USS Effingham (1777)

For other ships with the same name, see USS Effingham.
History
Name: USS Effingham
Namesake: Earl of Effingham
Laid down: 1776
Fate: Scuttled, 2 November 1777
General characteristics
Type: Frigate
Armament:

26 x 12-pounders guns

2 x 6-pounders guns

Effingham, a 32-gun frigate of the Continental Navy named after The 3rd Earl of Effingham, was built at Philadelphia in 1776 and 1777, and Captain John Barry was ordered to command her. When the British took possession of Philadelphia in September 1777, Barry was ordered to take the uncompleted ship up the Delaware River to a place of safety.

On 25 October general George Washington asked for the crew of Effingham for use in the fleet, and two days later the ship was ordered sunk or burned.[1] Effingham was sunk on 2 November just below Bordentown, New Jersey, to deny her use to the British. She was burned to the water's edge by the British on their way north from Philadelphia on 9 May 1778.

There was also an earlier galley named the "Effingham" built in 1775 by the Pennsylvania Navy.[2]

References

  1. Commodore Barry (1745-1803) "Father of the American Navy"
  2. "Ships and Seamen of the American Revolution", Jack Coggins, p99
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