GASPEE HISTORY
Joseph Bucklin Society.  A National History Center for the Gaspee Affair of 1772 and the Bucklin Family 1600-1899.


Home Page

In This Section

Page Up
GASPEE ATTACK
Law as Weapon
GASPEE RAIDERS
First Shot
Persons Involved
Witnesses Said
Post Gaspee Events
Forensic History

Buy books from Our JBS Bookstore

Now -- Bucklin logo!
Our caps, mugs,
T-shirts, clothing,
 & gifts you can buy.

Receive free newsletter about History & Bucklins.

(If you did not receive a newsletter in the last six months or so ---  it means the email address you gave us is no longer valid. If you want to again be on the list to receive our newsletter, you must opt-in again by using the above link to "Receive newsletter")

Not a Member, but want to support efforts to maintain American history knowledge? You do not have to be a Bucklin to join the Society.

The Gaspee Affair

Attack of the Gaspee as the start of the American Revolution
In the American Revolution ---- the American attack and capture of the English Navy ship Gaspee was the
first deliberate attack against the English.

The English Attorney General and Solicitor General called the capture and burning of the His Majesty's ship Gaspee--- "treason" and an  "act of war".  It was both.  Joseph Bucklin's shooting of the English naval ship captain was part of that act of war.

It was after midnight on June 10, 1772.   There was no useful moonlight and dark cloaked the Narragansett Bay, where the Gaspee, an English Navy schooner, had run aground on Namquid Point. Still, Joseph Bucklin could see the vessel's commander on the starboard gunwale, swinging his sword and preventing the attackers from boarding the Gaspee.

"Ephe," Bucklin said to his friend Ephraim Bowen, "reach me your gun, and I can kill that fellow."

Bucklin fired. The English ship commander, Lt. Dudingston, fell, with a terrible wound in his groin. The colonists boarded the schooner, and took its crew prisoner. Joseph Mawney, a doctor among the raiders, together with Bucklin, tended to Dudingston's wounds, saving his life. The raiders with their prisoners rowed away, leaving one longboat for the leaders of the American raiders.  The leaders carefully set the English Navy vessel on fire, before themselves leaving, just as dawn came.

The English Attorney General gave King George the legal opinion that this Gaspee raid, and the shot by Joseph Bucklin, was the first Act of War in the American colonies.

The English King proclaimed a £1000  reward in the American colonies for information leading to Joseph's arrest for treason.  Yet Rhode Island protected him and the Bucklin family.  

Our research and education effort on the Gaspee Affair area of the Joseph Bucklin Society research and education effort  is extensive.  On this website alone, we have over 100 pages of information.  Moreover, for more -  and growing every month - take a look at our Gaspee.Info site.   The greatest amount of information is found in this Gaspee. Info, a separate website that we maintain, devoted solely to the history of the 1772 Gaspee attack, plus an exclusive biographical list of the Gaspee Raiders, the men in the boats that captured and destroyed the Gaspee.

  At our "Gaspee Info" site, read about such items as:

bulletSummary of the capture and burning of the Gaspee
bulletThree American eye-witness accounts of the raid. 
bullet List, and descriptions, of participants in the Gaspee Attack
bulletThe colonists use of law and the courts as a weapon against the English navy
bulletIn depth historical research about the event.
bulletThe geography, tides, and moonlight of the attack.
bulletResearch and analysis of what Joseph Brown was going to use to justify the attack.
bulletInformation about Joseph Bucklin 4th, sea captain, and prominent merchant
bulletBiographical information on Joseph Bucklin 5th, the 19 year old man who fired the critical musket shot of the attack.


Gaspee History Edition: 11.02.2001 07:16:07 -0500

                                            GASPEE HISTORY AMERICAN HISTORY BUCKLIN HISTORY THE SOCIETY 

          © 1998 to 26-08-2008 Leonard Bucklin ©     See Copyright Information.  Warnings.  Disclaimers
Privacy Policies of the Society