Thursday, August 1, 2019
Stephen Champlin's Postwar Career-- Part 1
After his capture, the British paroled him figuring that his wounds would be mortal. He went back home to Connecticut where he recovered from the wounds. On March 28, 1815, he was ordered to join Perry's fleet which was heading to the Mediterranean to battle the Barbary Pirates off the coast of Algeria and Tunisia.
In the fall of 1815, in consideration of his wounds, he was ordered to to return to Erie in the spring of 1816. There he underwent a difficult operation to remove the many splinters of shattered bone that remained in his leg.
From 1816-1818, he commanded the USS Porcupine surveying the Canadian-American border along the upper Great Lakes. Upon his return to Erie, he was beached in a strong gale at Buffalo. During his enforced stay in Buffalo, he met and courted Minerva Lydia Pomeroy whom he married there on January 9, 1817.
She was a Buffalo socialite of the city. She and Stephen had eight children.
--Brock-Perry
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