Surprise (1777 ship)

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History
Royal Navy EnsignUnited Kingdom
Name: HMS Race Horse (or Racehorse)
Acquired: June 1776 by purchase
Fate: Captured 8 December 1776
Grand Union Flag
Name: Surprise
Acquired: 1776
Commissioned: 1777
Fate: Destroyed 15 November 1777
General characteristics [1]
Type: Sloop
Tons burthen: 98 (bm)
Length:
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Propulsion: Sails
Armament: 10 × 4-pounder guns

Surprise, the first American naval ship of the name, was a sloop that the Continental Navy purchased in 1777. She had been HMS Racehorse, which Andrew Doria captured in 1776. Her crew destroyed Surprise on 15 December 1777.

HMS Race Horse

The Royal Navy purchased the sloop Hercules in June 1776 at Jamaica in the British West Indies. The Navy renamed her Race Horse and commissioned her under Lieutenant Charles Everitt. In August, Commander James Jones replaced Everitt.[1]

On 6 December Racehorse was off Puerto Rico where she encountered Andrew Doria. After a two-hour single-ship engagement Racehorse struck.[2]

US service

The US Navy commissioned Surprise under Captain Benjamin Dunn.

Surprise was ordered in April 1777 to join brigantine USS Andrew Doria and sloop Fly in clearing the Cape May channel of British ships.

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On May 2nd, the Harwich packet Prince of Orange was taken in the English Channel by the USS Surprise, Captain Gustavus Conyngham. The latter vessel had been bought at Folkestone, and, with glaring disregard of French neutrality, had been equipped at Dunkirk. On the Surprise's return to Dunkirk, the prize was seized and restored to Britain, though it was believed at the time, not without some reason, that the British Government, anxious to avoid a dispute with France, had purchased from Conyngham his capture.[3]

Scuttling

Surprise was stationed in the Delaware River through the spring and summer of 1777. After Vice Admiral Lord Howe brought his British fleet into the river in September 1777, Surprise was part of the forces charged with defending Philadelphia. Following the British occupation of Fort Mifflin on 16 November, Surprise, with the remaining ships of the Continental Navy, including Andrew Doria, sought shelter under the guns of Fort Mercer at Red Bank, New Jersey. With the evacuation of Fort Mercer on 20 November, Captain Isaiah Robinson of Andrew Doria gave orders the next day for the crews to burn their ships to prevent their capture. This was done shortly thereafter.

Citations and references

Citations
References

External links