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Commodore Joshua Barney


Contributed by: chhbmd on 03-09-2006


JOSHUA BARNEY 1759 – 1818 By Maj. Henry Kenneth Bowers

Contributed by chhbmd (Charlie)

This article is about the Revolutionary War Captain Joshua Barney written by a very good friend in the Sons of the American Revolution. - Charlie

  

 Commodore Joshua Barney: distinguished American naval officer, prominent for the services rendered to his country in the Revolutionary War of 1776—1783 and the War of 1812-1814; wounded in the land battle at Bladensburg defending Washington D.C.; a freemason; a farmer; businessman; investor; with a strong Baltimore County, Maryland family lineage and descendants.

 His grandfather, William Barney, was living in Baltimore County by 1707. He died 19 March 1746, and was buried in the family graveyard in the Bear Creek Area of Patapsco Neck in Baltimore County. He was married twice and had 12 children. His oldest son, William, by the first wife Elizabeth Stevenson was born in Baltimore County on 20 March 1718. William II continued the farming tradition on the family tracts of land, and married Frances Holland Watts on January 26, 1743. He died in 1773 and is buried in the family graveyard. They had 6 children. A son, William S., was born on 28 December 1754 became a commanding officer in the Marines and he was captured while on board an American frigate the “Virginia". The 6th child of William II was Joshua Barney, one of fourteen children. He was born on July 6, 1759 in Baltimore County.

 When Joshua was ten years old, he was sent to live with his older sister in Baltimore Town or Fell’s Point. Her husband was the ship Captain, Thomas Drysdale, trading in the West Indies and Europe. Joshua went to sea when he was about twelve & ½ years old in 1772. At this time many produces were being imported and exported from the greater Baltimore area — Baltimore Town, Fell’s Point, Jonestown, Elkridge, Joppa, etc.




 Plague Dedicated to Commodore Joshua Barney.

 This Plague dedicates "Barney Square" (muster area for Cadets) at the
 US Merchant Marine Academy, Kings Point, NY

 Click on the image for more photos and information

 Shipbuilding was a large industry. Wells, and David Stodder (who after the Revolutionary War built the ship “Constellation”) were prominent shipbuilders, investors in trading and merchants. They are just two of the wealthy citizens of Baltimore Town. This brought many sailors and adventurers with their tales to the eager ears of many youngsters who chose to go to sea. This also brought the young fraternity of speculative masonry to Fell’s Point where the first lodge in Baltimore County was warranted in 1770 by the Provincial Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania and its appending territories.

 In 1774 when Joshua was at sea, his brother-in-law Captain Thomas Drysdale became ill and died. Joshua took command of the storm damaged brig and completed the voyage to the Mediterranean Sea where he sold the cargo of wheat. He purchased the trade goods and sailed back to Baltimore. This was a time of pirates operating in the Mediterranean Sea as well as the Caribbean Sea and other parts of the world  some were called Privateers.

 In October 1775, the Continental Marine Committee fitted out at Baltimore two cruisers to begin the American Navy. A Bermudan vessel was purchased, armed with ten guns, named the “Hornet,” and placed under the command of Captain William Stone with Joshua Barney as the second officer or Master’s Mate. He was only 16 years old. A crew had not yet been hired, and that duty of recruiting was assigned to Barney. At this time, the new American Fleet arrived from Philadelphia. It was the first Continental flag that had been seen in the United Colony of Maryland. It was raised on the main mast to the music of drums and fifes. Patriotism swelled. By the end of the day, Barney had enlisted a full crew. Later, the “Hornet” and the “Wasp” eluded the British Navy patrolling the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay and sailed to the Delaware where they joined the fleet of Commodore Hopkins.

 In February 1776 Commodore Hopkins’ Continental Fleet of 8 ships sailed south to the West Indies. On the way, the tender “Fly” smashed into the “Hornet” causing considerable damage. This fleet entered the port of New Providence and captured the town bringing away the governor, several prominent citizens, and large quantity of cannon's and other military stores. The Fleet returned to the United Colonies where at Philadelphia Barney was transferred to the schooner “Wasp,” mounting eight guns. Soon the “Wasp” captured a British tender in the Delaware Bay. For Barney’s actions to date he was promoted to lieutenant in the Navy of the United Colonies. Commodore Hopkins was dismissed from the United Colonies Navy for not carrying out orders. Captain James Nicholson replaced Hopkins on June 6, 1776. In the meantime, Captain Nicholson was placed in command of the new frigate “Virginia” with 28 guns; built at Fell’s Point, and with Lt. Joshua Barney second in command. Joshua’s brother, William, was in command of the Marines assigned to the ship. On April 1, 1776 as the "Virginia” tried to elude the British Navy at the mouth of the Chesapeake, the ship ran aground on a sandbar, and before the British captured the “Virginia” Captain Nicholson, with his papers, escaped in the ship’s barge. Lt. Barney, his brother, and all personnel were captured.

 On July 4, 1776, the United Colonies proclaimed their Declaration of Independence from Great Britain! Lt. Joshua Barney, United States of America Navy, was exchanged by the British. In August 1776, Barney was assigned to serve on the sloop “Sachem.” For the next 2 to 3 years, Barney commanded several armed merchantmen as privateers. In 1777, Robert Morris introduced Barney to freemasonry and he became a member of Philadelphia Lodge #3. In 1778, another Corps of Independents was raised in Baltimore Town by Count Pulaski. Brittingham Dickeson held a commission in the Baltimore Town Militia. He lived at 6 Philpot Street on Fell’s Point and was a Past Master of Masonic Lodge 415. In 1780, as a First Lieutenant on board the “Saratoga,” a brig out of Baltimore as a privateer, it fell prey to the British ship “Intrepid.” Barney spent nearly a year as a prisoner in England at the Royal Navy Base at Plymouth until he escaped. He spent about eight weeks in the costume of an English country gentleman touring the West Country and London before slipping away across the Channel to the Low Countries (in the company of a lovely Italian woman). There he got aboard a ship going to America.

 General George Washington attended the Provincial Military Masonic Lodge No.27 in the Maryland Line that was warranted with a Constitution and By-Laws on April 4, 1780 by the Provincial Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. In the 6 year period from April 1, 1777 to March 14,1783, as token from the actual records, the licensed privateers which sailed cut of the Chesapeake Bay numbered 248, and this was while the British Navy was guarding the mouth of the Bay. Likewise, a similar action was happening in the Delaware. Privateers were financed by investors and speculators from the American Colonies, and European countries as well. It was very profitable in the long term.

 On April 8, 1782, Barney commanded the armed merchantman of 16 guns, “Hyder Ally,” to protect a convoy leaving the Delaware. As the convoy entered the Capes, Barney saw three British warships coming in from the Atlantic, so he sent the convoy back while he attacked the sloop “General Monk.” The British frigate and a brig stood off to watch the fight. In about 30 minutes, Barney captured the “General Monk” and raised the British flag on both ships. The two remaining British ship captains thought all was well in their favor and sailed away. Barney brought his prize to Philadelphia and returned to take the convoy to sea. The Pennsylvania Legislature awarded Barney a gold encrusted sword. The banker & chairman of a committee of Congress, Robert Morris assigned new duties to Barney. The first was to carry dispatches to Ben Franklin in France. While in Paris, Ben Franklin introduced Barney to the Masonic Lodge of Nine Sisters where he became an affiliated visitor. The captured British sloop, the “General Monk” was repaired, made ready for war, and renamed the “George Washington”, which was assigned to Captain Joshua Barney for the rest of the War. By 1784, all of the warships of the United States of America were decommissioned.

 Captain Barney, aged 25, engaged in seagoing commerce and farming. Then at age 37 from 1796 until 1802, he returned to sailing with distinction as a Commodore in the French Navy in the West Indies.

 In 1788, the citizens of tile U.S.A. voted for George Washington to be President of this new Country. The votes were counted on April 6, 1789, and on April 16th he left Mt. Vernon to go to New York City. Deputations met him all along his route. Joshua Barney escorted him into Baltimore where his carriage was accompanied by a cavalcade of citizens a greeting of ringing bells and salvos of David Stodder’s Militia Artillery. Stodder was the Worshipful Master of the Masonic Lodge #15 of Fell’s Point. The Masonic Grand Lodge A.F.& A.M. of Maryland, the Provincial Masonic Lodge#15 now known as Lodge #3 A.F.&A.M., a subordinate lodge of the Grand Lodge A.F.& A.M. of Maryland, led the procession to the Fountain Inn where a welcoming committee composed of Joshua Barney, James McHenry, Nicholas Rogers, Paul Bentalou, John Bankson, R. Smith, Isaac Griest, O.H. Williams, Thorogood Smith, William Clemm, and John Swann presented George Washington with an address, and a sumptuous banquet. The next day Mr. Washington was escorted by Joshua Barney and Captain Nicholas Ruxton Moore with his Militia to Wilmington, Delaware. On the 19th of May 1789 Mrs. Martha Washington with her family were escorted by Barney in a sumptuous fashion to Baltimore and again to Wilmington.

 On September 8, 1790, President Washington and his wife, escorted by Captain Joshua Barney arrived here  in Baltimore from Philadelphia on their way to Mt. Vernon. On their entrance into town, they were received and saluted by a federal discharge from Captain Stodder’s Artillery Company. On Thursday, he was entertained by a company of merchants at an elegant entertainment prepared at Mr. Grant’s Tavern. On Wednesday, October 10, 1792, President Washington and the First Lady returning from Mt. Vernon stopped in Baltimore town where they were escorted by Mr. Barney on their way back to Philadelphia. Another dinner at Mr. Grant’s amid the discharge of artillery of Captain Stodder’s Company.

 Barney’s family included two wives, successively, and ten children. He was in his 40’s when he wrote his memoirs with vivid descriptions of his sea battles. His daughter-in-law, Mary Chase Barney, whose father, Samuel Chase, had been a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and later a Federal Justice of the Supreme Court, wrote a biography of Joshua Barney after his death. One of his homes is located in the town of Savage in present day Howard County, Maryland. His farm was on both sides of the Little Patuxent River.

 From 1803 until 1812 Joshua Barney again engaged in seagoing commerce and farming. In May 1812, he sold all his property in greater Baltimore Town and retired to his farm at Savage.

 Baltimore and the other ports of Maryland shipped great tonnage of merchandise - the fourth largest port in the new United States of America Very much trading was being done with England and with her enemies at war — France, Spain, and Holland. England treated the U.S.A. as her independent colony by stopping our merchant ships and our warships to confiscate cargo and to impress our seamen, which the English claimed were British subjects. The financial loss by American commerce suffered greatly one so did Joshua Barney and his partners. In 1806 over, 3000 of our seaman who had been impressed complained to Congress “in just one year.” Congress declared WAR against Great Britain on June 18, 1812. Again, the 53 year old Captain Barney went to war as a successful commander of privateers. In 26 naval combats, in both Wars, he was nearly always victorious. The British gunboats were ravishing the Chesapeake Bay and its shores for supplies, so Maryland built and supplied 18 gun barges and placed Commodore Barney in command. He was successful in capturing and chasing the enemy down the Bay until the large British Fleet arrived. Barney’s flotilla retreated far up the Patuxent River to St. Leonard’s Creek and other creeks where all barges were scuttled and burned. He and his crews took the guns and supplies up to Bladensburg to join the defense of Washington, D.C. During the ensuing battle, Commander Barney’s Artillery did considerable damage to the invading British army and delayed it from the capture of Washington, D.C. until President Madison and his entourage escaped. Barney and his flotilla men remained at their cannons until captured at the points of British swords. He suffered a severe leg wound when his horse was killed. Commodore Barney was paroled immediate, as the British perceived him to he a true hero. Barney insisted that his flotilla men also be paroled. At this battle, the U.S. troops did suffer 70% of the casualties.

 A few years later the 59 year old, Barney decided to move to his vast domain of wilderness — 50,000 acres with good title in Kentucky. So, in the fall of 1818 he and his family traveled by carriage, wagons, and horseback over the trail now called the National Road through Cumberland, Maryland to the Redstone Fort now called Brownsville, Pennsylvania. There he bought a flatboat with a cabin on it, hired a crew, and floated downstream to Fort Pitt, now called Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, at the beginning of the Ohio River. This trip was 57 miles of low water with swirling currents, rocks, and frequent portages. The strain caused illness and Barney died in Pittsburgh on December 1, 1818. He was given a great funeral by the townspeople and all the dignitaries. He was buried in the Presbyterian Churchyard; later his grave was moved into a large cemetery park and is marked with a large impressive gravestone.

 A fitting monument for so great a hero and man as was citizen and Commodore Joshua Barney, a real Maryland Patriot!

 In Joshua Barney’s will he stated that his son, Major William Bedford Barney, was to get the musket ball after it was removed from his thighbone before burial.

 Joshua Barney was a member of the Society of the Cincinnati. In honor of his services, he received a ceremonial sword from the City of Philadelphia; a ceremonial sword from the City of Baltimore; and a ceremonial sword from the City of Washington, District of Columbia.

 This research leads me to believe that Captain Joshua Barney became a good friend of David Stodder of Fell’s Point, used his shipyard, and became a member of the Masonic Lodge No.15 of Fell’s Point, Baltimore, Maryland.

Researched and, assembled by Maj. Henry Kenneth Bowers using resources as follows and other notes:

1. Baltimore County Families 1659—1759
By Robert W. Barnes, Genealogical Publishing Co. 1989.

2. Commodore Joshua Barney
By William Frederick Adams, Springfield Pub. 1912

3. History of Maryland, Vol.11
By J. Thomas Scharf, Tradition Press, PA. 1879 reprinted 1967

4. Collier’s Encyclopedia, Vol.3, p.633 Published 1963

5. The 1812 War Cry, Vol.19 No.2, September 1992
Pub. The General Society of The War of 1812

6. Sails and Oars, Vol.2 No.2
A newsletter about the Chesapeake Flotilla Project.

7. Joshua Barney
By Ralph D. Paine; The Century Co. 1924

8. Why The Name Washington Lodge?
A talk by Richard Gawthrop, P.M. Washington Lodge No.3 A.F.& A.M. 1945

Edited by Charles H. Hill, Secretary, Nicholas Ruxton Moore Chapter MDSSAR March 8, 2006 for: Format, spelling, and punctuations only.




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