Privateers
During the War of 1812, America's Second War of Independence, President James
Madison attempted to overcome the small size of the US Navy by issuing Letters of
Marquee and Reprisal to private ship owners. This document allowed its holder to
arm his vessel and act as a privateer, or, in essence, a legal pirate,
representing the United States. Privateers were permitted to prey upon the
merchant fleet of the belligerent nation, Great Britain, and take captured cargo
and vessels as prizes. American privateers, many of them sailing out of
Chesapeake Bay in Baltimore Clippers built in Fells Point, captured or sank some
1,700 British merchant vessels during the two and a half year war. Other
Baltimore Clippers served as cargo vessels to bring needed munitions and other
armaments through the naval blockade that the British imposed on the US coastline,
including Chesapeake Bay.
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Chasseur
the original "Pride of Baltimore"
One of the most famous of the American privateers was Captain Thomas Boyle, who
sailed his Baltimore Clipper, Chasseur, out of Fells Point, where she had
been launched from Thomas Kemp's shipyard in 1812. On his first voyage as master
of Chasseur in 1814, Boyle unexpectedly sailed east, directly to the
British Isles, where he unmercifully harassed the British merchant fleet. In a
characteristically audacious act, he sent a notice to the King by way of a
captured merchant vessel that he had released for the purpose. The notice, he
commanded, was to be posted on the door of Lloyd's of London, the famous shipping
underwriters. In it he declared that the entire British Isles were under naval
blockade by Chasseur alone! This affront sent the shipping community into
panic and caused the Admiralty to call vessels home from the American war to guard
merchant ships which had to sail in convoys. In all, Chasseur captured or
sank 17 vessels before returning home.
On Chasseur's triumphal return to Baltimore on March 25, 1815, the Niles
Weekly Register dubbed the ship, her captain, and crew the "pride of Baltimore"
for their daring exploits.
The Chesapeake Campaign
and the "Star Spangled Banner"
In retaliation for the actions of the Baltimore privateers, the British launched
the Chesapeake Campaign in 1814 for the purpose of "cleaning out that nest of
pirates in Baltimore." Its goal - to shut down the shipyards of Fells Point and
halt the production of the deadly Baltimore Clippers. On their way up the Bay,
the British captured and sacked Washington, DC. They burned the Capitol and White
House, the only such indignity to our national capital by a foreign power.
Continuing up the Bay, they sought to capture Baltimore by way of a combined land
and naval attack. They were rebuffed on both fronts. On September 12, 1814,
Baltimore troops fought a two hour battle to delay the British land forces at the
Battle of North Point before they reached the City. Fort McHenry, at the mouth of
Baltimore harbor, withstood a ferocious 25 hour naval bombardment on September 12
and 13, 1814. It was during this bombardment that Maryland lawyer poet, Francis
Scott Key, spotted "by dawn's early light" the huge "star spangled banner" still
flying over Ft. McHenry. He penned a description of the sight and his patriotic
reaction on the back of an envelope. The poem has gone down in history as our
national anthem, "The Star Spangled Banner."
Rebuffed by the Baltimore patriots, the British retreated down the Bay to New
Orleans, where on January 8, 1815, they were soundly defeated by Andrew Jackson.
The Treaty of Ghent, signed by the British on Christmas Eve, 1814, and by
President Madison on February 12, 1815, brought a formal end to hostilities
between America and Britain. This time the armistice held. The victory, although
a great triumph for American sailing ingenuity and audacity, signaled the end of
the era dominated by Baltimore Clippers.
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