In 1794, Congress authorized the building of six frigates, primarily for use
against the Barbary Coast pirates. One of those frigates was the Chesapeake,
built at Gosport (now Norfolk), Virginia. Construction began immediately, but
was halted the following year when peace treaties were signed with some of the
Barbary nations. Construction began again in 1798, however, when France began
seizing U.S. ships.
Unfortunately, the Chesapeake became known as a "hard
luck" ship. She was launched on December 2, 1799 under the command of Captain
Samuel Barron. It was reported that when the blocks were removed from under the
ship, she started, but went only a few feet and that one of the workmen was
killed during the attempted launch.
Chesapeake's first wartime cruise
began on May 24, 1800. Captain Barron was ordered by Benjamin Stoddert,
Secretary of the Navy (and a native of Charles County) to Georgia, South
Carolina, Delaware, and then to return to port no later than December since the
one-year enlistment of more than half of the crew expired then. Captain Thomas
Truxtun, the senior officer at Norfolk, countermanded Secretary Stoddert's
directive and ordered that the ship remain at sea until the following June. The
crewmen, whose term of service was to expire in December, rebelled. Those deemed
to be the worst offenders were flogged and then put ashore at St. Thomas.
Captain Barron died in 1810, at the relatively early age of 45.
The
Chesapeake was called to service again in 1802 after Tripoli declared war on the
U.S. This time, she was the flagship of Commodore Richard Morris. Within a few
days of their departure, the mainmast broke. After their arrival in the
Mediterranean, things got no better and in 1804 Captain Morris was court
martialed for injudicious conduct and dismissed from the service by President
Jefferson.
After spending an undistinguished ten months in the
Mediterranean, the ship returned to the U.S., this time under the command of
Captain James Barron, the brother of Captain Samuel Barron. The Chesapeake saw
no further service until 1807 when it would become embroiled in one of the worst
scandals of its time.
In 1807, Captain James Barron was assigned the
Chesapeake as his flagship for his new appointment as Commander of the
Mediterranean Squadron. Captain Barron made little or no preparations for the
upcoming voyage of the ship. When the Chesapeake left port, it was confronted by
the British ship Leopard, the captain of which demanded the return of three
British deserters believed to be on board. Neither the crew nor the guns of the
Chesapeake were ready to defend themselves. The Leopard fired three shots into
the Chesapeake, boarded her, and took off four crewmen (only one of whom was a
British deserter). Three crewmen were killed and 18 wounded. The end result was
that Captain Barron was court martialed and suspended from all naval command for
five years.
The next commander of the Chesapeake was Stephen Decatur, Jr.
who would later be killed in a duel by none other than Captain James Barron who
harbored a grudge against Decatur for having served at his court martial.
Decatur commanded the Chesapeake from 1807 until 1809 when he was ordered to
turn her over to Captain Isaac Hull. From 1809 until 1812, the Chesapeake was in
moth balls at the Boston Navy Yard. From 1812 to 1813, the Chesapeake, under the
command of Captain Samuel Evans patrolled the Atlantic in search of British
merchant ships. Captain Evans, who had previously been partially blinded while
serving at Tripoli, began losing sight in his other eye while in command of the
Chesapeake and would never again serve at sea.
The next, and last
American commander of the Chesapeake was Captain James Lawrence who was assigned
on April 9, 1813. Captain Lawrence asked to be assigned to the Constitution
instead, but his request was denied. He was ordered to sea as soon as repairs
were completed on the Chesapeake. On June 1, 1813, just off the coast of Boston,
the British frigate Shannon was waiting, anxious for a confrontation with an
American ship. Indeed, the commander of the Shannon sent a boat with a challenge
to Captain Lawrence, but before the challenge could be delivered, the Chesapeake
coincidentally left port and was immediately attacked.
Many of the crew
aboard the Chesapeake had already stated they would not fight until they had
received prize money from a previously captured ship. The battle between the
Chesapeake and the Shannon was over in 15 minutes. 146 crewmen of the Chesapeake
were killed or wounded including Captain Lawrence whose last orders were "Don't
give up the ship!". These words would become the rallying cry for the War of
1812. Oliver Hazard Perry, who was a friend of Captain Lawrence, had the motto
sewn onto a private battle flag which was flown during the Battle of Lake Erie.
Among those killed on the Chesapeake was Pollard Hopewell, Jr., a midshipman
from St. Mary's County. Pollard Hopewell, Jr. was the only child of Pollard
Hopewell and his wife, Catherine Hebb who were married December 19, 1785.
Pollard, Jr. was born sometime between 1786 and 1789. He was orphaned at an
early age. His father died in 1796 and his mother died on August 5, 1799.
Pollard, Jr. was left in the care of his uncle, James Hopewell. As far as I have
been able to determine, Pollard, Jr. never married. It would seem almost
destined for a boy who had a short, sad life to die on this "hard luck" ship.
The Chesapeake served in the Royal Navy until 1816. It was dismantled in
1820 and its timbers used as building materials for houses in Portsmouth,
England. The gun deck timber was used to build "Chesapeake Mill" which still
stands in Wickham, Hampshire, England.
Only one other naval ship has
borne the name Chesapeake and because of the fate of the original ship, its
Captain successfully petitioned the Secretary of the Navy to change the name.
Written and contributed Nov 2000 by Linda Reno
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