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Charles Stewart (American Navy officer)

Charles Stewart (28 July 1778 – 6 November 1869) was an officer in the United States Navy who commanded a number of US Navy ships, including USS Constitution. He saw service during the Quasi War and both Barbary Wars in the Mediterranean along North Africa and the War of 1812. He later commanded the navy yard in Philadelphia and was promoted to become the Navy's first flag officer shortly before retiring. He was promoted to rear admiral after he retired from the Navy. He lived a long life and was the last surviving Navy captain who had served in the War of 1812.

Charles Stewart
Born(1778-07-28)28 July 1778
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
Died6 November 1869(1869-11-06) (aged 91)
Bordentown, New Jersey, US
Buried
Woodlands Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
AllegianceUnited States
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1798–1861
RankRear Admiral
Commands held
Battles/wars
AwardsCongressional Gold Medal
Other workNaval Commissioner
Signature

Early life edit

On 28 July 1778, Stewart was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Charles and Sarah Harding (née Ford) Stewart, Scots-Irish immigrants from Belfast,[1] only a month after the British evacuated the city. His father died in 1780, leaving his mother little means to support him and his three siblings. She later remarried a former bodyguard of General Washington. Stewart attended Dr. Abercrombie's Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia where he met Stephen Decatur and Richard Somers. He went to sea at the age of thirteen as a cabin boy and rose through the grades to become master of a merchantman.[2][3]

Early naval service edit

During the Quasi-War with France, Stewart was one of the first officers in the rebirth of the United States Navy. At the age of nineteen, he was commissioned a lieutenant on 9 March 1798 and joined the frigate USS United States, under the command of John Barry, as fourth lieutenant for a cruise in the West Indies to restrain French privateers. Stewart was in charge of the ship's outfitting and recruiting of crew.[4][5]

On 16 July 1800 he assumed command of the schooner USS Experiment and captured two armed French vessels and recapturing several American ships.[6][7] While anchored at the island of Dominica for water, he secured the release of an American impressed on a British warship. He later rescued approximately seventy people, mostly women and children from a vessel in distress at a reef near Saona Island, just before the schooner sank, for which the Governor of Santo Domingo sent a letter of thanks to President Jefferson.[8]

 
USS Chesapeake

After brief command of USS Chesapeake in 1801 and service in USS Constellation in 1802, Stewart sailed to the Mediterranean in command of the brig USS Syren. He was promoted to master-commandant on 19 May 1804. There, he participated in the destruction of USS Philadelphia after her capture by Tripoli, helped to maintain the blockade of Tripoli,[8] and distinguished himself in assaults on the enemy in August and September 1804. After the First Barbary War, he participated in a show of force at Tunis. He was second in command to Preble from 1803 through 1805. He was promoted to the rank of captain on 22 April 1806 and returned home on leave from US Navy, joining the merchant fleet, where he remained until the late 1811.[9]

War of 1812 edit

 
USS Constellation

During the War of 1812, Stewart commanded, successively, USS Argus, USS Hornet, and USS Constellation. Since Constellation was closely blockaded in Norfolk by the British, he took command of Constitution ("Old Ironsides") at Boston on 18 July 1813.[9] He made two brilliant cruises in her between 1813 and 1815.

Under Stewart's command, Constitution captured HMS Cyane and HMS Levant on 20 February 1815. The Treaty of Ghent had been ratified by the United States government three days earlier but both sides in the battle were unaware of that event. By capturing two British warships with a single ship of his own, Stewart became a national hero and was awarded a Congressional Gold Medal on 22 February 1816. He was also admitted as an honorary member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Cincinnati in the same year.

Postwar career edit

Stewart's later service included command of the American Mediterranean squadron from 1816 to 1820 and of one in the Pacific from 1820 to 1824. For South American patriots fighting for their independence, commodore Stewart's conduct in Peruvian waters was controversial because, claiming "neutral rights" for U.S. merchants, he escorted their ships through a patriot blockade to trade with Spanish royalists. His flagship, the USS Franklin, also transported a Spanish spy. (Stewart said he was unaware the Spaniard was on his ship, and he blamed his wife for secreting the man on board.) For these and other actions, the U.S. Navy subjected Stewart to a highly publicized court-martial upon return to the United States. Stewart's wife refused to testify in his defense, and they soon divorced. Stewart biographers Berube and Rodgaard concluded about his trial that, “the Navy desperately needed a not-guilty verdict as several of its senior-most captains faced courts-martial in the summer of 1825.” A board of twelve of Stewart's fellow officers found him not guilty.

Stewart served as a Naval Commissioner from 1830 to 1832.

In 1836 Stewart saw service in the West Indies and commanded a vessel that captured a Portuguese slaver ship as it came into Havana. Before Stewart's boarding crew took control of the ship, the commander of the vessel jumped overboard, swam ashore and escaped. On board the captured ship were 250 surviving negro children, many others having died from lack of water during the voyage. Outraged at the conditions and health of the children Stewart informed British commissioner Kennedy in Havana of the dire situation.[10]

In the later years of his career, Stewart commanded the Philadelphia Navy Yard from 1838 to 1841, in 1846, and again from 1853 to 1861.

Senior officer edit

Upon the death of Captain James Barron in 1851, Stewart became the most senior ranking officer in the Navy.[citation needed] By a joint resolution passed on 2 March 1859, Congress made Stewart "senior flag officer" on 22 April 1859, a rank created for him in recognition of his distinguished and meritorious service.

Stewart was placed on the retired list on 21 December 1861 after serving 63 years in the Navy. His age at the time of his retirement was 83 years, 4 months and 24 days – making him the second oldest officer on active duty in the history of the U.S. Navy (after William D. Leahy). He was promoted to rear admiral on the retired list on 16 July 1862.[11] Stewart holds the all time records for the longest active duty career and longest time holding a single rank on active duty (52 years 10 months).

Shortly before his death, Stewart was elected a companion of the Pennsylvania Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States – a military society of officers who had served the Union during the Civil War. He was assigned the Society's insignia number 1119.

Stewart died at Bordentown, New Jersey on 6 November 1869 at the age of 91. He was buried at Woodlands Cemetery in Philadelphia.[12]

Dates of rank edit

  • Lieutenant, USN – 9 March 1798[8]
  • Captain, USN – 22 April 1806
  • Senior Flag Officer, USN – 2 March 1859
  • Retired List – 21 December 1861
  • Rear Admiral, USN (Retired) – 16 July 1862 [13]

Personal life and legacy edit

He first married Delia Tudor. His grandchildren, by their daughter Delia Tudor Stewart Parnell (1816–1918) and John Henry Parnell, included Charles Stewart Parnell, a prominent Irish political leader who fought for Irish home rule until his death in 1891, and Anna Parnell and Fanny Parnell, Irish nationalists who co-founded the Ladies' Land League in 1880 to raise money in America for the Land League.[14]

Secondly he married Margaretta W. Smith. Their daughter Julia Smith Stewart (1834–1910) married Harry Laguerenne, the son of Eliza Beauveau and Pierre Louis Laguerenne. He was a wine and spirits importer in Philadelphia.

Several of Stewart's nephews served in the Navy, including Commodore Charles Stewart McCauley.

Charles Stewart was buried beneath an obelisk at Woodland Cemetery in Philadelphia.[12]

In the late 19th century, his estate became the site of the Bordentown School, a residential high school academic and vocational training program.[15]

Two U.S. Navy destroyers, DD-13 and DD-224, and one destroyer escort, DE-238, have been named in Stewart's honor.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kuntz, Daniel J. (1999). "Stewart, Charles (1778–1869)". In Glazier, Michael (ed.). The Encyclopedia of the Irish in America. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press. p. 881. ISBN 978-0268027551.
  2. ^ Berube, Rodgaard, 2005 pp.xiv, 13
  3. ^ Tucker, 2004 p.4
  4. ^ Allison, 2005 p.23
  5. ^ Ignatius, Griffin, 1903 p.330
  6. ^ Maclay 1906, pp. 205.
  7. ^ Ignatius, Griffin, 1897 p.405
  8. ^ a b c Biographical Sketch, and Services of Commodore Charles Stewart of the Navy of the United States, J. Harding, Philadelphia, 1838
  9. ^ a b Martin, Tyrone G. (2003). A most fortunate ship : a narrative history of Old Ironsides. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1591145139. OCLC 51022876.
  10. ^ Philadelphia Religious Society of Friends, 1851 pp.19–21
  11. ^ List of Officers of the Navy of the United States and of the Marine Corps from 1775 to 1900. New York: L. R. Hamersly, 1901. Edited by Edward W. Callahan.
  12. ^ a b Find-a-Grave: Charles Stewart
  13. ^ "US Navy and Marine Corps Officers: 1775-1900 [S]".
  14. ^ "Anna & Fanny Parnell". History Ireland. 2013-02-05. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  15. ^ Staff. [1]The New York Times, June 29, 1902.

Bibliography edit

  • Allison, Robert J. (2005). Stephen Decatur American Naval Hero, 1779–1820.
    University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 1-55849-492-8.
    Url
  • Berube, Claude G.; Rodgaard, John A. (2005). A Call To The Sea: Captain Charles Stewart Of The USS Constitution. Potomac Books, Inc. p. 301. ISBN 1574885189.Url
  • Ignatius, Martin; Griffin, Joseph (1897). The history of Commodore John Barry.
    Published by the Author, Philadelphia. p. 261.
    Url
  • Tucker, Spencer (2004). Stephen Decatur: a life most bold and daring.
    Naval Institute Press, 2004 Annapolis, MD. p. 245. ISBN 1-55750-999-9.
    Url
  • Whipple, Addison Beecher Colvin (2001). To the Shores of Tripoli: the birth of the U.S. Navy and Marines.
    Naval Institute Press, 2001. p. 296. ISBN 1-55750-966-2.
    – Url
  • Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, ed. (1851). An exposition of the African slave trade: from the year 1840, to 1850, inclusive, Volume 2. J. Rakestraw. p. 160. Url

Further reading edit

  • Smethurst, David. Tripoli: The United States' First War On Terror. New York: Presidio Press, 2007. ISBN 0-89141-859-8.
  • Maclay, Edgar Stanton (1906). A History of the United States Volume I. New York: D. Appleton and Company. p. 205. experiment picaroons.

External links edit

  • Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography, Vol. V, pp. 685-6, "STEWART, Charles, naval officer,..." by Wilson, James Grant, 1832–1914; Fiske, John, 1842–1901.
  • Letter of Don Joaquin Garcia, Governor of Santo Domingo to Pres. Thomas Jefferson commending Lt Stewart for his rescue of persons from a reef off Saona Island

charles, stewart, american, navy, officer, charles, stewart, july, 1778, november, 1869, officer, united, states, navy, commanded, number, navy, ships, including, constitution, service, during, quasi, both, barbary, wars, mediterranean, along, north, africa, 1. Charles Stewart 28 July 1778 6 November 1869 was an officer in the United States Navy who commanded a number of US Navy ships including USS Constitution He saw service during the Quasi War and both Barbary Wars in the Mediterranean along North Africa and the War of 1812 He later commanded the navy yard in Philadelphia and was promoted to become the Navy s first flag officer shortly before retiring He was promoted to rear admiral after he retired from the Navy He lived a long life and was the last surviving Navy captain who had served in the War of 1812 Charles StewartBorn 1778 07 28 28 July 1778Philadelphia Pennsylvania USDied6 November 1869 1869 11 06 aged 91 Bordentown New Jersey USBuriedWoodlands Cemetery Philadelphia Pennsylvania USAllegianceUnited StatesService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of service1798 1861RankRear AdmiralCommands heldUSS Experiment USS Chesapeake USS Syren USS Argus USS Hornet USS Constellation USS Constitution Mediterranean Squadron Philadelphia Navy YardBattles warsQuasi War Barbary Wars War of 1812 American Civil WarAwardsCongressional Gold MedalOther workNaval CommissionerSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Early naval service 3 War of 1812 4 Postwar career 5 Senior officer 6 Dates of rank 7 Personal life and legacy 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editOn 28 July 1778 Stewart was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania to Charles and Sarah Harding nee Ford Stewart Scots Irish immigrants from Belfast 1 only a month after the British evacuated the city His father died in 1780 leaving his mother little means to support him and his three siblings She later remarried a former bodyguard of General Washington Stewart attended Dr Abercrombie s Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia where he met Stephen Decatur and Richard Somers He went to sea at the age of thirteen as a cabin boy and rose through the grades to become master of a merchantman 2 3 Early naval service editDuring the Quasi War with France Stewart was one of the first officers in the rebirth of the United States Navy At the age of nineteen he was commissioned a lieutenant on 9 March 1798 and joined the frigate USS United States under the command of John Barry as fourth lieutenant for a cruise in the West Indies to restrain French privateers Stewart was in charge of the ship s outfitting and recruiting of crew 4 5 On 16 July 1800 he assumed command of the schooner USS Experiment and captured two armed French vessels and recapturing several American ships 6 7 While anchored at the island of Dominica for water he secured the release of an American impressed on a British warship He later rescued approximately seventy people mostly women and children from a vessel in distress at a reef near Saona Island just before the schooner sank for which the Governor of Santo Domingo sent a letter of thanks to President Jefferson 8 nbsp USS Chesapeake After brief command of USS Chesapeake in 1801 and service in USS Constellation in 1802 Stewart sailed to the Mediterranean in command of the brig USS Syren He was promoted to master commandant on 19 May 1804 There he participated in the destruction of USS Philadelphia after her capture by Tripoli helped to maintain the blockade of Tripoli 8 and distinguished himself in assaults on the enemy in August and September 1804 After the First Barbary War he participated in a show of force at Tunis He was second in command to Preble from 1803 through 1805 He was promoted to the rank of captain on 22 April 1806 and returned home on leave from US Navy joining the merchant fleet where he remained until the late 1811 9 War of 1812 edit nbsp USS Constellation During the War of 1812 Stewart commanded successively USS Argus USS Hornet and USS Constellation Since Constellation was closely blockaded in Norfolk by the British he took command of Constitution Old Ironsides at Boston on 18 July 1813 9 He made two brilliant cruises in her between 1813 and 1815 Under Stewart s command Constitution captured HMS Cyane and HMS Levant on 20 February 1815 The Treaty of Ghent had been ratified by the United States government three days earlier but both sides in the battle were unaware of that event By capturing two British warships with a single ship of his own Stewart became a national hero and was awarded a Congressional Gold Medal on 22 February 1816 He was also admitted as an honorary member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Cincinnati in the same year Postwar career editStewart s later service included command of the American Mediterranean squadron from 1816 to 1820 and of one in the Pacific from 1820 to 1824 For South American patriots fighting for their independence commodore Stewart s conduct in Peruvian waters was controversial because claiming neutral rights for U S merchants he escorted their ships through a patriot blockade to trade with Spanish royalists His flagship the USS Franklin also transported a Spanish spy Stewart said he was unaware the Spaniard was on his ship and he blamed his wife for secreting the man on board For these and other actions the U S Navy subjected Stewart to a highly publicized court martial upon return to the United States Stewart s wife refused to testify in his defense and they soon divorced Stewart biographers Berube and Rodgaard concluded about his trial that the Navy desperately needed a not guilty verdict as several of its senior most captains faced courts martial in the summer of 1825 A board of twelve of Stewart s fellow officers found him not guilty Stewart served as a Naval Commissioner from 1830 to 1832 In 1836 Stewart saw service in the West Indies and commanded a vessel that captured a Portuguese slaver ship as it came into Havana Before Stewart s boarding crew took control of the ship the commander of the vessel jumped overboard swam ashore and escaped On board the captured ship were 250 surviving negro children many others having died from lack of water during the voyage Outraged at the conditions and health of the children Stewart informed British commissioner Kennedy in Havana of the dire situation 10 In the later years of his career Stewart commanded the Philadelphia Navy Yard from 1838 to 1841 in 1846 and again from 1853 to 1861 Senior officer editUpon the death of Captain James Barron in 1851 Stewart became the most senior ranking officer in the Navy citation needed By a joint resolution passed on 2 March 1859 Congress made Stewart senior flag officer on 22 April 1859 a rank created for him in recognition of his distinguished and meritorious service Stewart was placed on the retired list on 21 December 1861 after serving 63 years in the Navy His age at the time of his retirement was 83 years 4 months and 24 days making him the second oldest officer on active duty in the history of the U S Navy after William D Leahy He was promoted to rear admiral on the retired list on 16 July 1862 11 Stewart holds the all time records for the longest active duty career and longest time holding a single rank on active duty 52 years 10 months Shortly before his death Stewart was elected a companion of the Pennsylvania Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States a military society of officers who had served the Union during the Civil War He was assigned the Society s insignia number 1119 Stewart died at Bordentown New Jersey on 6 November 1869 at the age of 91 He was buried at Woodlands Cemetery in Philadelphia 12 Dates of rank editLieutenant USN 9 March 1798 8 Captain USN 22 April 1806 Senior Flag Officer USN 2 March 1859 Retired List 21 December 1861 Rear Admiral USN Retired 16 July 1862 13 Personal life and legacy editHe first married Delia Tudor His grandchildren by their daughter Delia Tudor Stewart Parnell 1816 1918 and John Henry Parnell included Charles Stewart Parnell a prominent Irish political leader who fought for Irish home rule until his death in 1891 and Anna Parnell and Fanny Parnell Irish nationalists who co founded the Ladies Land League in 1880 to raise money in America for the Land League 14 Secondly he married Margaretta W Smith Their daughter Julia Smith Stewart 1834 1910 married Harry Laguerenne the son of Eliza Beauveau and Pierre Louis Laguerenne He was a wine and spirits importer in Philadelphia Several of Stewart s nephews served in the Navy including Commodore Charles Stewart McCauley Charles Stewart was buried beneath an obelisk at Woodland Cemetery in Philadelphia 12 In the late 19th century his estate became the site of the Bordentown School a residential high school academic and vocational training program 15 Two U S Navy destroyers DD 13 and DD 224 and one destroyer escort DE 238 have been named in Stewart s honor See also editBibliography of early American naval history nbsp Biography portalReferences edit Kuntz Daniel J 1999 Stewart Charles 1778 1869 In Glazier Michael ed The Encyclopedia of the Irish in America Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press p 881 ISBN 978 0268027551 Berube Rodgaard 2005 pp xiv 13 Tucker 2004 p 4 Allison 2005 p 23 Ignatius Griffin 1903 p 330 Maclay 1906 pp 205 Ignatius Griffin 1897 p 405 a b c Biographical Sketch and Services of Commodore Charles Stewart of the Navy of the United States J Harding Philadelphia 1838 a b Martin Tyrone G 2003 A most fortunate ship a narrative history of Old Ironsides Naval Institute Press ISBN 1591145139 OCLC 51022876 Philadelphia Religious Society of Friends 1851 pp 19 21 List of Officers of the Navy of the United States and of the Marine Corps from 1775 to 1900 New York L R Hamersly 1901 Edited by Edward W Callahan a b Find a Grave Charles Stewart US Navy and Marine Corps Officers 1775 1900 S Anna amp Fanny Parnell History Ireland 2013 02 05 Retrieved 2021 09 21 Staff 1 The New York Times June 29 1902 Bibliography editAllison Robert J 2005 Stephen Decatur American Naval Hero 1779 1820 University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 1 55849 492 8 Url Berube Claude G Rodgaard John A 2005 A Call To The Sea Captain Charles Stewart Of The USS Constitution Potomac Books Inc p 301 ISBN 1574885189 Url Ignatius Martin Griffin Joseph 1897 The history of Commodore John Barry Published by the Author Philadelphia p 261 Url Tucker Spencer 2004 Stephen Decatur a life most bold and daring Naval Institute Press 2004 Annapolis MD p 245 ISBN 1 55750 999 9 Url Whipple Addison Beecher Colvin 2001 To the Shores of Tripoli the birth of the U S Navy and Marines Naval Institute Press 2001 p 296 ISBN 1 55750 966 2 Url Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends ed 1851 An exposition of the African slave trade from the year 1840 to 1850 inclusive Volume 2 J Rakestraw p 160 UrlFurther reading editSmethurst David Tripoli The United States First War On Terror New York Presidio Press 2007 ISBN 0 89141 859 8 Maclay Edgar Stanton 1906 A History of the United States Volume I New York D Appleton and Company p 205 experiment picaroons External links editAppleton s Cyclopaedia of American Biography Vol V pp 685 6 STEWART Charles naval officer by Wilson James Grant 1832 1914 Fiske John 1842 1901 Letter of Don Joaquin Garcia Governor of Santo Domingo to Pres Thomas Jefferson commending Lt Stewart for his rescue of persons from a reef off Saona Island Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Stewart American Navy officer amp oldid 1180017151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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