Thomas Breese
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Thomas Breese (November 4, 1793 – October 11, 1846) was an American naval officer. Best known for his service under Oliver Hazard Perry during the 1813 Battle of Lake Erie, he served in the United States Navy for another 33 years, including as a paymaster for over two decades.


Early life

Thomas Breese was born in
Newport, Rhode Island Newport is an American seaside city on Aquidneck Island in Newport County, Rhode Island. It is located in Narragansett Bay, approximately southeast of Providence, Rhode Island, Providence, south of Fall River, Massachusetts, south of Boston, ...
, on November 4, 1793, the son of a British army officer, Major John Breese (1738–1799), and Elizabeth Malbone (1755–1832). His mother was the daughter of Colonel Francis Malbone (1727–1785), one of Newport's wealthiest shipping merchants, and Margaret Saunders (1730–1775). The Malbones lived in an opulent house on Thames Street, which the Colonel had had built in 1760. The British occupied the house during the Revolutionary War. Major Breese was among the officers stationed there. He fell in love with the Malbones' daughter Elizabeth, and, returning to England after the war, resigned his commission and returned to Newport to marry her. He had obtained the position of British vice consul at Newport. The Breeses had eight children, of whom Thomas was the youngest son. When he was six, his father died. Despite the Malbones' wealth and connections, Thomas Breese was concerned during his early years to help support his mother and siblings. He first went to work at T & W Wickham Company, a New York-based shipping company. Thomas Wickham, its principal, was originally from Newport and an old friend of the Malbone family. After the Embargo of 1807 gradually bankrupted Wickham's business, Breese was forced to return to Newport. Newport was a small close-knit seagoing community, with numerous longstanding ties among its families. The Breeses and Wickhams were members of Newport's Trinity Church (Episcopal), as was the family of Breese's future mentor and patron, Oliver Hazard Perry. Both Breese and Perry were baptized at Trinity as young boys. Their lifelong connection was characteristic of the clannishness that was a feature of the early naval service.


Naval career

Breese's longing for a life at sea led him to ask Perry for an appointment as his personal clerk. Perry was in command of a flotilla of ships at Newport RI when the
War of 1812 The War of 1812 (18 June 1812 – 17 February 1815) was fought by the United States of America and its indigenous allies against the United Kingdom and its allies in British North America, with limited participation by Spain in Florida. It bega ...
began. Early in 1813, Perry received orders to go to the Great Lakes. Almost 150 sailors from the Newport area, including Thomas Breese, were sent there with him. The sailors made the arduous trip to Presque Isle, Pennsylvania, on the shore of Lake Erie, in February and March 1813. From March through August of that year, Breese served as Perry's clerk during the time required to build the Lake Erie fleet and prepare it for battle. Breese's signature appears on letters he wrote for Perry, indicating his knowledge of Perry's leadership and management of the endeavor. Perry appointed Breese the fleet's chaplain, which gave him a higher salary and a berth with the officers on board ship. During the ensuing naval battle with the British, Breese served as the commander's aide, along with Perry's younger brother, James Alexander Perry. During the combat, Bresse was assigned to Perry's flagship, the . The Battle of Lake Erie, sometimes called the Battle of Put-in-Bay, was fought on 10 September 1813. Thomas assisted in firing the last operational gun on the ''Lawrence'' before it went down. Breese was also likely one of the officers who rowed the longboat that carried Perry roughly half-mile (0.8 km), when the sinking of the ''Lawrence'' forced him to transfer his command to the . Many paintings show the other aide, James Alexander Perry, in the boat too. After the battle, Breese, as chaplain, was responsible for conducting the services for those who had died. Using the rites of the Episcopal Book of Common Prayer, he presided over the September 11 burial of common seamen in Lake Erie. The following day, September 12, the American and British officers were buried together at
Put-in-Bay Put-in-Bay is a village located on South Bass Island in Put-in-Bay Township, Ottawa County, Ohio, United States, east of Toledo. The population was 154 at the 2020 census. The village is a popular summer resort and recreational destinati ...
. (Breese was listed as a chaplain in the ship's record, but he served as both chaplain and clerk, which was an official rating of the United States Navy beginning in 1794. Clerks for commanders of naval vessels were termed the captain's clerk.) Breese received a share of the prize money allotted to the crew; he directed that the money (which amounted to over $1200) be sent to his mother in Newport. Along with other officers, he was also given a medal and a sword for his role. Breese was subsequently promoted to the rank of purser, thanks to the efforts of Commodore Perry, who sought promotions for all of his crew. To become a purser required serving at least one year as a captain's clerk, helping with the captain's correspondence and records. Between his time with Perry at Newport and the nine months on Lake Erie, Breese had fulfilled this requirement. The purser had charge of the stores and accounts on board ship. Breese was stationed at Boston when his new commission became effective on July 8, 1815. During the
Second Barbary War The Second Barbary War (1815) or the U.S.–Algerian War was fought between the United States and the North African Barbary Coast states of Tripoli, Tunis, and Algiers. The war ended when the United States Senate ratified Commodore Stephen De ...
, Breese served in the Mediterranean under Perry on the frigate . After the conclusion of that war and until 1825, Breese served mainly aboard the . In Newport on May 25, 1825, Thomas Breese married Lucy Marie Randolph, daughter of Richard K. Randolph. Randolph was a nephew of future president
William Henry Harrison William Henry Harrison (February 9, 1773April 4, 1841) was an American military officer and politician who served as the ninth president of the United States. Harrison died just 31 days after his inauguration in 1841, and had the shortest pres ...
. Among the Breeses' children was
Kidder Breese Captain Kidder Randolph Breese USN (14 April 1831 – 13 September 1881) was an officer in the United States Navy during the Mexican–American War and the American Civil War. Early life and career Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Breese was ap ...
, who also became a respected naval officer. In 1825, Breese was appointed navy paymaster in Newport, a post he held to the end of his career. A drinking song, "Here's a health to thee, Tom Breese," written in 1830 and dedicated to him, became popular among sailors. Thomas Breese died October 11, 1846, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He is buried in
Island Cemetery The Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery are a pair of separate cemeteries on Farewell and Warner Street in Newport, Rhode Island. Together they contain over 5,000 graves, including a colonial-era slave cemetery and Jewish graves. The pair ...
in Newport.


Naval assignments

Thomas Breese Naval Assignmentsas noted in th
American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive, of the Congress of the United States (ASP)
/ref> * 1812 – Newport frigate ''Revenge'' – Clerk to O. H. Perry * 1813 – Battle of Lake Erie – Captain's Clerk / Chaplain / Captain's Aid during Battle * 1814–1817 Frigate – Captain's Clerk to O. H. Perry * 1918 – Frigate ''Congress'' – Purser (p 461 ASP) * 1919 – Frigate ''Constitution'' – Purser (pg 594 ASP) * 1820 – Not on duty – Purser (pg 633 ASP) * 1821–1823 Frigate ''Constitution'' – Purser (pg 703, 751, 858 ASP) * 1824 – Frigate ''Constitution'' – Purser – ship stationed in Mediterranean (pg 922 ASP) * 1825 – Frigate ''Constitution'' – Purser – on leave of absence (pg 925 ASP) * 1825–1846 Newport Torpedo Station – Purser – Paymaster


General references

* *Altoff, Gerard T. (1988)

''Leatherneck: Magazine of the Marines 71:11'' (November). * * *
Mahan, Alfred Thayer Alfred Thayer Mahan (; September 27, 1840 – December 1, 1914) was a United States naval officer and historian, whom John Keegan called "the most important American strategist of the nineteenth century." His book '' The Influence of Sea Power ...
(1905
Power in Its Relation to the War of 1812'' (2 vols.)
(Boston:
Little Brown Little, Brown and Company is an American publishing company founded in 1837 by Charles Coffin Little and James Brown in Boston. For close to two centuries it has published fiction and nonfiction by American authors. Early lists featured Emily D ...
) American Library Association. * *
New England Historical & Genealogical Register
' vol 17(1863): 21–3; contains a verbatim excerpt on Breese/Breeze from Parsons' ''Brief Sketches'' cited below. *Niles, John M (1821)
''The Life of Oliver Hazard Perry''.
2d ed. Hartford: O. D. Cooke. (public domain)
Parsons, Usher (1862). ''Brief Sketches of the Officers Who Were In The Battle Of Lake Erie''
Albany NY: J. Munsell. Note: Parsons uses a contemporary alternate spelling of Breese's name, referring to him throughout as Thomas Breeze. *
Skaggs, David Curtis. (October 2006) ''Oliver Hazard Perry: honor, courage, and patriotism in the early U.S. Navy.''
Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ; . *Skaggs, David Curtis, and Gerard T. Altoff (1997)
''A Signal Victory: The Lake Erie Campaign, 1812–1813''
(Naval Institute Press), winner
John Lyman Book Awards The John Lyman Book Awards are given annually by the North American Society for Oceanic History to recognise excellence in published books making a major contribution to the study and understanding of maritime and naval history. They are named aft ...
. .


References

*"Niagara." Pamphlet published by the Flagship Niagara, Erie, Pennsylvania. 1990 *''The Building of Perry's Fleet on Lake Erie: 1812–1813.'' By M. Rosenberg. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission,1997 *History of the battle of Lake Erie (September 10, 1813,) and reminiscences of the flagship "Lawrence," by Capt. W. W. Dobbins *''Serving Two Masters: The Development of American Military Chaplaincy, 1860–1920.'' By Richard M. Budd (University of Nebraska Press, 2002) *''The Life of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry'', Volume 1. By Alexander Slidell Mackenzie. *''The Military Surgeon: Journal of the Association of Military'' Volume 51 by Usher Parsons *Cooper, James Fenimore,
History of the Navy
' (1839). *Letter from Thomas Breese to his Mother dated September 12, 1812. (Breese descendants' private collection)


External links







* ttp://www.ohiohistory.org/onlinedoc/war1812/lake_erie Ohio History - The War of 1812
Navy Pursers In the War of 1812
{{DEFAULTSORT:Breese, Thomas 1773 births 1846 deaths Military personnel from Newport, Rhode Island People of colonial Rhode Island United States Navy officers History of the United States Navy People from Rhode Island in the War of 1812