The Constitution, one of the US Navy’s…
August 1812 CE
The Constitution, one of the US Navy’s six frigates, wins an encounter with the British frigate Guerriere off Massachusetts on August 19.
Both American and British naval honor had been challenged in the leadup to the war.
The Chesapeake–Leopard affair had left the United States insulted by the Royal Navy's impressment of sailors.
Given that honor was at stake, the appropriate method for the United States Navy to redeem itself is by dueling.
Similarly, British honor had been challenged in the Little Belt Affair where the British sloop HMS Little Belt had been fired upon by the United States frigate President after the President mistook Little Belt for the British frigate HMS Guerriere.
Captain James Richard Dacres of the Guerriere has began a cycle of frigate duels by challenging the USS President to a single ship duel to avenge the losses aboard the Little Belt.
Commodore John Rodgers of the USS President had declines the challenge because he fears the intervention of the rest of British squadron under Commodore Philip Broke, of which Guerriere is part.
Meanwhile, the USS Constitution, commanded by Captain Isaac Hull, had sailed from the Chesapeake Bay on July 12.
On July 17, Commodore Broke's British squadron, which included Guerriere, had given chase off New York, but Constitution had evaded her pursuers after two days.
Constitution had briefly called at Boston to replenish water.
Commodore Borke had detached Guerriere from his squadron to seek out repairs as Guerriere, being a French-built ship, has weak scantlings (beams fastened with a thickened clamp rather than vertical and horizontal knees) and has, therefore, become leaky and rotten.
Furthermore, she had been struck by lightning severely damaging her masts.
Constitution encounters and engages the HMS Guerriere in a duel to redeem American honor.
Captain Dacres is eager to engage the American frigate as Constitution is the sister ship of President and will serve equally well as ship to duel against to redeem British honor.
USS Constitution has nearly fifty percent more men, more firepower, heavier tonnage and heavier scantlings (which determine how much damage enemy shot does to a ship) than Guerriere.
Unsurprisingly, Constitution emerges the victor.
After a thirty-five-minute battle, Guerriere has been dis-masted and captured, and will later be burned.
Constitution earns the nickname "Old Ironsides" following this battle as many of the British cannonballs are seen to bounce off her hull due to Constitution's heavy scantlings.
Hull returns to Boston with news of this significant victory.