Early in the American Revolution, James Mugford of Marblehead, Massachusetts, was impressed aboard a Royal Navy warship near his hometown, and while there overheard some of the British officers talking about the anticipated arrival of a large stores ship.
When his wife was able to obtain his release by appealing to the British captain, Mugford convinced the commander of American forces around Boston, General Artemus Ward, to give him command of the Franklin, a schooner armed with six carriage guns and a number of rail-mounted swivel guns.
Sailing immediately, Mugford soon spotted the anticipated British supply ship the Hope. She was considerably larger than the Franklin, and worse, she was within visual range of the British fleet she had come to resupply. Mugford warned his crew of 17 that they were probably in for a desperate fight but pressed on.
At first, he was happily surprised that the Hope surrendered without a fight. But as he closed in to claim his prize, he realized that the clever British captain had passed the order for his men to cut the ships halyards, knowing that this would prevent Mugford from being able to sail the disabled ship away before the nearby enemy fleet could respond.
Mugford opened fire with a volley of oaths and promises that the captain and his entire crew would suffer a horrid death if they persisted in cutting the lines. Knives and axes dropped to the deck, and Mugford soon had his undamaged prize. He immediately set sail and delivered much-needed supplies—including 1,500 barrels of gunpowder and 1,000 carbines—to the American troops ashore.
Knowing the Royal Navy would be seeking retribution, Mugford then headed for the open sea. But an opposing tide prevented him from getting far, and he was soon compelled to anchor. Expecting the worst, Mugford ordered a quantity of 12-pound shot heated until red hot and had springs fixed to his anchor cables to allow him to swing his ship about should he need to unmask batteries.
Before dawn could ease the inky darkness, lookouts heard the creak and splash of approaching oars. When Mugford hailed them, a voice replied, "For God's sake don't shoot! We are friends from Boston come to help you." Unfooled by this attempted ruse, Mugford opened fire with a broadside.
Of 14 boats filled with 200 British soldiers, five were immediately destroyed, but the others pressed the attack, and soldiers began clamoring up the Franklin's hull. In the vicious fight that ensued, the Americans dropped red-hot cannon balls on the attackers' heads, and as the enemy soldiers grasped at the Franklin's rails, the Americans lopped off a great many fingers and whole hands. Mugford alone severed five pairs of hands. But he soon paid battle's ultimate toll and fell, mortally wounded.
Before he died, Mugford told his second-in-command, "I am a dead man. But do not give up the vessel. You will be able to beat them off. If not, cut the cable and run the schooner on shore!" Not as succinct as Captain James Lawrence's later "Don't give up the ship," but the spirit was the same.
The lieutenant did indeed run the schooner ashore and saved her from capture. The British lost 70 men in the fight, while Captain Mugford was the only American death. A century later, a monument was placed in his honor on Old Burial Hill in Marblehead.