On the thirteenth of December, 1775, several frigates, were authorized, the annexed figures indicating their rate, by guns:

Alliance (32), twice identified with Lafayette (pp. [253], 361), and sold after the war.
Andrea Doria (32), burned in the Delaware to prevent capture1777
Boston (28), captured at Charleston1780
[[8]]Congress, burned in the Hudson, to prevent capture1777
Delaware (24), captured by the British, in the Delaware1777
Effingham (28), destroyed by the British, in the Delaware1777
Hancock (32), taken by British ships Rainbow (44) and Victor (16)1777
[[8]]Montgomery (24), burned in the Hudson to prevent capture1777
Providence (28), captured at Charleston1780
Queen of France (18), captured at Charleston1780
Raleigh (32), captured by the British ships Experiment (50) and Unicorn (16)1777
Randolph (32), blown up in action with the Yarmouth (64)1778
The Confederacy (32), taken by a British ship-of-the-line, off the Virginia coast1781
Trumbull (28), taken by British fleet, near Cape Henry1778
Virginia (28), taken by British fleet, near Cape Henry,1778
Warren (32), burned in the Penobscot, by the Americans1779
Washington (32), destroyed by the British, in the Delaware1778

[8]. Never went to sea.

Note.—John Paul, who took the name of John Paul Jones through gratitude to a citizen of North Carolina who assisted him in securing a naval commission (noticed on page [60] of the text), distinguished himself upon the British coast, and in his capture of the British ship Serapis, Sept. 23, 1779. His own ship, the Bon Homme Richard, was fitted out in France, by the aid of Benjamin Franklin, to war against British commerce. Franklin, in the issue of his “Almanack,” with shrewd business and moral maxims at the bottoms of the pages, used the nom-de-plume, “Poor Richard.” It was graceful in John Paul to name the ship Richard, in Franklin’s honor, with a complimentary prefix.

Of the later navy, that of 1812, the Brandywine (44), named after the battle of that name, was placed at the service of Lafayette when he visited America in 1825. (See note at end of Chapter XVIII., concerning Lafayette as first appearing in that battle.)

APPENDIX C.
COMPARISONS WITH LATER WARS.

The analogies between the Revolutionary War and later American wars are noticed in the Preface. Some special points should be noted for further comparisons.

The field casualties, including killed and wounded, in twenty-six of the principal engagements of the Revolution, do not greatly exceed 9,000; but other causes kept the army upon a very unsatisfactory basis in respect of numbers as well as efficiency.

Operations in Canada, early in the war, irrespective of the expeditions of Montgomery and Arnold, cost, through a visitation of small-pox, 5,000 lives in sixty days. (Page [88].)

At the April muster of the army in 1776, only 8,303, out of a total of 10,235, were fit for duty. (Page [87].)