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Columbia Encyclopedia: Barron, James,
1768–1851, U.S. naval officer, b. Hampton, Va. Of a seafaring family, he served in the Virginia navy in the Revolution, entered the U.S. navy as a lieutenant in 1798, and held commands in the Mediterranean at the time of the Tripolitan War. Promoted to commodore in 1807, he had just left Norfolk, Va., when his flagship, the Chesapeake, was halted and then bombarded by the British warship Leopard on June 22, 1807. The incident, notable in the troubles over the right of the British to search American vessels, aroused American anger. Barron was court-martialed, found guilty of “neglecting, on the probability of an engagement, to clear his ship for action” and suspended (1808) from duty for five years. Later, embittered and convinced (perhaps with justice) that Stephen Decatur was barring his return to honorable standing in the navy, Barron challenged him to a duel, in which Decatur was mortally wounded (Mar. 22, 1820). Though reinstated to duty (1821) Barron never regained his earlier status. He retired in 1848.

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See biography by W. O. Stevens (1969).

 
 
Wikipedia: James Barron

James Barron (176921 April 1851) was an officer in the United States Navy.

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Barron was born in Virginia in 1769. As a youth he served in the Virginia Navy during the last years of the American Revolution and, nearly two decades later in 1798, received a commission as a Lieutenant in the new U.S. Navy.

He demonstrated superior seamanship abilities as an officer of the frigate United States, was promoted to Captain and commanded the frigate Warren in 1800-1801, during the final months of the Quasi-War with France. Over the next several years, he served in the First Barbary War in the Mediterranean and supervised the construction of a gunboat.

During his career, he commanded the frigate USS Chesapeake as a commodore in the US Navy. On 22 June 1807, his ship was involved in the Chesapeake-Leopard Affair, which preceded the War of 1812. The British frigate, HMS Leopard cornered his frigate and asked to search for British navy deserters. Barron refused and the British frigate attacked USS Chesapeake, killing four (one of them died in a hospital) and wounding eighteen. Barron finally allowed for the search. The British took four supposed deserters.

Barron was court-martialed and suspended. John Rodgers was the President of the court-martial, and Stephen Decatur was a member. When Barron returned to rejoin the navy, he was met with much humiliation. He challenged Stephen Decatur to a duel, which they fought on 22 March 1820; Barron was hurt badly, and Decatur was fatally wounded.

Barron continued in the Navy on shore duty, becoming senior officer in 1839, and died in Norfolk, Virginia on 21 April 1851.

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "James Barron" Read more

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