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The most
important person to remember in the history of the U.S.
Brig NIAGARA is her relief commander during the Battle
of Lake Erie,
Commodore
Oliver Hazard Perry.
It was Perry who penned the famous report of victory,
"We have met the enemy and they are ours..." after the
defeat of the British squadron.
Perry was
born on August 23, 1785, at the Old Perry Homestead in
South Kingston, Rhode Island, of "Fighting Quaker
parents." His father was in the United States Navy and
young Perry soon followed. At the age of 13, Perry
entered the Navy as a midshipman, where his first
assignment was in the Caribbean under the command of his
father aboard the sloop-of-war, General Greene.
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Perry's
subsequent voyages took him to Europe and Africa during the
Barbary Wars. In 1805, at the age of 20, Perry became a
lieutenant and was given the command of a small schooner. Next,
he was called to oversee the construction of a number of
gunboats ordered by President Thomas Jefferson. When this job
was successfully completed, Perry was given the command of the
14-gun vessel REVENGE and cruised the northern- and mid-Atlantic
waters of the Eastern United States.
In January 1811, Perry was ordered to survey a number of Rhode
Island harbors. Unfortunately, through faulty piloting and bad
weather, REVENGE wrecked on a reef. Perry requested an inactive
status and an investigation. The court of inquiry found him
blameless for the loss and actually applauded him for his
valiant attempts to save public property.
In May 1812, Perry returned to active duty and received a
promotion to master-commandant. One month later the United
States declared war on Great Britain, citing British policies
that infringed on the American trade and freedom of the seas. He
was given command of 12 gunboats at Newport and New London.
Perry lost interest in the relative inactivity of this post,
and, in September 1812, requested duty on the high seas or the
Great Lakes.
In February 1813, he was ordered to Commodore Isaac Chauncey's
command at Sacket's Harbor, Lake Ontario. Perry reached
Chauncey's headquarters on March 3. Because British attacks were
expected momentarily, Chauncey kept Perry with him for two
weeks. The attacks failed to materialize and Chauncey decided
that Perry would be of better use in Erie, Pennsylvania, where a
fleet was being constructed to wrest control of Lake Erie from
the British who already had a small squadron there. Perry was
fully briefed on the situation in Erie and was sent to command
the project. He worked well with Noah Brown, the master builder
who Commodore Chauncey had hired earlier.
Although facing many adverse conditions, including lack of men
and materials, Perry and his men successfully completed six
vessels by July 1813. These six were joined by others from
Buffalo. Two months later, on September 10, 1813, the American
squadron commanded by Perry fought a British squadron commanded
by Captain Robert Barclay, RN.
The Battle of Lake Erie began with Perry aboard his flagship
LAWRENCE. In the early stages of the battle, however, LAWRENCE
and her crew took most of the enemy's fire. LAWRENCE was
severely damaged and over 80 percent of Perry's crew were killed
or wounded by concentrated British gunfire. In an attempt to
change defeat to victory, Perry, carrying his battle flag
emblazoned with Captain Lawrence's dying words, "Don't Give Up
The Ship," transferred from LAWRENCE to the lightly damaged
NIAGARA in a small boat. He took command of NIAGARA and sailed
her into the British battle line. The British had also taken
heavy casualties from the Lawrence' fire. Broadsides from the
fresh NIAGARA compelled their surrender within 15 minutes of
Perry's transfer.
Immediately following his victory at the Battle of Lake Erie,
Perry penned the famous words, 'We have met the enemy and they
are ours..." in his report to General William Henry Harrison.
Perry was the first in history to defeat
an entire British squadron and successfully bring back every
ship to his base as a prize of war. Perry, at the age of 28, was
hailed by the public as a national hero for his victory on Lake
Erie. Click
HERE
to learn more about "Perry Luck".
After his victory in the War of 1812, Perry was promoted to the
rank of Captain and given command of the new frigate JAVA. Then
in 1819, as commander of JOHN ADAMS, Perry was sent to Venezuela
on a diplomatic mission. After completing his mission he
contracted yellow fever and died at sea near Trinidad on August
23, 1819, his 34th birthday. He was buried at Port of Spain,
Trinidad, with full military honors. In 1826, his remains were
moved from Trinidad to Newport, Rhode Island, where a monument
in his honor was erected by the state. |