Online Encyclopedia

THOMAS TRUXTUN (1755-1822)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 339 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS TRUXTUN (1755-1822)  ,
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American
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naval officer, was born at
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Jamaica, Long Island, on the 17th of
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February 1755 . He went young to sea, and during the War of Independence was first persuaded to serve in a royal
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ship . But having been wounded in an
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action with a
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privateer manned by his countrymen, it is said that he declared he would never fight them again . Henceforth he commanded a succession of privateers sent out to cruise against
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British trade and transports—the " St . James," the " Mars," the " Independence." He had the reputation of being uniformly successful in all engagementswith British vessels . When the independence of the
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United States was recognized he returned to trade with a high reputation as a seaman . He was the author of a
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treatise on longitude and latitude, of a "
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System of masting a 44-
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gun
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frigate," and was an advocate for the foundation of a
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national
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navy . When the United States navy was reconstituted in 1798 he was one of the
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original corps of six captains . During the last years of the 18th and first of the 19th century American commerce was subject to much intolerable interference on the
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part of the French as well as of the British naval
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officers . It was against the first that Truxtun rendered the services which have made him a prominent personage in the
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history of the United States navy . In February 1799 he was captain of the United States Constellation " (36) and on the 19th of that month he captured the French " L'Insurgente " (36) . In the following
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year, and while still in command of the " Constellation," he fought the French " Vengeance;" (40), and drove her into Curacao .

The crippled

state of his own ship, which had lost her mainmast, prevented him from taking possession of the enemy . In 1802 he was to have sailed in command of the
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squadron sent against the
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Barbary pirates, but a difference having occurred between him and the navy department in regard to the appointment of a captain to his
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flagship, his remonstrance against the official decision of the authorities was treated as a resignation, which it was apparently not meant to be, and he was not employed any further . He died at
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Philadelphia on the 5th of May 1822 .

End of Article: THOMAS TRUXTUN (1755-1822)
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