On 13th of October 1775 the  Continental Congress in Philadelphia passed a resolution creating the Continental Navy . Today that date is celebrated as the birth of the U.S. navy.

USS Alliance Image credit: Nowland Van Powell, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The Navy was to protect American trade from blockade by the ships of the British Empire and would also make it possible to intercept ships laden with supplies for the king’s forces in North America.

Born in Kirkcudbright, Scotland, John Paul Jones, served in the Continental Navy.

American Revolutionary War hero John Paul Jones (1747-1792). Portrait drawn from life and engraved (etching) by Moreau le Jeune in 1780, completed by Jean-Baptiste Fossoyeux (burin) in 1781.

The Revolutionary War was ended by the Treaty of Paris in 1783, and by 1785 the Continental Navy was disbanded and the remaining ships were sold.

After his great success in the Continental Navy, Jones was appointed rear admiral in the Russian navy in 1788 by  Empress Catherine the Great. He served for a year and was to take up the post of U.S. Consul to Algiers but died before the commission arrived. His body was buried in Paris. Later it was  reinterred in an ornate tomb at the Naval Academy Chapel at Annapolis, Maryland, in 1913.

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