The Oakland Press

Papers shed light on early years of ‘Old Ironsides,’ Navy

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The U. S. S. Constituti­on Museum has acquired more than 150 documents, including correspond­ence from President George Washington’s secretary of war and the leader of the Haitian Revolution, that shed light on the warship’s early years and the young United States’ first internatio­nal conflict.

The collection acquired at auction had been in private hands for more than 225 years and will be unveiled during a Facebook Live celebratio­n of the ship’s 223rd birthdayWe­dnesday.

It is the largest acquisitio­n the Boston-basedU.S.S. Constituti­on Museum has made in nearly a decade.

“I have been looking for collection­s for thismuseum for over 30 years and have never seen anything like it,” museum President and CEO Anne Grimes Rand said in a statement. “The U. S. S.

Constituti­onMuseumis actively pursuing its mission in tough times by acquiring these documents that shed light on previously unknown aspects of the constructi­on, outfitting, and first movements of U.S.S.

Constituti­on.”

The cost of the documents was not disclosed, but they were paid for by a group of museum supporters known as the Commodores, she said.

“We rallied them and we were able to bid aggressive­ly and we landed the collection,” she said.

The museum is the nonprofit that preserves the history of the ship known as Old Ironsides, which is still an active- duty U.S. Navy vessel berthed in the city’s Charlestow­n neighborho­od.

The U.S.S Constituti­on is the world’s oldest commission­ed warship afloat. It was undefeated in battle and earned its nickname during the War of 1812, when British cannonball­s bounced off its wooden hull.

The papers cover several topics, including the constructi­on of the U.S. Navy’s first six frigates, which include the Constituti­on, and strategic plans for the undeclared Quasi-War with France from 1798 until 1800.

 ?? USS CONSTITUTI­ON MUSEUM VIA AP ?? A document of private signals used between the U.S. Navy and the Navy of Great Britain.
USS CONSTITUTI­ON MUSEUM VIA AP A document of private signals used between the U.S. Navy and the Navy of Great Britain.

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