USS Rattlesnake (1813)

For other ships with the same name, see HMS Rattlesnake.
History
United States
Name: Rattlesnake
Namesake: Rattlesnake
Acquired: 1813
Captured: 22 June 1814
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 278 (bm)
Armament: 14 guns

USS Rattlesnake was a brig built in Medford, Massachusetts as a privateer that the United States Navy purchased in 1813. Rattlesnake captured numerous British merchant vessels before HMS Leander captured her in mid-1814. The Royal Navy apparently purchased her at Nova Scotia, but there is no record of her subsequent career.

Career

She sailed from Portsmouth, New Hampshire 10 January 1814, under the command of Master Commandant John O. Creighton, and sailed with Enterprise cruising the Caribbean. The two ships took three prizes prior to their separation which was forced by a more heavily gunned British ship on 25 February.

Rattlesnake, fleeing back to more friendly waters, put into Wilmington, North Carolina on 9 March. Together, Rattlesnake and Enterprise had taken five prizes:[1]

Rattlesnake was soon back at sea under the command of Lt. James Renshaw. She apparently captured some eight merchant vessels in the eastern Atlantic, north of the equator. On 31 May she encountered a British frigate, but escaped by throwing all but two of her guns overboard. She then captured two more merchant vessels.

In June she captured and destroyed John, Geddes, master, which had been sailing from Liverpool to Oporto.[2] Before 11 July she captured and destroyed Crown Prince of Poole, Street, master, which had been sailing from Newfoundland to Alicante.[3]

Rattlesnake's depredations ended (arguably) on 22 June when the 50-gun British frigate Leander captured her off Cape Sable, the southern point of the island of the same name which lies off Nova Scotia. Leander was renowned for her speed, especially in the heavy weather conditions on the day of Rattlesnake's capture.

The letter from Captain George Collier of Leander is dated 11 July and states that Rattlesnake was armed with 22 guns, all of which she had thrown overboard during the chase, and that she had a crew of 131 men.[4]

The records of the Vice admiralty court at Halifax give the date of capture as 7 July, which is more consistent with the letter reporting the capture than is 22 June. It is also more consistent with the report in Lloyd's List that Rattlesnake went into Halifax on 13 July.[5]

In any case, the Halifax Dockyard reported on 31 July 1814 that the Royal Navy had purchased Rattlesnake. However, no further record exists.[6]

See also

Citations and references

  1. Lloyd's List,.
  2. Lloyd's List - accessed 24 November 2014.
  3. Lloyd's List, 12 August 1814 - accessed 24 November 2013.
  4. The London Gazette: no. 16941. p. 1964. 1 October 1814.
  5. Lloyd's List, 12 August 1814 - accessed 24 November 2013.
  6. Winfield (2008), p.323.
References

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.

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