Slops List of Lexington Men at Bordeaux on 27 June 1777

The List of 86 Officers and Men of the Brig Lexington who received Slops delivered at Bordeaux on 27 June 1777 was transcribed by Joseph and Joshua Ross in February 2014 from the original found among the prize court records pertaining to the brig Lexington (HCA 32/388) at the National Archives in Kew, England. Following is an alphabetized list including alternate spellings of names in parenthesis for ease in internet browsing and annotated to note their disposition after the Lexington was taken in battle. Men noted with a + sign were killed and those noted with a ++ sign were seriously wounded in action with HM cutter Alert on 19 September 1777. Finally those men marked with an asterisk * were entered on the ship’s book of the Alert as prisoners.

A List of Slops received at Bourdeaux (delivered 27 June 1777 on board the brig Lexington, Henry Johnson, Esqr 16 Guns & 10 Swivels)

Ledger (presumed Ledger B as many have notations brought over from Ledger A)

Elijah Bowen
John Hopes
Mathew Clear
Edward Hart
Thomas Coleston
John Barry
Mathew Brannon
Philip McGlaughlan
Aaron Quigley
William Riley
George Greggs
Henry Beckly
William Keith
Francis Coleburn
John Harvey
George Morrison
David Clark
Andrew Groce
James Shields
Nicholas Caldwell
Samuel Williams
John Davis
Thomas Lyne
Samuel Hubble
Daniel Feagan
John Thompson
Richard Dale
Thomas Marlin
Jeremiah Holden
James Connelly
John Stewart
Methusalah Lewis
James Dick
John Row
Thomas Bradley
John Chester
Joseph Coleston
James Jackson
Clement Smith
John Roy
Mathew Reason
John Bobbis
Peter Merle
John Bart
James Dane
John Tommy
Alexander Russell
Visant Sabeden
Peter Demey
Peter Gaudel
Francis Bruneau
Greilleume Lagherie
John Rousseau
Anthony Vassel
Joseph Bona
Jacque Lebayonne
John Tommy [blank after]
Anthony Ferrara
John Wiggins
John Dufoue
Peter Pelleren
Elie Legrange
Anthony Rouay
John Parquet
Charles Gay
Charles Bourong
Frederick Lewis
John Paris
John Froy
Augustine Guie(or c)hard
John Roustant
Luke Madeler
Jacob Crawford
Henry Lawrence
George Keith
Raphael Geraue
John LaReval
John Sanceir
John Rouseau
Bernard Fumade
Peter Castel
Benjamin Ragland
James Bennet
Nicholas Shay
Richard Howard
William Lee

Alphabetical List

John Barry *
John Bart
Henry Beckly (Beckley) *
James Bennet
John Bobbis *
Joseph Bona (Bonna) *
Charles Bourong
Elijah Bowen ++
Thomas Bradley *
Mathew Brannon *
Francis Bruneau
Nicholas Caldwell
Peter Castel
John Chester *
David Clark (Clarke) *
Mathew Clear *
Francis Coleburn (Colburn) *
Joseph Coleston (Coulston) *
Thomas Coleston (Coulston) *
James Connelly +
Jacob Crawford *
Richard Dale *
James Dane
John Davis *
Peter Demey
James Dick *
John Dufoue (Dufoe) *
Daniel Feagan (Fagan) *
Anthony Ferrara
John Froy
Bernard Fumade
Peter Gaudel
Charles Gay
Raphael Geraue (Gereau) *
George Greggs
Andrew Groce (Grace) *
Augustine (Auguste) Guichard *
Edward Hart *
John Harvey *
Jeremiah Holden +
John Hopes *
Richard Howard *
Samuel Hubble (Hobble) *
James Jackson
George Keith *
William Keith
Greilleume Lagherie
John LaReval
Henry Lawrence *
Jacque Lebayonne
William Lee *
Elie Legrange
Frederick Lewis *
Methusalah Lewis
Thomas Lyne *
Luke Madeler (Madiller) *
Thomas Marlin *
Philip McGlaughlan *
Peter Merle
George Morrison *
John Paris (Parris) *
John Parquet
Peter Pelleren
Aaron Quigley *
Benjamin Ragland *
Mathew Reason
William Riley *
Anthony Rouay
John Rouseau (Rosseau) *
John Rousseau
John Roustant *
John Row *
John Roy
Alexander Russell
Visant Sabeden
John Sanceir
Nicholas Shay (Shea) *
James Shields *
Clement Smith
John Stewart *
John Thompson ++
John Tommy
John Tommy [blank after]
Anthony Vassel (Varsailles) *
John Wiggins *
Samuel Williams *

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Officers and Men known or believed to be lost on the frigate Randolph on 7 March 1778

Undoubtedly the greatest catastrophic loss for the Continental Navy during the War for Independence was the total destruction of the frigate Randolph and the loss of Captain Nicholas Biddle and over three hundred of her officers, “picked seamen” and “gentlemen volunteers” on 7 March 1778. Only four of her reported crew of 315 survived the explosion of her magazine during an engagement with the 64-gun HMS Yarmouth under the command of Captain Nicholas Vincent. The tragic loss of life surpasses even the loss of the 18-gun Continental sloop Saratoga three years later which disappeared from sight in an instant during a particularly severe squall on 18 March 1781 with all hands lost.

No muster is known to have survived the tragic loss and no concentrated effort other than William Bell Clark’s 1949 “Captain Dauntless” appears to have been made in the last 240 years to reconstruct a list of the officers and men who gave their lives as the ultimate sacrifice on behalf of a nation yet to survive infancy. This site will periodically be updated with very short bios on those known or believed to have been lost in Randolph’s action with HMS Yarmouth. Only about fourteen percent of her compliment of 315 men have been identified by this writer. An attempt to identify power of attorney records for some or most of her crew in Exemplification Book 11 of the early deed books of the City of Philadelphia where a number of crew lists of Revolutionary War private armed ships were unsuccessful. The frigate Randolph left Philadelphia in February 1777 over one year before her total loss and just months before Power of Attorney records were first organised into what would later become Exemplification Book 11. It would be considered a great service if a South Carolina researcher would immerse themselves into such records in that place, as well as, wills and muster records of the unknown forty-seven men of the 1st SC Continental Regiment lost on the frigate Randolph. This post will continue to be a work in progress for many years and I invite additions and corrections to the list as well as offers of research assistance.

William Barnes, 1st Lieutenant

Joseph Barry

Nicholas Biddle, Captain

David Bigs aka David Biggs

Peter Bocquet, Midshipman

Joseph Brown

Thomas Budd, Surgeon’s Mate

James Budd, Volunteer

_________ Burrows, Midshipman

Joseph Cauffman, Surgeon’s Mate

William Connolly

Timothy Cremer, 1st SC Continental Regiment

Thomas Ellison

Joshua Fanning, 3rd Lieutenant

Bernard Garland aka Barny Garland

George Gray aka George Grey, Lieutenant of 1st SC Continental Regiment

William Honour

Thomas Hore, Surgeon

Thomas How

Joseph Ioor aka Joseph Joor, Captain of 1st SC Continental Regiment

William Irringston, Master’s Mate

Robert Johnson, Sailing Master

Dyer La Roche, Sergeant of 1st SC Continental Regiment

Alexander Leyburn aka Al Seyburn

Mordecai Matlack, Midshipman

Dennis McCarthy

John McDougall, 2nd Lieutenant

James McGill, Sergeant of 1st SC Continental Regiment

Thomas McNamee

James Meshick

James Parsons, 1st SC Continental Regiment

Thomas Saunders Pascho

Solomon Proby, Corporal of 1st SC Continental Regiment

Franklin Reid, 1st Lieutenant of Marines

John Scott

Samuel Shaw, Captain of Marines

Ebenezer Simmons, Lieutenant of 1st SC Continental Regiment

John Stockton

Thomas Tivy

Jeremiah Twig aka Jerry Towhig or Twoohig

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Lexington Men at Mill Prison

Roll of Mill Prison, Plymouth, England 7 February 1779

The roll prisoners at Mill Prison in Plymouth, England dated 7 February 1779 is taken from pages 249 and 252-254 of “A Relic of the Revolution” (1847) by Charles Herbert. The following marks taken from his annotations denote (*) died, (+) escaped or (++) joined English men-of-war

Brigantine Lexington taken 19 September 1777

From Boston
Captain Henry Johnston +

From Ireland
David Welch +
Arthur Kirk +
John Kennedy ++
Thos. Choulston ++
John Hopes
William Lee
Robert Ford
William Riley
Phil. McLoughlan
James Haze ++
Thomas Bradley
John Barry +
James Dick
Joseph Coulston ++
John Howard ++
Thomas Welch ++
Nicholas Chaise ++
Thomas Marley ++
Nath’I. Brennon ++

From Philadelphia
Andrew Grace ++
James Shields ++
Daniel Fagan ++
Jacob Crawford
Thomas Harvey
Francis Colburn ++
David Clark ++
Henry Bakeley ++

From Virginia
Richard Deal +
Henry Lawrence

From Providence
George Thayer

From England
John Chester
Thomas Lines ++
Matthew Clear ++
John Videan ++
Samuel Williams ++
John Davis ++
Joseph Wolt ++
Benj’n. Richardson ++
Edward Hart ++

From Scotland
George Morrison
Joseph Kennigton *
John Stewart ++

From New London
Samuel Hobble

From New Jersey
Aaron Twigley ++

Lexington Prize taken April 1777 and Committed to Mill Prison June 1777

From Jersey
Nicholas Simpkin *

From Maryland
William Stearns

From England
Thomas Haley
Benjamin Lockett ++

From Philadelphia
William Lane

From Ireland
John Gordon ++

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Alphabetical List of Officers and Men of the Brig Lexington captured September 1777

The Journal of Lieutenant John Bazely, Commander of the cutter Alert, for Friday 19 September 1777 found in Volume 9 of “Naval Documents of the American Revolution” reveals details of the action and capture of the Continental brig Lexington under the command of Captain Henry Johnson of Boston. “At 5 AM saw a Sail to the Etward standing for the wtward, let the Reef out of the Mainsail and set the 1st Jib, got the Topsail Yard up, set the Topsail and Royal, cleard the Cutter for Action.” Bazely continues, “after 6 Tack’d and stood to her fird a Swivel to bring her too; she then haild us when we answerd from whitehall, we then haild him when he answerd from Guernsey he then hauld down English Colours and hoisted American Colours gave us a broadside which we returnd and an engagement ensew’d which lasted from half past 7 to 10 0 Clock when he bore up made use of his sweeps and endeavourd to get off.” The Alert then “made Sail after him… [and] at 1/2 past 1 PM came up with the Enemy (cut and let run the small Sails overboard) renew’d the Action when at 1/2 past 2 she struck found her to be the Lexington Brig Arm’d by the American Congress Henry Johnstone Master, mounting 14 four & 2 six Pounders 12 Swivels & 84 Men the Enemy had 7 Men kill’d and 11 wounded in the former was the Master & Lieutenant of Marines in the latter was the 1st Lieut & Gunner, the loss on our side was three Men wounded and two kill’d with both our Mast & Rigging very much dammag’d sent a Midn & 17 Men onboard to take charge of the Prize receiv’d 68 Prisoners from her…at 9 made Sail the Prize in Compy.” Based on Bazely’s journal, the brig Lexington’s Master Jeremiah Holden and Lieutenant of Marines James Connelly were among the dead and 1st Lieutenant Elijah Bowen who had his arm blown off and Gunner John Thompson who lost a leg among the wounded. Five days later Lieutenant Bazely officially reports Alert suffered “only two Men Killed and three Wounded, one of which is since Dead, with my Mast, Rigging and Sails much Cutt and Damaged.” In a letter to Lord Sandwich dated 29 September 1777, Sir Hugh Palliser communicates Lieutenant John Bazely’s interrogation of Captain Henry Johnson about his loss of the brig Lexington, “On conversing with him about the action and the qualities of the Alert, he told me that Johnson took him for a smuggling cutter and reckoned on taking him after the first or second fire, and intended only to take out a good sea store of brandy and tea and to give the rest and the vessel to the crew, for they do not reckon the smugglers their enemies. But after he found his mistake, he endeavoured to get off, and would have succeeded had not the cutter outsailed him.” An American perspective of the engagement and aftermath is recorded in the Journal of Charles Herbert found in Volume 9 of the “Naval Documents of the American Revolution” dated at Mill Prison on 27 September 1777. “Ten more of Captain Johnston’s men came to prison to-day. They inform us that they were taken by a ten gun cutter after almost four hours’ engagement, and having expended all their shot; they were so disabled by having their shrouds, stays, and braces shot away, and so nearly wrecked, that they were obliged to strike to their inferiors. They had six men killed and a number wounded; their first lieutenant had an arm shot off, and after they were taken they were not stripped as our company had been, but were allowed all their clothes; and Captain Johnston was allowed even to wear his hanger, which he brought to prison with him, and delivered to the agent. He had considerable money with him, which the agent took, and he is to have it in small quantities as he wants it, for immediate use.”

The Alphabetical List of 68 Officers and Men of the Brig Lexington captured on 19 September 1777 is derived from the muster of the HM cutter Alert (ADM 36/7942) transcribed at the National Archives in Kew, England by Joseph and Joshua Ross in February 2014. The list includes rate or quality if noted in the muster. Rate or quality if known by the Lexington’s muster is noted in brackets. Alternate spellings of names in parenthesis are taken from the roll of prisoners in Mill Prison belonging to the brigantine Lexington. Of the 68 officers and men of the brig Resistance taken on board HM cutter Alert, nineteen men marked with a + sign are noted as Frenchman on a list enclosed with a letter from Vice Lord Shudham to Philip Stephens dated 5 October 1777, suggesting that the forty-nine remaining officers and men were Americans. This appears to be confirmed in a letter found in Volume 10 of “Naval Documents of the American Revolution” from William McCreery at Bordeaux to John Adams dated 10 October 1777 who writes that Captain Johnson “had but forty Eight men, & they were such a Motly Crew, that people are astonishd at his Having made so Gallant a resistance.” According to Johnson’s deposition taken at Mill Prison on 30 September 1777, in addition to himself, “there were Eighty Three Marriners on board her And that they were of many different Nations.” Sir Hugh Palliser in a 29 September 1777 letter to Lord Sandwich offers a different and distinctively British take on the make-up of the crew, “there was only seven Frenchmen found on board the Lexington, but Mr Bazely thinks there was some French officers killed, but they deny it… There was not above fourteen Americans, the rest stout young Irish fellows, not one above 26 years of age.” Based on Johnson’s testimony and accounting for the 68 officers and men entered on the Alert’s muster with seven who died in action, it appears that nine of the eleven wounded were left in the care of Lexington’s Surgeon Clement Smith. This agrees with the fact that John Kennedy and Master’s Mate George Thayer, two men not entered on board HM cutter Alert’s muster, are included on the roll of Lexington men at Mill Prison. A letter from commander of the HMS Trident Captain John Elliot to Philip Stevens dated 26 September 1777 confirms that Surgeon Smith is not on HM cutter Alert, HMS Blenheim or at Mill Prison but rather on his vessel awaiting orders for disposition. Based on the brig Lexington’s muster, it is speculated that five of her twelve unnamed casualties may include Armouror James Jackson; Carpenter’s Mate Matthew Lewis; Quartermaster George Greggs; Boy William Keith and Cabin Steward Nicholas Caldwell. Finally those men marked with an asterick * also appear on a published roll of Lexington officers and men at Mill Prison. In addition to naming the city from whence these prisoners hailed, the prison roll also indicates the identity of both those who escaped confinement and those who entered into British naval service.

Jacob Aaron
John Barry [Sergeant of Marines] *
Henry Beckley (Blakeley) [Boy] *
Joseph Bonna +
Thomas Bradley [OS Seaman] *
Matthew Brannon (Nathaniel Brennon) [Boatswain’s Yeoman] *
John Bubbis +
John Chester, Carpenter *
David Clarke (Clark) [Boy] *
Matthew Clear, Acting [3rd] Mate *
Fran Colebran (Francis Colburn) [Boy] *
Josh Coleston (Joseph Coulston) [OS Seaman] *
Thomas Coleston (Choulston) [OS Seaman] *
Jacob Crawford [Boy] *
Richard Dale (Deal), [1st] Mate *
John Davis [AB Seaman] *
James Dick, Midshipman *
John Dufoe +
John Duquene (Dequeni) +
Daniel Fagan (Feagan) [Boy] *
Charles Febry +
Robert Ford *
Ralph (Raphael) Gereau, Midshipman +
Andrew Grace (Groce) [Boy] *
Auguste (Augustus) Guichard, Midshipman +
Edward Hart [Quartermaster] *
John Harvey [Boy] *
James Hayes (Haze) *
Joseph Holt (Wolt) *
John Hopes, Captain’s Clerk *
Richard (John) Howard *
Samuel Hubble (Hobble) [Quartermaster] *
Henry Johnston (Johnson), Captain *
George Keith, Mate
J. Kennington (Joseph Kennigton) *
Arthur Kirk, Acting Mate *
Charles Lague (Legou) +
Henry Lawrence, [2nd] Mate *
William Lee *
William Legashrie (Lagashire) +
Frederick Lewis
Thomas Lyne (Lines), Boatswain *
Luke Maddiller (Madiller) +
Thomas Marlin (Marley) [OS Seaman] *
Charles Mauduit +
Charles McGinnis
Philip McGlaughlan (McLoughlan) [OS Seaman] *
George Morrison [Boy] *
Auguste (Augustine) Noelle +
John Parris +
Aaron Quigley (Twigley) [AB Seaman] *
Benjamin Ragland (Richardson) *
[blank] Raphaer (Raphier) +
Peter Richard +
William Riley (Ryley) [OS Seaman] *
John Rosseau (Roseau), Midshipman
John Roustant +
John Row [OS Seaman]
Nicolas Shea (Chaise) *
James Shields [Boatswain’s Mate] *
John Stewart [AB Seaman] *
Andrew Sutherland
John Vainsain (Vansan, Videan) + *
Anthony Varsaile (Antonio Versailles) +
David Welch, 2nd Lieutenant *
Thomas Welch *
John Wiggins [Steward]
Sam (Samuel) Williams [Cook] *

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Surviving Crew of the explosion of frigate Randolph on 7 March 1778

These four men are noted as “Taken off the Wreck” on the Muster of HMS Yarmouth on 12 March 1778, five days after the destruction of the Continental Navy frigate Randolph on 7 March 1778. (NDAR, Vol 11, pages 853-4)

Hantz Wortman, Ab, 1.1.7*
John Kerry, Ab, 1.0.10*
Alexr Robinson, Ab, 0.13.6*
Barthw Bourdeau

* [issued] Slop Cloths [pounds.shillings.pence]

Undoubtedly the greatest catastrophic loss for the Continental Navy during the War for Independence was the total destruction of the frigate Randolph and the loss of Captain Nicholas Biddle and over three hundred of her officers, “picked seamen” and “gentlemen volunteers” on 7 March 1778. Only four of her reported crew of 315 survived the explosion of her magazine during an engagement with the 64-gun HMS Yarmouth under the command of Captain Nicholas Vincent. The tragic loss of life surpasses even the loss of the 18-gun Continental sloop Saratoga three years later which disappeared from sight in an instant during a particularly severe squall on 18 March 1781 with all hands lost. Only the four Continental Navy seaman recorded on Yarmouth’s muster (ADM 36/8072) on 12 March 1778 as “Taken off the Wreck” lived to tell the story; Hantz Wortman (Hans Workman), John Kerry (John Carew), Alexander Robinson and Bartholomew Bourdeau.

A contemporary broadside found on pages 1175-7 of “Naval Documents of the American Revolution, Volume 11” (2005) records their experience for posterity. “A remarkable instance of the lives of four men being providentially saved. On the 7th of March, 1778, between five and six o’clock in the afternoon, his Majesty’s ship Yarmouth (Captain, now Admiral Vincent) being in the latitude of the island of Barbadoes, and about sixty leagues to the eastward of it, the man at the mast-head called out that he saw several sail to leeward, near each other. Soon after, there were discovered from the quarter-deck six sail- two ships, three brigs and a schooner, on the starboard tack, all sails set, and close to the wind, then about N.E. [The six vessels included the 36-gun Continental Navy frigate Randolph, SC privateer 20-gun General Moultrie (Captain Philip Sullivan), SC Navy 18-gun brig Notre Dame (Captain William Hall), SC privateers 16-gun brig Polly (Captain Hezekiah Anthony), 14-gun brig Fair American (Captain Charles Morgan) and a prize schooner converted to be Randolph’s tender (Prizemaster Simeon Fanning, Midshipman).] The captain and officers of the Yarmouth had not the least doubt of their being American privateers. For even a single merchant-ship, which had not a letter of marque, was, perhaps, never seen upon a wind in the latitude of Barbadoes, and forty or fifty leagues to the eastward of it, and the wind easterly. The Yarmouth accordingly bore down upon them, and about nine o’clock got very near to the largest of the two ships, which begun to fire on the Yarmouth, before the Yarmouth did on her. In about a quarter of an hour she blew up; being then on the Yarmouth’s lee-beam, and not above three or four ship’s length distant. The rest of their squadron immediately dispersed. The damage the Yarmouth received in her masts, sails and rigging was prodigious, and she had five men killed and twelve wounded. A great variety of articles were thrown into her- one, an entire American ensign, which was not even singed or torn. This happened between nine and ten o’clock Saturday night.”

In a letter to his superior Vice Admiral James Young dated 17 March 1778, Yarmouth’s Captain Nicholas Vincent reveals additional details of the engagement, damage and subsequent events, “We immediately bore down upon them, and about 9, got close on the Weather Quarter of the largest and headmost Ship, They had no Colours hoisted and as Ours were then up, I hailed her to hoist hers, or I would fire into her, on which she hoisted American, and immediately gave us her broad Side, which We returned, and in about a quarter of an hour she blew up. It was fortunate for us, that We were to Windward of her-as it was, our Ship was in a manner covered with parts of her, a great piece of a Top Timber Six feet long fell on our poop,-another large piece of Timber Stuck in our foretop gallant Sail (then upon the Cap) An American Ensign rolled up, blown in upon the forecastle, not so much as Singed &c; Immediately on her blowing up, the other four dispersed different ways-We Chaced a little while, two that Stood to the Southward, and afterwards another that bore away right before the Wind, but they were soon out of sight-Our Sails being tore all to pieces in a most surprizing manner”. (NDAR, Vol 11, pages 683-4)

The aforementioned broadside picks up the narrative five days after Randolph’s catastrophic destruction, “On the Thursday following, the Yarmouth being in chace of a ship, steering about West, (the wind in the N.E. quarter), the man at the mast-head called down to the officer on the quarter-deck, that he saw something on the water, abaft the beam (the starboard), but could not tell what to make of it. A question immediately arose, what was to be done? If the Yarmouth hauled up to see what it was, there would be little or no chance of coming up with her before dark. Humanity, however pleaded for it and prevailed. Accordingly she hauled her wind, and by the help of a spy-glass, discovered four men, that seemed to be standing on the water; for what supported them was not at first visible. In two or three hours she got up to the little float on which they stood, and brought them on board. The captain and officers were greatly surprised to find they belonged to the ship that was blown up the preceding Saturday. So that, they had been five whole nights, and nearly as many days, floating on the waves, and buried alive, as it were, under the vault of heaven. Being young and hardy, they did not appear much discomposed when they came upon the quarterdeck. They said they were not hungry, although they had not eaten any thing, but thirsty and very sleepy. A bason of tea, however, and a hammock to each, perfectly restored them in a few hours. When they arose, the only complaint they had, was that of their feet being greatly swoln, by having been so long in the water. The account they gave of themselves was only this- that they were quartered in the captain’s cabin, and thrown into the water without receiving any hurt. But they could give no account by what accident the ship blew up. Being good swimmers, they got hold of some spars and rope, with which they made the raft, on which they were found. And, providentially for them, they picked up a blanket, which served them as a reservoir of water; for during the time they were on the raft, there fell a few showers of rain, which they saved as much as they could in their blanket, sucking it from time to time; which, no doubt preserved all their lives.” (NDAR, Vol 11, pages 1175-7)

The broadside continues, “On the arrival of the Yarmouth two days after, at Barbadoes, proper officers came on board, in order to take the depositions of those four men, respecting the blowing up of the ship, &c. and particularly, as to the number of men on board her when the action began. For without a certificate to this purpose, the Treasurer of the navy has no authority to pay the head-money, allowed by Government, which is five pounds a head; and which, on this occasion, came to five hundred and seventy-five pound. Thus this little act of humanity seems to have been rewarded. They deposed, that the ship which blew up was called the Randolph, of thirty-six guns, twenty-six of which were twelve-pounders, and her complement of men three hundred and fifteen. The other ship was called the General Moutray; but the number of her guns, or her complement of men, or of the force of the three brigs: Admiral Vincent told the writer of this account, he could not precisely ascertain. The schooner was a prize. The captain of the Randolph was the commodore of this little squadron which had sailed just a month from Charles-town, South Carolina, where it was fitted out, with the design of attacking the island of Tobago, for which they were steering when they first saw the Yarmouth. No prize was lost. The ship the Yarmouth hauled off from, was a West-India merchant-man, bound to Barbadoes. The master of her came on board the Yarmouth after her arrival there: she had a letter of marque, and was upon a wind when the Yarmouth first saw her.” (NDAR, Vol 11, pages 1175-7)

Twenty-three years after the conflagration, eyewitness John Davis’ account of the engagement from his perspective on the South Carolina privateer General Moultrie was recorded, “on the 7th of March following, at one P.M., we discovered a sail standing for us, when the Randolph made a signal to heave to. About four P.M., Captain Biddle hove out a signal to make sail. We then spoke him, and Captain Biddle told us that one of his crew had deserted from the British ship Yarmouth of 74 guns, and he knew the ship to windward to be her- and from her appearance he had no doubt it was her; notwithstanding which, Sullivan [Moultrie’s commander Philip Sullivan] did not make sail, and the Randolph was obliged to engage the Yarmouth or sacrifice our ship. The Yarmouth hailed us as he passed. We answered, “the Polly, from Charleston,” and that our convoy was ahead. They then hailed the Randolph; and immediately after engaged. The Randolph appeared to fire four or five broadsides to the Yarmouth’s one, until she blew up, when Sullivan hauled down his colors, and we should have been taken but for Captain Blake, who commanded the marines. He insisted upon our making sail, and such was the confusion on board the Yarmouth, or she was so much injured during the engagement, that they took no note of us” (NDAR, Vol 11, pages 1175-7)

After the tragic loss of the Continental Navy frigate Randolph, her commander and men were mourned with appropriate accolades. In a letter to the President of Congress dated 30 March 1778, Rawlins Lowndes eulogizes Randolph’s marine contingent from South Carolina, “I could not Sir help giving you the particulars of this really distressing and Affecting affair as the Letter lies on my desk before me from whence I have extracted the article- 50 of the best Men in the first Regiment were on board of her and Several very promising Youths of this Country who have thus immaturely fallen in their Countrys Service.” (NDAR, Vol 11, pages 837-8) A purported eyewitness account pertaining to the conduct of Randolph’s commander was given to Charles Biddle, brother of Nicholas Biddle: “He told me he was stationed at one of the quarterdeck guns near Capt. Biddle, who early in the action was wounded in the thigh. He fell, but immediately sitting up again, and encouraging his crew, told them it was only a slight touch he had received. He ordered a chair, and one of the surgeon’s mates was dressing him at the time of the explosion. None of the men saved could tell by what means the accident happened.” A published letter from Charleston to Philadelphia dated 29 March 1778 concludes “Never was a man here more sincerely esteemed or lamented than Captain Biddle. His conduct both as an officer and a gentleman had procured general respect. He died in the midst of glory, fighting for his country against a very superior force, with all the gallantry of the bravest officer, and with every prospect of success.” (NDAR, Vol 11, pages 832-3) This great American tragedy was gloriously captured by “Poet of the Revolution” Philip Freneau (1752-1832).

On the Death of Captain Nicholas Biddle

WHAT distant thunders rend the skies,
What clouds of smoke in volumes rise,
What means this dreadful roar!
Is from his base Vesuvius thrown,
Is sky-topt Atlas tumbled down,
Or Etna’s self no more!

Shock after shock torments my ear;
And lo! two hostile ships appear,
Red lightnings round them glow:
The Yarmouth boasts of sixty-four,
The Randolph thirty-two—no more—
And will she fight this foe!

The Randolph soon on Stygian streams
Shall coast along the land of dreams,
The islands of the dead!
But fate, that parts them on the deep,
Shall save the Briton, still to weep
His ancient honors fled.

Say, who commands that dismal blaze,
Where yonder starry streamer plays;
Does Mars with Jove engage!
’Tis Biddle wings those angry fires,
Biddle, whose bosom Jove inspires
With more than mortal rage.

Tremendous flash! and hark, the ball
Drives through old Yarmouth, flames and all;
Her bravest sons expire;
Did Mars himself approach so nigh,
Even Mars, without disgrace, might fly
The Randolph’s fiercer fire.

The Briton views his mangled crew,
“And shall we strike to thirty-two,”
(Said Hector, stained with gore;)
“Shall Britain’s flag to these descend—
Rise, and the glorious conflict end,
Britons, I ask no more!”

He spoke—they charged their cannon round,
Again the vaulted heavens resound,
The Randolph bore it all,
Then fixed her pointed cannons true—
Away the unwieldly vengeance flew;
Britain, the warriors fall.

The Yarmouth saw, with dire dismay,
Her wounded hull, shrouds shot away,
Her boldest heroes dead—
She saw amidst her floating slain
The conquering Randolph stem the main—
She saw, she turned, and fled!

That hour, blest chief, had she been thine,
Dear Biddle, had the powers divine
Been kind as thou wert brave;
But fate, who doomed thee to expire,
Prepared an arrow tipped with fire,
And marked a watery grave,

And in that hour when conquest came
Winged at his ship a pointed flame
That not even he could shun—
The conquest ceased, the Yarmouth fled,
The bursting Randolph ruin spread,
And lost what honor won.

Four days after their miraculous rescue on 12 March 1778; Hans Workman, John Carew and Alexander Robinson offered their depositions concerning the frigate Randolph and the engagement of 7 March to the Chief Judge of his Majesty’s Court of Common Pleas in Barbados. (NDAR, Vol 11, pages 666-7) After one month on their captors’ Supernumerary List as American prisoners, all three were entered into British service on the HMS Yarmouth as able-bodied seamen on 9 April 1778. Nothing is presently known about why Bartholomew Bourdeau was not deposed or his eventual disposition. It may be that the apparent Frenchman proved to be the only survivor remaining loyal to the American cause.

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