USS Constitution
A 44-gun frigate built at the Edmond Hartt Shipyard, Boston, MA, in 1797. Her
dimensions are 53,34×13,26×6,0 (d) meters [175'0×43'6"×16'7"] and with a displacement of 2000 tons.
- 1794-1797
- Under construction at Edmond Hartt's Shipyard, Boston
- 1798
- Congress votes March 27 to fit her out for sea.
- 1798-1801
- Cruising in West Indies.
- 1801-1803
- Laid up in New York.
- 1803-1806
- Flagship, Mediterranean squadron, Tripolitan war.
- 1806-1810
- Cruising in Medterranean and West Indies.
- 1811-1812
- Cruise to Europe. Repairs at Washington Navy Yard.
- 1812-1815
- War with Great Britain.
- 1812 July 17
- Escapes from squadron of seven British ships.
- August 18, captures the British frigate Guerriere.
- December 29, captures the British frigate Java and five smaller vessels.
- 1813
- Overhaul at U.S. Navy Yard, Boston.
- 1814 February-April
- Captures the Picton and three smaller vessels.
- Escapes into Marblehead from two larger British frigates.
- Blockaded at Boston for eight months.
- 1815 February 20
- Captured the British sloops [brigs?]
Cyane and Levant.
- 1815-1821
- Laid up at the U.S. Navy Yard, Boston. Repaird.
- 1821-1828
- Flagship, Mediterranean squadron.
- 1828-1830
- Laid up at Boston. Condemned by the naval commissioners.
Saved by poem by Oliver Wendell Holmes.
- 1833-1834
- First ship to enter new dry dock at Boston, June 24, 1833. Repaired.
Difficulty over figurehead representing Andrew Jackson.
- 1835-1838
- Flagship, Mediterranean squadron.
- 1839-1841
- Flagship, Pacific squadron.
- 1842-1843
- Flagship, Atlantic squadron.
- 1844-1846
- Cruise to East Indies, Pacific Ocean and Coast of Brasil.
- 1848-1851
- Flagship, Mediterranean and African squadron; visited by Pope Pius IX.
- 1851-1852
- Laid up at New York.
- 1852-1855
- Flagship, Mediterranean squadron, for the last time.
- 1855-1860
- Laid up at the U.S. Navy Yard, Portsmouth, N.H., until
reconditioned as a school ship.
- 1860-1871
- School ship for midshipmen at Annapolis, MD, (and Newport,
R.I., during Civil War).
- 1871-1875
- Hauled out and rebuilt at U.S. Navy Yard, Philadelphia.
- 1876-1878
- Training Ship at Philadelphia yard.
- 1878-1879
- Last cruise in foreign waters. Carried the United States exhibits for Paris Exposition to Havre, France.
Ran aground at Swanage Point, England. Re-floated with the aid of the British Navy.
- 1879 May 24
- Arrived home in New York.
- 1879-1881
- Training ship for apprentice boys.
- 1882-1897
- Laid up at the U.S. Navy Yard, Portsmouth, N.H.,
serving part of the time as receiving ship.
- 1897 October 21
- Arrived at the Navy Yard, Boston, for celebration of
her 100th birthday.
- 1897-1900
- Permanently on exhibition at the U.S. Navy Yard, Boston.
- 1900 Februari 14
- Repairs authorized by Congress. Money to be
donated, but the response was only a few hundred dollars.
- 1905
- Navy recommends using the decaying hull for target practice.
Popular sentiment aroused to prevent this.
- 1906
- Congress votes $100.000 for repairs and restoration.
- 1907-1908
- Topsides restored. New spars, etc., but vessel not docked.
- 1909-1925
- On exhibition at the U.S. Navy Yard, Boston.
- 1925 March 4
- Congress authorized restoration, money to be raised
by popular subscription.
- 1925-1927
- Campaign for funds. For the first time a complete set
of plans of the ship are commenced.
- 1927 June 16
- Docked for complete reconstruction in the same dock
she was the first to enter, June 24, 1833. During the extensive 1927-1930
restoration all of the framing from the third futtocks and upwards were
replaced, as well as some fir
st and second futtocks. Since 1930, laminated white oak has been used to replace
the original live oak timbering.
- 1992 September 25
- Drydocked at the Old Navy Yard in Boston for a
major repair that is planned to be completed in 1997.
- 1995 September 26
- To be floated out of the drydock.
The oldest commissioned vessel in the US Navy.
Presently serving as a museum ship at the Charleston Navy Yard, Boston, MA.
Pictures:
-
Constitution, 1798. 44-gun frigate. Starboard bow, under sail.
Painting by Marshall Johnson, n.d. 19-N-13770.
-
Constitution. Sail plan. Artwork, n.d. 19-N-9982.
-
Constitution. Meeting with the Guerriere, 1812. Artwork by Thomas
Birch, n.d. 19-N-11845.
-
Constitution. Port beam, at sea. Photograph, 1931. 19-A-5A-383.
Select Bibliography:
- Cooper, James Fennimore: Old Ironsides.
Putnam's Monthly. A Magazine of Literature, Science, and Art, Vol. 1 (1853), pp 473-487, 593-607.
- Gillmer, Thomas C.: Old Ironsides, the Rise, Decline, and Resurrection of
the USS Constitution.
International Marine, Camden, ME, 1993.
- Magoun, F. Alexander: The Frigate Constitution and other Historic
Ships, 1927.
- Martin, Tyrone G.: A Most Fortunate Ship, Chester, CT, 1980.
- Otton, Patrick: USS Constitution Documentation.
Third International Conference on the Technical Aspects of the Preservation of Historic Vessels, San Francisco, CA, 1997.
- Otton, Patrick: USS Constitution Rehabilitation And Restoration.
Third International Conference on the Technical Aspects of the Preservation of Historic Vessels, San Francisco, CA, 1997.
- Ross, Robert J. & McDonald, Kent A. & Soltis, Lawrence A.: NDE of historic structures - USS Constitution.
Third International Conference on the Technical Aspects of the Preservation of Historic Vessels, San Francisco, CA, 1997.
Links
Updated 1999-05-05 by
Lars Bruzelius
Sjöhistoriska Samfundet |
The Maritime History Virtual Archives |
Ships.