The
first thing to note on the chart is that HMS Ramillies is marked on
this chart no less than seven times, presumably as the base for survey
operations. In addition to detailed soundings the chart includes some
important landmarks all of which are as relevant to today’s sailors as
they were then. These inclusions also help to date the chart.
The depiction of
the following lighthouses gives an important clue as to when the chart
was drawn, and is one of the earliest records in the region of the
development of what we now see as the modern lighthouse.
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The lighthouse
on Little Gull island overlooked naval activities between the Americans
and the British in the vicinity of ‘the Race’. It was constructed in
1806 and was 51ft high. The light on was tower was forceably removed by
British marines in 1813 after the lighthouse keeper, Giles Holt,
refused to extinguish it.
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The
New London harbour lighthouse depicted at the mouth of the Thames River, south of
New London, was
constructed in 1801 and stood 89ft tall. The octagonal brownstone tower
still stands and is the oldest existing lighthouse in
Connecticut. It was
extinguished during the War of 1812 at the request of the American
Commander, Commodore Stephen Decatur, Jr., who spent most of the war
confined, along with his fleet, by the British in the Thames
River.
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The light at
Watch Hill (‘Watchill’) Point was reputedly first established to warn
local residents of attack from the sea, not as an aid to navigation.
The lighthouse depicted here, an 81ft wooden tower, came into operation
in 1808. It was
Rhode Island’s second lighthouse. During his 27 year incumbency, lighthouse keeper Jonathan Nash, recorded 47 wrecks.
Possibly the
most telling remark included on the survey is the location of the rock
‘on which HMS Valiant struck N E by E from Gull Lt’. This is an
important reference to the first naval engagement of the British
blockade. In late May 1813 three American ships; USS United States, USS
Macedonian and the USS Hornet left
New York under the command of Commodore Stephen Decatur, Jr. On the 1st June the three vessels had been forced to take refuge in the Thames River by
New London by a powerful
British squadron. HMS Valiant had been amongst the British force which
had given chase to the three American ships and for her efforts was
grounded on the rock and had to wait for high tide to free herself. The
British Blockade of the American coastline proved remorseless and the
USS United States and USS Macedonian were kept blocked at
New London throughout the
duration. The Blockade of Long Island Sound did however provide a
couple of noticeable incidents, both involving HMS Ramillies.
The first was an attempt by two
New York shippers who, on the 25th
June 1813 packed the schooner ‘Eagle’ with 400 pounds of gunpowder in a
cask and other combustibles and sent her down the sound toward HMS
Ramillies. They were frustrated by the British blockage and encouraged
by a recent Federal statute which effectively offered a reward of half
the value of any British ship war (other than those showing a flag of
truce, which could be burned sunk or destroyed). The British commander,
Sir Thomas Masterman Hardy, possibly recognizing the danger, sent a
boat out to intercept the intruder. As the British approached the
American crew abandoned ship and left the vessel to the British. When
the Eagle exploded it killed 11 British seamen. A direct consequence of
this act was an edict from the British which effectively declared ‘open
season’ on any and all American vessels, including fishing vessels,
operating up and down coast between
New York and
Halifax.
The
second and no less significant incident was the (further) development
of submarine warfare by the American engineer and inventor David
Bushnell. Back in 1776 Bushnell had invented the ‘Turtle’, the first
combat submersible. He had used it to attack Admiral Howe’s Flagship
HMS Eagle in
New York harbour.
Although the attack had been unsuccessful it had shown that the idea had
potential. In 1812, it is believed that David Bushnell built another
submarine which attacked the British ship HMS Ramillies at anchor off
New London,
Connecticut. At least
three times the submarine passed under the hull of the Ramillies but
again failed to attach the explosive charge. A
Connecticut newspaper
editor reported that. . ‘So great is the alarm and fear aboard the
Ramillies that Commodore Hardy keeps his ships under way at all times’. |