T.A. Jameson
Provenance
Collection of Lord Berners, Faringdon House, Oxfordshire.
We believe Jameson to be a naval officer who was commissioned to paint a work of the famous capture of the Chesapeake.
During the Anglo-American War of 1812-14, the event which captured the public’s imagination more than any other was the celebrated duel between the Royal Navy's frigate HMS Shannon and the new republic's frigate Chesapeake.
Cruising off the eastern seaboard, Captain Philip Broke of the Shannon spotted the American frigates Chesapeake and Constitution refitting in Boston. Broke immediately challenged Captain Lawrence of the Chesapeake to come out and fight and, at about noon on 1st June 1813, the latter weighed anchor and stood out of Boston Roads accompanied by a small flotilla of pleasure craft crowded with spectators anxious to witness the fight. A furious action followed lasting a mere fifteen minutes and casualties on both vessels were very high. Soon overwhelmed, Chesapeake surrendered and Shannon took her as a prize into Halifax, Nova Scotia, where the captors were given a hero's welcome on 6th June.