JOSHUA BARNEY
'Joshua Barney' (6 July 1759 - 1 December 1818) was a commodore in the United States Navy who served in the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812.
Barney was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He served with distinction on the ''Hornet'' and ''Wasp'' during the Revolutionary War. He was offered one of the initial captaincies in the newly formed U.S. Navy, but turned it down because of a perceived slight.
At the outbreak of the War of 1812, after a successful but unprofitable privateering cruise as commander of the Baltimore schooner "Rossie", Barney reentered the Navy as a captain, and commanded the Chesapeake Bay Flotilla, a fleet of gunboats defending Chesapeake Bay. At the Battle of Bladensburg, Barney and his sailors, acting as artillerymen, made a heroic defense of the national capital. Barney was severely wounded, receiving a bullet deep in his thigh that could never be removed.
A replica of one of his gunboats today sits in a waterside park in Bladensburg.
With Gen. John Stricker of the Maryland Militia, Barney was responsible for the creation of the flag that flew over Fort McHenry that inspired Francis Scott Key to write "The Star Spangled Banner." The flag itself was sewn by Mrs. Mary Young Pickersgill of Baltimore.
Commodore Barney died at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on December 1, 1818, from a fever related to the wound he received at the Battle of Bladensburg.
Three ships, USS ''Barney'', were named for him, as well as ''Commodore Barney''.
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| See Also |
| External links |
See Also
★ Solomons Island, Maryland
External links
★ Biography at navy.mil
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