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Battle of Lake Erie by William H. Powell (1865): Perry transfers from the Lawrence to the Niagra
History -- Military
history -- List of battles
The Battle of Lake Erie was fought on September 10,
1813 between the United Kingdom and United
States. U.S. Capitan Oliver Hazard Perry's decisive
victory over the British fleet in this battle ensured American control of the Great Lakes during the War of 1812.
The British had been blockading the port of Erie,
Pennsylvania during the summer of 1813, but on August 1 they unexpectedly
withdrew. The American ships in the harbor were finally able to leave, and throughout August Oliver Perry prepared for the inevitable battle while keeping a close eye on the British ships at Detroit.
On September 10, British Commodore Robert Heriot Barclay, in his flagship the HMS
Detroit, met Perry near Put-in-Bay, Ohio. Barclay's six ships
outweighed and outgunned Perry's nine, including Perry's flagship the USS
Lawrence; the Lawrence faced an unfavourable wind and was destroyed in the course of the battle with
four-fifths of its crew killed or wounded. However, Perry was able to row a half-mile through heavy gunfire and transfer command
to the USS Niagara, a ship
equal in size and strength to the Lawrence, but which had not yet been engaged in the battle. As the HMS Detroit had suffered some damage, the Niagara was able to capture
it, along with the other five British ships.
Each side suffered about 100 casualties. After the battle, Perry sent his famous message to General William Henry Harrison, "We have met the enemy and they are
ours." Due to the outcome of the battle, Britain retreated from Detroit and lost control of Lake Erie for the remainder of the war.
After the war, the U.S. Navy intentionally sank both vessels in Lake Erie; the
battle damage they had suffered was too extensive to repair. In 1875 the Lawrence was raised and moved to Philadelphia,
where it was displayed at the 1876 Centennial Exposition. Later that year the ship burned when the pavilion that housed it
caught fire. Although the Niagara was raised and restored in 1913, it subsequently
fell into disrepair. It was eventually disassembled and portions of it were used in a reconstructed Niagara, which is
now on view in Erie, Pennsylvania.
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