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  1. Decatur house in Newport. Stephen Decatur Sr. (June 1751 – November 11, 1808) was an American privateer in the Revolutionary War and later in the Quasi-War was commissioned as a captain in the United States Navy. He was the father of Stephen Decatur Jr.

  2. Stephen Decatur Jr. ( / dɪˈkeɪtər /; [1] January 5, 1779 – March 22, 1820) was a U.S. naval officer and commodore. He was born on the eastern shore of Maryland in Worcester County. His father, Stephen Decatur Sr., was a commodore in the United States Navy who served during the American Revolution; he brought the younger Stephen into the ...

  3. May 15, 2019 · Born at Sinepuxent, Maryland, on January 5, 1779, Stephen Decatur was the son of Captain Stephen Decatur, Sr. and his wife Anne. A naval officer during the American Revolution, Decatur, Sr. had his son educated the Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia. Graduating, young Stephen enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania and was a classmate of ...

  4. www.history.navy.mil › stephen-decaturStephen Decatur - NHHC

    Stephen Decatur is best known for the 16 February 1804 action in Tripoli when, as a lieutenant, he and 75 Sailors set the captured frigate Philadelphia on fire during a daring raid on Tripoli harbor. Philadelphia had been surrendered to the enemy by her commanding officer, Captain Bainbridge, when she ran aground on a reef off Tripoli harbor. The Tripolitans took the captain and crew captive ...

  5. First Barbary War. Second Battle of Tripoli Harbor. War of 1812. Stephen Decatur (born Jan. 5, 1779, Sinepuxent, Md., U.S.—died March 22, 1820, Bladensburg, Md.) was a U.S. naval officer who held important commands in the War of 1812. After returning from successful engagements abroad in 1815, he replied to a toast with the famous words ...

  6. Details of HCA 32/497/27; Reference: HCA 32/497/27 Description: Captured ship: Ariel (master Stephen Decatur Sr). History: an American merchant ship (300 tons, no guns, 10 men, 5 boys and 24 passengers - 18 men and 6 women), bound from Bordeaux to St Thomas in the West Indies, laden with wine and sundries; taken on 10 or 11 June, 1793 at about 45° N by the privateer Union (Alexander Nicholson ...

    • 1792-1801
    • HCA 32/497/27
    • The National Archives, Kew
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  8. Dec 23, 2015 · His father Stephen Decatur, Sr. served as a privateer in the American navy during the American Revolution. In 1798, President John Adams appointed Stephen Decatur, Jr. a midshipman in the U.S. Navy, and Decatur initially served on the frigate USS United States under Commodore John Barry.

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