liver Hazard Perry (1785-1819), American
naval officer, born on Aug. 23, 1785, at South Kingston, R. I. He
served in the Tripolitan War, first on the frigate Adams (1802-3)
and afterwards, as a lieutenant, on the Constellation (1804-5);
and in 1807-10 he commanded a flotilla of seventeen gunboats on
the Newport Station. Soon after the outbreak of the War of 1812
he was again placed in command of a flotilla of gunboats and in
March, 1813, having been raised to the rank of captain, he was
made master-commandant, and was ordered to superintend, under the
direction of Com. Chauncy, the constructing and equipping of a
fleet for service on Lake Erie. The squadron was ready for
service by July 10 but the lack of men long kept Perry in the
harbor and he did not set sail from Erie until Aug. 12.
On Sept. 10, in the famous battle of
Lake Erie, fought off Put-in-Bay, he defeated the inferior
British squadron under Capt. Robert H. Barclay. During this
battle Perry displayed seamanship of a high order and great
personal bravery. Immediately after the battle Perry sent to Gen.
W. H. Harrison the famous message, We have met the enemy
and they are ours; two ships, two brigs, one schooner, and one
sloop. Perrys victory on Lake Erie aroused the
greatest enthusiasm throughout the United States. After the war
Perry was again placed in command of the Newport Station, and in
1816-17, as commander of the Java, served under Decatur in the
Mediterranean against the Algerine and Tripolitan pirates. In
1819 Perry, in command of several vessels, proceeded to the West
Indian waters to protect American commerce, and on his birthday,
Aug. 23, died of yellow fever near Trinidad. [The Home University
Encyclopedia, 1946]