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American Prizes July 1777 |
Name of Vessel:
Argus
Master of Vessel:
Archibald M’Donnell [Alexander Donaldson]
Rig of Vessel:
Ship
Date of Capture:
12 July 1777
Place of Capture:
Captor:
Connecticut Privateer Sloop Trumbull
Home Port:
From What Port:
Barbados, British West Indies
To What Port:
Quebec, Quebec
Cargo:
Sugar, rum
Tonnage:
Battery:
Crew:
Owners:
Prize master:
Prize crew:
Ordered Into:
Boston, Massachusetts
Into What Port:
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Date Arrived:
Date Tried:
Date Sold:
Action:
No
Recaptured:
Yes
Comments: Ship Argus (Archibald M’Donnell [McDonnell], or Alexander Donaldson), was bound from Barbados to Quebec, Quebec, with a cargo of sugar and rum. On 12 July 1777 the Argus encountered the Connecticut Privateer Sloop Trumbull (Commander Henry Billings). The British later reported that the Trumbull had twelve guns and seventy men aboard. The crews were exchanged and the prize master sailed for Boston, Massachusetts. Argus was off the coast of New Hampshire, near the mouth of the Piscataqua River, on 31 July 1777, when she was sighted and chased by HM Frigate Amazon (Captain Maximilian Jacobs). The chase began at 1000, when Amazon was five miles NE of Cape Ann. Several guns were fired at the Argus, and, at 1400, she was driven ashore by the prize crew. Amazon anchored off Rye Beach and fired on the Americans ashore, which were firing on the British boats that were hauling off the prize. At 1800 the prize and Amazon sailed, and, at 2100 Argus was sent off to Halifax.
[NDAR, IX, 355 and note; Middlebrook, Maritime Connecticut During the Revolution, II, 234; AVCR, 9]
Revised 20 January 2009