Display Patriot - P-254376 - Alexander MURRAY

Alexander MURRAY

SAR Patriot #: P-254376

The following information was assembled from numerous sources and cannot be used directly as proof of Qualifying Service or Lineage.
It is considered a research aid and is intended to assist in locating sources that can be used as proof.
 

State of Service: MD      Qualifying Service: Captain
DAR #: A083305

Birth: 12 Jul 1755 Chestertown / Kent / MD
Death: 06 Oct 1821 nr Philadelphia / Philadelphia / PA

Qualifying Service Description:
  1. Lieutenant in the 1st Maryland Regiment; promoted to Captain
  2. Commanded privateer ships including:
    • on 10 June 1777, Captain of the Maryland privateer sloop General Mercer, ten guns, William Lux of Baltimore, owner
    • on 1 May 1778, the brig Saratoga, twenty guns, Samuel and Robert Purviance of Baltimore, owners
    • on 5 April 1779, the brig Columbus, sixteen guns, owned by the Purviances
    • on 24 June 1780, the brig Revenge, prisoner of war, then exchanged
  3. Commissioned as Lieutenant, 20 July 1781 in Continental Navy
    • commanded frigate Trumbell, prisoner of war, then exchanged
    • Commanded letter-of-marque / privateer brig Prosperity
  4. Promoated to First Lieutenant of the frigate Alliance, Continental Navy, August 1783
  5. Original member of The State Society of the Cincinnati of Pennsylvania
  6. Served as a Second Lieutenant in the Second Company of the First Maryland Regiment, 1776 under Capt Patrick Sim
  7. Later promoted to First Lieutenant and Captain in the First Maryland Regiment before resigning in 1777
  8. Commissioned as a Captain in the Continental Navy in April 1777
  9. Commanded the frigate General Mercer and Saratoga and later the Columbus, Revenge, and Prosperity

Additional References:
  1. DAR cites: FUTURE APPLICANTS MUST COMPLETE
  2. Burial locations of Pennsylvania Rev War soldiers. Golden Book. PASSAR
  3. Waldo, Samuel Putnam (1823). Biographical sketches of distinguished American naval heroes in the war of the revolution, between the American Republic and the Kingdom of Great Britain; comprising sketches of Com. Nicholas Biddle, Com. John Paul Jones, Com. Edward Preble, and Com. Alexander Murray. With incidental allusions to other distinguished characters. Hartford, Connecticut: Silas Andrus
  4. Frost, John (1845). The Pictorial Book of the Commodores: comprising lives of distinguished commanders in the navy of the United States. New York: Nafis & Cornish. ISBN 1-55750-839-9
  5. Library of Congress. Naval heroes of the United States: no. 3 / lith. & pub. by N. Currier. digital file from color film copy slide
  6. Wikipedia contributors. "Alexander Murray (1755–1821)." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 25 Dec. 2022. Web. 15 Aug. 2023
  7. Archives of Maryland (Biographical Series), Alexander Murray (1755-1821), MSA SC 3520-16742
  8. The State Society of the Cincinnati of Pennsylvania
  9. Maryland State Archives MSA SC 3520-16742
  10. Muster Rolls and Other Records of Service of Maryland Troops in the American Revolution, Archives of Maryland Online, Vol 18, pg 13
  11. Pension of Alexander Murray. The National Archives. Rev War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files. NARA M804 B.L.Wt. 2324-100

Spouse: Mary Miller
Children: Mary; Magnus; Ann; Mary Ann; Alexander; Juliana; Elizabeth; Alexander Miller; Catherine;
Members Who Share This Ancestor
None*



*This means that the NSSAR has no applications for this Patriot on file.
Instead the information provided is best effort, and from volunteers who have either researched grave sites, service records, or something similar.
There is no documentation available at NSSAR HQ to order.


Location:
Philadelphia / Philadelphia / PA / USA
Find A Grave Cemetery #:

Grave Plot #:
Section G, Lot 243-East
Grave GPS Coordinates:
n/a
Find A Grave Memorial #:
Marker Type:
U.S. Veteran marker
SAR Grave Dedication Date:

Comments:

Directions to Cemetery / Gravesite:



Author: Maryland State Archives

Alexander Murray (1755-1821)

MSA SC 3520-16742

Second Lieutenant, First Maryland Regiment, 1776

First Lieutenant, First Maryland Regiment, 1776

Captain, First Maryland Regiment, 1777

Privateer, Continental Navy, 1777-1781

First Lieutenant, Continental Navy, 1781-1798

Captain, United States Navy, 1798-1812

Commander, Philadelphia Navy Yard, 1813-1821

 

Alexander Murray (1755-1821)

MSA SC 3520-16742

Biography:

 

Born in Chestertown, Kent County, Maryland on July 12, 1755, Alexander Murray was the son of Dr. William Murray (1708-1769) and Ann Smith (1720-1807). Murray's nautical career began in 1773 when he worked on merchant ships in the Atlantic Ocean.[1]  In 1776, as the American Revolution was picking up steam, Murray was appointed a lieutenant of the Continental Navy. However, when no ships were available for him to lead, he enlisted in the Army.[2]

Thus, on January 3, 1776, Murray was commissioned as a second lieutenant of Captain Patrick Sim's Second Company of the First Maryland Regiment.[3] Throughout his time in the Army, as part of his job as a second lieutenant, Murray was to teach the soldiers discipline, order, and fearlessness through “his judgment, vigilance, and bravery.”[4] The challenge Murray and the First Maryland Regiment faced was that none of the soldiers had any military experience prior to enlisting. As a result, it was Murray's job to teach the recruits how to be soldiers.[5]

Murray and his regiments' first engagement with the British occurred during the Battle of Brooklyn on August 27, 1776.[6] During the battle, the Continental Army led by George Washington tried to defend New York from the British. However, the British Army outflanked the Americans. As one Maryland soldier recounted, "the main body of their army, by a route we never dreamed of, had entirely surrounded us."[7]

As they retreated, Murray and his company were ambushed by a platoon of British soldiers. However, "fighting with more than Roman courage," the First Maryland Regiment forced the British back and allowed many companies, like Murray's, to escape across the Gowanus Creek to the fortified American lines. The other regiments that were not able to cross the creek, traveled up the stream. Those regiments ultimately confronted and fought another British platoon. These charges by the Marylanders and the bravery they showed earned them the title of the "Maryland 400."[8]

Between August and October of 1776, the American Army was forced out of New York after a series of unsuccessful engagements with the British. As one Maryland soldier detailed, “Smallwood’s [regiments] suffered most, on this occasion, sustaining, with great patience and coolness, a long and heavy fire– and finally retreated with great sullenness, being obliged to give way to a superior force.”[9] During the evacuation of New York City, Murray, now a first lieutenant, lost his hearing due to canon fire while defending his position.[10] Murray ultimately resigned from the Army in 1777 as Captain, which he was promoted to in December of 1776.[11]

After waiting a season to recover from a sickness he contracted while in the Army, Murray was commissioned on April 10, 1777 as a Captain in the Continental Navy.[12] With a letter of marque, Murray commanded a vessel of war, loaded with twelve guns and sixty men, in the Atlantic Ocean along the Eastern Shore.[13] The letter of marque specifically outlined that any ship "carrying Soldiers, Arms, Gun-powder, Ammunition, Provisions, or any other contraband Goods, to any of the British Armies or Ships of War employed against these colonies" was to be captured and stopped by any means necessary.[14]  From June of 1777 until May of 1778, Murray commanded the frigate General Mercer and later the Saratoga from May until November 1778. However, in December 1778, while sailing on the frigate Trumball, Murray was captured and held prisoner until February 1779, when he was exchanged. Murray then commanded the Columbus, Revenge, and Prosperity. In October of 1780 Murray was taken prisoner again and exchanged in Philadelphia in November 1781, after the effective end of the War at Yorktown in October.[15]

After his exchange, Murray stayed in Philadelphia working as a merchant, where he met and married Mary Miller (1766-1834) on June 12, 1782.[16] His children were Mary Murray (1783-1766), Magnus Miller Murray (1787-1838), Ann Murray (1789-1791), Mary Ann Murray (1792-1824), Alexander Murray (1794-1799), Juliana Murray (1795-1843), Elizabeth Murray (1798-1847), Alexander Miller Murray (1801-1822), and Catherine Murray (1804-1870).[17]

On July 1, 1798 Murray was commissioned as a Captain of the U.S. Navy, where he commanded the U.S.S. Constellation. From 1798 until 1812, Murray distinguished himself as one of the leading commanders of the Navy. From the Quasi-War with France in 1798 to 1799, to the battle against the Barbary Pirates in North Africa from 1801-1803, and finally to the War of 1812, triggered by economic sanctions and naval attacks by the British, Murray continuously led his men to victory.[18] As the author Samuel Putnam Waldo wrote in 1823, "by the time he (Murray) returned to America...there was not a single American living who has passed through more arduous duty; faced more dangers-fought in more battles; or achieved more victories".[19] Yet even with his success, Murray ran into trouble with the U.S. Government in the early 1800s, when he seized ships that did not belong to the enemy. Murray's actions resulted in a Supreme Court cases against him.[20]

After resigning from active Naval duty in 1813, Murray, in his final role in the Navy, worked as commander of the Philadelphia Navy Yard and Superintendent of the Gunboats there until 1821.[21]

Murray died on October 6, 1821 from typhoid. His death did not go unnoticed, as the flags at the Navy Yard were displayed at half-mast. His comrades, "felt that they had lost a kind protector-a just and generous commander."[22] He was buried at Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.[23]

-Joshua Rifkin

 

Notes:

[1] Samuel Putnam Waldo, American Republic and the Kingdom of Great Britain, (Connecticut: Silas Andrus, 1823), 254; Sons of the American Revolution Membership Application, 1889-1970, Volume 71, (Philadelphia, 1901), SAR 14055, from Ancestry.com

[2] Find a Grave. "Alexander Murray."

[3] Muster Rolls and Other Records of Service of Maryland Troops in the American Revolution, Archives of Maryland Online, vol. 18, p. 13.

[4] Frederick Steuben, Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States, Part I. (Philadelphia: Styner and Cist, 1792), 73-74

[5] Steuben, 73-74; Mark Andrew Tacyn, To the End: The First Maryland Regiment and the American Revolution, (PhD diss., University of Maryland College Park, 1999), 48-73.

[6] Tacyn, 48-73.

[7] Extract of a letter from New-York: Account of the battle on Long-Island, 1 September  1776, American Archives Online, series 5, vol. 2, p. 107.

[8] Tacyn, 48-73; Extract of a letter from New-York: Account of the battle on Long-Island.

[9] “Extract of another letter, dated in the evening of the above day," Maryland Gazette, 7  November 1776.

[10] Waldo, 262.

[11] Pension of Alexander Murray. The National Archives. Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files. NARA M804 B.L.Wt. 2324-100, from Fold3.com.; Waldo, 305.

[12] Pension of Alexander Murray;  Sons of the American Revolution Membership Application; Waldo Samuel Putnam, 262-266.

[13] Sons of the American Revolution Membership Application

[14] Ernest McNeill Eller, Chesapeake Bay in the American Revolution, (Centreville, Maryland: Tidewater Publishers, 1981), 265.

[15] William Alexander, Lord Stirling to George Washington, 4 January 1779, Founders Online, National Archive.

[16] Marriage Records, 1700-1821, (Pennsylvania, 1782), from ancestry.com

[17] Miller Family Bible, 1800s, shared by tmurray321, from ancestry.com

[18] William Alexander, Lord Stirling to George Washington, 4 January 1779,

[19] Waldo, 305

[20] U.S. Coast Guard. Record of Movements: Vessels of the United States Coast Guard: 1790- December 31, 1933. (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1934); William R. Wells II, US Revenue Cutters Captured in the War of 1812, American Neptune 58, No. 3, 225-241.

[21] William Alexander, Lord Stirling to George Washington, 4 January 1779,

[22] Joseph T. Buckingham, Miscellanies selected from the Public Journals, (Boston, 1822), 169.

[23] Find a Grave. "Alexander Murray."

 

Sources:

Archival Sources:

List of Regular Officers, 1776, Maryland State Papers, Red Books, 12:66 [MSA S 989-17, 01/06/04/005].

Pension of Alexander Murray, The National Archives. Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, NARA M804 B.L.Wt. 2324-100, from Fold3.com.

 

Published Sources:

Alexander, William Lord Stirling to George Washington, 4 January 1779, Founders Online, National Archive.

Extract of a letter from New-York: Account of the battle on Long-Island, 1 September  1776, American Archives Online, series 5, vol. 2, p. 107.

Marriage Records, 1700-1821, Pennsylvania, 1782, from Ancestry.com.

Miller Family Bible, 1800s, shared by tmurray321, from Ancestry.com.

Muster Rolls and Other Records of Service of Maryland Troops in the American Revolution, Archives of Maryland Online, vol. 18.

R. Wells II, William. "US Revenue Cutters Captured in the War of 1812." American Neptune, 58, no. 3.

Sons of the American Revolution Membership Application, 1889-1970, vol. 71, Philadelphia, 1901, SAR 14055, from Ancestry.com

Steuben, Frederick. Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States, Part I. Philadelphia: Styner and Cist, 1792.

Tacyn, Mark Andrew. To the End: The First Maryland Regiment and the American Revolution. PhD diss., University of Maryland College Park, 1999.

T. Buckingham, Joseph. Miscellanies selected from the Public Journals. Boston, 1822.

U.S. Coast Guard. Record of Movements: Vessels of the United States Coast Guard: 1790- December 31, 1933. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1934.

Waldo, Samuel Putnam. American Republic and the Kingdom of Great Britain. Connecticut: Silas Andrus, 1823.

 

Newspapers:

Extract of another letter, dated in the evening of the above day, Maryland Gazette, November 7, 1776, Maryland Gazette Collection, Image 1202. MSA SC 2731.

 

Web Sources:

Find a Grave, "Alexander Murray."

 


Send a biographical sketch of your patriot!

Patriot biographies must be the original work of the author, and work submitted must not belong to another person or group, in observance with copyright law. Patriot biographies are to be written in complete sentences, follow the established rules of grammar, syntax and punctuation, be free of typographical errors, and follow a narrative format. The narrative should unfold in a logical manner (e.g. the narrative does not jump from time period to time period) or have repeated digressions, or tell the history of the patriot's line from the patriot ancestor to the author. The thinking here is that this is a patriot biography, not a lineage report or a kinship determination project or other report published in a genealogy journal. The biography should discuss the qualifying service (military, patriotic, civil) of the patriot ancestor, where the service was rendered, whether this was a specific state or Continental service, as well as significant events (as determined by the author) of the patriot's life. This is the entire purpose of a patriot's biography.

Additional guidelines around the Biography writeup can be found here:

Send your submission1, in a Microsoft Word compatible format, to patriotbios@sar.org for inclusion in this space


1Upon submission of a patriot biography, the patriot biography becomes the property of the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, and may be edited to conform to the patriot biography submission standards.

Additional Information:
  • Post-Revolutionary War military positions included:
    • Post-captain, Quasi-War with France; commanded the corvette Montezuma and later, the frigate Insurgent
    • Commodore, First Barbary War


© 2025 - National Society of the American Revolution (NSSAR)