Early in 1822,
Alligator sailed from Boston to the
West Indies to combat the
piracy then rampant in the
Caribbean. In April, she took the pirate schooner
Cienega off
Nuevitas,
Cuba.
Alligator remained on the
West Indian station for the remainder of her career. While at
Matanzas in November of that year, she got word that an American schooner and
brig had been taken by a group of pirates and were located about east of Matanzas. She took the master and mate of the captured schooner on board and set sail to reclaim the American ships. She arrived at her destination at dawn on 9 November and found the pirates in possession of one ship, two brigs, and five schooners.
Alligator launched armed boats which gave chase to a heavily armed schooner that opened fire with five of her guns and commenced a
battle. The boats from
Alligator pressed home their attack and soon overhauled the schooner which they boarded in a mad rush. In the short, but sharp, fight,
Alligator lost her commanding officer,
Lieutenant William H. Allen, wounded mortally by two musket balls. The captured vessel, of 80 tons (bm), was armed with one long 18-pounder gun on a pivot, and with four smaller guns. US casualties amounted to eight men killed and wounded. Soon thereafter, boats from
Alligator captured all the pirate vessels except one schooner that managed to escape. Most of the pirates fled ashore.
Alligator recaptured
William and Henry, which had been on her way from New York to New Orleans when captured, the brigs
Iris and
Sarah, from Boston to New Orleans, the schooner
Argo, from Salem, and
Nancy and Mary, of Boston. On 18 November 1822,
Alligator, Lieutenant Dale, commanding, departed Matanzas for Norfolk, while escorting a convoy. Before dawn the following morning, she ran hard aground in
Hawk Channel on what is now known as
Alligator Reef off the coast of Florida. After working desperately to refloat their ship, officers and crewmen gave up on a hopeless task. On 21 November they spied a vessel, and made signals of distress. The vessel took the survivors off. On 23 November 1822, before they left, they set fire to
Alligator, which soon blew up. The wreck was initially thought to be located at , although a 1996 expedition proved this false, and the location of the
Alligator remains unknown. ==See also==