A lookout on Kingfisher had spotted Nancy…
June 1776 CE
Nancy, and the pursuing British, had been spotted by the American lookout at Cape May.
Captain Barry, on Lexington, had received a message by flag code from Nancy that she needed help.
Barry in turn had signaled Reprisal and Wasp, then met with their captains to plan a response.
Longboats from Lexington, Wasp, and Reprisal, led by Lieutenant Richard Wickes, had set out to assist Nancy.
In the early hours of June 29, pursued by the British Orpheus and Kingfisher and blocked from entering the Delaware Bay, Nancy heads for the nearby Turtle Gut Inlet in a heavy fog.
She soon runs aground, while the larger British ships are kept to deeper waters.
Although still out of range but sailing closer, the British shell Nancy, while the Americans attempt to salvage the cargo, especially the gunpowder kegs.
Barry organizes the crews into two operations.
One group returns cannon fire to keep the British from boarding.
The other transfers the cargo onto longboats and rows to shore where local residents help unload and secure it behind the dunes.
By late in the morning of June 29, two hundred and sixty-five to two hundred and eighty-six kegs of gunpowder have been removed, and the British bombardment has heavily damaged Nancy.
Barry orders the main sail wrapped around fifty pounds of gunpowder to create a long fuse running from the nearly one hundred gunpowder kegs remaining in the hold to the deck and over the side.
The fuse is lit as the crew abandons ship, while one last sailor climbs the mast to remove the American flag.
The British think the lowering of the flag is a sign of surrender and quickly board Nancy, by which time then the fuse has reached the hold.
The gunpowder explodes with a huge blast felt for miles that kills many British.
Captain Graeme reports the loss of his master's mate and six men on longboats from Kingfisher.
Lieutenant Richard Wickes, brother of Captain Lambert Wickes of Reprisal, is killed by British cannon fire near the end of the battle.