GASPEE

găsˈpēˌ, British revenue cutter, burned (June 10, 1772) at Namquit (now Gaspee) Point in the present-day city of Warwick on the western shore of Narragansett Bay, R.I. The vessel arrived in Mar., 1772, to enforce the revenue laws in an area where virtually the whole citizenry was engaged in smuggling, and her presence was decidedly unwelcome. Her commander, Lieutenant Dudingston, provoked the navigators of the bay further by the manner in which he carried out his duties. On June 9, 1772, the Gaspee was lured aground c.7 mi (11 km) S of Providence while giving chase to a suspect. A group of prominent Providence men, including John Brown and Joseph Bucklin, decided to burn the ship, and Capt. Abraham Whipple led the raiders. They boarded the Gaspee, wounded the commander, captured the crew, and then burned the vessel at the water's edge. Gov. Joseph Wanton, in the difficult position of having to enforce British regulations without offending his constituents (Rhode Island elected its own governor), admirably solved the problem by issuing proclamations for the arrest of the officially unknown offenders and then doing virtually nothing about them. Despite a large reward offered by the British, the names of the men involved, though well known in Providence, were not revealed until after the outbreak of the American Revolution. The incident was one of the most famous colonial acts of defiance in the troubled years before independence.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Gaspee
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books on: Gaspee  - 135 results

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...Beaver to Rhode Island to protect the Gaspee , and he expressed hopes that the British...officers." 62 On June 9, 1772, the Gaspee challenged the packet boat Hannah sailing...Hannah refused to heave to and led the Gaspee into shoal water, where she grounded...
...craft he suspected as a smuggler, ran the Gaspee aground. Unable to free her, he was...great Providence family, and took the Gaspee by force. Dudingston tried to resist...laying about them with handspikes when the Gaspee s crew tried to hold them off, then reading...
...had come to a more reasonable position. The Gaspee Affair Then, in June 1772, came the Gaspee affair. Rhode Island, one of the two self...British authorities finally dispatched the ship Gaspee to Narragansett Bay. Tricky tides ran the...
...3. 1772--RHODE ISLANDERS BURN THE GASPEE In the face of united opposition the British...had become a patriotic duty. When the Gaspee, a British revenue cutter, ran aground...Rhode Island, the schooner called the Gaspee, of eight guns, commanded by Wm. Duddingston...
...documents describing the burning of the Gaspee , see Recs. Col. R.I., VII , 68...Documentary History of the Destruction of the Gaspee Providence, 1845 . 21. Newp. Merc...constitutional and political implications of the Gaspee Commission, see: William R. Leslie...
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journal articles on: Gaspee  - 1 result

 
 
...looked: they sank the revenue schooner Gaspee in 1772; they orchestrated the Boston...the Providence Masonic lodge sank the Gaspee in June 1772, he had no proof to substantiate...continuing mystery surrounding the fate of the Gaspee, see Neil York, "The Uses of Law and...


 

magazine articles on: Gaspee  - 5 results

 
 
...June 1772, the British revenue vessel Gaspee was in pursuit of a ship in Narragansett...got his ship across a shoal on which the Gaspee landed. Later that night, about 150...Islanders in several boats approached the Gaspee, managed to wound its commander, removed...
...of gun control in 1774 and 1775 was only the last straw. More of a truly precipitating event was the Gaspee Affair in 1772." In the Gaspee Affair, England aimed to arrest and bring to trial in England colonists believed to have boarded and...
...skirmishing erupts into full-on revolution, with Washington at the center of the gathering storm. From the burning of the schooner Gaspee, considered by England to be the most outrageous and unforgivable acts committed by the Colonies, to the Naval bombardment...
...importation of English commodities. In 1772, Rhode Island patriots (smugglers from the British perspective) burned the schooner Gaspee in Newport harbor. The flames were barely extinguished when it was suggested that the instigators of such violence might be...
...families along the Bonaventure River, arguably Quebecs prettiest waterway. Originating in the Chic-Chocs Mountains of Quebecs Gaspee Peninsula, the Bonaventure wends its way through southeastern Canada to the Atlantic Ocean some 76 miles away The river was...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Gaspee  - 6 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-6 >>  
 
GASPEE gas pe , British revenue cutter, burned (June 10, 1772) at Namquit (now Gaspee) Point in the present-day city of Warwick...carried out his duties. On June 9, 1772, the Gaspee was lured aground c.7 mi (11 km) S of Providence...
...nearly destroyed (1676) in King Philips War . Gaspee Point, S of Pawtuxet, was the scene of the burning of the British revenue cutter Gaspee in 1772; annual "Gaspee Days" commemorate the event. Warwick has a very...
...captured numerous prizes. Whipple commanded the party of Rhode Islanders that captured and burned the British revenue cutter Gaspee in Narragansett Bay in 1772, one of the most provocative instances of resistance to the British in the pre-Revolutionary...
...Act of 1733 and the Navigation Acts . Narragansett Bay became a notorious haven for smugglers, and the British revenue cutter Gaspee was burned (1772) by patriots in protest against the enforcement of revenue laws. After the start of the American Revolution...
...sugar and stamp acts, was widely read. Again chief justice of the superior court, Hopkins refused to allow the burners of the Gaspee to be prosecuted. He was a member (1774 76) of the Continental Congress, a member of the committee that prepared the Articles...
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