Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Message from the President of the United States Communicating Information Relative to the Commencement of War by the Dey of Algiers against the United States

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Thomas Jefferson (author, 1743–1826)
Letterpress print
Washington, DC: A. & G. Way, 1808
Brown University Library, Starred Book Collection


This pamphlet records three messages addressed to Congress between 1807 and 1808 regarding the seizure of two American merchant vessels from New York and Boston by an Algerian frigate. The Algerian privateers captured the ships and their holdings as booty, while taking members of both crews as prisoners for ransom. The captain of one schooner, the Mary Ann of New York, successfully retook the vessel, throwing four of the “Turks” overboard. As with many prisoners captured near the Barbary Coast, these men escaped a fate serving years as slaves sold on the Algerian market. By the end of the Second Barbary War (1815), the United States demanded treaties that freed its ships from both the Barbary threat of slavery and extorted tribute.