PERRY, MATTHEW CALBRAITH

1794–1858, American naval officer, b. South Kingstown, R.I.; brother of Oliver Hazard Perry. Appointed a midshipman in 1809, he first served under his brother on the Revenge and then was aide to Commodore John Rodgers on the President, which defeated the British ship Little Belt before the War of 1812 had been formally declared. Perry saw little action in that war because he was assigned to the United States, which the British bottled up at New London. He received his first command in 1821. From 1833 to 1843 he was assigned to the New York (later Brooklyn) navy yard, where he pioneered in the application of steam power to warships, commanding (1837) the Fulton, first steam vessel in the U.S. navy, and encouraged the broadening of naval education. Promoted to captain in 1837, Perry received the title of commodore in 1841 and in the same year became commandant of the New York navy yard. In 1843–44 he commanded the African squadron, which was engaged in suppressing the slave trade. In the Mexican War, as commander of the Gulf Fleet, he supported Gen. Winfield Scott in taking Veracruz. Perry was ordered (Mar., 1852) to command the East India squadron and charged with the delicate task of penetrating isolationist Japan. On July 8, 1853, he anchored his four ships, including the powerful steam frigates Mississippi and Susquehanna, in lower Tokyo (then Yedo) Bay. The Japanese ordered him to go to Nagasaki, the only port open to foreigners, where the Dutch operated a limited trading concession under humiliating conditions, but Perry firmly declined. On July 14 he presented his papers, including a letter from President Millard Fillmore to the Japanese emperor, requesting protection for shipwrecked American seamen, the right to buy coal, and the opening of one or more ports to trade. The expedition then retired to the China coast, returning, with an increased fleet, in Feb., 1854. Perry's show of pomp (at which he was expert) and power obviously impressed the insecure Tokugawa shogunate, and on Mar. 31, 1854, near Yokohama a treaty was concluded that acceded to American requests, opening the ports of Shimoda and Hakodate to U.S. trade. For his successful expedition Perry was awarded $20,000 by Congress, which also paid for publication of the official Narrative of the Expedition of an American Squadron to the China Seas and Japan (3 vol., 1856), compiled under Perry's supervision.

See E. M. Barrows, The Great Commodore (1935); A. Walworth, Black Ships off Japan (1946, repr. 1966); Bluejackets with Perry in Japan (ed. by H. F. Graff, 1952); S. E. Morison, "Old Bruin" (1967).

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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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books on: Perry Matthew Calbraith  - 105 results

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...AMERICAN ANCESTRY AND FAMILY OF MATTHEW CALBRAITH PERRY Compiled from W. E. Griffis, Matthew Calbraith Perry ; Calbraith Bourne Perry...Lieutenant Sarah Wallace Perry Matthew Calbraith Perry Commodore Anna M...
...earliest Perry, Judge Freeman Perry, also an influential member of...Raymond, a son of Judge Freeman Perry, was a seaman during and after...commodores, Oliver Hazard and Matthew Calbraith Perry. In 1794 Christopher Raymond moved...
...n. 1 chap. 10 Pennsylvania , USS, 30 Perry, Matthew Calbraith: and artillery, 6; Asian policy of...Squadron; United States Expedition to Japan Perry, Oliver H., 5-6, 29 , 189 n. 5 Perry, Oliver H., II, 102 , 196 n. 2 chap...
...Pellew, Captain, 11 Peoples The Principles , 348 Permanent Court of International Justice, 376 Perry, Arthur Lay, 71 Perry, Commodore Matthew Calbraith, arrival of, in Japan, 20 - 21 fear of natives at, 21 demands made by, 22 as special envoy...
...flight, in 1911, a great grandson of Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry and a grandson of Commodore John Rodgers , Calbraith Perry Rodgers, became the first person to fly across the...
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journal articles on: Perry Matthew Calbraith  - 7 results

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...Pasternak, Boris. See Rilke, Rainer Maria. Percy, Walker. See American Catholic Writers. Perry, Matthew Calbraith Matthew Calbraith Perry: Antebellum Sailor and Diplomat. John Schroeder. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2001. 326...
...Aboard his flagship, Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry, Commander-in-Chief of U...himself as a modern-day Commodore Perry, and his experience has focused...analogy between Pickens and Commodore Perry is imperfect, since Pickens has...
...bestowed on the American Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry who, following the failed attempts...Preface," v). Indeed, Commodore Perry, who before setting off on his...shared their feeling. As Admiral Perry, discussing Golovnin s account...
...596-97; "George Brinton McClellan," 705-6; "Samuel Eliot Morrison," 781-84; "Matthew Calbraith Perry," 850-51; "Oliver Hazard Perry," 1086; "Anthony Wayne," 1162-63; "James Wilkinson," 1203-4. In Dictionary of...
...Barrows, The Great Commodore: The Exploits of Matthew Calbraith Perry (Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1935...Charvat, Roy Harvey Pearce, Claude M. Simpson, and Matthew J. Bruccoli, The Centenary Edition of the Works...
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magazine articles on: Perry Matthew Calbraith  - 4 results

 
 
Perry and His Black Ships at the Gates of Japan...earned retirement, American Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry, accepted the most challenging assignment...the War of 1812, Oliver Hazard Perry, Matthew well knew that the Japanese had refused...
...In the final slot, at number 100, is Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry, who forcibly opened Japan to Western trade by sailing...Tokyo) in 1853-54. The Japanese leaders with whom Perry "negotiated"? Those same Tokugawa shoguns brought...
...continent during the mid-nineteenth century. Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry was sent to open Japan in 1853, Alaska was purchased...American engagement there. Since the days of Commodore Perry, the United States has been inconsistent in its Asia...
...Jones, Preble, Stephen Decatur, Oliver Hazard Perry, Matthew C. Perry, David G. Farragut, Chester W. Nimitz, and...Navys exploration of the Pacific and Arctic and of Matthew Calbraith Perrys expedition to Japan in the 1850s. Toward...


 

newspaper articles on: Perry Matthew Calbraith  - 1 result

 
 
...HIROSHIGE; Japan Prints Powerful in West. Byline: Joanna Shaw-Eagle, THE WASHINGTON TIMES When Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry opened Japan to the United States in 1854 - Japan had shunned contact since 1633 - he revolutionized not only...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Perry Matthew Calbraith  - 2 results

 
 
PERRY, MATTHEW CALBRAITH 1794 1858, American naval officer...R.I.; brother of Oliver Hazard Perry. Appointed a midshipman in 1809, he...of 1812 had been formally declared. Perry saw little action in that war because...
PERRY, OLIVER HAZARD 1785 1819, American...South Kingstown, R.I.; brother of Matthew Calbraith Perry. Appointed a midshipman in 1799, he...become famous. The victory, which made Perry a national hero, gave the United States...


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