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A Brief History
Their country was at war. Their livelihoods were at stake.
Their
families needed to be fed.
So 25 men of Salem banded together, bought a
fast schooner, fitted her out as their own private man of war, and set
sail for the Gulf of Maine. As Fame rounded Cape Ann
and headed northeast for Canadian waters, those on board knew full well
that in two week's a time they could be rich — or they could be
prisoners.
WAR!
When war broke out in June of 1812, Salem was one of the busiest
ports in the young United States, but for decades her prosperity had
been precarious. The interminable wars between Great Britain and France
had led to Salem vessels being seized by both sides. American seamen
were continually being impressed — kidnapped — by a Royal
Navy desperate for men. Worst of all, America's foreign trade had been
shut down for over a year by President Jefferson's disastrous Embargo.
In a war against the world's most powerful navy, the mariners of Salem
had few options open to them. They could carry on with business as
usual, bringing back cargoes of tea, silks, and pepper from the rich
East — but they ran the risk of being captured by British
cruisers or privateers and losing everything. They could go
privateering themselves, playing cat-and-mouse with fat British
merchant ships and dangerous British men of war. Or they could 'swallow
the anchor' — sit at home and watch their savings dwindle,
praying for peace.
Many Salem mariners chose privateering as being the least of the three
evils — or at least the one in which they had most control over
their destinies. The 25 men who joined together to man FAME were
typical. These men were not wealthy. They were captains, merchants and
shipowners in a modest way. They couldn't afford not to be working, and
they weren't rich enough to invest in privateers while remaining safely
at home. Their plan was to pool their resources, purchase a suitable
vessel and man it themselves.
When war appeared imminent, they purchased a fast little schooner that
had recently been built by Captain Epes Davis of Annisquam. Fame,
as Davis called her, was about 50 feet on deck, with a broad bow and a
pointed 'pink' stern. She could carry two small cannon and a crew of up
to 30. FAME had originally been designed for fishing, so her new owners
brought her to Salem and fitted her out to carry the armament and
larger crew of a privateer.
The next order of business was to choose a captain from their crew of
captains. They settled on William Webb, one of their older members at
47 and a veteran merchant skipper. For his lieutenant they chose John
Becket Jr., another experienced shipmaster. They applied for a
privateering commission, and as soon as the commissions arrived from
Washington, DC — on July 1, 1812 — they set sail for the
eastward.
Reverend William Bentley of Salem noted the event in his dairy:
July 1: The Commissions
came for the Privateers which had already been fitted out in Salem
Harbour... we met upon our return from Baker's Island [a privateer]
with 25 men all of whom had had some command in merchant vessels. These
were in a fishing smack called a Jigger. They were in fine spirits
& huzzaed as they passed & we returned the salute. This Crew is
a valuable one & upon any mishap must be a great loss to Salem.
The privateering career of Fame had begun.
FIRST CAPTURES
Nobody knows the ways of merchant ships better than merchant captains, and Fame
had many of them on board. Their plan was to run down the Maine coast
to New Brunswick. There, in small ports such as St. Andrews, British
vessels loaded lumber and other raw materials for the insatiable Royal
Navy.
It didn't take long for Fame
to hit the jackpot. In a few days she was off Grand Manan, on the
border between the United States and Canada, and fell in with the ship Concord of Plymouth, England, and the Scottish brig Elbe.
Both vessels surrendered without firing a shot. These were arguably the
first prizes taken by any American privateer during the war.
Fame was back in port by July 9th, just eight days after setting out, and her prizes arrived a few days later. Concord, with her cargo of masts, spars, staves, and lumber, and Elbe
with tar, staves and spars, were condemned as legitimate prizes and
sold at auction. The net proceeds were $4,690.67 — nearly ten
times what Fame had cost!
Fame would
make eleven more cruises before being wrecked in the Bay of Fundy in
1814. But her maiden cruise was the only time she set sail with her
owners as crew. As the war wound on, shares in Fame were bought and sold, and she sailed under eight different captains, with crewmen from Salem, Marblehead, and Downeast Maine.
Her original ownership, the band of brothers, went their separate ways. Captain Webb held his share in Fame almost to the end, served as master aboard another privateer, survived the war and lived to the age of 83. Other Fame
owners served as privateer captains and officers, militia officers, and
several went on to amass considerable fortunes in the years following
the war.
It cannot be said that the United States won the War of 1812. But there
is no doubt that the activities of its privateers helped obtain an
honorable peace. And while many of the most successful privateers were
corporate projects, backed by some of the nation's wealthiest men, it
would be a shame to overlook middle-class mariners such as Salem's Band
of Brothers, for whom patriotism and necessity went hand in hand.
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For much, much more information on the career of Fame, privateering, and the War of 1812, be sure to check out the book Fame: The Salem Privateer and the DVD Fame: A Portrait of Craftmanship & Patriotism, both of which are for sale in our Ship's Store.
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