Everything about Stephen Decatur totally explained
Commodore Stephen Decatur, Jr (
5 January 1779 –
22 March 1820) was an
American naval officer notable for his heroism in the
Barbary Wars and in the
War of 1812. He was the youngest man to reach the rank of captain in the history of the
United States Navy, and the first American celebrated as a national military hero who hadn't played a role in the
American Revolution.
Early civilian life
Decatur was born on January 5 1779, in
Sinepuxent, Maryland to
Stephen Decatur, Sr. and
Ann Pine.
(External Link
) He attended the
Episcopal Academy and then attended the
University of Pennsylvania with future naval heroes
Richard Somers and
Charles Stewart. His father was also a Naval officer, having commanded several ships. Another
Stephen Decatur (1815–76) claimed to be his nephew and was an incorporator of
Decatur, Nebraska.
He married Susan Wheeler, the daughter of the Mayor of
Norfolk, Virginia, on March 8, 1806.
Military career
Pre-commission
Decatur was employed at the age of 17 in the firm of Gurney and Smith, acting as the company's supervisor to the early construction of the frigate
United States. He was one of "
Preble's Boys" and friends with
Charles Stewart and
Richard Rush.
Quasi-War
Decatur saw service throughout the
Quasi-War, an undeclared naval war with France. In 1798, Decatur secured commission as a midshipman aboard the
United States. He was promoted to the rank of
Lieutenant in 1799. For a brief period, Decatur served aboard the sloop
Norfolk but soon transferred back to the
United States. Following the Quasi-War, the US Navy underwent a significant reduction of active ships and officers; Decatur was one of the few selected to remain commissioned.
First Barbary War
Given command of the
brig Argus in 1803, he took it to the
Mediterranean for service in the
First Barbary War against
Tripoli. Once in the combat zone, Lieutenant Decatur commanded the
schooner Enterprise and, on
23 December 1803, captured the enemy
ketch Mastico. That vessel, taken into the U.S. Navy under the name
Intrepid, was used by Decatur on
16 February 1804 to execute a night raid into Tripoli harbor to destroy the former U.S. frigate
Philadelphia, which had been captured after running aground at the end of October 1803.
Admiral Lord Nelson is said to have called this "the most bold and daring act of the age".
This daring and extremely successful operation made Lieutenant Decatur an immediate national hero, a status that was enhanced by his courageous conduct during the
3 August 1804 bombardment of Tripoli. In that action, he led his men in hand-to-hand fighting while boarding and capturing an enemy gunboat. Decatur was subsequently promoted to the rank of
Captain, and over the next eight years had command of several
frigates.
War of 1812
The
United States declared
war on
Great Britain on
14 June 1812.
United States, commanded by Decatur, the frigate
Congress (36), and the
brig Argus (18) joined Commodore
John Rodgers' squadron at
New York City and put to sea immediately, cruising off the east coast until the end of August. The squadron again sailed on
8 October 1812, this time from Boston. Three days later, after capturing
Mandarin,
United States parted company and continued to cruise eastward. At dawn on
25 October, five hundred miles south of the
Azores, lookouts on board
United States reported seeing a sail 12 miles (19 km) to windward. As the ship rose over the horizon, Captain Decatur made out the fine, familiar lines of HMS
Macedonian.
In 1810, the
Macedonian and the
United States had been berthed next to one another in port at Norfolk, Virginia. The British captain John Carden wagered a beaver hat that if the two ever met in battle, the
Macedonian would emerge victorious. However, the engagement in a heavy swell proved otherwise as the
United States pounded the
Macedonian into a dismasted wreck from long range. The
Macedonian had no option but surrender, and thus was taken as a prize by Decatur. Eager to present the nation with a prize, Decatur spent a fortnight refitting the captured British frigate so as to make it able to travel back across the Atlantic.
After repairs,
United States—accompanied by
USS Macedonian and the brig
Hornet—sailed from New York on
24 May 1813. On
1 June, the three vessels were driven into
New London, Connecticut, by a powerful British squadron, and
United States and
Macedonian were kept blocked there until the end of the war.
Decatur attempted to sneak out of New London harbor at night in an effort to elude the British blockading squadron. While attempting to leave the Thames River Decatur saw blue lights burning near the mouth of the river in sight of the
British blockaders. Convinced that these were signals to betray his plans he abandoned the project. Suspicion was directed against the "peace men" and the odious epithet of "Bluelight Federalists" long was applied to extreme
Federalists.
In the spring of 1814, Decatur transferred his commodore's pennant to the
President (44), flagship of his new squadron consisting of
Hornet (20),
Peacock (22), and
Tom Bowline (12). However, the British had established a strict blockade in the squadron's port of New York, therefore restricting any cruises.
In January 1815, Decatur's squadron was assigned a mission in the East Indies. Shortly thereafter, Decatur attempted to break through the blockade alone in the
President and make for the appointed rendezvous at
Tristan da Cunha. On January 15, a day after setting sail from New York, he encountered the British West Indies Squadron comprised of
Razee HMS Majestic (56 guns, Captain
John Hayes) and the frigates
HMS Endymion (40 guns, Captain
Henry Hope),
HMS Pomone (38 guns, Captain
John Richard Lumley) and
HMS Tenedos (38 guns, Captain
Hyde Parker). After the
President was accidentally run aground, Decatur continued to attempt to evade his pursuers.
Endymion was the first to come up and after a fierce fight, he managed to disable the British frigate. But due to the damage sustained by
Endymion, Decatur's frigate was finally overhauled by
Pomone and
Tenedos, causing him to surrender his command. However, his hail of surrender wasn't heard by
Pomone, firing two broadsides into the
President until she hauled down a light to signify surrender. As Decatur himself termed it, "my ship crippled, and more than a four-fold force opposed to me, without a chance of escape left, I deemed it my duty to surrender". Decatur's command suffered 24 men killed and 55 wounded, including Decatur himself who was wounded by a large flying splinter.
Decatur and his men were transported as prisoners to Bermuda until February 1815. On
February 8, with news of the cessation of hostilities, Decatur traveled aboard
HMS Narcissus (32), landing in New London, Connecticut. On
February 26, Decatur arrived in New York City, where he convalesced in a boarding house.
Second Barbary War
In May 1815, Commodore Decatur sailed his squadron of nine ships to the Mediterranean Sea to conduct the
Second Barbary War, which put an end to the international practice of paying tribute to pirate states. Decatur was dispatched to
Algiers to secure the release of American slaves, to obtain an end to tribute, and finally, to procure favorable prize agreements.
Capturing the Algerian fleet flagship Mashouda as well as the Algerian brig
Estedio in route to Algeria, Decatur secured an amount of levying power with which to bargain with the
Dey of Algiers. Upon arrival, Decatur exhibited an early use of
Gunboat Diplomacy on behalf of American interests. A new treaty was agreed to within 48 hours of his arrival, confirming the success of his objectives.
After resolving the disputes in Algiers, Decatur sailed his squadron to
Tunis and
Tripoli to demand reimbursement for proceeds withheld by those governments in the War of 1812. In a similar fashion, Decatur received all of the demands he asked of them, and promptly sailed home victorious.
For this campaign, he became known as "the Conqueror of the
Barbary Pirates".
Domestic service
Between 1816 and 1820, Decatur served as a
Navy Commissioner. During his tenure as a Commissioner, Decatur became active in the Washington social scene. At one of his social gatherings, Decatur uttered an after-dinner toast that would become famous: "Our Country! In her intercourse with foreign nations may she always be in the right; but right or wrong, our country!" This toast is often misquoted as "My country, right or wrong!" and then attacked as a
straw man by those who believe it to be an enduring and official statement of
US foreign policy.
In 1818, in Washington, D.C., he built a house designed by
Benjamin Henry Latrobe. The
Decatur House, now a museum, was located on President's Square (
Lafayette Square).
Death
In 1820, Commodore
James Barron challenged Decatur to a
duel, relating in part to comments Decatur had made over what he considered Barron's poor conduct in the
Chesapeake-Leopard Affair of 1807. Decatur had served as one of the members of the Court Martial that had found Barron guilty of unpreparedness in the affair, and had barred him from a command for the next five years.
Barron's second was Captain
Jesse Elliott, known for his antagonism to Decatur. Decatur asked his supposed friend Commodore
William Bainbridge to be his second, to which Bainbridge consented. However, Decatur unknowingly had selected a man who had harbored a long-standing jealousy of Decatur.
The two officers fought at
Bladensburg Duelling Field in
Bladensburg, Maryland (now in
Colmar Manor, Maryland), on
22 March 1820. Before the duel, Barron spoke to Decatur in words of suggestive conciliation, but the seconds did nothing to halt the altercation. Decatur, an expert marksman with a pistol, intended only to wound Barron. However, Decatur was mortally wounded by a shot in the abdomen. (Decatur had likewise inflicted a severe, though not mortal, wound to Barron's hip.) As Decatur lay slowly dying in his home on Lafayette Square, he's said to have cried out, "I didn't know that any man could suffer such pain!" He died childless. Though he left his widow $75,000, a considerable sum in 1820, she died penniless in 1860.
As he lay dying at his home in Lafayette Square, there was a party at his house honoring the recent marriage of
First Daughter Maria Hester Monroe and White House staffer, and her first cousin
Samuel L. Gouverneur. This was the first White House wedding.
Decatur's funeral was attended by the Washington political elite, including the President and Supreme Court, as well as most of Congress. More than 10,000 citizens of Washington attended to pay respects to a national hero.
His remains were temporarily deposited in the tomb of
Joel Barlow at Washington, but later removed to
Philadelphia, where he was interred at
St. Peter's Church.
Legacy
Five U.S. Navy ships have been named
USS Decatur in his honor, along with numerous
locations. Numerous schools also bear his name.
An engraved portrait of Decatur appears on U.S. paper money on series 1886 $20 silver certificates.
His home in Washington, D.C. is a museum owned by the National Trust.
Forty-six communities in the United States have been named after Stephen Decatur, including:
- Decatur, Alabama
- Decatur, Arkansas
- Decatur, Illinois
- Decatur, Indiana
- Decatur, Texas
- Decatur, Georgia
- Decatur County, Georgia
- Decatur County, Indiana
- Decatur County, Iowa
- Decatur County, Kansas
- Decatur County, Tennessee
- Decatur Township, Indiana
- Decaturville, Missouri
Stephen Decatur Elementary in Indianapolis, Indiana, Marion County, Decatur Township
3 schools in Maryland have been named after him:
Stephen Decatur High School in Berlin, Maryland
Stephen Decatur Middle School in Berlin, Maryland
Stephen Decatur Middle School in Clinton, Maryland
1 school overseas has been named after him:
Stephen Decatur High School in Sigonella
Maryland Route 611, a road connecting U.S. Route 50 to Assateague Island in Worcester County, Maryland, is named the Stephen Decatur Highway in his honor.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Stephen Decatur'.
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