词条 | Battle off Cape Split |
释义 |
|conflict=Battle off Cape Split |partof=the American Revolutionary War | image=Capt William Bishop's Sword, Kings County Museum, Nova Scotia.jpg | image_size =300px |caption= Captain William Bishop's Sword from Battle Kings County Museum, Nova Scotia |date=21 May 1781 |place=off Cape Split, Nova Scotia |result=British victory |combatant1={{flagicon|United States|1777}} United States of America |combatant2={{flag|Kingdom of Great Britain}} |commander1={{Flagicon image|Naval Jack of the United States.svg}} |commander2={{flagicon|Kingdom of Great Britain|naval}} Captain William Bishop (military officer)[1] Captain Amos Sheffield Benjamin Belcher Captain Jonathan Crane |strength1= 28 privateers |strength2= 1 schooner (35 men) Success (28 men) |casualties1=1 killed |casualties2=no casualties }}{{Campaignbox American Revolutionary War: Northern coast 1776-1781}}{{Campaignbox American Revolutionary War: Atlantic Waters}}{{Campaignbox American Revolutionary War: Nova Scotia theatre}} The Battle off Cape Spilt (also known as the Battle of Blomindon) took place on 21 May 1781 during the American Revolutionary War. The naval battle involved three armed American privateer vessels against three Nova Scotian vessels off Cape Split, Nova Scotia. [2] A Nova Scotia vessel was captured by the American Privateers. Then Capt Bishop tried a rescue operation but was also captured by the American Privateers. Finally, a third vessel under the command of Captain Belcher was able to capture the American Privateer and the first vessel they had taken. Captain Bishop and crew, who had made the failed rescue attempt, were able to take back their ship and imprison their captors. BackgroundDuring the American Revolution, Americans regularly attacked Nova Scotia by land and sea. American privateers devastated the maritime economy by raiding many of the coastal communities,[3] such as the numerous raids on Liverpool and on Annapolis Royal.[4] After the British destroyed the Penobscot Expedition, the American Privateers began their most fierce revenge by attacking Nova Scotia.[5] The engagement between the American privateers and local militia was one of several in the region. On 2 May 1777, in the Minas Basin the Captain Collet ordered the capture the American privateer schooner Sea Duck, under the command of John Bohannan. He had the vessel taken to Windsor.[6] In June 1779, the British troops at Windsor captured 12 American privateers in the Bay of Fundy, where they cruised in a large boat, armed, plundering the vessels and the inhabitants.[7] On 10 July 1780, the British privateer brig Resolution (16 guns) under the command of Thomas Ross engaged the American privateer Viper (22 guns and 130 men) off Halifax at Sambro Light. In what one observer described as "one of the bloodiest battles in the history of privateering", the two privateers began a "severe engagement"[8] during which both pounded each other with cannon fire for about 90 minutes.[9] The engagement resulted in the surrender of the British ship and the death of up to 18 British and 33 American sailors.[10] BattleThere were 30 American privateers in one armed shallop (one carriage gun and six swivels) and two whaleboats. They captured Captain Sheffield’s schooner.[11] Captain William Bishop (along with Capt. Crane), in a small schooner (35 men), pursued the three privateer vessels and their prize. Bishop was in a 25 min naval battle with the privateers but was captured by them.[12] Lieutenant Belcher in the armed sloop Success (28 crew) pursued the three American privateer vessels and their two prizes (Sheffield’s schooner and Bishop’s schooner). Belcher caught Sheffield’s vessel, killing one privateer in the process. Many of the privateers then escaped in their whaleboat to the shores of Cape Split.[13] Belcher then began to pursue Captain Bishop’s vessel. During the pursuit Captain Bishop overthrew his captors and regained command of his schooner. He sent the remaining American privateer prisoners to Cornwallis.[14] AfterwardAmerican privateers continued to attack vessels in the Bay of Fundy.[15] August 7 the British schooner Adventure captured the schooner Mary off Annapolis.[16] In the fall of 1781, under orders of Captain James Nevins (Nevens, Nivens, Nuyens, Nevers), Mr. Low of the American naval vessel Defence (18 men) went up the Bay of Fundy and was attacked by the Nova Scotia militia. The militia took two of his men and the rest of his crew escaped into the woods and were rescued by Acadians.[17] Legacy
AftermathAmerican privateers remained a threat to Nova Scotian ports for the rest of the war. The following year, after a failed attempt to raid Chester, Nova Scotia, American privateers struck again in the Raid on Lunenburg in 1782. See also
Notes1. ^ Member of the 3rd Connecticut Regiment during French and Indian War . http://parkercat.org/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I1682&tree=maintree 2. ^[https://books.google.ca/books?id=WAIOAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA614&lpg=PA614&dq=captain+bishop+and+captain+crane+lieutenant+belcher&source=bl&ots=E6FK7-to4j&sig=ZT7IgjtpVuaLlE6UjPfYBfOKdgQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiSjsvr8dzZAhVPIqwKHWE2CUwQ6AEIQzAJ#v=onepage&q=captain%20bishop%20and%20captain%20crane%20lieutenant%20belcher&f=false Beamish Murdoch. History of Nova Scotia, Vol. 2, p.614] [https://archive.org/stream/historyofkingsco00eato#page/433/mode/1up History of Kings County, Nova Scotia. p. 433] 3. ^Benjamin Franklin also engaged France in the war, which meant that many of the privateers were also from France. 4. ^Roger Marsters (2004). Bold Privateers: Terror, Plunder and Profit on Canada's Atlantic Coast" , p. 87-89 5. ^[https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.ca/&httpsredir=1&article=2321&context=dissertations_1 p. 174] 6. ^[https://archive.org/stream/americanvesselsc00nova#page/75/mode/1up/search/windsor p. 75] 7. ^[https://archive.org/stream/ahistorynovasco01murdgoog#page/n620/mode/1up/search/tartar p.600] 8. ^Simeon Perkins Diary. Thursday 13 July 1780 9. ^Bandits and Privateers: Canada in the Age of Gunpowder; {{cite book |last=Murdoch |first=Beamish |author-link=Beamish Murdoch |title=A History of Nova-Scotia, Or Acadie |volume=Vol. II |date=1866 |publisher=J. Barnes |location=Halifax |url=https://archive.org/details/ahistorynovasco01murdgoog|p=608}} 10. ^There are varying reports on the number of casualties. Another source indicates that the Americans reported between 3 died (British reporting 30 American died), while British reported 8 killed and 10 wounded. 11. ^[https://archive.org/stream/historyofnovasco02alli#page/207/mode/1up History of Nova Scotia, p. 506] 12. ^Nathan Davison from Horton reported to the House of Assembly in June 1782 that in the spring of 1781 he was wounded while fighting American Privateers. (Council in General Assembly, June 28, 1782: PRO, CO. 220/14, 484 13. ^[https://archive.org/stream/historyofnovasco02alli#page/207/mode/1up History of Nova Scotia, p. 506] 14. ^[https://archive.org/stream/historyofnovasco02alli#page/207/mode/1up History of Nova Scotia, p. 506] 15. ^[https://archive.org/stream/documentaryhisto19main#page/356/mode/1up/search/nova+scotia Documentary History of the State of Maine, Vol. 19, p.356] 16. ^[https://archive.org/stream/americanvesselsc00nova#page/54/mode/1up/search/annapolis p.54] 17. ^ (See [https://archive.org/stream/documentaryhisto19main#page/356/mode/1up/search/nova+ Documentary history of the state of Maine, Vol.19, p. 356]) The only ships of the Massachusetts Navy that were operational in 1781 were the frigate Protector (captured 5 May 1781), ship Mars, galley Lincoln, and the sloop Defence (built summer 1781) ([https://archive.org/stream/navyamerrevol00paulrich#page/342/mode/1up/search/nevens See Navy of the American Revolution, p. 342]) 18. ^poem Note that Joan Dawson indicates the poem was written by former president of Acadian University Watson Kirkconnell. ReferencesSecondary Sources
Primary Sources
9 : Naval battles of the American Revolutionary War involving the United States|Naval battles of the American Revolutionary War|Privateering|Conflicts in 1781|Conflicts in Nova Scotia|Maritime history of Canada|Military history of Nova Scotia|Military history of New England|1781 in Nova Scotia |
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