“Don’t give up the ship”

E629041

“Don’t give up the ship” is a famous U.S. Navy battle cry and motto originating from the dying command of Captain James Lawrence during the War of 1812.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
“Don’t give up the ship” canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (31)

Predicate Object
instanceOf battle cry
naval motto
appliesTo naval warfare
associatedShip HMS Shannon NERFINISHED
USS Chesapeake NERFINISHED
associatedWithConflict War of 1812 NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
dateOfOrigin 1813
hasCulturalSignificance iconic phrase in U.S. naval history
patriotic slogan in the United States
inspired naval memorials and commemorations
language English
laterSymbolizedBy naval battle flag
mottoOf U.S. Navy training commands NERFINISHED
United States Navy units NERFINISHED
originalContext naval battle between USS Chesapeake and HMS Shannon
originatedAs dying command
popularizedBy Oliver Hazard Perry NERFINISHED
relatedConcept heroic last words
military morale
naval honor
spokenBy Captain James Lawrence NERFINISHED
James Lawrence NERFINISHED
spokenDuring Battle of Lake Erie NERFINISHED
War of 1812 NERFINISHED
symbolizes naval courage
perseverance in battle
refusal to surrender
usedBy U.S. Navy NERFINISHED
United States Navy
usedOn battle flag of Oliver Hazard Perry NERFINISHED

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

brig Lawrence mottoAssociation “Don’t give up the ship”
subject surface form: Brig Lawrence