- Capt. Denis N. Cottineau State
Historical Marker
- Located along the west fence within Colonial Park
Cemetery, Savannah
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32.075183, -81.0907
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- CAPT. DENIS N. COTTINEAU
- (1745-1808)
This grave links Savannah with one of history's
greatest naval dramas -- the epic fight in 1779 between the "Bon
Homme Richard" and "Serapis" in which John Paul
Jones immortalized himself.
Denis Nicolas Cottineau de Kerloguen received
a commission in the Continental navy during the American Revolution.
Commanding the slow sailing "Pallas" during the famous
naval engagement of Sept. 23, 1779, Capt. Cottineau, by skillful
seamanship, forced H.M.S. "Countess of Scarborough"
to strike her colors. He was subsequently wounded in a duel with
another officer, Pierre Landais, against whom Commodore Jones
made serious charges after the battle.
Cottineau later settled in the French West
Indies. During the slave insurrection in San Domingo he fled
to Pennsylvania where he joined several fellow French refugees
in establishing a colony. Suffering from a "lingering illness,"
he came to Savannah early in 1808. Capt. Cottineau died here,
Nov. 29 of that year, at the residence of the Abbe Carles. Cottineau's
widow was the sister of the Marquis de Montalet who once owned
the Hermitage plantation near Savannah.
In 1928 Ambassador Paul Claudel of France
knelt in homage here at the grave of the gallant Frenchman who
helped establish the prestige of the infant American navy.
025-55 GEORGIA HISTORICAL
COMMISSION 1957
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