Action of 1 January 1800

Action of 1 January 1800
Part of the Quasi-War and the War of Knives
Experiment fights off several Haitian barges with her convoy and the island of Gonâve in the background
An illustration of the engagement between Experiment and several Haitian barges.
William Bainbridge Hoff, 1875
Date1 January 1800
Location19°00′N 73°30′W / 19°N 73.5°W / 19; -73.5
Result American victory
Belligerents
 United States  France
Commanders and leaders
William Maley
David Porter
French First Republic André Rigaud
Strength
1 schooner
4 merchant ships
14 barges[1]
Casualties and losses
2 merchant ships captured
1 killed
1 wounded
3 barges sunk
Many killed[1]
Civilian casualties: 1 wounded

The action of 1 January 1800 was a naval battle of the Quasi-War that took place off the coast of present-day Haiti, near the island of Gonâve in the Bight of Léogâne. The battle was fought between an American convoy of four merchant vessels escorted by the United States naval schooner USS Experiment, and a squadron of fourteen armed barges manned by Haitian sailors.

A French-aligned Haitian general, André Rigaud, had instructed his forces to attack all foreign shipping within their range of operations. Accordingly, once Experiment and her convoy of merchant ships neared Gonâve, the barges attacked them, capturing two of the American merchant ships before withdrawing. Experiment managed to save the other two ships in her convoy, and escorted them to a friendly port. On the American side, only the captain of the schooner Mary was killed. Though the Haitians took heavy losses during this engagement, they remained strong enough to continue wreaking havoc among American shipping in the region. Only after Rigaud was forced out of power by the forces of Toussaint L'Ouverture, leader of the Haitian Revolution, did Haitian attacks on foreign merchantmen cease.

  1. ^ a b Williams 2009, p. 111.