The
Battle of Nassau (March 2 – March 3, 1776) was a naval action and
amphibious assault by American forces against
British-occupied
Nassau in the
Bahamas during the
American Revolutionary War. It is considered the first cruise and one of the first engagements of the newly established
Continental Navy and the
Continental Marines, the progenitor of the
United States Navy and
Marine Corps. The action was also the Marines' first amphibious landing in United States' history. It is sometimes known as the
Raid of Nassau.Background
Lord Dunmore, with the British force under his command, had collected a store of arms and provisions at New Providence, in the Bahamas, and had been effective against the rebels along the Colonial coast, particularly the shore of Virginia.
Battle
Under the command of Fleet Captain or
Commodore Esek Hopkins of
Rhode Island, a task force of four ships, including
Hornet,
Alfred, and
Wasp, rallied near
Great Abaco Island, north of the Island of
New Providence, on March 1, 1776. The force captured two
sloops owned by
Loyalists, one of those men being Capt. Gideon Lowe of Green Turtle Cay, and pressed their owners to serve as pilots. It is said that the two Abaconians escaped as soon as Nassau was in sight and warned the British of the approaching American ships
On March 2, the force approached Nassau, sending ashore a raiding party of 230 Continental Marines and 50 sailors under the command of Captain
Samuel Nicholas, the first commissioned officer in the Continental Marines. The force captured nearby Fort Montague but were repulsed in their assault on Fort Nassau.
On March 3 at 10:00 in the morning, a landing was again attempted, and this time the Marines captured Nassau without a fight, seizing a sizable store of 103 cannon, mortars and munitions. Much of the precious
gunpowder stores that were the target of the raid had been evacuated after the failed raid on March 2.
It marked the first instance in American military history that forces responded to the equivalent modern command of "Land the landing force."
On March 17, the fleet sailed for
Block Island Channel off
Newport, Rhode Island, with
Montfort Browne,
Lieutenant Governor of the Bahamas, as a prisoner. Browne was later exchanged for American general
William Alexander.
Legacy
In commemoration of the battle, two ships of the United States Navy have been christened
USS Nassau.
Category:Nassau, BahamasCategory:Conflicts in 1776Nassau 1776Category:History of the BahamasCategory:1776 in the Bahamasno:Slaget ved Nassaupt:Batalha de Nassau