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Commodore Samuel Barron was a United States and Confederate States naval officer. The son and nephew of United States Navy captains. He was appointed a midshipman at the age of two, reported for active duty at six and sailed aboard the flagship of the Mediterranean fleet before he was eleven.
During the Mexican War (1846–1848), Barron commanded the USS Perry on the Pacific coast, and during the 1850s, he served in Washington, DC, where his courtly manners earned him the nickname, "the Navy diplomat." Like Robert E. Lee he opposed secession, but joined the Confederacy anyway. During theCivil War (1861–1865) he served first on the North Carolina coast and was captured there in 1861, and exchanged in July 1862. In March 1863, he assumed command of the James River Squadron, but spent most of his time in Richmond. At the end of the year, he transferred to Europe, but by this time Britain and France had settled on neutrality and his efforts to build a Confederate fleet there were stymied. Barron did not return to Virginia in time to play much role in the end of the war, and eventually retired to a farm in Essex County, where he later died in 1888.
Contributor: Aaron Furtado Baldwin (50965906)
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Commodore Samuel Barron was a United States and Confederate States naval officer. The son and nephew of United States Navy captains. He was appointed a midshipman at the age of two, reported for active duty at six and sailed aboard the flagship of the Mediterranean fleet before he was eleven.
During the Mexican War (1846–1848), Barron commanded the USS Perry on the Pacific coast, and during the 1850s, he served in Washington, DC, where his courtly manners earned him the nickname, "the Navy diplomat." Like Robert E. Lee he opposed secession, but joined the Confederacy anyway. During theCivil War (1861–1865) he served first on the North Carolina coast and was captured there in 1861, and exchanged in July 1862. In March 1863, he assumed command of the James River Squadron, but spent most of his time in Richmond. At the end of the year, he transferred to Europe, but by this time Britain and France had settled on neutrality and his efforts to build a Confederate fleet there were stymied. Barron did not return to Virginia in time to play much role in the end of the war, and eventually retired to a farm in Essex County, where he later died in 1888.
Contributor: Aaron Furtado Baldwin (50965906)
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