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John
Paul Jones
1747-1992
The
man whom Thomas Jefferson later described as "the principal
hope of America's future efforts on the ocean" was born on
6 July 1747 in the gardener's cottage of the Arbigland Estate,
Kirkbean, Scotland.
1760
Apprenticed to a merchant at age 13, John Paul went to sea in
the brig Friendship to learn the art of seamanship. He first voyaged
between Whitehaven, England, and Barbados with cargoes of consumer
goods or sugar. At twenty-one he received his first command on
the brig John.
1773
On the Caribbean island of Tobago, where his ship Betsy ended
her outward voyage, Jones decided to invest money in return cargo
rather than pay his crew for their shore leave. One sailor, known
as "the ringleader," attempted to go ashore without
leave. Jones drew his sword on the man to enforce his orders,
but the man set on his captain with a bludgeon. In response to
the attack Jones ran him through with his sword. Jones immediately
went ashore to give himself up, but the death of the ringleader
had so stirred up local sentiment that John Paul's friends prevailed
upon him to escape to Virginia at once.
1775
In December 1775 Jones received his lieutenant's commission from
the Continental Congress for its navy. On 3 December 1775, as
first lieutenant of Alfred, he hoisted the Grand Union flag for
the first time on a Continental warship. The flag's Union Jack
in the upper left canton and thirteen red and white stripes represented
a united resistance to tyranny but loyalty to the English King.
1776
In February 1776 John Paul Jones participated in the attack on
Nassau, New Providence Island. Jones was appointed to command
Providence on 10 May 1776; his commission as Captain in the Continental
Navy was dated 8 August 1776. The 12- gun sloop departed for the
Delaware Capes on 21 August. Within a week she had captured the
whaling brigantine Britannia. Near Bermuda, she fell in with a
convoy escorted by the 28-gun frigate Solebay. In a thrilling
chase lasting ten hours, Jones saved Providence from the larger
warship by an act of superior seamanship. By 22 September he had
captured three British merchant vessels. While anchored he burnt
an English fishing schooner, sank another, and made prize of a
third. Jones would later declare that his best crew had been on
board Providence; he had received sound financial rewards from
the prizes, making this venture the most enjoyable of his career.
1777
In November 1777, John Paul Jones sailed for France in Ranger,
carrying word of Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga. Admiral La
Motte-Picquet returned Jones' salute at Quiberon Bay on 14 February
1778, the first time the Stars and Stripes were recognized by
a foreign power. Ranger later captured the British sloop of war
Drake off the coast of Ireland on 24 April and pillaged the British
coast.
1779
The French king loaned Jones the Bonhomme Richard, which Jones
had renamed after Poor Richard's Almanac, in honor of Benjamin
Franklin. On 14 August 1779, in command of four other ships and
two French privateers, Jones continued his raids on English shipping.
In his most famous engagement, 23 September 1779, Jones engaged
the British frigate Serapis off Flamborough Head, Yorkshire. Serapis
was a superior ship compared to Richard. She was faster, more
nimble and carried a far greater number of eighteen pounders.
The two ships fired simultaneously. At the first or second salvo,
two of Jones' eighteen pounders burst, killing many gunners and
ruining the entire battery as well as blowing up the deck above.
After exchanging two or three broadsides, and attempting to rake
the Serapis' bow and stern, the commodore estimated that he must
board and grapple, a gun-to-gun duel seeming futile. Serapis'
Captain Pearson repulsed the boarders, and attempted to cross
Richard's bow to rake her. During this stage of the bloody and
desperate battle, Pearson, seeing the shambles on board Bonhomme
Richard, asked if the American ship had struck. Jones' immortal
reply, "I have not yet begun to fight," served as a
rallying cry to the crew. The two ships grappled and Jones relied
on his marines to clear the enemy's deck of men. To Jones' disgust,
Alliance, under the Frenchman Pierre Landais, fired three broadsides
into Richard. Landais later stated that he wanted to help Serapis
sink Richard, then capture the British frigate. Even though his
ship had begun to sink, Jones determined he would not strike his
colors. He used his remaining guns to weaken Serapis' main mast.
It began to tremble, Pearson lost his nerve and decided to strike
his colors. When the battered Bonhomme Richard sank on 25 September,
Jones was forced to transfer to Serapis. For his victory, Congress
passed a resolution thanking Jones, and Louis XVI presented him
with a sword.
1779
One of Jones' midshipman on board the Bonhomme Richard was Beaumont
Groube. He acquired fame as the "Lieutenant Grub" of
chapbooks (comics), supposedly shot by Jones for striking the
colors during battle, an action which would have signified the
Richard's surrender.
1783-1790
After the Revolutionary War, Commodore John Paul Jones was active
in negotiating prize money claims in Paris. In 1788 he entered
the service of the Empress Catherine the Great of Russia as a
rear admiral. He hoped that command of a battle fleet in Russia
would qualify him for higher command if and when the United States
built a permanent Navy. Although he successfully commanded the
Black Sea Squadron in the Dnieper River, court intrigues forced
Jones to leave Russia.
1790-92
John Paul Jones returned to Paris in 1790 where he died 18 July
1792.
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