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Commodore
John Barry was born in Ireland; in Tacumshane, Co. Wexford, in the year 1745.
He grew up with a great love for the sea and while still a young man, he emigrated
to the Crown colonies in America. By 1760, he was employed in a shipbuilding
firm in Philadelphia and in 1766, at the age of 2l, he went to sea as captain
of the ship, The Barbadoes. The young Irishman seemed destined for
a prosperous career in the colonies, but his integrity and sense of justice
led him to risk all in a dangerous venture.
In l775, years of smoldering unrest erupted in open rebellion as the American
colonies finally declared their independence from the Crown. As England prepared
to regain control of the situation, the colonies formed the Second Continental
Congress to establish a military force and defend their recently declared
independence; but experienced men were hard to find.
Captain John Barry, an earlier champion of the patriot cause, promptly volunteered
his service. With nine years experience as a seagoing captain and five successful
commands to his credit, the young Irishman was quite warmly welcomed and given
command of a ship under the authority of the Continental Congress.
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December 7, 1775, eight months after the first shots were fired at
Lexington, Captain John Barry took the helm of a 14 gun vessel aptly
named, The Lexington. He quickly trained a crew and began the
task of supplying and supporting Washingtons ground forces. |
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On April 7, 1776,
just four months after taking command, Barry provided a necessary boost to
the morale of the continental forces just as he would de so many times when
it was needed-most: he captured the British ship, The Edward and her
cargo - the first American war prize. On June 6, he was given command of the
new cruiser, The Effingham, and captured two more British ships.
In spite of Barry's successes, the war was hot going well for the Americans;
Philadelphia was in the hands of the British; the British Navy had bottled
up the Delaware River; General Benedict Arnold had betrayed West Point and
gone over to fight for the British; and Washington's troops were in dire need.
A victory was essential to boost their sagging moral. Barry captured an armed
British vessel when ammunition was scarce and a supply ship when food was
at a premium; then he came to Washington's aid when the leader was planning
to cross the Delaware. He organized seamen and joined the land forces which
cross the river in boats supplied by Barry's friend, Patrick Calvin.
Barry was held in such high esteem that, after the Delaware crossing and the
subsequent victories at Trenton and Princeton in which he served as an aide
to Washington, Lord Howe made a flattering offer to Barry to desert the patriot
cause. "Not the value or command of the whole British fleet,"
Barry replied, "can lure me from the cause of my country which
is liberty and freedom." On January 3,1778; while the Delaware was
occupied by the British fleet, Barry organized the famous "Battle of
the Kegs" in which small kegs loaded with explosives were sent floating
down the river at the British ships and fired upon, exploding them and throwing
the British into a panic.
In addition to commanding naval operations for the Continental Congress, Barry
supervised the building of their ships. In command of one of those ships in
1781, when Washington was again in need. Barry captured four important British
vessels. Washington personally thanked him for the boost it provided and sent
his fearless captain back into the fray.
During a confrontation on May 28, 1781, Barry was wounded and taken below.
Subsequently, his first officer informed him that the battle was going against
them and Barry ordered that he be carried back on deck. When the British demanded
his surrender, Barry defiantly refused and sparked his crew to victory. The
wounded captain returned another prize.
The last sea battle of the American Revolution too place on March 10, 1783,
as Barry was returning with a shipload of bullion from Havana and was set
upon by three British ships. The resourceful captain engaged and destroyed
one and outdistanced the other two, returning with the precious cargo which
was used to establish a National Bank for the new nation.
Even after the war, this tireless seaman assisted America by transporting
Virginia tobacco to Holland to repay America's war debts. Far from the sea
and war; Barry also assisted at the Federal Convention held in 1787 to adopt
the new constitution.
It seems that there were a minority who were opposed to the adoption and absented
themselves from the convention, preventing a quorum from being formed. Barry
organized a group called "The Compellers" and physically forced
enough of the seceding members back to form a quorum; the vote was taken and
the constitution was finally approved.
Washington demonstrated Barry's immense value to the new nation when, on June
l4,1794, he asked the popular naval hero to form and train a class of midshipmen
who would then be commission as Ensigns and form the nucleus of the new American
Navy. Barry himself was named the ranking officer and granted Commission number
one.
Commodore John Barry had many firsts to his credit, from being the first to
fly the new American flag in battle to escorting America's famous ally, General
Lafayette; back to France, but the first that he should always be remembered
for is his position as Father of the American Navy.
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