Following the outbreak of the
American Revolutionary War, the
Royal Navy sent , a frigate commanded
James Wallace as captain to put a halt to smuggling out of
Newport. On June 13, 1775,
Nicholas Cooke, the colony's
lieutenant governor, officially asked Wallace to return two ships he had captured. Two days later, the
General Assembly authorized the
Committee of Safety to acquire two ships for the purpose of defending the colony's trade, established a committee to oversee the acquisition and fitting of the ships, and appointed
Abraham Whipple as commodore of the state navy. Two
sloops,
Katy and
Washington, were purchased. Whipple reported that the same day, June 15, he captured a
tender of
Rose. The navy was organized under, and subject to the direction of, the state's militia generals. In January 1776 two more ships were authorized, and an
admiralty court was established to adjudicate maritime matters, including the distribution of
prizes. The legislation also authorized the governor to issue
letters of marque, making
privateering possible. The latter legislation was amended the following May to harmonize it with Continental Navy regulations. About 200 ships engaged in privateering on behalf of the state. The General Assembly authorized two more armed ships in 1777, but neither was apparently acquired. It also authorized the purchase of merchant ships for the state's use, which resulted in the acquisition two sloops,
Aurora and
Diamond. Further authorizations occurred in 1778 in support of an anticipated expedition to expel the British from Newport (which failed in the August
Battle of Rhode Island), but were only fulfilled later, with the acquisition of the galley and the sloop
Argo, which were commanded by
Continental Army Lieutenant Colonel
Silas Talbot. The last ship commissioned by the state of Rhode Island was
Rover, a sloop that saw only brief service in 1781. ==Service==