Jeremiah O'Brien
{{Short description|American naval officer (1744–1818)}}
{{about|the Massachusetts naval captain|the Maine Congressman|Jeremiah O'Brien (Jeremiah's son, the Maine politician)|the ship|SS Jeremiah O'Brien}}
{{Infobox military person
| honorific_prefix = Captain
| name = Jeremiah O'Brien
| image = Jeremiah O'Brien.jpg
| birth_date = 1744
| birth_place = Kittery, Massachusetts Bay
| death_date = {{death-date|September 5, 1818}} (aged 74-79)
| death_place = Machias, District of Maine
| placeofburial = O'Brien Cemetery Machias, Maine
| allegiance = {{flagicon image|Ensign_of_New_England_(pine_only).svg}} Massachusetts Bay
| branch = {{flagicon image|An_Appeal_to_Heaven_Flag.svg}} Massachusetts State Navy
| branch_label = Branch
| rank = Captain
| battles = {{tree list}}
{{tree list/end}}
}}
Captain Jeremiah O'Brien (1744–1818) was an American captain in the Massachusetts State Navy. (Despite the image in this article, he had light brown hair and blue eyes.Sherman, Andrew, Life of Captain Jeremiah O'Brien, 1902 at p. 20) Prior to its existence (or that of the Continental Navy), he commanded the sloop Unity when he captured the British armed schooner {{HMS|Margaretta}} in the Battle of Machias, the first naval battle of the American Revolutionary War. Thereafter, he renamed the Unity the Machias Liberty. He also led the first American attack on Nova Scotia in the Raid on St. John (1775). Six United States ships have been named in his honor.
Early life
Jeremiah was the eldest son of Irish immigrants Morris and Mary O'Brien. He was born in Kittery, District of Maine in 1744. His family moved to Scarborough, Maine and settled in Machias, Maine in the 1760s to engage in lumbering. They owned two sawmills. Maine was a part of Massachusetts at the time.Bangor and Aroostook Railroad Historical and Technical Society The BAR Newsletter June 1976 volume III, issue 2, pages 2&3
American Revolution
Reports of the battles of Lexington and Concord reached Machias by early May 1775, leading Jeremiah and Benjamin Foster to rally Machias residents at Job Burnham's tavern. Machias merchant captain Ichabod Jones sailed his ships Unity and Polly to Boston with a cargo of lumber and purchased food for sale in Machias. British troops encouraged Jones to deliver another cargo of lumber for construction of their barracks in Boston. Admiral Samuel Graves ordered HMS Margaretta, under the command of James Moore, to accompany Jones' ships to discourage interference from Machias rebels. When the ships reached Machias on 2 June 1775, Capt. James Moore saw the town's liberty pole and ordered it removed. The Machias townspeople refused to remove the pole and to load the lumber. Foster plotted to capture the British officers when they attended church on 11 June, but the British escaped capture and retreated downriver aboard Margaretta. On 12 June Jeremiah pursued Margaretta aboard Jones' ship the Unity. Foster intended to participate in the packet boat Falmouth. But after the Falmouth ran aground, O'Brien and his five brothers, Gideon, John, William, Dennis and Joseph, and men of Machias took the Unity and went on alone.
Under the command of Jeremiah O'Brien, thirty-one townsmen sailed aboard Unity armed with guns, swords, axes, and pitch forks and captured Margaretta in an hour-long battle after Capt. Moore of the Margaretta had threatened to bombard the town. John O'Brien jumped aboard Margaretta as the two ships closed, but was forced to jump overboard by the British crew. After rescuing John, the Unity again closed on the Margaretta until their rigging became entangled. The Unity was bombarded by grenades from the British ship, but Margaretta surrendered after James Moore was mortally wounded.
This battle is often considered the first time British colors were struck to those of the United States, even though the Continental Navy did not exist at the time. The United States Merchant Marine claims Unity as its member and this incident as their beginning.
In August 1775, O'Brien participated in the Raid on St. John (1775).
O'Brien continued as the captain of Unity, renamed Machias Liberty, for two years, and received the first captain's commission in the Massachusetts State Navy in 1775. He met with General George Washington more than once.
Later life
President James Madison appointed O'Brien as the federal customs collector for the port of Machias in 1811, and he held the position until his death in 1818.
Honors
- Five ships in the United States Navy have been named in his honor:
- {{USS|O'Brien|TB-30}}, a torpedo boat, built in 1900 and served until 1909
- {{USS|O'Brien|DD-51}}, an O'Brien-class destroyer, which served from 1915 until 1922
- {{USS|O'Brien|DD-415}}, a {{sclass|Sims|destroyer}}, served from 1940 until she was sunk by an enemy torpedo in 1942
- {{USS|O'Brien|DD-725}}, an {{sclass|Allen M. Sumner|destroyer}}, served from 1944 until 1972
- {{USS|O'Brien|DD-975}}, a {{sclass|Spruance|destroyer}}, launched in 1976 and served until 2004
- {{libship honor|name=Jeremiah O'Brien|type=his}}, an EC2-S-C1-class Liberty ship, which served during World War II from 1943 until 1946 and is currently an operational museum ship in San Francisco
- Bangor and Aroostook Railroad bicentennial locomotive number 1776 was named Jeremiah O'Brien
See also
References
- {{Cite web|url=https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/1970/february/captain-jeremiah-obrien-and-machias-liberty|title=Captain Jeremiah O'Brien and the Machias Liberty|last=Lieutenant Commander M. D. Giambattista, U. S. Navy|date=1970-02-01|website=U.S. Naval Institute|language=en}}
- {{Cite book|last=Joshua M Smith|title=Borderland Smuggling : patriots, loyalists, and illicit trade in the northeast, 1783-1820|isbn=978-0-8130-6443-7|oclc=1096361672|date=2019-11-19}}
- {{Cite book|last=Allen|first=Gardner Weld|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hFsSAAAAYAAJ|title=A Naval History of the American Revolution|date=1913|publisher=Houghton Mifflin|pages=8–12|language=en}}
Notes
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Category:United States Navy officers
Category:American people of Irish descent
Category:People of Massachusetts in the American Revolution
Category:People from Kittery, Maine