was a British privateer operating under command of the nearby frigate HMSPomone. The seizure ofSusan was witnessed by another ship in the area which made for land to raise the alarm.[3]
Upon being informed of the seizure ofSusan, Lee ordered USRCEagle to put to sea to find and rescue the American packet boat. Several volunteers from local companies of theConnecticut State Militia offered to join the voyage and were taken aboard, the senior officer among them being Captain John Davis. By this point, five hours had passed andEagle left the port of New Haven as dark was settling. As the sun rose the next day,Eagle found herself "dangerously close" to the 18-gun brig HMSDispatch, which launched its barges in an apparent attempt to board the smallerEagle.Eagle opened fired on the barges while attempting to withdraw, but the cutter was unable to pick up enough wind to outsail the approaching Royal Navy vessels.[3][5][1]
By or before 8:15 a.m., according to HMSDispatch's log, Lee had maneuveredEagle towards Negro Head onLong Island and beached her, his intent as later explained being to put the ship in shallow enough water that the largerDispatch could not follow. However,Dispatch and her barges continued their advance and, at 9:00 a.m., the British ship dropped anchor and began firing on the beached American cutter. To protect the ship, Lee ordered his crew to salvageEagle's guns, which were hauled to the top of a nearby bluff and from there began returning fire againstDispatch in an effort to drive her away.Eagle's crew were joined by civilian volunteers fromWading River, New York.[a][3]
Over the course of the next day HMSDispatch continued to trade fire withEagle's crew. According to a popular account of the battle,Eagle's crew, having exhausted all available ammunition, began scavengingDispatch's spent cannonballs to fire back at her.[3][6] Another account of the battle, published in theNew York Evening Post, reported that:
Having expended all the wadding of the four-pounders on the hill, during the warmest of the firing, several of the crew volunteered and went on board the cutter to obtain more. At this moment the masts were shot away, when the brave volunteers erected a flag upon her stern; this was soon shot away, but was immediately replaced by a heroic tar, amidst the cheers of his undaunted comrades, which was returned by a whole broadside from the enemy. When the crew of the cutter had expended all their large shot and fixed ammunition, they tore up the log book to make cartridges and returned the enemy's small shot which lodged in the hull.[7]
On October 12Dispatch abandoned the battle and left the area to find reinforcements. The Connecticut State Militia troops, meanwhile, having run out of powder for their muskets and deciding they could be of no more assistance to the Revenue Marine, left to book passage on a schooner returning to Connecticut.[1]
The temporary respite in the fighting allowed Lee the opportunity to repair and re-float the damagedEagle. Barely had the ship made open water, however, when it again encounteredDispatch, which had returned with theLiverpool Packet and the 32-gun frigate HMSNarcissus. Again,Eagle retreated and was beached, her crew moving to the shore to direct musket fire against British barges attempting to attach tow cables to her. By noon on October 13, the Royal Navy had managed to takeEagle under tow and withdrew from the area after first sailing back past Negro Head for a victory lap, or what Jackson describes as an attempt "to mock the efforts of the late defenders of theEagle".[3]
Ship | Type | Displacement | Armament |
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USRCEagle | Schooner | 130 tons | 6 guns |
Ship | Type | Burthen | Armament |
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HMSNarcissus | Frigate[8] | 90890⁄94 | 32 guns[8] |
HMSDispatch | Brig[9] | N/A | 18 guns[9] |
Liverpool Packet | Schooner[10] | N/A | 5 guns[10] |
There were only two casualties reported in the battle, one on each side, and no fatalities. In addition, a calf grazing near the scene of the fight died after being hit by a 32 pound (15 kg) round shot fired by HMSDispatch.[3]
Despite the United States loss, Frederick Lee and theEagle's crew were celebrated in American newspapers of the day.[11]
Lee returned to military service as captain of a new cutter also namedEagle, the third Revenue Marine ship to bear that name.[11] After retirement, he was elected to theConnecticut General Assembly.[11]
Defense of the Cutter Eagle is one panel in a larger mural depicting the Revenue Marine and Coast Guard's battles displayed inside Hamilton Hall at theUnited States Coast Guard Academy.[4] It is one of two paintings commissioned by the Coast Guard of the battle, neither of which are considered accurate, the mural showing an unrealistic representation of the geography of Negro Head and the other work omitting the presence of the Connecticut soldiers.[1]
In 2014, during bicentennial observances of the War of 1812, the Hallockville Museum Farm inRiverhead, New York, organized a reenactment of the battle.[12]
As of 2019 USCGCEagle (formerly theKriegsmarine shipHorst Wessel), aGorch Fock–classbarque, perpetuates the nameEagle on the Coast Guard ship register.[13]
Three of the ships involved in the battle,Eagle as well asNarcissus andDispatch, are among the six legendary vessels celebrated in the second verse of the Coast Guard march "Semper Paratus":[14]
Surveyor andNarcissus,
TheEagle andDispatch,
TheHudson and theTampa,
These names are hard to match;
From Barrow's shores to Paraguay,
Great Lakes or Ocean's wave,
The Coast Guard fights through storms and winds
To punish or to save.