Today in History: ‘I Have Not Yet Begun to Fight’
It was Sept. 23, 1779. The American ship, named in honor of Founding Father Benjamin Franklin, was burning and locked in mortal combat with the superior British ship. The British captain hailed the Americans, expecting a surrender; instead, the defiant words came back, “I have not yet begun to fight.”
The words were uttered by John Paul Jones, a precocious and talented Scottish-born American seaman, who was sent as a naval commander by the American Revolutionaries to European waters to harass and harry the British. In the process, the “father of the American Navy” won a famous victory against the British and uttered one of the most immortal phrases in US military history.
The year was 1779, and Jones was captain of the 42-gun Bonhomme Richard (a former merchant ship the French gifted to the Americans). Jones chose the name as a reference to the book Poor Richard’s Almanac (or Les Maximes du Bonhomme Richard in French) by Jones’s friend Franklin. Leading a five-ship squadron in his Bonhomme Richard, Jones sailed around Scotland and England.
Below is an eyewitness account of the famed Battle of Flamborough Head:
On the 23d of September, 1779, being below, I was roused by an unusual noise upon deck. This induced me to go upon deck, when I found the men were swaying up the royal yards, preparatory to making sail for a large fleet under our lee. I asked the coasting pilot what fleet it was. He answered:
'The Baltic fleet, under convoy of the Serapis of forty-four guns, and the Countess of Scarborough of twenty guns.'
A general chase then commenced of the Bonhomme Richard, the Venseance, the Pallas, and the Alliance[American ships in Jones's squadron]…At about eight, being within hail, the Serapis demanded:
"What ship is that?"
He was answered: "I can't hear what you say." Immediately after the Serapis hailed again:
At this moment I received orders from Commodore Jones to commmence the action with a broadside, which indeed appeared to be simultaneous on board both ships. Our position being to windward of the Serapis, we passed ahead of her, and the Serapiscoming up on our larboard quarter, the action commenced abreast of each other. The Serapis soon passed ahead of the Bonhomme Richard, and when he thought he had gained a distance sufficient to go down athwart the fore foot to rake us, found he had not enough distance . . . and the Bonhomme Richard, having headway, ran her bows into the stern of the Serapis. We had remained in this situation but a few minutes when we were again hailed by the Serapis:
"Has your ship struck?"
To which Captain Jones answered: "I have not yet begun to fight."
As we were unable to bring a single gun to bear upon the Serapis, our topsails were backed, while those of the Serapis being filled, the ships separated. The Serapis bore short round upon her heel, and her jib boom ran into the mizen rigging of the Bonhomme Richard. In this situation the ships were made fast together with a hawser, the bowsprit of the Serapis to the mizenmast of the Bonhomme Richard, and the action recommenced from the starboard sides of the two ships .... A novelty in naval combats was now presented to many witnesses, but to few admirers. . . .
From the commencement to the termination of the action, there was not a man on board the Bonhomme Richard ignorant of the superiority of the Serapis, both in weight of metal, and in the qualities of the crews. The crew of that ship was picked seamen, and the ship itself had been only a few months off the stocks; whereas the crew of the Bonhomme Richard consisted of part American, English, and French, and a part of Maltese, Portuguese, and Malays, these latter contributing, by their want of naval skill and knowledge of the English language, to depress rather than elevate the first hope of success in a combat under such circumstances.
It appears this eyewitness was premature and perhaps somewhat prejudiced in his assessment, since this crew with their “want of naval skill” would ultimately be the victors in the combat. The eyewitness did, however, give full credit to the courage of all the men who contributed to the Americans’ success.
That success was particularly impressive, considering not only the early misfortune of the Americans, but also the superior fittings and force of the British ship. The eyewitness stated:
Neither the consideration of the relative force of the ships, the fact of the blowing up of the gundeck above them by the bursting of two of the eighteen pounders, nor the alarm that the ship was sinking, could depress the ardor or change the determination of the brave Captain Jones, his officers and men. Neither the repeated broadsides of the Alliance, given with a view of sinking or disabling the Bonhomme Richard, the frequent necessity of suspending the combat to extinguish the flames, which several times were within a few inches of the magazine, nor the liberation by the master-at-arms of nearly five hundred prisoners, could change or weaken the purpose of the American commander. At the moment of the liberation of the prisoners, one of them, a commander of a twenty-gun ship taken a few days before, passed through the ports on board the Serapis, and informed Captain Pearson that if he would hold out only a little while longer, the ship alongside would either strike or sink, and that all the prisoners had been released to save their lives. The combat was accordingly continued with renewed ardor by the Serapis.
But the Americans were not deterred, and soon proved that their skill in raining fire down on the enemy was too much for the British to hold out against.
The fire from the tops of the Bonhomme Richard was conducted with so much skill and effect as to destroy ultimately every man who appeared upon the quarter-deck of the Serapis, and induced her commander to order the survivors to go below. Nor even under shelter of the decks were they more secure. The powder-monkeys of the Serapis, finding no officer to receive the eighteen-pound cartridges brought from the magazines, threw them on the main deck, and went for more. These cartridges being scattered along the deck, and numbers of them broken, it so happened that some of the hand grenades thrown from the main-yard of the Bonhomme Richard, which was directly over the main hatch of the Serapis, fell upon this powder, and produced a most awful explosion. The effect was tremendous. More than twenty of the enemy were blown to pieces, and many stood with only the collars of their shirts upon their bodies. In less than an hour afterward the flag of England, which had been nailed to the mast of the Serapis, was struck by Captain Pearson's own hands, as none of his people would venture aloft on this duty; and this, too, when more than 1,500 persons were witnessing the conflict, and the humiliating termination of it, from Scarborough and Flamborough Head.
Humiliating for the British, but a moment of immense pride for the Americans. The fledgling American Navy had a great victory against the British, against serious odds, due to the courage and determination of Captain John Paul Jones and his motley crew. Jones stared defeat and disaster in the face, and declared he had not yet begun to fight. But when he did fight, the echoes of his determination and heroism were heard around the world, and sound even in our own day.