Jones was among the foremost in service at the founding
of the Continental Navy. He was commissioned in December 1775
as the first lieutenant on the frigate Alfred, on which he hoisted
the Continental flag, the old Grand Union.
As captain of the sloop of war Providence and as commander
of both the Alfred and the Providence, he captured valuable British
merchantmen and destroyed important fisheries and many vessels.
His skill in harrying the enemy was widely noted, and in February
1777, the Marine Committee directed its secretary, Robert Morris,
to place the Continental fleet in his hands. But the jealousy
of others thwarted these orders.
Superseded by many officers, he became, unfairly,
the 18th captain in naval rank. But John Hancock, president of
Congress, as well as Robert Morris recognized his abilities.
Accordingly, on June 14, 1777, he received the command of the
new sloop of war Ranger, one of the first naval vessels to fly
the Stars and Stripes, and sailed to France.
Jones sailed the Ranger to the very shores of England,
and tried to burn the shipping at Whitehaven. At Saint Mary's
Isle he attempted, unsuccessfully, to take the earl of Selkirk
as a hostage for the exchange of prisoners. On April 24, 1778,
he captured the Drake, the first victory of a Continental vessel
over a British warship.
Upon his return to the French port of Brest, Jones
was eager to undertake more ambitious enterprises in larger ships.
At every turn, however, he found political and naval intrigues,
both French and American. The ship he eventually received (a
merchantman renamed the Bonhomme Richard in honor of Benjamin
Franklin), was old and slow, armed with 42 guns, and ill suited
to fight or escape.
Off Flamborough Head, however, the Richard pursued
and challenged to battle two British ships of warthe Serapis,
carrying 50 guns, and the Countess of Scarborough, with 22 guns.
In the grim struggle on Sept. 23, 1779, Jones had to fight not
only against the superior crew, armament, speed, and maneuvering
ability of the Serapis, as well as the Countess of Scarborough,
but also against a grave and almost fatal accident. Two of the
six old 18-pounders of the Richard burst at their first broadside
and killed or wounded many men. It became imperative for Jones
to outwit Richard Pearson, the captain of the Serapis.
An initial attempt to board the British frigate and
win by sheer desperate fighting failed. In a second effort he
managed to lock the two ships together. The Serapis was beating
in one of the Richard's sides and blowing out the other. Most
of the guns of the American ship were broken and silenced. The
Richard with its dry old timbers was afire again and again, and
the water in the hold rose ominously. A gunner, crediting a report
that Jones had been killed, called to offer surrender of the
Richard, and Pearson loudly responded, Do you ask for quarter?
Jones then made his memorable reply, emphasizing it by hurling
his two pistols at the head of the gunner:
I have not yet begun to fight!
A grenade thrown from the Richard caused a disastrous
explosion of ammunition on board the Serapis. After three and
one-half hours of heroic battle in full moonlight, the Serapis
struck its flag. Then Jones and his crew boarded the British
ship and saw the Bonhomme Richard sink, stern uppermost and with
its colors flying. |