History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Name: | USS Eagle |
Builder: | A & N Brown, Vergennes, Vermont |
Laid down: | 29 July 1814 |
Launched: | 11 August 1814 |
Acquired: | Purchased |
Fate: | Captured by the British, 3 June 1813 |
United Kingdom | |
Name: |
|
Acquired: | Captured, 3 June 1813 |
Fate: | Lost at the Battle of Lake Champlain, 11 September 1814 |
United States | |
Name: | USS Eagle |
Acquired: | Captured, 11 September 1814 |
Fate: | Sold, July 1815 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Sloop or Brig |
Tons burthen: | 110 (bm) |
Length: | 64 ft (20 m) |
Beam: | 20 ft 4 in (6.20 m) |
Draft: | 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) |
Propulsion: | Sail |
Complement: | 50 officers and enlisted |
Armament: | 11 guns |
USS Eagle, a sloop, was a merchant ship purchased at Vergennes, Vermont on Lake Champlain in 1812 and fitted for naval service. The British captured her in 1813 and renamed her HMS Finch, only to lose her to the Americans at the Battle of Lake Champlain in 1814. She was sold in 1815.
She cruised on the lake under the command of Sailing Master J. Loomis as a member of Commodore Thomas Macdonough's squadron blockading the British advance from Canada. Major George Taylor of the 100th Regiment captured Eagle on 3 June 1813 on the Sorrell River near Ile aux Noix on the Canadian side of the lake, after a fight of three-and-a-half hours; British casualties were three men wounded and American casualties were one man killed and eight severely wounded. (Both vessels were taken into Royal Navy service, but the Americans recaptured them the next year.) The British took her into the Royal Navy as HMS Shannon but later renamed her HMS Chubb.
Finch accompanied the expedition that burned the arsenal and storehouses at Plattsburg, New York. She was under the command of Lieutenant William Hicks on 11 September 1814 at the Battle of Lake Champlain. She was bringing up the rear of the British line together with some gunboats. She was ordered to sail towards and engage the USS Preble, a sloop of seven guns. As she did so, the schooner USS Ticonderoga fired on Finch shooting away her rigging. Finch ran aground near Crab Island where a small American shore battery commenced firing on her. Unable to free herself, and with two men wounded, Hicks struck the colors.