Divers say they’ve found wreck of Oliver Hazard Perry’s ship off Westerly
break, Divers say they’ve found wreck of Oliver Hazard Perry’s ship off Westerly, news 7:35 π.μ.
A team of  Connecticut scuba divers say they’ve discovered off the Westerly coast  the wreck of a ship once commanded by Rhode Island naval war hero Oliver  Hazard Perry, whose actions helped the United States defeat the British  during the War of 1812.
It was after the naval victory at Lake  Erie in September 1813 — during which Perry had one ship founder beneath  him before transferring to another and continuing the battle — that his  message to his commanders would become immortalized: “We have met the  enemy and they are ours ...”
Now, divers Charles Buffum and Craig  Harger say Perry would have never been at the Battle of Lake Erie had  his schooner not sunk off the reefs of Watch Hill.
Buffum, the  owner of a Pawcatuck brewery, declined to name the ship they’ve  discovered until a planned announcement Friday afternoon in Westerly.  But local marine archeologists, who have heard of the find, identified  the vessel as the Revenge, a schooner that sank on Jan. 8, 1811 ––  exactly 200 years ago Saturday.
Rhode Island marine archaeologist  D.K. “Kathy” Abbass wrote a history of Rhode Island’s early navy for the  Naval Historical Center in Washington, D.C., and is leading much of the  underwater mapping of sunken ships in Rhode Island waters. She is  familiar with the Revenge.
She says it’s a “long stretch” to say,  as the divers have, that the vessel’s sinking “changed the course of  U.S. history” merely because Perry ended up on Lake Erie two years  later.
Further, because of how the Revenge sank –– and the  likelihood that hundreds of other wooden vessels have fallen victim to  the rocks and rip currents in the area known as The Race — she wonders  if the divers have definitive proof they’ve found the Revenge.
According  to Abbass, the Revenge, which was conducting the all-important task of  charting coastal waters — went aground in fog off Watch Hill. Sailors  transferred much of her cargo to other vessels before starting to tow  her off the rocks. During the towing, the cable parted and the Revenge  began drifting and, eventually, went down.
“If you knew the  direction of the wind that day and the tide, you might get a trajectory  of where she might be” now, said Abbass. “But it’s a very complicated  thing. So, if [the divers] haven’t done the analysis, I’d question if  that is really her.”
Buffum said Thursday the divers did not find  anything at the wreck that positively identified the ship as the  Revenge. Still he said they were confident of their findings.
If  the ship is the Revenge, it remains the property of the Navy, said  Abbass, and cannot be salvaged by treasure hunters. Buffum said there  was little of the ship left. The divers hope a government-funded  archeological excavation might mine some historic value.
Perry was  born in South Kingstown on Aug. 23, 1785. A biography written by the  National Parks Service says that a court-martial proceeding exonerated  Perry of the sinking, blaming the Revenge’s loss on the ship’s pilot who  had assured Perry he could navigate Block Island Sound.
Still,  the sinking blemished Perry’s career. He ended up cooling his heels in  Newport for a time, unemployed, until the threat of war in 1812 earned  him an assignment of leading a squadron of small gunboats in Newport  Harbor.
Dissatisfied that he did not have a high-seas sloop-of-war  at his command, he petitioned the Navy Department several times for  postings at sea. Finally, as a last resort, he called upon a friend who  commanded warships on Lake Erie for a command.
On Sept. 10, 1813,  the American and British fleets prepared to do battle. Perry began the  fight aboard his flagship, the Lawrence. Just before its sinking, he  boarded a lifeboat and rowed with a few remaining sailors to the  Niagara, considered an extremely brave action, and carried on the fight  to victory.
 
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