- USS Revenge (1776)
The first USS "Revenge" was a
schooner in theContinental Navy . "Revenge" was built in the summer of 1776 by ColonelJeduthan Baldwin atFort Ticonderoga ,New York .The schooner, commanded by a Captain Seaman, joined the flotilla commanded by General
Benedict Arnold atCrown Point . She got underway at sunset on24 August and headed north along theNew York shore ofLake Champlain . Two days later, when "Connecticut" lost a mast during a storm, "Revenge" towed the damaged gundalow out of danger of grounding. In the weeks that followed, the ships maneuvered on the lake enabling the green crews, for the most part made up of landsmen, to learn the ways of the sea.Meanwhile, the British were building a fleet farther north, and were preparing to challenge Arnold for control of the lake. Naval supremacy would enable the King's troops assembled in
Canada to drive down the strategic Lake Champlain-Hudson River corridor to New York. Success of this British strategy would cut the American colonies in two, beginning a dismemberment process by which the "redcoats" could defeat the "rebels" in detail and restore Royal authority in North America.The two forces met on
11 October in theBattle of Valcour Island , fought in the strait betweenValcour Island and the lake's western shore where Arnold had stationed his ships. In the action, the out-gunned Americans suffered a tactical defeat, but won a great strategic victory by delaying the British advance for a year - a year in which the Americans strengthened their Army enough to capture GeneralBurgoyne 's expeditionary force atSaratoga .After the battle of Valcour Island, "Revenge" and the other remaining American ships retired farther up the lake. Only "Revenge", another schooner, two galleys, and a sloop reached the protection of
Fort Ticonderoga . She remained on the upper lake until she was taken early in July 1777 when a British force under General Burgoyne captured Fort Ticonderoga. However, some sources indicate that the schooner may have been burned and sunk to prevent capture.References
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