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The Buckeye Chronicles

a compendium of facts about Ohio history

by Dan Chabek


Battle of Lake Erie

This fall (1997) Ohio will celebrate the 184th anniversary of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry's brilliant victory in the Battle of Lake Erie.

During the War of 1812, Perry was assigned to oversee the building of an Amrican fleet at the eastern end of Lake Erie. He was only 28 years old at the time.

Within four months he had readied nine vessels equipped to carry 54 guns. Soon after, Robert H. Barclay, veteran British commander, sailed east from Malden, a port near Detroit, with six warships carrying 63 guns.

Perry met Barclay near Put-in-Bay on Sept. 10, 1813. The British took an early advantage, destroying Perry's flagship "Lawrence." Perry then transferred to the "Niagara," which had suffered little damage, and continued the fight.

The battle lasted three hours. Perry lost 27 men, Barclay 41. An estimated 100 were wounded on both sides. Barclay, who had earlier sacrificed an arm while fighting under Nelson at Trafalgar, lost the remaining one in the Erie battle.

Oliver Hazard PerryAfter the British fleet surrendered, Perry reported his victory to General William Henry Harrison at Fort Meigs with the memorable words: "We have met the enemy and they are ours."
 


                      Oliver Hazard Perry from Old New England by Barrows Mussey:
                      A. A. Wyn, Inc.(1946)


© 1997 Dan Chabek

Niagara History from the home of the U.S. Brig Niagara, the reconstructed flagship of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry.

The Battle of Lake Erie from the H.M.S. Detroit Project.

The Battle of Lake Erie and Perry's Victory and International Peace Memorial - National Park Service.