PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Abraham Whipple
rdfs:comment
  • Abraham Whipple (September 26, 1733 – May 27, 1819) was an American revolutionary commander in the Continental Navy. Whipple was born near Providence, Rhode Island and chose to be a seafarer early in his life. He embarked on a career in the lucrative West Indies trade, working for Moses and John Brown. In the French and Indian War period, he became a privateersman and commanded privateer Game Cock from 1759 to 1760. In one six-month cruise, he captured 23 French ships.
owl:sameAs
Office
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
serviceyears
  • 1775
term start
  • 1775-06-15
appointer
  • Continental Congress
Birth Date
  • 1733-09-26
Branch
death place
  • Marietta, Ohio
Name
  • Abraham Whipple
Caption
  • Abraham Whipple, by Edward Savage
placeofburial label
  • Place of burial
Birth Place
  • Providence, Rhode Island
term end
  • 1780-05-12
death date
  • 1819-05-27
Rank
  • 30
Battles
Relations
laterwork
placeofburial
Predecessor
  • New office
abstract
  • Abraham Whipple (September 26, 1733 – May 27, 1819) was an American revolutionary commander in the Continental Navy. Whipple was born near Providence, Rhode Island and chose to be a seafarer early in his life. He embarked on a career in the lucrative West Indies trade, working for Moses and John Brown. In the French and Indian War period, he became a privateersman and commanded privateer Game Cock from 1759 to 1760. In one six-month cruise, he captured 23 French ships. He sank the first British ship of the American Revolution, the British schooner HMS Gaspée, in the 1772 Gaspée Affair. The first to unfurl the Star Spangled Banner in London, Whipple was also the first to sail an ocean-going ship 2000 miles downriver from Ohio to the Caribbean, which opened trade with the Northwest Territory.
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