Construction Upon the outbreak of the
American Revolutionary War, the Connecticut General Assembly in July 1775 authorized Governor
Jonathan Trumbull to purchase and outfit two armed vessels, the largest of which would be
Oliver Cromwell. Under the supervision of Capt. Seth Harding, ship builder Uriah Hayden began preliminary work for the project on 30 January. Work began in the Hayden family shipyard that sat on the
Connecticut River in Saybrook (Essex), Connecticut, on April 2, and continued until the ship's launch on 13 June 1776. When launched, the three-masted brig was the largest fully-rigged warship in the
Continental Navy, and carried twenty guns. She weighed 300 tons, had an eighty-foot keel, was twenty-seven feet wide, and had a hold twelve feet deep.
Capture of Admiral Keppel In the spring of 1778
Oliver Cromwell set sail from Boston with
Defence for the West Indies, stopping in Charleston, S.C., for refitting. On April 15, while sailing east of St. Kitts, the pair encountered two British ships,
Admiral Keppel and
Cyrus, and captured them. On board
Admiral Keppel, and taken prisoner, was
Henry Shirley, the former British Ambassador to Russia, and other bureaucrats, and their families, who were en route to Kingston, Jamaica, to relay instructions from London to the colony.
Admiral Keppel was sailed to Boston and sold for £22,321, and, after some deliberation by Gov. Trumbull, Mr. Shirley and the other captives were permitted to continue to Kingston under a flag of truce.
End of Service with the Connecticut Navy A hurricane struck
Oliver Cromwell while she was off the coast of the Bahamas in which she was stripped of her masts. In June 1779 she encountered British ships off Sandy Hook and was forced to strike her colors after a battle lasting several hours. After her capture, the British refitted her and commissioned her as
Restoration. From there, the ship was purchased by the Royal Navy and commissioned as
HMS Loyalist.
Royal Navy '
HMS Loyalist'''
was fitted as a 14-gun sloop. In 1780 Admiral Arbuthnot placed John Plumer Ardesoife in command of Loyalist
. He immediately proceeded to terrorize the inhabitants of the Sea Islands, arousing opposition to the British. Around this time Loyalist
took the sloop George
, of 25 tons burthen, William Stein master. George'' was condemned at the vice admiralty court in Savannah on 23 August 1780. While under Ardesoife's command
Loyalist also took some prizes at George Town. She was under the command of Captain Richard Williams when the French captured her in the Chesapeake on 30 August 1781. According to French sources,
Loyalist and the frigate were on picket duty when they encountered the French fleet under Admiral
de Grasse.
Guadeloupe escaped up the York River to York Town, where her crew would later scuttle her. The English court martial records report that
Loyalist was returning to the British fleet off the Jersey coast when she encountered the main French fleet. The , with the
74-gun in sight, was able to overtake
Loyalist.
French service The French took her into service as
Loyaliste in September. On 15 September she arrived at Yorktown, De Grasse having detached her to escort in some grenadiers and chasseurs. Her commander, briefly, was
lieutenant de vaisseau Pascal Melchior Philibert de Barras-Saint-Laurent, son of
Admiral de Barras. Shortly thereafter, in November, the French gave her to the Americans. In her brief French service she is described as carrying 22 guns, probably 14 guns plus eight
swivel guns. ==References==