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Old 02-16-2007, 03:21 AM
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...In 1804, Lieutenant Stephen Decatur led a successful raid into Tripoli Harbor to burn the U-S Navy frigate Philadelphia, which had fallen into the hands of pirates.
Admiral Lord Nelson is said to have called this "the most bold and daring act of the age."

In 1820, Commodore James Barron challenged Decatur to a duel, relating in part to comments Decatur had made over what he considered Barron's poor conduct in the Chesapeake-Leopard Affair of 1807. Decatur had served as one of the members of the Court Martial that had found Barron guilty of unpreparedness in the affair, and had barred him from a command for the next five years.

Barron's second was Captain Jesse Elliott, known for his antagonism to Decatur. Decatur asked his supposed friend Commodore William Bainbridge to be his second, to which Bainbridge consented. However, Decatur unknowingly had selected a man who had harbored a long-standing jealousy for Decatur.

The two officers fought at Bladensburg Duelling Field in Bladensburg, Maryland (now in Colmar Manor, Maryland), on 22 March 1820. Before the duel, Barron spoke to Decatur in words of suggestive conciliation, but the seconds did nothing to halt the altercation. Decatur, an expert marksman with a pistol, intended only to wound Barron. However, Decatur was mortally wounded by a shot in the abdomen. (Decatur had likewise inflicted a severe, though not mortal, wound to Barron's hip.) As Decatur lay slowly dying in his home on Lafayette Square, he is said to have cried out, "I did not know that any man could suffer such pain!" He died childless. Though he left his widow $75,000, a considerable sum in 1820, she died penniless in 1860.

Decatur's funeral was attended by the Washington political elite, including the President and Supreme Court, as well as most of Congress. More than 10,000 citizens of Washington attended to pay respects to a national hero.
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Old 02-16-2007, 10:21 AM
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Wow an Air Force guy knowing more about Naval History then a sailor. I never know Decatur was killed in a duel.
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Old 02-18-2007, 09:17 AM
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At that time the practice of dueling was sort a "wink-wink-nudge-nudge" thing that was officially outlawed by the War Department but continued late into the 19th century as an "affair of honor". Most duel were fought over what we would consider trivial slights and insults; some with little or basis in fact, but an insulted man was "required" to save his honor. Pistols were the main weapon of choice since firing a gun at a close distance really didn't require much training while swordsmanship took years to devlop. Today if someone insults you or your family you simply ignore the asshole or take him outside and bitch-slap him. In those days it was much more serious.
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