USS Bonhomme Richard (1765)
Bonhomme Richard, formerly
Duc de Duras, was a warship in the American Continental Navy named for Founding Father Benjamin Franklin. She was originally an East Indiaman, a merchant ship built in France for the French East India Company in 1765, for service between France and Asia. She was placed at the disposal of
John Paul Jones on 4 February 1779, by King Louis XVI of France as a result of a loan to the United States by French shipping magnate Jacques-Donatien Le Ray.
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Battle of Flamborough Head
Main article: Battle of Flamborough Head
Bonhomme Richard on fire
On 23 September 1779, the squadron encountered the Baltic Fleet of 41 sail under convoy of HMS
Serapis and HM hired armed ship
Countess of Scarborough near Flamborough Head.
Bonhomme Richard and
Serapis entered a bitter engagement at about 6:00 p.m. The battle continued for the next four hours, costing the lives of nearly half of the American and British crews. British victory seemed inevitable, as the more heavily armed
Serapis used its firepower to rake
Bonhomme Richard with devastating effect. The commander of
Serapis finally called on Jones to surrender. He replied, "Sir, I have not yet begun to fight!" Jones eventually managed to lash the ships together, nullifying his opponent's greater maneuverability and allowing him to take advantage of the larger size and considerably more numerous crew of
Bonhomme Richard. An attempt by the Americans to board
Serapis was repulsed, as was an attempt by the British to board
Bonhomme Richard. Finally, after another of Jones's ships joined the fight, the British captain was forced to surrender at about 10:30 p.m.
Bonhomme Richard shattered, on fire, leaking badly defied all efforts to save her and sank about 36 hours later at 11:00 a.m. on 25 September 1779. Jones sailed the captured
Serapis to the Dutch United Provinces for repairs.
Though
Bonhomme Richard sank after the battle, the battle's outcome was one of the factors that convinced the French crown to back the colonies in their fight to become independent of British authority.
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