War of 1812, Part 26: The Battle of Valparaiso

In August 1813, Captain David Porter aboard the USS Essex sailed for the Washington Islands, an archipelago 3,000 miles southwest of the Galapagos, to find more British whalers to capture and, more importantly, to repair the vessel far away from the Royal Navy. With his ships refitted, Porter sailed from Nukahiva and arrived at Valparaiso in February 1814, and five days later, Royal Navy ships HMS Phoebe and HMS Cherub arrived as well. Captain James Hillyer, commander of Phoebe, asked Porter to surrender to the stronger British squadron, but Porter would have none of it, replying, “You shall never take my ship without fighting for her.”

Tom Hand, creator and publisher of Americana Corner, discusses what happened during the Battle of Valparaiso and why it still matters today.

Images courtesy of Naval History and Heritage Command, Library of Congress, Internet Archive, Wikimedia. 


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War of 1812, Part 25: The Cruise of USS Essex