USS Queen of France
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USS Queen of France


Operator
United States Navy
Vessel Type
ship

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The USS Queen of France was a 28-gun frigate serving in the Continental Navy during the American Revolutionary War. Originally purchased in France in 1777 by American commissioners Benjamin Franklin and Silas Deane, the vessel was fitted out as a frigate and was in Boston Harbor by December 1778. Her design and armament made her a formidable presence on the Atlantic coast. Constructed for combat and patrol duties, Queen of France participated in various naval operations along the American coast. Under the command of Captain Joseph Olney, she departed Boston on March 13, 1779, as part of a squadron led by Captain John Burroughs Hopkins. During this cruise, she cruised as far south as Charleston, South Carolina, targeting small armed vessels operating out of New York. Notably, on April 6, near Cape Henry, Virginia, she captured the schooner Hibernia, a 10-gun privateer. The following morning, Queen of France and her squadron engaged and captured a fleet of nine vessels, including the 20-gun ship Jason, the provision-laden schooner Meriah, and several brigs and schooners. Queen of France returned to Boston on April 20 with her prizes, including Maria, Hibernia, and three other vessels. While in Boston, command shifted to Captain John Rathbun. Under his leadership, Queen of France continued her operations, including an audacious attack near the Grand Banks of Newfoundland in July 1779. In dense fog, she and her accompanying ships tricked a British convoy by pretending to be British frigates, then boarding and capturing two West Indiamen. Over the course of this operation, they captured nine additional British vessels, with eight reaching Boston with the squadron and later sold for over a million dollars—an impressive haul for the young American navy. Queen of France's service included cruising off Bermuda, where she captured the privateer Dolphin on December 5, 1779. Her active career ended when she was scuttled at Charleston on May 11, 1780, to prevent her capture following the city’s surrender during the British occupation. Her operational history highlights her as a key vessel in the early naval efforts of the United States against British maritime forces.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

27 ship citations (2 free) in 10 resources

Queen of France (1777) Subscribe to view
Queen of France (Continental Navy) Subscribe to view
Queen of France (United States): Taken at Charleston Subscribe to view
Queen of France, 1777
Book The History of the American Sailing Navy: The Ships and Their Development
Author Howard I. Chapelle
Published W.W. Norton & Co., New York,
ISBN 1568522223
Pages 95, 96
Queen of France, American fifth rate frigate (1777) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental frigate
Book American Ships of the Colonial and Revolutionary Periods
Author John F. Millar
Published W.W. Norton & Co., New York,
ISBN 0393032221, 9780393032222
Pages 223, 225, 234, 235, 287
Queen of France, Continental frigate: historical references Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune] (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: armament of (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: arrival of, at Boston (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: arrival of, at Cape Ann (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: arrival of, in United States (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: as cruiser (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: cargo of (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: departure of, from France (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: feared captured (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: formerly Brune (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: French naval escort for (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: French officers serving aboard (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: French seamen aboard (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: in convoy (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: mission of (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: on crew of (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: purchase of (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: sailing qualities of (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view
Queen of France, Continental Navy frigate [formerly Brune]: situation of (Capt. John Green) Subscribe to view