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--- a/42138-0.txt
+++ b/42138-0.txt
@@ -1,35 +1,4 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike & Cutlass, by George Gibbs
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Pike & Cutlass
- Hero Tales of Our Navy
-
-Author: George Gibbs
-
-Release Date: February 20, 2013 [EBook #42138]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PIKE & CUTLASS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Rosanna Murphy and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42138 ***
Transcriber’s Note: italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
@@ -6277,361 +6246,4 @@ have been retained, except as follows:
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike & Cutlass, by George Gibbs
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42138 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike & Cutlass, by George Gibbs
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Pike & Cutlass
- Hero Tales of Our Navy
-
-Author: George Gibbs
-
-Release Date: February 20, 2013 [EBook #42138]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PIKE & CUTLASS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Rosanna Murphy and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note: italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-PIKE & CUTLASS
-
-[Illustration: THE ESCAPE OF THE "CONSTITUTION"
-
-Page 209]
-
-
-
-
- PIKE & CUTLASS
-
- HERO TALES
- OF
- OUR NAVY
-
- WRITTEN & ILLUSTRATED
- BY GEORGE GIBBS
-
- [Illustration]
-
- PHILADELPHIA & LONDON
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- 1900
-
-
- Copyright, 1898 and 1899, by
- THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY
-
- Copyright, 1899, by
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
-
- ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED BY
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- TO THE CADETS
- OF THE
- UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY
- PAST, PRESENT, AND
- FUTURE
-
-
-
-
-NOTE
-
-
-The writer expresses thanks for their courtesy to the editors of
-"Lippincott's Magazine" and the editors of the "Saturday Evening Post,"
-of Philadelphia, in which periodicals several of these Hero Tales have
-been printed. He also acknowledges his indebtedness for many valuable
-historical facts to "Cooper's Naval History;" "History of the Navy," by
-Edgar S. Maclay; "History of Our Navy," by John R. Spears; "Twelve Naval
-Captains," by Molly Elliot Seawell; "American Naval Heroes," by John
-Howard Brown; "Naval Actions of the War of 1812," by James Barnes; and
-to many valuable works and papers in the archives of the Library of the
-Navy Department at Washington. Thanks are due the Art Department of the
-"Saturday Evening Post" and the Art Department of "Collier's Weekly" for
-their permission to reprint many of the drawings herein.
-
- GEORGE GIBBS.
-
- August 15, 1899.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- The Effrontery of Paul Jones 7
-
- HIS FIGHT WITH THE "DRAKE" AND DESCENT ON WHITEHAVEN
-
- A Struggle to the Death 24
-
- PAUL JONES'S FIGHT WITH THE "SERAPIS"
-
- The Terrier and the Mastiff 34
-
- NICHOLAS BIDDLE'S WONDERFUL FIGHT
-
- Decatur and the "Philadelphia" 46
-
- The Biggest _Little_ Fight in Naval History 56
-
- DECATUR AND THE TRIPOLITAN GUNBOATS
-
- A Double Encounter 73
-
- STEWART AND THE "CYANE" AND "LEVANT"
-
- The "Constitution" and the "Guerriere" 90
-
- The "Wasp" and the "Frolic" 106
-
- The "Constitution" and the "Java" 117
-
- The Last of the "Essex" 132
-
- The Captain of the Maintop 148
-
- Cushing and the "Albemarle" 158
-
- Somers and the "Intrepid" 170
-
- The Passing of the Old Navy 181
-
- OLD SALTS AND NEW SAILORS. THE OLD SHIPS AND THE NEW
-
- Farragut in Mobile Bay 220
-
- At the Naval Academy 231
-
- Our Nation's New Heroes 248
-
- Heroes of the Deep 274
-
- OUR FISHING FLEET
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- The Escape of the "Constitution" _Frontispiece_
-
- The Descent on Whitehaven 17
-
- "Yard-arm to Yard-arm" 27
-
- Decatur boards the "Philadelphia" 52
-
- The Danger of the "Intrepid" 53
-
- "No 'Dutch Courage' on _THIS_ Ship" 83
-
- In the Tops of the "Constitution" 101
-
- The "Constellation" and the "Vengeance" 155
-
- The Smoking Hour 189
-
- Neptune comes Aboard 191
-
- Modern Sea Monsters in Action 204
-
- The Admiral lashed to the Rigging 225
-
- Reefing Top-sails 242
-
- They did not touch Him and His Leg was saved 252
-
- Her Last Duty 263
-
-
-
-
-THE EFFRONTERY OF PAUL JONES
-
-
-In April, 1778, there were more than two-score of French ships-of-the-line
-within easy sailing distance of the coast of England. They were tremendous
-three-decked monsters, armed with tier upon tier of cannon, and it took
-nearly a thousand officers and men to man each of them. They lay at
-anchor in the harbors of France or sallied forth into the open sea to the
-southward to prey upon the commerce of Great Britain. But grand as they
-were, not one of them dared to do what John Paul Jones did in the little
-Continental sloop of war "Ranger." By good seamanship, an element of
-chance, and a reckless daring almost without precedent, he accomplished
-under the very noses of the gold-laced French admirals what they had been
-hemming and hawing about since the beginning of the war.
-
-Inaction weighed upon the mind of Paul Jones more heavily than the hardest
-of labor. He had to be up and doing all the time, or trouble was brewing
-for everybody on shipboard. So when he reached Nantes, France, and found
-that the frigate which had been promised him was not forthcoming, he
-determined, alone and unaided, to do with the little "Ranger" what he
-was not yet destined to do with a bigger ship. No person but Paul Jones
-would for a moment have considered such a desperate project as the one he
-conceived. What the flower of the navy and chivalry of France had refused
-to attempt was little short of suicide for the mad American. But Jones was
-not cast in an ordinary mould. When he got to Brest, he made up his mind
-once and for all, by one good fire of British shipping to put an end to
-all the ship and town burnings in America.
-
-There was clanking of bit and chain as the anchor was hove up short on
-the little craft. The officers and men of the great vessels of the French
-fleet looked over the glistening water, warmed by the afternoon sun of
-spring, and wondered where their impetuous harbor-mate was off to. A week
-before, they knew Paul Jones had demanded that the French Admiral salute
-the Continental flag which the "Ranger" wore for the first time. And they
-had given those salutes right willingly, acknowledging publicly the nation
-they had been helping in secret. They knew he was a man of determination,
-and they wondered what the American was going to do. Some of them--the
-younger ones--wished they too were aboard the dainty little craft, bound
-out to sea under a man who feared nothing and dared everything. They heard
-the whistles and hoarse calls of the bos'n as the men tumbled down from
-aloft, the sheets flew home, and yards went up to their blocks with a
-clatter and a rush that showed how willing were the hands at the tackles.
-The tops'ls caught a fine breeze from the southward and, bracing up, the
-"Ranger" flew down the harbor and around the point of Quiberon just as
-the sun was setting behind the purple cloud-streaks along the line of
-limitless ocean. Up the coast she moved, her bowsprit pointing fearlessly
-to the north, where lay the Scilly Isles. The Frenchmen left behind in the
-harbor looked enviously at the patch of gold, growing every moment more
-indistinct in the fading light, and said "En voilà un brave!"
-
-The next day Jones left the Scilly Isles on his starboard quarter and
-steered boldly up Saint George's Channel into the wide Irish Sea. The
-merchantmen he boarded and captured or scuttled did not quite know what
-to make of a man who feared so little that he looked into the eyes of the
-lion sternly and even menacingly when one movement might have destroyed
-him. These channel-men thought themselves secure, for such a venturesome
-procedure as that of Paul Jones was contrary to all precedent. They
-couldn't understand it at all until their vessels were burned and they
-themselves were prisoners. Then they knew that they had been taken by
-a man whose daring far surpassed that of the naval captains of England
-and France. In plain sight of land he took a brig bound from Ireland
-to Ostend. He didn't want to be bothered with prisoners, so he sent her
-crew ashore in their own boat to tell the story of their escape. Then off
-Dublin he took another ship, the "Lord Chatham," and sent her in charge
-of a prize-crew down to Brest.
-
-Paul Jones had one great advantage. Nowadays, when the railway and
-telegraph have brought all the people of the world closer together, such
-a cruise would be impossible. The report would be sent at once to the
-Admiralty, and two fleets, if necessary, would be despatched post-haste
-to intercept him. But Paul Jones knew the value of the unexpected. And
-although fortune favors the brave and the winds and waves seem always on
-the side of the ablest navigators, he had made his calculations carefully.
-He knew that unless an English fleet was at some point nearer than
-Portsmouth he would have ample time to carry out his plans.
-
-He made up his mind before burning any shipping to capture, if possible,
-the Earl of Selkirk, who lived on St. Mary's Isle, and to hold him as
-a hostage. By this means he hoped to compel England to treat American
-prisoners with humanity, according to the laws of war. But on the
-twenty-first of April he picked up a fisherman who gave him information
-which for the moment drove all thought of the Earl of Selkirk and the
-shipping from his mind. Inside the harbor of Carrickfergus, where Belfast
-is, lay a man-of-war of twenty guns, the "Drake," a large ship, with more
-men than the "Ranger" carried. He would drop down alongside of her under
-cover of the night and board her before her crew could tumble out of
-their hammocks. Such an attempt in a fortified harbor of the enemy would
-not have occurred to most men, but Paul Jones believed in achieving the
-impossible. He waited until nightfall, and then, with a wind freshening
-almost to a gale, sped up the harbor. The "Drake" lay well out in the
-roadstead, her anchor lights only marking her position in the blackness
-of the night. Carefully watching his time, Captain Jones stood forward
-looking at the lights that showed how she swung to the tide. He kept full
-headway on the "Ranger," until she could swing up into the wind almost
-under the jib-boom of the Englishman. By dropping his anchor across the
-chain of the "Drake" he hoped to swing down alongside, grapple, and board
-before the crew were fairly awake.
-
-But this time he was destined to fail. Everything depended on the dropping
-of the anchor at the proper time. His orders were not obeyed, for not
-until the "Ranger" had drifted clear of the Englishman's chain did the
-splash come. Then it was too late. Fortunately the watch on the "Drake"
-were not suspicious. Had they been wider awake they would have had the
-"Ranger" at their mercy, and Paul Jones might not have survived to fight
-them a few days later. As it was, they only swore at the stupidity of the
-Irish lubber they thought he was. Jones knew that his chance was gone,
-and as soon as a strain came on the cable it was cut, and he filled away
-to sea again.
-
-He now returned to his original plan of burning the shipping of some
-important town. He decided on Whitehaven as his first objective point, and
-the "Ranger," sailing leisurely over, dropped anchor in the outer harbor
-during the following night.
-
-Whitehaven was a town of considerable importance in the Scottish and
-North of England shipping trade. The inhabitants were for the greater part
-sailors and others who made their living by the sea, and there was never
-a time when the docks were not crowded with vessels, of all countries,
-from the sloop to the full-rigged ship, discharging or taking on cargoes
-which figured largely in England's commerce. At one side of the harbor lay
-the town, and farther around to the left lay the docks where the shipping
-was. Over two hundred vessels, large and small, lay there or out in the
-roadstead. Two forts, mounting fifteen guns each, guarded the town. They
-were adequately garrisoned, and it looked like a piece of desperate folly
-to make the attempt upon a town directly under their guns.
-
-Paul Jones knew Whitehaven from his childhood. He remembered just where
-the guard-houses were to be found, and knew how to force the entrance
-to the barracks. By three o'clock in the morning he was ready to make
-the assault. Two cutters with fifteen men in each, armed with cutlasses
-and pistols, were all he took to do the work. With thirty men he went
-fearlessly and confidently to intimidate the soldiers, spike the guns in
-the forts, overawe the town, and burn the shipping! Lieutenant Wallingford
-was given command of one of the cutters. His mission was to burn the
-shipping to the left. The other cutter Paul Jones commanded himself, and
-assumed the more hazardous duty of holding with his fifteen men the forts
-and the town, until such a blaze should illumine the morning sky that all
-England would know that the burning of Portland, Maine, was avenged.
-
-Quietly they pulled up towards the great stone dock, where the
-shipping-houses were. The tide was very low as they moved past the
-schooners and brigs in the harbor, many of them careened far over
-on their sides, waiting for a rise in the tide to pull down to more
-comfortable moorings. But the boats went by without challenge or notice,
-and Wallingford's cutter had slipped away like a gray shadow in the
-darkness. The first violet streaks of dawn were just beginning to throw
-the shore-line to the east in hazy silhouette when they reached the
-landing-place.
-
-The dawn was coming up quickly now, and Paul Jones led his fifteen men
-at a run to the nearest fort. With cutlass in one hand and pistol in the
-other, they dashed upon the first sentry. There was no time for stealth,
-so they bore him down by sheer weight. The next one saw them coming,
-but Jones locked him and the rest of them in the guard-house. Then he
-proceeded to spike the guns. So quick was the work that not a shot was
-fired. They were running towards the second fort before the soldiers were
-quite sure what had happened. Even then they were too terrified to follow
-in pursuit. As the gallant band ran towards the other fort they got a
-clear view of the harbor, a glimmering sheet of orange and violet, under
-the morning glow. But strain his eyes as he might, their captain could
-get no sign of Wallingford or his work. They dashed as desperately at
-this fort as at the other and were equally successful, intimidating the
-garrison and spiking every gun they could find.
-
-But what could be the trouble with Wallingford? Still seeing no blaze or
-even spark among the shipping to the eastward, Paul Jones felt that the
-main object of his descent upon the town was to prove a failure. So he
-dashed down the street from the fort towards the dock, pistol in hand,
-followed by his crew, who rolled along grinning at the ease with which
-they had accomplished their work. One of them had a bad cut over the head
-and the blood was staining his shoulder, but he didn't seem to mind it in
-the least. To their surprise as they passed the houses the people began
-coming out of their doors shaking their fists at and cursing them. They
-grinned no longer, for they knew that some one had betrayed them. Jones
-looked around for the fifteenth man. The fellow with the cut wiped some
-blood from his cheek and said,--
-
-"Dave Freeman, sir, he's gone!"
-
-Freeman was the traitor, then.
-
-But there was no time for parley or revenge. The mob was collecting
-in the street they had left and soon would be down on the dock. Though
-Wallingford failed, Paul Jones would not. He dashed into a house on the
-dock, and seizing a burning brand went aboard one of the largest vessels
-of the fleet. He hastily pulled together some straw and hatchway gratings
-and soon had a roaring blaze. Then one of his men spilled a barrel of tar
-in the midst of it to make the destruction more sure.
-
-[Illustration: THE DESCENT ON WHITEHAVEN]
-
-He had been so intent upon his work that he had not noticed the mob
-that had gathered on the dock. The place seemed black with people, and
-their number was increasing every minute. Then, leaving the work of
-destruction to the others, he went down alone to face fifteen hundred
-infuriated people with a single flint-lock pistol! Dave Freeman had done
-his work well, for they seemed to pour from every street and doorway.
-But Paul Jones was determined that the work should be finished, and
-took a position where he could command the boat-landing and retreat of
-his men. The people came down in a body to within twenty paces of Paul
-Jones and then--stopped. There was something in the _look_ of the man
-and the menacing black barrel that moved from one to the other that made
-them quail and fall over each other to get out of range. Those in the
-background swore and pushed gallantly, but the front rank was a line
-of straw, and Paul Jones moved it with his old flint-lock as though a
-Biscay wind-squall was striking it. For fifteen minutes and longer he
-stood there, immovable, the master of the situation, the picture of the
-intimidating power of one resolute man over a mob. Such another instance
-is hardly to be found in history.
-
-When the black smoke rolled up from half a dozen vessels of the fleet,
-Paul Jones's crew retreated in an orderly manner to the cutter. Jones
-walked down the steps into the boat, covering the crowd the while. Then
-his men leisurely rowed away, not a shot having been fired. It was not
-until the cutter was well out into the bay that some of the bewildered
-soldiers recovered sufficiently to load two cannon that Paul Jones had
-overlooked. These they brought to bear upon the cutter dancing down in
-the sunrise towards the "Ranger" and fired. The shot whistled wide of the
-mark, and Jones, to show his contempt of such long-range courage, fired
-only his pistol in return.
-
-But that was not the end of this remarkable cruise. Having failed to find
-the Earl of Selkirk on St. Mary's Isle, Paul Jones squared away to the
-southward, hoping to pick up another full-rigged ship off Dublin or to
-meet with the "Drake" again. He knew that by this time the Admiralty was
-well informed as to his whereabouts, and that before many hours had passed
-he would be obliged to run the gauntlet of a whole line of British fire.
-But he hated to be beaten at anything, and since the night when he failed
-to grapple her had been burning to try conclusions yard-arm to yard-arm
-with the "Drake."
-
-On the twenty-fourth of April, just two weeks after sailing from the
-harbor of Brest, he hove to off the Lough of Belfast, where within the
-harbor he could plainly see the tall spars of the Englishman swinging
-at his anchorage. Paul Jones was puzzled at first to know how he was to
-lure the "Drake" out to sea, for a battle under the lee of the land in
-the harbor was not to be thought of. So he went about from one tack to
-another, wearing ship and backing and filling, until the curiosity of the
-English captain, Burdon, was thoroughly aroused, and he sent one of his
-junior officers out in a cutter to find out who the stranger was. Jones
-ran his guns in and manoeuvred so cleverly that the stern of the "Ranger"
-was kept towards the boat until he was well aboard. The young officer
-was rather suspicious, but, nothing daunted, pulled up to the gangway in
-true man-o'-war style and went on deck. There he was met by an officer,
-who courteously informed him that he was on board the Continental sloop
-of war "Ranger," Captain Paul Jones, and that he and his boat's crew were
-prisoners of war.
-
-In the meanwhile Captain Burdon, finding that his boat's crew did
-not return, got up his anchor, shook out his sails, and cleared ship
-for action. He was already suspicious, and too good a seaman to let
-unpreparedness play any part in his actions. There was not very much
-wind, and slowly the "Drake" bore down on the silent vessel which lay,
-sails flapping idly as she rolled, on the swell of the Irish Sea. As the
-afternoon drew on the wind almost failed, so that it was an hour before
-sunset before the "Drake" could get within speaking range. Hardly a ripple
-stirred the surface of the glassy swells, and the stillness was ominous
-and oppressive.
-
-When within a cable's length of the "Ranger" Captain Burdon sent up his
-colors. Captain Jones followed his lead in a moment by running up the
-Stars and Stripes.
-
-Suddenly a voice, looming big and hoarse in the silence, came from the
-"Drake,"--
-
-"What ship is that?"
-
-Paul Jones mounted the hammock nettings and, putting his speaking-trumpet
-to his lips, coolly replied,--
-
-"The American Continental ship 'Ranger.' We have been waiting for you.
-The sun is but little more than an hour from setting, and it is time to
-begin."
-
-Then he turned and gave a low order to the man at the wheel, and the
-"Ranger" wore around so that her broadside would bear. Paul Jones always
-believed in striking the first blow. When they came before the wind the
-word was passed, and a mass of flame seemed to leap clear across the
-intervening water to the "Drake." The "Ranger" shuddered with the shock
-and felt in a moment the crashing of the other's broadside through her
-hull and rigging. The battle was on in earnest. Yard-arm to yard-arm they
-went, drifting down the wind, and the deep thundering of the cannonade was
-carried over to the Irish hills, where masses of people were watching the
-smoke-enveloped duel. The sun sank low, touching the purple hilltops, a
-golden ball that shed a ruddy glow over the scene and made the spectacle
-seem a dream rather than reality. Still they fought on.
-
-It was a glorious fight--and as fair a one as history records. The "Drake"
-pounded away at the "Ranger's" hull alone, while Jones was doing all he
-could with his smaller pieces to cripple his enemy's rigging. First the
-"Drake's" fore-tops'l yard was cut in two. The main dropped next, and the
-mizzen gaff was shot away. For purposes of manoeuvring, the "Drake" was
-useless and drifted down, her jib trailing in the water and her shrouds
-and rigging dragging astern. She was almost a wreck. As she heeled over on
-the swell, the gunners on the "Ranger" could see human blood mingling with
-the water of the division tubs that came from her scuppers. The first flag
-was shot away, but another was quickly run up to its place. In a moment
-that too was shot away from the hoisting halyard and fell into the water
-astern, where it trailed among the wreckage. But still she fought on.
-
-On the "Ranger" the loss had been comparatively slight. Lieutenant
-Wallingford and one other man had been killed and there were five or
-six wounded men in the cockpit. Jones seemed to be everywhere, but still
-remained uninjured and directed the firing until the end. He saw that the
-sharpshooters in his tops were doing terrific execution on the decks of
-his adversary, and at last he saw the imposing figure of Captain Burdon
-twist around for a second and then sink down to the deck. Another officer
-fell, and in a moment above the crash of division firing and the rattle
-of the musketry overhead he heard a cry for quarter.
-
-The battle was at an end in a little over an hour. It was almost as great
-a victory as that of the "Bonhomme Richard" over the "Serapis." Paul
-Jones's ship carried eighteen guns; the Englishman carried twenty. The
-"Ranger" had one hundred and twenty-three men; the "Drake" had one hundred
-and fifty-one and carried many volunteers besides. The "Ranger" lost two
-killed and had six wounded; the "Drake" lost forty-two killed and wounded.
-Against great odds John Paul Jones still remained victorious.
-
-The people on shore heard the cannonading cease and saw the great clouds
-of gold-tinted smoke roll away to the south. There they saw the two
-vessels locked as if in an embrace of death and a great cheer went up.
-They thought the "Drake" invincible. The gray of twilight turned to black,
-and the ships vanished like spectres in the darkness. But late that night
-some fishermen in a boat came ashore with a sail from the store-room of
-the "Drake." They said it had been given them by John Paul Jones. The
-people knew then that the "Drake" had been captured.
-
-When the "Ranger" returned with her prizes to Brest, and his people told
-the tale of Paul Jones's victory, France was electrified. Neither in
-France nor in England would they at first believe it. France made him her
-hero. England offered ten thousand guineas for his head.
-
-
-
-
-A STRUGGLE TO THE DEATH
-
-
-Never, since the beginning of time, has there been a fiercer sea-fight
-than that between the "Bonhomme Richard" and the "Serapis." No struggle
-has been more dogged--no victory greater.
-
-Three--four times during the night-long battle any other man than Paul
-Jones would have struck his colors. His main-deck battery and crews blown
-to pieces--his water-line gaping with wounds--his sides battered into
-one great chasm--still he fought on. His prisoners released--his masts
-tottering--his rudder gone--his ship afire below and aloft, his resistance
-was the more desperate. The thought of surrender never occurred to him.
-
-After taking the "Drake" in a gallant fight, burning Whitehaven, and
-terrorizing the whole British coast, Paul Jones went to Paris, where a
-commission to the converted East Indiaman, the "Bonhomme Richard," awaited
-him. Putting her in the best shape possible, he boldly steered across for
-English waters. Paul Jones thirsted for larger game.
-
-When Captain Pearson, with the new frigate "Serapis," on a fine September
-afternoon in 1779, sighted Paul Jones, he signalled his merchant convoy
-to scatter, and piped all hands, who rushed jubilantly to quarters. The
-opportunity of his life had come, for the capture of the rebel frigate
-meant glory and a baronetcy. But he reckoned without his host.
-
-Across the oily waters came the cheery pipes of the boatswain's mate of
-the "Richard" as Jones swung her up to meet her adversary, and Pearson
-knew his task would not be an easy one. The wind fell so light that the
-sun had sunk behind the light on Flamborough Head before the ships drifted
-up to fighting distance, and it was dark before they were ready to come to
-close quarters. On the "Bonhomme Richard," Jones's motley crew, stripped
-to the waist, were drawn up at the guns, peering out through the ports at
-the dark shadow on the starboard bow they were slowly overhauling.
-
-The decks were sanded, the hammocks piled around the wheel, and there at
-the break of the poop stood the captain, trumpet in hand, turning now
-and then to give an order to Richard Dale or his midshipmen, quiet and
-composed, with the smile on his face men saw before the fight with the
-"Drake." The clumsy hulk rolled to the ground-swell, and the creaking
-of the masts and clamping of the sheet-blocks were all that broke the
-silence of the night. No excitement was apparent, and the stillness seemed
-the greater for an occasional laugh from the gunners, or the rattle of a
-cutlass newly settled in its sheath.
-
-Then close aboard from out the blackness came a voice,--
-
-"What ship is that?"
-
-Paul Jones moved to the lee mizzen-shrouds and slowly replied,--
-
-"I can't hear what you say."
-
-He wanted all of his broadside to bear on the Englishman.
-
-"What ship is that? Answer, or I shall fire."
-
-The moment had arrived. For answer Jones leaned far over the rail of
-the poop and passed the word. A sheet of flame flashed from one of the
-"Richard's" after eighteen-pounders, followed by a terrific broadside
-which quaked the rotten timbers of the "Richard" from stem to stern. At
-the same time the guns of the "Serapis" were brought to bear, and her side
-seemed a mass of flame.
-
-[Illustration: "YARD-ARM TO YARD-ARM"]
-
-On the "Richard," two of the eighteen-pounders burst at this first
-broadside, killing their crews, heaving up the deck above, and driving
-the men from the upper tier. The others cracked and were useless. In this
-terrible situation Paul Jones knew the chances for victory were against
-him, for he had thought his lower battery his mainstay in a broadside
-fight.
-
-But if he felt daunted his men did not know it, for, amid the hurricane of
-fire and roar of the guns, his ringing voice, forward, aft, everywhere,
-told them that victory was still theirs for the gaining. He ordered all
-of the men from the useless battery to the main deck; and it was well he
-did so,--for so terrific was the fire that the six ports of the "Bonhomme
-Richard" were blown into one, and the shot passed clear through the
-ship, cutting away all but the supports of the deck above. No one but the
-marines guarding the powder-monkeys were left there, but they stood firm
-at their posts while the balls came whistling through and dropped into
-the sea beyond. But the fire of Paul Jones's battery did not slacken for
-a moment. There seemed to be two men to take the place of every man who
-was killed, and he swept the crowded deck of the "Serapis" from cathead
-to gallery.
-
-In the meanwhile, the "Serapis," having the wind of the "Richard," drew
-ahead, and Pearson hauled his sheets to run across and rake Jones's
-bows. But he miscalculated, and the American ran her boom over the stern
-of the Englishman. For a moment neither ship could fire at the other,
-and they hung together in silence, fast locked in a deadly embrace.
-Jones's crew, eager to renew the battle, glared forward at the shimmering
-battle-lanterns of the Englishman, cursing because their guns would not
-bear. The smoke lifted, and Paul Jones, who was deftly training one of
-his guns at the main-mast of the "Serapis," saw Pearson slowly climb up
-on the rail. The silence had deceived the Englishman, and his voice came
-clearly across the deck,--
-
-"Have you struck?"
-
-A harsh laugh broke from the "Richard."
-
-"Struck!" Paul Jones's answer came in a roar that was heard from truck to
-keelson. "I haven't begun to fight yet!"
-
-A cheer went up that drowned the rattle of the musketry from the tops,
-and the fight went on. Swinging around again the jib-boom of the "Serapis"
-came over the poop so that Paul Jones could touch it. Rushing to the mast,
-he seized a hawser, and quickly taking several turns with it, lashed the
-bowsprit of his enemy to his mizzen-rigging. Grappling-irons were dropped
-over on the enemy--and the battle became a battle to the death.
-
-"Well done, lads; we've got her now." And Jones turned to his
-nine-pounders, which renewed their fire. Both crews fought with the fury
-of desperation. The men at the guns, stripped to the buff, grimed and
-blackened with powder, worked with extraordinary quickness. Every shot
-told. But the fire of the "Serapis" was deadly, and she soon silenced
-every gun but Jones's two nine-pounders, which he still worked with dogged
-perseverance. He sent Dale below to hurry up the powder charges. To his
-horror Dale found that the master-at-arms, knowing the ship to be sinking,
-had released a hundred English prisoners. The situation was terrifying.
-With foes within and without, there seemed no hope. But Dale, with ready
-wit, ordered the prisoners to the pumps and to fight the fire near the
-magazine, telling them that their only hope of life lay in that. And at
-it they went, until they dropped of sheer exhaustion.
-
-The doctor passed Dale as he rushed upon deck. "Sir," said he to Jones,
-"the water is up to the lower deck, and we will sink with all hands in a
-few minutes."
-
-Jones turned calmly to the doctor, as though surprised. "What, doctor,"
-said he, "would you have me strike to a drop of water? Here, help me get
-this gun over."
-
-The surgeon ran below, but Jones got the gun over, and served it, too.
-
-To add to the horror of the situation, just at this moment a ball from a
-new enemy came screaming just over the head of Paul Jones, and the wind
-of it knocked off his hat. The carpenter, Stacy, ran up breathlessly.
-
-"My God, she's firing on us--the 'Alliance,' sir!" And the captain glanced
-astern where the flashes marked the position of the crazy Landais, firing
-on his own consort.
-
-If ever Paul Jones had an idea of hauling his colors, it must have been
-at this moment.
-
-He had been struck on the head by a splinter, and the blood surged down
-over his shoulder--but he didn't know it.
-
-Just then a fear-crazed wretch rushed past him, trying to find the
-signal-halyards, crying wildly as he ran,--
-
-"Quarter! For God's sake, quarter! Our ship is sinking!"
-
-Jones heard the words, and, turning quickly, he hurled an empty pistol at
-the man, which struck him squarely between the eyes, knocking him headlong
-down the hatch.
-
-Pearson heard the cry. "Do you call for quarter?" he shouted.
-
-For answer Paul Jones's nine-pounder cut away the rail on which he was
-standing.
-
-Then came the turn in the fight. Horrible as had been the slaughter
-on the "Richard," the quick flashes from his tops told Paul Jones that
-his marines had not been placed aloft in vain. He saw the crew on the
-spar-deck of his enemy fall one by one and men fleeing below for safety.
-Raising his trumpet, he cheered his topmen to further efforts. In their
-unceasing fire lay his only hope.
-
-One of them in his maintop with great deliberateness laid aside his
-musket and picked up a leather bucket of hand grenades. Jones watched him
-anxiously as, steadying himself, he slowly lay out along the foot-rope of
-the main-yard. His captain knew what he meant to do. He reached the lift,
-which was directly over the main hatch of the "Serapis." There he coolly
-fastened his bucket to the sheet-block, and, taking careful aim, began
-dropping his grenades down the open hatchway. The second one fell on a
-row of exposed powder charges. The explosion that followed shook sea and
-sky, and the air was filled with blackened corpses. The smoke came up in
-a mighty cloud, and soon the forks of flame licked through it and up the
-rigging.
-
-That was the supreme moment of Paul Jones's life, for he knew that victory
-was his.
-
-The fire from the "Serapis" ceased as if by magic. The explosion had
-blown a whole battery to eternity, and, as the smoke cleared a little,
-he could see the figure of Pearson leaning against the pin-rail, almost
-deserted, his few men running here and there, stricken mad with fear. Then
-the English captain stumbled heavily, as though blind, over the slippery
-deck towards the mizzen, where the flag had been nailed, and with his own
-hands tore it frantically from the mast.
-
-A mighty victory for Paul Jones it was. But now, as the flames mounted
-higher through the rifts of smoke, he could see at what a cost. His dead
-lay piled upon the poop so that he could not get to the gangway. His
-masts were shot through and through, and strained at the stays at every
-lift of the bow. The fire, though beaten from the magazine, still burst
-from the forward hatches, firing the tangled rigging and outlining them
-in its lurid hues against the black beyond. The water had risen, and the
-freshening breeze lashed the purple foam in at the lower-deck ports. For
-hours the men fought against their new enemy; but towards five in the
-morning their captain decided that no human power could save her. He then
-began moving his wounded and prisoners to the "Serapis".
-
-The first gray streaks of dawn saw Paul Jones upon the poop of the
-"Serapis," looking to the leeward, where the "Richard" lay rolling
-heavily. Her flag, shot away again and again, had been replaced and
-floated proudly from its staff. Lower and lower she sank into the water,
-mortally wounded, a heavy swell washing in at the lower gun-ports. At
-length, heaving her stern high in the air, her pennant fluttering a last
-defiance to the captured "Serapis," she slowly disappeared, dying grandly
-as she had lived.
-
-After Pearson's release, the British government offered ten thousand
-guineas for Paul Jones, dead or alive. Forty-two British frigates chased
-him and scoured the Channel; but Jones passed within sight of them, the
-American flag flying at the mast, and reached France in safety, where
-he became the hero of the hour. And so long as the Stars and Stripes fly
-over American war-ships will the men who know hold up as their ideal of
-a dogged warrior and gallant seaman the hero of Flamborough--Paul Jones.
-
-
-
-
-THE TERRIER AND THE MASTIFF
-
-
-The first of the great American captains to give his life to the cause
-of liberty was Nicholas Biddle. And the action in which he lost it is the
-finest example of daring and hardihood in the little known pages of naval
-history. His part in that glorious action must ever remain unknown as to
-its details since but five out of his crew remained alive to tell of it,
-and we are chiefly indebted to the British accounts for the information
-which has been handed down.
-
-Nicholas Biddle began his naval career by being shipwrecked on a desert
-shoal at the age of thirteen. But being rescued, with his four companions,
-at the end of two months, his ardor was so little dampened that as soon
-as opportunity offered he immediately went forth in search of further
-adventures on the sea. A war between England and Spain being imminent,
-he went to London, and succeeded in getting a midshipman's warrant on the
-ship of Captain--afterwards Admiral--Sterling.
-
-But just before the declaration of independence of his own country,
-a voyage of discovery to the North Pole was proposed by the Royal
-Geographical Society, and this opportunity seemed to hold forth infinitely
-more possibilities for advancement than the daily port routine of a
-British frigate of war.
-
-So, Admiral Sterling refusing Biddle's mild request to be transferred
-to one of the vessels, the young man took it upon himself to doff
-his gold-laced uniform and present himself upon the "Carcase" in very
-shabby sailor clothes, upon which he was forthwith entered upon her
-books as a sailor before the mast. He was in glorious company, though,
-for Horatio Nelson--afterwards to be the greatest admiral England has
-ever known--shared his humble lot as a jacky, although his prospects in
-the service were more brilliant than Biddle's. The expedition, having
-accomplished its purpose, returned to England in 1774, both young Nelson
-and Biddle having been appointed coxswains for meritorious service.
-
-When hostilities in the United States began, Biddle, of course, resigned
-from the British navy and offered his services to the Continental
-Congress. His first commission was the command of the "Camden," a galley
-fitted out by the State of Pennsylvania for the defence of the Delaware
-River. He was then made a captain in the naval service, and took command
-of the "Andrew Doria," of fourteen guns and one hundred and thirty men.
-
-Just before Commodore Hopkins's fleet hoisted anchor, Biddle had an
-opportunity to show his intrepidity in a very personal way. Two men who
-had deserted from his vessel had been taken and were placed in prison at
-Lewistown. Biddle sent an officer and a squad of men ashore to bring them
-off. But the officer returned to the ship and reported that the deserters
-had joined with the other prisoners, and barricaded the door, swearing
-that no man alive would take them. Biddle put on his side-arms and, taking
-only a young midshipman with him, went at once to the prison. The door
-was tightly barred from the inside, and the prisoners, led by one of the
-deserters named Green, shook their fists and pointed their weapons at him.
-Some of the more venturesome of the townsfolk, who only needed a resolute
-leader, now smashed down the door at the naval officer's directions, and
-Biddle, drawing both his pistols, quickly stepped within the opening.
-Green stood in front of his ill-favored companions, his eye gleaming
-villanously down the barrel of his flint-lock. Without moving his eye
-from the man, and planting himself squarely in the doorway, Biddle said,
-steadily,--
-
-"Now, Green, if you don't take good aim, you are a dead man!"
-
-There was a moment's pause, after which the pistol fell a little, and
-finally, under the resolute attitude of his captain, the fellow broke
-down. He was completely awed, and at Biddle's command dropped his pistol
-to the floor and allowed himself to be conducted to the ship. Their leader
-cowed, the remainder of the prisoners permitted the Lewistown militia,
-who had recovered from their fright, to come in and make them fast again.
-
-This incident had its moral effect upon his men, and never again, when
-they learned to know him, was Biddle troubled with disaffection among his
-crew. The fury with which they went into the fights that followed showed
-how much he was a man after their own hearts.
-
-After Commodore Esek Hopkins's unsuccessful encounter with the British
-fleet, the "Andrew Doria" put to sea and cruised off the coast of
-Newfoundland. Biddle captured a prize laden with arms and ammunition,
-which he carried to port, where they greatly strengthened Washington's
-army, which was badly in need of supplies of all kinds. He captured a
-transport and four hundred British soldiers, and made a great number of
-merchant prizes. He would have taken more, but he only had five men left
-aboard to take the "Doria" back to Philadelphia.
-
-The Congress had authorized the building of several new frigates, and one
-of these, the "Randolph," of thirty-two guns, was just off the stocks.
-Biddle was made commander of her, and set immediately about finishing
-her and making her ready for sea. He had great difficulty in getting a
-crew, as privateering, where the prizes were greater and ship actions less
-frequent, proved more attractive to the adventurous spirits of the day.
-Congress, however, drafted a number of men from the army, and the crew was
-completed by the enlistment of volunteers from among the prisoners taken
-on prizes. After many difficulties with this motley crew, Biddle at last
-got to sea in February, 1777.
-
-The men of his old crew were with him to a man, but many of the volunteers
-were shoal-water sailors, and his army recruits didn't know a sheet
-from a buntline. So when he ran into a Hatteras gale a few days out, the
-"Randolph" carried away her masts, and was altogether so uncomfortable a
-wreck that the volunteers mutinied, and Biddle had a hard time getting
-into Charleston harbor. He succeeded at last in refitting and in
-instilling some of the man-of-war spirit into his crew, sailing at last
-for the West Indies. Then his luck turned for the better, and he sighted
-the English ship "True Briton," twenty guns, convoying three merchantmen.
-Without accident he succeeded in taking them and in bringing all four
-prizes safe and sound into Charleston harbor. This was the first capture
-of the navy in the South, and, as the prizes were again liberally supplied
-with arms, the capture was doubly welcome. So much did Congress appreciate
-this affair that they had a medal struck off in Biddle's honor. The
-British hearing of this exploit of the "Randolph," sent a fleet south,
-and succeeded in blockading her at Charleston for a time.
-
-The State of South Carolina got ready a fleet in the hope of raising the
-blockade, but before they could get to sea the Englishmen had disappeared.
-
-In February, 1778, Biddle went out with a little fleet composed of the
-"General Moultrie," 18, the "Polly," 16, and the "Fair American," 14,
-in search of the British squadron. But missing them, they only succeeded
-in taking a few merchant vessels of the enemy. They boarded a number of
-Dutch and French ships, and Biddle knew that before long they must fall
-in with some of the enemy. To Captain Blake, who was dining with him, he
-said, "I would not be surprised if my old ship should be out after us. As
-to anything that carries her guns upon one deck, I think myself a match
-for her."
-
-On the afternoon of the 7th of March, a sail was made out to windward,
-and they sailed up to examine her. As she came down with the wind she was
-made out to be square-rigged; but, bows on, she looked rather like a sloop
-than a frigate. A short time later she could be made out more plainly a
-man-of-war,--evidently of the enemy,--coming down speedily, and, from the
-way she was sailing, able to out-foot any of the squadron. Biddle could
-see that she stood well out of the water; but a small frigate might do
-that. And if she was only a frigate of forty guns or under, he promised
-himself a great battle that day. But if she were a ship of the line, not
-only the "Randolph" but the smaller vessels were in great danger, for
-nothing save a craft somewhere near her size could resist the broadsides
-of the two heavy gun-tiers.
-
-He quickly made his resolution. Signalling to the fleet of cruisers
-and prizes to go about, he himself took the deck and sent the little
-"Randolph" boldly down towards the stranger. On she came, bowing
-majestically over the water, never making a sign until nearing gunshot
-distance, when the sound of the pipes and the calls on her deck showed
-that she was clearing ship for action. Biddle had been prepared for an
-hour. Now, as she came a little closer to the wind, the American captain
-discovered what he had suspected--two long lines of muzzles running out
-of her leeward ports.
-
-She was a line-of-battle-ship, then.
-
-He clinched his jaws and looked over his shoulder to where the prizes were
-scurrying away in the gathering darkness. They at least would be safe. But
-he did not shift his course a point, sailing on until the canvas of the
-great ship seemed to tower far above the little spars of his own vessel.
-The men of the "Randolph" were aghast at the action of their captain. To
-them an English "Sixty-Four" was the epitome of all that was powerful upon
-the seas. Biddle thought so, too; but there was nothing of timidity in
-his voice as he bade his gunners stand by to train upon her. He knew that
-this battle would be his last, for he resolved in those few moments that
-he would not give up his ship while one plank of her remained above water.
-The enemy might blow him out of the water and send him to the bottom, but
-before she did it he would give them such a lesson in patriotism that the
-world would not easily forget it.
-
-His men guessed something of what was in his mind, and by the time the big
-ship hove close aboard they were keyed up to the fighting pitch, waiting
-with the utmost impatience for the first shot to be fired. The dusk had
-fallen, but the great loom of the sails of the English frigate showed
-plainly as she came closer. They were scarcely a pistol-shot apart when
-a figure on the Englishman mounted the hammock nettings aft, and a voice
-came clearly across the water,--
-
-"Ahoy, the frigate!"
-
-Biddle paused a moment to gain time, and then giving a word to his
-division officers, lifted his speaking-trumpet,--
-
-"What ship is that?"
-
-"His Britannic Majesty's ship-of-the-line 'Yarmouth,' Captain Vincent.
-Who are you? Answer, or I will be compelled to fire."
-
-Another pause as Biddle directed the American colors to be run up to the
-mast, and then said,--
-
-"This is the American Continental ship 'Randolph,' Captain Biddle!"
-
-Without the pause of a second a tremendous broadside was poured into the
-Englishman, and in a moment the battle was on.
-
-Biddle had gained a slight advantage in position by waiting as he did, and
-the "Randolph's" broadsides did great execution on the crowded decks of
-her adversary. But the "Yarmouth" men sprang to their guns, and in a few
-moments were firing their tremendous broadside of thirty guns as fast as
-they could be served and run out.
-
-On the "Randolph" Biddle's men were working well, but the crashing of the
-shot and the flying splinters were terrific. In fifteen minutes the decks
-were covered with the bodies of dead and dying men, and the surgeon and
-his mate below in the cockpit, covered with blood, were laboring to help
-such of those as could be aided, and the decks, in spite of the sand, were
-so slippery that as the ship rolled it was difficult to stand upright upon
-them. Many of the guns of one of the broadsides were disabled, and there
-was not a gun that had a full crew to man it.
-
-Biddle walked to and fro from one battery to another, lending a word here
-and a hand there, acting as sponger or tackle or handspikeman, wherever
-he was most needed. The men fought with the energy of despair--the despair
-of the dying. If they were to die, they would die hard, and the guns were
-loaded as though they would fire as many times as they could in the short
-time left them. The English aimed more deliberately. But when the dreaded
-broadside came, it dealt a blow that shook the smaller ship from stem to
-stern.
-
-Biddle, although badly wounded, refused to leave the deck, and, ordering a
-stool to be placed where he could best direct the firing, sat calmly down,
-though in great agony, and gave the orders to his officers, who repeated
-them to the men.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It has never been discovered just what happened on the "Randolph." In
-spite of her losses, she was keeping up her fire wonderfully, when, with
-scarcely a warning of any kind, she blew up.
-
-The force of the explosion was so great that the ship split in two, and
-sank immediately. The air was filled with guns, spars, and the blackened
-bodies of men, many of which fell upon the deck of the "Yarmouth." An
-American ensign, neatly rolled in a ball, ready to be sent aloft on the
-"Randolph" if the others had been shot away, fell on the quarter-deck of
-the Englishman unsinged.
-
-That national emblem was all, save a spar or two, that remained of the
-"Randolph." Captain Biddle and three hundred and ten of her crew of three
-hundred and fifteen were blown to pieces and drowned. Four days later the
-"Yarmouth," cruising near the same place, discovered a piece of the wreck
-to which five men, more dead than alive, had managed to cling.
-
-The "Randolph" was lost, but the "Yarmouth" was so badly cut up that
-she could not follow the chase, and was obliged to lay to for repairs.
-What, if any, difference there might have been had the "Randolph" not
-been destroyed by explosion from within it is not easy to say; but all
-authorities agree that the fight, while it lasted, was one of the most
-determined in history. Captain Biddle at the time of his death was but
-twenty-eight years old, and the infant navy and the colonies lost one of
-their most intrepid officers and gallant seamen.
-
-
-
-
-DECATUR AND THE "PHILADELPHIA"
-
-
-It was on the deck of the "Enterprise," before Tripoli, in 1804. The crew
-had been called aft, and Decatur, smiling, stood on his quarter-deck.
-
-"My men," said he, "the 'Philadelphia' is in the hands of the enemy. A
-few days from now and we may see American guns turned against American
-sailors. The commodore has given us permission to sail in and blow her
-up. Will you go?"
-
-Into the air flew a hundred caps, and three wild American cheers were the
-answer.
-
-"I can't take you all," he explained; "the expedition is a dangerous one.
-We are going under the broadsides of the enemy, and I only want those of
-you who are ready. Now, lads, any of you who are willing to go, take one
-step aft."
-
-Without a second's pause the crew of the "Enterprise," to a man, stepped
-out; then, fearful lest others should get in the front rank, came towards
-the young commander in a body, elbowing and swearing at one another
-lustily.
-
-Decatur smiled. With such a spirit there was nothing he might not
-accomplish. He picked out sixty-two of his youngest and steadiest men,
-each of them touching his tarry cap with a grateful "Thank'ee, sir," as
-Decatur called his name.
-
-That afternoon they tumbled joyfully down into a captured ketch,
-which had been named the "Intrepid," and, stores aboard, hoisted their
-three-cornered sail for the harbor of Tripoli. As they hauled off, Decatur
-went below to see that all his supplies and combustibles were stored,
-when Midshipman Lawrence came towards him somewhere from the depths of
-the fore-hold, pushing along by the scruff of the neck a youngster, who
-was crying bitterly.
-
-"I found this stowaway, sir," said Lawrence, with a smile.
-
-"Please, sir," sobbed the boy, "don't send me back. I want to see this
-'ere fight, and I ain't going to do no harm. Don't send me back, sir."
-
-Decatur had looked up with a fierce frown, but the anxiety on the lad's
-face was pathetic, and he smiled in spite of himself.
-
-"You can go," he laughed, "but I'll put you in the brig--when we get back."
-
-On that six days' voyage to Tripoli the wind blew a hurricane, and the
-masquerade of the American tars seemed likely to end in disaster, without
-even a fight for their pains. But as they sighted the coast the sea
-went down, and the arrangements were completed. The yellow sails of the
-"Siren," their consort, hove again into sight, and by the afternoon of
-the 16th of February the two vessels were bearing down upon the dark line
-that lay shimmering purple under the haze of the southern sky.
-
-The sun dropped down, a ball of fire, into the western sea, and by eight
-o'clock the towers of the bashaw's castle loomed dark against the amber
-of the moonlit sky. To the left the stately spars of the doomed frigate
-towered above the rigging in the harbor, and floating at her truck was
-the hated insignia of the enemy.
-
-The piping northern breeze bellied the crazy sail of the ketch and sent
-the green seas swashing under the high stern, speeding them good luck on
-their hazardous venture. Catalano, the pilot, stood at the helm, swinging
-the clumsy tiller to meet her as she swayed. By his side was a tall
-figure, a white burnoose about his shoulders and a fez set jauntily on his
-head--Decatur. Four others, in unspeakable Tripolitan costumes, lounged
-about the deck or squatted cross-legged. But the delusion went no further.
-For one of them, Reuben James, was puffing at a stubby black pipe, and
-another spat vigorously to leeward. The others were below, lying along
-the sides, sharpening their cutlasses.
-
-On they sped, Catalano heading her straight for the frigate. As the
-harbor narrowed and the black forts came nearer, they could see the dusky
-outlines of the sentries and the black muzzles that frowned on them from
-the battlements. Over towards the east faint glimmers showed where the
-town was, but the wind had now fallen low, and the lapping of the water
-along the sides alone awoke the silence. A single light shone from the
-forecastle of the frigate, where the anchor watch kept its quiet vigil.
-She swung at a long cable, a proud prisoner amid the score of watchful
-sentinels that encircled her.
-
-As placid as the scene about him, Decatur turned to the pilot and gave
-a low order. The helm was shifted and the tiny vessel pointed for the
-bowsprit of the "Philadelphia." Nearer and nearer they came, until
-scarcely a cable's length separated them. They saw several turbaned heads,
-and an officer leaned over the rail, puffing lazily at a cigarette. He
-leisurely took the cigarette from his mouth, and his voice came across
-the quiet water of the harbor,--
-
-"Where do you come from?" he hailed.
-
-Catalano, the pilot, answered him in the lingua Franca of the East,--
-
-"The ketch 'Stella,' from Malta. We lost our anchors and cables in the
-gale, and would like to lie by during the night."
-
-The Tripolitan took another puff, and an ominous stir, quickly silenced,
-was heard down in the hold of the ketch. It seemed an eternity before the
-answer came,--
-
-"Your request is unusual, but I will grant it," said the Tripolitan, at
-last. "What ship is that in the offing?"
-
-The officer had seen the "Siren," which hovered outside the entrance of
-the harbor.
-
-"The British ship 'Transfer,'" said Catalano, promptly.
-
-The ketch was slowly drifting down until a grappling-iron could almost
-be thrown aboard. Right under the broadside she went, and a line of dark
-heads peered over the rail at her as she gradually approached the bow.
-
-The chains of the frigate were now almost in the grasp of Reuben James,
-on the forecastle, when the wind failed and a cat's-paw caught the ketch
-aback. Down she drifted towards the terrible broadside. But at a sign
-from Decatur the eager Lawrence and James got into a small boat and
-carried a line to a ring-bolt at the frigate's bow. A boat put out from
-the "Philadelphia" at the same time. But Lawrence coolly took the hawser
-from the Tripolitan--"to save the gentleman trouble," he explained--and
-brought it aboard the "Intrepid." A moment more, and the ketch was warping
-down under the "Philadelphia's" quarter. It was a moment of dire peril.
-The slightest suspicion, and they would be blown to pieces.
-
-Decatur leaned lightly against the rail, but his hand grasped his cutlass
-under his robe so that the blood tingled in his nails and his muscles were
-drawn and tense. Morris and Joseph Bainbridge stood at the rigging beside
-him, trembling like greyhounds in leash.
-
-Suddenly they swung around and shot out from under the shadow into a
-yellow patch of moonlight. The watchful eyes above the rail saw the anchor
-and cables and the white jackets of the sailors below decks as they strove
-to hide themselves in the shadows. One glance was enough. In an instant
-the ship resounded with the thrilling cry, "Americano! Americano!"
-
-At the same moment the "Intrepid" ground up against the side of the
-frigate. In an instant, as if by magic, she was alive with men. Throwing
-off his disguise, and with a loud cry of "Boarders, away!" Decatur sprang
-for the mizzen-chains. And now the hot blood of fighting leaped to their
-brains. The long agony of suspense was over. Lawrence and Laws sprang for
-the chain-plates and hauled themselves up. Decatur's foot slipped, and
-Morris was the first on deck. Laws dashed at a port, pistols in hand.
-Nothing could withstand the fury of the charge, and over the rail they
-swarmed, cutlasses in teeth, jumping over the nettings, and down on the
-heads of the Tripolitans below. Though Morris was first on deck, Decatur
-lunged in ahead of him, bringing down the Tripolitan officer before he
-could draw his sword. One of them aimed a pike at him, but he parried it
-deftly, and Morris cut the fellow down with a blow that laid his shoulder
-open from collar to elbow.
-
-Though surprised, the Tripolitans fought fiercely. They had won their
-title of "the best hand-to-hand fighters in the world" in many a hard
-pirate battle in the Mediterranean. Around the masts they rallied,
-scimetars in hand, until they were cut or borne down by the fury of their
-opponents.
-
-[Illustration: DECATUR BOARDS THE "PHILADELPHIA"]
-
-After the first order, not a word was spoken and not a shot was
-fired. The Americans needed no orders. Over the quarter-deck they
-swept--irresistible, clearing it in a trice. Overwhelmed by the fierce
-onslaught, the Tripolitans fled for life, the sailors driving them up on
-the forecastle and overboard in a mass, where their falling bodies sounded
-like the splash of a ricochet.
-
-So swift was the work that in ten minutes no Tripolitans were left on the
-deck of the frigate but the dead. Not a sailor had been killed. One man
-had been slashed across the forehead, but he grinned through the blood
-and fought the more fiercely. Then the watchers out on the "Siren" saw
-a single rocket go high in the air, which was Decatur's signal that the
-"Philadelphia" was again an American vessel.
-
-In the meanwhile the combustibles were handed up from the ketch with
-incredible swiftness, and the work of destruction began. Midshipman Morris
-and his crew had fought their way below to the cock-pit and had set a fire
-there. But so swiftly did those above accomplish their work that he and
-his men barely had time to escape. On reaching the upper deck, Decatur
-found the flames pouring from the port-holes on both sides and flaring
-up red and hungry to seize the tar-soaked shrouds. He gave the order to
-abandon, and over the sides they tumbled as quickly as they had come.
-Decatur was the last to leave the deck. All the men were over, and the
-ketch was drifting clear, while around him the flames were pouring, their
-hot breath overpowering him. But he made a jump for it and landed safely,
-amid the cheers of his men.
-
-Then the great oars were got out, eight on a side, and pulling them as
-only American sailor-men could or can, they swept out towards the "Siren."
-
-The Tripolitans ashore and on the gunboats had hastened to their guns,
-and now, as the ketch was plainly seen, their batteries belched forth a
-terrific storm of shot that flew across the water. The men bent their
-backs splendidly to their work, jeering the while at the enemy as the
-balls whistled by their heads or sent the foam splashing over them. Out
-they went across the great crimson glare of the fire. It was magnificent.
-The flames swept up the shrouds with a roar, catching the woodwork of
-the tops and eating them as though they were tinder. She was ablaze from
-water to truck, and all the heavens were alight,--aglow at the splendid
-sacrifice. Then to the added roar of the batteries ashore came the
-response from the guns of the flaming ship, which, heated by the fierce
-flames, began to discharge themselves. But not all of them were fired so,
-for in a second all eyes were dazzled by a blazing light, and they saw the
-great hull suddenly burst open, with huge streaks of flame spurting from
-between the parting timbers. Then came a roar that made the earth and sea
-shudder. The fire had reached the magazine.
-
-[Illustration: THE DANGER OF THE "INTREPID"]
-
-The waves of it came out to the gallant crew, who, pausing in their work,
-gave one last proof of their contempt of danger. Rising to their feet,
-they gave three great American cheers that echoed back to the forts while
-their guns thundered fruitlessly on.
-
-Decatur and his men were safe under the "Siren's" guns.
-
-Is it any wonder that Congress gave Decatur a sword and made him a
-captain, or that Lord Nelson called this feat "the most daring act of any
-age"?
-
-
-
-
-THE BIGGEST _LITTLE_ FIGHT IN NAVAL HISTORY
-
-
-It should have been renown enough for one man to have performed what
-Nelson was pleased to call "the most daring act of any age." But the
-capture of the "Philadelphia" only whetted Decatur's appetite for further
-encounters. He was impetuous, bold even to rashness, and so dashing that
-to his men he was irresistible. But behind it all--a thing rare in a man
-of his peculiar calibre--there was the ability to consider judiciously
-and to plan carefully as well as daringly to execute. His fierce temper
-led him into many difficulties, but there was no cruelty behind it; and
-the men who served with him, while they feared him, would have followed
-him into the jaws of death, for they loved him as they loved no other
-officer in the American service. Once while the frigate "Essex," Captain
-Bainbridge, lay in the harbor at Barcelona, the officers of the American
-vessel suffered many petty indignities at the instance of the officers
-of the Spanish guardship. Having himself been subjected to a slight from
-the Spanish commander, Lieutenant Decatur took the bull by the horns. He
-bade his coxswain pull to the gangway of the Spaniard, and he went boldly
-aboard. His lips were set, for he had resolved upon his own responsibility
-to make an immediate precedent which would serve for all time. The Spanish
-commander, most fortunately, was absent. But Decatur none the less strode
-aft past the sentry to the gangway and, lifting his great voice so that
-it resounded from truck to keelson, he shouted,--
-
-"Tell your comandante that Lieutenant Stephen Decatur, of the 'Essex,'
-declares him to be a scoundrelly coward, and if Lieutenant Decatur meets
-him ashore he will cut his ears off."
-
-So among the men of the squadron Decatur came to be known as a man who
-brooked nothing and dared everything.
-
-But when the crusty Preble took command in the Mediterranean he was not
-over-impressed with the under-officers of his command. Not one of the
-lieutenants was over twenty-four and none of those higher in authority had
-turned thirty. Decatur and Somers were twenty-five; Charles Stewart was
-only twenty-six, and Bainbridge the younger; Morris and Macdonough were
-barely out of their teens.
-
-It was not the custom of the commander-in-chief to mince his words.
-So sparing himself the delicacy of secluding himself behind the saving
-bulkheads of the after-cabin he swore right roundly at his home government
-for sending him what he was pleased to call "a parcel of d-- school-boys."
-He was a martinet of the old style, and believed in the school of the
-fo'c's'le, and not in young gentlemen whose friends at home sent them in
-by the ports of the after-cabin. He held the youngsters aloof, and not
-until he had tried them in every conceivable fashion would he consider
-them in his councils. A year had passed, and Decatur, Morris, Bainbridge,
-Macdonough, and Somers had helped to add glorious pages to naval history,
-before the old man, with a smile to Colonel Lear, the consul, consented
-to say,--
-
-"Well, after all, colonel, they are very good school-boys!"
-
-Although Decatur's success in the destruction of the "Philadelphia" had
-removed a dangerous auxiliary battery from the harbor of Tripoli, the
-bashaw was far from overawed, and, with the officers and crew of the
-"Philadelphia" as hostages, declined to consider any terms offered by
-the Americans; and so it was resolved by Commodore Preble to make an
-attempt upon the Tripolitan batteries and fleet. The Americans had the
-"Constitution,"--"Old Ironsides,"--Commodore Preble, and six brigs and
-schooners mounting twelve and sixteen guns each. Preble had also succeeded
-in borrowing from "the most gracious king of the Sicilies," who was then
-at war with the bashaw, two bomb-vessels and six single gunboats,--quite
-a formidable little force of a hundred and thirty-four guns and about a
-thousand men.
-
-It was not until the morning of the 3d of August, 1804, that the
-weather, which had been very stormy, moderated sufficiently to allow
-the squadron to approach the African coast. The gunboats were unwieldy
-craft, flat-bottomed, and, as the sea made clean breeches over them,
-they were a dozen times in danger of sinking. But by ten o'clock the sky
-to the southward had lightened, and the heavy storm-clouds were blowing
-away overhead to the westward. "Old Ironsides" shook the reefs out of
-her topsails and, spreading her top-gallant-sails, she beat up for the
-entrance of the harbor of Tripoli with two of the gunboats in tow. Her
-tall spars, seeming almost to pierce the low-rolling clouds, towered far
-above the little sticks of the "Siren" and "Nautilus," which bore down
-directly in her wake. The sea had lashed out its fury, and, before the
-little fleet had reached the reef, the gray had turned to green, and
-here and there a line of amber showed where the mid-day sun was stealing
-through.
-
-Stephen Decatur, on gunboat No. 4, had been given command of the left
-division of three gunboats. Casting off the tow-lines from his larger
-consorts, he got under weigh, and bore down for a rift between the reefs
-at the eastern entrance to the harbor, where the Tripolitan fleet, cleared
-for action, lay awaiting him. The wind was on his bow, and he was obliged
-to hold a course close to the wind in order to weather the point.
-
-The gunboat lumbered uncertainly in the cross-sea, for she had no longer
-the steady drag of the "Constitution's" hawser to steady her. The seas
-came up under her flat bottom, and seemed to toss rather than swing
-her into the hollows. She was at best an unsteady gun-platform, and
-nice sail-trimming was an impossibility. But they got out their sweeps,
-and that steadied her somewhat. Great volumes of spray flew over the
-weather-bow as she soused her blunt nose into it, and the fair breeze sent
-it shimmering down to leeward.
-
-Decatur stood aft by the helmsman, watching the quivering leeches, and
-keeping her well up into the wind. Beside him stood his midshipmen, Thomas
-Macdonough--afterwards to win a great victory of his own--and Joseph
-Thorn. Both of them had smelt powder before, and Macdonough had been one
-of the first on the deck of the ill-fated "Philadelphia." This was to be
-a different sort of a fight from any they had seen. It was to be man to
-man, where good play of cutlass and pike and youth and American grit might
-mean victory. Defeat meant annihilation. But youth is good at a game of
-life and death, and as they looked at Decatur there was never a moment's
-fear of the result. They leaned against the rail to leeward, looking past
-the foam boiling on the point to the spars of the African gunboats, and
-their eyes were alight with eagerness for battle.
-
-The men were bending steadily to their sweeps. Most of them were stripped
-to the waist, and Decatur looked along the line of sinewy arms and chests
-with a glow of pride and confidence. There was no wavering anywhere in
-the row of glistening faces. But they all knew the kind of pirates they
-were going to meet,--reckless, treacherous devils, who loved blood as they
-loved Allah,--the best hand-to-hand fighters in the Mediterranean.
-
-The ring of the cutlasses, loose-settled in their hangers, against the
-butts of the boarding-pistols was clear above the sound of the row-locks
-and the rush of the waters, while forward the catch of a song went up,
-and they bent to their work the more merrily.
-
-As they came under the lee of the Tripolitan shore and the sea went down,
-Decatur ordered the long iron six-pounder cast loose. They had provided
-solid shot for long range at the batteries, and these were now brought up
-and put conveniently on the fo'c's'le. But for the attack upon the vessels
-of the fleet they loaded first with a bag of a thousand musket-balls. At
-point-blank range Decatur judged that this would do tremendous execution
-among the close-ranked mass of Tripolitans on the foreign vessels. His
-idea was not to respond to the fire of the enemy, which would soon begin,
-until close aboard, and then to go over the rail before they could recover
-from their confusion. He felt that if they did not make a wreck of him and
-batter up his sweeps he could get alongside. And once alongside, he knew
-that his men would give a good account of themselves.
-
-But as they came up towards the point the wind shifted, and the head of
-the gunboat payed off. Even with their work at the sweeps, he now knew
-that it would be no easy matter for all the Americans to weather the
-point, for two of them were well down to leeward. But his brother, James
-Decatur, in gunboat No. 2, and Sailing-Master John Trippe, in gunboat No.
-6, had kept well up to windward, and so he felt that he should be able to
-count on at least these two. As they reached the line of breakers, one of
-the gunboats to leeward, under Richard Somers, was obliged to go about,
-and in a moment the two others followed. Then the young commanders of the
-windward gunboats knew that if the attack was to be made they alone would
-have the glory of the first onslaught.
-
-What Decatur feared most was that Preble, on the "Constitution," would
-see how terribly they were overmatched and signal the recall. But as they
-reached the point, Decatur resolutely turned his back to the flagship,
-and, putting his helm up, set her nose boldly into the swash of the
-entrance and headed for the gray line of vessels, three times his number,
-which hauled up their anchors and came down, gallantly enough, to meet
-him.
-
-There was very little sound upon the gunboat now. The wind being
-favorable, the Americans shipped their sweeps, and sat watching the
-largest of the Tripolitan vessels, which was bearing down upon them
-rapidly. They saw a puff of white smoke from her fo'c's'le, and heard
-the whistle of a shot, which, passing wide, ricochetted just abeam and
-buried itself beyond. Thorn stood forward, waiting for the order to fire
-his long gun. But Decatur gave no sign. He stood watching the lift of the
-foresail, carefully noting the distance between the two vessels. Trippe
-and James Decatur had each picked out an adversary, and were bearing down
-as silently as he, in spite of the cannonade which now came from both the
-vessels and batteries of the Turks. The shots were splashing all around
-him, but nothing had been carried away, and the American jackies jeered
-cheerfully at the wretched marksmanship. As the Tripolitans came nearer,
-the Americans could see the black mass of men along the rails and catch
-the glimmer of the yataghans. Then Decatur ordered his own men to seize
-their pikes and draw their pistols and cutlasses.
-
-At the word from Decatur, Thorn began training the fo'c's'le gun, which
-in the steadier sea would have a deadly effect. The distance was a matter
-of yards now, and a shot came ploughing alongside that threw spray all
-along the rail and nearly doused the match of the gunner of the fo'c's'le.
-But not until he could see the whites of the eyes of his adversaries did
-Decatur give the order to fire. As the big gun was discharged point-blank
-into the thick of the crowded figures, Decatur shifted his helm quickly
-and lay aboard the Tripolitan. So tremendous had been the execution of the
-musket-balls, and so quickly had the manoeuvre been executed, that almost
-before the Tripolitans were aware of it the Americans were upon them. The
-few shots from the Turkish small arms had gone wild, but a fierce struggle
-ensued before the Americans reached the deck. At last Decatur, followed
-by Thorn, Macdonough, and twenty-two seamen, gained the fo'c's'le in a
-body, and the Tripolitans retreated aft.
-
-The Tripolitan boat was divided amidships by an open hatchway, and for
-a moment the opposing forces stopped to catch their breath, glaring at
-one another across the opening. Decatur did not pause long. Giving them
-a volley of pistol-bullets at close range, he dashed furiously down one
-gangway, while Macdonough and Thorn went down the other, and, with a
-cheer, cut down the remaining Turks or drove them overboard. A half-dozen
-went down a forward hatch, and these were made prisoners.
-
-It was a short fight, with an inconsiderable loss to Decatur, but the
-Tripolitan dead were strewn all over the decks, and the Turkish captain
-was pierced by fourteen bullets. The Tripolitan flag was hauled down, and,
-taking his prize in tow, Decatur put his men at the sweeps again, to move
-farther out of the reach of the batteries.
-
-By this time James Decatur and John Trippe had got into the thick of it.
-Following Stephen Decatur's example, they dashed boldly at the larger
-of the bashaw's vessels, and, reserving their fire for close range, they
-lay two of them aboard. John Trippe, Midshipman Henley, and nine seamen
-had gained the deck of their adversary, when the vessels drifted apart,
-and they were left alone on the deck of the enemy. But Trippe was the man
-for the emergency. So rapidly did they charge the Turks that their very
-audacity gave them the advantage, and Trippe finally succeeded in killing
-the Tripolitan commander by running him through with a boarding-pike. They
-fought with the energy of despair, and, although wounded and bleeding from
-a dozen sabre-cuts, struggled on until their gunboat got alongside and
-they were rescued by their comrades.
-
-But the story of the treachery of the Turkish captain and Stephen
-Decatur's revenge for the death of his brother makes even the wonderful
-defensive battle of Trippe seem small by comparison.
-
-James Decatur, having got well up with one of the largest of the
-Tripolitan vessels, delivered so quick and telling a fire with his long
-gun and musketry that the enemy immediately struck his colors. He hauled
-alongside and clambered up and over the side of the gunboat to take
-possession of her personally. As his head came up above the rail his men
-saw the Turkish commander rush forward and aim his boarding-pistol at the
-defenceless American. The bullet struck him fairly in the forehead, and
-Decatur, with barely a sound, sank back into his boat.
-
-In their horror at the treachery of the Tripolitan, the Americans allowed
-the boat to sheer off, and the Turk, getting out his sweeps, was soon
-speeding away toward the protection of the batteries.
-
-Stephen Decatur, towing his prize to safety, had noted the gallant attack,
-and had seen the striking of the Turkish colors. But not until an American
-boat darted alongside of him did he hear the news of the treacherous
-manner of his brother's death. The shock of the information for the moment
-appalled him, but in the place of his grief there arose so fierce a rage
-at the dastardly act that for a moment he was stricken dumb and senseless.
-His men sprang quickly when at last he thundered out his orders. Deftly
-casting off the tow-line of the prize, they hoisted all sail and jumped to
-their sweeps as though their lives depended on it. Macdonough's gun-crew
-were loading with solid shot this time, and, as soon as they got the
-range, a ball went screaming down towards the fleeing Tripolitan. The men
-at the sweeps needed little encouragement. They had heard the news, and
-they loved James Decatur as they worshipped his brother, who stood aft,
-his lips compressed, anxiously watching the chase. The water boiled under
-the oar-blades as the clumsy hulk seemed to spring from one wave-crest
-to another. Again the long gun spoke, and the canister struck the water
-all about the Turkish vessel. The Tripolitans seemed disorganized,
-for their oars no longer moved together and the blades were splashing
-wildly. Another solid shot went flying, and Decatur smiled as he saw the
-spray fly up under the enemy's counter. There would be no mercy for the
-Tripolitans that day. Nearer and nearer they came, until the Turks, seeing
-that further attempts at flight were useless, dropped their sweeps and
-prepared to receive the Americans. They shifted their helm so that their
-gun could bear, and the shot that followed tore a great rent in Decatur's
-foresail. But the Americans heeded it little more than if it had been a
-puff of wind, and pausing only to deliver another deadly discharge of the
-musket-balls at point-blank range, Decatur swung in alongside under cover
-of the smoke.
-
-As the vessels grated together, Decatur jumped for the Tripolitan rigging,
-and, followed by his men, quickly gained the deck. Two Turks rushed at
-Decatur, aiming vicious blows with their scimetars; but he parried them
-skilfully with his pike, looking around him fiercely the while for the
-captain. As he thought of his brother dying, or dead, he swore that no
-American should engage the Turkish commander but himself. He had not long
-to wait. They espied each other at about the same moment, and brushing
-the intervening weapons aside, dashed upon each other furiously.
-
-Decatur was tall, and as active as a cat. His muscles were like steel, and
-his rage seemed to give him the strength of a dozen. But the Mussulman
-was a giant, the biggest man in the Tripolitan fleet, and a very demon
-in power and viciousness. So strong was he, that as Decatur lunged at him
-with his boarding-pike he succeeded in wrenching it from the hand of the
-American, and so wonderfully quick that Decatur had hardly time to raise
-his cutlass to parry the return. He barely caught it; but in doing so his
-weapon broke off short at the hilt. The next lunge he partially warded
-by stepping to one side; but the pike of the Mussulman in passing cut an
-ugly wound in his arm and chest. Entirely defenceless, he now knew that
-his only chance was at close quarters, so he sprang in below the guard of
-the Turk and seized him around the waist, hoping to trip and stun him. But
-the Tripolitan tore the arms away as though he had been a stripling, and,
-seizing him by the throat, bore him by sheer weight to the deck, trying
-the while to draw a yataghan. The American crew, seeing things going badly
-with their young captain, fought in furiously, and in a moment the mass
-of Americans and Tripolitans were fighting in one desperate, struggling,
-smothering heap, above the prostrate bodies of their captains, neither of
-whom could succeed in drawing a weapon. The Turk was the first to get his
-dagger loose, but the American's death-like grasp held his wrist like a
-vise, and kept him from striking the blow. Decatur saw another Turk just
-beside him raise his yataghan high above his head, and he felt that he was
-lost. But at this moment a sailor, named Reuben James, who loved Decatur
-as though he were a brother, closed in quickly and caught on his own head
-the blow intended for Decatur. Both his arms had been disabled, but he
-asked nothing better than to lay down his life for his captain.
-
-In the meanwhile, without relinquishing his grip upon the Turk, Decatur
-succeeded in drawing a pistol from the breast of his shirt, and, pressing
-the muzzle near the heart of the Tripolitan, fired. As the muscles of
-his adversary relaxed, the American managed to get upon one knee, and so
-to his feet, stunned and bleeding, but still unsubdued. The Tripolitans,
-disheartened by the loss of their leader, broke ground before the force
-of the next attack and fled overboard or were cut down where they stood.
-
-The death of James Decatur was avenged.
-
-The other Tripolitan gunboats had scurried back to safety, so Decatur,
-with his two prizes, made his way out towards the flagship unmolested. His
-victory had cost him dearly. There was not a man who had not two or three
-wounds from the scimetars, and some of them had cuts all over the body.
-The decks were like a slaughter-pen and the scuppers were running blood.
-But the bodies of the Tripolitans were ruthlessly cast overboard to the
-sharks; and by the time the Americans had reached the "Constitution" the
-decks had been scrubbed down and the wounded bandaged and roughly cared
-for by those of their comrades who had fared less badly.
-
-Decatur, by virtue of his exploit in destroying the "Philadelphia,"
-already a post-captain at the age of twenty-five, could expect no further
-immediate honors at the hands of the government; but then, as ever
-afterwards, he craved nothing but a stanch ship and a gallant crew. The
-service he could do his country was its own reward.
-
-
-
-
-A DOUBLE ENCOUNTER
-
-
-The old "Constitution" was out on the broad ocean again! And when the
-news went forth that she had succeeded for the seventh time in running
-the blockade of the British squadrons, deep was the chagrin of the
-Admiralty. This Yankee frigate, still stanch and undefeated, had again and
-again proved herself superior to everything afloat that was British; had
-shown her heels, under Hull's masterly seamanship, to a whole squadron
-during a chase that lasted three days; and had under Hull, and then
-under Bainbridge, whipped both the "Guerriere" and the "Java," two of
-their tidiest frigates, in an incredibly short time, with a trifling loss
-both in men and rigging. She was invincible; and the title which she had
-gained before Tripoli, under Commodore Preble, when the Mussulman shot
-had hailed against her oaken timbers and dropped harmlessly into the sea
-alongside, seemed more than ever to befit her. "Old Ironsides" was abroad
-again, overhauled from royal to locker, with a crew of picked seamen and
-a captain who had the confidence of the navy and the nation.
-
-Her hull had been made new, her canvas had come direct from the sail-lofts
-at Boston, and her spars were the stanchest that the American forests
-could afford. She carried thirty-one long 24-pounders and twenty short
-32-pounders,--fifty-one guns in all, throwing six hundred and forty-four
-pounds of actual weight of metal to a broadside. Her officers knew her
-sailing qualities, and she was ballasted to a nicety, bowling along in a
-top-gallant-stu'n-sail breeze at twelve knots an hour.
-
-The long list of her victories over their old-time foe had given her men a
-confidence in the ship and themselves that attained almost the measure of
-a faith; and, had the occasion presented itself, they would have been as
-willing to match broadsides with a British seventy-four as with a frigate
-of equal metal with themselves. They were a fine, hearty lot, these
-jack-tars; and, as "Old Ironsides" left the green seas behind and ploughed
-her bluff nose boldly through the darker surges of the broad Atlantic,
-they vowed that the frigate's last action would not be her least. The
-"Constitution" would not be dreaded by the British in vain.
-
-For dreaded she was among the officers of the British North Atlantic
-squadron. As soon as it was discovered by the British Admiralty that
-she had passed the blockade, instructions were at once given out and
-passed from ship to ship to the end that every vessel of whatever class
-which spoke another on the high seas should report whether or not she
-had seen a vessel which looked like the "Constitution." By means of this
-ocean telegraphy they hoped to discover the course and intention of the
-great American, and finally to succeed in bringing her into action with
-a British fleet. By this time they had learned their lesson. Single
-frigates were given orders to avoid an encounter, while other frigates
-were directed to hunt for her in pairs!
-
-Charles Stewart had been one of old Preble's "school-boy captains" before
-Tripoli, the second in command. He had been one to suggest the expedition
-to cut out or destroy the "Philadelphia," the envied command of which fell
-to Decatur. But he won distinction enough before the batteries there, and
-afterwards when he captured the French "Experiment," of a much heavier
-force and armament than his own, in a brilliant little action. He had
-entered the merchant service at thirteen, had been captain of a ship in
-the India trade at nineteen, and thus from his boyhood had been schooled
-in the finer points of rough-and-ready seamanship.
-
-He was born in Philadelphia, in 1778, at a time when the blood of
-patriotism ran hot in the veins of the mothers as well as of the fathers
-of the race, and he then imbibed the principles he afterwards stood for
-so valiantly on sea and on land. On the frigate "United States," that
-"nursery of heroes," he had for mess-mates Stephen Decatur and Richard
-Somers; and Edward Preble gave him ideas of discipline that later stood
-him in good stead. He was, like Decatur, of an impetuous disposition;
-but he had learned what quick obedience meant to the service, and among
-the men on the "Constitution" it was known that infractions of duty would
-be quickly punished. The men tumbled quickly to the gear and handled the
-guns so smartly that with his picked seamen Stewart had not been out of
-sight of land a week before they attained a proficiency in manoeuvre rarely
-surpassed on a man-of-war. It is related that once, having received an
-order from a superior officer to sail with his ship immediately, Stewart
-got under weigh, towing behind him his mainmast, which he had not had the
-opportunity to step.
-
-Stewart was, of course, aware of the orders which had been issued by the
-Admiralty, but with his ship in fine condition and provisioned for a long
-cruise he feared nothing that floated, whether one ship or two. In fact,
-just before leaving his young wife in Boston he had asked her what he
-should bring her home.
-
-"A British frigate," said she, patriotically.
-
-"I will bring you two of them," he said, smiling.
-
-Stewart sailed to the southward, in the hope of falling in with some
-vessels in the India trade. For two months, in spite of their fitness,
-the men were daily exercised in all weathers at evolutions with the
-sails and great guns, and part of the day was given to cutlass-work and
-pistol-practice. No emergency drill was overlooked, and from reefing
-topsails to sending up spare spars or setting stu'n-sails they moved
-like the co-ordinated parts of a great machine. But one prize having been
-taken, however, Stewart set his course for the coast of Europe, to seek
-the lion, like Paul Jones, on his own cruising ground.
-
-On February 18, 1815, just two months after leaving Boston, the
-"Constitution," being then near the Portuguese coast, sighted a large
-sail, and immediately squared away in pursuit. But hardly were they set
-on their new course before another sail hove up to leeward, and Stewart
-quickly made down for her. Overhauling her shortly, she was discovered to
-be the British merchant ship "Susan," which he seized as a prize and sent
-back to Boston. Meanwhile the other sail, which afterwards proved to be
-the "Elizabeth," 74, had disappeared.
-
-The following day the "Constitution" was holding a course to the southward
-from the coast of Spain toward Madeira. A group of her officers stood
-upon her quarter-deck, watching the scud flying to leeward. They were
-rather a discontented lot. They had been to sea two months, and beyond
-a few merchant prizes they had nothing to show for their cruise. It was
-not like the luck of "Old Ironsides." What they craved was action to
-put a confirmatory test to the metal they were so sure of. The fo'c's'le
-was grumbling, too; and the men who had been in her when she fought the
-"Guerriere" and the "Java" could no longer in safety boast of the glory
-of those combats.
-
-Had they but known it, the "Elizabeth," 74, and the "Tiber," 38, in
-command of Captain Dacres, who had lost the "Guerriere," were but a few
-hours astern of them; and the "Leander," 50, the "Newcastle," 50, and the
-"Acasta," 40, whom they had so skilfully eluded at Boston, were dashing
-along from the westward in pursuit. The seas to the eastward, too, were
-swarming with other frigates (in couples), who were seeking her no less
-anxiously than she was seeking them.
-
-Stewart was not so easily disheartened as his officers. He knew that the
-"Constitution" was in the very midst of the ships of the enemy. Had he
-not known it he would not have been there. He came on deck during the
-afternoon in a high good humor. He was a believer in presentiments, and
-said, jovially,--
-
-"The luck of the 'Constitution' isn't going to fail her this time,
-gentlemen. I assure you that before the sun rises and sets again you will
-be engaged in battle with the enemy, and it will not be with a single
-ship."
-
-The morning of the next day dawned thick and cloudy. Though well to the
-southward, the air was cold and damp. The wind was blowing sharply from
-the northeast, and the choppy seas sent their gray crests pettishly or
-angrily upward, where they split into foam and were carried down to mingle
-with the blur of the fog to leeward. Occasionally, in the wind-squalls,
-the rain pattered like hail against the bellying canvas and ran down into
-the lee-clews, where it was caught as it fell and whipped out into the
-sea beyond.
-
-Two or three officers paced the quarter-deck, looking now and then aloft
-or to windward to see if the weather were clearing. Saving these, the
-fellows at the wheel, and the watch on deck, all hands were below on the
-gun-deck, polishing their arms or loitering in the warmth near the galley,
-where the cooks were preparing the mid-day meal.
-
-During the morning watch, Stewart, for some reason which he was unable
-to give, save an unaccountable impulse, changed the course and sent
-the ship down sixty miles to the southwest. Shortly after noon the fog
-fell lower, and so thinned out at the mast-head that the lookout on
-the topsail-yard could soon see along its upper surface. At about one
-o'clock the welcome sound of "Sail, ho!" came echoing down through the
-open hatchways. While ordinarily the sighting of a sail so near the coast
-has no great significance, Stewart's prediction of a battle had aroused
-the men to a fever of impatience; and when they knew that a large sail,
-apparently a frigate, had been raised and that the fog was lifting, the
-watch below dropped their kits and tools and tumbled up on deck to have
-a glimpse of the stranger. Here and there wider rifts appeared in the
-fog-banks, and the midshipman of the watch, who climbed with a glass into
-the foretop, soon made her out to be a frigate bearing about two points
-on the port-bow.
-
-Stewart came up from below and immediately crowded on top-gallant-sails
-and royals in pursuit. Before long the weather had cleared, so that they
-could make out the horizon to windward, and from the deck could dimly
-discern the hazy mass of the chase as she hung on the lee-bow, apparently
-motionless. In less than an hour the man at the mast-head reported another
-sail ahead of the first one, and noted that signals were being exchanged
-between them.
-
-It was now almost a certainty that the vessels were those of the enemy.
-Forward the men were slapping one another on the back, and rough jokes and
-laughter resounded from the gun-deck, where the boys and stewards were
-clearing away the mess-dishes and stowing away all gear, in preparation
-for a possible action. On the quarter-deck wagers were freely offered on
-the character of the vessels, which looked to be frigates of 50 and 38.
-Stewart glanced aloft at the straining spars and smiled confidently.
-
-By this time the nearer frigate bore down within the range of the
-glasses, and they could see that she was painted with double yellow
-lines, and apparently cut for fifty guns. As it afterwards appeared, she
-had a double gun-streak, false ports having been painted in her waist.
-Lieutenant Ballard, who had been carefully examining her with his glasses,
-remarked to the captain, who stood at his elbow, that she must at least
-be a fifty-gun ship. Stewart, after a long look, suggested that she was
-too small to be a ship of that class. "However," he continued, "be this
-as it may, you know I have promised you a fight before the setting of
-to-morrow's sun; and if we do not take it, now that it is offered, we may
-not have another chance. We must flog them when we catch them, whether
-she has one gun-deck or two."
-
-Signals were now constantly interchanged between the vessels, and by three
-o'clock the "Constitution" had come so near that they were plainly made
-out to be two small frigates, or a frigate and a sloop-of-war, both close
-hauled on the starboard tack. The "Constitution," having the windward
-gauge, now manoeuvred more carefully, and, hauling her sheets flat aft,
-pointed up so as to keep the advantage of position.
-
-[Illustration: "NO 'DUTCH COURAGE' ON _THIS_ SHIP"]
-
-As the vessels came nearer and an action became certain, the stewards came
-on deck with the grog-buckets, in accordance with the time-honored rule on
-men-of-war by which the liquor is served before a fight. Instructions had
-been given that, as the battle was to be with two ships, a double portion
-of the drink should be served. But just as the stewards were about to
-ladle it out an old quartermaster rolled down from forward, and saying,
-"We don't want any 'Dutch courage' on _this_ ship," with a great kick sent
-the bucket and its contents flying into the scuppers.
-
-About four o'clock the westernmost ship signalled her consort and bore
-down to leeward to join her. The "Constitution" now set her stu'n-sails
-and went bearing down after them at a strain that seemed to menace her
-spars. She was rapidly drawing up with them when, just as she got well
-within range of the long guns, there was a sharp crack far aloft and
-the royal-mast snapped off at the cap. It was a doubtful moment, for
-the Englishmen crowded on all sail to escape, and rapidly drew together,
-flinging out their English ensigns as though in triumph.
-
-But they did not reckon on the superb seamanship of the "Constitution." In
-a trice the men were aloft with their axes, the wreck was cleared away,
-new gear was rove, and in half an hour a new mast was aloft and another
-royal was spread to the breeze.
-
-But the ships had been enabled to close with each other, and Stewart
-had lost the opportunity of attacking them separately. They made one
-ineffectual effort to get the weather-gauge, but, finding that the
-"Constitution" outpointed them, they settled back in line of battle and
-cleared ship for action. Stewart immediately showed his colors and beat
-to quarters.
-
-The fog had blown away and the sun had set behind a lowering bank of
-clouds. The wind still blew briskly, but the "Constitution" only pitched
-slightly, and offered a fairly steady platform for the guns, which were
-now trained upon the nearest vessel, but a few hundred yards broad off the
-port-bow. The darkness fell rapidly, and the moon came out from behind the
-fast-flying cloud-bank and silvered the winter twilight, gleaming fitfully
-on the restless water, a soft reproach upon the bloody work that was to
-follow.
-
-At a few moments past six the long guns of the "Constitution's"
-port-battery opened fire, and the battle was on. Both ships responded
-quickly to the fire, and for fifteen minutes the firing was so rapid that
-there was not a second's pause between the reverberations. The English
-crews cheered loudly. But the gunners of the "Constitution" went on
-grimly with their work, sponging and loading as though at target-practice,
-content to hear the splintering of the timbers of the nearest vessel as
-the double-shotted thirty-twos went crashing into her. Before long the
-smoke became so thick that the gunners could not see their adversaries;
-and Stewart, ordering the batteries to cease firing, drew ahead and
-ranged abeam of the foremost ship, with his port-battery reloaded and
-double-shotted. He waited until he was well alongside before giving the
-order to fire, when he delivered such a terrible hail of round-shot,
-grape, and canister that the enemy staggered and halted like an animal
-mortally wounded. For the moment her battery was entirely silenced, and
-during the lull they could hear the cries of the wounded as they were
-carried below to the cockpit. The English cheered no longer. Another such
-a broadside might have finished her; but before Stewart could repeat it
-he saw that the other ship was luffing up so as to take a raking position
-under the stern of the "Constitution."
-
-Nowhere did the wonderful presence of mind of Stewart and the splendid
-seamanship of his crew show to better advantage than in the manoeuvre
-which followed. He quickly braced his main- and mizzen-topsails flat to
-the mast, let fly all forward, and actually backed down upon the other
-enemy, who, instead of being able to rake the "Constitution," found her
-emerging from the smoke abreast his bows in a position to effectually
-rake _him_. The "Constitution's" guns by this time had all been reloaded,
-and a terrific fire swept fore and aft along the decks of the Englishman,
-tearing and splintering her decks and dismounting many of the guns of both
-batteries. So terrible was the blow that she faltered and fell off. Before
-she could recover from the first, another terrible broadside was poured
-into her.
-
-The other vessel now tried to luff up and rake the "Constitution" from
-the bows. But the American filled away immediately and let them have
-her other broadside. Side by side the "Constitution" and the larger ship
-sailed, firing individually and by battery as fast as they could sponge
-and load. Here and there a shot would strike within the stout bulwarks of
-the American; and one of these tore into the waist, killing two men and
-smashing through a boat in which two tigers were chained. A sailor named
-John Lancey, of Cape Ann, was carried below horribly mutilated. When the
-surgeon told him he only had a few moments to live, he said, "Yes, sir, I
-know it; but I only want to know that the ship has struck." Soon after,
-when he heard the cheers at her surrender, he rose from his cot, and,
-waving the stump of his blood-stained arm in the air, gasped out three
-feeble cheers and fell back lifeless.
-
-Having silenced the larger vessel, Stewart immediately hurried to the
-smaller one, which had been firing through the smoke at the gun-flashes.
-The "Constitution" fell off, and, gathering headway, succeeded in getting
-again across her stern, where she poured in two raking broadsides, which
-practically cut her rigging to pieces. Returning to the larger vessel,
-Stewart rounded to on her port-quarter and delivered broadside after
-broadside with such a telling effect that at 6.50 she struck her colors.
-
-The other vessel having in a measure refitted, came down gallantly but
-foolishly to the rescue of her consort. The "Constitution" met her with
-another broadside, which she tried to return, and then spread all sail
-to get away. But the American ship could outsail as well as outpoint her,
-and under the continuous fire of the bow-chasers of the "Constitution" she
-became practically helpless, and at about ten o'clock, when the dreaded
-broadside was about to be put into play again, she surrendered.
-
-It was a wonderful battle. In a fight between one sailing-ship and two the
-odds were four-fold on the side of the majority. For it was deemed next
-to impossible to rake without being doubly raked in return. This obvious
-disadvantage was turned by Stewart to his own account by what critics
-throughout the world consider to be the finest manoeuvring ever known in
-an American ship in action. He fought both his broadsides alternately,
-and luffed, wore, or backed his great vessel as though she had been
-a pleasure-boat. Neither of his adversaries succeeded in delivering
-one telling raking broadside. She seemed to be playing with them, and
-skilfully presented her reloaded guns to each vessel as it attempted to
-get her at a disadvantage.
-
-The larger vessel was discovered to be the "Cyane," 32, Captain Gordon
-Falcon, and the smaller one the sloop-of-war "Levant," 21, Captain George
-Douglass. The "Constitution" had fifty-one guns, while the Englishmen had
-fifty-three; but of the "Constitution's" crew four were killed and ten
-wounded. On the "Cyane" and "Levant" thirty-five were killed and forty-two
-were wounded.
-
-After the battle, while the two English captains were seated in Stewart's
-cabin dining with their victor, a discussion arose between them in
-regard to the part each had borne in the battle, while Stewart listened
-composedly. Their words became warmer and warmer, and each accused the
-other in plain terms of having been responsible for the loss of the
-vessels. At a point when it seemed as though the bitterness of their
-remarks bade fair to result in blows, Stewart arose and said, dryly,--
-
-"Gentlemen, there is no use getting warm about it; it would have been all
-the same, whatever you might have done. If you doubt that, I will put you
-all on board again, and we can try it over."
-
-The invitation was declined in silence.
-
-For this gallant action Congress awarded Stewart a sword and a gold medal,
-and "Old Ironsides" soon after the war was over was temporarily put out
-of commission. Her day of fighting was over. But years after, refitted
-and remodelled, she served her country in peace as gracefully as she had
-served it gloriously in war.
-
-
-
-
-THE "CONSTITUTION" AND THE "GUERRIERE"
-
-
-By the exercise of remarkable seamanship Captain Hull had succeeded in
-escaping from the British squadron, under Broke, off the Jersey coast.
-But he came so near capture that the secretary of the navy succeeded
-in frightening himself and the whole Cabinet at Washington into such a
-state of timidity that, had they had their way, no war-vessel flying the
-American flag would have been allowed to leave any Atlantic seaport and
-put to sea.
-
-Captain Hull had carried the "Constitution" into Boston, where, if the
-orders had reached him in time, the secretary would have peremptorily
-bidden him to remain. But Hull was not in a humor to be inactive. What
-he wanted was a fight, yard-arm to yard-arm, with a frigate of the enemy,
-preferably the "Guerriere," Captain Richard Dacres, who had sailed boldly
-up and down the coast with an open challenge to any frigate flying the
-American flag. Though very warm personal friends ashore, both Hull and
-Dacres had high opinions of the merits of their own vessels. Dacres voiced
-the prevailing sentiment of the officers of his navy when he spoke of the
-"Constitution" as a bunch of pine boards which the British would knock to
-pieces in twenty minutes. Hull said little; but several months before war
-was declared had met Dacres, and wagered him a cocked hat on the result
-should the "Constitution" and the "Guerriere" ever meet. With the timidity
-at home, neither he nor any American officers had much encouragement.
-There was no confidence in the navy at this period, and the insults they
-heard from abroad were not half so hard to bear as the thinly-veiled
-indifference they met at home.
-
-But Hull knew he had a good ship and a good crew. He had trained them
-himself, and he knew what they could do aloft and at the guns. Moreover,
-he knew what he could do himself. The navy was small, but the men who
-had smelt powder in the Revolution and before Tripoli were a stalwart
-set and had done deeds of gallantry that had set the greatest admirals
-of Europe by the ears. Many ingenious contrivances had been adopted, to
-be now tried for the first time. Sights had been put upon the guns, and
-the gun-captains knew better how to shoot than ever before. So, without
-waiting for the orders from the secretary which he knew would hold him in
-port indefinitely, Hull sailed on the first fair wind and uncompromisingly
-put out to sea. If the orders came, he wouldn't be back to obey unless
-he had captured a British frigate, or, at the very least, some merchant
-prizes. If he _did not_ succeed, it meant that he might be hung or shot
-for sailing without orders. But even this sword of Damocles did not deter
-him. He would do his best, at any rate, and made a quiet seaman's petition
-to the God of winds and seas to send him the "Guerriere."
-
-Thinking to find a better opportunity towards Halifax, where many British
-men-of-war and merchantmen put in, Hull sailed to the northward, and
-cruised as far as the mouth of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The frigate
-"Spartan," 38, was in those waters; but after watching for her for some
-days, he stood out to sea. On the 15th of August he sighted five vessels.
-The "Constitution" set all sail and rapidly came up with them. Four
-of them scattered, leaving the fifth, a brig, on fire. Hull made for
-the largest of the others, and found her to be an English merchantman
-in charge of an American prize-crew. The "Constitution" saved her from
-capture at the hands of the other vessels. Before night another vessel was
-overhauled, and she was found to be the American "Adeline," in the hands
-of a prize-crew from the British "Avenger." One vessel was destroyed and
-the other was sent to Boston in charge of Midshipman Madison and five men,
-carrying the first suggestion of the brilliant news which was to follow.
-
-A few days later the "Constitution" chased and overhauled the American
-privateer "Decatur," which, believing her to be an English cruiser, had
-thrown overboard almost all of her guns. The captain of the privateer
-had good news, though. He had sighted an English frigate the day before,
-sailing southward under easy sail. Hull immediately set everything the
-"Constitution" could carry and gave the quartermasters a course which
-should enable him to come up with her by the following day.
-
-The next morning dawned clear, but the breezes fell light, and not
-until the morning watch was there wind enough to send the American
-frigate bowling along on her course under top-gallant-sails and royals.
-Hull took the deck for awhile himself and sent lookouts to the fore-
-and main-royal-yards to keep a sharp lookout. With moderate luck they
-should catch up with her. And then Hull felt that he would make the
-"Constitution" the most talked about ship afloat or else he would change
-the timidity at the Navy Department into a panic for which there would be
-some reason.
-
-If the ship were the "Guerriere," he promised himself a new hat.
-
-Not a sail hove in sight until towards two in the afternoon, when a
-lookout aloft shouted, in a voice that was taken up by four hundred
-throats on the spar- and gun-decks,--
-
-"Sail ho!"
-
-In a moment the watch below came rushing up. So great was the excitement
-that many of them went half-way to the tops, without orders or permission,
-to view the stranger. In an hour the stronger glasses proved her plainly
-to be a frigate, and the "Constitution" eased off her sheets, and with
-the bit in her teeth boomed steadily down for her. For an hour the two
-ships moved in this position, the stranger making no effort to escape
-and leaving her colors, which were soon made out to be British, flying
-in defiance. In fact, as soon as she discovered the "Constitution" to be
-an American frigate she took in sail, laid her maintop-sail to the mast,
-and silently awaited the approach. Hull sailed on until within about
-three miles of the enemy, when he sent his light yards down, reefed his
-topsails, and cleared ship for action.
-
-An American-built frigate was for the first time to test her stanchness
-against a worthy representative of the mistress of the seas and "Terror
-of the World." Most of the crew had never been in close action before. The
-chase of the "Constitution" had tired their hearts less than their bodies,
-for the firing of the British squadron had been at a very long range, and
-there was never a time when their ship was in danger from the cannonading
-of the enemy. There was not a qualm or a fear to be seen on the faces
-either of grizzled seaman or powder-boy, and they went to quarters with
-enthusiasm.
-
-But underlying it all there was a note of gravity. They were going to
-bring an American ship into action with a frigate whose navy had scored
-hundreds of victories over the vessels of all the great nations of the
-earth. They half wondered at their audacity and that of their captain in
-defying a frigate so redoubtable as the "Guerriere," for there seemed
-no further doubt that it was she. But they looked up at Hull, who was
-calmly pacing up and down the quarter-deck, taking a look now and then at
-the enemy through his glass, and their confidence came back to them. The
-excitement was intense, and one by one the men began throwing aside their
-shirts and drawing in the buckles of their cutlass-hangers, most of the
-gun-crews stripping themselves to the waist and casting aside their shoes
-to avoid slipping on the decks when the blood began to flow. More than one
-of them had his own private score to settle with the British navy. Many
-of them had been at one time or another taken off American merchant-ships
-and impressed into the service of the enemy, and some of them still bore
-upon their backs the scars of the bloody lashes of the relentless "Cat."
-The father of Captain Hull had died in the pest-ship "Jersey," in the
-Revolution, and the other officers had all some grievances of their own
-which made them look eagerly forward to the battle which they intended
-should mean victory or death.
-
-On the "Guerriere" there was a feeling of unshaken confidence. That any
-calamity to their ship could be expected from an American-built vessel,
-manned by a crew collected haphazard among the merchant-ships of the
-Atlantic harbors, never for a moment occurred to them. When the drum
-beat to quarters, the men tumbled to their stations willingly enough,
-with no more trepidation than if they were going to target-practice.
-Captain Dacres summoned an American prisoner, the captain of the captured
-merchant-brig "Betsy," and asked him what he thought of the vessel which
-was approaching. The skipper ventured that she was undoubtedly an American
-frigate. Captain Dacres replied with a smile,--
-
-"She comes down a shade too boldly for an American." And then added,
-"Well, the better he behaves the more honor we will have in taking him."
-
-As the "Constitution" bore down nearer, her ensign and jack flying
-proudly, there could no longer be any doubt as to her nationality and
-intentions, and he shouted to his crew, who stood at the guns,--
-
-"There, my men, is a Yankee frigate. In forty-five minutes she is
-certainly ours. Take her in fifteen, and I promise you four months' pay."
-
-Shortly after this Captain Hull was within two or three miles, and the
-"Guerriere" opened fire on the "Constitution," to try the distance and
-get the range.
-
-The shots fell short, but Hull took in his light sails and came down more
-warily under topsails. The "Constitution" fired a broadside, but these
-shots, too, dropped in the water between them. As he came nearer, the
-"Guerriere" squared away, wearing first to port and then to starboard,
-firing alternate broadsides and manoeuvring to avoid being raked. He wanted
-to cripple the American's rigging from a distance, if possible. But the
-shot all missed their mark, and the "Constitution" only replied with
-her bow-guns. Hull soon saw that this manoeuvring might last the day out
-without coming to close quarters, so he hoisted his top-gallant-sails and
-made straight for the enemy.
-
-Now the shot of the Englishman began coming aboard. Some of the standing
-rigging was cut away and the vessel was hulled several times. But the
-men, having carefully reloaded, stood silently at their guns, looking out
-through the ports at the "Guerriere," which, enveloped in smoke, kept up a
-continuous fire. They looked anxiously at the short, stout, sturdy figure
-of Captain Hull, but he continued pacing the quarter-deck, making no
-sign that he was aware of the damage the shots were causing. In a moment
-the report of "Nobody hurt yet, sir," ceased suddenly. A shot struck the
-"Constitution's" starboard bulwarks up forward and sent a jagged hail of
-splinters among the crew of two of the guns of the first division. Two men
-were killed outright and one or two more were wounded by this shot, and
-as their shipmates saw the men carried below to the cockpit they moved
-uneasily, and several of the gun-captains wished to fire. Lieutenant
-Morris now, with a view to quieting them, strode aft to the quarter-deck,
-where Hull was still calmly pacing up and down, and said,--
-
-"The enemy has killed two of our men. Shall we return it?"
-
-"Not yet, sir," replied the impenetrable Hull.
-
-Morris returned to his station. But there is nothing more disorganizing to
-men than to be fired at and not have the opportunity of firing in return,
-and they besought Morris again to give the permission. Twice more the
-lieutenant went aft to the quarter-deck, and twice he got the same reply.
-Hull, like Paul Jones, believed in great broadsides at close quarters.
-This silence under galling fire was the greatest test of discipline an
-American crew had ever had. For in the heat of battle a man forgets to be
-afraid. That the men stood to it, speaks well for Hull's training.
-
-At last the "Constitution," which had been drawing closer and closer, drew
-up to a position about forty yards off the "Guerriere's" port-quarter,
-and Hull, waiting until his guns could all bear, stooped low, bursting
-his breeches from knee to waistband in the excitement of the moment, and
-gave vent to all the pent-up feelings of two hours in the hoarse order,--
-
-"Now, boys, give it to them!"
-
-It was a well-directed broadside.
-
-The shots crashed along the line of bulwarks and sent showers of splinters
-flying over her spar-deck. The ships were so close together that the
-effect of those shots could be seen distinctly. Some of the splinters flew
-as high as the mizzen-top, and instantly the English cheering ceased and
-the shrieks and cries of the wounded rang out between the concussions.
-Dacres now, for the first time, must have realized how great the honor
-would be if he took the "Constitution."
-
-Nor did the action promise any sign of being over in fifteen minutes.
-So well aimed were the American guns that in a short time the enemy's
-main-yard was shot away, and he was otherwise damaged severely both
-below and aloft. At a little after six a twenty-four pound shot went
-through the "Guerriere's" mizzen-mast, and, swaying a moment, over it
-fell to starboard, making a wreck and drag which impeded the Englishman's
-manoeuvres. The seas pounded it against the sides of the ship and a hole
-was knocked under her stern, through which she began taking water badly.
-When the mizzen-mast fell, Hull threw off his hat, and shouted,--
-
-"Hurrah, boys, we've made a brig of her!"
-
-[Illustration: IN THE TOPS OF THE "CONSTITUTION"]
-
-One of the seamen shouted back,--
-
-"We'll make a sloop of her soon, sir!"
-
-And they did; for in a little while the foremast followed by the
-board. The wreck trailing in the water astern acted as a rudder to the
-"Guerriere," and she swung across the wind. The "Constitution" forged
-ahead, and crossing her bows, poured in a raking broadside. Then swinging
-round to port, she sent in another as effective as the first. The ships
-were very close together, and a fire from a burning gun-wad broke out
-in the cabin of the American ship. This was quickly put out, however, by
-Lieutenant Hoffman of the after-gun division.
-
-Both captains now decided to board, and the men were massed on the
-decks as they could be spared from the guns for the purpose. Dacres
-was on the point of sending his men across his bowsprit, but, finding
-the jackies of the "Constitution" ready to receive him, changed his
-mind. The sharpshooters in the tops of both vessels were firing into
-the black masses of men, and every shot told. Lieutenant Morris, on the
-"Constitution," while attempting to take a few turns of rope around the
-bowsprit of the "Guerriere," received a bullet through the body. William
-S. Bush, the first lieutenant of marines, while standing on the taffrail
-ready to board, was shot through the skull by a British marine, and
-instantly killed. John C. Alwyn, the sailing-master, at the same time
-received a ball through the shoulder. Captain Hull climbed up on the rail,
-when a Yankee seaman, putting his arms around him, dragged him down and
-out of danger.
-
-"Not with them swabs on," he said, pointing to Hull's big bullion
-epaulettes. He would have been a certain mark for one of the sharpshooters
-of the enemy.
-
-At about this time the flag of the "Constitution," which had been
-nailed at the mizzen-truck, was shot down. But a young topman, named
-Hogan, shinned up the spar far aloft, and, though fired at repeatedly
-by the British marines, succeeded in replacing it amid the cheers of his
-companions.
-
-On the "Guerriere" things were going badly. Captain Dacres had been shot
-in the back by one of the American marines, but he pluckily remained
-on deck. As the "Constitution" got clear again, both the mainmast and
-foremast of the "Guerriere," which had been repeatedly cut by American
-shot, went over with a crash, and she lay on the wave completely helpless.
-This was less than half an hour after the "Constitution" sent in her
-terrible broadside.
-
-The American ship drew off to a short distance to repair her damages, and
-in less than an hour returned, and sent Lieutenant Read in a cutter to
-discover if Captain Dacres had surrendered.
-
-Dacres's humiliation was complete, and he felt that further battle would
-only be the butchery of his own brave fellows.
-
-Lieutenant Read hailed him to learn if he had surrendered.
-
-"I don't know that it would be prudent to continue the engagement any
-longer."
-
-"Do I understand you to say that you have struck?" asked Read.
-
-"Not precisely; but I don't know that it would be worth while to fight
-any longer."
-
-"If you cannot decide," said the American, "I will return aboard my ship
-and resume the engagement."
-
-Dacres here called out hurriedly,--
-
-"I am pretty much _hors de combat_ already. I have hardly men enough to
-work a single gun and my ship is in a sinking condition."
-
-"I wish to know, sir," demanded Read peremptorily, "whether I am to
-consider you as a prisoner of war or as an enemy. I have no time for
-further parley."
-
-Dacres paused, and then said, brokenly, "I believe now there is no
-alternative. If I could fight longer I would with pleasure, but I--I must
-surrender."
-
-When Dacres went up the side of the "Constitution" to surrender his sword
-he was treated in the manner befitting his rank by a generous enemy.
-Captain Hull assisted him to the deck, saying, anxiously,--
-
-"Dacres, give me your hand; I know you are hurt." And when the Englishman
-extended his sword, hilt forward, in formal surrender, Hull said,
-magnanimously,--
-
-"No, no; I will not have the sword of a man who knows so well how to use
-it. But"--and his eyes twinkled merrily--"but I'll thank you for that
-hat." He had not forgotten the wager, if Dacres had.
-
-The transferring of prisoners was at once begun, for it was seen that the
-"Guerriere" was a hopeless hulk, not fit to take to port. When this was
-all completed and every article of value taken from her, she was blown
-up, and the "Constitution" sailed for Boston.
-
-She arrived at an opportune time. For Detroit had been surrendered without
-firing a shot in its defence, and the American arms on the Canadian
-frontier had otherwise met with disastrous failure. The "Constitution,"
-gaily dressed in flags, came up the harbor amid the booming of cannon and
-the wildest of excitement among the people. A banquet was given to the
-officers in Faneuil Hall, and from that time the American navy gained a
-prestige at home it has never since lost. Congress voted a gold medal to
-Captain Hull, silver ones to the officers, and fifty thousand dollars as
-a bonus to the crew.
-
-The statistics of the fight are as follows:
-
-The "Constitution" had fifty-five guns, the "Guerriere" forty-nine,
-sending shot weighing approximately seven hundred and six hundred
-pounds respectively. The "Constitution's" crew numbered four hundred and
-sixty-eight; that of the "Guerriere" two hundred and sixty-three. The
-"Constitution" lost seven killed and seven wounded, and the "Guerriere"
-fifteen killed and sixty-three wounded. All authorities acknowledge
-that, other things being equal, the discrepancy in metal and crews hardly
-explains the difference in the condition of the vessels at the end of the
-battle.
-
-
-
-
-THE "WASP" AND THE "FROLIC"
-
-
-The American frigates "Constitution," "Constellation," and "United
-States" fought and won great battles where the metal and crews were equal
-or nearly equal, and proved beyond a doubt the advantage of American
-seamanship and gunnery over the British in the Naval War of 1812. But it
-remained for the little sloop-of-war "Wasp," Captain Jacob Jones, to add
-the final evidence of Yankee superiority. Her action with the "Frolic"
-was fought under conditions so trying that it fairly ranks with the great
-frigate actions of our naval history.
-
-The "Wasp" was only about one-sixth the size of the "Constitution." She
-was about as big as the three-masted schooners which ply in and out of
-our Atlantic seaports to-day, and only carried one hundred and forty men.
-What she lacked in size she made up in personnel, and what she lacked in
-ordnance she made up in precision of fire. They must have been fine Jack
-tars and gallant fellows every one of them, for there was no chance for
-skulkers in that fight. The vessel could not have been handled or the guns
-served as they were with one man less.
-
-It was off Albemarle Sound, in the rough end of a Hatteras gale, with a
-gun-platform which now rolled the gun-muzzles into the spume and then sent
-them skyward half-way to the zenith. It is a wonder that the gunners could
-hit anything at all; but almost every broadside told, and the hull of the
-"Frolic" was again and again riddled and raked fore and aft.
-
-When the war broke out the "Wasp" was in European waters, carrying
-despatches for the government. She was immediately recalled, and in
-October, 1812, sailed from the Delaware to the southward and eastward
-to get in the track of the British merchantmen in the West India trade.
-On the 15th of October she ran into a gale of wind off the capes of the
-Chesapeake, and lost her jib-boom and two men who were working on it at
-the time. For two days and nights the little vessel tumbled about under
-storm-sails, but Captain Jacob Jones was one of the best seamen in the
-navy, and no further harm was done. On the night of the 17th the wind
-moderated somewhat, though the seas still ran high. At about half-past
-eleven a number of frigates were seen, and Captain Jones deeming it
-imprudent to bear down nearer until day should show him who the strangers
-were, sailed up to get the weather-gage and await the dawn. His forward
-rigging was disabled, and he had no wish to take chances with an enemy of
-greatly superior force.
-
-The dawn came up clear and cold, and, as the darkness lifted, the crew
-of the "Wasp" could make out six fine merchantmen under convoy of a big
-brig. The brig was about the same size as the "Wasp," and it was seen
-that several of the merchantmen mounted from eleven to eighteen guns each.
-Nevertheless, Jones sent his topmen aloft, and in a trice he had his light
-yards on deck and his ship reefed down to fighting-canvas. The vessel was
-rolling her bows half under, but the guns were cast loose and the decks
-cleared for action. The brig, too, showed signs of animation. Her men
-went aloft at about the same time as those of the "Wasp," and soon she
-signalled her convoy to make all sail before the wind to escape.
-
-The sea was so high that it was eleven o'clock before the vessels came
-within range of each other. Then on the English vessel the Spanish flag
-was run up to the gaff. But the Americans nevertheless held on a course
-which would soon bring the ships together. There were enough Englishmen
-in those waters for Jones to take chances of her being one of the enemy.
-By half-past eleven the ships were within speaking-distance,--two or three
-hundred feet apart,--and Captain Jones mounted the mizzen-rigging, lifting
-his voice so that it might be heard above the shrieking of the wind and
-sea, and shouted through his trumpet,--
-
-"What ship is that?"
-
-For answer the Spanish flag came down with a run, the British ensign
-was hoisted, and a broadside was fired. Just then a squall keeled the
-Englishman over to leeward, and the "Wasp" having the weather-gage, the
-shots whistled harmlessly overhead and through the rigging. The Yankee
-ship responded immediately. The gunners had been trained in all weathers
-to fire as their own vessel was about to roll downward on the wave towards
-their adversary. By this means the shots were more sure to go low in the
-enemy's hull and to have the additional chance of the ricochet which would
-strike a glancing blow. They waited a second or so for this opportunity,
-and then sent their broadside of nine shots crashing through the hull of
-the "Frolic."
-
-The tumbling of the vessel sent the guns rolling about, and the tacklemen
-needed all their strength and skill to hold the guns in for serving and
-out for firing. But they were in no hurry. They worked as slowly and as
-surely as possible, taking every advantage of the roll of the vessel,
-training and aiming deliberately, and then firing at will. The Englishmen
-sent in three broadsides to two of the Yankees. But they fired from the
-hollow on the upward roll of the vessel and most of their shots went high,
-scarcely one of them striking the hull of the "Wasp."
-
-It is a wonderful thing to think even of these two little vessels, tossed
-about like billets of wood, the playthings of the elements, fighting
-a battle to the death with each other, ignoring the roaring of the sea
-and the hissing of the water which now and again seemed to completely
-engulf them in its foam. The waves came over the bows and waist of the
-"Wasp," flooding the decks, overturning buckets and making division-tubs
-a superfluity. Sometimes it dashed in at the leeward ports, dipping the
-handles of the sponges and rammers, and even burying the muzzles of the
-guns, which the next moment would be pointing at the main-truck of their
-adversary. The powder-boys, wet to the waist, stumbled over the decks with
-their powder-charges under their jackets, and, though buffeted about and
-knocked down repeatedly, kept the men at the guns plentifully supplied
-with ammunition.
-
-Although the British were firing rapidly and the shots were flying high,
-they began doing great damage in the rigging of the American. A few
-minutes after the battle was begun a shot from the "Frolic" struck the
-maintop-mast of the "Wasp" just above the cap, and it fell forward across
-the fore-braces, rendering the head-yards unmanageable for the rest of the
-action. A few minutes later other shots struck the mizzen-top-gallant-mast
-and the gaff, and soon almost every brace was shot away. The "Frolic" had
-been hulled repeatedly, but aloft had only lost her gaff and head-braces.
-In a quiet sea it would have been bad enough to lose the use of the sails,
-but in a gale of wind manoeuvring became practically impossible. The wind
-was blowing fiercely so both vessels drove on before it, keeping up the
-cannonading whenever a gun would bear, and pouring in from the tops a fire
-of musketry upon the officers and men upon the decks.
-
-The "Wasp," having squared forward by the dropping of her maintop-mast
-across the fore-braces, no longer sailed on the wind, and in a moment drew
-forward, gradually approaching across the bows of the "Frolic," which,
-having lost the use of her head-sails, could not sheer off. Captain Jones
-was quick to see his advantage, and ran the enemy's bowsprit between the
-main- and mizzen-masts of the "Wasp." The vessels now began striking
-and grinding against each other furiously, as though by a test of the
-stanchness of their timbers to settle the battle between them. The men who
-were loading two of the port broadside guns of the "Wasp" struck the bow
-of the "Frolic" with their rammers and found themselves looking into the
-forward ports of the enemy. The guns were loaded with grape, and after the
-ships crashed together were fired directly through those forward ports of
-the "Frolic," raking her from stem to stern in a frightful manner.
-
-The next wave tore the ships apart, and the "Wasp" forged ahead,
-the bowsprit of the Englishman catching in the mizzen-shrouds, where
-Lieutenant James Biddle and a party of officers and seamen were awaiting
-the order to board. In this position the bowsprit of the "Frolic" was
-pounding terribly upon the poop of the "Wasp." At every send of the waves
-the bows of the Englishman would fall as the stern of the American rose,
-and it seemed as though both ships would be torn to pieces. The men of the
-"Wasp" had wished to board, the moment the ships had come together, and
-crowded along the hammock-nettings hardly to be restrained. But Captain
-Jones, knowing the advantage of his raking position, wanted to send in
-another broadside. He called the men back to the guns, but they were too
-intent upon their object. One brawny fellow, named Jack Lang, who had
-been impressed into the British service, made a spring, and catching a
-piece of gear, swung himself up on the bowsprit and clambered down alone,
-his cutlass in his teeth, to the enemy's deck. The "Wasp's" men cheered
-vigorously, and, leaving their guns, rushed aft to follow him. Captain
-Jones, seeing that they would not be denied, then gave the order to
-Lieutenant Biddle to board.
-
-Biddle, cutlass in hand, jumped upon the nettings to lead the men.
-Midshipman Yorick Baker, being too small to clamber up alone, and seeing
-Biddle's coat-tails flapping in the wind, seized hold of them, one in
-each hand. He did not want to be left behind, and thought he might trust
-to the impetuosity of his superior officer to land him successfully among
-the first on the deck of the enemy. But just then a terrific lurch threw
-Biddle off his balance, and they both came violently to the deck. They
-were up again in a second, however, and with Lieutenant George W. Rogers
-and a party of seamen finally reached the bowsprit of the "Frolic."
-
-Upon the fo'c's'le of the enemy stood Jack Lang, swinging to the motion
-of the brig, his cutlass at his side, looking aft at a scene of carnage
-that was hardly imaginable. All the fierceness had died out of him, for
-he looked around at Biddle and grinned broadly. The decks were covered
-with the dead and dying, who tossed about in the wash of bloody water
-with every heave of the ship. The decks, masts, bulwarks, and rails were
-torn to ribbons, huge jagged splinters projecting everywhere. Guns, tubs,
-sponges, rammers, and solid shot were adrift, pounding from one side
-of the wreck to the other. No one moved to secure them, for only half a
-dozen men stood upright. At the wheel an old quartermaster, badly wounded,
-swung grimly, ready to die at his post. Behind him an English lieutenant,
-bleeding from ghastly wounds, clutched at a stanchion for support. Two
-other officers stood near, and one or two jackies glared forward at the
-Americans. There was no sign of resistance, and the wave of pity which
-came over Biddle and his officers swept away all desire for battle. The
-British flag was still flying. No one seemed to have the strength to
-haul it down; so Biddle went aft and lowered it to the deck. In a few
-moments the masts fell, and she lay a useless hulk wallowing upon the
-waves, which, more sure of their prey, dashed against her torn sides,
-widening the gashes made by her indomitable enemy, and at times making
-clean breaches over her bulwarks, tearing loose her boats and otherwise
-completing her destruction.
-
-Under the conditions, it seemed hardly credible that such injury could
-have been inflicted in so short a time, for the battle had lasted only
-forty-three minutes. The "Frolic" had twenty-two guns, while the "Wasp"
-had only eighteen. The crew of the "Frolic" was less than of the "Wasp,"
-the best authorities estimating it at one hundred and ten, against one
-hundred and thirty-eight of the "Wasp." But even here the great loss and
-damage to the "Frolic" can be explained in no way save that the Americans
-were superior gunners and seamen. The "Wasp" lost five killed and five
-wounded, and these men were most of them shot while aloft trying to refit
-gear. The "Frolic" lost fifteen killed and forty-seven wounded, making a
-total of sixty-two against ten of the "Wasp."
-
-But Jacob Jones's victory was not to prove profitable, save in the great
-moral influence it exercised in England and America. He placed a crew
-upon the prize, and, having cleared away his wreck and refitted his
-rigging, tried to make sail away after the fleet of merchantmen, which
-by this time were nearly hull down on the horizon. But a great British
-seventy-four, the "Poictiers," hove in sight, and before Jones could get
-away he found himself under her guns a prisoner. Captain Beresford, of the
-line-of-battle ship, took the sloop-of-war to Bermuda, and there a garbled
-report of the action between Captain Whinyate's and Captain Jones's
-vessels was written. But the American captain and his gallant crew were
-soon exchanged, and returned home, where their victory had been given its
-true value. They received twenty-five thousand dollars from Congress as
-prize-money, and a gold medal was given to Captain Jones and a silver one
-to each of the officers. The legislature of Pennsylvania gave Lieutenant
-Biddle a sword for his gallantry.
-
-
-
-
-THE "CONSTITUTION" AND THE "JAVA"
-
-
-At the beginning of the war of 1812 there were but three first-class
-frigates in our navy, and but five vessels of any description were
-fit to go to sea. But the war with Tripoli and the gallant deeds of
-the American officers had made the service popular with the public. In
-March, 1812, an act was passed which appropriated money to put all these
-vessels in condition to meet the enemy on a more equal footing, and a
-naval committee was formed to deal with the emergency. Langdon Cheves
-was appointed chairman, and he took hold of the great task of rebuilding
-and regenerating the naval service with enthusiasm and good judgment.
-The result was that the committee expressed the opinion "that it was the
-true policy of the United States to build up a navy establishment, as the
-cheapest, the safest, and the best protection to their sea-coast and to
-their commerce, and that such an establishment was inseparably connected
-with the future prosperity, safety, and glory of the country."
-
-When war was declared, the "Constitution" was in good condition, but
-the "Chesapeake" and the "Constellation" were not seaworthy. These were
-recommended to be immediately put in condition, and ten other frigates,
-averaging thirty-eight guns each, to be built. There was no difficulty in
-raising the crews for these vessels. Owing to the impressment of American
-and other seamen into the British service, the Cross of St. George had
-come to be so hated by the fishermen, coastwise sailors, and merchantmen
-that they sailed, drove, or walked to Philadelphia, Baltimore, and the
-other places where the frigates were fitting out, eager to sign the
-articles which made them American men-o'war's-men. They were not drafted
-into the service like many of the British Jackies, at the point of the
-pistol, but came because they wanted to, and because with the building up
-of a new navy there came a chance to see the flag they hated trailed in
-defeat. That and nothing else was the reason for the wonderful success of
-American arms upon the sea during the war of 1812. The American officers,
-smarting under past indignities to the service and to themselves, went
-into the many actions with determination and enthusiasm, combined with
-the experience of a rough-and-tumble sea,--experience which with anything
-like an equal force meant either victory or absolute destruction.
-
-The "Constitution," under Hull, had escaped from the British squadron,
-under Broke, off the Jersey coast, had defeated the frigate "Guerriere,"
-and in all her history had shown herself to be a lucky ship. William
-Bainbridge had been given the command of the "Constellation," but,
-arriving at Boston, Hull had found it necessary to give up his command,
-and Bainbridge immediately applied for "Old Ironsides."
-
-The victories of the American frigates "Constitution" and "United States"
-over the British "Guerriere" and "Macedonian" had aroused great enthusiasm
-throughout the country, and the government had decided to change its
-timorous policy. Hoping to draw some of the British vessels away from the
-coast and cause them to be distributed over a wider horizon, expeditions
-were arranged to strike the enemy at many distant points. Bainbridge's
-orders were to sail for the Indian Ocean and capture or destroy as
-many English merchant-vessels as possible. His squadron, besides the
-"Constitution," 44, consisted of the "Essex," 32, Captain David Porter,
-and the "Hornet," 18, Master-Commandant James Lawrence. Bainbridge and
-Lawrence put to sea from Boston on the 26th of October, while Porter
-left the Delaware on the 24th to rendezvous at Porto Praya, on the South
-American coast.
-
-A few days later, H. M. S. "Java," a thirty-eight-gun frigate,
-Captain Henry Lambert, having two merchant-ships under convoy, sailed
-from Portsmouth, England, for India. She also had as passengers the
-newly-appointed governor of India, Lieutenant-General Thomas Hislop, and
-many naval and army officers, who were being carried out to their posts.
-
-The "Constitution," arriving at Porto Praya, and failing to find Porter
-in the "Essex," put to sea again, stopping at Fernando de Noronha in
-the hope of meeting her there. Lawrence, in the "Hornet," challenged the
-British sloop-of-war "Bonne Citoyenne" to single combat; but her commander
-declined, in view of the presence of the "Constitution." Bainbridge
-wrote that he would not interfere, and pledged him his honor to give the
-Englishman the opportunity to fight the "Hornet" to the death. Hoping to
-bring the action about, Bainbridge sailed away, and remained four days.
-But the British captain was determined not to fight, and Lawrence was thus
-denied the opportunity he afterwards had with the ill-fated "Chesapeake."
-
-Near the end of December, 1812, the "Constitution" was cruising off
-the coast of Brazil, about thirty miles from Bahia. The wind was light
-from the northeast, and Bainbridge was moving under short sail. "Old
-Ironsides," a ready sailer when in condition, had been off the stocks so
-long and was so befouled by her stay in tropical waters that she moved
-rather sluggishly, and had not the capacity for legging it that she had
-when Hull had carried her from under the guns of the British squadron.
-Her sails were patched and her rigging was old, but Bainbridge had done
-all he could with her, and his men were full of confidence. She was
-the "Constitution," and that was enough for them. They only wanted an
-opportunity to repeat or surpass some of her previous exploits.
-
-They had not long to wait. At nine o'clock on the morning of December
-29, the man at the fore-crosstrees passed the cry of "Sail-ho," and soon
-from the deck two sails could be seen to the north, near the coast. They
-were both made out to be full-rigged ships, one standing in cautiously
-for the land and the other keeping a course out to sea, pushing down
-gallantly under a full press of canvas. The one inshore was the American
-ship "William," which had been captured by the British, and the other was
-the "Java." The jackies who lined the nettings of the "Constitution" soon
-discovered that their wishes were to be granted, for the larger ship was
-evidently determined to come up, and could be nothing but a man-of-war
-looking for a fight.
-
-By about eleven Captain Bainbridge took in his royals and went about
-on the other tack. The Englishman was coming nearer now, and hoisted
-the private signals, English, Spanish, and Portuguese, in succession.
-Bainbridge hoisted the private signal of the day, and finding that it was
-not answered, cleared ship for action immediately. Then, wishing to draw
-his enemy from his consort, he set his mainsails and royals and stood out
-to sea. The "Java" came up rapidly, and made sail in a parallel course.
-Finding that the other ship did not follow, and desiring to make the other
-vessel disclose her identity, Bainbridge showed his colors,--his broad
-pennant at the main, the Stars and Stripes at the peak, another at the
-maintop-gallant-mast, and the American jack at the fore. This was shortly
-followed by his adversary, who hoisted an English ensign and displayed a
-private signal.
-
-All this time the "Java" was rapidly gaining on the "Constitution," and
-Bainbridge, finding that he was outsailed, took in his royals and went
-about on the other tack, so as to pass within pistol-shot of the other.
-
-The "Constitution," still a mile to leeward, soon fired a shot across
-the "Java's" bows to induce her to show her colors, which she had hauled
-down again. This had the desired effect, for the bits of bunting went up
-with a run, and a whole broadside was fired at the "Constitution." But
-the range was too great for successful marksmanship, both these shots and
-those fired by the "Constitution" in return dropping harmlessly alongside.
-
-By a little after two o'clock the frigates were within half a mile of each
-other, and the action then began with great spirit. The Englishman got
-the range first, and sent in a broadside which hulled the "Constitution"
-and killed and wounded several of her men. It soon became evident to
-Bainbridge that Captain Lambert's guns carried better than his own,
-so began luffing up repeatedly in order to shorten the distance for an
-effective broadside. He was sure of his marksmanship if once his men got
-the range, for the same gun-captains were with him that had helped Hull
-to her great victory over the "Guerriere." It was difficult to draw up,
-as the Englishman was forging ahead with the evident desire to sail close
-to the wind and keep the weather-gage at all hazards. The "Constitution"
-could only luff up at opportune moments, for Lambert's position was one
-which would enable him to rake the "Constitution" from stem to stern if
-he luffed when the broadside was ready. But he edged up cautiously, and
-soon the vessels were but musket-shot apart. A continuous fire now began,
-and the wind being light, both vessels were soon so shrouded in smoke
-that only at intervals could the gunners make out their adversaries.
-Along they sailed, side by side, giving and receiving tremendous volleys.
-About this time a solid shot went crashing along the quarter-deck of the
-"Constitution" and, striking her wheel, smashed it to pieces. The gear had
-been rove below, however, and the ship throughout the remainder of the
-battle was steered by means of tackles on the berth-deck. The captain's
-orders were shouted down through the after-hatch and repeated by a line
-of midshipmen to the men at the tackles.
-
-Bainbridge, in full uniform, stood by the weather-rigging at the time
-the disabling shot came aboard, and a small copper bolt drove through
-the upper part of his leg, inflicting a bad wound. But fearing that if
-he left the deck his men might lose some of the ardor with which they
-were fighting, he would not go below though frequently urged so to do.
-Instead of this he bound it up with his handkerchief, and remained at
-his post, his epaulettes a fair mark for the sharpshooters in the tops
-of the enemy. His men down in the waist of the "Constitution" looked now
-and again at the imposing figure by the mizzen-mast, and bent to their
-work with a will, firing as rapidly as their guns could be loaded. The
-distance between the ships was now so short that all the smaller guns and
-carronades could be used, and a rapid and well-directed fire was kept up
-both upon the hull and the spars of their adversary.
-
-The "Java," by her superior sailing qualities, was enabled to reach well
-forward on the "Constitution's" bow when she eased off her sheets to
-round down across the bows of the American and rake. But Bainbridge, in
-spite of the disadvantage of wrecked steering-gear, was too quick for
-her. He put his helm up, and wore around in the smoke, thus keeping his
-broadside presented. The Englishman at last succeeded in getting under
-the "Constitution's" stern and pouring in a broadside at close range. But,
-fortunately, comparatively little damage was done. The superiority of the
-gunnery of the Americans, save for a few of the Englishman's well-directed
-shots, had been from the first far superior to that of the Englishmen. The
-fire of the "Java" was far less rapid and less careful than that of the
-"Constitution." Had the gunnery been equal, the story of the fight would
-have had a different ending.
-
-But the Americans labored under a great disadvantage, and Captain
-Bainbridge, determined to close with the enemy at all hazards, put his
-helm down and headed directly for the enemy, thus exposing himself to
-a fore-and-aft fire, which might have been deadly. But for some reason
-the Englishman failed to avail himself of this opportunity, only one
-9-pounder being discharged. When near enough, the "Constitution" rounded
-to alongside and delivered her entire starboard broadside, which crashed
-through the timbers of the "Java" and sent the splinters flying along the
-entire length of her bulwarks. The shrieks of the injured could be plainly
-heard in the lulls in the firing, and soon the bowsprit and jib-boom of
-the enemy were hanging down forward, where they lay, with the gear of the
-head-sails and booms in a terrible tangle. With this misfortune the "Java"
-lost her superiority in sailing, and this was the turn in the action.
-Quickly availing himself of this advantage, Bainbridge again wore in the
-smoke before Captain Lambert could discover his intentions, and, getting
-under the "Java's" stern, poured in a rapid broadside, which swept the
-decks from one end to the other, killing and wounding a score of men. Then
-sailing around, he reloaded, and fired another broadside from a diagonal
-position, which carried away the "Java's" foremast and otherwise wrecked
-her.
-
-Captain Lambert, now finding his situation becoming desperate, determined
-to close with the "Constitution" and board her. He tried to bear down
-on her, but the loss of his head-yards and the wreck on his forecastle
-made his vessel unwieldy, and only the stump of his bowsprit fouled the
-mizzen-chains of the American vessel. The American topmen and marines
-during this time were pouring a terrific fire of musketry into the mass of
-men who had gathered forward on the English vessel. An American marine,
-noting the epaulettes of Captain Lambert, took deliberate aim, and shot
-him through the breast. Lambert fell to the deck, and Lieutenant Chads
-assumed the command. The Englishmen, disheartened by the loss of their
-captain, still fought pluckily, though the wreck of the gear forward and
-the loss of their maintop-mast seriously impeded the handling of the guns.
-At each discharge their sails and gear caught fire, and at one time the
-"Java's" engaged broadside seemed a sheet of flame. At about four o'clock
-her mizzen-mast, the last remaining spar aloft, came down, and she swung
-on the waves entirely dismasted. It seemed impossible to continue the
-action, as but half a dozen guns could be brought to bear.
-
-The "Constitution," finding the enemy almost silenced and practically at
-her mercy, drew off to repair damages and re-reeve her gear. Bainbridge
-had great confidence in the _look_ of the "Constitution," as, to all
-outward appearances unharmed, she bore down again and placed herself in
-a position to send in another broadside. His surmise was correct, for the
-one flag which had remained aloft was hauled down before the firing could
-be resumed.
-
-Lieutenant George Porter, of the "Constitution," was immediately
-sent aboard the Englishman. As he reached the deck he found the
-conditions there even worse than had been imagined by those aboard the
-"Constitution." Many of the broadside guns were overturned, and, though
-the wreck had been partially cleared away, the tangle of rigging was
-still such that the remaining guns were practically useless. The dead and
-wounded literally covered the decks, and as the lieutenant went aboard
-the dead were being dropped overboard. The loss of her masts made her
-roll heavily, and occasionally her broadside guns went under. Lambert
-was mortally wounded. Lieutenant Chads, too, was badly hurt. When he
-had assumed command, in spite of the fact that he knew his battle was
-hopeless, he had tried to refit to meet the American when she came down
-for the second time. He only struck his colors when he knew that further
-resistance meant murder for his own brave men. The "Java" was a mere hulk,
-and the hulk was a sieve.
-
-Comparison of the injuries of the "Java" and "Constitution" is
-interesting. With the exception of her maintop-sail-yard, the
-"Constitution" came out of the fight with every yard crossed and every
-spar in position. The injuries to her hull were trifling. The "Java" had
-every stick, one after another, shot out of her until nothing was left but
-a few stumps. It might have been possible to have taken her into Bahia,
-but Bainbridge thought himself too far away from home; and so, after the
-prisoners and wounded had been removed to the "Constitution," a fuse was
-laid, and the American got under weigh. Not long after a great volume of
-smoke went up into the air, and a terrific explosion was heard as the last
-of the "Java" sunk beneath the Southern Ocean.
-
-When the "Constitution" arrived at Bahia, Captain Lambert was carried
-up on the quarter-deck, and lay near where Bainbridge, still suffering
-acutely from his wounds, had been brought. Bainbridge was supported by
-two of his officers as he came over to Lambert's cot, for he was very
-weak from loss of blood. He carried in his hand the sword which the dying
-Englishman had been obliged to surrender to him. Bainbridge put it down
-beside him on his bed, saying,--
-
-"The sword of so brave a man should never be taken from him."
-
-The two noble enemies grasped hands, and tears shone in the eyes of
-both. A few days afterwards the Englishman was put on shore, where more
-comfortable quarters were provided for him, but he failed rapidly, and
-died five days after.
-
-The news of the capture of the "Java" created consternation in England.
-The loss of the "Guerriere" and the "Macedonian" were thought to have been
-ill-luck. But they now discovered an inkling of what they rightly learned
-before the war was over,--that the navy of the United States, small as
-it appeared, was a force which, man for man and gun for gun, could whip
-anything afloat.
-
-When Bainbridge arrived in Boston he and his officers were met by a
-large delegation of citizens, and many festivities and dinners were held
-and given in their honor. The old "Constitution," rightly deserving
-the attention of the government, was put in dry-dock to be thoroughly
-overhauled. Of the five hundred merchantmen captured by Americans, she
-had taken more than her share, and of the three frigates captured she had
-taken two.
-
-
-
-
-THE LAST OF THE "ESSEX"
-
-
-When Captain David Porter in the "Essex" failed to meet Captain Bainbridge
-in the "Constitution" off the Brazilian coast, and learned that the latter
-had captured the "Java" and returned to the United States, he was free to
-make his own plans and choose his own cruising-ground.
-
-He captured an English vessel or so, but his ambition was to make a voyage
-which would result in the capture of as many vessels as could be manned
-from the "Essex." He thought the matter over at length and then formulated
-a plan which few other men would have thought of. No large war-vessel of
-the American government had been in the South Pacific for some years, and
-now the English whalers and merchantmen pursued their trade unmolested,
-save by a few privateers which sailed haphazard in the waters along the
-coast. David Porter decided to round the Horn, thus cutting himself off
-from his nearest base of supplies, and live the best way he might off
-vessels captured from the enemy.
-
-He knew that he could not hope for a hospitable reception at any port
-he visited, but if he could keep his magazine and store-rooms supplied,
-determined to capture or destroy every vessel flying the British flag in
-those waters.
-
-He started on his long voyage at the end of January, 1813, during the
-Southern summer season, when the gales and hurricanes in that region are
-at their fiercest. He had not been at sea very long before the scurvy
-broke out on the ship, and it was only by the most rigorous discipline
-and cleanliness that the disease was kept under control. By the middle
-of February the "Essex" reached the Cape, and, the weather having been
-moderately free from squalls, they were congratulating themselves on
-avoiding the usual dangers of those waters when a storm came up which in
-a short time began to blow with hurricane force. Gale succeeded gale,
-followed by intervals of calm, but nothing terrifying occurred until
-towards the end of February, when a storm which exceeded all the others
-in its fierceness began to blow. They were near a barren country, and,
-even should they reach land, there was no possible chance of escaping
-the slow torture of death from hunger and thirst. Great gray waves,
-measuring hundreds of feet from crest to crest, swept them resistlessly
-on towards the menacing shore, which could be seen dimly through the
-driving spray frowning to leeward. Many of the waves broke clear over the
-little frigate, knocking in her ports, opening her timbers, battering her
-boats to pieces as they swung on the davits, and loosening her bowsprit
-and other spars so that they threatened at each movement to go by the
-board. The crew, weakened and disheartened by disease and the excess of
-labor, lost heart and considered the "Essex" a doomed ship. David Glascoe
-Farragut, then a midshipman aboard of her, afterwards wrote that never
-before had he seen good seamen so paralyzed by fear at the mere terrors
-of the sea. On the third day an enormous wave struck her fairly on the
-weather-bow and broadside, and she went over on her beam ends, burying
-her lee-bulwark in the foam. It looked for a moment as if she would
-never right herself. The ports on the gun-deck were all stove in and she
-seemed to be filling with water. The head-rails were swept away, and one
-of the cutters was lifted bodily from the davits and smashed against the
-wheel. The fellows there stood bravely at their posts, though thoroughly
-terrified at the position of the ship. The water poured down below, and
-the men on the gun-deck thought she was already plunging to the bottom.
-The grizzly boatswain, crazy with fear, cried out in his terror,--
-
-"The ship's broadside is stove in! We are sinking!"
-
-That was the greatest of their dangers, though, and better days were in
-store for them. Early in March the "Essex" succeeded in reaching Mocha
-Island, and the men, starved on half and quarter rations, were sent ashore
-to hunt wild hogs and horses. These were shot in numbers and salted down
-for food. The crew soon regained their health and spirits, and Porter
-sailed away for Valparaiso, putting in there to refit his damaged rigging
-and spars.
-
-And now began a cruise which is numbered among the most successful
-in the country's history. Porter had been at sea but a few days when
-he overhauled a Peruvian privateer, the "Nereyda." To his surprise,
-twenty-four American sailors were found prisoners aboard of her. When
-asked to explain, the Peruvian captain replied that as his country was
-an ally of Great Britain, and that as war was soon to be declared between
-Spain and America, he thought he would anticipate matters and be sure of
-his prizes. Porter, in forcible English, explained the Peruvian's mistake,
-and, to make the matter more clear, threw all his guns and ammunition
-overboard, so that he might repent of his folly in a more diplomatic
-condition.
-
-The Peruvian captain begrudgingly gave Porter a list of all the English
-vessels in those waters. The first one captured was the whaler "Barclay."
-On the 29th of April the "Essex" took the "Montezuma," with a cargo
-of fourteen hundred barrels of whale-oil. Later in the same day the
-"Georgiana" and the "Policy" were overhauled. These prizes, with their
-cargoes, in England were worth half a million dollars; but, better than
-money, they were plentifully supplied with ropes, spars, cordage, stores,
-and ammunition, of which Porter still stood badly in need.
-
-Finding that the "Georgiana" was a fast sailer and pierced for eighteen
-guns, Porter decided to make use of her as a cruiser, and, fitting her
-up, placed Lieutenant Downes in command of her, with forty men for a
-crew. Then the "Essex" took the "Atlantic" and the "Greenwich." With this
-very respectable squadron Porter sailed for the mainland, Lieutenant
-Downes in the "Georgiana" meanwhile capturing without great difficulty
-the "Catharine" and the "Rose." A third vessel, the "Hector," fought
-viciously, but was eventually secured after a stiff little battle.
-
-Young Farragut had been made the prize-master of the "Barclay." He was
-only twelve years old, but Captain Porter, who was very fond of him,
-was confident of his ability to bring the ship into port. The English
-captain had been persuaded to act as navigator; but once out of sight of
-the squadron he refused to sail for Valparaiso. He afterwards said it was
-merely to frighten the boy. But the boy did not frighten at all. Instead
-he called one of his best seamen to him and ordered sail made. Then he
-told the captain that if he did not go below and stay there he would have
-him thrown overboard. The Englishman retreated below precipitately, and
-Farragut brought the ship safely in, a first proof of the courage and
-skill he was to show in after-life. Few boys of twelve would have done it
-even in those days when midshipmen soon became men regardless of age.
-
-The "Atlantic," being reckoned the fastest vessel of her kind afloat
-in those waters, was now given to Downes, who had been promoted to
-master-commandant, and renamed the "Essex Junior." She was given twenty
-guns and sixty men, and soon proved her worth. All of this time Porter had
-been self-supporting. Neither he nor his squadron had cost his government
-a penny in money, and the prizes he captured, including the "Charlton,"
-"Seringapatam," "New Zealand," and "Sir Andrew Hammond," could not be
-reckoned much short of a million and a half of dollars, a tremendous sum
-in those days, when the pay of a captain of a naval vessel was only twelve
-hundred dollars,--less than the pay of a boatswain to-day.
-
-But Porter grew tired of his easy victories over merchantmen and
-privateers. He had succeeded in frightening the ships of the British
-entirely from the ocean. His one ship, a small frigate, had complete
-control in the South Pacific, and the Admiralty wondered at the skill
-and ingenuity of a man who could manage his fleets so adroitly. They
-determined to capture him; and two smart ships, the "Phoebe" and the
-"Cherub," were sent out for this purpose. Porter heard of their coming,
-and was willing enough to meet them if it were possible. He went to
-Nukahiva, in the Marquesas Islands, to put the "Essex" in thorough repair
-and give his men a rest. He remained there two months, sailing near the
-end of the year 1813 for Valparaiso, with the hope of their meeting the
-English cruisers.
-
-The "Essex" had been there but a month when the "Essex Junior," which
-was cruising in the offing in anticipation of the arrival of the British
-ships, signalled, "Two enemy's ships in sight." Half the crew of the
-"Essex" were ashore enjoying sailor-men's liberty. Even if they all got
-aboard, it was fair to assume that they would be in no condition to fight
-should the Englishmen choose to violate the neutrality of the port by
-firing on them. Porter immediately fired a gun and hoisted the recall
-signal for all boats and men to return. The English captain, Hillyar, ran
-the "Phoebe" on the wind straight for the "Essex," the "Cherub" following
-closely. But when they reached the anchorage, the "Essex" was ready for
-action and the crew were at their stations. The "Phoebe" went around under
-the quarter of the "Essex," luffing up scarcely fifteen feet away. It
-was an exciting moment. Hillyar could see the men at their guns, and his
-ardor was perceptibly diminished. Had he given the order to fire then,
-he would have been raked fore and aft, and the tale of this last fight of
-the "Essex" might have had a different ending.
-
-As it was, he jumped upon the nettings, and said, with distinguished
-politeness,--
-
-"Captain Hillyar's compliments to Captain Porter, and hopes he is well."
-
-Porter _was_ well, but he was in no humor to bandy compliments.
-
-"Very well, I thank you," he replied; "but I hope you will not come too
-near, for fear some accident might take place which would be disagreeable
-to you." And at a wave of his hand the kedge-anchors and grappling-irons
-were swung up to the yard-arms, ready to be dropped on the decks of
-the enemy. The men swarmed along the nettings, ready to jump aboard the
-Englishman as soon as she was close enough.
-
-But Hillyar, not liking the looks of things, changed his tone
-considerably. He backed his yards hurriedly, and said in an excited
-manner,--
-
-"I had no intention of getting aboard of you. I assure you that if I fall
-aboard it will be entirely accidental."
-
-"Well," said Porter, "you have no business where you are. If you touch a
-rope-yarn of this ship I shall board instantly."
-
-Porter then hailed Downes on the "Essex Junior" and told him to be
-prepared to repel the enemy. The vessels were in a position to be almost
-at the mercy of the Americans. When the "Phoebe" ranged alongside, the
-crews could see each other through the ports, and laughed and made
-grimaces at one another. One young fellow in the "Essex," who had come
-aboard drunk, stood at one of the guns, match in hand. He saw one of the
-English jackies grinning at him. He was primed for a fight, and yelled
-across,--
-
-"I'll stop your making faces, my fine fellow." He leaned forward to
-apply the match to the vent, and was only saved from firing it in time by
-Lieutenant McKnight of the gun-division, who knocked him sprawling. Had
-that gun been fired, the "Phoebe" would have been taken.
-
-There seems no doubt of Captain Hillyar's previous intention to try to
-take the "Essex" as she lay, regardless of the neutrality. Captain Porter
-would have been justified if he had fired at that time.
-
-But the Englishmen were willing to bide their time. Two more British ships
-were expected, and they felt sure of their prey.
-
-A strange state of affairs now ensued. The officers meeting on shore
-exchanged the proper courtesies, and strict orders were issued to the
-men, who for a wonder were restrained from fighting. Porter flew from
-his foremast a great white burgee, bearing the legend, "Free Trade and
-Sailors' Rights." Captain Hillyar soon hoisted one in reply, "God and
-Country: British Sailors' Best Rights. Traitors Offend Both." Porter then
-had another painted, and sent it to the mizzen, which read, "God, Our
-Country, and Liberty. Tyrants Offend Them."
-
-These amenities had the effect of making the crew eager for a speedy
-settlement of the question. Once Captain Hillyar fired a gun in challenge;
-but upon Porter's accepting it, the Englishman sailed down to his consort
-the "Cherub," and Porter returned. The Englishman, in spite of his
-challenge, was not willing to fight a single battle.
-
-Finally, Captain Porter, learning of the expected early arrival of the
-"Tagus," 38, the "Raccoon," and two other ships, determined to put to sea
-and there fight it out with the two frigates as best he might. The next
-day, the 28th of March, 1814, a squall came up, and the "Essex" lost one
-of her anchors and dragged the other out to sea. Not a moment was to be
-lost in getting sail on the ship, for he saw a chance to sail between the
-southwest point of the harbor and the enemy. Under close-reefed topsails
-Porter made a course which seemed likely to carry him just where he wanted
-to go, when a heavy squall struck the ship, carrying away the maintop-mast
-and throwing the men who were aloft on the top-gallant-yard into the sea.
-
-This great misfortune at a time when there was at least a fighting chance
-of getting away put a different aspect upon the chances of the "Essex."
-Both English vessels immediately gave chase, and Porter, failing to make
-his anchorage, ran for shore, to anchor there and fight it out to the last
-drop of blood. The "Phoebe" and the "Cherub," bedecked with flags, came
-booming down to where Porter awaited them, flying flags from the stumps of
-his maintop-mast and at almost every point where he could run a halyard.
-
-At about four o'clock the "Phoebe" selected a position under the stern
-of the "Essex," and opened fire at long range. The "Cherub" stood off
-her bow. The fire of the "Phoebe" was terribly destructive, and few guns
-from the "Essex" could be brought to bear upon her. The "Cherub" fared
-differently; and, finding her position too hot, sailed around and took up
-a position by her consort, where a tremendous fire was poured in. Captain
-Porter, with great difficulty, had three of his long 12-pounders hauled
-into his after-cabin, and at last succeeded in opening such a fierce
-and well-aimed fire that the enemy wore about and increased the distance
-between them. The "Phoebe" had three holes in her water-line, had lost the
-use of her mainsail and jib, and had her fore-main- and mizzen-stays shot
-away. Her bowsprit was badly wounded, and she had other injuries below.
-
-But the "Essex" was fighting against terrible odds. The springs on her
-cables were again and again shot away and the crew were being killed
-and wounded in great numbers. When the ships of the enemy returned and
-opened a galling fire from such a position that it could not be returned
-by the "Essex," Porter determined to assume the aggressive. But when he
-attempted to make sail on his ship, he found that most of the running-gear
-had been cut away, only his flying-jib could be spread to the winds. But,
-nothing daunted, he cut his cable, and, spreading his tattered canvases
-the best way he could, made down for the "Cherub" until within range
-of the cannonades, where he gave the Englishman such a drubbing that he
-took to his heels and got out of range altogether. The "Phoebe" managed to
-keep her distance, and with her long guns kept sending in broadside after
-broadside, which swept the decks of the doomed "Essex" and mowed her men
-down like chaff. Captain Hillyar was taking no chances.
-
-The slaughter on the "Essex" was horrible. One gun was manned by three
-crews, fifteen men being killed at it. Men were dying like sheep; but
-those who remained at the guns, and even the wounded, had no thought of
-surrender. A sailor named Bissley, a young Scotchman by birth, lost his
-leg. He lifted himself, and said to some of his shipmates,--
-
-"I hope I have proved myself worthy of the country of my adoption. I am
-no longer of any use to you or her; so good-by." And before he could
-be restrained he pushed himself through the port into the sea and was
-drowned.
-
-Midshipman Farragut acted as captain's aid, quarter-gunner, powder-boy,
-and anything that was required of him. He went below for some primers,
-when the captain of a gun was struck full in the face by a sixteen-pound
-shot, falling back upon the midshipman, spattering him with blood
-and tumbling them both down the hatch together. The blow stunned the
-midshipman for a moment; but when he recovered, he rushed again on deck.
-Captain Porter, seeing him covered with blood, asked him if he were
-wounded.
-
-"I believe not, sir."
-
-"Then, where are the primers?"
-
-This first brought him completely to his senses. He rushed below again and
-brought the primers up. Captain Porter fell, stunned by the windage of a
-shot, but got to his feet unaided.
-
-Though most other men would have surrendered the ship, Porter made up his
-mind to run her towards the shore and beach her broadside on, fight until
-the last and then blow her to pieces. An explosion occurred below and
-a fire broke out in two places. The decks were so covered with dead and
-dying that the men who remained upright could scarcely move among them.
-The cockpit would hold not another wounded man, and the shots which came
-in killed men who were under the surgeon's knife. Out of the two hundred
-and fifty-five souls who began the fight only seventy-five, including
-officers and boys, remained on the ship fit for duty. Many of the men,
-thinking the ship was about to blow up, had jumped overboard and had
-drowned or were struggling in the water in the attempt to swim to land.
-The long-range shots of the enemy were striking her at every fire. The
-Englishmen had the distance accurately and were battering her to pieces
-as though at target-practice.
-
-Captain Porter, at last seeing that resistance was only a waste of life,
-called his officers into consultation. But one, Lieutenant McKnight, could
-respond, and at 6.20 P.M. the order was given to haul down the flag.
-
-When the British boarding-officer came over the side, the sight of the
-carnage was so shocking that he had to lean against a gun for support. The
-force of the "Essex" was forty-six guns and two hundred and fifty-five
-men. That of the English, in conservative estimates, was seventy-three
-guns and four hundred and twenty-one men. The English lost five killed
-and ten wounded. The "Essex" fifty-eight killed, sixty-six wounded, and
-thirty-one missing.
-
-Thus died the "Essex" in one of the bloodiest and most obstinate combats
-on record.
-
-
-
-
-THE CAPTAIN OF THE MAINTOP
-
-
-James Jarvis was one of the "young gentlemen" on the "Constellation"
-during the war with France. "Young gentlemen" was what the midshipmen
-were called in the old naval service, and Jarvis was the youngest of them
-all, being just thirteen at the time of the action with the "Vengeance."
-He was the smallest officer aboard, and his most important duties were
-those of passing the word from the quarter-deck forward, and taking his
-station aloft in the maintop, where he was learning the mysteries of the
-maze of gear which went through the lubber's-hole or belayed in the top.
-He also stood at quarters with his diminutive sword drawn,--a smaller
-edition of the lieutenants, who were allowed to wear one epaulette and
-who could make a louder noise through the speaking-trumpet than Jarvis
-could hope to for years. Down in the midshipmen's mess, by virtue of his
-diminutive stature and tender years, he was not much interfered with by
-Wederstrandt, Henry, Vandyke, and the bigger men. But he fought one or two
-of the young gentlemen nearer his age, and, though frequently defeated,
-stood up as strongly as possible for what he deemed his rights. He was
-a manly little reefer, and up in the maintop, where he was stationed in
-time of action, the men swore by him. He was sensible enough not to give
-any orders without the professional opinion of one of the old jackies,
-who always ventured it with a touch of the cap, a respectful "Sir," and
-perhaps a half-concealed smile, which was more of interest than amusement.
-Thirteen was rather a tender age at which to command men of fifty, but
-the midshipmen of those days were not ordinary boys. They went out from
-their comfortable homes aboard ships where men were even rougher and less
-well-disciplined than they are to-day, and they had either to sink or
-swim. It was Spartan treatment; but a year of it made men and sailors of
-them or else sent them posting home to their mothers and sisters.
-
-Jarvis loved it, and did his duty like a man. He knew the lead of all
-the gear on his mast, and kept his few pieces of brass-work aloft shining
-like new. He kept the rigging in his top, even when there was no occasion
-for it, coiled down as though for inspection, although nobody but the
-topmen and yardmen ever had occasion to examine it. He was as active as a
-monkey, and, scorning the "lubber's-hole," went over the futtock-shrouds
-as smartly as any of the light-yardmen.
-
-The greatest and probably the only regret of midshipman Jarvis's short
-life was that he had not joined the great frigate before she met and
-defeated the "Insurgente" the year before. He wanted to be in a great
-action. Nothing seemed to make him feel more of a man than when the long
-18-pounders were fired in broadside at target-practice. If he had been
-but a boy, instead of an officer with a gold-laced cap and a dirk and all
-the dignities pertaining to those habiliments, he would have clapped his
-hands and shouted for sheer joy. But the eyes of his men were upon him,
-and so he stood watching the flight of the shots, and biting hard on his
-lips he kept his composure.
-
-Captain Truxton, ever mindful of his midshipmen, had disposed them in
-different parts of the ship with regard to their size and usefulness.
-The older ones had been given gun-divisions, while the youngsters were
-placed on the fo'c's'le or in the tops, where they might be of assistance,
-but would more certainly be out of harm's way. Such a thought was not
-suggested on the "Constellation." If it had been, little Jarvis would
-probably have resigned immediately, or at the very least have burst into
-unmanly tears. As it was, he felt that his post aloft was as important
-as any on the ship, and he promised himself that if another Frenchman was
-sighted he would stay there whether the mast were up or down.
-
-So, on the 1st of February, 1800, just about a year after the capture of
-the "Insurgente," while they were bowling along under easy sail, about
-fifteen miles off Basse Terre, a large sail, which appeared to be a French
-frigate, was sighted to the southward. Jarvis went aloft two ratlines at
-a time, his heart bounding with joy at the prospect of the chance of a
-fight.
-
-On assuring himself that she was a large ship, Captain Truxton immediately
-set all sail and took a course which soon brought her hull above the
-horizon and showed the Americans beyond a doubt that she was a ship-of-war
-of heavier metal than the "Constellation." Nothing daunted, Truxton bore
-on his course until the gun-streaks of the other vessel could be plainly
-seen. Instead of showing the same desire to speak, the stranger held on,
-pointing a little off his course, as though anxious to avoid an encounter.
-
-But the breeze, which had been light, now died away altogether, and the
-sea became calm. There the two great vessels drifted in sight of each
-other all night and part of the following day, awaiting the wind which
-would enable them to close. Jarvis was in a fever of impatience. A half
-a dozen times he got permission from the officer of the deck, and with
-a telescope almost as long as himself, clambered up to the main-royal
-to report. There was but one opinion among the midshipmen who went
-aloft,--she was a Frenchman. She _could not_ be anything else.
-
-About two o'clock in the afternoon of the next day, up to the northward
-they saw the ripple on the water of the wind they had been waiting for.
-The sail-loosers flew aloft, and every sail was spread to catch it. Soon
-the "Constellation" was pushing her way through the water, and the foam
-was even flying from the wave-tops here and there. The chase had caught
-the breeze at about the same time, and the Americans could see by the
-line of white under her bow that she was beginning to leg it at a handsome
-rate. But the "Constellation" was in excellent condition for a race, and
-by degrees drew up on the other ship, which as they reached her was seen
-to lie very low in the water, as though deep-laden. They were sure to
-discover who she was before nightfall, so Truxton cleared his ship for
-action. Jarvis went aloft to his top and saw the backstays lashed and the
-preventer-braces securely hooked and rove. Extra muskets were carried up
-into his top for the use of the jackies and marines when they should come
-into close quarters, for then the fire of sharpshooters would be almost
-as valuable as the shots of the great guns.
-
-Their work had been over an hour and the sun had set in a clear sky before
-the "Constellation" drew up to gunshot distance. It was moonlight before
-she came within effective range. The battle-lanterns were lit, and the
-long row of lights on the Frenchman showed that he, too, was prepared
-for fight. The sky was clear, and the moon, which was nearly at the full,
-made the outlines of the vessels perfectly visible to the men at the guns.
-Jarvis, from his post aloft, could plainly see the lines of heads along
-the poop, and fancied that he could make out a midshipman almost as young
-as he, who was clambering about the maintop of the other vessel. He heard
-the beating of a drum and the sound of cheers as the Frenchmen moved to
-their quarters.
-
-On the decks below there was not a sound. Truxton had given his men
-their orders. There was to be no cheering until there was something to
-cheer for. They were to await the order to fire until the enemy was close
-aboard, and then, and not until then, was the broadside to be delivered.
-The division-officers had gone about quietly repeating these commands
-to the gun-captains, and there was nothing further to say. Only to wait
-until the battle began. Jarvis repeated to his topmen, word for word, the
-instructions he had received, that in their aim particular attention was
-to be paid to the officers of the enemy.
-
-Soon a gun from the after-battery of the Frenchman was fired. This was
-followed shortly by all the guns that would bear. Some of the shots
-crashed into the hull of the "Constellation," and one of them killed
-several men. The division-officers glanced appealingly to Truxton, in
-the hope of the order to fire; but he merely held up his hand. Again the
-broadside came, and men seemed to be falling everywhere. The strain below
-and aloft was terrific. But the officers stood steadily, with a word of
-encouragement here and there, and the men did not flinch.
-
-[Illustration: THE "CONSTELLATION" AND THE "VENGEANCE"]
-
-At last the "Constellation" came abreast the after-ports of the Frenchman,
-and Truxton, throwing her off a little, so that all his broadside would
-bear in a diagonal direction, loudly shouted the order to fire.
-
-The telling broadside was delivered, and the battle was on in earnest.
-To those aloft the crash of the long eighteens into the hull of the
-enemy at every other downward roll of the "Constellation" showed how
-well the American gunners had learned to shoot, while the short bark of
-the cannonades and the shrieks in the brief pauses from the decks of the
-Frenchman told of the terrible effects of the fire among the enemy. The
-guns of the Frenchman were well served and rapidly fired, but they were
-aiming on the upward roll of the sea, and their shots went high. Several
-balls from the smaller pieces had lodged in the foremast and mainmast,
-and one had struck just below the futtock-band of the maintop, where
-Jarvis was, and sent the splinters flying up and all about him. Yard-arm
-to yard-arm they sailed for three long, bloody hours, until the firing
-of the Frenchman gradually slackened and then stopped almost altogether.
-The Americans had suffered less on the decks than aloft, and Jarvis's
-topmen were employed most of the time in splicing and re-reeving gear.
-The discharge of the "Constellation's" broadside-guns did not diminish
-for a moment, and so fast was the firing that many of the guns became
-overheated, and the men had to crawl out of the exposed ports to draw up
-buckets of water to cool them.
-
-At about midnight Truxton managed to draw ahead of his adversary in the
-smoke, and, taking a raking position, sent in such a broadside that the
-Frenchman was silenced completely.
-
-Jarvis and the men in the maintop had little time to use their muskets.
-Several long shots had struck the mast, and almost every shroud and
-backstay had been carried away. As the "Constellation" bore down upon her
-adversary to deal her the death-blow, the mast began swaying frightfully.
-There was a cry from the men at Jarvis's side, and the marines and topmen
-began dropping through the lubber's-hole, swinging themselves down the
-sides of the swaying mast by whatever gear they could lay their hands to.
-
-Jarvis did not move. One of the older seamen took him by the shoulder and
-urged him to go below. The mast was going, he said, and it meant certain
-death to stay aloft.
-
-Little Jarvis smiled at him. "This is my post of duty," he replied, "and
-I am going to stay here until ordered below."
-
-At this moment a terrific crackling was heard, and the old man-o'-warsman
-went over the edge of the top. All the strain was on one or two of the
-shrouds, and, just as he reached the deck, with a tremendous crash the
-great mast went over the side.
-
-Jarvis had kept his promise to stay by his mast whether it was up or down.
-
-The Frenchman, not so badly injured aloft, took advantage of the condition
-of the "Constellation," and, slowly making sail before the wreck was
-cleared away, faded into the night. It was afterwards discovered that she
-was the "Vengeance," of fifty-two guns. She succeeded in reaching Curaçoa
-in a sinking condition.
-
-When the news of the fight reached home, Congress gave Truxton a medal
-and a sword, and prize money to the officers and crew.
-
-For little Jarvis, the midshipman, who preferred to die at his post,
-Congress passed a special resolution, which read:
-
-"_Resolved_, That the conduct of James Jarvis, a midshipman in said
-frigate, who gloriously preferred certain death to an abandonment of
-his post, is deserving of the highest praise, and that the loss of so
-promising an officer is a subject of national regret."
-
-History does not show an instance of nobler self-sacrifice, and no such
-honor as this special act of Congress was received by a boy before or
-since.
-
-
-
-
-CUSHING AND THE "ALBEMARLE"
-
-
-Although the Civil War furnished many instances of conspicuous gallantry,
-so many that most of them remain to-day comparatively unknown, none
-was more notable than the torpedo exploit of Lieutenant William Barker
-Cushing. There have been several similar expeditions in our naval
-history. Before Tripoli, Richard Somers made the ill-fated attempt
-with the "Intrepid," and in the war with Spain, Richmond Hobson sunk
-the "Merrimac." There is no question that the personal and sentimental
-aspects of these three hazardous enterprises are similar. All three men
-were young, and each one knew that he took his life in his hands. Somers,
-rather than be captured with his powder, destroyed both his ship and
-himself. Hobson sunk the "Merrimac," but did not succeed in getting her
-athwart the channel. Cushing, in a torpedo-launch, went under the guns of
-the enemy, and escaped both death and imprisonment. On the enemy the moral
-effect of all three exploits must have been the same. Professionally,
-Cushing's exploit has just this distinction: he was successful. Like
-Decatur in the recapture of the "Philadelphia," he carried out in every
-detail the plans he had made. And upon his success the way was opened
-for the Union fleet, and the hopes of the Confederates fled, for only two
-seaports in the South--Charleston and Wilmington--remained open to them.
-
-After the great success of the "Merrimac" in Hampton Roads, the
-Confederates determined to construct a vessel of similar design for use
-in the Southern rivers and sounds. Under great difficulties they built
-the "Albemarle" on the Roanoke River, and carried her into action almost
-before the last rivet was driven. She was a formidable craft in those
-days, and the shots from the vessels of the Northern fleet went harmlessly
-against her iron sides to break and fly into a thousand pieces. On the
-5th of May the "Albemarle" had another fight with a larger fleet of Union
-vessels, which had gathered to hem in and disable her. During the action
-the "Sassacus" saw an opportunity to ram her, and, going ahead at full
-speed, struck the ram a terrific blow amidships. The bow of the "Sassacus"
-was literally torn to pieces by the impact, and the "Albemarle," though
-heeling over and in danger of sinking for a time, finally righted and
-pulled out of the action uninjured, but by no means disabled. All of the
-vessels of the squadron kept up a heavy fire upon her, but she went on to
-her anchorage up the river, where a few repairs made her as good as ever.
-
-It looked to the Unionists as though the story of the "Merrimac" with
-the "Congress" and the "Cumberland" was about to be repeated; that the
-"Albemarle" in course of time would come down at her leisure and destroy
-all Northern vessels in those waters. To make matters worse, the Unionists
-learned that another vessel of a similar type was nearly completed, and
-that the two vessels would attack at the same time,--a combination which,
-with their consorts, seemed irresistible. Something had to be done if the
-command of the sounds of the Carolinas was to remain with the navy of the
-North.
-
-But during the summer of 1864 two steam launches rigged up as
-torpedo-boats, the invention of Engineer J. L. Long, were fitted out at
-New York and brought down through the canals to Albemarle Sound. The bows
-of the boats were cut under and decked over, and the engines were so built
-that when covered and moving at a low rate of speed they made little or
-no noise. A spar ten or fifteen feet long, which carried a torpedo and a
-firing attachment, projected forward over the bow, and a small howitzer
-was also mounted forward where it would be useful to repel attack.
-
-The government had decided to make a night attempt on the "Albemarle,"
-and the honor of the command of the expedition was bestowed on Lieutenant
-Cushing, who had half a dozen times before received the thanks of the
-secretary of the navy for gallantry in action off Cape Fear River.
-
-The expedition was favored by the inactivity of the Confederates. The
-"Albemarle" lay alongside the dock at Plymouth awaiting the completion of
-her sister-ship, but this needless delay gave Cushing the opportunity he
-wanted.
-
-The Confederates were fully aware of the plans of the Unionist's navy, and
-a thousand soldiers remained to guard the "Albemarle" from land attack as
-well as to act as sentries for a distance along the river bank. To provide
-against torpedoes, a line of great cypress logs was boomed off her sides
-at a distance of twenty to thirty feet, so that it seemed impossible to
-come within striking distance. Besides this, the smaller guns of the ram
-were trained up and down the river,--which here was but one hundred and
-fifty yards wide,--to sweep the entire area over which the attacking party
-had to pass.
-
-But Cushing, like Decatur, rejoiced at obstacles. He was only twenty-one,
-but he carried a man's head on his broad shoulders, and the planning
-of such an expedition down to the smallest detail was a task which he
-entered into with judgment and enthusiasm, ingredients as rare as they
-are necessary in such a desperate enterprise.
-
-After a week spent in preparation and experiment, the gunboat "Otsego"
-brought the launch to the mouth of the river, where Cushing cast off and
-pointed his bow toward Plymouth, towing a cutter full of armed men, who
-were to capture, if possible, a Confederate guard,--which had been set
-in a schooner near the sunken "Southfield,"--to prevent their giving the
-alarm. But the expedition started badly, for the launch ran aground on
-a bar. Before Cushing could float her again it was too late to make the
-attempt. Cushing and his boat's crews then returned to the "Otsego."
-
-The next night was black and squally, with occasional showers of rain.
-They could only make out the loom of the shore by straining their eyes
-into the darkness. Cushing was as cool as though taking shore-liberty. As
-he shook hands with the "Otsego's" officers he paused at the gangway to
-say, with a laugh,--
-
-"Well, here goes for another stripe or a coffin."
-
-They crept slowly up the river, keeping close to the bank, under the
-shadow of the reeds and trees. The little engine, covered with tarpaulins,
-made so little sound that the men in the cutter towing astern could hardly
-hear it. There was not a sound except the plashing of the gusts of rain
-and the ripple of the water as the little craft moved steadily on. Cushing
-knew he must be passing some of the pickets now, so not a word even in
-whispers was spoken. Every man had his duty and knew when to do it. Acting
-Ensign William Howarth was aft at Cushing's side. Acting Master's Mate
-John Woodman, who knew the river, was next to him. The other officers were
-Acting Master's Mate Thomas S. Gay, Acting Assistant-Paymaster Francis H.
-Swan, and Acting Third-Assistant-Engineers Charles L. Steever and William
-Stotesbury.
-
-By half-past two A.M., about a mile below Plymouth, where the "Albemarle"
-lay, they came upon the submerged "Southfield," and could just make out
-the lines of the guard-schooner. The machinery of the launch was slowed,
-almost stopped, for Cushing had decided to get by her if he could without
-a fight. It was a moment of utmost anxiety, and every man was prepared for
-the attack. But there was no sign of discovery from the schooners, and in
-ten minutes the little expedition had passed up the river in safety.
-
-But only the first danger of discovery was over. Between the "Southfield"
-and Plymouth the bank was guarded by a double line of sentries, and the
-men in the boats, now moving more quickly, could see the red glare of
-the smouldering fires reaching all the way to town. As they came to the
-point beyond which the ram was lying, they found, to their delight, that
-the fires which should have been brightly burning were smouldering in
-the rain. There was no sign of a man to be made out anywhere, and Cushing
-pushed on directly for the "Albemarle," which he could now see plainly as
-she lay at the wharf, grim and menacing, but without a sign of life.
-
-Suddenly from the shore there came the sharp bark of a dog. To the ears
-of Cushing and his men in the deep silence and anxiety of the moment it
-sounded like the report of a Dahlgren. There was a cry from a sentry and a
-challenge, followed by a musket-shot, and the bullet flew over the boats
-and struck the water fifty feet away with a vicious _ping_ that sounded
-not less loud than the report itself. There was another challenge, and in
-a moment the cries came from everywhere. Other dogs began barking, and it
-seemed as though the whole town was aroused. The sentries on both sides
-of the stream threw inflammable material on the smouldering fires, and in
-a moment the river was as bright as day.
-
-Realizing that further concealment was useless, Cushing himself cast off
-the towline of the cutter, and telling the men in her to row for their
-lives, gave the engineer the order, "Four bells, ahead full speed,"
-setting the nose of the launch directly for the ram. The sparks flew up
-from her stack, and the dark water churned up in masses of foam under her
-stern, as like a sentient thing she leaped forward on her deadly mission.
-It was then that Cushing discovered for the first time the line of torpedo
-booms which guarded the ram. In facing the musketry-fire and the great
-guns of their enormous adversary the task of getting close enough to reach
-her seemed impossible.
-
-Cushing knew that if he was to get over the log booms he must strike
-them fair; then perhaps he could slide over within striking distance. He
-shifted his helm, and making a wide sweep out into the stream, gathered
-all the headway he could and came down into the very jaws of the great
-monster. A tremendous volley from the shot-guns and muskets of the
-sentries greeted them, and Paymaster Swan was wounded. Cushing received
-a charge of buckshot in the back of his coat and had the sole of his shoe
-torn off, but these were the only shots which took effect.
-
-Cushing here shouted, in a loud voice, "Leave the ram; we're going to blow
-you up!" hoping to create a panic. But the Confederates continued firing,
-and succeeded in getting in two howitzer-shots, one of which felled a
-man by Cushing's side. At this moment, Gay, up forward in the launch,
-took careful aim with the howitzer, and sent a charge in the midst of the
-Confederate crew. Then with a slight jar the sled-like bow rose on the
-boom. She balanced a second, and slid over within the enclosure, half full
-of water, but within reaching distance.
-
-One of the great guns of the "Albemarle," a hundred-pounder, protruded
-from a broadside port directly in front of them, and they could see the
-gun-crew frantically training the gun and trying to depress the muzzle
-enough to bear on them. It was a matter of seconds now. Who would fire
-first? Cushing had lowered the torpedo-spar, and as soon as he had it well
-under the overhang he detached it, then waited until he heard the torpedo
-strike the hull, when he pulled the trigger-line. He was not a fraction
-of a second too soon, for the two concussions were almost simultaneous.
-There was a muffled roar from below the great vessel, and a column of
-water shot out from under her as she lifted on the wave. The shock of the
-hundred-pounder was terrific, and it seemed as if the frail launch had
-been blown to pieces. But Cushing had been too quick for them. The charge
-of canister passed a few feet over their heads and scattered in the river
-beyond.
-
-The work of the gallant crew was done. Cushing had made a hole in the
-"Albemarle" large enough to have driven a wagon through. The great
-wave of the torpedo rose and went completely over the launch, swamping
-her alongside and throwing her men into the water. All of them got to
-the booms safely. Here Cushing paused a moment to throw off his outer
-clothing, while the Confederates on the banks were shouting to the men to
-surrender. Several of them, being unable to swim, did so; but Cushing,
-calling to the others to follow him, plunged boldly into the water and
-struck off down the stream. He was a powerful swimmer, but the night was
-cold, and he knew that he could not keep up very long. But he swam for
-half an hour, and he came upon Woodman in the middle of the stream, almost
-exhausted. Though almost entirely fagged out himself, he tried to help the
-mate towards the shore. Finding that he was being pulled down and unable
-to save the other, Cushing struggled on, and reached the shoal water more
-dead than alive. Here he lay among the reeds until dawn, when he learned
-from a negro how complete had been his success. At last, after almost
-twenty-four hours' exposure, he succeeded in finding one of the enemy's
-deserted picket-skiffs, and managed under cover of the second night to
-pull off to the Federal "Valley City," which he reached at eleven o'clock
-at night, and was hauled aboard completely exhausted from his labor and
-exposure. Only one other of his crew reached a place of safety. Woodman
-and Samuel Higgins, the fireman, were drowned. The others went ashore and
-surrendered or were captured.
-
-This service, because of the great benefit to the Union cause and the
-daring manner in which it had been performed, made Cushing the hero of
-the year. Congress passed a vote of thanks and promoted him to the rank
-of lieutenant-commander, which he held until 1872, when he became a
-commander.
-
-He did not long enjoy his honors, for two years later he died of brain
-fever, in Washington, at the age of thirty-two. Had he lived he would have
-been but fifty-six years of age at the outbreak of the war with Spain,
-and would have been one of the ranking officers in active service of the
-new navy.
-
-
-
-
-SOMERS AND THE "INTREPID"
-
-
-Among the young officers of Commodore Preble's squadron before Tripoli
-there was a tall, dark, melancholy-looking fellow of about twenty-five.
-His name was Richard Somers and his command was the "Nautilus," a little
-schooner of twelve guns and a hundred men. He had been with Decatur
-and Stewart, a junior officer on Commodore Barry's "United States" in
-the war with Spain, and the friendship formed in those early days had
-been cemented by a score of thrilling adventures which had drawn them
-more closely together than brothers. Charles Stewart, before Decatur's
-promotion to post-captain, had been the second in command to Preble,
-and his vessel, the "Siren," had taken a prominent part in all the many
-actions with the Tripolitan forts and gunboats. He was a year or so older
-than his companions and had drifted a little away from them. But Decatur
-and Somers were inseparable. Some bond outside of mere professional
-sympathy and environment existed between them, and there seemed to be no
-thought of the one that the other did not share. The difference in their
-temperaments was marked. Decatur was bold, domineering, and impetuous.
-Somers was quiet, mild, and ever avoided the quarrel which Decatur too
-often sought. But under the quiet exterior men had found a will like iron
-and the willingness to dare and do anything that came within the province
-of his profession. He was thoughtful, but not so quiet that he could not
-enter into the gayety of the mess; he was mild, but not so mild that he
-would overlook shortcomings among his men or brook any slight upon his
-office or his reputation.
-
-In the old days on the "United States" there happened an affair which
-immediately established his reputation as an officer and a man. At first
-he was not understood. His brother midshipmen, mistaking the reserve of
-his manner for weakness, did not hesitate before they had been aboard with
-him a month to take advantage of him in the steerage and on deck in every
-possible way. Not only did they slight him, but, after the manner of the
-cadet midshipman of recent years, they made him the butt of most of their
-practical jokes below-decks. Somers stood it for a while in silence. He
-dearly loved peace, and, beyond a good-humored protest, let everything
-pass for what it was worth. But as the weeks went by and the bantering
-continued, instead of laughing it off as before, Somers became more and
-more quiet and self-contained.
-
-Decatur, ever humorous and mischief-making, had himself been one of the
-worst to chaff his comrade; but he knew what Somers' silence meant, and
-he desisted. He had been his school-mate in Philadelphia, and he had seen
-that ominous quiet before. Decatur would have fought for him to the last
-drop of his blood, but he felt that his comrade was well able to look out
-for himself.
-
-Somers went about his duties quietly, never giving a sign that there was
-anything upon his mind until the day before coming into port, then he went
-to Decatur, and said,--
-
-"Stephen, to-morrow I want you to go ashore with me, for I am going to
-meet three men."
-
-The next afternoon a cutter containing Somers, Decatur, and three
-midshipmen, with their seconds, went ashore and found a secluded spot upon
-the beach where they would be free from interference. He had challenged
-all three to fight at the same time and would take them in succession.
-
-In the first two duels Somers received two shots in the body, the latter
-one of which caused him to sink upon the sand as though dangerously hurt;
-but he rallied quickly, and, seeing that the third midshipman was standing
-waiting to see if the battle could be continued, he tried to struggle to
-his feet. He found he could not get up, and Decatur offered to take his
-place and receive the fire of the third midshipman. But Somers, though
-suffering greatly, was not to be deterred, and bade Decatur prop him up
-in a sitting posture, in which position he exchanged shots with the third
-man. Fortunately, none of the injuries resulted fatally, and in a few
-weeks Somers was on deck again. He went about his duties as quietly as
-before, but never after that did they call him milksop.
-
-It was Somers who led one division of the gunboats to attack the
-Tripolitan fleet while Decatur was leading the other. Finding that he
-could not reach them by the eastern entrance, he sailed into the northern
-entrance of the harbor and single-handed boldly sent his little vessel
-into the midst of five of the enemy. His gunboat was smaller than any one
-of those of his adversaries; but so well was his long gun served and so
-true was the fire of his musketry that he held them at bay for half an
-hour, and not one of them succeeded in getting alongside of him to board.
-They were all bearing straight down upon the rocks, though, and Somers
-could not spare enough men from the guns to man his sweeps. But Preble,
-on the "Constitution," saw his danger, and, coming up in time, sent a
-broadside of grape among the pirates, and they got out their sweeps and
-retreated, when, in spite of the doggedness of the defence, one united
-attack would have made the victory theirs. But as they drew off, instead
-of returning, as Preble wished, to the "Constitution," Somers pursued them
-until within less than a cable's length of a twelve-gun battery, which
-had not fired before for fear of damaging the fleeing Tripolitans. When
-she opened fire at this close range the destruction of Somers's valiant
-little vessel seemed inevitable. But by a lucky chance a bombard exploded
-in the battery, blew up the platform, and drove the Tripolitans to cover.
-
-Before they could recover and train their guns, Somers managed to bring
-his craft out in safety. In a later action, as Somers stood leaning
-against a flag-staff on his little vessel, a shot came directly for him.
-The officer saw it in time, and jumped aside to see the spar carried away
-at just the spot where his head had been. He was spared for more deadly
-work.
-
-While these many attacks were being made upon the gunboats and batteries,
-the "Intrepid," in which Decatur had recaptured and destroyed the
-"Philadelphia," was being rapidly prepared as a fire-ship. Their plan was
-to load her with a hundred barrels of powder in bulk, with bags of grape
-and solid shot, and under cover of the night explode her in the midst of
-the Tripolitan war-vessels. Somers, who had been frequently in the harbor
-of Tripoli and knew its reefs and rocks so that he could readily thread
-his way through the narrow channels, asked for the opportunity to command
-this expedition. But Decatur's success in boarding the "Philadelphia"
-had raised the chivalry of every officer and man in the fleet to a point
-rarely equalled in our own history, and Somers, while he did not begrudge
-Decatur his two epaulettes, was filled with the passion to do a deed as
-great, if not greater. They had been rivals since youth, and he felt that
-now was the opportunity to attempt a great deed for his country, though
-he and every man in the fleet knew that the chances of coming out alive
-were but one in a hundred. Somers went to Commodore Preble and urged
-his knowledge of the harbor as his chief claim to the service. It was an
-honor that a half-dozen other men sought, and not until the old commodore
-had weighed the chances fully did he at last agree to let Somers go.
-But, before consenting, Preble repeatedly warned the young officer of
-the desperate character of the work, and told him that on account of the
-Napoleonic wars the Tripolitans were short of ammunition, and that so
-much powder must not fall into the hands of the enemy. But Somers needed
-no warning. A day or two afterwards, when the preparations were nearly
-completed, Preble and some other officers were trying a fuse in the cabin
-of the "Constitution." One of the officers, watch in hand, ventured the
-opinion that it burned too long and might enable the enemy to put it out
-before it exploded the magazine. Hearing this, Somers said, quietly,--
-
-"I ask for no fuse at all."
-
-He was more gentle than ever in those last few days, and as he and Decatur
-leaned over the hammock-nettings of "Old Ironsides," looking towards
-the line of white where the sea was breaking over the outer roofs, the
-melancholy look seemed to deepen and the far-away expression in his eyes
-was of another world. Decatur knew that rather than give up his ship and
-his powder, Somers would blow the ship and himself to eternity.
-
-When volunteers were called for, the desperateness of the enterprise
-was fully explained; but the crew of the "Nautilus," Somers's own vessel
-stepped forward to a man. He selected four,--James Simms, Thomas Tompline,
-James Harris, and William Keith. From the "Constitution" he took William
-Harrison, Robert Clark, Hugh McCormick, Jacob Williams, Peter Penner, and
-Isaac Downes. Midshipman Henry Wadsworth (an uncle of the poet Longfellow)
-was chosen as second in command. Midshipman Joseph Israel, having vainly
-pleaded with Somers to be allowed to go, at the last moment smuggled
-himself aboard the "Intrepid," and when discovered Somers had not the
-heart to send him back.
-
-Decatur and Stewart went aboard the "Nautilus" on the evening that the
-attempt had been planned. The three had been so closely united all their
-lives that Stewart and Decatur felt the seriousness of the moment. Even
-professionally the attempt seemed almost foolhardy, for several Tripolitan
-vessels had come to anchor just within the entrance, and to pass them
-even at night seemed an impossibility. Somers felt a premonition of his
-impending catastrophe, for just as they were about to return to their own
-vessels he took a ring from his finger and, breaking it into three pieces,
-gave each of them a part, retaining the third for himself.
-
-As soon as the night fell the "Intrepid" cast off her lines and went
-slowly up towards the harbor. The "Argus," the "Vixen," and the "Nautilus"
-followed her, while shortly afterwards Stewart on the "Siren" became so
-anxious that he followed, too. A haze that had come up when the sun went
-down hung heavily over the water, and soon the lines of the fire-ship
-became a mere gray blur against the dark coast-line beyond. The excitement
-upon the guard-ships now became intense, and both officers and men climbed
-the rigging and leaned out in the chains in the hope of being able to
-follow the movements of the ketch. Midshipman Ridgley, on the "Nautilus,"
-by the aid of a powerful night-glass aloft, managed to follow her until
-she got well within the harbor, and then she vanished. The suspense soon
-became almost unbearable, for not a shot had been fired and not a sound
-came from the direction in which she had gone. At about nine o'clock a
-half-dozen cannon-shots could be plainly heard, and even the knowledge
-that she had been discovered and was being fired on was a relief from the
-awful silence.
-
-At about ten o'clock Stewart was standing at the gangway of the "Siren,"
-with Lieutenant Carrol, when the latter, craning his neck out into the
-night, suddenly exclaimed,--
-
-"Look! See the light!"
-
-Stewart saw away up the harbor a speck of light, as if from a lantern,
-which moved rapidly, as though it were being carried by some one running
-along a deck. Then it paused and disappeared from view. In a second a
-tremendous flame shot up hundreds of feet into the air, and the glare
-of it was so intense that it seemed close aboard. The flash and shock
-were so stupendous that the guard-ships, though far out to sea, trembled
-and shivered like the men who watched and were blinded. The sound of
-the explosion which followed seemed to shake sea and sky. It was like a
-hundred thunder-claps, and they could hear the echoes of it go rolling
-down across the water until it was swallowed up in the silence of the
-night.
-
-That was all. The officers and the men looked at one another in mute
-horror. Could anything have lived in the area of that dreadful explosion?
-The tension upon the men of the little fleet was almost at the breaking
-point. Every eye was strained towards the harbor and every ear caught
-eagerly at the faintest sound. Officers and men frequently asked one
-another the question, "Have you heard anything yet?" with always the same
-reply.
-
-The vessels beat to and fro between the harbor-entrances, firing rockets
-and guns for the guidance of possible fugitives. And the doleful sound
-of that gun made the silences the more depressing. All night long did the
-fleet keep vigil, but not a shot, a voice, or even a splash came from the
-harbor.
-
-With the first streaks of dawn the Americans were aloft with their
-glasses. On the rocks at the northern entrance, through which the
-"Intrepid" had passed, they saw a mast and fragments of vessels. When
-the mist cleared they saw that one of the enemy's largest gunboats had
-disappeared and two others were so badly shattered that they lay upon the
-shore for repairs.
-
-The details of the occurrence were never actually known, but it is thought
-that Somers, being laid aboard by three gunboats before actually in the
-midst of the shipping, and feeling himself overpowered, fired his magazine
-and destroyed himself and his own men in his avowed purpose not to be
-taken by the enemy.
-
-Thus died Richard Somers, Henry Wadsworth, the midshipman, Joseph Israel,
-and ten American seamen, whose names have been inscribed on the navy's
-roll of fame. Nothing can dim the honor of a man who dies willingly for
-his country.
-
-
-
-
-THE PASSING OF THE OLD NAVY
-
-
-OLD SALTS AND NEW SAILORS
-
-Since ballad-mongering began, the sea and the men who go down to it in
-ships have been a fruitful theme; and the conventional song-singing,
-horn-piping tar of the chanteys is a creature of fancy, pure and simple.
-
-Jack is as honest as any man. Aboard ship he goes about his duties
-willingly, a creature of habit and environment, with a goodly respect for
-his "old man" and the articles of war. Ashore he is an innocent,--a brand
-for the burning, with a half-month's pay and a devouring thirst.
-
-Sailor-men all over the world are the same, and will be throughout all
-time, except in so far as their life is improved by new conditions. Though
-Jack aboard ship is the greatest grumbler in the world, ashore he loves
-all the world, and likes to be taken for the sailor of the songs. In a
-week he will spend the earnings of many months, and go back aboard ship,
-sadder, perhaps, but never a wiser man.
-
-He seldom makes resolutions, however, and so, when anchor takes ground
-again, his money leaves him with the same merry clink as before. Though
-a Bohemian and a nomad, he does not silently steal away, like the Arab.
-His goings, like his comings, are accompanied with much carousing and
-song-singing; and the sweetheart he leaves gets to know that wiving is
-not for him. With anchor atrip and helm alee, Jack mourns not, no matter
-whither bound.
-
-The improved conditions on the modern men-of-war have changed things for
-him somewhat, and, though still impregnated with old ideas, Jack is more
-temperate, more fore-sighted, and more self-reliant than he once was. His
-lapses of discipline and his falls from grace are less frequent than of
-yore, for he has to keep an eye to windward if he expects to win any of
-the benefits that are generously held out to the hard-working, sober, and
-deserving.
-
-But the bitterness of the old days is barely disguised in the jollity of
-the chanteys. However we take it, the sea-life is a hardship the like of
-which no land-lubber knows. Stories of the trials of the merchant service
-come to him now and then and open his eyes to the real conditions of the
-service.
-
-Men are greater brutes at sea than ashore. The one-man power, absolute,
-supreme in the old days, when all license was free and monarchies trod
-heavily on weak necks, led men to deeds of violence and death, whenever
-violence and death seemed the easiest methods of enforcing discipline. Men
-were knocked down hatchways, struck with belaying-pins, made to toe the
-seam on small provocation or on no provocation at all. The old-fashioned
-sea-yarns of Captain Marryat ring true as far as they go, but they do not
-go far enough.
-
-In England the great frigates were generally both under-manned and
-badly victualled, and the cruises were long and sickening. The practice
-of medicine had not reached the dignity of the precise science it is
-to-day, and the surgeon's appliances were rude and roughly manipulated.
-Anæsthetics were unknown, and after the battles, the slaughter in which
-was sometimes terrific, many a poor chap was sent to his last account by
-unwise amputation or bad treatment after the operation.
-
-The water frequently became putrid, and this, with the lack of fresh
-vegetables and the over use of pork, brought on the disease called scurvy,
-which oftentimes wiped out entire crews in its deadly ravages. Every year
-thousands of men were carried off by it. A far greater number died from
-the effects of scurvy than from the enemy's fire. Lieutenant Kelly says
-that during the Seven Years' War but one thousand five hundred and twelve
-seamen and marines were killed, but one hundred and thirty-three thousand
-died of disease or were reported missing. Not until the beginning of this
-century was this dreadful evil ameliorated.
-
-The evils of impressment and the work of the crimp and his gang--so
-infamous in England--had no great vogue here, for the reason that, during
-our wars of 1776 and 1812, the good seamen--coasters and fishermen, who
-had suffered most from the Lion--were only too anxious to find a berth
-on an American man-of-war, where they could do yeoman's service against
-their cruel oppressor.
-
-"Keel-hauling" and the "cat" were relics of the barbarism of the old
-English navy. Keel-hauling was an extreme punishment, for the unfortunate
-rarely, if ever, survived the ordeal. In brief, it consisted in sending
-the poor sailor-man on a voyage of discovery along the keel of the vessel.
-Trussed like a fowl, he was lowered over the bows of the ship and hauled
-along underneath her until he made his appearance at the stern, half or
-wholly drowned, and terribly cut all over the body by the sea-growth on
-the ship's bottom. He bled in every part from the cuts of the barnacles;
-but "this was considered rather advantageous than otherwise, as the loss
-of blood restored the patient, if he were not quite drowned, and the
-consequence was that one out of three, it is said, have been known to
-recover from their enforced submarine excursion."
-
-Think of it! Recovery was not anticipated, but if the victim got well,
-the officer in command made no objection! Beside the brutality of these
-old English navy bullies a barbarous Hottentot chief would be an angel of
-mercy.
-
-Flogging and the use of the cat were abolished in the American navy
-in 1805. This law meant the use of the cat-o'-nine tails as a regular
-punishment, but did not prohibit blows to enforce immediate obedience.
-Before that time it was a common practice for the punishment of minor
-offences as well as the more serious ones.
-
-Flogging in the old days was an affair of much ceremony on board
-men-of-war. The entire ship's company was piped on deck for the
-punishment, and the culprit, stripped to the waist, was brought to the
-mast. The boatswain's mate, cat in hand, stood by the side of a suspended
-grating in the gangway, and the captain, officer of the deck, and the
-surgeon took their posts opposite him. The offence and the sentence were
-then read, and the stripes were administered on the bare back of the
-offender, a petty officer standing by to count the blows of the lash,
-while the doctor, with his hand on the victim's pulse, was ready to give
-the danger signal when absolutely necessary.
-
-The men bore it in different ways. The old hands gritted their teeth
-philosophically, but the younger men frequently shrieked in their agony as
-the pitiless lash wound itself around the tender flesh, raising at first
-livid red welts, and afterwards lacerating the flesh and tearing the back
-into bloody seams.
-
-The effect upon the lookers-on was varied. The younger officers, newly
-come from well-ordered English homes, frequently fainted at the sight.
-But the horror of the spectacle soon died away, and before many weeks had
-passed, with hardened looks, they stood on the quarter-deck and watched
-the performance amusedly. Soon the spectacle got to be a part of their
-life, and the jokes were many and the laughter loud at the victim's
-expense. The greater the suffering the more pleasurable the excitement.
-
-Many yarns are spun of Jack's tricks to avoid the lash or to reduce to a
-minimum the pain of the blows. Sometimes the men had their flogging served
-to them regularly, but in small doses. To these the punishment lost its
-rigor. For the boatswain's mate not infrequently disguised the force of
-his blows, which came lightly enough, though the victim bawled vigorously
-to keep up the deception, and in the "three- and four-dozen" cases he
-sometimes tempered his blows to the physical condition of the sufferers,
-who otherwise would have swooned with the pain.
-
-One Jacky, who thought himself wiser than his fellows, in order to escape
-his next dozen, had a picture of a crucifix tattooed over the whole
-surface of his back, and under it a legend, which intimated that blows
-upon the image would be a sacrilege. When next he was brought before the
-mast he showed it to the boatswain and his captain. The captain, a crusty
-barnacle of the old harsh school, smiled grimly.
-
-"Don't desecrate the picture, bos'n," he said; "we will respect this
-man's religious scruples. You may put on his shirt," he said, chuckling
-to himself, "but remove his trousers, bos'n, and give him a dozen extra.
-And lay them on religiously, bos'n."
-
-All this was in the older days, and it was never so bad in the American as
-in the English navy. The middle period of the American navy, from before
-the Civil War to the age of iron and steel cruisers, presents an entirely
-different aspect in some ways.
-
-Illegal punishments were still inflicted, for there were always then,
-as now, a certain percentage of ruffians forward who were amenable to
-no discipline, and could be managed only by meeting them with their own
-weapons. The "spread-eagle" and the ride on the "gray mare" were still
-resorted to to compel obedience.
-
-They "spread-eagled" a man by tricing him up inside the rigging, taut
-lines holding his arms and legs outstretched to the farthest shrouds, a
-bight of rope passed around his body preventing too great a strain. He
-was gagged, and so he could not answer back.
-
-The "gray mare" on which the obstreperous were forced to gallop was the
-spanker-boom--the long spar that extends far over the water at the ship's
-stern. By casting loose the sheets, the boom rolled briskly from side to
-side, and the lonely horseman was forced in this perilous position to hold
-himself by digging his nails into the soft wood or swinging to any of the
-gear that flew into his reach. At best it was not a safe saddle, and a
-rough sea made it worse than a bucking broncho.
-
-[Illustration: THE SMOKING HOUR]
-
-Paul Jones had a neat way of disciplining his midshipmen aloft. He would
-go to the rail himself, and casting loose the halyards, let the yard go
-down with a run, to the young gentleman's great discomfiture.
-
-But the life of the old salt was not all bitterness. It was not all
-shore-leave, but there was skittles now and then for the deserving and
-good-conduct men. Jack's pleasures were simple, as they are to-day. There
-was never a crew that did not have its merry chanter and its flute,
-fiddle, or guitar, or the twice-told tale of the ship's Methuselah to
-entertain the dog-watches of the evening or the smoking-hour and make a
-break in the dreary monotony of routine.
-
-On public holidays, when everything was snug at sea or in port, a glorious
-skylark was the order of the afternoon. At the call of the bos'n's mate,
-"All hands frolic," rigorous discipline was suspended, and the men turned
-to with a will to make the day one to be talked about. Mast-head-races,
-potato- and sack-races, climbing the greased pole, and rough horse-play
-and man-handling filled the afternoon until hammocks were piped down
-and the watch was set. Purses from the wardroom and prizes of rum and
-tobacco--luxuries dear to Jack's heart--were the incentives to vigorous
-athletics and rough buffoonery. The rigging was filled from netting to
-top with the rough, jesting figures, and cheer upon cheer and laugh upon
-laugh greeted a successful bout or fortunate sally.
-
-Jack is a child at the best of times and at the worst, and he takes his
-pleasures with the zest of a boy of seven, laughing and making merry until
-he falls to the deck from very weariness. And woe be at these merry times
-to the shipmate who has no sense of humor. His day is a hideous one,
-for he is hazed and bullied until he is forced in self-defence to seek
-the seclusion granted by the nethermost part of the hold. A practical
-joker always, when discipline is lax, Jack's boisterous humor knows no
-restraint.
-
-The ceremony of "crossing the line," the boarding of the ship by Neptune
-and his court, seems almost as old as ships, and is honored even to-day,
-when much of the romantic seems to have passed out of sea-life. It is the
-time when the deep-sea sailor has the better of his cousin of the coasts.
-Every man who crossed the equator for the first time had to pay due honor
-to the god of the seas. They exacted it, too, among the whalers when they
-crossed the Arctic Circle.
-
-[Illustration: NEPTUNE COMES ABOARD]
-
-The wardroom usually bought off in rum, money, or tobacco, but forward
-it was the roughest kind of rough man-handling; and the victims were
-happy indeed when they got their deep-water credentials. The details of
-procedure in this remarkable rite differed somewhat on different ships,
-but the essential elements of play and torture were the same in all cases.
-
-The day before the line was to be reached both wardroom and forecastle
-would receive a manifesto setting forth the intention of the god of the
-seas to honor their poor craft and ordering all those who had not paid
-tribute to him to gather forward to greet him as he came over the side. At
-the hour appointed there was a commotion forward, and a figure, wearing
-a pasteboard crown that surmounted a genial red face adorned with oakum
-whiskers, made its appearance over the windward nettings and proclaimed
-its identity as Neptune. Behind him was a motley crew in costumes of any
-kind and all kinds--or no kind--who had girded itself for this ungentle
-art of bull-baiting. The deep-water men intended to have an ample return
-for what they themselves had suffered, not many years back, when they had
-rounded the Horn or Cape of Good Hope.
-
-The unfortunates, stripped to the waist, were brought forward, one by one,
-to be put through their paces. After a mock trial by the jury of buffoons,
-the king ordered their punishment meted out in doses proportioned directly
-to the popularity of the victims as shipmates. The old long boat, with
-thwarts removed and a canvas lining, served as a ducking-pond. After
-vigorous applications, of "slush,"--which is another name for ship's
-grease,--or perhaps a toss in a hammock or a blanket, they were pitched
-backward into the pool and given a thorough sousing, emerging somewhat the
-worse for wear, but happy that the business was finally done for good and
-all.
-
-To-day the roughest sort of bullying no longer takes place, and much of
-the romance seems to have passed out of the custom.
-
-The punishments, too, have lost their severity. The "gray mare" swings to
-an empty saddle, the "spread eagle" is a thing of the past, and the "cat"
-is looked upon as a relic of barbarism. Things are not yet Pinafore-like,
-but the cursing and man-handling are not what they used to be. There are
-a few of the old-timers who still believe the "cat" a necessary evil,
-and would like to see an occasional "spread eagle," but the more moderate
-punishments of to-day have proved, save in a few hardened cases, that much
-may be done if the morale of the service is high.
-
-The fact of the matter is, that the standard of the man behind the gun has
-kept up with the marvellous advance of the ships and the ordnance. To-day,
-the naval service of the United States is worthy of any seaman's metal. As
-a mode of living, sea-faring on American men-of-war attracts as many good
-men as any other trade. Machinists, electricians, carpenters, gunners,
-and sail-makers, all have the chance of a good living, with prizes for
-the honest and industrious.
-
-The seaman himself, in times of peace, may rise by faithful service to
-a competency and a retiring pension more generous than that of any other
-nation in the world. The discipline is the discipline of right relations
-between superior and inferior men of sense, and the articles of war govern
-as rigorously the cabin as the forecastle. Republican principles are
-carried out, as far as they are compatible with perfect subordination,
-and there exists no feeling between the parts of the ship, except in
-extraordinary instances, but wholesome respect and convention. There is
-little tyranny on the one side or insubordination on the other.
-
-The training of the young officer of the old navy was the training of
-the larger school of the world. "Least squares" and "ballistics" were
-not for him. He could muster a watch, bend and set a stun'sail, work out
-a traverse, and pass a weather-earing; but he toyed not with the higher
-mathematics, like the machine-made "young gentleman" of to-day. What he
-knew of navigation he had picked haphazard, as best he might.
-
-At the age of twelve his career usually opened briskly in the thunder
-of a hurricane or the slaughter of a battle, under conditions trying to
-the souls of bronzed, bearded men. Physical and even mental training of
-a certain kind he had, but the intellectual development of modern days
-was missing. The American officer of the days before the Naval Academy
-was founded was the result of rough conditions that Nature shaped to her
-own ends with the only tools she had. Though these "boys" had not the
-beautiful theory of the thing, they had its practice, and no better seamen
-ever lived.
-
-At the beginning of the century, the crusty Preble, commodore of the
-blockading fleet before Tripoli, was sent a consignment of these "boys"
-to aid him in his work. The names of the "boys" were Decatur, Stewart,
-Macdonough, Lawrence, and Perry. Excepting Decatur, who was twenty-six,
-there was not one who was over twenty-four, and two or three of them were
-under twenty. The commodore grew red in the face and swore mighty oaths
-when he thought of the things he had to accomplish with the youngsters
-under his command. But he found before long that though youth might be
-inconvenient, it could not be considered as a reproach in their case.
-
-Decatur, with a volunteer crew, went under the guns at Tripoli, captured
-and blew up the "Philadelphia" in a way that paled all deeds of gallantry
-done before or since. The dreamy Somers went in with a fire-ship and
-destroyed both the shipping and himself. In the hand-to-hand fights on
-the gunboats, Lawrence, young Bainbridge, Stewart, and the others fought
-and defeated the best hand-to-hand fighters of the Mediterranean. The Dey
-of Algiers, when Decatur came before him to make terms of peace, stroked
-his black beard and looked at the young hero curiously. "Why," he said,
-"do they send over these young boys to treat with the older Powers?"
-
-When the war was over, Preble no longer grew red in the face or swore. He
-loved his school-boys, and walked his quarter-deck with them arm-in-arm.
-And they loved him for his very crustiness, for they knew that back of it
-all was a man.
-
-These youthful heroes were not the only ones. Young Farragut, an infant
-of twelve years, with an old "Shoot-if-you're-lucky," quelled a promising
-mutiny. At eighteen Bainbridge did the same. Farragut, at thirteen, was
-recommended for promotion to a lieutenancy he was too young to take. Perry
-was about thirty when he won the victory of Erie.
-
-A youngster's character bears a certain definite relation to the times he
-lives in. Skies blue and breezes light, he shapes his life's course with
-no cares but the betterment of his mental condition. Baffling winds create
-the sailor, and storm and stress bring out his greater capabilities.
-The Spanish war has proved that heroes only slumber, and that the young
-gentleman with the finely-tempered mind of an Annapolis training is
-capable of the great things his father did.
-
-The blue-jacket of to-day has plenty of hard work to do, but he is as
-comfortable as good food and sleeping accommodations, regular habits, and
-good government can make him. As a class, the United States Jacky is more
-contented, perhaps, than any other man of similar conditions. Unlike the
-soldier, he does not even have to rough it very much, for wherever he goes
-he takes his house with him.
-
-Jacky sleeps in a hammock strung upon hooks to the beams of the deck
-above him. When he turns out, he lashes his hammock with its lashing, and
-stores it in the nettings,--the troughs for the purpose at the sides of
-the ship,--where it must stay until night. If Jack wants to sleep in the
-meanwhile, he chooses the softest spot he can find on a steel-clad deck;
-and he can sleep there, too, in the broad glare of daylight, a hundred
-feet passing him, and the usual run of ship's calls and noises droning in
-his ears.
-
-Jacky's food is provided by the government, while his superior of the
-wardroom has to pay his own mess-bill. He is allowed, in addition to his
-pay, the sum of nine dollars per month, and this must purchase everything,
-except such luxuries as he may choose to buy from his pay. The ship's
-paymaster is allowed a certain amount of money to furnish the supplies,
-and between him and the ship's cook the problem is settled. At the end
-of the month, if the amount served out is in excess of the computation
-for rations, the brunt falls upon the "Jack-of-the-Dust,"--the assistant
-to the paymaster's yeoman,--who has the work of accurately measuring the
-rations which are given to the cook of the ship.
-
-The ship's cook receives from the government from twenty-five to
-thirty-five dollars a month, according to the size of the ship, and, in
-addition, certain money perquisites from the different messes, which gives
-him a fair average. He has complete charge of the ship's galley and the
-cooks of the messes, and must be able to concoct a dainty French dish for
-the wardroom as well as the usual "salt horse" or "dog" for the Jacky.
-
-"Salt horse" is the sea-name for pork. "Dog" is soaked hardtack, mixed
-with molasses and fried; and, though it is not pleasant twenty-nine days
-out of the month, it is healthful, and tastes good to a hard-working
-sailor with the salt of the sea producing a splendid appetite.
-
-The mess-tables hang by iron supports to the beams of the deck above,
-and when the mess has been served and eaten,--as only Jack knows how to
-eat,--they are triced up into their places, and all is cleaned and made
-ship-shape in the twinkling of an eye. A half-hour is allowed for dinner,
-and this time is kept sacred for Jack's use. A red pennant flies from the
-yard-arm, that all may know that the sailor-man is eating and must not be
-disturbed by any importunate or curious callers.
-
-In the dog-watches of the evening, after supper, from six to eight P.M.,
-the blue-jacket is given his leisure. It is then that pipes are smoked,
-vigilance relaxed, boxing and wrestling bouts are in order, and Jacky
-settles down for his rest after the day of labor. From somewhere down on
-the gun-deck comes the tinkle of a guitar or banjo, and a tuneful, manly
-voice sings the songs of France or Spain, and, better still, of beloved
-America, for the shipmates.
-
-The sailor of to-day is also a soldier. Back in the days of Henry the
-Eighth, when England first had a navy, the sailors only worked the ships.
-The fighting was done by the soldiers. Later, when the ships were armed
-with many guns and carried a greater spread of canvas, there was no space
-for great companies of soldiers, and the sailors became gunners as well.
-A few soldiers there were, but these did only sentry duty and performed
-the duties of the ships's police. As such they were cordially hated by
-the jackies.
-
-This antipathy has come down through the ages to the present day,
-and marines are still looked on by the sailor-men as land-lubbers and
-Johnnies--sea-people who have no mission upon the earth save to do all
-the eating and very little of the rough work.
-
-The new navy has done much to change this feeling. The mission of the
-marine is now a definite one. Always used as a sharpshooter, he now mans
-the rapid-fire batteries, and even guns of a larger caliber. He has done
-his work well, and the affair at Guantanamo has caused the sneer to fade
-from the lip of the American sailor-man. Two of the ablest captains of our
-navy, always the deadliest opponents of the marine corps, upon assuming
-their latest commands, applied immediately for the largest complement of
-marines that they could get.
-
-Any ship, old or new, is as frail as the crew that mans it. The strength
-of any vessel varies directly with its discipline and personnel. Hull,
-Jones, Decatur, Bainbridge, and Stewart, in the old days, knew with some
-accuracy the forces they had to reckon with. Their guns were of simple
-contrivance, and their men knew them as well as they knew how to reef
-a topsail or smartly pass a weather-earing. They feared nothing so long
-as they were confident of their captain. New and mysterious contrivances
-for death-dealing were unknown to them, and hence the morale of the old
-sea-battles was the morale only of strength and discipline. There were
-no uncertain factors to reckon with, save the weight of metal and the
-comparative training of the gun-crews.
-
-To-day the unknown plays a large part in warfare. Intricate appliances,
-mysterious inventions, new types of torpedo-boats, and submarine vessels
-form a new element to contend against and have a personal moral influence
-upon the discipline of crews. To combat this new element of the unknown
-and uncertain has required sailors and men of a different stripe from the
-old. Where, in the old days, ignorance and all its accompanying evils held
-sway over the mind of poor Jack, and made him a prey to superstition and
-imagination, to-day, by dint of careful training of brain as well as body,
-he has become a thinking creature of power and force of mind. He knows
-in a general way the working of the great mechanical contrivances; and
-in the fights that are to come, as well as those that have been, he will
-show that the metal the American Jacky is made of rings true and stands
-well the trial by fire.
-
-
-THE OLD SHIPS AND THE NEW
-
-With much hitching of trousers and shifting of quid, the old longshoreman
-will tell you that sea-life isn't at all what it once was.
-
-He will gaze out to sea, where the great iron machines are plying back
-and forth, and a reminiscent sparkle will come into his eyes as he turns
-to his lobster-pots and tells you how it was in the good days of clippers
-and sailing-frigates, when sailor-men were sailor-men and not boiler-room
-swabs, machine-made and steam-soaked. He will also yarn, with much d--ning
-of his eyes (and yours), of how fair it was in the deck-watches of the
-"Saucy Sally" barque, with everything drawing alow and aloft, grog and
-'baccy a-plenty, and never a care but the hurry to spend the voyage-money.
-And not till he's mumbled all his discontent will he haul his sheets and
-give you right-of-way.
-
-He forgets, sheer hulk that he is, that he's been in dry-dock a generation
-or more and that swift-moving Time has loosed his gear and dimmed his
-binnacle-lights. Despite his ancient croaking, tricks at the wheel are
-to-day as ably kept, eyes as sharp as his still peer into the dimness
-over the forecastle, and the sea-lead takes as long a heave as in the
-early sixties, when he hauled up to New York with a thousand dollars
-in prize-money and a heart full for the business of spending it. It has
-always been so. There has never been an age that has not had its carper
-to tell you of the wonders that once were.
-
-Yet it was truly beautiful. With the tide on the ebb and the wind a-piping
-free, never was a fairer sight than the Atlantic clipper as she picked
-her speedy way through the shipping to the harbor's mouth; and nothing
-so stately as the gallant frigate in her wake, with all sail set to
-ga'n's'ls, her topsails bellying grandly to the quartering breeze, which
-whipped the filmy wave-tops against her broad bows, under which the yellow
-curl lapped merrily its greeting. The harbor clear and the capes abeam,
-aloft flew the nimble sail-loosers. The royals and the stu'n-sails flapped
-to the freshening wind, sheets went home with a run, and the yards flew
-to their blocks.
-
-Then, her departure taken, like a gull she sped blithely on her course.
-The rays of the afternoon sun gilded her snowy canvases until she looked
-a thing of air and fairyland, not of reality. On she flew, her tall spars
-dipping grandly to the swells--a stately farewell courtesy to the clipper,
-hull down to leeward. On the decks the boatswain piped his cheerful note,
-and everything came ship-shape and Bristol-fashion for the cruise. The
-running-gear was neatly coiled for running, the guns secured for sea,
-and the watches told off. The officer of the deck walked to and fro,
-singing softly to himself, casting now and then a careful eye aloft to the
-weather-leeches, which quivered like an aspen as the helmsman, leaning to
-the slant of the deck, kept her well up to her work.
-
-And yet the poetry has not gone out of it all. The poetry of the
-sailing-frigate was lyric. That of the steel battle-ship is Homeric.
-
-Nothing save a war of the elements has the power of a battle-ship in
-action. Ten thousand tons of steel,--a mighty fortress churning speedily
-through the water fills the spirit with wonder at the works of man and
-makes any engine for his destruction a possibility. Away down below the
-water-line a score or more of furnaces, white-heated, roar furiously under
-the forced draught, and the monster engines move their ponderous arms
-majestically, and in rhythm and harmony mask their awful strength. Before
-the furnace-doors, blackened, half-naked stokers move, silhouetted against
-the crimson glare, like grim phantoms of the Shades. The iron uprights and
-tools are hot to their touch, the purple gases hiss and sputter in their
-very faces, yet still they toil on, gasping for breath, their tongues
-cleaving to their mouths, and their wet bodies steaming in the heat of it.
-
-[Illustration: MODERN SEA MONSTERS IN ACTION]
-
-The deck above gives no sign of the struggle below. Where, in the old
-days, the sonorous trumpet rang out and the spar-deck was alive with the
-watch who hurried to the pin-rail at the frequent call, now all is quiet.
-Here and there bright work is polished, or a lookout passes a cheery call,
-but nothing save the man at the wheel and the officer of the watch shows
-the actual working of the ship.
-
-Seamanship, in the sense of sail-handling, is a thing of the past. Though
-there is no officer in the navy who could not in an emergency handle
-a square-rigger with the science of an old sea-captain, the man on the
-bridge has now come to be first a tactician and after that a master of
-steam and electricity.
-
-In the sea-battles of 1812 the captain was here, there, and everywhere in
-the thickest of the fight, inspiring by his personal magnetism the men at
-the guns. He was the soul of his ship. To-day the sea-battle is a one-man
-battle. The captain is still the heart and soul of the ship, but his ends
-are accomplished in a less personal way. His men need not see him. By the
-touch of a finger he can perform every action necessary to carry his ship
-to victory. He can see everything, do everything, and make his presence
-everywhere felt by the mere operation of a set of electrical instruments
-in front of him.
-
-The intricacies of his position are, in a way, increased. He may lose
-a boiler, split a crank, or break an electrical connection, but the
-beautiful subtleties of old-fashioned seamanship have no place whatever
-on the modern war-ship.
-
-Let it not be understood that the handling of the great ocean fortress of
-to-day may be mastered by any save a craftsman of the art. With plenty
-of sea-room and a keen watch alow and aloft the trick is a simple one,
-for the monster is only a speck in the infinity of sea and sky, and there
-is never a fear save for a blow, or a ship, or a shore. But in close
-manoeuvre, or in harbor, the problem is different. Ten thousand tons of
-bulk cannot be turned and twisted on the heel with the swish and toss
-of the wieldy clipper. Observant transpontine voyagers, who have watched
-the gigantic liner warped out from her pier into a swift tide-way with a
-leeward ebb, will tell you what a complicated and difficult thing it seems
-to be.
-
-The captain of the battle-ship must be all that the merchant captain is,
-and more besides. Mooring and slipping moorings should be an open book
-to the naval officer, but his higher studies, the deeper intricacies of
-the science of war, are mysteries for the merchant captain. All of it
-is seamanship, of course. But to-day it is the seamanship of the bridled
-elements, where strength is met by strength and steam and iron make wind
-and wave as nothing.
-
-The perfection of the seamanship of the past was not in strength, but
-in yielding, and the saltiest sea-captain was he who cajoled both ship
-and sea to his bidding. The wind and waves, they say, are always on the
-side of the ablest navigators, but it was rather a mysterious and subtle
-knowledge of the habits and humors of God's sea and sky, and a sympathy
-born of constant communion, which made both ship and captain a part of
-the elements about them, and turned them into servants, and not masters.
-
-The naval captains of 1812 had learned this freemasonry of sea and sky,
-and one incident--a typical one--will show it as no mere words can do.
-Its characteristics are Yankee pluck and old-fashioned Yankee seamanship.
-
-The frigate "Constitution"--of glorious memory--in 1812 gave the British
-squadron which surrounded her startling proof of the niceties of Yankee
-seamanship. There never has been a race for such a stake, and never will
-be. Had "Old Ironsides" been captured, there is no telling what would have
-been the deadly effect on the American fortunes. It was the race for the
-life of a nation.
-
-The "Constitution" was the country's hope and pride, and Captain Hull
-knew it. He felt that "Old Ironsides" could never fail to do the work
-required of her. So for four days and nights the old man towed her along,
-the British frigates just out of range, until he showed clean heels to
-the entire squadron. The ingenuity and deft manoeuvring of the chase has
-no parallel in the history of this or any other country in the world.
-
-With hardly a catspaw of wind, Hull drifted into sight of the British
-fleet off the Jersey coast. Before he knew it, they brought the wind up
-with them, and his position was desperate. There were four frigates and
-a ship-of-the-line spread out in a way to take advantage of any breath
-of air. Hull called away his boats, and running lines to them, sent them
-ahead to tow her as best they might. The British did still better, for
-they concentrated the boats of the squadron on two ships, and gained
-rapidly on the American. Hull cut ports over the stern, and ran two
-18-pounders out of his cabin windows, where he began a continuous fire on
-the enemy. The British ships shifted their helms and took up positions on
-the quarters of the frigate, unable to approach too closely with their
-boats for fear of the "Constitution's" stern-guns, which dropped their
-hurtling shot under their very bows.
-
-The desperate game had only begun. Hull, finding that he had but one
-hundred and fifty feet of water under him, decided to kedge her along. In
-a few minutes the largest boat was rowing away ahead with a small anchor
-on board, stretching out half a mile of cable. The anchor dropped, the men
-hauled in roundly and walked away with the line at a smart pace. It was
-heart-breaking work, but the speed of the ship was trebled. By the time
-the vessel was warped up to the first anchor another one was ready for
-her, and she clawed still further out of the enemy's reach. The British
-did not at first discover the magic headway of the American, and not for
-some time did they attempt to follow suit.
-
-Then a breeze came up. Hull hauled his yards to it, picked up his boats
-without slacking sail, and went ahead. But hardly were the sails drawing
-when the wind died away again. One of the ships came into range, and there
-was nothing for it but to go back to the kedging. Three times did this
-occur, the captain, with his eye on the dog-vane, jockeying her along as
-a skipper would his racing-yacht. The men had now been at their quarters
-for thirty-six hours without rest or sleep. But at the order they dropped
-into the boats again, ready for anything.
-
-Another breeze sprang up now and held for two hours. Like logs the
-sailor-men tumbled over on the decks, nearly dead for lack of sleep. On
-the afternoon of the third day of the chase the "Constitution" lost the
-wind and the enemy kept it. Back again to kedging they went, weary and
-sick at heart.
-
-But relief was in sight. A great cloud hove up on the southeastern
-horizon, and the black squall that followed was a Godsend to the
-"Constitution" and her weary crew. Hull knew the Englishmen would not
-like the looks of the squall. No more did he. But he kept his boats at
-the towing, nevertheless.
-
-He stationed his men at the halyards and down-hauls, and had everything in
-hand for the shock. He calmly watched the on-coming line of froth, growing
-whiter every minute, while his officers came to him and begged him to take
-in his sail. But wait he did until the first breath stirred his royals.
-Then the shrill pipe of the boatswain called the boats alongside of the
-"Constitution."
-
-They were not a moment too soon. As the men were hooking the tackles the
-blast struck the ship. Over she heeled, almost on her beam ends, the boats
-tossed up like feather-weights. The yards came down with a rush, and the
-sails flew up to the quarter-blocks, though the wind seemed likely to blow
-them out of the bolt-ropes. She righted herself in a moment, though, and
-so cleverly had Hull watched his time that not a boat was lost.
-
-Among the enemy all was disorganization. Every sail was furled, and some
-of their boats went adrift. Then, as the friendly rain and mist came down,
-the wily Yankee spread his sails--not even furled--and sailed away on an
-easy bowline at nine knots an hour.
-
-The race was won. Before the Englishmen could recover, Hull managed by
-wetting his sails to make them hold the wind, and soon the enemy was but
-a blur on his western horizon. Then the British gave it up.
-
-The superiority of Yankee seamanship was never more marked than in this
-chase. The British had the wind, the advantage of position, the force,
-and lacked only the wonderful skill and indomitable perseverance of the
-American, who, with everything against him, never for a moment despaired
-of pulling gallant "Old Ironsides" out of the reach of his slow-moving
-enemy.
-
-The difficult manoeuvre of picking up his boats without backing a yard
-or easing a sheet he repeated again and again, to the wonderment of his
-adversaries, whose attempts in this direction failed every time they tried
-it in a smart breeze. Hull's tactics at the coming of the squall were
-hazardous, and under any other circumstances would have been suicidal. For
-a skipper to have his boats two cable-lengths away from his ship, with his
-royals flapping to the first shock of a squall, is bad seamanship. But if
-tackles are hooked and men are safe aboard there is no marine feat like
-it.
-
-The naval history of this country is full of such instances. Captain
-Charles Stewart, on the same ship, did a wonderful thing. In his fight
-with the "Cyane" and the "Levant" he delivered a broadside from both
-batteries at the same time. Then, shifting his helm under cover of the
-smoke, he backed his topsails and drew out sternward from the enemy's
-fire, taking a new position, and delivering another broadside, which
-brought about their surrender.
-
-The war-ship of fifty years ago was as different from the battle-ship
-of to-day as a caravel from a torpedo-boat. With half the length and a
-third the tonnage, the old "ship-of-the-line" had three times as many men
-as the modern sea-fighter. Yet, with a thousand men aboard, she had work
-for them all. More than two acres of canvas were to be handled, and over
-a hundred guns were to be served, loaded, and fired. A thousand pieces
-of running-gear were to be rove and manned. The huge topsails, weighing,
-with their yards, many tons, needed on their halyards half a hundred
-men. Great anchors were to be broken from their sandy holds, and the
-capstan-bars, double-banked, hove around to the sound of the merry chantey
-and deep-voiced trumpet. Homeward bound, the business of anchor-hoisting
-turned into a mad scene, and many a rude jest and hoarse song turned the
-crowded fo'c's'le into a carnival of jollity.
-
-In matters of routine and training the crews of the American frigates
-differed little from those of England. The sailor-men of the United
-States, though newer to the work of navigating the big ships, were smart
-seamen, and could cross or bring down their light yards, send down their
-masts, or clear for action with the oldest and very best of England's
-men-o'war's-men.
-
-The ships themselves differed little in general construction. During the
-war of 1812, of large frigates we possessed but the "Constitution," the
-"President," and the "Constellation." Though built upon models patterned
-after the accepted standards of the period, they were somewhat smaller
-than the British vessels and usually carried a lighter armament. Their
-unbroken list of victories during the war with England is remarkable when
-one considers what the young nation was contending against, both at home
-and abroad, and how little aid Congress had given the infant navy.
-
-It seems really wonderful how a large body of men, numbering from three
-hundred to six hundred, and later a thousand or more, could find comfort
-and a home from one year's end to another in a space only two hundred feet
-long and fifty feet wide.
-
-But Jack is nowhere so comfortable as aboard ship. He is used to
-prescribed limits, and crawls into his hammock at night happy that
-the space is no greater. There is a companionship, he thinks, in close
-quarters, and he likes them.
-
-In the old ships it was a matter of great importance to provide
-comfortable quarters for the great crews they were obliged to carry.
-In England, during the first years of the century, the complement of a
-"Seventy-four" was five hundred and ninety, and even six hundred and
-forty men. Hammocks seem to have been used during the reign of Queen
-Elizabeth, when they were called "nets," probably because they were made
-of rope-yarn.
-
-The officers were then, as now, given the after part of the ship. A wooden
-bulkhead separated the cabins of the officers from the main-decks, where
-the men lived, though when the ship was cleared for action the bulkheads
-were taken down and all movable property both of officer and man was taken
-below-deck.
-
-This gave a clean sweep of the deck from bow to stern. The steerage had
-from two to six broadside-guns in it, and even the captain had to live
-with a couple of brass stern-chasers and a broadsider or two.
-
-The grandest line-of-battle-ship ever built for this country was the old
-"Pennsylvania." She was made of wood throughout, two hundred and twenty
-feet long and fifty-eight feet beam, with a draft of twenty-five feet
-of water and thirty-five hundred tons displacement,--just one-third of
-that of the modern "Iowa." Eleven hundred men could swing their hammocks
-on her wide decks, where no modern gun-carriages or steel compartments
-broke the long sweep from the cabin forward. Her sides were of oak, with a
-thickness of eighteen inches at the upper gun-ports and thirty-two inches
-at the water-line, almost heavy enough at long range to resist the shot
-of a modern rifle. Her sixteen inches were proof against her own fire at
-a mile. On her three fighting-decks she carried sixteen 8-inch guns, the
-heaviest they had in those days, and one hundred and four 32-pounders. Her
-mainmast was over two hundred feet long, and with all sail set she could
-leg it at twelve knots an hour.
-
-But compare her with the modern "Indiana." The "Pennsylvania" weighed less
-than the armor of the "Indiana" alone. The "Indiana" has but sixteen guns,
-against one hundred and twenty on the "Pennsylvania;" but that broadside
-can send two tons of tempered steel at a single discharge. The old 8-inch
-guns of the "Pennsylvania" could send a shell through fifteen inches of
-oak at a distance of a mile--the equivalent of half an inch of steel.
-
-The range of a modern rifle is from five to twelve miles; the
-penetration is almost anything you please in the way of steel armor.
-The "Pennsylvania's" shells at point-blank range would hardly make a
-perceptible dent in the "Indiana's" steel armor, and the old cast-iron
-shot would roll harmlessly down the new ship's sides. But one explosive
-shell from the "Indiana" would go through the "Pennsylvania" from stem to
-stern, and would splinter and burn her beyond repair.
-
-The "Pennsylvania" cost the government, in 1837, nearly seven hundred
-thousand dollars; a fabulous sum for a battle-ship in those days. The
-"Indiana" cost three millions and a half,--only two hundred and fifty
-thousand dollars less than the sum paid for that vast territory bought
-from Napoleon, and known as the "Louisiana Purchase," and about half the
-sum paid for the acquisition of Alaska from Russia.
-
-The statistics are interesting. According to official authority, in
-putting this vessel together seven hundred tons of rivets alone were used.
-About four hundred plans were made for the hull and about two hundred and
-fifty plans and drawings were made for the engines. These would take a
-force of one hundred men a year to complete.
-
-The engines and machinery alone weigh about nine hundred tons. The
-smoke-stacks are about sixteen feet in diameter. Each of the main engines
-is so enormous that under the great frames, in the economy of space and
-construction, are two smaller engines, the sole mission of which is to
-start the big ones. There are about sixty-six separate engines for various
-purposes. The condensing-tubes, placed end to end, would cover a distance
-of twelve miles. Thirty tons of water fill her boilers, which would stand
-a pressure of one hundred and sixty pounds to the square inch. Three
-dynamos provide the electricity,--a plant which would light a town of five
-thousand inhabitants. There are twenty-one complete sets of speaking-tubes
-and twenty-four telephone stations.
-
-The two great turrets are clad with nineteen inches of toughened steel.
-In each of these turrets are two 13-inch guns. Each of these guns is about
-fifty feet long and weighs sixty-one tons. There are eight 8-inch guns on
-the superstructure, in sets of twos, and amidships on the main-deck are
-four 6-inch rifles. In ten minutes, firing each 13-inch gun once in two
-minutes, and using all the other guns at their full power, the "Indiana"
-could fire about sixty tons of death-dealing metal.
-
-The millennium has not yet been reached, but such awful force makes
-universal peace a possibility. What the immediate future holds forth in
-naval architecture and gunnery is a matter which excites some curiosity,
-for it almost seems as though perfection, according to the standard of the
-end of the century, has been reached. And yet we already know of certain
-changes, improvements, and inventions, the direct outcome of the Spanish
-war, which are to be made on the vessels now contracted for, which affect
-importantly the government of the ship; and so it may be that the next
-twenty years will show as great an evolution as have the two decades just
-past.
-
-But whatever the future may bring, it has been a marvellous and momentous
-change from the old navy to the new. Since the "Monitor"-"Merrimac" fight
-no country has been quicker to profit by the lessons of the victory of
-iron over wood and steel over iron than the United States.
-
-But the navy that is, however glorious its achievements, can never dim the
-glory of the navy that was, though sailor-men, old and new, know that in
-a test of ship and ship, and man and man, the flag of this country will
-continue to fly triumphant.
-
-
-
-
-FARRAGUT IN MOBILE BAY
-
-
-It was Friday, the 5th of August, 1864. The first violet streaks of dawn
-stole through the purple clouds that the wind had tossed up during the
-night. Admiral Farragut sat in his cabin, quietly sipping his tea, his
-fleet-captain, Drayton, by his side. Through the open ports they could
-see the dim masses of the ships of the fleet as, lashed two and two, they
-stretched in a long line to seaward. The wind no longer blew, and the
-shrill pipes and the creaking of the blocks as the light yards came down
-echoed clearly across the silent water.
-
-"How is the wind, Drayton?" said the admiral, at last.
-
-Drayton walked to the port.
-
-"About west-sou'west, sir, I should say."
-
-The admiral smiled.
-
-"A good omen. Our smoke will blow over their batteries."
-
-He raised his cup, drained it, and set it back on its saucer. Then he rose
-to his feet and walked slowly up and down the cabin, looking first at his
-watch and then out through the starboard gallery, where the fleet lay. He
-turned, his genial face all aglow in the cool light of the morning, and
-reached to the table for his side-arms.
-
-The moment had arrived.
-
-"Well, Drayton," he said, "we might as well get under weigh."
-
-Drayton knew, and Farragut knew, that the momentous day before them
-would decide the fate of the West Gulf and of the nation in the South.
-It was the supreme moment in the admiral's career. But as he clasped his
-sword-belt his hands were as firm as though on inspection.
-
-With a cheery "Aye, aye, sir," Drayton went out of the door and up the
-companion, and soon the deck above resounded with the nimble feet as the
-men sprang joyfully to quarters. Old Knowles, the quartermaster, deftly
-sent his little ball of bunting, ready for an hour, to the yard-arm, and
-in a moment the row of multi-colored flags, tipped with the glow of the
-brightened east, fluttered proudly out into the morning breeze.
-
-Then the bright answering pennants flew up from all the vessels of the
-fleet, and the black smoke poured from their dusky funnels as the white
-water churned up behind them on their way into line.
-
-The admiral, on the quarter-deck, glass in hand, saw the black turrets of
-the monitors, with their grim, shiny muzzles, drift slowly inland towards
-the batteries, not a ripple showing behind them as they moved on their
-deadly mission towards the frowning battlements of Fort Morgan. Ahead of
-the "Hartford" was the broad stern of the "Brooklyn," as she churned her
-way slowly onward, her smoke drifting in great clouds over her starboard
-bow towards the water-batteries. Beside the admiral, one hand on the rail,
-was Drayton, cool as though on a practice drill, and as he looked over
-the swarthy backs that shone bare in the morning sun he knew well that
-the flagship would give a good account of herself.
-
-Behind him stood Watson, Gates, McKinley, and Brownell, watching the
-progress of the monitors. The calmness of the scene was sublime. Only
-an occasional order to the tacklemen, given in a quiet voice by the
-gun-captains, showed the deadly work ahead.
-
-As the "Hartford" drew into range, the admiral walked over to the main
-rigging and clambered up into the shrouds; and his men below him at the
-batteries lovingly watched their "old man" as step by step he mounted
-to get a clearer view. They knew him for a gallant old sea-dog. They had
-seen him steam past the batteries at Vicksburg and Port Hudson, and they
-smiled at his sternness at the capture of New Orleans, for they loved
-him. But at Mobile they learned that he feared nothing above the ocean
-or under it, if it stood in the way of the cause of his country. At this
-point Farragut stood a few feet above Jouett, on the wheel-house of the
-"Metacomet" alongside, and could hail the top above him, where Freeman,
-his trusty pilot, gave him his soundings and bearings.
-
-At length the battle opened. A great puff of white smoke rolled along
-the water from the turret of the "Tecumseh," and a yellow cloud of dust
-above the water-batteries marked where the shot had struck. Fort Morgan
-immediately replied, and, as the gunners got the range, the angry splash
-of the shots as they skipped across the water came clearly to the crew
-of the "Hartford," who stood at their guns silent and motionless. As
-the shots rained about them and great white splinters were torn from the
-nettings and flew across the decks, they only looked up at their admiral,
-who, leaning slightly forward, was slowly scanning the breastworks. In his
-face there was no impatience, no irritation, no sign of anxiety, and while
-he could calmly wait, they could. The courage of the leader was reflected
-in his men. It was the very perfection of human discipline.
-
-Would the order to fire never come? Already a fragment of shell had struck
-a gun-captain in the breast, and they saw him carried past them, moaning
-piteously. A shot had struck the foremast, and a jagged splinter from the
-mainmast flew up and lodged in the rigging below where the admiral stood.
-They saw him take the glass from his eyes, and, turning towards Captain
-Drayton, hold up his hand.
-
-The guns, already trained, belched forth their iron greeting to the
-gunboats, and the battle was on in earnest. Calm before, the men were
-calmer now, and they went about their work as though at target practice.
-The powder-boys flew like sprites, and the gunners sponged and loaded with
-rapidity. It was as if each gun and its crew were parts of one mechanism.
-
-"Steady, boys, steady. Left tackle a little. So! so!"
-
-And then came another broadside, followed by an eager cheer as the enemy
-were driven away from their water-battery.
-
-[Illustration: THE ADMIRAL LASHED TO THE RIGGING]
-
-As the smoke from the broadsides increased and obscured his view, the
-admiral, ratline by ratline, ascended the rigging until he found himself
-partly above the futtock bands and holding on to the futtock shrouds.
-The watchful eye of Drayton saw him perched high up, all unconscious of
-himself, thinking only of the great movements about him. A shock, and
-he would be thrown into the sea. The captain gave an order to Knowles,
-the quartermaster, who lay aloft briskly with a piece of lead-line. The
-admiral did not even see him, and only when Knowles passed the line around
-him did Farragut take his glasses down. "Never mind," said he, with a
-smile, "I'm all right." But the quartermaster lashed him, nevertheless,
-and lay below.
-
-Then from his lofty position the admiral saw a magnificent but terrible
-thing. The monitor "Tecumseh" was up well with the fort, and drawing
-slowly on, when, without a warning, a great column of water shot up under
-her starboard bow. She heeled over to port and went down with every soul
-on board. She had struck a torpedo. Captain Craven, in his eagerness to
-engage the "Tennessee" in battle, had passed to the west of the fatal
-buoy.
-
-This disaster was not immediately realized by the men. Some supposed the
-"Tennessee" had been sunk, and cheer after cheer was taken up and echoed
-along the line.
-
-But the admiral knew the danger that was coming. His anxiety was not
-decreased when the "Brooklyn," just ahead of him, suddenly stopped. The
-frown on his brows deepened, and loudly he hailed his pilot, Freeman, in
-the top, a few feet above him,--
-
-"What's the matter with the Brooklyn?" he shouted. "She must have plenty
-of water there."
-
-Freeman's head appeared promptly at the lubber's hole.
-
-"Plenty and to spare, admiral," he answered.
-
-Then the admiral knew. Captain Alden had seen the "Tecumseh" go down,
-and the heavy line of torpedoes across the channel made him pause. The
-backing screw churned up the water, and the "Hartford" every moment was
-bearing down on her. The vessels in the rear, pressing on those in the
-van, created a terrible confusion, and in the uncertainty the batteries
-of Farragut's ships ceased fire, while the whole of Mobile Point was a
-living flame. Disaster was imminent.
-
-But not a second did Farragut pause. A harsh voice from the "Hartford"
-broke the brief but ominous silence.
-
-"What's the trouble?"
-
-Then Alden's voice from the "Brooklyn" answered,--
-
-"Torpedoes."
-
-"Damn the torpedoes!" shouted the admiral. "Four bells. Captain Drayton,
-go ahead. Jouett, full speed."
-
-And the "Hartford" dashed forward, passed the "Brooklyn," and assumed the
-head of the column.
-
-Over the line of mines they flew at full speed, and the men below could
-hear them as they scraped along the hull. It was the one way out of the
-difficulty, and a second's hesitation would have closed even this escape
-from a frightful calamity. The admiral looked astern at the manoeuvring
-of his vessels with a smile of satisfaction. It was a magnificent sight.
-At first they appeared to be fouling each other in dire confusion, at the
-mercy of the guns which still belched forth a merciless fire. But as the
-"Hartford" dashed forward, one by one, as if by magic, they took their
-places. And he knew a grand tactical movement had been accomplished.
-
-Nor did he forget the poor men of the "Tecumseh," struggling in the water
-where their ship had gone down, but, going down the rigging, ordered
-Jouett to lower a boat immediately and pick up the survivors.
-
-The "Hartford" was nearly a mile ahead before the line could be
-straightened, and single-handed she fought the batteries and the gunboats,
-making straight for Buchanan's invincible ram, the "Tennessee." Amid the
-fire of shot and bursting shell the admiral walked calmly back to his
-quarter-deck, giving a word of advice here and an order there. But soon
-the other vessels were able to pour in a storm of shot and shell that
-completely silenced the batteries.
-
-One by one he saw the gunboats sink, until only the "Tennessee" had to be
-accounted for. The admiral tried to ram her, and the solid shot of his
-broadsides rolled down her iron sides; but she slipped away, pouring in
-a terrific fire at close range. She riddled the "Brooklyn," "Richmond,"
-and "Monongahela," all three of which dashed at her, bows on, at fearful
-speed. The admiral again struck her a fearful blow, but apparently with
-no effect whatever.
-
-The ram had one great advantage: she was surrounded by enemies and could
-fire continually, while the Union vessels had to use the utmost care not
-to fire into or collide with one another. An accident of this kind now
-happened to Farragut's ship. The "Hartford" and the "Lackawanna" were both
-making at full speed for the ram. The "Hartford" had the better position;
-and the "Lackawanna," sheering off to avoid another ship, ran into the
-quarter of the flagship, just where the admiral was standing, cutting her
-down nearly to the water's edge. The shock of the impact nearly took him
-off his feet, but in a moment he was climbing over the side to see what
-damage had been done.
-
-His crew thought he was looking out for himself. Immediately there was a
-cry, "Get the admiral out of the ship." The whole thought of his crew,
-unmindful of themselves, was to get him to a place of safety. It was a
-mere sudden impulse. But Farragut was not the man to look to himself.
-Having satisfied himself that the "Hartford" could last, he again gave
-the order, "Full speed," and set his prow again for the "Tennessee."
-
-But in the meanwhile the monitors had been hammering away at her with
-their heavy shot. Her rudder and smoke-stack were shot away, and her
-shutters jammed, and as the "Hartford" bore down upon her for the third
-time she showed her white flag and surrendered.
-
-The "Hartford" was greatly cut up,--twenty-five killed and twenty-eight
-wounded,--but the admiral had not a scratch to show for his deadly
-encounters. He came on deck just as the poor fellows who had been killed
-were being carefully laid out on the port side of the quarter-deck.
-
-"It was a great victory, Drayton," said he, sadly, "but----"
-
-And the men saw him turn aside, tears coursing down his cheeks.
-
-In truth, "there is nothing half so melancholy as a battle lost, except
-a battle won."
-
-
-
-
-AT THE NAVAL ACADEMY
-
-
-In times like those we have but recently passed through, when the theories
-and studies of thirty years are being put to tests of fire and the sword,
-it is interesting to turn for a moment to our naval school at Annapolis,
-where the officers who planned our campaigns, directed our battles and
-our blockades, and commanded our ships were first trained to the serious
-business of war. Though the years which have passed since 1861 have made
-changes in the personnel system and appearance of the Naval Academy, the
-city of Annapolis itself is the same sleepy, careless, happy-go-lucky town
-of earlier days.
-
-Once a year, and only once, it rouses itself from its lethargy and assumes
-an air of gayety and importance which it may not even have shown when it
-earned for itself the title of "The Gayest Colonial Capital." During the
-latter part of May and the first of June each train that pulls into the
-ramshackle station bears a load of pretty young women,--sisters, cousins,
-sweethearts,--who come for the two-weeks' exercises, when the naval cadets
-are graduated, and for the June ball. It has been so since the founding of
-the Naval Academy, and will be so as long as youngsters in brass buttons
-are brought up to be professional heroes.
-
-In the old colonial days Annapolis was rich. There was an English
-governor, and grouped about him were some of the oldest English families.
-In the middle of the eighteenth century Annapolis had become refined, gay,
-elegant, and even dissipated.
-
-Not only was Annapolis in these old days the most lucrative place in
-the colonies for the practice of law, but it was the birthplace of such
-lawyers as Daniel Dulaney, William Pinckney, Charles Carroll, and Reverdy
-Johnson. In those days, too, after the Revolution, Charles Carroll of
-Carrollton, the richest man in America, was one of the citizens. To-day,
-while the descendants of some of these families are still in possession of
-the homes of their forefathers, the seat of power and money of Maryland
-has changed to the commercial capital, Baltimore. The centre of social
-gayety, therefore, is to be found in the Naval Academy.
-
-The social feature of the life of the cadet must not be underestimated.
-The youngsters who present themselves as candidates for admission,
-appointed politically, come from all parts of the country, and represent
-every shade of opinion and training in the United States. They are a
-smaller image of the large mass of our people. The problem of bringing
-these different natures into accord with the conditions which they must
-face is no easy one; and the weeding-out process, which immediately
-begins, is conducted by the superintendent--usually a captain in the
-navy--and the officers under his command, under rules which have been
-adopted after sixty years of previous administrations.
-
-There is an indefinable something in the organization of the place that
-makes an indelible impression upon the mind of the candidate, and as he
-enters upon his duties it does not take long to discover whether he is
-mentally and personally fitted for the long task before him. It was said
-in the old days that a seaman was born and not made. But modern warfare
-has so changed the conditions that, while the officers of the navy must
-always command men and have the instincts of the sailor, high mental
-attainments are also the requisite, and those instincts can be formed by
-experience and association.
-
-The course, then, in brief, is the training of the mind and the body,
-the school of the soldier and sailor, and the school of the gentleman.
-Here, then, is where the social influences of the Naval Academy are felt.
-Politics, like misfortune, makes strange bedfellows, and the scion of
-your Eastern banker may soon find himself detailed as the room-mate of the
-most impecunious and unpretentious of Uncle Sam's younger sons. It is the
-democracy of military training, in which every man's standing is governed
-alone by his professional qualifications. Money or position can in no way
-affect his life. His rise or fall depends entirely upon his own worth.
-
-To the young man fortunate enough to secure an early appointment from his
-representative in Congress, his new home, in the month of May, presents
-every attraction. From the moment he passes the gate, passes the marine
-guards, his eye meets the beautifully kept lawns of the campus and
-drill-ground, sweeping gradually down to the sea-wall on the north and
-east sides, where the Severn River flows, stretching out to the blue
-waters of Chesapeake Bay, only three miles from old Fort Severn. To the
-left, as he enters, are the New Quarters and hospital. To the right, the
-sacred precincts of "Lovers' Lane," into which he cannot go, under pain of
-displeasure of his upper classmen, until he has passed through the first,
-or "plebe," year, and this rule is stringent.
-
-To pass the examinations successfully the candidate must be physically
-sound, and must have a knowledge of arithmetic, geography, United States
-history, reading, writing, spelling, English grammar, and the first
-principles of algebra. The number of appointees is limited by law to one
-naval cadet for every member or delegate of the House of Representatives,
-one for the District of Columbia, and ten at-large; the District of
-Columbia and the at-large appointments being made by the President. The
-course of the naval cadets is six years,--four years at the Naval Academy
-and two years at sea,--at the expiration of which time the cadet returns
-for the final graduation.
-
-The fourth-class man who enters in May has a certain advantage over the
-September appointee, for he has the advantage of four months of practical
-instruction, which hardens his muscles and gets his mind into excellent
-shape for the harder work of the year. Having passed his examinations,
-the youngster goes to the office of the superintendent, where he takes
-the oath of allegiance which binds him to serve in the United States navy
-eight years, including his time of probation at the Naval Academy, unless
-sooner discharged. He deposits a sum of money for his books, and such
-other amount as may be necessary for his outfit, and is put to no further
-expense.
-
-His pay is five hundred dollars a year while at the Naval Academy,
-but, while he acknowledges its receipt to the paymaster by signing the
-pay-roll, he is furnished with only sufficient pocket-money to get along
-on. This sum of money is microscopic, and is usually spent as soon as
-received. Having procured his outfit from the storekeeper, he reports on
-board the "Santee." The "Santee" is one of the old sailing-frigates in the
-navy, and has for years been anchored at the naval dock as quarters for
-cadets during the summer time and for practical instruction in the drill
-of the old Dahlgrens. Here, too, is where the fractious cadets are placed
-in durance.
-
-Until within a very few years the new fourth-class men were sent
-upon the summer cruise of cadets, first on the "Dale," then on the
-"Constellation" and the "Monongahela." But by a change in the curriculum
-the May appointees in the fourth class do not take the summer cruise. The
-"Monongahela," one summer, carried the line division of the first class,
-the second class, and the third class. Before this change the life of the
-"plebe" on the summer cruise was not a bed of roses. The cadets of the
-third class, until recently "plebes" themselves, were prepared to wreak
-upon their juniors all of the pent-up exuberance of the previous year.
-
-Hazing, in the old sense, has died away, and even the "running" of ten
-years ago has been reduced to a minimum through the efforts of Captains
-Ramsey, Sampson, and Phythian; but the "plebe" was made to step around in
-a very lively manner, and to do most of the hauling on the heavy gear,
-while the third-class men did the complaining. On the "Monongahela" the
-first, second, and third classes are now, as in the old days, considered
-as sailors, although a number of the blue-jackets are retained on the
-vessel. The cadets do their share of the work, and perform all the
-duties of men-of-war's-men except scrubbing, holy-stoning, and cleaning
-brass-work. The lower-class men are divided into watches with the regular
-blue-jackets, side by side with whom they assist in performing all the
-evolutions in working the ship.
-
-The cruise which follows is usually a pleasant one. There is a lot of hard
-work to do, and in a short while the hands and muscles get hard, the white
-suits conveniently tarry, and the skins of the youngsters as brown as
-leather. But the life has its compensations, for at Fortress Monroe they
-get into their uniforms again and go ashore to the dances given there at
-the time of their arrival and departure.
-
-Meanwhile the engineer division of the first class is off on a cruise to
-visit the various navy-yards and docks of the Atlantic coast. Their course
-of instruction differs from that of the cadets on the "Monongahela,"
-and they are shown the practical side of engineering work on sea-going
-ships. Away down below the water-line of their vessel, in the stoke-hole,
-engine-room, or boiler-room, covered with grease or coal-dust, they do all
-the work of oilers, engineers, stokers, and mechanics, so as to be able
-to know accurately all the duties of those men, and to be able to command
-them in the years to come.
-
-In October the study-term begins, and the cadets are then given their
-quarters for winter. Most of them are in the building known as the New
-Quarters, while the others, cadet officers of the first class, are placed
-in the Old Quarters. The subtle distinction in the titles of these two
-sets of buildings is hardly appreciated at the Naval Academy, since they
-have both been built for thirty or forty years, and are in a frightful
-state of dilapidation. Two cadets of the same class are quartered in
-each room, and the discipline of household, as well as of person, begins
-immediately. Each room is plainly furnished, and contains two beds, two
-wardrobes, two looking-glasses, two iron wash-stands, a common table, and
-a broom. The charge of the room is taken by each cadet every other week,
-and this cadet is responsible for its general order and cleanliness.
-If the officer in charge should happen to inspect the quarters in his
-absence, and find anything contrary to regulations, the cadet in charge
-is the one who is reported at the next morning's formation, although his
-room-mate may have been the delinquent.
-
-Throughout the year the reveille sounds at six o'clock. At a quarter
-to seven is morning formation, roll-call, and inspection. The ranks
-are opened, and the keen-eyed officer in charge, followed by the cadet
-officer-of-the-day and his ominous scratch-pad, with keen eyes looks for
-grease spots, specks of dust on blouses, tumbled hair, or unblackened
-boots. After breakfast the sick-call is sounded, and cadets who are ill,
-or who think they are, report to the hospital. At eight o'clock the study
-begins, and lasts until half-past twelve. The cadets of each class are
-divided into sections of from six to a dozen each, and at the bugle-call
-are formed by sections and marched to their recitation-rooms for study.
-The morning is divided into two parts, and each part is divided into two
-periods, one for study and one for recitation.
-
-Briefly, the course of instruction is as follows: Fourth class, first
-year: algebra, geometry, English, history of Greece and Rome, French,
-naval history of the United States, Spanish. Third class, second year:
-descriptive geometry, trigonometry, the Constitution of the United States,
-analytical geometry, mechanical drawing, physics, and chemistry. Second
-class, third year: seamanship, principles of mechanism, differential
-calculus, integral calculus, physics, chemistry, mechanical drawing, and
-navigation. First class, line division: seamanship and naval tactics,
-ordnance and gunnery, theory and practice of navigation, hydrographic
-surveying, least squares, applied mechanics, naval construction,
-ballistics, armor, and torpedoes. The engineer division has marine
-engines, boilers, machinery designing, mechanics, and naval construction.
-
-The first part of the course, it will be seen, deals with the simpler
-branches of study. The plan is not to burden the mind of the cadet with
-unnecessary knowledge, yet every branch which will directly, or even
-indirectly, contribute to his ultimate efficiency has its place in the
-curriculum. The end--the making of a thoroughly trained seaman--is kept
-constantly in view. The simpler studies train the mind of the cadet to the
-technical work which follows in the third and fourth years, and in those
-two years he gets his principal technical and practical training. Each one
-of the departments in which he studies has a head, usually a naval officer
-above the rank of lieutenant-commander. All of these heads of departments,
-with the superintendent and commandant of cadets, who is also head of the
-Department of Discipline, form the Academic Board. The afternoon classes
-begin at two and last till four, after which comes the afternoon drill,
-which lasts until 5.30 and completes the daily duties.
-
-It does not seem with all this work as though the cadet had very much
-time to himself, but the cadet is not unhappy. Wednesday and Saturday
-afternoons are given over as recreation-hours, and football and baseball
-with neighboring college teams bring crowds of visitors into the Academy.
-The band plays upon the lawn, and the pathways are filled with fair
-visitors, who walk with their respective heroes along the shady lanes.
-Saturday night, too, during the winter, hops are given, sometimes by
-officers and sometimes by cadets, and a gymnastic entertainment once a
-year gives the cadets the opportunity to show their prowess in boxing,
-fencing, and work on the gymnastic paraphernalia.
-
-Towards the end of May the annual exercises begin. The examinations
-finished, the arrival of the Board of Visitors is announced by the booming
-of cannons from the sea-wall. The cadets receive them on dress-parade,
-and the work of showing their progress during the year is at once
-begun. The Board of Visitors go out on one of the government tugs into
-Chesapeake Bay, and there they see the upper-class men tack, wear-ship,
-box, haul, and perform all the evolutions in a seamanlike manner on the
-old "Monongahela." Light yards are swung across with the precision of
-old men-of-war's-men; sails are reefed, furled, or set in an incomparably
-short space of time; and the cadets are down from aloft for their target
-practice. The target is towed out by a launch, anchored, and gun by gun,
-battery by battery, division by division, or by broadside, the cadets
-hammer away at it as though it were the vessel of a hostile power, more
-often than not blowing it entirely to pieces.
-
-[Illustration: REEFING TOP-SAILS]
-
-Back again at the yard, they go through with their drill as infantry
-or artillery; and last, but not least, comes the drill by companies for
-the honor of bearing the Naval Academy flag during the coming year. The
-judges in this competition are usually army officers, and every movement
-is carefully watched and marked. The captain of each company, before going
-to this drill, selects its sponsor,--a very pretty girl, who, the drill
-over, presents the flag to the victorious company amid loud cheers from
-the whole battalion.
-
-The exercises are over. The cadet of the first class is now ready to be
-graduated. Companies are formed up in hollow square, and the secretary
-of the navy in the centre, with a pleasant word to each, presents the
-diplomas to the graduates amid cheers from the companies. As quickly as
-he can the first-class man goes to his quarters and shifts into his new
-uniform, and comes back to the campus for the congratulations of his
-friends. That night the June ball takes place, and the graduate bids
-farewell to his old associations and goes out into the world.
-
-Few articles that have been written about the Naval Academy have given
-anything of the personal side of the life of the cadet,--the side of his
-life that is an escape-valve from books and drills. There was a time,
-years ago, when smoking was permitted by the superintendent, and this is
-how the privilege was granted: One night, in January, 1879, an alarm of
-fire was sounded just before ten o'clock. The cadets, then nearly ready
-for turning in, appeared in all sorts of costumes, but reported promptly
-in the hall. When the battalion was assembled at fire-quarters, word
-passed that there was a fire in the city and they were expected to aid.
-
-With a cheer the cadets dashed to the engines, and, in spite of the cold
-and their scanty costumes, rushed out to the State-House circle, where
-seven or eight buildings were all ablaze.
-
-It was found that the hydrants could not supply enough water, so the cadet
-officers immediately took charge and ran a line of hose to the river.
-Four houses were already past help, but attention was immediately directed
-towards saving the others.
-
-In order to save three buildings it was found necessary to pull one of
-these burning structures down. A heavy chain was passed through the doors
-and one of the windows, which was manned by the cadets and townsfolk, and
-the building was in a short time demolished. In some unaccountable way,
-after part of the building had been pulled down, the chain was unshackled,
-and the townsfolk, who were now manning it, shot half-way up the street.
-So the cadets, in spite of their hard work, could always find time for
-skylarking. One officer, who was not very much liked, received the full
-force of the hose, which was in charge of two cadets, directly under the
-chin. Of course, apologies were in order, but the officer had to go home.
-At four o'clock in the morning the cadets, wet and tired out, returned to
-their quarters.
-
-The next day they found that it was generally considered that they had
-not only saved the buildings but the greater part of the business portion
-of the town, as the wind had shifted, and the part of the town towards
-the harbor would have been completely destroyed. At formation the order
-of the superintendent was read. It said that, "Whereas, the cadets had
-shown great bravery in the performance of their duty the night before,
-and had conducted themselves in a creditable manner, the superintendent
-desired to express his appreciation and grant to them the privilege of
-using tobacco." Ten minutes after breakfast there was not a man in the
-battalion of nearly four hundred who was not puffing away furiously on
-pipe, cigar, or cigarette, although not an ounce of tobacco had been drawn
-from the stock of the storekeeper. Whence it came is a mystery.
-
-The privilege was taken away in 1881; and though to-day there is no
-smoking allowed, and smoking is considered one of the most serious
-offences, yet it is safe to say that in many a secret nook this contraband
-is safely hid from the eye of the officer in charge. In the old days,
-after taps, or lights out, poker-parties were the order of the night.
-The windows and transoms were covered with blankets, and every ray was
-hidden from the eye of the zealous officer and watchman. But to-day
-the discipline is different, and the cadet, to pass the rigorous mental
-examination, has no time to transgress the written and unwritten law.
-
-There are, of course, many criticisms from various quarters as to the
-methods of instruction at the Naval Academy, but it is not desirable
-to make rapid changes, in spite of new conditions, in a course that has
-proved successful for many years. It is asked that if cadets are to man
-steamships without sails, what is the use of educating them to officer
-sailing-vessels? What was the necessity of building the "Bancroft," if she
-was not to be used for the practice-cruises of the cadets? Why has it been
-proposed to build wooden vessels for their instruction? The superintendent
-of the Naval Academy, Captain Cooper, Secretary Herbert, and Secretary
-Long have contended that officer-like qualities can best be attained by
-experience in sailing-vessels. They believe that intrepidity and alertness
-come from the old school of sailing-ships.
-
-On the other hand, many of the older officers believe that there is too
-much book-learning at the Academy and too little practical instruction;
-but most of them are willing to admit that the naval officer of to-day
-must be a scientific man to properly meet requirements of modern ships,
-and that he cannot acquit himself properly unless he has a complete
-theoretical training. It is certain that the cadet graduated now from the
-Naval Academy is thoroughly trained in his profession. He has never yet
-been shown deficient in knowledge of any duty which he has been called
-upon to perform, nor incapable of mastering the intricate parts of modern
-ships. Considering the age at which he leaves the Academy, he is better
-educated in his profession than the college graduate, and is also trained
-in those qualities for command which make the American naval service what
-it is to-day. He goes forth thoroughly equipped for his life-work.
-
-
-
-
-OUR NATION'S NEW HEROES
-
-
-The great General Grant, when a cadet, went through his course at West
-Point with one foot out of the Academy and the other in. So curiously
-deficient was he in all the arts and sciences which theory insists must
-go to make the perfect soldier that he was always in the "Immortals."
-
-"Immortals" is the name of the section at the foot of the class, admission
-to whose profane cult means small marks and the possible privilege of
-resigning at the end of the half-year. Immortals is a neat contraction of
-"Les Immortals,"--that is, lazy mortals. Immortal Grant became, but not
-in the way the academic reports of the time would have indicated.
-
-This has proved true again and again among the graduates of the Naval
-Academy, as well as those of West Point. Though the "child is father to
-the man" in general tendencies and character, it does not follow that
-mere mental attainments are an indication of great genius in the practical
-operation of the great military professions. Works of the brain and works
-of the body and spirit are two things; and though the finely-ordered mind
-controls to a degree both body and spirit, no such mechanism can ever
-accomplish great deeds in which heart and spirit are needed, though it
-may plan the details with a nicety to challenge criticism. A combination
-of all these qualities is rare, for the bookworm is seldom an enthusiast
-on any subject which gets very far away from his theories.
-
-
-DOES SCHOLARSHIP COUNT IN WAR?
-
-The Spanish war has shown that it is not always the men who stand at the
-heads of their classes who lead in the more practical duties of ship and
-camp. Admiral Sampson, one of the greatest thinkers and most profound
-students in the navy, as a boy and as a man always led in everything he
-undertook; but, on the other hand, Hobson, though one of the leaders of
-his class at Annapolis, was demure and retiring, hardly the man one would
-select to lead a forlorn hope into the jaws of death.
-
-One may go through the list man for man, and find as many backward in
-their studies as those who have carved high niches for themselves in the
-Academy records.
-
-No proposition could cover the situation in a general way, for, after
-all, the men we have heard from were perhaps only lucky,--lucky in being
-chosen as the instruments of the result. There are hundreds--thousands--of
-officers in the service, some brilliant, some wise, some brave, some
-strong, as good as they, who have lacked only opportunity. The singling
-out of any names for special mention seems an injustice to them,--"the
-heroes of the heart."
-
-
-TAYLOR AND EVANS AS SCHOOL-MATES
-
-Forty years ago Harry Taylor and Bob Evans were boys together in
-Washington. They were school-mates and chums, fighting each other's
-battles and longing for the day when they would be old enough to go to the
-Naval Academy and fight for their country. They were both lively, active
-lads, Taylor perhaps the quieter of the two.
-
-As their characters developed, Taylor became more of a student than Evans,
-and that became the distinguishing feature of their entire careers.
-While Captain Taylor has been the student of books, Captain Evans is
-known throughout the navy as a student of men and a "man's man" in the
-best sense of the term. The friendship of youth continued without break
-throughout their young manhood and prime. The bond was strengthened when
-Evans, at the close of the Civil War, married his chum's sister.
-
-They were both in the famous three-year class which was admitted to the
-Naval Academy in 1860. They had hardly entered on their careers long
-enough to get the smell of the brine into their nostrils when the Civil
-War broke out. Here was the very chance they were longing for. But they
-ruefully saw two upper classes go out, and they knew that fighting of the
-larger sort was not yet for them.
-
-For two years they were kept at their books, when finally the welcome news
-came that they would be graduated in three years instead of four, if they
-could pass the examinations. In spite of their many disappointments, there
-was a wild whoop of joy up and down the corridors, and they set about
-their work in earnest, studying with a concentration which no diversion
-could dissipate.
-
-Taylor and Evans both left the Academy before having been graduated,
-and were ordered to duty with the blockading squadrons along the Gulf
-and Southern coasts. They went to their ships gleefully, bearing the
-proud titles of "acting ensigns," but in reality merely midshipmen of
-three years' standing,--destined, however, to do the duties and have
-the responsibilities of men many years their seniors in theoretical and
-practical service.
-
-
-HOW CAPTAIN EVANS SAVED HIS LEG
-
-Evans was in both attacks on Fort Fisher, and in the second fight he was
-shot twice. The wounds were severe, and he was sent into hospital. His
-leg was shattered badly, and after examining it carefully the doctors told
-the young sufferer bluntly that they would be obliged to amputate it.
-
-When they went out Evans made a resolution that his leg was not to be cut
-off. He came to the conclusion that he would rather quit right there than
-to go through life one-legged. It was his own leg anyhow, and nobody had
-a better right to decide the question than himself.
-
-By some means he got hold of one of the big navy revolvers, and had
-it secreted under his pillow when the surgeons, with a blood-curdling
-array of knives and saws, made their appearance on the scene and began
-preparations to carry their threat into execution. But when the chief
-surgeon turned to the bed to examine the wounds he found himself looking
-into the black barrel of young Evans's navy revolver.
-
-[Illustration: THEY DID NOT TOUCH HIM AND HIS LEG WAS SAVED]
-
-"Now, see here," said Evans, as the doctor retired in some alarm; "I want
-that leg to stay on. I need it. I will get well with that where it is, or
-not at all, and that's the end of it. That leg does not come off. Do you
-understand what I mean?"
-
-The doctor was dismayed. But he understood perfectly, and Evans carried
-the day. The wounds were dressed and healed rapidly. In several months he
-was out again. But he limped then, and will as long as he lives.
-
-
-SIGSBEE AS A PRACTICAL JOKER
-
-Charles D. Sigsbee, writer, artist, hydrographic expert, mathematician,
-inventor, and incidentally the central figure, composed and dignified, in
-the greatest marine tragedy of modern times, is the kind of a man most
-people--men, women, and children,--like to see and know. His brow can
-be stern, and no one knows that better than the people who have sailed
-under him; but he loves peace better than war, and the twinkle behind his
-glasses never quite dies out.
-
-As a midshipman he was always the prime mover in any affair which could
-contribute to the gayety of existence; was a better judge of people than
-he was of test-tubes, and a practical joker of ability, which is saying
-much. The fascination which the ocean holds for all boys of sound mind
-gained an early sway over young Sigsbee. He received his appointment to
-the Naval Academy just before the Civil War, in 1859.
-
-He liked the practical work, but could never settle down to the
-desperate grind of the academic course. He found himself more often
-making caricatures of "Dom Roget," the teacher of Spanish (a language
-he has since mastered), than in poring over the verbs and adverbs in the
-text-book. They were good caricatures, too, and when the other youngsters
-in the section saw them there was merriment which poor Dom Roget could not
-understand. But the professor solved the matter satisfactorily by marking
-all the delinquents on a low scale of credit, and, to be certain of the
-right culprit, Sigsbee lowest of all.
-
-The young artist used to make pictures of everything and everybody he
-saw, and write pieces about them,--sprightly literature which went from
-one end of the Academy to the other. And so when the end of the year came
-round he found that, instead of being enrolled on the academic scroll of
-fame, he was relegated to the lower half of the class, which they called
-the "wooden" half.
-
-He went back into the next class,--which entered in 1860,--and with
-the advantage of a year of experience he obtained a position in the new
-class which he held until graduation time. He never quite got over his
-propensities for making fun.
-
-He began as a joke, and afterwards kept it up, an anonymous correspondence
-with a member of his class. Sigsbee disguised his hand, and in the
-guise of "Lily Gaines," a very fascinating young woman of susceptible
-tendencies, wrote to Midshipman Mullan in such endearing terms that
-for three months that young gentleman was kept in a state of alternate
-suspense and rapture. At last, in a burst of confidence some one told
-Mullan of the deception, and the correspondence suddenly ceased.
-
-But in spite of all this Midshipman Sigsbee went out into the world to
-practise his profession in stirring times, and ever acquitted himself as
-a valiant officer and accomplished gentleman. As the months rolled into
-years the naval service could boast of no officer who studied harder or
-who brought more steadfast qualities into his work.
-
-
-THE BRAVE COMMANDER OF THE "WINSLOW"
-
-Lieutenant John B. Bernadou was the commander of the "Winslow" in the
-fight at Cardenas, at which Ensign Worth Bagley, his second in command,
-was killed. The story of the fight these young officers made, until Bagley
-was killed, Bernadou was wounded, and the "Hudson" came and towed them out
-of danger, has been told again and again, and the tale of it will go down
-into the history of the Spanish-American War as one of the pluckiest of
-which there is record. Bagley, being the only naval officer killed during
-the war, was heard of from one end of the country to the other, but little
-was told of Bernadou, his commander.
-
-Bernadou's early career showed in several instances the fearlessness
-of his disposition and the sturdiness of his character. The boy's first
-idea was to go to West Point. Failing in this, he secured an appointment
-to the Naval Academy, where he entered with a fine standing, which he
-maintained until he was graduated. He was always a brilliant worker, and
-in gunnery and foreign languages showed a most remarkable aptitude. To-day
-he speaks eight languages, and is one of the foremost men in the navy as
-an authority on smokeless powder.
-
-
-THE MAN WHO NEVER KNEW FEAR
-
-Bernadou's classmates say that he fears nothing on earth or water. His
-fearlessness overcomes any consciousness of self.
-
-One afternoon in October, 1881, the United States steamer "Kearsarge,"
-Captain G. B. White, lay at anchor in Hampton Roads. The weather had been
-stormy for a day or two, and the wind had kicked up a heavy sea. There
-was a strong tide running, and the vessel swung out on a long cable. A
-seaman by the name of Christoverson, who was boat-tender in one of the
-cutters swinging at the lower booms, went out and down the Jacob's ladder.
-In stepping to the thwart his foot slipped, and those on deck saw him
-disappear under the gray water.
-
-There was a hoarse cry of "man overboard." Seaman Robert Sweeny, who saw
-the accident, running out along the boom, plunged in without delay, just
-as the man came up the second time. Bernadou, then a cadet-midshipman,
-heard the cry, and rushing to the gangway, saw the terrible struggle
-of Sweeny with the drowning man as the tide swept them out towards the
-sea. Bernadou tossed off his coat, and was overboard in an instant.
-Christoverson, in his fierce struggle, carried Sweeny down with him, the
-latter only breaking away to be carried down again.
-
-Bernadou by this time was within reach, and catching the drowning man from
-behind, managed to relieve Sweeny until a line was thrown to them, and
-they were finally hauled aboard in an exhausted condition. For this act
-both Bernadou and the sailor received the recommendations of their captain
-and the thanks of William H. Hunt, then the secretary of the navy.
-
-
-ONLY NAVAL OFFICER KILLED IN THE WAR
-
-Worth Bagley's career at the Naval Academy was a triumph of the heart
-rather than of the mind. While he loved the service and hoped some day to
-fill a useful place in it, he found more to attract him in football and
-athletics than in calculus and least squares. But no man who ever entered
-was more beloved than he, and no man had better friends in the service and
-out of it. He was turned back twice, but entered, in 1891, the class of
-'95, in which year he was graduated. He was a member of the "Five B's,"
-composed of Bennett, Barnes, Bagley, Breckinridge, and Baldwin, men who
-were close friends while they were at the Academy.
-
-But football was Bagley's ruling passion. During this time, too, the
-great series of games between West Point and Annapolis, between the army
-and navy, over which the entire United Service went mad, were played,
-and Bagley was on the victorious team of '93, and was named for the
-"All-America" team.
-
-Bagley roomed during the four years' course with his chum Breckinridge,
-who was washed off another torpedo-boat, the "Cushing," and drowned, as
-he was trying to get into Havana a few days before the blowing up of the
-"Maine."
-
-"Worthless" Bagley (as his intimates called him) and Breckinridge were
-never left much to themselves in their quarters, for their room was always
-crowded during recreation-hours with cadets skylarking or asking advice
-or assistance. There was another intimate and classmate of Bagley, D.
-R. Merritt, who was killed in the "Maine" disaster a few days after the
-drowning of Breckinridge.
-
-
-ROOSEVELT SAVED BAGLEY FOR THE NAVY
-
-When Bagley came up for graduation at the end of the four-years' course
-the doctors thought they discovered an irregular movement of the heart,
-and recommended that he be dropped. Bagley took his case to Theodore
-Roosevelt, then assistant secretary of the navy.
-
-Roosevelt, looking at him through his glasses with a quick, critical
-glance, said,--
-
-"You are Bagley, the football player, are you not?"
-
-Bagley said he was.
-
-"Well, you are to stay in the navy while I am here. The service needs more
-men just like you."
-
-Then Bagley went on his two-years' cruise, and when he came back he was
-passed through without question.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Captain Cook, Admiral Schley's chief-of-staff on the "Brooklyn," Captain
-Clark, of the "Oregon," and Commander Davis were room-mates in the
-famous class of Crowninshield, Taylor, and Evans. The "Brooklyn" and the
-"Oregon," commanded by classmates and room-mates, fought almost side by
-side down the desperate flight to the westward, the "Oregon" farther
-inland, but both thundering their iron missiles on the "Colon" as she
-struggled to her doom.
-
-It is an interesting fact that Captain Clark, then holding the title of
-acting ensign, but really a midshipman, was the first one to communicate
-with the captain of the ram "Tennessee" when she was captured at
-Mobile Bay, while it was Captain Cook who received the surrender of the
-"Cristobal Colon." The third member of this trio was retired several years
-ago or he would have had a command in the same action. The affection which
-these youngsters bore one for the other was very much like that which
-existed between Captains Evans and Taylor.
-
-
-CLARK'S HEROISM AT THE BATTLE OF MOBILE BAY
-
-In the battle of Mobile Bay young Clark was on the forecastle of the
-"Ossipee," then holding an important position in the line of ships that
-swung past the torpedoes after the gallant Farragut in the "Hartford."
-
-The forecastle was bare of any defence, and the position was exposed
-to all assaults of the fire, first from Fort Morgan and then from Fort
-Gaines, farther up. When the forts were passed, there followed a fierce
-fight with the gunboats and the invincible ram "Tennessee." Again and
-again the "Hartford," "Ossipee," and other vessels of the fleet rammed her
-in succession, and young Clark saw her terrible ports fly open and send
-out just by him their awful discharge.
-
-At last, however, she became unmanageable, her shutters were jammed, and
-the "Ossipee," under full head of steam, was making for her. But while
-Clark was straining his eyes through the smoke, a white flag was hoisted
-in token of surrender. Clark shouted to Johnson, the commander of the
-ram, to starboard his helm. But the reply came that his wheel-ropes were
-shot away. It was too late to keep from striking her, but the force of
-the blow was broken by the manoeuvre. This early experience was followed
-by the bombardment of Fort Morgan,--two important actions before Clark
-had got into his early twenties. His fearlessness then, as now, needs no
-mention.
-
-
-POPULARITY OF CAPTAIN PHILIP AS A CADET
-
-It has been said that Captain Philip's public acknowledgment of God on
-the decks of the battle-ship "Texas," after the fight before Santiago, was
-the natural expression of a deeply religious nature. But his classmates at
-the Naval Academy and the men who have sailed with him say that he is not
-more religious than other men in the navy,--not so religious as many, who
-always have their Bible on the table in their cabins and read it regularly
-when at sea or in port.
-
-They believe that he spoke on the impulse of the moment, his heart
-devoutly thankful that the victory had been achieved at so slight a loss,
-and willing that all men should witness his profession of faith.
-
-[Illustration: HER LAST DUTY]
-
-As a boy at the Academy, while he never surreptitiously drank, as others
-did, he made no pretence of being religious. He smoked whenever he got
-a chance, in his quarters or in the darknesses back of old Fort Severn,
-between the watchmen's rounds. He never, as other cadets did, gave his
-word not to smoke, and so he felt a perfect freedom to do it if he could
-keep from being caught. Like Sigsbee, he was a practical joker, and if
-you should go to any of the members of his class and ask them who was the
-most popular man in it, they would say, "Jack Philip."
-
-
-THE VERSATILITY OF ADMIRAL SAMPSON
-
-In Admiral Sampson, the boy was father to the man. From boyhood his was
-a life of unneglected opportunities. Born of very humble parents, by the
-hardest of work and the most sincere endeavors he succeeded in obtaining
-his appointment to the Naval School. His mind, naturally studious, turned
-to the beginnings of the new profession with avidity, and so fine was his
-mind even then that, without trying himself unduly, he easily distanced
-his entire class and took first honors for the course.
-
-His classmates say that he was studious, but they do not say that he
-applied himself so closely to the work that he shut himself off from
-the diversions or recreations of the rest-hours. On the contrary, he was
-foremost in most of the sports of the day, and was, in his own way, one
-of the best athletes in his class.
-
-He was then, as he is now, an "Admirable Crichton," but his versatility
-did not diminish for him the serious aspect of any of the things he
-attempted. Some of his classmates called him cold, as his contemporaries
-out in the service do now, but when they wanted advice on any subject
-which seemed to require a reasoning power entirely beyond their own,
-they said, "Ask Sampson." He was not only high in his class councils,
-but dearly beloved, as he is to-day, by every man in it and every man
-who knew him. If people thought him cold then it was because they did not
-understand him. If they think him cold to-day it is because he does not
-care to be understood by the men with whom he has no interest or sympathy.
-If arrogance begins to be a virtue, then repression born of modesty is a
-crime.
-
-To those men he cares for--now as in his youth--he has always a warm
-handshake and an open heart. His eye is calm, sympathetic, penetrating,
-stern, as the humor dictates, anything you please,--sometimes cold,
-but always hypnotic. If he wants the friendship of man or woman he is
-irresistible. To-day he is the authority on naval ordnance, an expert on
-explosives, a capital seaman, a famous tennis-player,--the best-equipped
-man in the service for any work--or play--that can be put before him.
-
-
-BLUE, WHO DISCOVERED CERVERA'S FLEET
-
-Victor Blue, who in his uniform made the fearless expedition ashore at
-Santiago, and actually saw for the first time the Spanish fleet within
-the harbor, is the kind of a man who does not have very much to say for
-himself, which is often a sign that a person is to be found ready when
-wanted. He was a member of the class of '87, in which his work was fair,
-but not remarkable in any way. He lived quietly, receiving his quota
-of good and bad marks, but having no special distinction, even in his
-offences against the oracles of Stribling Row.
-
-He did not care much for "fems" (girls, in the vernacular), but towards
-his first class-year began to "take notice." He played a guard on the
-"Hustlers," the scrub football team which struggles with the "Academy"
-eleven on practice-days, but never made the "Team." He had plenty of grit,
-but was too light for the centre and not active enough for the ends. Blue
-is a fair specimen of the type of men who without ostentation have made
-our new navy what it is. Many men envy him, but no man begrudges him his
-numbers recently awarded for "extraordinary heroism."
-
-
-YOUNG DEWEY AS A FIGHTER
-
-George Dewey entered the class of '58 at the Naval Academy at the age
-of seventeen. He was not a large boy, but fairly up to middle height,
-and strong and active in all athletic sports. It was not long after his
-entrance that he found an opportunity to show the fighting spirit that was
-in him. It was not altogether of his own seeking, but when he was weighed
-in the balance, even then he was not found wanting.
-
-The line between the Northern boys and the Southerners was clearly
-marked, and one day one of the Southerners called the young Vermonter a
-"dough-face."
-
-Young Dewey awaited a favorable opportunity, and struck his opponent so
-fair a blow that he knocked him down. There was a rough-and-tumble fight
-then and there, and Dewey's adversary came out second best.
-
-Later on another one of the Southerners insulted the young admiral, and
-there was another battle. But full satisfaction could not be obtained in
-this prosaic fashion, so the Southerner finally challenged young Dewey.
-The offer was promptly accepted, seconds were chosen, and the time and
-place were definitely settled upon. But some of Dewey's classmates,
-seriously alarmed at the aspect of affairs, and knowing that neither one
-of the principals was of a temper to falter, hastily informed the academic
-authorities, and the whole affair was nipped in the bud but a few hours
-before the hour set.
-
-Dewey was graduated in 1858, and stood fifth in his class. Of the
-sixty-five who had started in as candidates, but fourteen received their
-diplomas at the end of the four years' course.
-
-
-THE UNRECOGNIZED HEROES OF THE WAR
-
-Much has been said and written of the heroes of action and movement. The
-country from one end to the other has rung with their praises. But what of
-the unknown heroes, unhonored and unsung? What of the men who, because of
-their superior abilities in other lines, were doomed to physical inaction?
-who performed their secret missions and labors skilfully, faithfully,
-uncomplainingly, while their classmates were being given numbers over
-their heads, and the chance of a lifetime for great deeds was being
-quietly passed by?
-
-
-THE REAL BRAINS OF THE WAR
-
-Captain A. S. Crowninshield, the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation, bore
-the brunt of the brain-work for the men and ships at the front.
-
-His bureau has to do with the ordering of all ships and all men, and
-Crowninshield, when he accepted the office, knew that the odds were
-against him. He knew that by his own orders he would put forward above
-him men who were many years his juniors in the service. He never winced,
-but went on perfecting the target-scores of the men behind the guns.
-When war was declared, he felt that, gun for gun, our navy could whip
-anything afloat. But he did not get out of the office. He could have had
-any command in Sampson's fleet. But he preferred to stay and carry out
-the work he had begun, in spite of the fact that each week, as younger
-men went over him, he saw the chances of hoisting the pennant of a
-fleet-commander grow fainter and fainter.
-
-If you were to ask Secretary Long who did the real brain-work of the war,
-he would unhesitatingly answer, "Captain Crowninshield." Ask the younger
-officers in command of gun-divisions who is responsible for the straight
-shooting of the gun-captains, and they will say, "Captain Crowninshield."
-Ask any captain of the fleet of victorious battle-ships and cruisers of
-Santiago or Cavite who contributed most to the victory of Santiago and
-Manila, and they will say, "Captain Crowninshield."
-
-These are the facts, and no one in the service disputes them for a moment.
-If the people are in ignorance, it is because Captain Crowninshield will
-never talk of himself or his own affairs under any circumstances.
-
-Captain Crowninshield comes of a distinguished New England family. He is
-a grandson of Jacob Crowninshield, an early secretary of the navy, and
-a great-nephew of Benjamin Crowninshield, also a secretary of the navy.
-Like all the Crowninshields of Salem, he was full of love of the sea. His
-father was a graduate of Harvard and a founder of the Porcelain Club.
-
-
-FILLING THE DUKE'S SHOES WITH MUCILAGE
-
-Captain Crowninshield as a lad read and studied all the books he could
-find about the sea, upon which his ancestors, near and remote, had sailed.
-From the first he was determined to be a naval officer. To this end he
-went to a village where lived a member of Congress, who, he thought, might
-make him his appointee. The young man found the old member of Congress
-out in his field, ploughing. He liked the looks of the boy and gave him a
-half-promise of the appointment. Young Crowninshield was forced to wait a
-month, but at last the letter came, and with trembling fingers he broke
-the seal of the letter which made him a midshipman (a title which it is
-to be hoped will be restored ere long to the service).
-
-Some of his classmates were the present Captain Clark, of "Oregon" fame,
-Captain Harry Taylor, Drayton Cassell, Captain Wadleigh, and Captain Cook,
-of the "Brooklyn." His room-mate was Pierre d'Orleans, and many a time
-did Captain Crowninshield rescue the young foreigner when the jokes became
-too fast and furious. A favorite amusement with the midshipmen was to fill
-"Pete" d'Orleans's shoes with mucilage. This practice, so far from making
-him feel like sticking to this country, persuaded the young duke to return
-to his native land, where there were no wild American boys to tamper with
-his dignity.
-
-When the Academy was removed from Annapolis to Newport, young
-Crowninshield, of course, went with the school, with Evans and the others.
-He was told that those who could pass the required examination at the end
-of three years could go out to the war as officers.
-
-Half of the class passed the examination. When one considers that no
-studying at night was allowed, that an officer made the rounds after
-lights were supposed to be out, and that at the sound of his footsteps
-the delinquent who was burning the midnight oil would be obliged to tumble
-into bed with his clothes on, throwing the wet towel which bound his head
-into the corner of the room, feigning sleep while a candle was passed
-across his face, one can understand why more young men of that class did
-not graduate at the end of the three-years' limit.
-
-
-SCOUTING IN THE ENEMY'S COUNTRY
-
-There are many other gallant navy men of whom the public has not heard,
-but two more will suffice. Within a week after the declaration of war two
-young ensigns, Ward and Buck, the former in the Bureau of Navigation and
-the latter at the Naval Academy, disappeared from the face of the earth.
-So completely did they destroy all traces of themselves that for all the
-Bureau of Navigation or their relatives seemed to know they might have
-ceased to exist.
-
-Speculation was rife concerning them, but nothing could be learned of
-their duties, the impression being, even among Navy Department officials,
-that they were installing a system of coast-signals in New England.
-Ward, it appears, disguised himself as an Englishman, and went straight
-into the heart of the enemy's country, making his headquarters at Cadiz,
-the principal Spanish naval station, and from there sending the Navy
-Department continuous and accurate reports of the fighting strength and
-actual movements of the Spanish fleet.
-
-He was under suspicion, but watched his time, and succeeded in getting
-away to Porto Rico. There he was arrested as a suspicious character and
-spy. He managed, it is supposed through the British representatives, to
-obtain his release, and, escaping from San Juan, cabled the department a
-full account of the state of defences there and the movements of Cervera's
-fleet. While Ward was in Porto Rico, Buck was following Camara's fleet
-in the Mediterranean, keeping watch on its movements, and sending daily
-reports of its condition, armament, and plans.
-
-We do not know what is in the hearts of men. We do not know whether the
-men who did the creditable things during the war did them in spite of
-themselves, or whether in the glory of action and adventure they took
-their lives into their hands gladly, fearlessly, for their country. We do
-know that there were hundreds ready and willing to court danger and death
-for a useful end who for lack of opportunity could not.
-
-
-
-
-HEROES OF THE DEEP
-
-
-All the long winter the "Polly J." had slept snugly in Gloucester Harbor,
-rigging unrove and everything snug aloft that the wind could freeze or
-the ice could chafe. Careful eyes had watched her as she swung at her
-moorings, and rugged hands had gripped the familiar gear as the skipper
-or some of the men had made their periodical visits. But however gray
-and desolate she loomed, with her topmasts housed and the black lines of
-ratline and stay across the brightening sky, nothing could hide the saucy
-cut-under of the bow and the long, free sweep of the rail.
-
-The afternoon sun of March melted the snow on the south slopes of the
-fish-sheds, and great gray-and-green patches came out here and there
-against the endless white.
-
-A brisk breeze, with a touch of the spring, blew up from the south, and
-the "Polly," heedless of the tide, turned her head to it, sniffing and
-breathing it, bobbing and jerking nervously at her anchor, impatient to
-be dressed in her cloud of canvas, and away where the wind blows free and
-the curl dashes high under the forefoot.
-
-
-WHEN THE SNOW MELTS
-
-Ashore in Gloucester town there are signs a-plenty of the work to come.
-The sleepy village throws off her white mantle and rises from the lethargy
-of the winter past. The spring is in the air, and the docks and wharves,
-white and ice-trussed during the long, bleak winter, are trod by groups
-of men, rubber-coated and "sou' westered," moving briskly from one shed
-to another.
-
-In the town they gather like the stray birds of spring that flutter under
-the eaves of the store-houses. By twos and threes they appear. On street
-corners they meet, pipe-smoking, reminiscent, gloomily hopeful for the
-future, and grateful that they have helped themselves over "March Hill"
-without a loan from owner or buyer. And as they lounge from post-office
-to store, from store to shed, and back again, their talk is of dealings
-with owners and skippers, of vessels and luck.
-
-For luck is their fortune. It means larger profits by shares, new dresses
-for the wife and little ones, and perhaps an easy time of it in the winter
-to follow. It means that there will be no long, hard winter of it at the
-haddock-fisheries at "George's," where trawls are to be set in weather
-which makes frozen hands and feet, and perhaps a grave in an icy sea,
-where thousands have gone before.
-
-The skipper of the "Polly," even before he gets his men, has broken out
-his gear and reckoned up his necessities for the run up to the Banks. If
-he ships the same crew he had the year before, they work in well together.
-The "Polly's" topmasts are run up with a hearty will and a rush. There
-is a cheerful clatter of block and tackle, and the joyous "Yeo-ho" echoes
-from one schooner to another as sail and rigging are fitted and run into
-place.
-
-The snow yet lingers in little patches on the moors when some of the
-vessels warp down to an anchorage. Dories are broken from their nests
-and skim lightly across the harbor, now alive with a fleet in miniature.
-Jests and greetings fill the air, as old shipmates and dory-mates meet
-again,--Gloucester men some of them, but more often Swedes, Portuguese,
-and men from the South.
-
-For to-day the fleet is not owned in the villages, and Gloucester, once
-the centre of the fishing aristocracy, the capital of the nation of the
-Banks, is now but a trading- and meeting-place for half the sea-people
-who come from the North and East.
-
-The skipper of the "Polly J.," himself perhaps the scion of three
-generations of fishing captains, may wag his head regretfully, for
-fishers cannot be choosers; but he knows that his fishing has to be done,
-and, after all, a "Portygee" is as good a sailor-man and dory-mate as
-another,--better sometimes,--if he keeps sober.
-
-So long as the ship-owner makes his credit good at the store for the
-people at home, the fisherman takes life as joyfully as a man may who
-looks at death with every turn of the glass. If he takes his pleasures
-seriously, it is because he lives face to face with his Maker. Nature, in
-the awful moods he knows her, makes trivial the little ills that flesh is
-heir to.
-
-So when the crews are aboard, and the stores and salt are being hoisted
-in, there is a hurry to be among the first away. Chains and windlasses
-creak and clang, nimble feet fly aloft, hoarse voices ring across the
-rippling water, and many a cheerful song echoes from ship to shore and
-back again.
-
-Willing hands, strangers for months to hemp and tar, lay on to the tackle,
-as spar and boom are run into place. The fish-bins below are cleaned and
-scrubbed to the very quick. Bright-work, if there be any, is polished,
-and sail-patching and dory-painting and caulking are the order of the day,
-and most of the night. The black cook, below in the mysterious blackness
-of the galley, potters with saucepan and kettle, and when the provisions
-are aboard serves the first meal. There is coffee, steaming hot in the
-early hours of the morning, and biscuit and meat,--plenty of it. There is
-not much variety, but, with the work to be done above and below decks, a
-full-blooded appetite leaves no chance for grumbling.
-
-At last the bag and baggage of the crew are tossed aboard,--packs of
-tobacco innumerable, new rubber clothes, all yellow and shiny in the
-morning dampness, boots and woollens to keep out the cold of spring on
-the Bank Sea,--all bought on credit at the store, to be charged against
-"settling-day."
-
-
-WAVING GODSPEED TO THE FISHER-FOLK
-
-It is morning, just before the dawn. The "Polly J.," her new paint all
-silver in the early light, rides proudly at her anchor in the centre of
-the tideway. The nip of winter lingers in the air, but the snow is gone
-and the rigging is no longer stiff to the touch.
-
-It is just daylight when the last dory is hoisted aboard into its nest.
-Three or four figures on the wharves, outlined against the purple sky and
-hills, stand waving Godspeed to their fisher-folk. Women's voices ring out
-between the creakings of the blocks, "Good luck! Good luck! 'Polly J.';
-wet your salt first, 'Polly J.'" It is the well-wishing from the hearts
-of women, who go back to weep in silence. Which one of them is to make
-her sacrifice to the god of winds and storms?
-
-There is a cheerful answer from the "Polly," drowned in the flapping of
-the sails and creaking of the windlass. The anchor, rusty and weed-hung,
-is broken out and comes to the surface with a rush, while sheets are
-hauled aft, and, catching the morning breeze, the head of the schooner
-pays off towards Norman's Woe, the water rippling merrily along her sides.
-
-The figures on the wharves are mere gray patches in the mass of town and
-hills. The big sails, looming dark in the gray mists of the morning, round
-out to the freshening wind, and push the light fabric through the opal
-waves with ever-increasing speed. By the time the first rays of the rising
-sun have gilded the quivering gaff of the main, Eastern Point is left
-far astern, and the nose of the vessel ploughs boldly out to sea, rising
-with her empty bins light as a feather to the big, heavy swell that comes
-rolling in, to break in a steady roar on the brown rocks to leeward.
-
-There is man's work and plenty of it during those sailing days past
-"George's," Sable Island, and the St. Lawrence. The provisions and salt
-are to be stowed and restowed, ballast is to be shifted, sails to be made
-stronger and more strong, fish-bins to be prepared, old dories to be made
-seaworthy, rigging to be tautened, and reels and lines to be cleared and
-hooked. Buoy-lines and dory-roding are to be spliced, and miscellaneous
-carpenter work takes up the time about the decks. For a skipper unprepared
-to take advantage of all that luck may throw in his way does an injustice
-to his owner and his crew. But, busy as the time is, the skipper has his
-weather-eye open for the "signs." The feel of the air, the look and color
-of the cold, gray Bank Sea, tell him in so many words how and where the
-fish will be running. At last a hand takes the heavy sea-lead and moves
-forward where the line may run free. Deliberately the line is coiled
-in great turns around the left hand, and then, like a big pendulum, the
-weight begins to swing with the strong right arm.
-
-
-IN THE EXCITEMENT OF THE FIRST CATCH
-
-There is a swirl of the line as the lead goes all the way over, a splash
-forward, and, as the skipper luffs her up into it, the line comes upright,
-and gets a depth of thirty fathoms. As she comes up into the wind, the
-noisy jib flaps down with a run, and the anchor drops to the sandy bottom.
-Now the buckets of bait are tossed up from below, and the skipper leaves
-his helm to take to the lines. Over the sides and stern they go, dragging
-down to leeward.
-
-There is quiet for a moment, and then a line runs out. There is a tug as
-the strong arm checks it and hauls it in quickly, hand over hand. There
-is a gleam of light, a swish at the surface, and the fish flies over
-the rail, flopping helplessly on to the deck, the first catch of the
-season,--a big one.
-
-Another tug, and another, and soon the work is fast and furious. It takes
-honest elbow-muscle, too, to haul ten pounds of floundering cod up five
-feet of freeboard to the rail and deck. Soon the deck is covered with the
-long, slim, gleaming bodies, and the boys of the schooner have man's work
-in tossing them into the gurry-pen amidships. Before the pen is filled,
-the fishes stop biting as suddenly as they struck on, and there is a rest
-for a while to bait-up and clean down.
-
-If the signs hold good, the skipper will order the men out to set trawls,
-for the smell of the dead fish sometimes drives the school away.
-
-
-HANDLING THE TRAWLS
-
-The "trawls" are only an elaboration of the hand-lines. They are single
-lines, several hundred feet in length, with short lines and baited hooks
-at intervals. They are taken out by members of the crew in their dories,
-buoyed and anchored. It is the work of tending these trawls that takes the
-greatest skill and fearlessness. It is in the work of hauling and baiting
-the lines in all weathers that the greatest losses of life occur. There is
-no room on the decks of the schooners for heavy boats, and as many such
-craft are needed, five or six are piled together amidships. A block and
-purchase from aloft are their hoisting-tackle.
-
-They are handy boats, though light, and two men and a load of fish can
-weather the rough seas, if your fisherman is an adept with his oars. But
-they are mere cockle-shells at the best, and are tossed like feathers.
-The "codders" are reckless fellows, and they will put out to the trawls
-day after day in any kind of weather, fog or clear, wind or calm, with
-not even a beaker of water or a piece of pilot-bread.
-
-
-A LONELY NIGHT ON THE BROAD ATLANTIC
-
-A night alone on the broad Atlantic in an open dory seems to have no
-terrors for them. Each year adds its lists of casualties to those that
-have gone before. Fogs have shut in, seas have risen, and morning has
-dawned again and again with no sign of the missing men. Sometimes an
-upturned dory is found, with her name--the "Molly S.," or the "Betty T.,"
-in honor of the owner's shore-mate--on her pointed bow, but only the gray
-ocean can tell the story of the missing men.
-
-When the "Polly's" day's luck is run, all hands take stations for dressing
-down. It is the dirty part of the business; but so quickly is it done that
-the crew seems part of a mechanism, working like clockwork. Two men stand
-at the gurry-pen, their long knives gleaming red in the sunset. The fish
-is slit from throat to tail with one cut, and again on both sides of the
-neck. It then passes to the next man, who with a scoop of his hand drops
-the cod's liver in a basket and sends the head and offal flying. The fish
-slides across the dressing-table, where the backbone is torn out by the
-third man, who throws it, finally, headless, cleaned, and open, into the
-washing-tub.
-
-The moment the tub is filled, the fish are pitched down the open hatch to
-the fifth man, who packs them with salt snugly in the bins. So quickly
-is the work done that the fish seem to travel from one hand to another
-as though they were alive, and a large gurry-pen is emptied and the bin
-packed and salted in less than an hour.
-
-
-WHEN THE DAY'S WORK IS DONE
-
-The head of the black cook appears above the hatch-combing, and his mouth
-opens wide as he gives the welcome supper call. Down the ladder into the
-cuddy they tumble, one and all, and lay-to with an appetite and vigor
-which speaks of good digestive organs. Conversation is omitted. Coffee,
-pork-and-beans, biscuit,--nectar and ambrosia,--vanish from the tin
-dishes, until the cook comes in with the sixth pot of steaming coffee.
-
-At last, when the cook vows the day's allowance is eaten and the last drop
-of coffee is poured, the benches are pushed back, tobacco and pipes are
-produced from the sacred recesses of the bunks, and six men are puffing
-out the blue smoke as though their lives depended on it.
-
-The schooner rolls to the long ground-swell, her lamp-bracket swinging
-through a great arc and casting long, black shadows, monstrous
-presentiments of the smokers, which move rapidly from side to side over
-the misty beams and bulkheads like gnomes. A concertina, a mouth-organ,
-and perhaps a fiddle, are brought out, and a sea-song, an Irish jig,
-or something in unspeakable Portuguese, rises above the creaking of the
-timbers and the burst of foam alongside.
-
-But the work is not done yet. It is never done. The ship is to be cleaned
-down and the gurry-pen and dory are to be sluiced out in readiness for
-the morrow. A vigil is to be kept, watch and watch, and woe be to the
-youngster who tumbles off his hatchway to the deck from sheer weariness.
-
-
-WHEN A STEAMER LOOMS UP IN THE FOG
-
-If there should be a fog,--and hardly a day or a night passes without
-one,--the danger is great. When the white veil settles down over the
-schooners the men on deck can hardly see their cross-trees. Foot-power
-horns are blown, the ship's bell is tolled steadily, while conch shells
-bellow their resonant note from the trawlers in the dories. But it is all
-to no purpose. For the great siren comes nearer and nearer every second,
-and the pounding of the waves against the great hulk and the rush of
-resisting water grow horribly distinct.
-
-There is a hazy glimmer of a row of lights, a roar and a splutter of
-steam, a shock and the inrush of the great volume of water, a shout or
-two from the towering decks and bridge, and the great body dashes by
-disdainfully, speed undiminished, her passengers careless, and unmindful
-that the lives and fortunes of half a dozen human beings have hung for a
-moment in the balance of Life and Death. But records have to be made, and
-the gold-laced officers forget to mention the occurrence. The men on the
-schooner do not forget it, though. More than one face is white with the
-nearness to calamity.
-
-"What was she, Jim?"
-
-"The 'Frederick.' I'd know her bloomin' bellow in a thousand."
-
-They lean out over the rail and peer into the gray blackness, shaking
-their fists at the place where she vanished in the fog.
-
-The man who gets his name in the newspaper and a medal from his government
-is not the only hero. And the modesty with which the Gloucester fisherman
-hides his sterling merit is only convincing proof of the fact,--Gloucester
-is a city of heroes.
-
-For grit and devotion the case of Howard Blackburn surpasses understanding.
-
-
-THE COURAGE OF THE UNNAMED HEROES
-
-Blackburn and his dory-mate left their schooner in a driving snow-storm.
-Before they had been at the trawls long the weather had become so thick
-that they couldn't see ten feet from the dory's gunwale. The wind shifted
-and put them to leeward of their vessel. There was never a sound of bell
-or horn through the thickness, and, though they pulled to windward, where
-they thought their skipper lay, the vessel could not be found. They were
-lost, and the sea was rising. Then they anchored until dawn.
-
-When the snow stopped falling, they saw the schooner's light, a tiny
-speck, miles to windward. To reach it was impossible. The situation was
-desperate. Wave-crest after wave-crest swept into the dory, and all but
-swamped her. Time after time she was baled out, until it seemed as if
-human endurance could stand it no longer. Blackburn made a sea-anchor for
-a drag, but in throwing it out lost his mittens overboard. It was horrible
-enough to fear drowning in the icy sea, but as he felt his hands beginning
-to freeze the effort seemed hopeless.
-
-With hands frozen, Blackburn felt that he was useless, for his dory-mate
-was already almost helpless with exposure. So he sat down to his oars and
-bent his freezing fingers over the handles, getting as firm a clutch as
-he could. There he sat patiently, calmly, keeping the dory up to the seas
-meanwhile,--waiting for his hands to freeze to the oars. The dory became
-covered with ice, and pieces of it knocked against the frozen hands and
-beat off a little finger and a part of one of the palms. During the second
-day Blackburn's dory-mate gave it up, and Blackburn laid down beside him
-to try and warm him. But it was useless. The dory-man froze to death where
-he lay.
-
-
-FOR FIVE DAYS ADRIFT AND STARVING
-
-When Blackburn felt the drowsiness coming over him, he stood up and baled
-as the boat filled. The third day dawned without a ray of hope, and not a
-morsel to eat or a drop to drink, so he stuck the oar through his wounded
-fingers and rowed again.
-
-The fourth day he saw land. He did not reach it until the afternoon of
-the fifth day, when he landed at a deserted fish-wharf. No one could be
-found, and he was too weak to move farther. So he lay down, more dead than
-alive, and tried in vain to sleep, munching snow to quench his thirst.
-
-The next day he went out in the dory to try to find some signs of life,
-and in about three hours, the last remnant of his strength being gone, he
-saw smoke and the roofs of some houses, and he knew that he was saved.
-Even when he reached the shore in a pitiable condition, he would not go
-into the house until they promised him to get the body of his dory-mate.
-
-This heroic man lost his hands and the most of his toes, but he reached
-Gloucester alive. The story of his grit and devotion to his dory-mate are
-to-day told to the young fishermen of the fleet, and the men of the Banks
-will sing his praises until Time shall have wiped out all things which
-remain unrecorded.
-
-
-WHERE THE COD ABOUND
-
-On some of the schooners, by the middle of the season most of the salt
-is "wet." It is then that the "Polly J." follows the fleet up to the
-"Virgin."
-
-This is a rocky ledge, many miles out in the desolate Bank seas, which
-rises to within a few feet of the surface of the ocean. Here the cod and
-camplin abound, and here, when it is time for them to run, most of the
-schooners come to anchor, sending out their little fleets until perhaps
-two thousand dories and schooners are afloat at the same time, within a
-distance of two or three miles of one another. When the schools of camplin
-come to the surface and begin to jump, the dories all close in on them,
-for the fishermen know that the cod are after them. Almost as quickly
-as the lines can be baited and cast overboard the fish strike on, and
-the work is steady and hard until the dories, loaded down almost to the
-gunwales, have made several trips of it, and the salt in the bins shows
-a prospect of being "all wet" before the week is out.
-
-The few days towards the end of the season at the "Old Virgin" are a race
-between the ships at catching and dressing down. The rival crews work from
-dawn until dark.
-
-At last the big mainsail of the victor--perhaps the "Polly J."--is hauled
-out, the chain is hove in short, and the dories from less fortunate
-schooners crowd alongside with good wishes and letters for the folks at
-home. Anchor up, the flag is hoisted,--the right of the first boat off the
-Banks,--and the proud schooner, low lying in the water with her fifteen
-hundred quintal, bows gracefully to each vessel of the fleet at anchor as
-she passes them, homeward bound.
-
-
-WHEN THE SCHOONERS MOVE UP THE HARBOR
-
-Homeward bound!--there is magic in the word. Though the first vessel
-to head to the southward is proud among the fleet, she has a burden of
-responsibility upon her, for she carries every year news of death and
-calamity that will break the hearts of many down in Gloucester, and the
-flags she flaunts so gayly must come to half-mast before she sights the
-hazy blue of Eastern Point.
-
-During those long summer months a lonely wife goes about her household
-duties down in Gloucester town. There is a weight upon her heart, and
-until the fleet comes in and she sees the familiar face at the front gate,
-happiness is not for her. Day after day she listens for his footsteps, and
-after supper, when the season draws to a close, she walks down to where
-she can look far out to sea.
-
-Then a schooner, heavy laden, appears around the Point. She comes around
-and moves up the harbor slowly,--oh, so slowly. The flag the wife has seen
-is half-masted, and she knows that some woman's heart is to break. Will
-it be hers?
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-By Sydney George Fisher
-
-Men, Women, and Manners in Colonial Times.
-
- Illustrated with four photogravures and numerous head and tail
- sketches in each volume. Two volumes. Satine, in a box, $3.00;
- half calf or half morocco, $6.00.
-
-_SECOND EDITION._
-
-"The author's work is a blending of grave history, amusing anecdote,
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-knack of liveliness that is quite Frenchy, and stimulates the reader into
-a ravenous delight. Puritan, Pilgrim, Cavalier, Quaker, and Catholic are
-made to re-enact their Colonial parts, and the resulting drama is full of
-action, humor, wit, and pathos."--_Boston Globe._
-
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-panoramic view of a whole era that abounds in picturesque and diverting
-incident. Discretion and taste were required in the selection, and
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-the result is social history in the most engaging style."--_Philadelphia
-Press._
-
-The Making of Pennsylvania.
-
-The Evolution of the Constitution of the United States.
-
-Each volume. 12mo. Buckram, $1.50.
-
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
-
-
-BY SYDNEY GEORGE FISHER.
-
- THE TRUE BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.
-
- With numerous illustrations, portraits, and fac-similes. Crown
- octavo. Cloth, $2.00. Uniform with "THE TRUE GEORGE WASHINGTON."
-
-"Mr. Fisher has done a service to American literature and history which
-is not to be measured alone by the facts supplied in his book. There is
-a sentimental value to his study, which resides in its effect upon the
-public mind in making us realize the true proportions of one of our few
-great men. Washington and Franklin are the true figures in our early
-history to which the verdict of the world has given lasting fame. Paul
-Leicester Ford has changed Washington from a myth into a human being.
-Mr. Fisher has done the same for Franklin. Of the two heroes Washington
-was the less understood. But the popular conception of Franklin in its
-way was also far from the truth. The result of Mr. Fisher's analysis of
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-he was to us before. Mr. Fisher evidently has made a careful study of
-Franklin; first, as he reveals himself in his own writings and in his
-life; and, secondly, as his biographers and those who were contemporary
-with him have estimated him. He destroys some popular delusions concerning
-him, and, on the other hand, brings out more clearly and forcibly than
-heretofore the greatness of certain qualities of his character which have
-been rather lost sight of or neglected. Mr. Fisher has done his work with
-the painstaking care and skill that have made his various other books
-along historical lines of recognized merit. He writes clearly, frankly,
-and without prejudice."--_Philadelphia Evening Bulletin._
-
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
-
-
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-
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-revered. Brushing aside the hysterical panegyrics of would-be biographers
-and historians as well as super-laudatory passages in works otherwise
-trustworthy and meritorious, Mr. Ford resolutely set out to acquire
-real knowledge of the man, George Washington. Few of the other heroes
-of history could pass unscathed through an examination so thorough and
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-Country as he was in his social and family relations has been carefully
-considered."--_Boston Evening Gazette._
-
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-extreme. While his exhaustive researches have resulted in humanizing
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-subject."--_Philadelphia Evening Bulletin._
-
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
-
-
-BY HON. JOHN BIGELOW.
-
- THE LIFE OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.
-
- Written by himself. Now first edited from original manuscripts and
- from his printed correspondence and other writings. Revised and
- corrected, with additional notes. Three volumes. Crown octavo.
- Cloth, $4.50; half calf, $9.00; three-quarters calf, gilt top,
- uncut edges, $9.75.
-
-FOURTH EDITION.
-
-"Mr. Bigelow has again revised his splendid work, first published
-twenty-three years ago, and incorporated such discoveries as have been
-made in the past five years. The editor may well boast that time has
-indicated the artistic principle upon which the work was constructed of
-letting Franklin tell his own story in his own way, beginning with the
-autobiography and continuing the narrative with a most careful mosaic of
-Franklin's voluminous letters. And it is to be credited to Mr. Bigelow
-that the ever-increasing fame of Franklin has made such substantial
-advance in our own day, since such contemporary impetus was given to the
-study of the man and his services by this very 'Life of Franklin.' It
-is a unique biography, or rather autobiography, and, of course, it is
-unapproachable in the case of its own particular subject. Until an equally
-tireless and copious letter-writer as Franklin can be found another such
-work is impossible."--_Philadelphia Press._
-
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Missing periods and quotation marks have been supplied where
-obviously required. All other original errors and inconsistencies
-have been retained, except as follows:
-
- Page 68: changed attemts to attempts
- (that further attempts at flight)
- Page 145: changed then to them
- (and tumbling them both down)
- Page 248: changed gradutes to graduates
- (among the graduates of the)
- Page 282: changed bated to baited
- (lines and baited hooks at)
- Ads page 4: changed bioggraphy to biography
- (a unique biography, or rather)
- Ads page 4: changed tireles to tireless
- (an equally tireless and copious)
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike & Cutlass, by George Gibbs
-
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</style>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike & Cutlass, by George Gibbs
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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-
-
-Title: Pike & Cutlass
- Hero Tales of Our Navy
-
-Author: George Gibbs
-
-Release Date: February 20, 2013 [EBook #42138]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PIKE & CUTLASS ***
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-</pre>
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42138 ***</div>
<div class="tnote">
<p class="center"><b>Transcriber’s Notes:</b></p>
@@ -9820,384 +9781,6 @@ an equally <span class="correction">tireless</span> and copious
</ul>
</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike & Cutlass, by George Gibbs
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42138 ***</div>
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike & Cutlass, by George Gibbs
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Pike & Cutlass
- Hero Tales of Our Navy
-
-Author: George Gibbs
-
-Release Date: February 20, 2013 [EBook #42138]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PIKE & CUTLASS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Rosanna Murphy and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note: italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-PIKE & CUTLASS
-
-[Illustration: THE ESCAPE OF THE "CONSTITUTION"
-
-Page 209]
-
-
-
-
- PIKE & CUTLASS
-
- HERO TALES
- OF
- OUR NAVY
-
- WRITTEN & ILLUSTRATED
- BY GEORGE GIBBS
-
- [Illustration]
-
- PHILADELPHIA & LONDON
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- 1900
-
-
- Copyright, 1898 and 1899, by
- THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY
-
- Copyright, 1899, by
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
-
- ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED BY
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- TO THE CADETS
- OF THE
- UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY
- PAST, PRESENT, AND
- FUTURE
-
-
-
-
-NOTE
-
-
-The writer expresses thanks for their courtesy to the editors of
-"Lippincott's Magazine" and the editors of the "Saturday Evening Post,"
-of Philadelphia, in which periodicals several of these Hero Tales have
-been printed. He also acknowledges his indebtedness for many valuable
-historical facts to "Cooper's Naval History;" "History of the Navy," by
-Edgar S. Maclay; "History of Our Navy," by John R. Spears; "Twelve Naval
-Captains," by Molly Elliot Seawell; "American Naval Heroes," by John
-Howard Brown; "Naval Actions of the War of 1812," by James Barnes; and
-to many valuable works and papers in the archives of the Library of the
-Navy Department at Washington. Thanks are due the Art Department of the
-"Saturday Evening Post" and the Art Department of "Collier's Weekly" for
-their permission to reprint many of the drawings herein.
-
- GEORGE GIBBS.
-
- August 15, 1899.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- The Effrontery of Paul Jones 7
-
- HIS FIGHT WITH THE "DRAKE" AND DESCENT ON WHITEHAVEN
-
- A Struggle to the Death 24
-
- PAUL JONES'S FIGHT WITH THE "SERAPIS"
-
- The Terrier and the Mastiff 34
-
- NICHOLAS BIDDLE'S WONDERFUL FIGHT
-
- Decatur and the "Philadelphia" 46
-
- The Biggest _Little_ Fight in Naval History 56
-
- DECATUR AND THE TRIPOLITAN GUNBOATS
-
- A Double Encounter 73
-
- STEWART AND THE "CYANE" AND "LEVANT"
-
- The "Constitution" and the "Guerriere" 90
-
- The "Wasp" and the "Frolic" 106
-
- The "Constitution" and the "Java" 117
-
- The Last of the "Essex" 132
-
- The Captain of the Maintop 148
-
- Cushing and the "Albemarle" 158
-
- Somers and the "Intrepid" 170
-
- The Passing of the Old Navy 181
-
- OLD SALTS AND NEW SAILORS. THE OLD SHIPS AND THE NEW
-
- Farragut in Mobile Bay 220
-
- At the Naval Academy 231
-
- Our Nation's New Heroes 248
-
- Heroes of the Deep 274
-
- OUR FISHING FLEET
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- The Escape of the "Constitution" _Frontispiece_
-
- The Descent on Whitehaven 17
-
- "Yard-arm to Yard-arm" 27
-
- Decatur boards the "Philadelphia" 52
-
- The Danger of the "Intrepid" 53
-
- "No 'Dutch Courage' on _THIS_ Ship" 83
-
- In the Tops of the "Constitution" 101
-
- The "Constellation" and the "Vengeance" 155
-
- The Smoking Hour 189
-
- Neptune comes Aboard 191
-
- Modern Sea Monsters in Action 204
-
- The Admiral lashed to the Rigging 225
-
- Reefing Top-sails 242
-
- They did not touch Him and His Leg was saved 252
-
- Her Last Duty 263
-
-
-
-
-THE EFFRONTERY OF PAUL JONES
-
-
-In April, 1778, there were more than two-score of French ships-of-the-line
-within easy sailing distance of the coast of England. They were tremendous
-three-decked monsters, armed with tier upon tier of cannon, and it took
-nearly a thousand officers and men to man each of them. They lay at
-anchor in the harbors of France or sallied forth into the open sea to the
-southward to prey upon the commerce of Great Britain. But grand as they
-were, not one of them dared to do what John Paul Jones did in the little
-Continental sloop of war "Ranger." By good seamanship, an element of
-chance, and a reckless daring almost without precedent, he accomplished
-under the very noses of the gold-laced French admirals what they had been
-hemming and hawing about since the beginning of the war.
-
-Inaction weighed upon the mind of Paul Jones more heavily than the hardest
-of labor. He had to be up and doing all the time, or trouble was brewing
-for everybody on shipboard. So when he reached Nantes, France, and found
-that the frigate which had been promised him was not forthcoming, he
-determined, alone and unaided, to do with the little "Ranger" what he
-was not yet destined to do with a bigger ship. No person but Paul Jones
-would for a moment have considered such a desperate project as the one he
-conceived. What the flower of the navy and chivalry of France had refused
-to attempt was little short of suicide for the mad American. But Jones was
-not cast in an ordinary mould. When he got to Brest, he made up his mind
-once and for all, by one good fire of British shipping to put an end to
-all the ship and town burnings in America.
-
-There was clanking of bit and chain as the anchor was hove up short on
-the little craft. The officers and men of the great vessels of the French
-fleet looked over the glistening water, warmed by the afternoon sun of
-spring, and wondered where their impetuous harbor-mate was off to. A week
-before, they knew Paul Jones had demanded that the French Admiral salute
-the Continental flag which the "Ranger" wore for the first time. And they
-had given those salutes right willingly, acknowledging publicly the nation
-they had been helping in secret. They knew he was a man of determination,
-and they wondered what the American was going to do. Some of them--the
-younger ones--wished they too were aboard the dainty little craft, bound
-out to sea under a man who feared nothing and dared everything. They heard
-the whistles and hoarse calls of the bos'n as the men tumbled down from
-aloft, the sheets flew home, and yards went up to their blocks with a
-clatter and a rush that showed how willing were the hands at the tackles.
-The tops'ls caught a fine breeze from the southward and, bracing up, the
-"Ranger" flew down the harbor and around the point of Quiberon just as
-the sun was setting behind the purple cloud-streaks along the line of
-limitless ocean. Up the coast she moved, her bowsprit pointing fearlessly
-to the north, where lay the Scilly Isles. The Frenchmen left behind in the
-harbor looked enviously at the patch of gold, growing every moment more
-indistinct in the fading light, and said "En voila un brave!"
-
-The next day Jones left the Scilly Isles on his starboard quarter and
-steered boldly up Saint George's Channel into the wide Irish Sea. The
-merchantmen he boarded and captured or scuttled did not quite know what
-to make of a man who feared so little that he looked into the eyes of the
-lion sternly and even menacingly when one movement might have destroyed
-him. These channel-men thought themselves secure, for such a venturesome
-procedure as that of Paul Jones was contrary to all precedent. They
-couldn't understand it at all until their vessels were burned and they
-themselves were prisoners. Then they knew that they had been taken by
-a man whose daring far surpassed that of the naval captains of England
-and France. In plain sight of land he took a brig bound from Ireland
-to Ostend. He didn't want to be bothered with prisoners, so he sent her
-crew ashore in their own boat to tell the story of their escape. Then off
-Dublin he took another ship, the "Lord Chatham," and sent her in charge
-of a prize-crew down to Brest.
-
-Paul Jones had one great advantage. Nowadays, when the railway and
-telegraph have brought all the people of the world closer together, such
-a cruise would be impossible. The report would be sent at once to the
-Admiralty, and two fleets, if necessary, would be despatched post-haste
-to intercept him. But Paul Jones knew the value of the unexpected. And
-although fortune favors the brave and the winds and waves seem always on
-the side of the ablest navigators, he had made his calculations carefully.
-He knew that unless an English fleet was at some point nearer than
-Portsmouth he would have ample time to carry out his plans.
-
-He made up his mind before burning any shipping to capture, if possible,
-the Earl of Selkirk, who lived on St. Mary's Isle, and to hold him as
-a hostage. By this means he hoped to compel England to treat American
-prisoners with humanity, according to the laws of war. But on the
-twenty-first of April he picked up a fisherman who gave him information
-which for the moment drove all thought of the Earl of Selkirk and the
-shipping from his mind. Inside the harbor of Carrickfergus, where Belfast
-is, lay a man-of-war of twenty guns, the "Drake," a large ship, with more
-men than the "Ranger" carried. He would drop down alongside of her under
-cover of the night and board her before her crew could tumble out of
-their hammocks. Such an attempt in a fortified harbor of the enemy would
-not have occurred to most men, but Paul Jones believed in achieving the
-impossible. He waited until nightfall, and then, with a wind freshening
-almost to a gale, sped up the harbor. The "Drake" lay well out in the
-roadstead, her anchor lights only marking her position in the blackness
-of the night. Carefully watching his time, Captain Jones stood forward
-looking at the lights that showed how she swung to the tide. He kept full
-headway on the "Ranger," until she could swing up into the wind almost
-under the jib-boom of the Englishman. By dropping his anchor across the
-chain of the "Drake" he hoped to swing down alongside, grapple, and board
-before the crew were fairly awake.
-
-But this time he was destined to fail. Everything depended on the dropping
-of the anchor at the proper time. His orders were not obeyed, for not
-until the "Ranger" had drifted clear of the Englishman's chain did the
-splash come. Then it was too late. Fortunately the watch on the "Drake"
-were not suspicious. Had they been wider awake they would have had the
-"Ranger" at their mercy, and Paul Jones might not have survived to fight
-them a few days later. As it was, they only swore at the stupidity of the
-Irish lubber they thought he was. Jones knew that his chance was gone,
-and as soon as a strain came on the cable it was cut, and he filled away
-to sea again.
-
-He now returned to his original plan of burning the shipping of some
-important town. He decided on Whitehaven as his first objective point, and
-the "Ranger," sailing leisurely over, dropped anchor in the outer harbor
-during the following night.
-
-Whitehaven was a town of considerable importance in the Scottish and
-North of England shipping trade. The inhabitants were for the greater part
-sailors and others who made their living by the sea, and there was never
-a time when the docks were not crowded with vessels, of all countries,
-from the sloop to the full-rigged ship, discharging or taking on cargoes
-which figured largely in England's commerce. At one side of the harbor lay
-the town, and farther around to the left lay the docks where the shipping
-was. Over two hundred vessels, large and small, lay there or out in the
-roadstead. Two forts, mounting fifteen guns each, guarded the town. They
-were adequately garrisoned, and it looked like a piece of desperate folly
-to make the attempt upon a town directly under their guns.
-
-Paul Jones knew Whitehaven from his childhood. He remembered just where
-the guard-houses were to be found, and knew how to force the entrance
-to the barracks. By three o'clock in the morning he was ready to make
-the assault. Two cutters with fifteen men in each, armed with cutlasses
-and pistols, were all he took to do the work. With thirty men he went
-fearlessly and confidently to intimidate the soldiers, spike the guns in
-the forts, overawe the town, and burn the shipping! Lieutenant Wallingford
-was given command of one of the cutters. His mission was to burn the
-shipping to the left. The other cutter Paul Jones commanded himself, and
-assumed the more hazardous duty of holding with his fifteen men the forts
-and the town, until such a blaze should illumine the morning sky that all
-England would know that the burning of Portland, Maine, was avenged.
-
-Quietly they pulled up towards the great stone dock, where the
-shipping-houses were. The tide was very low as they moved past the
-schooners and brigs in the harbor, many of them careened far over
-on their sides, waiting for a rise in the tide to pull down to more
-comfortable moorings. But the boats went by without challenge or notice,
-and Wallingford's cutter had slipped away like a gray shadow in the
-darkness. The first violet streaks of dawn were just beginning to throw
-the shore-line to the east in hazy silhouette when they reached the
-landing-place.
-
-The dawn was coming up quickly now, and Paul Jones led his fifteen men
-at a run to the nearest fort. With cutlass in one hand and pistol in the
-other, they dashed upon the first sentry. There was no time for stealth,
-so they bore him down by sheer weight. The next one saw them coming,
-but Jones locked him and the rest of them in the guard-house. Then he
-proceeded to spike the guns. So quick was the work that not a shot was
-fired. They were running towards the second fort before the soldiers were
-quite sure what had happened. Even then they were too terrified to follow
-in pursuit. As the gallant band ran towards the other fort they got a
-clear view of the harbor, a glimmering sheet of orange and violet, under
-the morning glow. But strain his eyes as he might, their captain could
-get no sign of Wallingford or his work. They dashed as desperately at
-this fort as at the other and were equally successful, intimidating the
-garrison and spiking every gun they could find.
-
-But what could be the trouble with Wallingford? Still seeing no blaze or
-even spark among the shipping to the eastward, Paul Jones felt that the
-main object of his descent upon the town was to prove a failure. So he
-dashed down the street from the fort towards the dock, pistol in hand,
-followed by his crew, who rolled along grinning at the ease with which
-they had accomplished their work. One of them had a bad cut over the head
-and the blood was staining his shoulder, but he didn't seem to mind it in
-the least. To their surprise as they passed the houses the people began
-coming out of their doors shaking their fists at and cursing them. They
-grinned no longer, for they knew that some one had betrayed them. Jones
-looked around for the fifteenth man. The fellow with the cut wiped some
-blood from his cheek and said,--
-
-"Dave Freeman, sir, he's gone!"
-
-Freeman was the traitor, then.
-
-But there was no time for parley or revenge. The mob was collecting
-in the street they had left and soon would be down on the dock. Though
-Wallingford failed, Paul Jones would not. He dashed into a house on the
-dock, and seizing a burning brand went aboard one of the largest vessels
-of the fleet. He hastily pulled together some straw and hatchway gratings
-and soon had a roaring blaze. Then one of his men spilled a barrel of tar
-in the midst of it to make the destruction more sure.
-
-[Illustration: THE DESCENT ON WHITEHAVEN]
-
-He had been so intent upon his work that he had not noticed the mob
-that had gathered on the dock. The place seemed black with people, and
-their number was increasing every minute. Then, leaving the work of
-destruction to the others, he went down alone to face fifteen hundred
-infuriated people with a single flint-lock pistol! Dave Freeman had done
-his work well, for they seemed to pour from every street and doorway.
-But Paul Jones was determined that the work should be finished, and
-took a position where he could command the boat-landing and retreat of
-his men. The people came down in a body to within twenty paces of Paul
-Jones and then--stopped. There was something in the _look_ of the man
-and the menacing black barrel that moved from one to the other that made
-them quail and fall over each other to get out of range. Those in the
-background swore and pushed gallantly, but the front rank was a line
-of straw, and Paul Jones moved it with his old flint-lock as though a
-Biscay wind-squall was striking it. For fifteen minutes and longer he
-stood there, immovable, the master of the situation, the picture of the
-intimidating power of one resolute man over a mob. Such another instance
-is hardly to be found in history.
-
-When the black smoke rolled up from half a dozen vessels of the fleet,
-Paul Jones's crew retreated in an orderly manner to the cutter. Jones
-walked down the steps into the boat, covering the crowd the while. Then
-his men leisurely rowed away, not a shot having been fired. It was not
-until the cutter was well out into the bay that some of the bewildered
-soldiers recovered sufficiently to load two cannon that Paul Jones had
-overlooked. These they brought to bear upon the cutter dancing down in
-the sunrise towards the "Ranger" and fired. The shot whistled wide of the
-mark, and Jones, to show his contempt of such long-range courage, fired
-only his pistol in return.
-
-But that was not the end of this remarkable cruise. Having failed to find
-the Earl of Selkirk on St. Mary's Isle, Paul Jones squared away to the
-southward, hoping to pick up another full-rigged ship off Dublin or to
-meet with the "Drake" again. He knew that by this time the Admiralty was
-well informed as to his whereabouts, and that before many hours had passed
-he would be obliged to run the gauntlet of a whole line of British fire.
-But he hated to be beaten at anything, and since the night when he failed
-to grapple her had been burning to try conclusions yard-arm to yard-arm
-with the "Drake."
-
-On the twenty-fourth of April, just two weeks after sailing from the
-harbor of Brest, he hove to off the Lough of Belfast, where within the
-harbor he could plainly see the tall spars of the Englishman swinging
-at his anchorage. Paul Jones was puzzled at first to know how he was to
-lure the "Drake" out to sea, for a battle under the lee of the land in
-the harbor was not to be thought of. So he went about from one tack to
-another, wearing ship and backing and filling, until the curiosity of the
-English captain, Burdon, was thoroughly aroused, and he sent one of his
-junior officers out in a cutter to find out who the stranger was. Jones
-ran his guns in and manoeuvred so cleverly that the stern of the "Ranger"
-was kept towards the boat until he was well aboard. The young officer
-was rather suspicious, but, nothing daunted, pulled up to the gangway in
-true man-o'-war style and went on deck. There he was met by an officer,
-who courteously informed him that he was on board the Continental sloop
-of war "Ranger," Captain Paul Jones, and that he and his boat's crew were
-prisoners of war.
-
-In the meanwhile Captain Burdon, finding that his boat's crew did
-not return, got up his anchor, shook out his sails, and cleared ship
-for action. He was already suspicious, and too good a seaman to let
-unpreparedness play any part in his actions. There was not very much
-wind, and slowly the "Drake" bore down on the silent vessel which lay,
-sails flapping idly as she rolled, on the swell of the Irish Sea. As the
-afternoon drew on the wind almost failed, so that it was an hour before
-sunset before the "Drake" could get within speaking range. Hardly a ripple
-stirred the surface of the glassy swells, and the stillness was ominous
-and oppressive.
-
-When within a cable's length of the "Ranger" Captain Burdon sent up his
-colors. Captain Jones followed his lead in a moment by running up the
-Stars and Stripes.
-
-Suddenly a voice, looming big and hoarse in the silence, came from the
-"Drake,"--
-
-"What ship is that?"
-
-Paul Jones mounted the hammock nettings and, putting his speaking-trumpet
-to his lips, coolly replied,--
-
-"The American Continental ship 'Ranger.' We have been waiting for you.
-The sun is but little more than an hour from setting, and it is time to
-begin."
-
-Then he turned and gave a low order to the man at the wheel, and the
-"Ranger" wore around so that her broadside would bear. Paul Jones always
-believed in striking the first blow. When they came before the wind the
-word was passed, and a mass of flame seemed to leap clear across the
-intervening water to the "Drake." The "Ranger" shuddered with the shock
-and felt in a moment the crashing of the other's broadside through her
-hull and rigging. The battle was on in earnest. Yard-arm to yard-arm they
-went, drifting down the wind, and the deep thundering of the cannonade was
-carried over to the Irish hills, where masses of people were watching the
-smoke-enveloped duel. The sun sank low, touching the purple hilltops, a
-golden ball that shed a ruddy glow over the scene and made the spectacle
-seem a dream rather than reality. Still they fought on.
-
-It was a glorious fight--and as fair a one as history records. The "Drake"
-pounded away at the "Ranger's" hull alone, while Jones was doing all he
-could with his smaller pieces to cripple his enemy's rigging. First the
-"Drake's" fore-tops'l yard was cut in two. The main dropped next, and the
-mizzen gaff was shot away. For purposes of manoeuvring, the "Drake" was
-useless and drifted down, her jib trailing in the water and her shrouds
-and rigging dragging astern. She was almost a wreck. As she heeled over on
-the swell, the gunners on the "Ranger" could see human blood mingling with
-the water of the division tubs that came from her scuppers. The first flag
-was shot away, but another was quickly run up to its place. In a moment
-that too was shot away from the hoisting halyard and fell into the water
-astern, where it trailed among the wreckage. But still she fought on.
-
-On the "Ranger" the loss had been comparatively slight. Lieutenant
-Wallingford and one other man had been killed and there were five or
-six wounded men in the cockpit. Jones seemed to be everywhere, but still
-remained uninjured and directed the firing until the end. He saw that the
-sharpshooters in his tops were doing terrific execution on the decks of
-his adversary, and at last he saw the imposing figure of Captain Burdon
-twist around for a second and then sink down to the deck. Another officer
-fell, and in a moment above the crash of division firing and the rattle
-of the musketry overhead he heard a cry for quarter.
-
-The battle was at an end in a little over an hour. It was almost as great
-a victory as that of the "Bonhomme Richard" over the "Serapis." Paul
-Jones's ship carried eighteen guns; the Englishman carried twenty. The
-"Ranger" had one hundred and twenty-three men; the "Drake" had one hundred
-and fifty-one and carried many volunteers besides. The "Ranger" lost two
-killed and had six wounded; the "Drake" lost forty-two killed and wounded.
-Against great odds John Paul Jones still remained victorious.
-
-The people on shore heard the cannonading cease and saw the great clouds
-of gold-tinted smoke roll away to the south. There they saw the two
-vessels locked as if in an embrace of death and a great cheer went up.
-They thought the "Drake" invincible. The gray of twilight turned to black,
-and the ships vanished like spectres in the darkness. But late that night
-some fishermen in a boat came ashore with a sail from the store-room of
-the "Drake." They said it had been given them by John Paul Jones. The
-people knew then that the "Drake" had been captured.
-
-When the "Ranger" returned with her prizes to Brest, and his people told
-the tale of Paul Jones's victory, France was electrified. Neither in
-France nor in England would they at first believe it. France made him her
-hero. England offered ten thousand guineas for his head.
-
-
-
-
-A STRUGGLE TO THE DEATH
-
-
-Never, since the beginning of time, has there been a fiercer sea-fight
-than that between the "Bonhomme Richard" and the "Serapis." No struggle
-has been more dogged--no victory greater.
-
-Three--four times during the night-long battle any other man than Paul
-Jones would have struck his colors. His main-deck battery and crews blown
-to pieces--his water-line gaping with wounds--his sides battered into
-one great chasm--still he fought on. His prisoners released--his masts
-tottering--his rudder gone--his ship afire below and aloft, his resistance
-was the more desperate. The thought of surrender never occurred to him.
-
-After taking the "Drake" in a gallant fight, burning Whitehaven, and
-terrorizing the whole British coast, Paul Jones went to Paris, where a
-commission to the converted East Indiaman, the "Bonhomme Richard," awaited
-him. Putting her in the best shape possible, he boldly steered across for
-English waters. Paul Jones thirsted for larger game.
-
-When Captain Pearson, with the new frigate "Serapis," on a fine September
-afternoon in 1779, sighted Paul Jones, he signalled his merchant convoy
-to scatter, and piped all hands, who rushed jubilantly to quarters. The
-opportunity of his life had come, for the capture of the rebel frigate
-meant glory and a baronetcy. But he reckoned without his host.
-
-Across the oily waters came the cheery pipes of the boatswain's mate of
-the "Richard" as Jones swung her up to meet her adversary, and Pearson
-knew his task would not be an easy one. The wind fell so light that the
-sun had sunk behind the light on Flamborough Head before the ships drifted
-up to fighting distance, and it was dark before they were ready to come to
-close quarters. On the "Bonhomme Richard," Jones's motley crew, stripped
-to the waist, were drawn up at the guns, peering out through the ports at
-the dark shadow on the starboard bow they were slowly overhauling.
-
-The decks were sanded, the hammocks piled around the wheel, and there at
-the break of the poop stood the captain, trumpet in hand, turning now
-and then to give an order to Richard Dale or his midshipmen, quiet and
-composed, with the smile on his face men saw before the fight with the
-"Drake." The clumsy hulk rolled to the ground-swell, and the creaking
-of the masts and clamping of the sheet-blocks were all that broke the
-silence of the night. No excitement was apparent, and the stillness seemed
-the greater for an occasional laugh from the gunners, or the rattle of a
-cutlass newly settled in its sheath.
-
-Then close aboard from out the blackness came a voice,--
-
-"What ship is that?"
-
-Paul Jones moved to the lee mizzen-shrouds and slowly replied,--
-
-"I can't hear what you say."
-
-He wanted all of his broadside to bear on the Englishman.
-
-"What ship is that? Answer, or I shall fire."
-
-The moment had arrived. For answer Jones leaned far over the rail of
-the poop and passed the word. A sheet of flame flashed from one of the
-"Richard's" after eighteen-pounders, followed by a terrific broadside
-which quaked the rotten timbers of the "Richard" from stem to stern. At
-the same time the guns of the "Serapis" were brought to bear, and her side
-seemed a mass of flame.
-
-[Illustration: "YARD-ARM TO YARD-ARM"]
-
-On the "Richard," two of the eighteen-pounders burst at this first
-broadside, killing their crews, heaving up the deck above, and driving
-the men from the upper tier. The others cracked and were useless. In this
-terrible situation Paul Jones knew the chances for victory were against
-him, for he had thought his lower battery his mainstay in a broadside
-fight.
-
-But if he felt daunted his men did not know it, for, amid the hurricane of
-fire and roar of the guns, his ringing voice, forward, aft, everywhere,
-told them that victory was still theirs for the gaining. He ordered all
-of the men from the useless battery to the main deck; and it was well he
-did so,--for so terrific was the fire that the six ports of the "Bonhomme
-Richard" were blown into one, and the shot passed clear through the
-ship, cutting away all but the supports of the deck above. No one but the
-marines guarding the powder-monkeys were left there, but they stood firm
-at their posts while the balls came whistling through and dropped into
-the sea beyond. But the fire of Paul Jones's battery did not slacken for
-a moment. There seemed to be two men to take the place of every man who
-was killed, and he swept the crowded deck of the "Serapis" from cathead
-to gallery.
-
-In the meanwhile, the "Serapis," having the wind of the "Richard," drew
-ahead, and Pearson hauled his sheets to run across and rake Jones's
-bows. But he miscalculated, and the American ran her boom over the stern
-of the Englishman. For a moment neither ship could fire at the other,
-and they hung together in silence, fast locked in a deadly embrace.
-Jones's crew, eager to renew the battle, glared forward at the shimmering
-battle-lanterns of the Englishman, cursing because their guns would not
-bear. The smoke lifted, and Paul Jones, who was deftly training one of
-his guns at the main-mast of the "Serapis," saw Pearson slowly climb up
-on the rail. The silence had deceived the Englishman, and his voice came
-clearly across the deck,--
-
-"Have you struck?"
-
-A harsh laugh broke from the "Richard."
-
-"Struck!" Paul Jones's answer came in a roar that was heard from truck to
-keelson. "I haven't begun to fight yet!"
-
-A cheer went up that drowned the rattle of the musketry from the tops,
-and the fight went on. Swinging around again the jib-boom of the "Serapis"
-came over the poop so that Paul Jones could touch it. Rushing to the mast,
-he seized a hawser, and quickly taking several turns with it, lashed the
-bowsprit of his enemy to his mizzen-rigging. Grappling-irons were dropped
-over on the enemy--and the battle became a battle to the death.
-
-"Well done, lads; we've got her now." And Jones turned to his
-nine-pounders, which renewed their fire. Both crews fought with the fury
-of desperation. The men at the guns, stripped to the buff, grimed and
-blackened with powder, worked with extraordinary quickness. Every shot
-told. But the fire of the "Serapis" was deadly, and she soon silenced
-every gun but Jones's two nine-pounders, which he still worked with dogged
-perseverance. He sent Dale below to hurry up the powder charges. To his
-horror Dale found that the master-at-arms, knowing the ship to be sinking,
-had released a hundred English prisoners. The situation was terrifying.
-With foes within and without, there seemed no hope. But Dale, with ready
-wit, ordered the prisoners to the pumps and to fight the fire near the
-magazine, telling them that their only hope of life lay in that. And at
-it they went, until they dropped of sheer exhaustion.
-
-The doctor passed Dale as he rushed upon deck. "Sir," said he to Jones,
-"the water is up to the lower deck, and we will sink with all hands in a
-few minutes."
-
-Jones turned calmly to the doctor, as though surprised. "What, doctor,"
-said he, "would you have me strike to a drop of water? Here, help me get
-this gun over."
-
-The surgeon ran below, but Jones got the gun over, and served it, too.
-
-To add to the horror of the situation, just at this moment a ball from a
-new enemy came screaming just over the head of Paul Jones, and the wind
-of it knocked off his hat. The carpenter, Stacy, ran up breathlessly.
-
-"My God, she's firing on us--the 'Alliance,' sir!" And the captain glanced
-astern where the flashes marked the position of the crazy Landais, firing
-on his own consort.
-
-If ever Paul Jones had an idea of hauling his colors, it must have been
-at this moment.
-
-He had been struck on the head by a splinter, and the blood surged down
-over his shoulder--but he didn't know it.
-
-Just then a fear-crazed wretch rushed past him, trying to find the
-signal-halyards, crying wildly as he ran,--
-
-"Quarter! For God's sake, quarter! Our ship is sinking!"
-
-Jones heard the words, and, turning quickly, he hurled an empty pistol at
-the man, which struck him squarely between the eyes, knocking him headlong
-down the hatch.
-
-Pearson heard the cry. "Do you call for quarter?" he shouted.
-
-For answer Paul Jones's nine-pounder cut away the rail on which he was
-standing.
-
-Then came the turn in the fight. Horrible as had been the slaughter
-on the "Richard," the quick flashes from his tops told Paul Jones that
-his marines had not been placed aloft in vain. He saw the crew on the
-spar-deck of his enemy fall one by one and men fleeing below for safety.
-Raising his trumpet, he cheered his topmen to further efforts. In their
-unceasing fire lay his only hope.
-
-One of them in his maintop with great deliberateness laid aside his
-musket and picked up a leather bucket of hand grenades. Jones watched him
-anxiously as, steadying himself, he slowly lay out along the foot-rope of
-the main-yard. His captain knew what he meant to do. He reached the lift,
-which was directly over the main hatch of the "Serapis." There he coolly
-fastened his bucket to the sheet-block, and, taking careful aim, began
-dropping his grenades down the open hatchway. The second one fell on a
-row of exposed powder charges. The explosion that followed shook sea and
-sky, and the air was filled with blackened corpses. The smoke came up in
-a mighty cloud, and soon the forks of flame licked through it and up the
-rigging.
-
-That was the supreme moment of Paul Jones's life, for he knew that victory
-was his.
-
-The fire from the "Serapis" ceased as if by magic. The explosion had
-blown a whole battery to eternity, and, as the smoke cleared a little,
-he could see the figure of Pearson leaning against the pin-rail, almost
-deserted, his few men running here and there, stricken mad with fear. Then
-the English captain stumbled heavily, as though blind, over the slippery
-deck towards the mizzen, where the flag had been nailed, and with his own
-hands tore it frantically from the mast.
-
-A mighty victory for Paul Jones it was. But now, as the flames mounted
-higher through the rifts of smoke, he could see at what a cost. His dead
-lay piled upon the poop so that he could not get to the gangway. His
-masts were shot through and through, and strained at the stays at every
-lift of the bow. The fire, though beaten from the magazine, still burst
-from the forward hatches, firing the tangled rigging and outlining them
-in its lurid hues against the black beyond. The water had risen, and the
-freshening breeze lashed the purple foam in at the lower-deck ports. For
-hours the men fought against their new enemy; but towards five in the
-morning their captain decided that no human power could save her. He then
-began moving his wounded and prisoners to the "Serapis".
-
-The first gray streaks of dawn saw Paul Jones upon the poop of the
-"Serapis," looking to the leeward, where the "Richard" lay rolling
-heavily. Her flag, shot away again and again, had been replaced and
-floated proudly from its staff. Lower and lower she sank into the water,
-mortally wounded, a heavy swell washing in at the lower gun-ports. At
-length, heaving her stern high in the air, her pennant fluttering a last
-defiance to the captured "Serapis," she slowly disappeared, dying grandly
-as she had lived.
-
-After Pearson's release, the British government offered ten thousand
-guineas for Paul Jones, dead or alive. Forty-two British frigates chased
-him and scoured the Channel; but Jones passed within sight of them, the
-American flag flying at the mast, and reached France in safety, where
-he became the hero of the hour. And so long as the Stars and Stripes fly
-over American war-ships will the men who know hold up as their ideal of
-a dogged warrior and gallant seaman the hero of Flamborough--Paul Jones.
-
-
-
-
-THE TERRIER AND THE MASTIFF
-
-
-The first of the great American captains to give his life to the cause
-of liberty was Nicholas Biddle. And the action in which he lost it is the
-finest example of daring and hardihood in the little known pages of naval
-history. His part in that glorious action must ever remain unknown as to
-its details since but five out of his crew remained alive to tell of it,
-and we are chiefly indebted to the British accounts for the information
-which has been handed down.
-
-Nicholas Biddle began his naval career by being shipwrecked on a desert
-shoal at the age of thirteen. But being rescued, with his four companions,
-at the end of two months, his ardor was so little dampened that as soon
-as opportunity offered he immediately went forth in search of further
-adventures on the sea. A war between England and Spain being imminent,
-he went to London, and succeeded in getting a midshipman's warrant on the
-ship of Captain--afterwards Admiral--Sterling.
-
-But just before the declaration of independence of his own country,
-a voyage of discovery to the North Pole was proposed by the Royal
-Geographical Society, and this opportunity seemed to hold forth infinitely
-more possibilities for advancement than the daily port routine of a
-British frigate of war.
-
-So, Admiral Sterling refusing Biddle's mild request to be transferred
-to one of the vessels, the young man took it upon himself to doff
-his gold-laced uniform and present himself upon the "Carcase" in very
-shabby sailor clothes, upon which he was forthwith entered upon her
-books as a sailor before the mast. He was in glorious company, though,
-for Horatio Nelson--afterwards to be the greatest admiral England has
-ever known--shared his humble lot as a jacky, although his prospects in
-the service were more brilliant than Biddle's. The expedition, having
-accomplished its purpose, returned to England in 1774, both young Nelson
-and Biddle having been appointed coxswains for meritorious service.
-
-When hostilities in the United States began, Biddle, of course, resigned
-from the British navy and offered his services to the Continental
-Congress. His first commission was the command of the "Camden," a galley
-fitted out by the State of Pennsylvania for the defence of the Delaware
-River. He was then made a captain in the naval service, and took command
-of the "Andrew Doria," of fourteen guns and one hundred and thirty men.
-
-Just before Commodore Hopkins's fleet hoisted anchor, Biddle had an
-opportunity to show his intrepidity in a very personal way. Two men who
-had deserted from his vessel had been taken and were placed in prison at
-Lewistown. Biddle sent an officer and a squad of men ashore to bring them
-off. But the officer returned to the ship and reported that the deserters
-had joined with the other prisoners, and barricaded the door, swearing
-that no man alive would take them. Biddle put on his side-arms and, taking
-only a young midshipman with him, went at once to the prison. The door
-was tightly barred from the inside, and the prisoners, led by one of the
-deserters named Green, shook their fists and pointed their weapons at him.
-Some of the more venturesome of the townsfolk, who only needed a resolute
-leader, now smashed down the door at the naval officer's directions, and
-Biddle, drawing both his pistols, quickly stepped within the opening.
-Green stood in front of his ill-favored companions, his eye gleaming
-villanously down the barrel of his flint-lock. Without moving his eye
-from the man, and planting himself squarely in the doorway, Biddle said,
-steadily,--
-
-"Now, Green, if you don't take good aim, you are a dead man!"
-
-There was a moment's pause, after which the pistol fell a little, and
-finally, under the resolute attitude of his captain, the fellow broke
-down. He was completely awed, and at Biddle's command dropped his pistol
-to the floor and allowed himself to be conducted to the ship. Their leader
-cowed, the remainder of the prisoners permitted the Lewistown militia,
-who had recovered from their fright, to come in and make them fast again.
-
-This incident had its moral effect upon his men, and never again, when
-they learned to know him, was Biddle troubled with disaffection among his
-crew. The fury with which they went into the fights that followed showed
-how much he was a man after their own hearts.
-
-After Commodore Esek Hopkins's unsuccessful encounter with the British
-fleet, the "Andrew Doria" put to sea and cruised off the coast of
-Newfoundland. Biddle captured a prize laden with arms and ammunition,
-which he carried to port, where they greatly strengthened Washington's
-army, which was badly in need of supplies of all kinds. He captured a
-transport and four hundred British soldiers, and made a great number of
-merchant prizes. He would have taken more, but he only had five men left
-aboard to take the "Doria" back to Philadelphia.
-
-The Congress had authorized the building of several new frigates, and one
-of these, the "Randolph," of thirty-two guns, was just off the stocks.
-Biddle was made commander of her, and set immediately about finishing
-her and making her ready for sea. He had great difficulty in getting a
-crew, as privateering, where the prizes were greater and ship actions less
-frequent, proved more attractive to the adventurous spirits of the day.
-Congress, however, drafted a number of men from the army, and the crew was
-completed by the enlistment of volunteers from among the prisoners taken
-on prizes. After many difficulties with this motley crew, Biddle at last
-got to sea in February, 1777.
-
-The men of his old crew were with him to a man, but many of the volunteers
-were shoal-water sailors, and his army recruits didn't know a sheet
-from a buntline. So when he ran into a Hatteras gale a few days out, the
-"Randolph" carried away her masts, and was altogether so uncomfortable a
-wreck that the volunteers mutinied, and Biddle had a hard time getting
-into Charleston harbor. He succeeded at last in refitting and in
-instilling some of the man-of-war spirit into his crew, sailing at last
-for the West Indies. Then his luck turned for the better, and he sighted
-the English ship "True Briton," twenty guns, convoying three merchantmen.
-Without accident he succeeded in taking them and in bringing all four
-prizes safe and sound into Charleston harbor. This was the first capture
-of the navy in the South, and, as the prizes were again liberally supplied
-with arms, the capture was doubly welcome. So much did Congress appreciate
-this affair that they had a medal struck off in Biddle's honor. The
-British hearing of this exploit of the "Randolph," sent a fleet south,
-and succeeded in blockading her at Charleston for a time.
-
-The State of South Carolina got ready a fleet in the hope of raising the
-blockade, but before they could get to sea the Englishmen had disappeared.
-
-In February, 1778, Biddle went out with a little fleet composed of the
-"General Moultrie," 18, the "Polly," 16, and the "Fair American," 14,
-in search of the British squadron. But missing them, they only succeeded
-in taking a few merchant vessels of the enemy. They boarded a number of
-Dutch and French ships, and Biddle knew that before long they must fall
-in with some of the enemy. To Captain Blake, who was dining with him, he
-said, "I would not be surprised if my old ship should be out after us. As
-to anything that carries her guns upon one deck, I think myself a match
-for her."
-
-On the afternoon of the 7th of March, a sail was made out to windward,
-and they sailed up to examine her. As she came down with the wind she was
-made out to be square-rigged; but, bows on, she looked rather like a sloop
-than a frigate. A short time later she could be made out more plainly a
-man-of-war,--evidently of the enemy,--coming down speedily, and, from the
-way she was sailing, able to out-foot any of the squadron. Biddle could
-see that she stood well out of the water; but a small frigate might do
-that. And if she was only a frigate of forty guns or under, he promised
-himself a great battle that day. But if she were a ship of the line, not
-only the "Randolph" but the smaller vessels were in great danger, for
-nothing save a craft somewhere near her size could resist the broadsides
-of the two heavy gun-tiers.
-
-He quickly made his resolution. Signalling to the fleet of cruisers
-and prizes to go about, he himself took the deck and sent the little
-"Randolph" boldly down towards the stranger. On she came, bowing
-majestically over the water, never making a sign until nearing gunshot
-distance, when the sound of the pipes and the calls on her deck showed
-that she was clearing ship for action. Biddle had been prepared for an
-hour. Now, as she came a little closer to the wind, the American captain
-discovered what he had suspected--two long lines of muzzles running out
-of her leeward ports.
-
-She was a line-of-battle-ship, then.
-
-He clinched his jaws and looked over his shoulder to where the prizes were
-scurrying away in the gathering darkness. They at least would be safe. But
-he did not shift his course a point, sailing on until the canvas of the
-great ship seemed to tower far above the little spars of his own vessel.
-The men of the "Randolph" were aghast at the action of their captain. To
-them an English "Sixty-Four" was the epitome of all that was powerful upon
-the seas. Biddle thought so, too; but there was nothing of timidity in
-his voice as he bade his gunners stand by to train upon her. He knew that
-this battle would be his last, for he resolved in those few moments that
-he would not give up his ship while one plank of her remained above water.
-The enemy might blow him out of the water and send him to the bottom, but
-before she did it he would give them such a lesson in patriotism that the
-world would not easily forget it.
-
-His men guessed something of what was in his mind, and by the time the big
-ship hove close aboard they were keyed up to the fighting pitch, waiting
-with the utmost impatience for the first shot to be fired. The dusk had
-fallen, but the great loom of the sails of the English frigate showed
-plainly as she came closer. They were scarcely a pistol-shot apart when
-a figure on the Englishman mounted the hammock nettings aft, and a voice
-came clearly across the water,--
-
-"Ahoy, the frigate!"
-
-Biddle paused a moment to gain time, and then giving a word to his
-division officers, lifted his speaking-trumpet,--
-
-"What ship is that?"
-
-"His Britannic Majesty's ship-of-the-line 'Yarmouth,' Captain Vincent.
-Who are you? Answer, or I will be compelled to fire."
-
-Another pause as Biddle directed the American colors to be run up to the
-mast, and then said,--
-
-"This is the American Continental ship 'Randolph,' Captain Biddle!"
-
-Without the pause of a second a tremendous broadside was poured into the
-Englishman, and in a moment the battle was on.
-
-Biddle had gained a slight advantage in position by waiting as he did, and
-the "Randolph's" broadsides did great execution on the crowded decks of
-her adversary. But the "Yarmouth" men sprang to their guns, and in a few
-moments were firing their tremendous broadside of thirty guns as fast as
-they could be served and run out.
-
-On the "Randolph" Biddle's men were working well, but the crashing of the
-shot and the flying splinters were terrific. In fifteen minutes the decks
-were covered with the bodies of dead and dying men, and the surgeon and
-his mate below in the cockpit, covered with blood, were laboring to help
-such of those as could be aided, and the decks, in spite of the sand, were
-so slippery that as the ship rolled it was difficult to stand upright upon
-them. Many of the guns of one of the broadsides were disabled, and there
-was not a gun that had a full crew to man it.
-
-Biddle walked to and fro from one battery to another, lending a word here
-and a hand there, acting as sponger or tackle or handspikeman, wherever
-he was most needed. The men fought with the energy of despair--the despair
-of the dying. If they were to die, they would die hard, and the guns were
-loaded as though they would fire as many times as they could in the short
-time left them. The English aimed more deliberately. But when the dreaded
-broadside came, it dealt a blow that shook the smaller ship from stem to
-stern.
-
-Biddle, although badly wounded, refused to leave the deck, and, ordering a
-stool to be placed where he could best direct the firing, sat calmly down,
-though in great agony, and gave the orders to his officers, who repeated
-them to the men.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It has never been discovered just what happened on the "Randolph." In
-spite of her losses, she was keeping up her fire wonderfully, when, with
-scarcely a warning of any kind, she blew up.
-
-The force of the explosion was so great that the ship split in two, and
-sank immediately. The air was filled with guns, spars, and the blackened
-bodies of men, many of which fell upon the deck of the "Yarmouth." An
-American ensign, neatly rolled in a ball, ready to be sent aloft on the
-"Randolph" if the others had been shot away, fell on the quarter-deck of
-the Englishman unsinged.
-
-That national emblem was all, save a spar or two, that remained of the
-"Randolph." Captain Biddle and three hundred and ten of her crew of three
-hundred and fifteen were blown to pieces and drowned. Four days later the
-"Yarmouth," cruising near the same place, discovered a piece of the wreck
-to which five men, more dead than alive, had managed to cling.
-
-The "Randolph" was lost, but the "Yarmouth" was so badly cut up that
-she could not follow the chase, and was obliged to lay to for repairs.
-What, if any, difference there might have been had the "Randolph" not
-been destroyed by explosion from within it is not easy to say; but all
-authorities agree that the fight, while it lasted, was one of the most
-determined in history. Captain Biddle at the time of his death was but
-twenty-eight years old, and the infant navy and the colonies lost one of
-their most intrepid officers and gallant seamen.
-
-
-
-
-DECATUR AND THE "PHILADELPHIA"
-
-
-It was on the deck of the "Enterprise," before Tripoli, in 1804. The crew
-had been called aft, and Decatur, smiling, stood on his quarter-deck.
-
-"My men," said he, "the 'Philadelphia' is in the hands of the enemy. A
-few days from now and we may see American guns turned against American
-sailors. The commodore has given us permission to sail in and blow her
-up. Will you go?"
-
-Into the air flew a hundred caps, and three wild American cheers were the
-answer.
-
-"I can't take you all," he explained; "the expedition is a dangerous one.
-We are going under the broadsides of the enemy, and I only want those of
-you who are ready. Now, lads, any of you who are willing to go, take one
-step aft."
-
-Without a second's pause the crew of the "Enterprise," to a man, stepped
-out; then, fearful lest others should get in the front rank, came towards
-the young commander in a body, elbowing and swearing at one another
-lustily.
-
-Decatur smiled. With such a spirit there was nothing he might not
-accomplish. He picked out sixty-two of his youngest and steadiest men,
-each of them touching his tarry cap with a grateful "Thank'ee, sir," as
-Decatur called his name.
-
-That afternoon they tumbled joyfully down into a captured ketch,
-which had been named the "Intrepid," and, stores aboard, hoisted their
-three-cornered sail for the harbor of Tripoli. As they hauled off, Decatur
-went below to see that all his supplies and combustibles were stored,
-when Midshipman Lawrence came towards him somewhere from the depths of
-the fore-hold, pushing along by the scruff of the neck a youngster, who
-was crying bitterly.
-
-"I found this stowaway, sir," said Lawrence, with a smile.
-
-"Please, sir," sobbed the boy, "don't send me back. I want to see this
-'ere fight, and I ain't going to do no harm. Don't send me back, sir."
-
-Decatur had looked up with a fierce frown, but the anxiety on the lad's
-face was pathetic, and he smiled in spite of himself.
-
-"You can go," he laughed, "but I'll put you in the brig--when we get back."
-
-On that six days' voyage to Tripoli the wind blew a hurricane, and the
-masquerade of the American tars seemed likely to end in disaster, without
-even a fight for their pains. But as they sighted the coast the sea
-went down, and the arrangements were completed. The yellow sails of the
-"Siren," their consort, hove again into sight, and by the afternoon of
-the 16th of February the two vessels were bearing down upon the dark line
-that lay shimmering purple under the haze of the southern sky.
-
-The sun dropped down, a ball of fire, into the western sea, and by eight
-o'clock the towers of the bashaw's castle loomed dark against the amber
-of the moonlit sky. To the left the stately spars of the doomed frigate
-towered above the rigging in the harbor, and floating at her truck was
-the hated insignia of the enemy.
-
-The piping northern breeze bellied the crazy sail of the ketch and sent
-the green seas swashing under the high stern, speeding them good luck on
-their hazardous venture. Catalano, the pilot, stood at the helm, swinging
-the clumsy tiller to meet her as she swayed. By his side was a tall
-figure, a white burnoose about his shoulders and a fez set jauntily on his
-head--Decatur. Four others, in unspeakable Tripolitan costumes, lounged
-about the deck or squatted cross-legged. But the delusion went no further.
-For one of them, Reuben James, was puffing at a stubby black pipe, and
-another spat vigorously to leeward. The others were below, lying along
-the sides, sharpening their cutlasses.
-
-On they sped, Catalano heading her straight for the frigate. As the
-harbor narrowed and the black forts came nearer, they could see the dusky
-outlines of the sentries and the black muzzles that frowned on them from
-the battlements. Over towards the east faint glimmers showed where the
-town was, but the wind had now fallen low, and the lapping of the water
-along the sides alone awoke the silence. A single light shone from the
-forecastle of the frigate, where the anchor watch kept its quiet vigil.
-She swung at a long cable, a proud prisoner amid the score of watchful
-sentinels that encircled her.
-
-As placid as the scene about him, Decatur turned to the pilot and gave
-a low order. The helm was shifted and the tiny vessel pointed for the
-bowsprit of the "Philadelphia." Nearer and nearer they came, until
-scarcely a cable's length separated them. They saw several turbaned heads,
-and an officer leaned over the rail, puffing lazily at a cigarette. He
-leisurely took the cigarette from his mouth, and his voice came across
-the quiet water of the harbor,--
-
-"Where do you come from?" he hailed.
-
-Catalano, the pilot, answered him in the lingua Franca of the East,--
-
-"The ketch 'Stella,' from Malta. We lost our anchors and cables in the
-gale, and would like to lie by during the night."
-
-The Tripolitan took another puff, and an ominous stir, quickly silenced,
-was heard down in the hold of the ketch. It seemed an eternity before the
-answer came,--
-
-"Your request is unusual, but I will grant it," said the Tripolitan, at
-last. "What ship is that in the offing?"
-
-The officer had seen the "Siren," which hovered outside the entrance of
-the harbor.
-
-"The British ship 'Transfer,'" said Catalano, promptly.
-
-The ketch was slowly drifting down until a grappling-iron could almost
-be thrown aboard. Right under the broadside she went, and a line of dark
-heads peered over the rail at her as she gradually approached the bow.
-
-The chains of the frigate were now almost in the grasp of Reuben James,
-on the forecastle, when the wind failed and a cat's-paw caught the ketch
-aback. Down she drifted towards the terrible broadside. But at a sign
-from Decatur the eager Lawrence and James got into a small boat and
-carried a line to a ring-bolt at the frigate's bow. A boat put out from
-the "Philadelphia" at the same time. But Lawrence coolly took the hawser
-from the Tripolitan--"to save the gentleman trouble," he explained--and
-brought it aboard the "Intrepid." A moment more, and the ketch was warping
-down under the "Philadelphia's" quarter. It was a moment of dire peril.
-The slightest suspicion, and they would be blown to pieces.
-
-Decatur leaned lightly against the rail, but his hand grasped his cutlass
-under his robe so that the blood tingled in his nails and his muscles were
-drawn and tense. Morris and Joseph Bainbridge stood at the rigging beside
-him, trembling like greyhounds in leash.
-
-Suddenly they swung around and shot out from under the shadow into a
-yellow patch of moonlight. The watchful eyes above the rail saw the anchor
-and cables and the white jackets of the sailors below decks as they strove
-to hide themselves in the shadows. One glance was enough. In an instant
-the ship resounded with the thrilling cry, "Americano! Americano!"
-
-At the same moment the "Intrepid" ground up against the side of the
-frigate. In an instant, as if by magic, she was alive with men. Throwing
-off his disguise, and with a loud cry of "Boarders, away!" Decatur sprang
-for the mizzen-chains. And now the hot blood of fighting leaped to their
-brains. The long agony of suspense was over. Lawrence and Laws sprang for
-the chain-plates and hauled themselves up. Decatur's foot slipped, and
-Morris was the first on deck. Laws dashed at a port, pistols in hand.
-Nothing could withstand the fury of the charge, and over the rail they
-swarmed, cutlasses in teeth, jumping over the nettings, and down on the
-heads of the Tripolitans below. Though Morris was first on deck, Decatur
-lunged in ahead of him, bringing down the Tripolitan officer before he
-could draw his sword. One of them aimed a pike at him, but he parried it
-deftly, and Morris cut the fellow down with a blow that laid his shoulder
-open from collar to elbow.
-
-Though surprised, the Tripolitans fought fiercely. They had won their
-title of "the best hand-to-hand fighters in the world" in many a hard
-pirate battle in the Mediterranean. Around the masts they rallied,
-scimetars in hand, until they were cut or borne down by the fury of their
-opponents.
-
-[Illustration: DECATUR BOARDS THE "PHILADELPHIA"]
-
-After the first order, not a word was spoken and not a shot was
-fired. The Americans needed no orders. Over the quarter-deck they
-swept--irresistible, clearing it in a trice. Overwhelmed by the fierce
-onslaught, the Tripolitans fled for life, the sailors driving them up on
-the forecastle and overboard in a mass, where their falling bodies sounded
-like the splash of a ricochet.
-
-So swift was the work that in ten minutes no Tripolitans were left on the
-deck of the frigate but the dead. Not a sailor had been killed. One man
-had been slashed across the forehead, but he grinned through the blood
-and fought the more fiercely. Then the watchers out on the "Siren" saw
-a single rocket go high in the air, which was Decatur's signal that the
-"Philadelphia" was again an American vessel.
-
-In the meanwhile the combustibles were handed up from the ketch with
-incredible swiftness, and the work of destruction began. Midshipman Morris
-and his crew had fought their way below to the cock-pit and had set a fire
-there. But so swiftly did those above accomplish their work that he and
-his men barely had time to escape. On reaching the upper deck, Decatur
-found the flames pouring from the port-holes on both sides and flaring
-up red and hungry to seize the tar-soaked shrouds. He gave the order to
-abandon, and over the sides they tumbled as quickly as they had come.
-Decatur was the last to leave the deck. All the men were over, and the
-ketch was drifting clear, while around him the flames were pouring, their
-hot breath overpowering him. But he made a jump for it and landed safely,
-amid the cheers of his men.
-
-Then the great oars were got out, eight on a side, and pulling them as
-only American sailor-men could or can, they swept out towards the "Siren."
-
-The Tripolitans ashore and on the gunboats had hastened to their guns,
-and now, as the ketch was plainly seen, their batteries belched forth a
-terrific storm of shot that flew across the water. The men bent their
-backs splendidly to their work, jeering the while at the enemy as the
-balls whistled by their heads or sent the foam splashing over them. Out
-they went across the great crimson glare of the fire. It was magnificent.
-The flames swept up the shrouds with a roar, catching the woodwork of
-the tops and eating them as though they were tinder. She was ablaze from
-water to truck, and all the heavens were alight,--aglow at the splendid
-sacrifice. Then to the added roar of the batteries ashore came the
-response from the guns of the flaming ship, which, heated by the fierce
-flames, began to discharge themselves. But not all of them were fired so,
-for in a second all eyes were dazzled by a blazing light, and they saw the
-great hull suddenly burst open, with huge streaks of flame spurting from
-between the parting timbers. Then came a roar that made the earth and sea
-shudder. The fire had reached the magazine.
-
-[Illustration: THE DANGER OF THE "INTREPID"]
-
-The waves of it came out to the gallant crew, who, pausing in their work,
-gave one last proof of their contempt of danger. Rising to their feet,
-they gave three great American cheers that echoed back to the forts while
-their guns thundered fruitlessly on.
-
-Decatur and his men were safe under the "Siren's" guns.
-
-Is it any wonder that Congress gave Decatur a sword and made him a
-captain, or that Lord Nelson called this feat "the most daring act of any
-age"?
-
-
-
-
-THE BIGGEST _LITTLE_ FIGHT IN NAVAL HISTORY
-
-
-It should have been renown enough for one man to have performed what
-Nelson was pleased to call "the most daring act of any age." But the
-capture of the "Philadelphia" only whetted Decatur's appetite for further
-encounters. He was impetuous, bold even to rashness, and so dashing that
-to his men he was irresistible. But behind it all--a thing rare in a man
-of his peculiar calibre--there was the ability to consider judiciously
-and to plan carefully as well as daringly to execute. His fierce temper
-led him into many difficulties, but there was no cruelty behind it; and
-the men who served with him, while they feared him, would have followed
-him into the jaws of death, for they loved him as they loved no other
-officer in the American service. Once while the frigate "Essex," Captain
-Bainbridge, lay in the harbor at Barcelona, the officers of the American
-vessel suffered many petty indignities at the instance of the officers
-of the Spanish guardship. Having himself been subjected to a slight from
-the Spanish commander, Lieutenant Decatur took the bull by the horns. He
-bade his coxswain pull to the gangway of the Spaniard, and he went boldly
-aboard. His lips were set, for he had resolved upon his own responsibility
-to make an immediate precedent which would serve for all time. The Spanish
-commander, most fortunately, was absent. But Decatur none the less strode
-aft past the sentry to the gangway and, lifting his great voice so that
-it resounded from truck to keelson, he shouted,--
-
-"Tell your comandante that Lieutenant Stephen Decatur, of the 'Essex,'
-declares him to be a scoundrelly coward, and if Lieutenant Decatur meets
-him ashore he will cut his ears off."
-
-So among the men of the squadron Decatur came to be known as a man who
-brooked nothing and dared everything.
-
-But when the crusty Preble took command in the Mediterranean he was not
-over-impressed with the under-officers of his command. Not one of the
-lieutenants was over twenty-four and none of those higher in authority had
-turned thirty. Decatur and Somers were twenty-five; Charles Stewart was
-only twenty-six, and Bainbridge the younger; Morris and Macdonough were
-barely out of their teens.
-
-It was not the custom of the commander-in-chief to mince his words.
-So sparing himself the delicacy of secluding himself behind the saving
-bulkheads of the after-cabin he swore right roundly at his home government
-for sending him what he was pleased to call "a parcel of d-- school-boys."
-He was a martinet of the old style, and believed in the school of the
-fo'c's'le, and not in young gentlemen whose friends at home sent them in
-by the ports of the after-cabin. He held the youngsters aloof, and not
-until he had tried them in every conceivable fashion would he consider
-them in his councils. A year had passed, and Decatur, Morris, Bainbridge,
-Macdonough, and Somers had helped to add glorious pages to naval history,
-before the old man, with a smile to Colonel Lear, the consul, consented
-to say,--
-
-"Well, after all, colonel, they are very good school-boys!"
-
-Although Decatur's success in the destruction of the "Philadelphia" had
-removed a dangerous auxiliary battery from the harbor of Tripoli, the
-bashaw was far from overawed, and, with the officers and crew of the
-"Philadelphia" as hostages, declined to consider any terms offered by
-the Americans; and so it was resolved by Commodore Preble to make an
-attempt upon the Tripolitan batteries and fleet. The Americans had the
-"Constitution,"--"Old Ironsides,"--Commodore Preble, and six brigs and
-schooners mounting twelve and sixteen guns each. Preble had also succeeded
-in borrowing from "the most gracious king of the Sicilies," who was then
-at war with the bashaw, two bomb-vessels and six single gunboats,--quite
-a formidable little force of a hundred and thirty-four guns and about a
-thousand men.
-
-It was not until the morning of the 3d of August, 1804, that the
-weather, which had been very stormy, moderated sufficiently to allow
-the squadron to approach the African coast. The gunboats were unwieldy
-craft, flat-bottomed, and, as the sea made clean breeches over them,
-they were a dozen times in danger of sinking. But by ten o'clock the sky
-to the southward had lightened, and the heavy storm-clouds were blowing
-away overhead to the westward. "Old Ironsides" shook the reefs out of
-her topsails and, spreading her top-gallant-sails, she beat up for the
-entrance of the harbor of Tripoli with two of the gunboats in tow. Her
-tall spars, seeming almost to pierce the low-rolling clouds, towered far
-above the little sticks of the "Siren" and "Nautilus," which bore down
-directly in her wake. The sea had lashed out its fury, and, before the
-little fleet had reached the reef, the gray had turned to green, and
-here and there a line of amber showed where the mid-day sun was stealing
-through.
-
-Stephen Decatur, on gunboat No. 4, had been given command of the left
-division of three gunboats. Casting off the tow-lines from his larger
-consorts, he got under weigh, and bore down for a rift between the reefs
-at the eastern entrance to the harbor, where the Tripolitan fleet, cleared
-for action, lay awaiting him. The wind was on his bow, and he was obliged
-to hold a course close to the wind in order to weather the point.
-
-The gunboat lumbered uncertainly in the cross-sea, for she had no longer
-the steady drag of the "Constitution's" hawser to steady her. The seas
-came up under her flat bottom, and seemed to toss rather than swing
-her into the hollows. She was at best an unsteady gun-platform, and
-nice sail-trimming was an impossibility. But they got out their sweeps,
-and that steadied her somewhat. Great volumes of spray flew over the
-weather-bow as she soused her blunt nose into it, and the fair breeze sent
-it shimmering down to leeward.
-
-Decatur stood aft by the helmsman, watching the quivering leeches, and
-keeping her well up into the wind. Beside him stood his midshipmen, Thomas
-Macdonough--afterwards to win a great victory of his own--and Joseph
-Thorn. Both of them had smelt powder before, and Macdonough had been one
-of the first on the deck of the ill-fated "Philadelphia." This was to be
-a different sort of a fight from any they had seen. It was to be man to
-man, where good play of cutlass and pike and youth and American grit might
-mean victory. Defeat meant annihilation. But youth is good at a game of
-life and death, and as they looked at Decatur there was never a moment's
-fear of the result. They leaned against the rail to leeward, looking past
-the foam boiling on the point to the spars of the African gunboats, and
-their eyes were alight with eagerness for battle.
-
-The men were bending steadily to their sweeps. Most of them were stripped
-to the waist, and Decatur looked along the line of sinewy arms and chests
-with a glow of pride and confidence. There was no wavering anywhere in
-the row of glistening faces. But they all knew the kind of pirates they
-were going to meet,--reckless, treacherous devils, who loved blood as they
-loved Allah,--the best hand-to-hand fighters in the Mediterranean.
-
-The ring of the cutlasses, loose-settled in their hangers, against the
-butts of the boarding-pistols was clear above the sound of the row-locks
-and the rush of the waters, while forward the catch of a song went up,
-and they bent to their work the more merrily.
-
-As they came under the lee of the Tripolitan shore and the sea went down,
-Decatur ordered the long iron six-pounder cast loose. They had provided
-solid shot for long range at the batteries, and these were now brought up
-and put conveniently on the fo'c's'le. But for the attack upon the vessels
-of the fleet they loaded first with a bag of a thousand musket-balls. At
-point-blank range Decatur judged that this would do tremendous execution
-among the close-ranked mass of Tripolitans on the foreign vessels. His
-idea was not to respond to the fire of the enemy, which would soon begin,
-until close aboard, and then to go over the rail before they could recover
-from their confusion. He felt that if they did not make a wreck of him and
-batter up his sweeps he could get alongside. And once alongside, he knew
-that his men would give a good account of themselves.
-
-But as they came up towards the point the wind shifted, and the head of
-the gunboat payed off. Even with their work at the sweeps, he now knew
-that it would be no easy matter for all the Americans to weather the
-point, for two of them were well down to leeward. But his brother, James
-Decatur, in gunboat No. 2, and Sailing-Master John Trippe, in gunboat No.
-6, had kept well up to windward, and so he felt that he should be able to
-count on at least these two. As they reached the line of breakers, one of
-the gunboats to leeward, under Richard Somers, was obliged to go about,
-and in a moment the two others followed. Then the young commanders of the
-windward gunboats knew that if the attack was to be made they alone would
-have the glory of the first onslaught.
-
-What Decatur feared most was that Preble, on the "Constitution," would
-see how terribly they were overmatched and signal the recall. But as they
-reached the point, Decatur resolutely turned his back to the flagship,
-and, putting his helm up, set her nose boldly into the swash of the
-entrance and headed for the gray line of vessels, three times his number,
-which hauled up their anchors and came down, gallantly enough, to meet
-him.
-
-There was very little sound upon the gunboat now. The wind being
-favorable, the Americans shipped their sweeps, and sat watching the
-largest of the Tripolitan vessels, which was bearing down upon them
-rapidly. They saw a puff of white smoke from her fo'c's'le, and heard
-the whistle of a shot, which, passing wide, ricochetted just abeam and
-buried itself beyond. Thorn stood forward, waiting for the order to fire
-his long gun. But Decatur gave no sign. He stood watching the lift of the
-foresail, carefully noting the distance between the two vessels. Trippe
-and James Decatur had each picked out an adversary, and were bearing down
-as silently as he, in spite of the cannonade which now came from both the
-vessels and batteries of the Turks. The shots were splashing all around
-him, but nothing had been carried away, and the American jackies jeered
-cheerfully at the wretched marksmanship. As the Tripolitans came nearer,
-the Americans could see the black mass of men along the rails and catch
-the glimmer of the yataghans. Then Decatur ordered his own men to seize
-their pikes and draw their pistols and cutlasses.
-
-At the word from Decatur, Thorn began training the fo'c's'le gun, which
-in the steadier sea would have a deadly effect. The distance was a matter
-of yards now, and a shot came ploughing alongside that threw spray all
-along the rail and nearly doused the match of the gunner of the fo'c's'le.
-But not until he could see the whites of the eyes of his adversaries did
-Decatur give the order to fire. As the big gun was discharged point-blank
-into the thick of the crowded figures, Decatur shifted his helm quickly
-and lay aboard the Tripolitan. So tremendous had been the execution of the
-musket-balls, and so quickly had the manoeuvre been executed, that almost
-before the Tripolitans were aware of it the Americans were upon them. The
-few shots from the Turkish small arms had gone wild, but a fierce struggle
-ensued before the Americans reached the deck. At last Decatur, followed
-by Thorn, Macdonough, and twenty-two seamen, gained the fo'c's'le in a
-body, and the Tripolitans retreated aft.
-
-The Tripolitan boat was divided amidships by an open hatchway, and for
-a moment the opposing forces stopped to catch their breath, glaring at
-one another across the opening. Decatur did not pause long. Giving them
-a volley of pistol-bullets at close range, he dashed furiously down one
-gangway, while Macdonough and Thorn went down the other, and, with a
-cheer, cut down the remaining Turks or drove them overboard. A half-dozen
-went down a forward hatch, and these were made prisoners.
-
-It was a short fight, with an inconsiderable loss to Decatur, but the
-Tripolitan dead were strewn all over the decks, and the Turkish captain
-was pierced by fourteen bullets. The Tripolitan flag was hauled down, and,
-taking his prize in tow, Decatur put his men at the sweeps again, to move
-farther out of the reach of the batteries.
-
-By this time James Decatur and John Trippe had got into the thick of it.
-Following Stephen Decatur's example, they dashed boldly at the larger
-of the bashaw's vessels, and, reserving their fire for close range, they
-lay two of them aboard. John Trippe, Midshipman Henley, and nine seamen
-had gained the deck of their adversary, when the vessels drifted apart,
-and they were left alone on the deck of the enemy. But Trippe was the man
-for the emergency. So rapidly did they charge the Turks that their very
-audacity gave them the advantage, and Trippe finally succeeded in killing
-the Tripolitan commander by running him through with a boarding-pike. They
-fought with the energy of despair, and, although wounded and bleeding from
-a dozen sabre-cuts, struggled on until their gunboat got alongside and
-they were rescued by their comrades.
-
-But the story of the treachery of the Turkish captain and Stephen
-Decatur's revenge for the death of his brother makes even the wonderful
-defensive battle of Trippe seem small by comparison.
-
-James Decatur, having got well up with one of the largest of the
-Tripolitan vessels, delivered so quick and telling a fire with his long
-gun and musketry that the enemy immediately struck his colors. He hauled
-alongside and clambered up and over the side of the gunboat to take
-possession of her personally. As his head came up above the rail his men
-saw the Turkish commander rush forward and aim his boarding-pistol at the
-defenceless American. The bullet struck him fairly in the forehead, and
-Decatur, with barely a sound, sank back into his boat.
-
-In their horror at the treachery of the Tripolitan, the Americans allowed
-the boat to sheer off, and the Turk, getting out his sweeps, was soon
-speeding away toward the protection of the batteries.
-
-Stephen Decatur, towing his prize to safety, had noted the gallant attack,
-and had seen the striking of the Turkish colors. But not until an American
-boat darted alongside of him did he hear the news of the treacherous
-manner of his brother's death. The shock of the information for the moment
-appalled him, but in the place of his grief there arose so fierce a rage
-at the dastardly act that for a moment he was stricken dumb and senseless.
-His men sprang quickly when at last he thundered out his orders. Deftly
-casting off the tow-line of the prize, they hoisted all sail and jumped to
-their sweeps as though their lives depended on it. Macdonough's gun-crew
-were loading with solid shot this time, and, as soon as they got the
-range, a ball went screaming down towards the fleeing Tripolitan. The men
-at the sweeps needed little encouragement. They had heard the news, and
-they loved James Decatur as they worshipped his brother, who stood aft,
-his lips compressed, anxiously watching the chase. The water boiled under
-the oar-blades as the clumsy hulk seemed to spring from one wave-crest
-to another. Again the long gun spoke, and the canister struck the water
-all about the Turkish vessel. The Tripolitans seemed disorganized,
-for their oars no longer moved together and the blades were splashing
-wildly. Another solid shot went flying, and Decatur smiled as he saw the
-spray fly up under the enemy's counter. There would be no mercy for the
-Tripolitans that day. Nearer and nearer they came, until the Turks, seeing
-that further attempts at flight were useless, dropped their sweeps and
-prepared to receive the Americans. They shifted their helm so that their
-gun could bear, and the shot that followed tore a great rent in Decatur's
-foresail. But the Americans heeded it little more than if it had been a
-puff of wind, and pausing only to deliver another deadly discharge of the
-musket-balls at point-blank range, Decatur swung in alongside under cover
-of the smoke.
-
-As the vessels grated together, Decatur jumped for the Tripolitan rigging,
-and, followed by his men, quickly gained the deck. Two Turks rushed at
-Decatur, aiming vicious blows with their scimetars; but he parried them
-skilfully with his pike, looking around him fiercely the while for the
-captain. As he thought of his brother dying, or dead, he swore that no
-American should engage the Turkish commander but himself. He had not long
-to wait. They espied each other at about the same moment, and brushing
-the intervening weapons aside, dashed upon each other furiously.
-
-Decatur was tall, and as active as a cat. His muscles were like steel, and
-his rage seemed to give him the strength of a dozen. But the Mussulman
-was a giant, the biggest man in the Tripolitan fleet, and a very demon
-in power and viciousness. So strong was he, that as Decatur lunged at him
-with his boarding-pike he succeeded in wrenching it from the hand of the
-American, and so wonderfully quick that Decatur had hardly time to raise
-his cutlass to parry the return. He barely caught it; but in doing so his
-weapon broke off short at the hilt. The next lunge he partially warded
-by stepping to one side; but the pike of the Mussulman in passing cut an
-ugly wound in his arm and chest. Entirely defenceless, he now knew that
-his only chance was at close quarters, so he sprang in below the guard of
-the Turk and seized him around the waist, hoping to trip and stun him. But
-the Tripolitan tore the arms away as though he had been a stripling, and,
-seizing him by the throat, bore him by sheer weight to the deck, trying
-the while to draw a yataghan. The American crew, seeing things going badly
-with their young captain, fought in furiously, and in a moment the mass
-of Americans and Tripolitans were fighting in one desperate, struggling,
-smothering heap, above the prostrate bodies of their captains, neither of
-whom could succeed in drawing a weapon. The Turk was the first to get his
-dagger loose, but the American's death-like grasp held his wrist like a
-vise, and kept him from striking the blow. Decatur saw another Turk just
-beside him raise his yataghan high above his head, and he felt that he was
-lost. But at this moment a sailor, named Reuben James, who loved Decatur
-as though he were a brother, closed in quickly and caught on his own head
-the blow intended for Decatur. Both his arms had been disabled, but he
-asked nothing better than to lay down his life for his captain.
-
-In the meanwhile, without relinquishing his grip upon the Turk, Decatur
-succeeded in drawing a pistol from the breast of his shirt, and, pressing
-the muzzle near the heart of the Tripolitan, fired. As the muscles of
-his adversary relaxed, the American managed to get upon one knee, and so
-to his feet, stunned and bleeding, but still unsubdued. The Tripolitans,
-disheartened by the loss of their leader, broke ground before the force
-of the next attack and fled overboard or were cut down where they stood.
-
-The death of James Decatur was avenged.
-
-The other Tripolitan gunboats had scurried back to safety, so Decatur,
-with his two prizes, made his way out towards the flagship unmolested. His
-victory had cost him dearly. There was not a man who had not two or three
-wounds from the scimetars, and some of them had cuts all over the body.
-The decks were like a slaughter-pen and the scuppers were running blood.
-But the bodies of the Tripolitans were ruthlessly cast overboard to the
-sharks; and by the time the Americans had reached the "Constitution" the
-decks had been scrubbed down and the wounded bandaged and roughly cared
-for by those of their comrades who had fared less badly.
-
-Decatur, by virtue of his exploit in destroying the "Philadelphia,"
-already a post-captain at the age of twenty-five, could expect no further
-immediate honors at the hands of the government; but then, as ever
-afterwards, he craved nothing but a stanch ship and a gallant crew. The
-service he could do his country was its own reward.
-
-
-
-
-A DOUBLE ENCOUNTER
-
-
-The old "Constitution" was out on the broad ocean again! And when the
-news went forth that she had succeeded for the seventh time in running
-the blockade of the British squadrons, deep was the chagrin of the
-Admiralty. This Yankee frigate, still stanch and undefeated, had again and
-again proved herself superior to everything afloat that was British; had
-shown her heels, under Hull's masterly seamanship, to a whole squadron
-during a chase that lasted three days; and had under Hull, and then
-under Bainbridge, whipped both the "Guerriere" and the "Java," two of
-their tidiest frigates, in an incredibly short time, with a trifling loss
-both in men and rigging. She was invincible; and the title which she had
-gained before Tripoli, under Commodore Preble, when the Mussulman shot
-had hailed against her oaken timbers and dropped harmlessly into the sea
-alongside, seemed more than ever to befit her. "Old Ironsides" was abroad
-again, overhauled from royal to locker, with a crew of picked seamen and
-a captain who had the confidence of the navy and the nation.
-
-Her hull had been made new, her canvas had come direct from the sail-lofts
-at Boston, and her spars were the stanchest that the American forests
-could afford. She carried thirty-one long 24-pounders and twenty short
-32-pounders,--fifty-one guns in all, throwing six hundred and forty-four
-pounds of actual weight of metal to a broadside. Her officers knew her
-sailing qualities, and she was ballasted to a nicety, bowling along in a
-top-gallant-stu'n-sail breeze at twelve knots an hour.
-
-The long list of her victories over their old-time foe had given her men a
-confidence in the ship and themselves that attained almost the measure of
-a faith; and, had the occasion presented itself, they would have been as
-willing to match broadsides with a British seventy-four as with a frigate
-of equal metal with themselves. They were a fine, hearty lot, these
-jack-tars; and, as "Old Ironsides" left the green seas behind and ploughed
-her bluff nose boldly through the darker surges of the broad Atlantic,
-they vowed that the frigate's last action would not be her least. The
-"Constitution" would not be dreaded by the British in vain.
-
-For dreaded she was among the officers of the British North Atlantic
-squadron. As soon as it was discovered by the British Admiralty that
-she had passed the blockade, instructions were at once given out and
-passed from ship to ship to the end that every vessel of whatever class
-which spoke another on the high seas should report whether or not she
-had seen a vessel which looked like the "Constitution." By means of this
-ocean telegraphy they hoped to discover the course and intention of the
-great American, and finally to succeed in bringing her into action with
-a British fleet. By this time they had learned their lesson. Single
-frigates were given orders to avoid an encounter, while other frigates
-were directed to hunt for her in pairs!
-
-Charles Stewart had been one of old Preble's "school-boy captains" before
-Tripoli, the second in command. He had been one to suggest the expedition
-to cut out or destroy the "Philadelphia," the envied command of which fell
-to Decatur. But he won distinction enough before the batteries there, and
-afterwards when he captured the French "Experiment," of a much heavier
-force and armament than his own, in a brilliant little action. He had
-entered the merchant service at thirteen, had been captain of a ship in
-the India trade at nineteen, and thus from his boyhood had been schooled
-in the finer points of rough-and-ready seamanship.
-
-He was born in Philadelphia, in 1778, at a time when the blood of
-patriotism ran hot in the veins of the mothers as well as of the fathers
-of the race, and he then imbibed the principles he afterwards stood for
-so valiantly on sea and on land. On the frigate "United States," that
-"nursery of heroes," he had for mess-mates Stephen Decatur and Richard
-Somers; and Edward Preble gave him ideas of discipline that later stood
-him in good stead. He was, like Decatur, of an impetuous disposition;
-but he had learned what quick obedience meant to the service, and among
-the men on the "Constitution" it was known that infractions of duty would
-be quickly punished. The men tumbled quickly to the gear and handled the
-guns so smartly that with his picked seamen Stewart had not been out of
-sight of land a week before they attained a proficiency in manoeuvre rarely
-surpassed on a man-of-war. It is related that once, having received an
-order from a superior officer to sail with his ship immediately, Stewart
-got under weigh, towing behind him his mainmast, which he had not had the
-opportunity to step.
-
-Stewart was, of course, aware of the orders which had been issued by the
-Admiralty, but with his ship in fine condition and provisioned for a long
-cruise he feared nothing that floated, whether one ship or two. In fact,
-just before leaving his young wife in Boston he had asked her what he
-should bring her home.
-
-"A British frigate," said she, patriotically.
-
-"I will bring you two of them," he said, smiling.
-
-Stewart sailed to the southward, in the hope of falling in with some
-vessels in the India trade. For two months, in spite of their fitness,
-the men were daily exercised in all weathers at evolutions with the
-sails and great guns, and part of the day was given to cutlass-work and
-pistol-practice. No emergency drill was overlooked, and from reefing
-topsails to sending up spare spars or setting stu'n-sails they moved
-like the co-ordinated parts of a great machine. But one prize having been
-taken, however, Stewart set his course for the coast of Europe, to seek
-the lion, like Paul Jones, on his own cruising ground.
-
-On February 18, 1815, just two months after leaving Boston, the
-"Constitution," being then near the Portuguese coast, sighted a large
-sail, and immediately squared away in pursuit. But hardly were they set
-on their new course before another sail hove up to leeward, and Stewart
-quickly made down for her. Overhauling her shortly, she was discovered to
-be the British merchant ship "Susan," which he seized as a prize and sent
-back to Boston. Meanwhile the other sail, which afterwards proved to be
-the "Elizabeth," 74, had disappeared.
-
-The following day the "Constitution" was holding a course to the southward
-from the coast of Spain toward Madeira. A group of her officers stood
-upon her quarter-deck, watching the scud flying to leeward. They were
-rather a discontented lot. They had been to sea two months, and beyond
-a few merchant prizes they had nothing to show for their cruise. It was
-not like the luck of "Old Ironsides." What they craved was action to
-put a confirmatory test to the metal they were so sure of. The fo'c's'le
-was grumbling, too; and the men who had been in her when she fought the
-"Guerriere" and the "Java" could no longer in safety boast of the glory
-of those combats.
-
-Had they but known it, the "Elizabeth," 74, and the "Tiber," 38, in
-command of Captain Dacres, who had lost the "Guerriere," were but a few
-hours astern of them; and the "Leander," 50, the "Newcastle," 50, and the
-"Acasta," 40, whom they had so skilfully eluded at Boston, were dashing
-along from the westward in pursuit. The seas to the eastward, too, were
-swarming with other frigates (in couples), who were seeking her no less
-anxiously than she was seeking them.
-
-Stewart was not so easily disheartened as his officers. He knew that the
-"Constitution" was in the very midst of the ships of the enemy. Had he
-not known it he would not have been there. He came on deck during the
-afternoon in a high good humor. He was a believer in presentiments, and
-said, jovially,--
-
-"The luck of the 'Constitution' isn't going to fail her this time,
-gentlemen. I assure you that before the sun rises and sets again you will
-be engaged in battle with the enemy, and it will not be with a single
-ship."
-
-The morning of the next day dawned thick and cloudy. Though well to the
-southward, the air was cold and damp. The wind was blowing sharply from
-the northeast, and the choppy seas sent their gray crests pettishly or
-angrily upward, where they split into foam and were carried down to mingle
-with the blur of the fog to leeward. Occasionally, in the wind-squalls,
-the rain pattered like hail against the bellying canvas and ran down into
-the lee-clews, where it was caught as it fell and whipped out into the
-sea beyond.
-
-Two or three officers paced the quarter-deck, looking now and then aloft
-or to windward to see if the weather were clearing. Saving these, the
-fellows at the wheel, and the watch on deck, all hands were below on the
-gun-deck, polishing their arms or loitering in the warmth near the galley,
-where the cooks were preparing the mid-day meal.
-
-During the morning watch, Stewart, for some reason which he was unable
-to give, save an unaccountable impulse, changed the course and sent
-the ship down sixty miles to the southwest. Shortly after noon the fog
-fell lower, and so thinned out at the mast-head that the lookout on
-the topsail-yard could soon see along its upper surface. At about one
-o'clock the welcome sound of "Sail, ho!" came echoing down through the
-open hatchways. While ordinarily the sighting of a sail so near the coast
-has no great significance, Stewart's prediction of a battle had aroused
-the men to a fever of impatience; and when they knew that a large sail,
-apparently a frigate, had been raised and that the fog was lifting, the
-watch below dropped their kits and tools and tumbled up on deck to have
-a glimpse of the stranger. Here and there wider rifts appeared in the
-fog-banks, and the midshipman of the watch, who climbed with a glass into
-the foretop, soon made her out to be a frigate bearing about two points
-on the port-bow.
-
-Stewart came up from below and immediately crowded on top-gallant-sails
-and royals in pursuit. Before long the weather had cleared, so that they
-could make out the horizon to windward, and from the deck could dimly
-discern the hazy mass of the chase as she hung on the lee-bow, apparently
-motionless. In less than an hour the man at the mast-head reported another
-sail ahead of the first one, and noted that signals were being exchanged
-between them.
-
-It was now almost a certainty that the vessels were those of the enemy.
-Forward the men were slapping one another on the back, and rough jokes and
-laughter resounded from the gun-deck, where the boys and stewards were
-clearing away the mess-dishes and stowing away all gear, in preparation
-for a possible action. On the quarter-deck wagers were freely offered on
-the character of the vessels, which looked to be frigates of 50 and 38.
-Stewart glanced aloft at the straining spars and smiled confidently.
-
-By this time the nearer frigate bore down within the range of the
-glasses, and they could see that she was painted with double yellow
-lines, and apparently cut for fifty guns. As it afterwards appeared, she
-had a double gun-streak, false ports having been painted in her waist.
-Lieutenant Ballard, who had been carefully examining her with his glasses,
-remarked to the captain, who stood at his elbow, that she must at least
-be a fifty-gun ship. Stewart, after a long look, suggested that she was
-too small to be a ship of that class. "However," he continued, "be this
-as it may, you know I have promised you a fight before the setting of
-to-morrow's sun; and if we do not take it, now that it is offered, we may
-not have another chance. We must flog them when we catch them, whether
-she has one gun-deck or two."
-
-Signals were now constantly interchanged between the vessels, and by three
-o'clock the "Constitution" had come so near that they were plainly made
-out to be two small frigates, or a frigate and a sloop-of-war, both close
-hauled on the starboard tack. The "Constitution," having the windward
-gauge, now manoeuvred more carefully, and, hauling her sheets flat aft,
-pointed up so as to keep the advantage of position.
-
-[Illustration: "NO 'DUTCH COURAGE' ON _THIS_ SHIP"]
-
-As the vessels came nearer and an action became certain, the stewards came
-on deck with the grog-buckets, in accordance with the time-honored rule on
-men-of-war by which the liquor is served before a fight. Instructions had
-been given that, as the battle was to be with two ships, a double portion
-of the drink should be served. But just as the stewards were about to
-ladle it out an old quartermaster rolled down from forward, and saying,
-"We don't want any 'Dutch courage' on _this_ ship," with a great kick sent
-the bucket and its contents flying into the scuppers.
-
-About four o'clock the westernmost ship signalled her consort and bore
-down to leeward to join her. The "Constitution" now set her stu'n-sails
-and went bearing down after them at a strain that seemed to menace her
-spars. She was rapidly drawing up with them when, just as she got well
-within range of the long guns, there was a sharp crack far aloft and
-the royal-mast snapped off at the cap. It was a doubtful moment, for
-the Englishmen crowded on all sail to escape, and rapidly drew together,
-flinging out their English ensigns as though in triumph.
-
-But they did not reckon on the superb seamanship of the "Constitution." In
-a trice the men were aloft with their axes, the wreck was cleared away,
-new gear was rove, and in half an hour a new mast was aloft and another
-royal was spread to the breeze.
-
-But the ships had been enabled to close with each other, and Stewart
-had lost the opportunity of attacking them separately. They made one
-ineffectual effort to get the weather-gauge, but, finding that the
-"Constitution" outpointed them, they settled back in line of battle and
-cleared ship for action. Stewart immediately showed his colors and beat
-to quarters.
-
-The fog had blown away and the sun had set behind a lowering bank of
-clouds. The wind still blew briskly, but the "Constitution" only pitched
-slightly, and offered a fairly steady platform for the guns, which were
-now trained upon the nearest vessel, but a few hundred yards broad off the
-port-bow. The darkness fell rapidly, and the moon came out from behind the
-fast-flying cloud-bank and silvered the winter twilight, gleaming fitfully
-on the restless water, a soft reproach upon the bloody work that was to
-follow.
-
-At a few moments past six the long guns of the "Constitution's"
-port-battery opened fire, and the battle was on. Both ships responded
-quickly to the fire, and for fifteen minutes the firing was so rapid that
-there was not a second's pause between the reverberations. The English
-crews cheered loudly. But the gunners of the "Constitution" went on
-grimly with their work, sponging and loading as though at target-practice,
-content to hear the splintering of the timbers of the nearest vessel as
-the double-shotted thirty-twos went crashing into her. Before long the
-smoke became so thick that the gunners could not see their adversaries;
-and Stewart, ordering the batteries to cease firing, drew ahead and
-ranged abeam of the foremost ship, with his port-battery reloaded and
-double-shotted. He waited until he was well alongside before giving the
-order to fire, when he delivered such a terrible hail of round-shot,
-grape, and canister that the enemy staggered and halted like an animal
-mortally wounded. For the moment her battery was entirely silenced, and
-during the lull they could hear the cries of the wounded as they were
-carried below to the cockpit. The English cheered no longer. Another such
-a broadside might have finished her; but before Stewart could repeat it
-he saw that the other ship was luffing up so as to take a raking position
-under the stern of the "Constitution."
-
-Nowhere did the wonderful presence of mind of Stewart and the splendid
-seamanship of his crew show to better advantage than in the manoeuvre
-which followed. He quickly braced his main- and mizzen-topsails flat to
-the mast, let fly all forward, and actually backed down upon the other
-enemy, who, instead of being able to rake the "Constitution," found her
-emerging from the smoke abreast his bows in a position to effectually
-rake _him_. The "Constitution's" guns by this time had all been reloaded,
-and a terrific fire swept fore and aft along the decks of the Englishman,
-tearing and splintering her decks and dismounting many of the guns of both
-batteries. So terrible was the blow that she faltered and fell off. Before
-she could recover from the first, another terrible broadside was poured
-into her.
-
-The other vessel now tried to luff up and rake the "Constitution" from
-the bows. But the American filled away immediately and let them have
-her other broadside. Side by side the "Constitution" and the larger ship
-sailed, firing individually and by battery as fast as they could sponge
-and load. Here and there a shot would strike within the stout bulwarks of
-the American; and one of these tore into the waist, killing two men and
-smashing through a boat in which two tigers were chained. A sailor named
-John Lancey, of Cape Ann, was carried below horribly mutilated. When the
-surgeon told him he only had a few moments to live, he said, "Yes, sir, I
-know it; but I only want to know that the ship has struck." Soon after,
-when he heard the cheers at her surrender, he rose from his cot, and,
-waving the stump of his blood-stained arm in the air, gasped out three
-feeble cheers and fell back lifeless.
-
-Having silenced the larger vessel, Stewart immediately hurried to the
-smaller one, which had been firing through the smoke at the gun-flashes.
-The "Constitution" fell off, and, gathering headway, succeeded in getting
-again across her stern, where she poured in two raking broadsides, which
-practically cut her rigging to pieces. Returning to the larger vessel,
-Stewart rounded to on her port-quarter and delivered broadside after
-broadside with such a telling effect that at 6.50 she struck her colors.
-
-The other vessel having in a measure refitted, came down gallantly but
-foolishly to the rescue of her consort. The "Constitution" met her with
-another broadside, which she tried to return, and then spread all sail
-to get away. But the American ship could outsail as well as outpoint her,
-and under the continuous fire of the bow-chasers of the "Constitution" she
-became practically helpless, and at about ten o'clock, when the dreaded
-broadside was about to be put into play again, she surrendered.
-
-It was a wonderful battle. In a fight between one sailing-ship and two the
-odds were four-fold on the side of the majority. For it was deemed next
-to impossible to rake without being doubly raked in return. This obvious
-disadvantage was turned by Stewart to his own account by what critics
-throughout the world consider to be the finest manoeuvring ever known in
-an American ship in action. He fought both his broadsides alternately,
-and luffed, wore, or backed his great vessel as though she had been
-a pleasure-boat. Neither of his adversaries succeeded in delivering
-one telling raking broadside. She seemed to be playing with them, and
-skilfully presented her reloaded guns to each vessel as it attempted to
-get her at a disadvantage.
-
-The larger vessel was discovered to be the "Cyane," 32, Captain Gordon
-Falcon, and the smaller one the sloop-of-war "Levant," 21, Captain George
-Douglass. The "Constitution" had fifty-one guns, while the Englishmen had
-fifty-three; but of the "Constitution's" crew four were killed and ten
-wounded. On the "Cyane" and "Levant" thirty-five were killed and forty-two
-were wounded.
-
-After the battle, while the two English captains were seated in Stewart's
-cabin dining with their victor, a discussion arose between them in
-regard to the part each had borne in the battle, while Stewart listened
-composedly. Their words became warmer and warmer, and each accused the
-other in plain terms of having been responsible for the loss of the
-vessels. At a point when it seemed as though the bitterness of their
-remarks bade fair to result in blows, Stewart arose and said, dryly,--
-
-"Gentlemen, there is no use getting warm about it; it would have been all
-the same, whatever you might have done. If you doubt that, I will put you
-all on board again, and we can try it over."
-
-The invitation was declined in silence.
-
-For this gallant action Congress awarded Stewart a sword and a gold medal,
-and "Old Ironsides" soon after the war was over was temporarily put out
-of commission. Her day of fighting was over. But years after, refitted
-and remodelled, she served her country in peace as gracefully as she had
-served it gloriously in war.
-
-
-
-
-THE "CONSTITUTION" AND THE "GUERRIERE"
-
-
-By the exercise of remarkable seamanship Captain Hull had succeeded in
-escaping from the British squadron, under Broke, off the Jersey coast.
-But he came so near capture that the secretary of the navy succeeded
-in frightening himself and the whole Cabinet at Washington into such a
-state of timidity that, had they had their way, no war-vessel flying the
-American flag would have been allowed to leave any Atlantic seaport and
-put to sea.
-
-Captain Hull had carried the "Constitution" into Boston, where, if the
-orders had reached him in time, the secretary would have peremptorily
-bidden him to remain. But Hull was not in a humor to be inactive. What
-he wanted was a fight, yard-arm to yard-arm, with a frigate of the enemy,
-preferably the "Guerriere," Captain Richard Dacres, who had sailed boldly
-up and down the coast with an open challenge to any frigate flying the
-American flag. Though very warm personal friends ashore, both Hull and
-Dacres had high opinions of the merits of their own vessels. Dacres voiced
-the prevailing sentiment of the officers of his navy when he spoke of the
-"Constitution" as a bunch of pine boards which the British would knock to
-pieces in twenty minutes. Hull said little; but several months before war
-was declared had met Dacres, and wagered him a cocked hat on the result
-should the "Constitution" and the "Guerriere" ever meet. With the timidity
-at home, neither he nor any American officers had much encouragement.
-There was no confidence in the navy at this period, and the insults they
-heard from abroad were not half so hard to bear as the thinly-veiled
-indifference they met at home.
-
-But Hull knew he had a good ship and a good crew. He had trained them
-himself, and he knew what they could do aloft and at the guns. Moreover,
-he knew what he could do himself. The navy was small, but the men who
-had smelt powder in the Revolution and before Tripoli were a stalwart
-set and had done deeds of gallantry that had set the greatest admirals
-of Europe by the ears. Many ingenious contrivances had been adopted, to
-be now tried for the first time. Sights had been put upon the guns, and
-the gun-captains knew better how to shoot than ever before. So, without
-waiting for the orders from the secretary which he knew would hold him in
-port indefinitely, Hull sailed on the first fair wind and uncompromisingly
-put out to sea. If the orders came, he wouldn't be back to obey unless
-he had captured a British frigate, or, at the very least, some merchant
-prizes. If he _did not_ succeed, it meant that he might be hung or shot
-for sailing without orders. But even this sword of Damocles did not deter
-him. He would do his best, at any rate, and made a quiet seaman's petition
-to the God of winds and seas to send him the "Guerriere."
-
-Thinking to find a better opportunity towards Halifax, where many British
-men-of-war and merchantmen put in, Hull sailed to the northward, and
-cruised as far as the mouth of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The frigate
-"Spartan," 38, was in those waters; but after watching for her for some
-days, he stood out to sea. On the 15th of August he sighted five vessels.
-The "Constitution" set all sail and rapidly came up with them. Four
-of them scattered, leaving the fifth, a brig, on fire. Hull made for
-the largest of the others, and found her to be an English merchantman
-in charge of an American prize-crew. The "Constitution" saved her from
-capture at the hands of the other vessels. Before night another vessel was
-overhauled, and she was found to be the American "Adeline," in the hands
-of a prize-crew from the British "Avenger." One vessel was destroyed and
-the other was sent to Boston in charge of Midshipman Madison and five men,
-carrying the first suggestion of the brilliant news which was to follow.
-
-A few days later the "Constitution" chased and overhauled the American
-privateer "Decatur," which, believing her to be an English cruiser, had
-thrown overboard almost all of her guns. The captain of the privateer
-had good news, though. He had sighted an English frigate the day before,
-sailing southward under easy sail. Hull immediately set everything the
-"Constitution" could carry and gave the quartermasters a course which
-should enable him to come up with her by the following day.
-
-The next morning dawned clear, but the breezes fell light, and not
-until the morning watch was there wind enough to send the American
-frigate bowling along on her course under top-gallant-sails and royals.
-Hull took the deck for awhile himself and sent lookouts to the fore-
-and main-royal-yards to keep a sharp lookout. With moderate luck they
-should catch up with her. And then Hull felt that he would make the
-"Constitution" the most talked about ship afloat or else he would change
-the timidity at the Navy Department into a panic for which there would be
-some reason.
-
-If the ship were the "Guerriere," he promised himself a new hat.
-
-Not a sail hove in sight until towards two in the afternoon, when a
-lookout aloft shouted, in a voice that was taken up by four hundred
-throats on the spar- and gun-decks,--
-
-"Sail ho!"
-
-In a moment the watch below came rushing up. So great was the excitement
-that many of them went half-way to the tops, without orders or permission,
-to view the stranger. In an hour the stronger glasses proved her plainly
-to be a frigate, and the "Constitution" eased off her sheets, and with
-the bit in her teeth boomed steadily down for her. For an hour the two
-ships moved in this position, the stranger making no effort to escape
-and leaving her colors, which were soon made out to be British, flying
-in defiance. In fact, as soon as she discovered the "Constitution" to be
-an American frigate she took in sail, laid her maintop-sail to the mast,
-and silently awaited the approach. Hull sailed on until within about
-three miles of the enemy, when he sent his light yards down, reefed his
-topsails, and cleared ship for action.
-
-An American-built frigate was for the first time to test her stanchness
-against a worthy representative of the mistress of the seas and "Terror
-of the World." Most of the crew had never been in close action before. The
-chase of the "Constitution" had tired their hearts less than their bodies,
-for the firing of the British squadron had been at a very long range, and
-there was never a time when their ship was in danger from the cannonading
-of the enemy. There was not a qualm or a fear to be seen on the faces
-either of grizzled seaman or powder-boy, and they went to quarters with
-enthusiasm.
-
-But underlying it all there was a note of gravity. They were going to
-bring an American ship into action with a frigate whose navy had scored
-hundreds of victories over the vessels of all the great nations of the
-earth. They half wondered at their audacity and that of their captain in
-defying a frigate so redoubtable as the "Guerriere," for there seemed
-no further doubt that it was she. But they looked up at Hull, who was
-calmly pacing up and down the quarter-deck, taking a look now and then at
-the enemy through his glass, and their confidence came back to them. The
-excitement was intense, and one by one the men began throwing aside their
-shirts and drawing in the buckles of their cutlass-hangers, most of the
-gun-crews stripping themselves to the waist and casting aside their shoes
-to avoid slipping on the decks when the blood began to flow. More than one
-of them had his own private score to settle with the British navy. Many
-of them had been at one time or another taken off American merchant-ships
-and impressed into the service of the enemy, and some of them still bore
-upon their backs the scars of the bloody lashes of the relentless "Cat."
-The father of Captain Hull had died in the pest-ship "Jersey," in the
-Revolution, and the other officers had all some grievances of their own
-which made them look eagerly forward to the battle which they intended
-should mean victory or death.
-
-On the "Guerriere" there was a feeling of unshaken confidence. That any
-calamity to their ship could be expected from an American-built vessel,
-manned by a crew collected haphazard among the merchant-ships of the
-Atlantic harbors, never for a moment occurred to them. When the drum
-beat to quarters, the men tumbled to their stations willingly enough,
-with no more trepidation than if they were going to target-practice.
-Captain Dacres summoned an American prisoner, the captain of the captured
-merchant-brig "Betsy," and asked him what he thought of the vessel which
-was approaching. The skipper ventured that she was undoubtedly an American
-frigate. Captain Dacres replied with a smile,--
-
-"She comes down a shade too boldly for an American." And then added,
-"Well, the better he behaves the more honor we will have in taking him."
-
-As the "Constitution" bore down nearer, her ensign and jack flying
-proudly, there could no longer be any doubt as to her nationality and
-intentions, and he shouted to his crew, who stood at the guns,--
-
-"There, my men, is a Yankee frigate. In forty-five minutes she is
-certainly ours. Take her in fifteen, and I promise you four months' pay."
-
-Shortly after this Captain Hull was within two or three miles, and the
-"Guerriere" opened fire on the "Constitution," to try the distance and
-get the range.
-
-The shots fell short, but Hull took in his light sails and came down more
-warily under topsails. The "Constitution" fired a broadside, but these
-shots, too, dropped in the water between them. As he came nearer, the
-"Guerriere" squared away, wearing first to port and then to starboard,
-firing alternate broadsides and manoeuvring to avoid being raked. He wanted
-to cripple the American's rigging from a distance, if possible. But the
-shot all missed their mark, and the "Constitution" only replied with
-her bow-guns. Hull soon saw that this manoeuvring might last the day out
-without coming to close quarters, so he hoisted his top-gallant-sails and
-made straight for the enemy.
-
-Now the shot of the Englishman began coming aboard. Some of the standing
-rigging was cut away and the vessel was hulled several times. But the
-men, having carefully reloaded, stood silently at their guns, looking out
-through the ports at the "Guerriere," which, enveloped in smoke, kept up a
-continuous fire. They looked anxiously at the short, stout, sturdy figure
-of Captain Hull, but he continued pacing the quarter-deck, making no
-sign that he was aware of the damage the shots were causing. In a moment
-the report of "Nobody hurt yet, sir," ceased suddenly. A shot struck the
-"Constitution's" starboard bulwarks up forward and sent a jagged hail of
-splinters among the crew of two of the guns of the first division. Two men
-were killed outright and one or two more were wounded by this shot, and
-as their shipmates saw the men carried below to the cockpit they moved
-uneasily, and several of the gun-captains wished to fire. Lieutenant
-Morris now, with a view to quieting them, strode aft to the quarter-deck,
-where Hull was still calmly pacing up and down, and said,--
-
-"The enemy has killed two of our men. Shall we return it?"
-
-"Not yet, sir," replied the impenetrable Hull.
-
-Morris returned to his station. But there is nothing more disorganizing to
-men than to be fired at and not have the opportunity of firing in return,
-and they besought Morris again to give the permission. Twice more the
-lieutenant went aft to the quarter-deck, and twice he got the same reply.
-Hull, like Paul Jones, believed in great broadsides at close quarters.
-This silence under galling fire was the greatest test of discipline an
-American crew had ever had. For in the heat of battle a man forgets to be
-afraid. That the men stood to it, speaks well for Hull's training.
-
-At last the "Constitution," which had been drawing closer and closer, drew
-up to a position about forty yards off the "Guerriere's" port-quarter,
-and Hull, waiting until his guns could all bear, stooped low, bursting
-his breeches from knee to waistband in the excitement of the moment, and
-gave vent to all the pent-up feelings of two hours in the hoarse order,--
-
-"Now, boys, give it to them!"
-
-It was a well-directed broadside.
-
-The shots crashed along the line of bulwarks and sent showers of splinters
-flying over her spar-deck. The ships were so close together that the
-effect of those shots could be seen distinctly. Some of the splinters flew
-as high as the mizzen-top, and instantly the English cheering ceased and
-the shrieks and cries of the wounded rang out between the concussions.
-Dacres now, for the first time, must have realized how great the honor
-would be if he took the "Constitution."
-
-Nor did the action promise any sign of being over in fifteen minutes.
-So well aimed were the American guns that in a short time the enemy's
-main-yard was shot away, and he was otherwise damaged severely both
-below and aloft. At a little after six a twenty-four pound shot went
-through the "Guerriere's" mizzen-mast, and, swaying a moment, over it
-fell to starboard, making a wreck and drag which impeded the Englishman's
-manoeuvres. The seas pounded it against the sides of the ship and a hole
-was knocked under her stern, through which she began taking water badly.
-When the mizzen-mast fell, Hull threw off his hat, and shouted,--
-
-"Hurrah, boys, we've made a brig of her!"
-
-[Illustration: IN THE TOPS OF THE "CONSTITUTION"]
-
-One of the seamen shouted back,--
-
-"We'll make a sloop of her soon, sir!"
-
-And they did; for in a little while the foremast followed by the
-board. The wreck trailing in the water astern acted as a rudder to the
-"Guerriere," and she swung across the wind. The "Constitution" forged
-ahead, and crossing her bows, poured in a raking broadside. Then swinging
-round to port, she sent in another as effective as the first. The ships
-were very close together, and a fire from a burning gun-wad broke out
-in the cabin of the American ship. This was quickly put out, however, by
-Lieutenant Hoffman of the after-gun division.
-
-Both captains now decided to board, and the men were massed on the
-decks as they could be spared from the guns for the purpose. Dacres
-was on the point of sending his men across his bowsprit, but, finding
-the jackies of the "Constitution" ready to receive him, changed his
-mind. The sharpshooters in the tops of both vessels were firing into
-the black masses of men, and every shot told. Lieutenant Morris, on the
-"Constitution," while attempting to take a few turns of rope around the
-bowsprit of the "Guerriere," received a bullet through the body. William
-S. Bush, the first lieutenant of marines, while standing on the taffrail
-ready to board, was shot through the skull by a British marine, and
-instantly killed. John C. Alwyn, the sailing-master, at the same time
-received a ball through the shoulder. Captain Hull climbed up on the rail,
-when a Yankee seaman, putting his arms around him, dragged him down and
-out of danger.
-
-"Not with them swabs on," he said, pointing to Hull's big bullion
-epaulettes. He would have been a certain mark for one of the sharpshooters
-of the enemy.
-
-At about this time the flag of the "Constitution," which had been
-nailed at the mizzen-truck, was shot down. But a young topman, named
-Hogan, shinned up the spar far aloft, and, though fired at repeatedly
-by the British marines, succeeded in replacing it amid the cheers of his
-companions.
-
-On the "Guerriere" things were going badly. Captain Dacres had been shot
-in the back by one of the American marines, but he pluckily remained
-on deck. As the "Constitution" got clear again, both the mainmast and
-foremast of the "Guerriere," which had been repeatedly cut by American
-shot, went over with a crash, and she lay on the wave completely helpless.
-This was less than half an hour after the "Constitution" sent in her
-terrible broadside.
-
-The American ship drew off to a short distance to repair her damages, and
-in less than an hour returned, and sent Lieutenant Read in a cutter to
-discover if Captain Dacres had surrendered.
-
-Dacres's humiliation was complete, and he felt that further battle would
-only be the butchery of his own brave fellows.
-
-Lieutenant Read hailed him to learn if he had surrendered.
-
-"I don't know that it would be prudent to continue the engagement any
-longer."
-
-"Do I understand you to say that you have struck?" asked Read.
-
-"Not precisely; but I don't know that it would be worth while to fight
-any longer."
-
-"If you cannot decide," said the American, "I will return aboard my ship
-and resume the engagement."
-
-Dacres here called out hurriedly,--
-
-"I am pretty much _hors de combat_ already. I have hardly men enough to
-work a single gun and my ship is in a sinking condition."
-
-"I wish to know, sir," demanded Read peremptorily, "whether I am to
-consider you as a prisoner of war or as an enemy. I have no time for
-further parley."
-
-Dacres paused, and then said, brokenly, "I believe now there is no
-alternative. If I could fight longer I would with pleasure, but I--I must
-surrender."
-
-When Dacres went up the side of the "Constitution" to surrender his sword
-he was treated in the manner befitting his rank by a generous enemy.
-Captain Hull assisted him to the deck, saying, anxiously,--
-
-"Dacres, give me your hand; I know you are hurt." And when the Englishman
-extended his sword, hilt forward, in formal surrender, Hull said,
-magnanimously,--
-
-"No, no; I will not have the sword of a man who knows so well how to use
-it. But"--and his eyes twinkled merrily--"but I'll thank you for that
-hat." He had not forgotten the wager, if Dacres had.
-
-The transferring of prisoners was at once begun, for it was seen that the
-"Guerriere" was a hopeless hulk, not fit to take to port. When this was
-all completed and every article of value taken from her, she was blown
-up, and the "Constitution" sailed for Boston.
-
-She arrived at an opportune time. For Detroit had been surrendered without
-firing a shot in its defence, and the American arms on the Canadian
-frontier had otherwise met with disastrous failure. The "Constitution,"
-gaily dressed in flags, came up the harbor amid the booming of cannon and
-the wildest of excitement among the people. A banquet was given to the
-officers in Faneuil Hall, and from that time the American navy gained a
-prestige at home it has never since lost. Congress voted a gold medal to
-Captain Hull, silver ones to the officers, and fifty thousand dollars as
-a bonus to the crew.
-
-The statistics of the fight are as follows:
-
-The "Constitution" had fifty-five guns, the "Guerriere" forty-nine,
-sending shot weighing approximately seven hundred and six hundred
-pounds respectively. The "Constitution's" crew numbered four hundred and
-sixty-eight; that of the "Guerriere" two hundred and sixty-three. The
-"Constitution" lost seven killed and seven wounded, and the "Guerriere"
-fifteen killed and sixty-three wounded. All authorities acknowledge
-that, other things being equal, the discrepancy in metal and crews hardly
-explains the difference in the condition of the vessels at the end of the
-battle.
-
-
-
-
-THE "WASP" AND THE "FROLIC"
-
-
-The American frigates "Constitution," "Constellation," and "United
-States" fought and won great battles where the metal and crews were equal
-or nearly equal, and proved beyond a doubt the advantage of American
-seamanship and gunnery over the British in the Naval War of 1812. But it
-remained for the little sloop-of-war "Wasp," Captain Jacob Jones, to add
-the final evidence of Yankee superiority. Her action with the "Frolic"
-was fought under conditions so trying that it fairly ranks with the great
-frigate actions of our naval history.
-
-The "Wasp" was only about one-sixth the size of the "Constitution." She
-was about as big as the three-masted schooners which ply in and out of
-our Atlantic seaports to-day, and only carried one hundred and forty men.
-What she lacked in size she made up in personnel, and what she lacked in
-ordnance she made up in precision of fire. They must have been fine Jack
-tars and gallant fellows every one of them, for there was no chance for
-skulkers in that fight. The vessel could not have been handled or the guns
-served as they were with one man less.
-
-It was off Albemarle Sound, in the rough end of a Hatteras gale, with a
-gun-platform which now rolled the gun-muzzles into the spume and then sent
-them skyward half-way to the zenith. It is a wonder that the gunners could
-hit anything at all; but almost every broadside told, and the hull of the
-"Frolic" was again and again riddled and raked fore and aft.
-
-When the war broke out the "Wasp" was in European waters, carrying
-despatches for the government. She was immediately recalled, and in
-October, 1812, sailed from the Delaware to the southward and eastward
-to get in the track of the British merchantmen in the West India trade.
-On the 15th of October she ran into a gale of wind off the capes of the
-Chesapeake, and lost her jib-boom and two men who were working on it at
-the time. For two days and nights the little vessel tumbled about under
-storm-sails, but Captain Jacob Jones was one of the best seamen in the
-navy, and no further harm was done. On the night of the 17th the wind
-moderated somewhat, though the seas still ran high. At about half-past
-eleven a number of frigates were seen, and Captain Jones deeming it
-imprudent to bear down nearer until day should show him who the strangers
-were, sailed up to get the weather-gage and await the dawn. His forward
-rigging was disabled, and he had no wish to take chances with an enemy of
-greatly superior force.
-
-The dawn came up clear and cold, and, as the darkness lifted, the crew
-of the "Wasp" could make out six fine merchantmen under convoy of a big
-brig. The brig was about the same size as the "Wasp," and it was seen
-that several of the merchantmen mounted from eleven to eighteen guns each.
-Nevertheless, Jones sent his topmen aloft, and in a trice he had his light
-yards on deck and his ship reefed down to fighting-canvas. The vessel was
-rolling her bows half under, but the guns were cast loose and the decks
-cleared for action. The brig, too, showed signs of animation. Her men
-went aloft at about the same time as those of the "Wasp," and soon she
-signalled her convoy to make all sail before the wind to escape.
-
-The sea was so high that it was eleven o'clock before the vessels came
-within range of each other. Then on the English vessel the Spanish flag
-was run up to the gaff. But the Americans nevertheless held on a course
-which would soon bring the ships together. There were enough Englishmen
-in those waters for Jones to take chances of her being one of the enemy.
-By half-past eleven the ships were within speaking-distance,--two or three
-hundred feet apart,--and Captain Jones mounted the mizzen-rigging, lifting
-his voice so that it might be heard above the shrieking of the wind and
-sea, and shouted through his trumpet,--
-
-"What ship is that?"
-
-For answer the Spanish flag came down with a run, the British ensign
-was hoisted, and a broadside was fired. Just then a squall keeled the
-Englishman over to leeward, and the "Wasp" having the weather-gage, the
-shots whistled harmlessly overhead and through the rigging. The Yankee
-ship responded immediately. The gunners had been trained in all weathers
-to fire as their own vessel was about to roll downward on the wave towards
-their adversary. By this means the shots were more sure to go low in the
-enemy's hull and to have the additional chance of the ricochet which would
-strike a glancing blow. They waited a second or so for this opportunity,
-and then sent their broadside of nine shots crashing through the hull of
-the "Frolic."
-
-The tumbling of the vessel sent the guns rolling about, and the tacklemen
-needed all their strength and skill to hold the guns in for serving and
-out for firing. But they were in no hurry. They worked as slowly and as
-surely as possible, taking every advantage of the roll of the vessel,
-training and aiming deliberately, and then firing at will. The Englishmen
-sent in three broadsides to two of the Yankees. But they fired from the
-hollow on the upward roll of the vessel and most of their shots went high,
-scarcely one of them striking the hull of the "Wasp."
-
-It is a wonderful thing to think even of these two little vessels, tossed
-about like billets of wood, the playthings of the elements, fighting
-a battle to the death with each other, ignoring the roaring of the sea
-and the hissing of the water which now and again seemed to completely
-engulf them in its foam. The waves came over the bows and waist of the
-"Wasp," flooding the decks, overturning buckets and making division-tubs
-a superfluity. Sometimes it dashed in at the leeward ports, dipping the
-handles of the sponges and rammers, and even burying the muzzles of the
-guns, which the next moment would be pointing at the main-truck of their
-adversary. The powder-boys, wet to the waist, stumbled over the decks with
-their powder-charges under their jackets, and, though buffeted about and
-knocked down repeatedly, kept the men at the guns plentifully supplied
-with ammunition.
-
-Although the British were firing rapidly and the shots were flying high,
-they began doing great damage in the rigging of the American. A few
-minutes after the battle was begun a shot from the "Frolic" struck the
-maintop-mast of the "Wasp" just above the cap, and it fell forward across
-the fore-braces, rendering the head-yards unmanageable for the rest of the
-action. A few minutes later other shots struck the mizzen-top-gallant-mast
-and the gaff, and soon almost every brace was shot away. The "Frolic" had
-been hulled repeatedly, but aloft had only lost her gaff and head-braces.
-In a quiet sea it would have been bad enough to lose the use of the sails,
-but in a gale of wind manoeuvring became practically impossible. The wind
-was blowing fiercely so both vessels drove on before it, keeping up the
-cannonading whenever a gun would bear, and pouring in from the tops a fire
-of musketry upon the officers and men upon the decks.
-
-The "Wasp," having squared forward by the dropping of her maintop-mast
-across the fore-braces, no longer sailed on the wind, and in a moment drew
-forward, gradually approaching across the bows of the "Frolic," which,
-having lost the use of her head-sails, could not sheer off. Captain Jones
-was quick to see his advantage, and ran the enemy's bowsprit between the
-main- and mizzen-masts of the "Wasp." The vessels now began striking
-and grinding against each other furiously, as though by a test of the
-stanchness of their timbers to settle the battle between them. The men who
-were loading two of the port broadside guns of the "Wasp" struck the bow
-of the "Frolic" with their rammers and found themselves looking into the
-forward ports of the enemy. The guns were loaded with grape, and after the
-ships crashed together were fired directly through those forward ports of
-the "Frolic," raking her from stem to stern in a frightful manner.
-
-The next wave tore the ships apart, and the "Wasp" forged ahead,
-the bowsprit of the Englishman catching in the mizzen-shrouds, where
-Lieutenant James Biddle and a party of officers and seamen were awaiting
-the order to board. In this position the bowsprit of the "Frolic" was
-pounding terribly upon the poop of the "Wasp." At every send of the waves
-the bows of the Englishman would fall as the stern of the American rose,
-and it seemed as though both ships would be torn to pieces. The men of the
-"Wasp" had wished to board, the moment the ships had come together, and
-crowded along the hammock-nettings hardly to be restrained. But Captain
-Jones, knowing the advantage of his raking position, wanted to send in
-another broadside. He called the men back to the guns, but they were too
-intent upon their object. One brawny fellow, named Jack Lang, who had
-been impressed into the British service, made a spring, and catching a
-piece of gear, swung himself up on the bowsprit and clambered down alone,
-his cutlass in his teeth, to the enemy's deck. The "Wasp's" men cheered
-vigorously, and, leaving their guns, rushed aft to follow him. Captain
-Jones, seeing that they would not be denied, then gave the order to
-Lieutenant Biddle to board.
-
-Biddle, cutlass in hand, jumped upon the nettings to lead the men.
-Midshipman Yorick Baker, being too small to clamber up alone, and seeing
-Biddle's coat-tails flapping in the wind, seized hold of them, one in
-each hand. He did not want to be left behind, and thought he might trust
-to the impetuosity of his superior officer to land him successfully among
-the first on the deck of the enemy. But just then a terrific lurch threw
-Biddle off his balance, and they both came violently to the deck. They
-were up again in a second, however, and with Lieutenant George W. Rogers
-and a party of seamen finally reached the bowsprit of the "Frolic."
-
-Upon the fo'c's'le of the enemy stood Jack Lang, swinging to the motion
-of the brig, his cutlass at his side, looking aft at a scene of carnage
-that was hardly imaginable. All the fierceness had died out of him, for
-he looked around at Biddle and grinned broadly. The decks were covered
-with the dead and dying, who tossed about in the wash of bloody water
-with every heave of the ship. The decks, masts, bulwarks, and rails were
-torn to ribbons, huge jagged splinters projecting everywhere. Guns, tubs,
-sponges, rammers, and solid shot were adrift, pounding from one side
-of the wreck to the other. No one moved to secure them, for only half a
-dozen men stood upright. At the wheel an old quartermaster, badly wounded,
-swung grimly, ready to die at his post. Behind him an English lieutenant,
-bleeding from ghastly wounds, clutched at a stanchion for support. Two
-other officers stood near, and one or two jackies glared forward at the
-Americans. There was no sign of resistance, and the wave of pity which
-came over Biddle and his officers swept away all desire for battle. The
-British flag was still flying. No one seemed to have the strength to
-haul it down; so Biddle went aft and lowered it to the deck. In a few
-moments the masts fell, and she lay a useless hulk wallowing upon the
-waves, which, more sure of their prey, dashed against her torn sides,
-widening the gashes made by her indomitable enemy, and at times making
-clean breaches over her bulwarks, tearing loose her boats and otherwise
-completing her destruction.
-
-Under the conditions, it seemed hardly credible that such injury could
-have been inflicted in so short a time, for the battle had lasted only
-forty-three minutes. The "Frolic" had twenty-two guns, while the "Wasp"
-had only eighteen. The crew of the "Frolic" was less than of the "Wasp,"
-the best authorities estimating it at one hundred and ten, against one
-hundred and thirty-eight of the "Wasp." But even here the great loss and
-damage to the "Frolic" can be explained in no way save that the Americans
-were superior gunners and seamen. The "Wasp" lost five killed and five
-wounded, and these men were most of them shot while aloft trying to refit
-gear. The "Frolic" lost fifteen killed and forty-seven wounded, making a
-total of sixty-two against ten of the "Wasp."
-
-But Jacob Jones's victory was not to prove profitable, save in the great
-moral influence it exercised in England and America. He placed a crew
-upon the prize, and, having cleared away his wreck and refitted his
-rigging, tried to make sail away after the fleet of merchantmen, which
-by this time were nearly hull down on the horizon. But a great British
-seventy-four, the "Poictiers," hove in sight, and before Jones could get
-away he found himself under her guns a prisoner. Captain Beresford, of the
-line-of-battle ship, took the sloop-of-war to Bermuda, and there a garbled
-report of the action between Captain Whinyate's and Captain Jones's
-vessels was written. But the American captain and his gallant crew were
-soon exchanged, and returned home, where their victory had been given its
-true value. They received twenty-five thousand dollars from Congress as
-prize-money, and a gold medal was given to Captain Jones and a silver one
-to each of the officers. The legislature of Pennsylvania gave Lieutenant
-Biddle a sword for his gallantry.
-
-
-
-
-THE "CONSTITUTION" AND THE "JAVA"
-
-
-At the beginning of the war of 1812 there were but three first-class
-frigates in our navy, and but five vessels of any description were
-fit to go to sea. But the war with Tripoli and the gallant deeds of
-the American officers had made the service popular with the public. In
-March, 1812, an act was passed which appropriated money to put all these
-vessels in condition to meet the enemy on a more equal footing, and a
-naval committee was formed to deal with the emergency. Langdon Cheves
-was appointed chairman, and he took hold of the great task of rebuilding
-and regenerating the naval service with enthusiasm and good judgment.
-The result was that the committee expressed the opinion "that it was the
-true policy of the United States to build up a navy establishment, as the
-cheapest, the safest, and the best protection to their sea-coast and to
-their commerce, and that such an establishment was inseparably connected
-with the future prosperity, safety, and glory of the country."
-
-When war was declared, the "Constitution" was in good condition, but
-the "Chesapeake" and the "Constellation" were not seaworthy. These were
-recommended to be immediately put in condition, and ten other frigates,
-averaging thirty-eight guns each, to be built. There was no difficulty in
-raising the crews for these vessels. Owing to the impressment of American
-and other seamen into the British service, the Cross of St. George had
-come to be so hated by the fishermen, coastwise sailors, and merchantmen
-that they sailed, drove, or walked to Philadelphia, Baltimore, and the
-other places where the frigates were fitting out, eager to sign the
-articles which made them American men-o'war's-men. They were not drafted
-into the service like many of the British Jackies, at the point of the
-pistol, but came because they wanted to, and because with the building up
-of a new navy there came a chance to see the flag they hated trailed in
-defeat. That and nothing else was the reason for the wonderful success of
-American arms upon the sea during the war of 1812. The American officers,
-smarting under past indignities to the service and to themselves, went
-into the many actions with determination and enthusiasm, combined with
-the experience of a rough-and-tumble sea,--experience which with anything
-like an equal force meant either victory or absolute destruction.
-
-The "Constitution," under Hull, had escaped from the British squadron,
-under Broke, off the Jersey coast, had defeated the frigate "Guerriere,"
-and in all her history had shown herself to be a lucky ship. William
-Bainbridge had been given the command of the "Constellation," but,
-arriving at Boston, Hull had found it necessary to give up his command,
-and Bainbridge immediately applied for "Old Ironsides."
-
-The victories of the American frigates "Constitution" and "United States"
-over the British "Guerriere" and "Macedonian" had aroused great enthusiasm
-throughout the country, and the government had decided to change its
-timorous policy. Hoping to draw some of the British vessels away from the
-coast and cause them to be distributed over a wider horizon, expeditions
-were arranged to strike the enemy at many distant points. Bainbridge's
-orders were to sail for the Indian Ocean and capture or destroy as
-many English merchant-vessels as possible. His squadron, besides the
-"Constitution," 44, consisted of the "Essex," 32, Captain David Porter,
-and the "Hornet," 18, Master-Commandant James Lawrence. Bainbridge and
-Lawrence put to sea from Boston on the 26th of October, while Porter
-left the Delaware on the 24th to rendezvous at Porto Praya, on the South
-American coast.
-
-A few days later, H. M. S. "Java," a thirty-eight-gun frigate,
-Captain Henry Lambert, having two merchant-ships under convoy, sailed
-from Portsmouth, England, for India. She also had as passengers the
-newly-appointed governor of India, Lieutenant-General Thomas Hislop, and
-many naval and army officers, who were being carried out to their posts.
-
-The "Constitution," arriving at Porto Praya, and failing to find Porter
-in the "Essex," put to sea again, stopping at Fernando de Noronha in
-the hope of meeting her there. Lawrence, in the "Hornet," challenged the
-British sloop-of-war "Bonne Citoyenne" to single combat; but her commander
-declined, in view of the presence of the "Constitution." Bainbridge
-wrote that he would not interfere, and pledged him his honor to give the
-Englishman the opportunity to fight the "Hornet" to the death. Hoping to
-bring the action about, Bainbridge sailed away, and remained four days.
-But the British captain was determined not to fight, and Lawrence was thus
-denied the opportunity he afterwards had with the ill-fated "Chesapeake."
-
-Near the end of December, 1812, the "Constitution" was cruising off
-the coast of Brazil, about thirty miles from Bahia. The wind was light
-from the northeast, and Bainbridge was moving under short sail. "Old
-Ironsides," a ready sailer when in condition, had been off the stocks so
-long and was so befouled by her stay in tropical waters that she moved
-rather sluggishly, and had not the capacity for legging it that she had
-when Hull had carried her from under the guns of the British squadron.
-Her sails were patched and her rigging was old, but Bainbridge had done
-all he could with her, and his men were full of confidence. She was
-the "Constitution," and that was enough for them. They only wanted an
-opportunity to repeat or surpass some of her previous exploits.
-
-They had not long to wait. At nine o'clock on the morning of December
-29, the man at the fore-crosstrees passed the cry of "Sail-ho," and soon
-from the deck two sails could be seen to the north, near the coast. They
-were both made out to be full-rigged ships, one standing in cautiously
-for the land and the other keeping a course out to sea, pushing down
-gallantly under a full press of canvas. The one inshore was the American
-ship "William," which had been captured by the British, and the other was
-the "Java." The jackies who lined the nettings of the "Constitution" soon
-discovered that their wishes were to be granted, for the larger ship was
-evidently determined to come up, and could be nothing but a man-of-war
-looking for a fight.
-
-By about eleven Captain Bainbridge took in his royals and went about
-on the other tack. The Englishman was coming nearer now, and hoisted
-the private signals, English, Spanish, and Portuguese, in succession.
-Bainbridge hoisted the private signal of the day, and finding that it was
-not answered, cleared ship for action immediately. Then, wishing to draw
-his enemy from his consort, he set his mainsails and royals and stood out
-to sea. The "Java" came up rapidly, and made sail in a parallel course.
-Finding that the other ship did not follow, and desiring to make the other
-vessel disclose her identity, Bainbridge showed his colors,--his broad
-pennant at the main, the Stars and Stripes at the peak, another at the
-maintop-gallant-mast, and the American jack at the fore. This was shortly
-followed by his adversary, who hoisted an English ensign and displayed a
-private signal.
-
-All this time the "Java" was rapidly gaining on the "Constitution," and
-Bainbridge, finding that he was outsailed, took in his royals and went
-about on the other tack, so as to pass within pistol-shot of the other.
-
-The "Constitution," still a mile to leeward, soon fired a shot across
-the "Java's" bows to induce her to show her colors, which she had hauled
-down again. This had the desired effect, for the bits of bunting went up
-with a run, and a whole broadside was fired at the "Constitution." But
-the range was too great for successful marksmanship, both these shots and
-those fired by the "Constitution" in return dropping harmlessly alongside.
-
-By a little after two o'clock the frigates were within half a mile of each
-other, and the action then began with great spirit. The Englishman got
-the range first, and sent in a broadside which hulled the "Constitution"
-and killed and wounded several of her men. It soon became evident to
-Bainbridge that Captain Lambert's guns carried better than his own,
-so began luffing up repeatedly in order to shorten the distance for an
-effective broadside. He was sure of his marksmanship if once his men got
-the range, for the same gun-captains were with him that had helped Hull
-to her great victory over the "Guerriere." It was difficult to draw up,
-as the Englishman was forging ahead with the evident desire to sail close
-to the wind and keep the weather-gage at all hazards. The "Constitution"
-could only luff up at opportune moments, for Lambert's position was one
-which would enable him to rake the "Constitution" from stem to stern if
-he luffed when the broadside was ready. But he edged up cautiously, and
-soon the vessels were but musket-shot apart. A continuous fire now began,
-and the wind being light, both vessels were soon so shrouded in smoke
-that only at intervals could the gunners make out their adversaries.
-Along they sailed, side by side, giving and receiving tremendous volleys.
-About this time a solid shot went crashing along the quarter-deck of the
-"Constitution" and, striking her wheel, smashed it to pieces. The gear had
-been rove below, however, and the ship throughout the remainder of the
-battle was steered by means of tackles on the berth-deck. The captain's
-orders were shouted down through the after-hatch and repeated by a line
-of midshipmen to the men at the tackles.
-
-Bainbridge, in full uniform, stood by the weather-rigging at the time
-the disabling shot came aboard, and a small copper bolt drove through
-the upper part of his leg, inflicting a bad wound. But fearing that if
-he left the deck his men might lose some of the ardor with which they
-were fighting, he would not go below though frequently urged so to do.
-Instead of this he bound it up with his handkerchief, and remained at
-his post, his epaulettes a fair mark for the sharpshooters in the tops
-of the enemy. His men down in the waist of the "Constitution" looked now
-and again at the imposing figure by the mizzen-mast, and bent to their
-work with a will, firing as rapidly as their guns could be loaded. The
-distance between the ships was now so short that all the smaller guns and
-carronades could be used, and a rapid and well-directed fire was kept up
-both upon the hull and the spars of their adversary.
-
-The "Java," by her superior sailing qualities, was enabled to reach well
-forward on the "Constitution's" bow when she eased off her sheets to
-round down across the bows of the American and rake. But Bainbridge, in
-spite of the disadvantage of wrecked steering-gear, was too quick for
-her. He put his helm up, and wore around in the smoke, thus keeping his
-broadside presented. The Englishman at last succeeded in getting under
-the "Constitution's" stern and pouring in a broadside at close range. But,
-fortunately, comparatively little damage was done. The superiority of the
-gunnery of the Americans, save for a few of the Englishman's well-directed
-shots, had been from the first far superior to that of the Englishmen. The
-fire of the "Java" was far less rapid and less careful than that of the
-"Constitution." Had the gunnery been equal, the story of the fight would
-have had a different ending.
-
-But the Americans labored under a great disadvantage, and Captain
-Bainbridge, determined to close with the enemy at all hazards, put his
-helm down and headed directly for the enemy, thus exposing himself to
-a fore-and-aft fire, which might have been deadly. But for some reason
-the Englishman failed to avail himself of this opportunity, only one
-9-pounder being discharged. When near enough, the "Constitution" rounded
-to alongside and delivered her entire starboard broadside, which crashed
-through the timbers of the "Java" and sent the splinters flying along the
-entire length of her bulwarks. The shrieks of the injured could be plainly
-heard in the lulls in the firing, and soon the bowsprit and jib-boom of
-the enemy were hanging down forward, where they lay, with the gear of the
-head-sails and booms in a terrible tangle. With this misfortune the "Java"
-lost her superiority in sailing, and this was the turn in the action.
-Quickly availing himself of this advantage, Bainbridge again wore in the
-smoke before Captain Lambert could discover his intentions, and, getting
-under the "Java's" stern, poured in a rapid broadside, which swept the
-decks from one end to the other, killing and wounding a score of men. Then
-sailing around, he reloaded, and fired another broadside from a diagonal
-position, which carried away the "Java's" foremast and otherwise wrecked
-her.
-
-Captain Lambert, now finding his situation becoming desperate, determined
-to close with the "Constitution" and board her. He tried to bear down
-on her, but the loss of his head-yards and the wreck on his forecastle
-made his vessel unwieldy, and only the stump of his bowsprit fouled the
-mizzen-chains of the American vessel. The American topmen and marines
-during this time were pouring a terrific fire of musketry into the mass of
-men who had gathered forward on the English vessel. An American marine,
-noting the epaulettes of Captain Lambert, took deliberate aim, and shot
-him through the breast. Lambert fell to the deck, and Lieutenant Chads
-assumed the command. The Englishmen, disheartened by the loss of their
-captain, still fought pluckily, though the wreck of the gear forward and
-the loss of their maintop-mast seriously impeded the handling of the guns.
-At each discharge their sails and gear caught fire, and at one time the
-"Java's" engaged broadside seemed a sheet of flame. At about four o'clock
-her mizzen-mast, the last remaining spar aloft, came down, and she swung
-on the waves entirely dismasted. It seemed impossible to continue the
-action, as but half a dozen guns could be brought to bear.
-
-The "Constitution," finding the enemy almost silenced and practically at
-her mercy, drew off to repair damages and re-reeve her gear. Bainbridge
-had great confidence in the _look_ of the "Constitution," as, to all
-outward appearances unharmed, she bore down again and placed herself in
-a position to send in another broadside. His surmise was correct, for the
-one flag which had remained aloft was hauled down before the firing could
-be resumed.
-
-Lieutenant George Porter, of the "Constitution," was immediately
-sent aboard the Englishman. As he reached the deck he found the
-conditions there even worse than had been imagined by those aboard the
-"Constitution." Many of the broadside guns were overturned, and, though
-the wreck had been partially cleared away, the tangle of rigging was
-still such that the remaining guns were practically useless. The dead and
-wounded literally covered the decks, and as the lieutenant went aboard
-the dead were being dropped overboard. The loss of her masts made her
-roll heavily, and occasionally her broadside guns went under. Lambert
-was mortally wounded. Lieutenant Chads, too, was badly hurt. When he
-had assumed command, in spite of the fact that he knew his battle was
-hopeless, he had tried to refit to meet the American when she came down
-for the second time. He only struck his colors when he knew that further
-resistance meant murder for his own brave men. The "Java" was a mere hulk,
-and the hulk was a sieve.
-
-Comparison of the injuries of the "Java" and "Constitution" is
-interesting. With the exception of her maintop-sail-yard, the
-"Constitution" came out of the fight with every yard crossed and every
-spar in position. The injuries to her hull were trifling. The "Java" had
-every stick, one after another, shot out of her until nothing was left but
-a few stumps. It might have been possible to have taken her into Bahia,
-but Bainbridge thought himself too far away from home; and so, after the
-prisoners and wounded had been removed to the "Constitution," a fuse was
-laid, and the American got under weigh. Not long after a great volume of
-smoke went up into the air, and a terrific explosion was heard as the last
-of the "Java" sunk beneath the Southern Ocean.
-
-When the "Constitution" arrived at Bahia, Captain Lambert was carried
-up on the quarter-deck, and lay near where Bainbridge, still suffering
-acutely from his wounds, had been brought. Bainbridge was supported by
-two of his officers as he came over to Lambert's cot, for he was very
-weak from loss of blood. He carried in his hand the sword which the dying
-Englishman had been obliged to surrender to him. Bainbridge put it down
-beside him on his bed, saying,--
-
-"The sword of so brave a man should never be taken from him."
-
-The two noble enemies grasped hands, and tears shone in the eyes of
-both. A few days afterwards the Englishman was put on shore, where more
-comfortable quarters were provided for him, but he failed rapidly, and
-died five days after.
-
-The news of the capture of the "Java" created consternation in England.
-The loss of the "Guerriere" and the "Macedonian" were thought to have been
-ill-luck. But they now discovered an inkling of what they rightly learned
-before the war was over,--that the navy of the United States, small as
-it appeared, was a force which, man for man and gun for gun, could whip
-anything afloat.
-
-When Bainbridge arrived in Boston he and his officers were met by a
-large delegation of citizens, and many festivities and dinners were held
-and given in their honor. The old "Constitution," rightly deserving
-the attention of the government, was put in dry-dock to be thoroughly
-overhauled. Of the five hundred merchantmen captured by Americans, she
-had taken more than her share, and of the three frigates captured she had
-taken two.
-
-
-
-
-THE LAST OF THE "ESSEX"
-
-
-When Captain David Porter in the "Essex" failed to meet Captain Bainbridge
-in the "Constitution" off the Brazilian coast, and learned that the latter
-had captured the "Java" and returned to the United States, he was free to
-make his own plans and choose his own cruising-ground.
-
-He captured an English vessel or so, but his ambition was to make a voyage
-which would result in the capture of as many vessels as could be manned
-from the "Essex." He thought the matter over at length and then formulated
-a plan which few other men would have thought of. No large war-vessel of
-the American government had been in the South Pacific for some years, and
-now the English whalers and merchantmen pursued their trade unmolested,
-save by a few privateers which sailed haphazard in the waters along the
-coast. David Porter decided to round the Horn, thus cutting himself off
-from his nearest base of supplies, and live the best way he might off
-vessels captured from the enemy.
-
-He knew that he could not hope for a hospitable reception at any port
-he visited, but if he could keep his magazine and store-rooms supplied,
-determined to capture or destroy every vessel flying the British flag in
-those waters.
-
-He started on his long voyage at the end of January, 1813, during the
-Southern summer season, when the gales and hurricanes in that region are
-at their fiercest. He had not been at sea very long before the scurvy
-broke out on the ship, and it was only by the most rigorous discipline
-and cleanliness that the disease was kept under control. By the middle
-of February the "Essex" reached the Cape, and, the weather having been
-moderately free from squalls, they were congratulating themselves on
-avoiding the usual dangers of those waters when a storm came up which in
-a short time began to blow with hurricane force. Gale succeeded gale,
-followed by intervals of calm, but nothing terrifying occurred until
-towards the end of February, when a storm which exceeded all the others
-in its fierceness began to blow. They were near a barren country, and,
-even should they reach land, there was no possible chance of escaping
-the slow torture of death from hunger and thirst. Great gray waves,
-measuring hundreds of feet from crest to crest, swept them resistlessly
-on towards the menacing shore, which could be seen dimly through the
-driving spray frowning to leeward. Many of the waves broke clear over the
-little frigate, knocking in her ports, opening her timbers, battering her
-boats to pieces as they swung on the davits, and loosening her bowsprit
-and other spars so that they threatened at each movement to go by the
-board. The crew, weakened and disheartened by disease and the excess of
-labor, lost heart and considered the "Essex" a doomed ship. David Glascoe
-Farragut, then a midshipman aboard of her, afterwards wrote that never
-before had he seen good seamen so paralyzed by fear at the mere terrors
-of the sea. On the third day an enormous wave struck her fairly on the
-weather-bow and broadside, and she went over on her beam ends, burying
-her lee-bulwark in the foam. It looked for a moment as if she would
-never right herself. The ports on the gun-deck were all stove in and she
-seemed to be filling with water. The head-rails were swept away, and one
-of the cutters was lifted bodily from the davits and smashed against the
-wheel. The fellows there stood bravely at their posts, though thoroughly
-terrified at the position of the ship. The water poured down below, and
-the men on the gun-deck thought she was already plunging to the bottom.
-The grizzly boatswain, crazy with fear, cried out in his terror,--
-
-"The ship's broadside is stove in! We are sinking!"
-
-That was the greatest of their dangers, though, and better days were in
-store for them. Early in March the "Essex" succeeded in reaching Mocha
-Island, and the men, starved on half and quarter rations, were sent ashore
-to hunt wild hogs and horses. These were shot in numbers and salted down
-for food. The crew soon regained their health and spirits, and Porter
-sailed away for Valparaiso, putting in there to refit his damaged rigging
-and spars.
-
-And now began a cruise which is numbered among the most successful
-in the country's history. Porter had been at sea but a few days when
-he overhauled a Peruvian privateer, the "Nereyda." To his surprise,
-twenty-four American sailors were found prisoners aboard of her. When
-asked to explain, the Peruvian captain replied that as his country was
-an ally of Great Britain, and that as war was soon to be declared between
-Spain and America, he thought he would anticipate matters and be sure of
-his prizes. Porter, in forcible English, explained the Peruvian's mistake,
-and, to make the matter more clear, threw all his guns and ammunition
-overboard, so that he might repent of his folly in a more diplomatic
-condition.
-
-The Peruvian captain begrudgingly gave Porter a list of all the English
-vessels in those waters. The first one captured was the whaler "Barclay."
-On the 29th of April the "Essex" took the "Montezuma," with a cargo
-of fourteen hundred barrels of whale-oil. Later in the same day the
-"Georgiana" and the "Policy" were overhauled. These prizes, with their
-cargoes, in England were worth half a million dollars; but, better than
-money, they were plentifully supplied with ropes, spars, cordage, stores,
-and ammunition, of which Porter still stood badly in need.
-
-Finding that the "Georgiana" was a fast sailer and pierced for eighteen
-guns, Porter decided to make use of her as a cruiser, and, fitting her
-up, placed Lieutenant Downes in command of her, with forty men for a
-crew. Then the "Essex" took the "Atlantic" and the "Greenwich." With this
-very respectable squadron Porter sailed for the mainland, Lieutenant
-Downes in the "Georgiana" meanwhile capturing without great difficulty
-the "Catharine" and the "Rose." A third vessel, the "Hector," fought
-viciously, but was eventually secured after a stiff little battle.
-
-Young Farragut had been made the prize-master of the "Barclay." He was
-only twelve years old, but Captain Porter, who was very fond of him,
-was confident of his ability to bring the ship into port. The English
-captain had been persuaded to act as navigator; but once out of sight of
-the squadron he refused to sail for Valparaiso. He afterwards said it was
-merely to frighten the boy. But the boy did not frighten at all. Instead
-he called one of his best seamen to him and ordered sail made. Then he
-told the captain that if he did not go below and stay there he would have
-him thrown overboard. The Englishman retreated below precipitately, and
-Farragut brought the ship safely in, a first proof of the courage and
-skill he was to show in after-life. Few boys of twelve would have done it
-even in those days when midshipmen soon became men regardless of age.
-
-The "Atlantic," being reckoned the fastest vessel of her kind afloat
-in those waters, was now given to Downes, who had been promoted to
-master-commandant, and renamed the "Essex Junior." She was given twenty
-guns and sixty men, and soon proved her worth. All of this time Porter had
-been self-supporting. Neither he nor his squadron had cost his government
-a penny in money, and the prizes he captured, including the "Charlton,"
-"Seringapatam," "New Zealand," and "Sir Andrew Hammond," could not be
-reckoned much short of a million and a half of dollars, a tremendous sum
-in those days, when the pay of a captain of a naval vessel was only twelve
-hundred dollars,--less than the pay of a boatswain to-day.
-
-But Porter grew tired of his easy victories over merchantmen and
-privateers. He had succeeded in frightening the ships of the British
-entirely from the ocean. His one ship, a small frigate, had complete
-control in the South Pacific, and the Admiralty wondered at the skill
-and ingenuity of a man who could manage his fleets so adroitly. They
-determined to capture him; and two smart ships, the "Phoebe" and the
-"Cherub," were sent out for this purpose. Porter heard of their coming,
-and was willing enough to meet them if it were possible. He went to
-Nukahiva, in the Marquesas Islands, to put the "Essex" in thorough repair
-and give his men a rest. He remained there two months, sailing near the
-end of the year 1813 for Valparaiso, with the hope of their meeting the
-English cruisers.
-
-The "Essex" had been there but a month when the "Essex Junior," which
-was cruising in the offing in anticipation of the arrival of the British
-ships, signalled, "Two enemy's ships in sight." Half the crew of the
-"Essex" were ashore enjoying sailor-men's liberty. Even if they all got
-aboard, it was fair to assume that they would be in no condition to fight
-should the Englishmen choose to violate the neutrality of the port by
-firing on them. Porter immediately fired a gun and hoisted the recall
-signal for all boats and men to return. The English captain, Hillyar, ran
-the "Phoebe" on the wind straight for the "Essex," the "Cherub" following
-closely. But when they reached the anchorage, the "Essex" was ready for
-action and the crew were at their stations. The "Phoebe" went around under
-the quarter of the "Essex," luffing up scarcely fifteen feet away. It
-was an exciting moment. Hillyar could see the men at their guns, and his
-ardor was perceptibly diminished. Had he given the order to fire then,
-he would have been raked fore and aft, and the tale of this last fight of
-the "Essex" might have had a different ending.
-
-As it was, he jumped upon the nettings, and said, with distinguished
-politeness,--
-
-"Captain Hillyar's compliments to Captain Porter, and hopes he is well."
-
-Porter _was_ well, but he was in no humor to bandy compliments.
-
-"Very well, I thank you," he replied; "but I hope you will not come too
-near, for fear some accident might take place which would be disagreeable
-to you." And at a wave of his hand the kedge-anchors and grappling-irons
-were swung up to the yard-arms, ready to be dropped on the decks of
-the enemy. The men swarmed along the nettings, ready to jump aboard the
-Englishman as soon as she was close enough.
-
-But Hillyar, not liking the looks of things, changed his tone
-considerably. He backed his yards hurriedly, and said in an excited
-manner,--
-
-"I had no intention of getting aboard of you. I assure you that if I fall
-aboard it will be entirely accidental."
-
-"Well," said Porter, "you have no business where you are. If you touch a
-rope-yarn of this ship I shall board instantly."
-
-Porter then hailed Downes on the "Essex Junior" and told him to be
-prepared to repel the enemy. The vessels were in a position to be almost
-at the mercy of the Americans. When the "Phoebe" ranged alongside, the
-crews could see each other through the ports, and laughed and made
-grimaces at one another. One young fellow in the "Essex," who had come
-aboard drunk, stood at one of the guns, match in hand. He saw one of the
-English jackies grinning at him. He was primed for a fight, and yelled
-across,--
-
-"I'll stop your making faces, my fine fellow." He leaned forward to
-apply the match to the vent, and was only saved from firing it in time by
-Lieutenant McKnight of the gun-division, who knocked him sprawling. Had
-that gun been fired, the "Phoebe" would have been taken.
-
-There seems no doubt of Captain Hillyar's previous intention to try to
-take the "Essex" as she lay, regardless of the neutrality. Captain Porter
-would have been justified if he had fired at that time.
-
-But the Englishmen were willing to bide their time. Two more British ships
-were expected, and they felt sure of their prey.
-
-A strange state of affairs now ensued. The officers meeting on shore
-exchanged the proper courtesies, and strict orders were issued to the
-men, who for a wonder were restrained from fighting. Porter flew from
-his foremast a great white burgee, bearing the legend, "Free Trade and
-Sailors' Rights." Captain Hillyar soon hoisted one in reply, "God and
-Country: British Sailors' Best Rights. Traitors Offend Both." Porter then
-had another painted, and sent it to the mizzen, which read, "God, Our
-Country, and Liberty. Tyrants Offend Them."
-
-These amenities had the effect of making the crew eager for a speedy
-settlement of the question. Once Captain Hillyar fired a gun in challenge;
-but upon Porter's accepting it, the Englishman sailed down to his consort
-the "Cherub," and Porter returned. The Englishman, in spite of his
-challenge, was not willing to fight a single battle.
-
-Finally, Captain Porter, learning of the expected early arrival of the
-"Tagus," 38, the "Raccoon," and two other ships, determined to put to sea
-and there fight it out with the two frigates as best he might. The next
-day, the 28th of March, 1814, a squall came up, and the "Essex" lost one
-of her anchors and dragged the other out to sea. Not a moment was to be
-lost in getting sail on the ship, for he saw a chance to sail between the
-southwest point of the harbor and the enemy. Under close-reefed topsails
-Porter made a course which seemed likely to carry him just where he wanted
-to go, when a heavy squall struck the ship, carrying away the maintop-mast
-and throwing the men who were aloft on the top-gallant-yard into the sea.
-
-This great misfortune at a time when there was at least a fighting chance
-of getting away put a different aspect upon the chances of the "Essex."
-Both English vessels immediately gave chase, and Porter, failing to make
-his anchorage, ran for shore, to anchor there and fight it out to the last
-drop of blood. The "Phoebe" and the "Cherub," bedecked with flags, came
-booming down to where Porter awaited them, flying flags from the stumps of
-his maintop-mast and at almost every point where he could run a halyard.
-
-At about four o'clock the "Phoebe" selected a position under the stern
-of the "Essex," and opened fire at long range. The "Cherub" stood off
-her bow. The fire of the "Phoebe" was terribly destructive, and few guns
-from the "Essex" could be brought to bear upon her. The "Cherub" fared
-differently; and, finding her position too hot, sailed around and took up
-a position by her consort, where a tremendous fire was poured in. Captain
-Porter, with great difficulty, had three of his long 12-pounders hauled
-into his after-cabin, and at last succeeded in opening such a fierce
-and well-aimed fire that the enemy wore about and increased the distance
-between them. The "Phoebe" had three holes in her water-line, had lost the
-use of her mainsail and jib, and had her fore-main- and mizzen-stays shot
-away. Her bowsprit was badly wounded, and she had other injuries below.
-
-But the "Essex" was fighting against terrible odds. The springs on her
-cables were again and again shot away and the crew were being killed
-and wounded in great numbers. When the ships of the enemy returned and
-opened a galling fire from such a position that it could not be returned
-by the "Essex," Porter determined to assume the aggressive. But when he
-attempted to make sail on his ship, he found that most of the running-gear
-had been cut away, only his flying-jib could be spread to the winds. But,
-nothing daunted, he cut his cable, and, spreading his tattered canvases
-the best way he could, made down for the "Cherub" until within range
-of the cannonades, where he gave the Englishman such a drubbing that he
-took to his heels and got out of range altogether. The "Phoebe" managed to
-keep her distance, and with her long guns kept sending in broadside after
-broadside, which swept the decks of the doomed "Essex" and mowed her men
-down like chaff. Captain Hillyar was taking no chances.
-
-The slaughter on the "Essex" was horrible. One gun was manned by three
-crews, fifteen men being killed at it. Men were dying like sheep; but
-those who remained at the guns, and even the wounded, had no thought of
-surrender. A sailor named Bissley, a young Scotchman by birth, lost his
-leg. He lifted himself, and said to some of his shipmates,--
-
-"I hope I have proved myself worthy of the country of my adoption. I am
-no longer of any use to you or her; so good-by." And before he could
-be restrained he pushed himself through the port into the sea and was
-drowned.
-
-Midshipman Farragut acted as captain's aid, quarter-gunner, powder-boy,
-and anything that was required of him. He went below for some primers,
-when the captain of a gun was struck full in the face by a sixteen-pound
-shot, falling back upon the midshipman, spattering him with blood
-and tumbling them both down the hatch together. The blow stunned the
-midshipman for a moment; but when he recovered, he rushed again on deck.
-Captain Porter, seeing him covered with blood, asked him if he were
-wounded.
-
-"I believe not, sir."
-
-"Then, where are the primers?"
-
-This first brought him completely to his senses. He rushed below again and
-brought the primers up. Captain Porter fell, stunned by the windage of a
-shot, but got to his feet unaided.
-
-Though most other men would have surrendered the ship, Porter made up his
-mind to run her towards the shore and beach her broadside on, fight until
-the last and then blow her to pieces. An explosion occurred below and
-a fire broke out in two places. The decks were so covered with dead and
-dying that the men who remained upright could scarcely move among them.
-The cockpit would hold not another wounded man, and the shots which came
-in killed men who were under the surgeon's knife. Out of the two hundred
-and fifty-five souls who began the fight only seventy-five, including
-officers and boys, remained on the ship fit for duty. Many of the men,
-thinking the ship was about to blow up, had jumped overboard and had
-drowned or were struggling in the water in the attempt to swim to land.
-The long-range shots of the enemy were striking her at every fire. The
-Englishmen had the distance accurately and were battering her to pieces
-as though at target-practice.
-
-Captain Porter, at last seeing that resistance was only a waste of life,
-called his officers into consultation. But one, Lieutenant McKnight, could
-respond, and at 6.20 P.M. the order was given to haul down the flag.
-
-When the British boarding-officer came over the side, the sight of the
-carnage was so shocking that he had to lean against a gun for support. The
-force of the "Essex" was forty-six guns and two hundred and fifty-five
-men. That of the English, in conservative estimates, was seventy-three
-guns and four hundred and twenty-one men. The English lost five killed
-and ten wounded. The "Essex" fifty-eight killed, sixty-six wounded, and
-thirty-one missing.
-
-Thus died the "Essex" in one of the bloodiest and most obstinate combats
-on record.
-
-
-
-
-THE CAPTAIN OF THE MAINTOP
-
-
-James Jarvis was one of the "young gentlemen" on the "Constellation"
-during the war with France. "Young gentlemen" was what the midshipmen
-were called in the old naval service, and Jarvis was the youngest of them
-all, being just thirteen at the time of the action with the "Vengeance."
-He was the smallest officer aboard, and his most important duties were
-those of passing the word from the quarter-deck forward, and taking his
-station aloft in the maintop, where he was learning the mysteries of the
-maze of gear which went through the lubber's-hole or belayed in the top.
-He also stood at quarters with his diminutive sword drawn,--a smaller
-edition of the lieutenants, who were allowed to wear one epaulette and
-who could make a louder noise through the speaking-trumpet than Jarvis
-could hope to for years. Down in the midshipmen's mess, by virtue of his
-diminutive stature and tender years, he was not much interfered with by
-Wederstrandt, Henry, Vandyke, and the bigger men. But he fought one or two
-of the young gentlemen nearer his age, and, though frequently defeated,
-stood up as strongly as possible for what he deemed his rights. He was
-a manly little reefer, and up in the maintop, where he was stationed in
-time of action, the men swore by him. He was sensible enough not to give
-any orders without the professional opinion of one of the old jackies,
-who always ventured it with a touch of the cap, a respectful "Sir," and
-perhaps a half-concealed smile, which was more of interest than amusement.
-Thirteen was rather a tender age at which to command men of fifty, but
-the midshipmen of those days were not ordinary boys. They went out from
-their comfortable homes aboard ships where men were even rougher and less
-well-disciplined than they are to-day, and they had either to sink or
-swim. It was Spartan treatment; but a year of it made men and sailors of
-them or else sent them posting home to their mothers and sisters.
-
-Jarvis loved it, and did his duty like a man. He knew the lead of all
-the gear on his mast, and kept his few pieces of brass-work aloft shining
-like new. He kept the rigging in his top, even when there was no occasion
-for it, coiled down as though for inspection, although nobody but the
-topmen and yardmen ever had occasion to examine it. He was as active as a
-monkey, and, scorning the "lubber's-hole," went over the futtock-shrouds
-as smartly as any of the light-yardmen.
-
-The greatest and probably the only regret of midshipman Jarvis's short
-life was that he had not joined the great frigate before she met and
-defeated the "Insurgente" the year before. He wanted to be in a great
-action. Nothing seemed to make him feel more of a man than when the long
-18-pounders were fired in broadside at target-practice. If he had been
-but a boy, instead of an officer with a gold-laced cap and a dirk and all
-the dignities pertaining to those habiliments, he would have clapped his
-hands and shouted for sheer joy. But the eyes of his men were upon him,
-and so he stood watching the flight of the shots, and biting hard on his
-lips he kept his composure.
-
-Captain Truxton, ever mindful of his midshipmen, had disposed them in
-different parts of the ship with regard to their size and usefulness.
-The older ones had been given gun-divisions, while the youngsters were
-placed on the fo'c's'le or in the tops, where they might be of assistance,
-but would more certainly be out of harm's way. Such a thought was not
-suggested on the "Constellation." If it had been, little Jarvis would
-probably have resigned immediately, or at the very least have burst into
-unmanly tears. As it was, he felt that his post aloft was as important
-as any on the ship, and he promised himself that if another Frenchman was
-sighted he would stay there whether the mast were up or down.
-
-So, on the 1st of February, 1800, just about a year after the capture of
-the "Insurgente," while they were bowling along under easy sail, about
-fifteen miles off Basse Terre, a large sail, which appeared to be a French
-frigate, was sighted to the southward. Jarvis went aloft two ratlines at
-a time, his heart bounding with joy at the prospect of the chance of a
-fight.
-
-On assuring himself that she was a large ship, Captain Truxton immediately
-set all sail and took a course which soon brought her hull above the
-horizon and showed the Americans beyond a doubt that she was a ship-of-war
-of heavier metal than the "Constellation." Nothing daunted, Truxton bore
-on his course until the gun-streaks of the other vessel could be plainly
-seen. Instead of showing the same desire to speak, the stranger held on,
-pointing a little off his course, as though anxious to avoid an encounter.
-
-But the breeze, which had been light, now died away altogether, and the
-sea became calm. There the two great vessels drifted in sight of each
-other all night and part of the following day, awaiting the wind which
-would enable them to close. Jarvis was in a fever of impatience. A half
-a dozen times he got permission from the officer of the deck, and with
-a telescope almost as long as himself, clambered up to the main-royal
-to report. There was but one opinion among the midshipmen who went
-aloft,--she was a Frenchman. She _could not_ be anything else.
-
-About two o'clock in the afternoon of the next day, up to the northward
-they saw the ripple on the water of the wind they had been waiting for.
-The sail-loosers flew aloft, and every sail was spread to catch it. Soon
-the "Constellation" was pushing her way through the water, and the foam
-was even flying from the wave-tops here and there. The chase had caught
-the breeze at about the same time, and the Americans could see by the
-line of white under her bow that she was beginning to leg it at a handsome
-rate. But the "Constellation" was in excellent condition for a race, and
-by degrees drew up on the other ship, which as they reached her was seen
-to lie very low in the water, as though deep-laden. They were sure to
-discover who she was before nightfall, so Truxton cleared his ship for
-action. Jarvis went aloft to his top and saw the backstays lashed and the
-preventer-braces securely hooked and rove. Extra muskets were carried up
-into his top for the use of the jackies and marines when they should come
-into close quarters, for then the fire of sharpshooters would be almost
-as valuable as the shots of the great guns.
-
-Their work had been over an hour and the sun had set in a clear sky before
-the "Constellation" drew up to gunshot distance. It was moonlight before
-she came within effective range. The battle-lanterns were lit, and the
-long row of lights on the Frenchman showed that he, too, was prepared
-for fight. The sky was clear, and the moon, which was nearly at the full,
-made the outlines of the vessels perfectly visible to the men at the guns.
-Jarvis, from his post aloft, could plainly see the lines of heads along
-the poop, and fancied that he could make out a midshipman almost as young
-as he, who was clambering about the maintop of the other vessel. He heard
-the beating of a drum and the sound of cheers as the Frenchmen moved to
-their quarters.
-
-On the decks below there was not a sound. Truxton had given his men
-their orders. There was to be no cheering until there was something to
-cheer for. They were to await the order to fire until the enemy was close
-aboard, and then, and not until then, was the broadside to be delivered.
-The division-officers had gone about quietly repeating these commands
-to the gun-captains, and there was nothing further to say. Only to wait
-until the battle began. Jarvis repeated to his topmen, word for word, the
-instructions he had received, that in their aim particular attention was
-to be paid to the officers of the enemy.
-
-Soon a gun from the after-battery of the Frenchman was fired. This was
-followed shortly by all the guns that would bear. Some of the shots
-crashed into the hull of the "Constellation," and one of them killed
-several men. The division-officers glanced appealingly to Truxton, in
-the hope of the order to fire; but he merely held up his hand. Again the
-broadside came, and men seemed to be falling everywhere. The strain below
-and aloft was terrific. But the officers stood steadily, with a word of
-encouragement here and there, and the men did not flinch.
-
-[Illustration: THE "CONSTELLATION" AND THE "VENGEANCE"]
-
-At last the "Constellation" came abreast the after-ports of the Frenchman,
-and Truxton, throwing her off a little, so that all his broadside would
-bear in a diagonal direction, loudly shouted the order to fire.
-
-The telling broadside was delivered, and the battle was on in earnest.
-To those aloft the crash of the long eighteens into the hull of the
-enemy at every other downward roll of the "Constellation" showed how
-well the American gunners had learned to shoot, while the short bark of
-the cannonades and the shrieks in the brief pauses from the decks of the
-Frenchman told of the terrible effects of the fire among the enemy. The
-guns of the Frenchman were well served and rapidly fired, but they were
-aiming on the upward roll of the sea, and their shots went high. Several
-balls from the smaller pieces had lodged in the foremast and mainmast,
-and one had struck just below the futtock-band of the maintop, where
-Jarvis was, and sent the splinters flying up and all about him. Yard-arm
-to yard-arm they sailed for three long, bloody hours, until the firing
-of the Frenchman gradually slackened and then stopped almost altogether.
-The Americans had suffered less on the decks than aloft, and Jarvis's
-topmen were employed most of the time in splicing and re-reeving gear.
-The discharge of the "Constellation's" broadside-guns did not diminish
-for a moment, and so fast was the firing that many of the guns became
-overheated, and the men had to crawl out of the exposed ports to draw up
-buckets of water to cool them.
-
-At about midnight Truxton managed to draw ahead of his adversary in the
-smoke, and, taking a raking position, sent in such a broadside that the
-Frenchman was silenced completely.
-
-Jarvis and the men in the maintop had little time to use their muskets.
-Several long shots had struck the mast, and almost every shroud and
-backstay had been carried away. As the "Constellation" bore down upon her
-adversary to deal her the death-blow, the mast began swaying frightfully.
-There was a cry from the men at Jarvis's side, and the marines and topmen
-began dropping through the lubber's-hole, swinging themselves down the
-sides of the swaying mast by whatever gear they could lay their hands to.
-
-Jarvis did not move. One of the older seamen took him by the shoulder and
-urged him to go below. The mast was going, he said, and it meant certain
-death to stay aloft.
-
-Little Jarvis smiled at him. "This is my post of duty," he replied, "and
-I am going to stay here until ordered below."
-
-At this moment a terrific crackling was heard, and the old man-o'-warsman
-went over the edge of the top. All the strain was on one or two of the
-shrouds, and, just as he reached the deck, with a tremendous crash the
-great mast went over the side.
-
-Jarvis had kept his promise to stay by his mast whether it was up or down.
-
-The Frenchman, not so badly injured aloft, took advantage of the condition
-of the "Constellation," and, slowly making sail before the wreck was
-cleared away, faded into the night. It was afterwards discovered that she
-was the "Vengeance," of fifty-two guns. She succeeded in reaching Curacoa
-in a sinking condition.
-
-When the news of the fight reached home, Congress gave Truxton a medal
-and a sword, and prize money to the officers and crew.
-
-For little Jarvis, the midshipman, who preferred to die at his post,
-Congress passed a special resolution, which read:
-
-"_Resolved_, That the conduct of James Jarvis, a midshipman in said
-frigate, who gloriously preferred certain death to an abandonment of
-his post, is deserving of the highest praise, and that the loss of so
-promising an officer is a subject of national regret."
-
-History does not show an instance of nobler self-sacrifice, and no such
-honor as this special act of Congress was received by a boy before or
-since.
-
-
-
-
-CUSHING AND THE "ALBEMARLE"
-
-
-Although the Civil War furnished many instances of conspicuous gallantry,
-so many that most of them remain to-day comparatively unknown, none
-was more notable than the torpedo exploit of Lieutenant William Barker
-Cushing. There have been several similar expeditions in our naval
-history. Before Tripoli, Richard Somers made the ill-fated attempt
-with the "Intrepid," and in the war with Spain, Richmond Hobson sunk
-the "Merrimac." There is no question that the personal and sentimental
-aspects of these three hazardous enterprises are similar. All three men
-were young, and each one knew that he took his life in his hands. Somers,
-rather than be captured with his powder, destroyed both his ship and
-himself. Hobson sunk the "Merrimac," but did not succeed in getting her
-athwart the channel. Cushing, in a torpedo-launch, went under the guns of
-the enemy, and escaped both death and imprisonment. On the enemy the moral
-effect of all three exploits must have been the same. Professionally,
-Cushing's exploit has just this distinction: he was successful. Like
-Decatur in the recapture of the "Philadelphia," he carried out in every
-detail the plans he had made. And upon his success the way was opened
-for the Union fleet, and the hopes of the Confederates fled, for only two
-seaports in the South--Charleston and Wilmington--remained open to them.
-
-After the great success of the "Merrimac" in Hampton Roads, the
-Confederates determined to construct a vessel of similar design for use
-in the Southern rivers and sounds. Under great difficulties they built
-the "Albemarle" on the Roanoke River, and carried her into action almost
-before the last rivet was driven. She was a formidable craft in those
-days, and the shots from the vessels of the Northern fleet went harmlessly
-against her iron sides to break and fly into a thousand pieces. On the
-5th of May the "Albemarle" had another fight with a larger fleet of Union
-vessels, which had gathered to hem in and disable her. During the action
-the "Sassacus" saw an opportunity to ram her, and, going ahead at full
-speed, struck the ram a terrific blow amidships. The bow of the "Sassacus"
-was literally torn to pieces by the impact, and the "Albemarle," though
-heeling over and in danger of sinking for a time, finally righted and
-pulled out of the action uninjured, but by no means disabled. All of the
-vessels of the squadron kept up a heavy fire upon her, but she went on to
-her anchorage up the river, where a few repairs made her as good as ever.
-
-It looked to the Unionists as though the story of the "Merrimac" with
-the "Congress" and the "Cumberland" was about to be repeated; that the
-"Albemarle" in course of time would come down at her leisure and destroy
-all Northern vessels in those waters. To make matters worse, the Unionists
-learned that another vessel of a similar type was nearly completed, and
-that the two vessels would attack at the same time,--a combination which,
-with their consorts, seemed irresistible. Something had to be done if the
-command of the sounds of the Carolinas was to remain with the navy of the
-North.
-
-But during the summer of 1864 two steam launches rigged up as
-torpedo-boats, the invention of Engineer J. L. Long, were fitted out at
-New York and brought down through the canals to Albemarle Sound. The bows
-of the boats were cut under and decked over, and the engines were so built
-that when covered and moving at a low rate of speed they made little or
-no noise. A spar ten or fifteen feet long, which carried a torpedo and a
-firing attachment, projected forward over the bow, and a small howitzer
-was also mounted forward where it would be useful to repel attack.
-
-The government had decided to make a night attempt on the "Albemarle,"
-and the honor of the command of the expedition was bestowed on Lieutenant
-Cushing, who had half a dozen times before received the thanks of the
-secretary of the navy for gallantry in action off Cape Fear River.
-
-The expedition was favored by the inactivity of the Confederates. The
-"Albemarle" lay alongside the dock at Plymouth awaiting the completion of
-her sister-ship, but this needless delay gave Cushing the opportunity he
-wanted.
-
-The Confederates were fully aware of the plans of the Unionist's navy, and
-a thousand soldiers remained to guard the "Albemarle" from land attack as
-well as to act as sentries for a distance along the river bank. To provide
-against torpedoes, a line of great cypress logs was boomed off her sides
-at a distance of twenty to thirty feet, so that it seemed impossible to
-come within striking distance. Besides this, the smaller guns of the ram
-were trained up and down the river,--which here was but one hundred and
-fifty yards wide,--to sweep the entire area over which the attacking party
-had to pass.
-
-But Cushing, like Decatur, rejoiced at obstacles. He was only twenty-one,
-but he carried a man's head on his broad shoulders, and the planning
-of such an expedition down to the smallest detail was a task which he
-entered into with judgment and enthusiasm, ingredients as rare as they
-are necessary in such a desperate enterprise.
-
-After a week spent in preparation and experiment, the gunboat "Otsego"
-brought the launch to the mouth of the river, where Cushing cast off and
-pointed his bow toward Plymouth, towing a cutter full of armed men, who
-were to capture, if possible, a Confederate guard,--which had been set
-in a schooner near the sunken "Southfield,"--to prevent their giving the
-alarm. But the expedition started badly, for the launch ran aground on
-a bar. Before Cushing could float her again it was too late to make the
-attempt. Cushing and his boat's crews then returned to the "Otsego."
-
-The next night was black and squally, with occasional showers of rain.
-They could only make out the loom of the shore by straining their eyes
-into the darkness. Cushing was as cool as though taking shore-liberty. As
-he shook hands with the "Otsego's" officers he paused at the gangway to
-say, with a laugh,--
-
-"Well, here goes for another stripe or a coffin."
-
-They crept slowly up the river, keeping close to the bank, under the
-shadow of the reeds and trees. The little engine, covered with tarpaulins,
-made so little sound that the men in the cutter towing astern could hardly
-hear it. There was not a sound except the plashing of the gusts of rain
-and the ripple of the water as the little craft moved steadily on. Cushing
-knew he must be passing some of the pickets now, so not a word even in
-whispers was spoken. Every man had his duty and knew when to do it. Acting
-Ensign William Howarth was aft at Cushing's side. Acting Master's Mate
-John Woodman, who knew the river, was next to him. The other officers were
-Acting Master's Mate Thomas S. Gay, Acting Assistant-Paymaster Francis H.
-Swan, and Acting Third-Assistant-Engineers Charles L. Steever and William
-Stotesbury.
-
-By half-past two A.M., about a mile below Plymouth, where the "Albemarle"
-lay, they came upon the submerged "Southfield," and could just make out
-the lines of the guard-schooner. The machinery of the launch was slowed,
-almost stopped, for Cushing had decided to get by her if he could without
-a fight. It was a moment of utmost anxiety, and every man was prepared for
-the attack. But there was no sign of discovery from the schooners, and in
-ten minutes the little expedition had passed up the river in safety.
-
-But only the first danger of discovery was over. Between the "Southfield"
-and Plymouth the bank was guarded by a double line of sentries, and the
-men in the boats, now moving more quickly, could see the red glare of
-the smouldering fires reaching all the way to town. As they came to the
-point beyond which the ram was lying, they found, to their delight, that
-the fires which should have been brightly burning were smouldering in
-the rain. There was no sign of a man to be made out anywhere, and Cushing
-pushed on directly for the "Albemarle," which he could now see plainly as
-she lay at the wharf, grim and menacing, but without a sign of life.
-
-Suddenly from the shore there came the sharp bark of a dog. To the ears
-of Cushing and his men in the deep silence and anxiety of the moment it
-sounded like the report of a Dahlgren. There was a cry from a sentry and a
-challenge, followed by a musket-shot, and the bullet flew over the boats
-and struck the water fifty feet away with a vicious _ping_ that sounded
-not less loud than the report itself. There was another challenge, and in
-a moment the cries came from everywhere. Other dogs began barking, and it
-seemed as though the whole town was aroused. The sentries on both sides
-of the stream threw inflammable material on the smouldering fires, and in
-a moment the river was as bright as day.
-
-Realizing that further concealment was useless, Cushing himself cast off
-the towline of the cutter, and telling the men in her to row for their
-lives, gave the engineer the order, "Four bells, ahead full speed,"
-setting the nose of the launch directly for the ram. The sparks flew up
-from her stack, and the dark water churned up in masses of foam under her
-stern, as like a sentient thing she leaped forward on her deadly mission.
-It was then that Cushing discovered for the first time the line of torpedo
-booms which guarded the ram. In facing the musketry-fire and the great
-guns of their enormous adversary the task of getting close enough to reach
-her seemed impossible.
-
-Cushing knew that if he was to get over the log booms he must strike
-them fair; then perhaps he could slide over within striking distance. He
-shifted his helm, and making a wide sweep out into the stream, gathered
-all the headway he could and came down into the very jaws of the great
-monster. A tremendous volley from the shot-guns and muskets of the
-sentries greeted them, and Paymaster Swan was wounded. Cushing received
-a charge of buckshot in the back of his coat and had the sole of his shoe
-torn off, but these were the only shots which took effect.
-
-Cushing here shouted, in a loud voice, "Leave the ram; we're going to blow
-you up!" hoping to create a panic. But the Confederates continued firing,
-and succeeded in getting in two howitzer-shots, one of which felled a
-man by Cushing's side. At this moment, Gay, up forward in the launch,
-took careful aim with the howitzer, and sent a charge in the midst of the
-Confederate crew. Then with a slight jar the sled-like bow rose on the
-boom. She balanced a second, and slid over within the enclosure, half full
-of water, but within reaching distance.
-
-One of the great guns of the "Albemarle," a hundred-pounder, protruded
-from a broadside port directly in front of them, and they could see the
-gun-crew frantically training the gun and trying to depress the muzzle
-enough to bear on them. It was a matter of seconds now. Who would fire
-first? Cushing had lowered the torpedo-spar, and as soon as he had it well
-under the overhang he detached it, then waited until he heard the torpedo
-strike the hull, when he pulled the trigger-line. He was not a fraction
-of a second too soon, for the two concussions were almost simultaneous.
-There was a muffled roar from below the great vessel, and a column of
-water shot out from under her as she lifted on the wave. The shock of the
-hundred-pounder was terrific, and it seemed as if the frail launch had
-been blown to pieces. But Cushing had been too quick for them. The charge
-of canister passed a few feet over their heads and scattered in the river
-beyond.
-
-The work of the gallant crew was done. Cushing had made a hole in the
-"Albemarle" large enough to have driven a wagon through. The great
-wave of the torpedo rose and went completely over the launch, swamping
-her alongside and throwing her men into the water. All of them got to
-the booms safely. Here Cushing paused a moment to throw off his outer
-clothing, while the Confederates on the banks were shouting to the men to
-surrender. Several of them, being unable to swim, did so; but Cushing,
-calling to the others to follow him, plunged boldly into the water and
-struck off down the stream. He was a powerful swimmer, but the night was
-cold, and he knew that he could not keep up very long. But he swam for
-half an hour, and he came upon Woodman in the middle of the stream, almost
-exhausted. Though almost entirely fagged out himself, he tried to help the
-mate towards the shore. Finding that he was being pulled down and unable
-to save the other, Cushing struggled on, and reached the shoal water more
-dead than alive. Here he lay among the reeds until dawn, when he learned
-from a negro how complete had been his success. At last, after almost
-twenty-four hours' exposure, he succeeded in finding one of the enemy's
-deserted picket-skiffs, and managed under cover of the second night to
-pull off to the Federal "Valley City," which he reached at eleven o'clock
-at night, and was hauled aboard completely exhausted from his labor and
-exposure. Only one other of his crew reached a place of safety. Woodman
-and Samuel Higgins, the fireman, were drowned. The others went ashore and
-surrendered or were captured.
-
-This service, because of the great benefit to the Union cause and the
-daring manner in which it had been performed, made Cushing the hero of
-the year. Congress passed a vote of thanks and promoted him to the rank
-of lieutenant-commander, which he held until 1872, when he became a
-commander.
-
-He did not long enjoy his honors, for two years later he died of brain
-fever, in Washington, at the age of thirty-two. Had he lived he would have
-been but fifty-six years of age at the outbreak of the war with Spain,
-and would have been one of the ranking officers in active service of the
-new navy.
-
-
-
-
-SOMERS AND THE "INTREPID"
-
-
-Among the young officers of Commodore Preble's squadron before Tripoli
-there was a tall, dark, melancholy-looking fellow of about twenty-five.
-His name was Richard Somers and his command was the "Nautilus," a little
-schooner of twelve guns and a hundred men. He had been with Decatur
-and Stewart, a junior officer on Commodore Barry's "United States" in
-the war with Spain, and the friendship formed in those early days had
-been cemented by a score of thrilling adventures which had drawn them
-more closely together than brothers. Charles Stewart, before Decatur's
-promotion to post-captain, had been the second in command to Preble,
-and his vessel, the "Siren," had taken a prominent part in all the many
-actions with the Tripolitan forts and gunboats. He was a year or so older
-than his companions and had drifted a little away from them. But Decatur
-and Somers were inseparable. Some bond outside of mere professional
-sympathy and environment existed between them, and there seemed to be no
-thought of the one that the other did not share. The difference in their
-temperaments was marked. Decatur was bold, domineering, and impetuous.
-Somers was quiet, mild, and ever avoided the quarrel which Decatur too
-often sought. But under the quiet exterior men had found a will like iron
-and the willingness to dare and do anything that came within the province
-of his profession. He was thoughtful, but not so quiet that he could not
-enter into the gayety of the mess; he was mild, but not so mild that he
-would overlook shortcomings among his men or brook any slight upon his
-office or his reputation.
-
-In the old days on the "United States" there happened an affair which
-immediately established his reputation as an officer and a man. At first
-he was not understood. His brother midshipmen, mistaking the reserve of
-his manner for weakness, did not hesitate before they had been aboard with
-him a month to take advantage of him in the steerage and on deck in every
-possible way. Not only did they slight him, but, after the manner of the
-cadet midshipman of recent years, they made him the butt of most of their
-practical jokes below-decks. Somers stood it for a while in silence. He
-dearly loved peace, and, beyond a good-humored protest, let everything
-pass for what it was worth. But as the weeks went by and the bantering
-continued, instead of laughing it off as before, Somers became more and
-more quiet and self-contained.
-
-Decatur, ever humorous and mischief-making, had himself been one of the
-worst to chaff his comrade; but he knew what Somers' silence meant, and
-he desisted. He had been his school-mate in Philadelphia, and he had seen
-that ominous quiet before. Decatur would have fought for him to the last
-drop of his blood, but he felt that his comrade was well able to look out
-for himself.
-
-Somers went about his duties quietly, never giving a sign that there was
-anything upon his mind until the day before coming into port, then he went
-to Decatur, and said,--
-
-"Stephen, to-morrow I want you to go ashore with me, for I am going to
-meet three men."
-
-The next afternoon a cutter containing Somers, Decatur, and three
-midshipmen, with their seconds, went ashore and found a secluded spot upon
-the beach where they would be free from interference. He had challenged
-all three to fight at the same time and would take them in succession.
-
-In the first two duels Somers received two shots in the body, the latter
-one of which caused him to sink upon the sand as though dangerously hurt;
-but he rallied quickly, and, seeing that the third midshipman was standing
-waiting to see if the battle could be continued, he tried to struggle to
-his feet. He found he could not get up, and Decatur offered to take his
-place and receive the fire of the third midshipman. But Somers, though
-suffering greatly, was not to be deterred, and bade Decatur prop him up
-in a sitting posture, in which position he exchanged shots with the third
-man. Fortunately, none of the injuries resulted fatally, and in a few
-weeks Somers was on deck again. He went about his duties as quietly as
-before, but never after that did they call him milksop.
-
-It was Somers who led one division of the gunboats to attack the
-Tripolitan fleet while Decatur was leading the other. Finding that he
-could not reach them by the eastern entrance, he sailed into the northern
-entrance of the harbor and single-handed boldly sent his little vessel
-into the midst of five of the enemy. His gunboat was smaller than any one
-of those of his adversaries; but so well was his long gun served and so
-true was the fire of his musketry that he held them at bay for half an
-hour, and not one of them succeeded in getting alongside of him to board.
-They were all bearing straight down upon the rocks, though, and Somers
-could not spare enough men from the guns to man his sweeps. But Preble,
-on the "Constitution," saw his danger, and, coming up in time, sent a
-broadside of grape among the pirates, and they got out their sweeps and
-retreated, when, in spite of the doggedness of the defence, one united
-attack would have made the victory theirs. But as they drew off, instead
-of returning, as Preble wished, to the "Constitution," Somers pursued them
-until within less than a cable's length of a twelve-gun battery, which
-had not fired before for fear of damaging the fleeing Tripolitans. When
-she opened fire at this close range the destruction of Somers's valiant
-little vessel seemed inevitable. But by a lucky chance a bombard exploded
-in the battery, blew up the platform, and drove the Tripolitans to cover.
-
-Before they could recover and train their guns, Somers managed to bring
-his craft out in safety. In a later action, as Somers stood leaning
-against a flag-staff on his little vessel, a shot came directly for him.
-The officer saw it in time, and jumped aside to see the spar carried away
-at just the spot where his head had been. He was spared for more deadly
-work.
-
-While these many attacks were being made upon the gunboats and batteries,
-the "Intrepid," in which Decatur had recaptured and destroyed the
-"Philadelphia," was being rapidly prepared as a fire-ship. Their plan was
-to load her with a hundred barrels of powder in bulk, with bags of grape
-and solid shot, and under cover of the night explode her in the midst of
-the Tripolitan war-vessels. Somers, who had been frequently in the harbor
-of Tripoli and knew its reefs and rocks so that he could readily thread
-his way through the narrow channels, asked for the opportunity to command
-this expedition. But Decatur's success in boarding the "Philadelphia"
-had raised the chivalry of every officer and man in the fleet to a point
-rarely equalled in our own history, and Somers, while he did not begrudge
-Decatur his two epaulettes, was filled with the passion to do a deed as
-great, if not greater. They had been rivals since youth, and he felt that
-now was the opportunity to attempt a great deed for his country, though
-he and every man in the fleet knew that the chances of coming out alive
-were but one in a hundred. Somers went to Commodore Preble and urged
-his knowledge of the harbor as his chief claim to the service. It was an
-honor that a half-dozen other men sought, and not until the old commodore
-had weighed the chances fully did he at last agree to let Somers go.
-But, before consenting, Preble repeatedly warned the young officer of
-the desperate character of the work, and told him that on account of the
-Napoleonic wars the Tripolitans were short of ammunition, and that so
-much powder must not fall into the hands of the enemy. But Somers needed
-no warning. A day or two afterwards, when the preparations were nearly
-completed, Preble and some other officers were trying a fuse in the cabin
-of the "Constitution." One of the officers, watch in hand, ventured the
-opinion that it burned too long and might enable the enemy to put it out
-before it exploded the magazine. Hearing this, Somers said, quietly,--
-
-"I ask for no fuse at all."
-
-He was more gentle than ever in those last few days, and as he and Decatur
-leaned over the hammock-nettings of "Old Ironsides," looking towards
-the line of white where the sea was breaking over the outer roofs, the
-melancholy look seemed to deepen and the far-away expression in his eyes
-was of another world. Decatur knew that rather than give up his ship and
-his powder, Somers would blow the ship and himself to eternity.
-
-When volunteers were called for, the desperateness of the enterprise
-was fully explained; but the crew of the "Nautilus," Somers's own vessel
-stepped forward to a man. He selected four,--James Simms, Thomas Tompline,
-James Harris, and William Keith. From the "Constitution" he took William
-Harrison, Robert Clark, Hugh McCormick, Jacob Williams, Peter Penner, and
-Isaac Downes. Midshipman Henry Wadsworth (an uncle of the poet Longfellow)
-was chosen as second in command. Midshipman Joseph Israel, having vainly
-pleaded with Somers to be allowed to go, at the last moment smuggled
-himself aboard the "Intrepid," and when discovered Somers had not the
-heart to send him back.
-
-Decatur and Stewart went aboard the "Nautilus" on the evening that the
-attempt had been planned. The three had been so closely united all their
-lives that Stewart and Decatur felt the seriousness of the moment. Even
-professionally the attempt seemed almost foolhardy, for several Tripolitan
-vessels had come to anchor just within the entrance, and to pass them
-even at night seemed an impossibility. Somers felt a premonition of his
-impending catastrophe, for just as they were about to return to their own
-vessels he took a ring from his finger and, breaking it into three pieces,
-gave each of them a part, retaining the third for himself.
-
-As soon as the night fell the "Intrepid" cast off her lines and went
-slowly up towards the harbor. The "Argus," the "Vixen," and the "Nautilus"
-followed her, while shortly afterwards Stewart on the "Siren" became so
-anxious that he followed, too. A haze that had come up when the sun went
-down hung heavily over the water, and soon the lines of the fire-ship
-became a mere gray blur against the dark coast-line beyond. The excitement
-upon the guard-ships now became intense, and both officers and men climbed
-the rigging and leaned out in the chains in the hope of being able to
-follow the movements of the ketch. Midshipman Ridgley, on the "Nautilus,"
-by the aid of a powerful night-glass aloft, managed to follow her until
-she got well within the harbor, and then she vanished. The suspense soon
-became almost unbearable, for not a shot had been fired and not a sound
-came from the direction in which she had gone. At about nine o'clock a
-half-dozen cannon-shots could be plainly heard, and even the knowledge
-that she had been discovered and was being fired on was a relief from the
-awful silence.
-
-At about ten o'clock Stewart was standing at the gangway of the "Siren,"
-with Lieutenant Carrol, when the latter, craning his neck out into the
-night, suddenly exclaimed,--
-
-"Look! See the light!"
-
-Stewart saw away up the harbor a speck of light, as if from a lantern,
-which moved rapidly, as though it were being carried by some one running
-along a deck. Then it paused and disappeared from view. In a second a
-tremendous flame shot up hundreds of feet into the air, and the glare
-of it was so intense that it seemed close aboard. The flash and shock
-were so stupendous that the guard-ships, though far out to sea, trembled
-and shivered like the men who watched and were blinded. The sound of
-the explosion which followed seemed to shake sea and sky. It was like a
-hundred thunder-claps, and they could hear the echoes of it go rolling
-down across the water until it was swallowed up in the silence of the
-night.
-
-That was all. The officers and the men looked at one another in mute
-horror. Could anything have lived in the area of that dreadful explosion?
-The tension upon the men of the little fleet was almost at the breaking
-point. Every eye was strained towards the harbor and every ear caught
-eagerly at the faintest sound. Officers and men frequently asked one
-another the question, "Have you heard anything yet?" with always the same
-reply.
-
-The vessels beat to and fro between the harbor-entrances, firing rockets
-and guns for the guidance of possible fugitives. And the doleful sound
-of that gun made the silences the more depressing. All night long did the
-fleet keep vigil, but not a shot, a voice, or even a splash came from the
-harbor.
-
-With the first streaks of dawn the Americans were aloft with their
-glasses. On the rocks at the northern entrance, through which the
-"Intrepid" had passed, they saw a mast and fragments of vessels. When
-the mist cleared they saw that one of the enemy's largest gunboats had
-disappeared and two others were so badly shattered that they lay upon the
-shore for repairs.
-
-The details of the occurrence were never actually known, but it is thought
-that Somers, being laid aboard by three gunboats before actually in the
-midst of the shipping, and feeling himself overpowered, fired his magazine
-and destroyed himself and his own men in his avowed purpose not to be
-taken by the enemy.
-
-Thus died Richard Somers, Henry Wadsworth, the midshipman, Joseph Israel,
-and ten American seamen, whose names have been inscribed on the navy's
-roll of fame. Nothing can dim the honor of a man who dies willingly for
-his country.
-
-
-
-
-THE PASSING OF THE OLD NAVY
-
-
-OLD SALTS AND NEW SAILORS
-
-Since ballad-mongering began, the sea and the men who go down to it in
-ships have been a fruitful theme; and the conventional song-singing,
-horn-piping tar of the chanteys is a creature of fancy, pure and simple.
-
-Jack is as honest as any man. Aboard ship he goes about his duties
-willingly, a creature of habit and environment, with a goodly respect for
-his "old man" and the articles of war. Ashore he is an innocent,--a brand
-for the burning, with a half-month's pay and a devouring thirst.
-
-Sailor-men all over the world are the same, and will be throughout all
-time, except in so far as their life is improved by new conditions. Though
-Jack aboard ship is the greatest grumbler in the world, ashore he loves
-all the world, and likes to be taken for the sailor of the songs. In a
-week he will spend the earnings of many months, and go back aboard ship,
-sadder, perhaps, but never a wiser man.
-
-He seldom makes resolutions, however, and so, when anchor takes ground
-again, his money leaves him with the same merry clink as before. Though
-a Bohemian and a nomad, he does not silently steal away, like the Arab.
-His goings, like his comings, are accompanied with much carousing and
-song-singing; and the sweetheart he leaves gets to know that wiving is
-not for him. With anchor atrip and helm alee, Jack mourns not, no matter
-whither bound.
-
-The improved conditions on the modern men-of-war have changed things for
-him somewhat, and, though still impregnated with old ideas, Jack is more
-temperate, more fore-sighted, and more self-reliant than he once was. His
-lapses of discipline and his falls from grace are less frequent than of
-yore, for he has to keep an eye to windward if he expects to win any of
-the benefits that are generously held out to the hard-working, sober, and
-deserving.
-
-But the bitterness of the old days is barely disguised in the jollity of
-the chanteys. However we take it, the sea-life is a hardship the like of
-which no land-lubber knows. Stories of the trials of the merchant service
-come to him now and then and open his eyes to the real conditions of the
-service.
-
-Men are greater brutes at sea than ashore. The one-man power, absolute,
-supreme in the old days, when all license was free and monarchies trod
-heavily on weak necks, led men to deeds of violence and death, whenever
-violence and death seemed the easiest methods of enforcing discipline. Men
-were knocked down hatchways, struck with belaying-pins, made to toe the
-seam on small provocation or on no provocation at all. The old-fashioned
-sea-yarns of Captain Marryat ring true as far as they go, but they do not
-go far enough.
-
-In England the great frigates were generally both under-manned and
-badly victualled, and the cruises were long and sickening. The practice
-of medicine had not reached the dignity of the precise science it is
-to-day, and the surgeon's appliances were rude and roughly manipulated.
-Anaesthetics were unknown, and after the battles, the slaughter in which
-was sometimes terrific, many a poor chap was sent to his last account by
-unwise amputation or bad treatment after the operation.
-
-The water frequently became putrid, and this, with the lack of fresh
-vegetables and the over use of pork, brought on the disease called scurvy,
-which oftentimes wiped out entire crews in its deadly ravages. Every year
-thousands of men were carried off by it. A far greater number died from
-the effects of scurvy than from the enemy's fire. Lieutenant Kelly says
-that during the Seven Years' War but one thousand five hundred and twelve
-seamen and marines were killed, but one hundred and thirty-three thousand
-died of disease or were reported missing. Not until the beginning of this
-century was this dreadful evil ameliorated.
-
-The evils of impressment and the work of the crimp and his gang--so
-infamous in England--had no great vogue here, for the reason that, during
-our wars of 1776 and 1812, the good seamen--coasters and fishermen, who
-had suffered most from the Lion--were only too anxious to find a berth
-on an American man-of-war, where they could do yeoman's service against
-their cruel oppressor.
-
-"Keel-hauling" and the "cat" were relics of the barbarism of the old
-English navy. Keel-hauling was an extreme punishment, for the unfortunate
-rarely, if ever, survived the ordeal. In brief, it consisted in sending
-the poor sailor-man on a voyage of discovery along the keel of the vessel.
-Trussed like a fowl, he was lowered over the bows of the ship and hauled
-along underneath her until he made his appearance at the stern, half or
-wholly drowned, and terribly cut all over the body by the sea-growth on
-the ship's bottom. He bled in every part from the cuts of the barnacles;
-but "this was considered rather advantageous than otherwise, as the loss
-of blood restored the patient, if he were not quite drowned, and the
-consequence was that one out of three, it is said, have been known to
-recover from their enforced submarine excursion."
-
-Think of it! Recovery was not anticipated, but if the victim got well,
-the officer in command made no objection! Beside the brutality of these
-old English navy bullies a barbarous Hottentot chief would be an angel of
-mercy.
-
-Flogging and the use of the cat were abolished in the American navy
-in 1805. This law meant the use of the cat-o'-nine tails as a regular
-punishment, but did not prohibit blows to enforce immediate obedience.
-Before that time it was a common practice for the punishment of minor
-offences as well as the more serious ones.
-
-Flogging in the old days was an affair of much ceremony on board
-men-of-war. The entire ship's company was piped on deck for the
-punishment, and the culprit, stripped to the waist, was brought to the
-mast. The boatswain's mate, cat in hand, stood by the side of a suspended
-grating in the gangway, and the captain, officer of the deck, and the
-surgeon took their posts opposite him. The offence and the sentence were
-then read, and the stripes were administered on the bare back of the
-offender, a petty officer standing by to count the blows of the lash,
-while the doctor, with his hand on the victim's pulse, was ready to give
-the danger signal when absolutely necessary.
-
-The men bore it in different ways. The old hands gritted their teeth
-philosophically, but the younger men frequently shrieked in their agony as
-the pitiless lash wound itself around the tender flesh, raising at first
-livid red welts, and afterwards lacerating the flesh and tearing the back
-into bloody seams.
-
-The effect upon the lookers-on was varied. The younger officers, newly
-come from well-ordered English homes, frequently fainted at the sight.
-But the horror of the spectacle soon died away, and before many weeks had
-passed, with hardened looks, they stood on the quarter-deck and watched
-the performance amusedly. Soon the spectacle got to be a part of their
-life, and the jokes were many and the laughter loud at the victim's
-expense. The greater the suffering the more pleasurable the excitement.
-
-Many yarns are spun of Jack's tricks to avoid the lash or to reduce to a
-minimum the pain of the blows. Sometimes the men had their flogging served
-to them regularly, but in small doses. To these the punishment lost its
-rigor. For the boatswain's mate not infrequently disguised the force of
-his blows, which came lightly enough, though the victim bawled vigorously
-to keep up the deception, and in the "three- and four-dozen" cases he
-sometimes tempered his blows to the physical condition of the sufferers,
-who otherwise would have swooned with the pain.
-
-One Jacky, who thought himself wiser than his fellows, in order to escape
-his next dozen, had a picture of a crucifix tattooed over the whole
-surface of his back, and under it a legend, which intimated that blows
-upon the image would be a sacrilege. When next he was brought before the
-mast he showed it to the boatswain and his captain. The captain, a crusty
-barnacle of the old harsh school, smiled grimly.
-
-"Don't desecrate the picture, bos'n," he said; "we will respect this
-man's religious scruples. You may put on his shirt," he said, chuckling
-to himself, "but remove his trousers, bos'n, and give him a dozen extra.
-And lay them on religiously, bos'n."
-
-All this was in the older days, and it was never so bad in the American as
-in the English navy. The middle period of the American navy, from before
-the Civil War to the age of iron and steel cruisers, presents an entirely
-different aspect in some ways.
-
-Illegal punishments were still inflicted, for there were always then,
-as now, a certain percentage of ruffians forward who were amenable to
-no discipline, and could be managed only by meeting them with their own
-weapons. The "spread-eagle" and the ride on the "gray mare" were still
-resorted to to compel obedience.
-
-They "spread-eagled" a man by tricing him up inside the rigging, taut
-lines holding his arms and legs outstretched to the farthest shrouds, a
-bight of rope passed around his body preventing too great a strain. He
-was gagged, and so he could not answer back.
-
-The "gray mare" on which the obstreperous were forced to gallop was the
-spanker-boom--the long spar that extends far over the water at the ship's
-stern. By casting loose the sheets, the boom rolled briskly from side to
-side, and the lonely horseman was forced in this perilous position to hold
-himself by digging his nails into the soft wood or swinging to any of the
-gear that flew into his reach. At best it was not a safe saddle, and a
-rough sea made it worse than a bucking broncho.
-
-[Illustration: THE SMOKING HOUR]
-
-Paul Jones had a neat way of disciplining his midshipmen aloft. He would
-go to the rail himself, and casting loose the halyards, let the yard go
-down with a run, to the young gentleman's great discomfiture.
-
-But the life of the old salt was not all bitterness. It was not all
-shore-leave, but there was skittles now and then for the deserving and
-good-conduct men. Jack's pleasures were simple, as they are to-day. There
-was never a crew that did not have its merry chanter and its flute,
-fiddle, or guitar, or the twice-told tale of the ship's Methuselah to
-entertain the dog-watches of the evening or the smoking-hour and make a
-break in the dreary monotony of routine.
-
-On public holidays, when everything was snug at sea or in port, a glorious
-skylark was the order of the afternoon. At the call of the bos'n's mate,
-"All hands frolic," rigorous discipline was suspended, and the men turned
-to with a will to make the day one to be talked about. Mast-head-races,
-potato- and sack-races, climbing the greased pole, and rough horse-play
-and man-handling filled the afternoon until hammocks were piped down
-and the watch was set. Purses from the wardroom and prizes of rum and
-tobacco--luxuries dear to Jack's heart--were the incentives to vigorous
-athletics and rough buffoonery. The rigging was filled from netting to
-top with the rough, jesting figures, and cheer upon cheer and laugh upon
-laugh greeted a successful bout or fortunate sally.
-
-Jack is a child at the best of times and at the worst, and he takes his
-pleasures with the zest of a boy of seven, laughing and making merry until
-he falls to the deck from very weariness. And woe be at these merry times
-to the shipmate who has no sense of humor. His day is a hideous one,
-for he is hazed and bullied until he is forced in self-defence to seek
-the seclusion granted by the nethermost part of the hold. A practical
-joker always, when discipline is lax, Jack's boisterous humor knows no
-restraint.
-
-The ceremony of "crossing the line," the boarding of the ship by Neptune
-and his court, seems almost as old as ships, and is honored even to-day,
-when much of the romantic seems to have passed out of sea-life. It is the
-time when the deep-sea sailor has the better of his cousin of the coasts.
-Every man who crossed the equator for the first time had to pay due honor
-to the god of the seas. They exacted it, too, among the whalers when they
-crossed the Arctic Circle.
-
-[Illustration: NEPTUNE COMES ABOARD]
-
-The wardroom usually bought off in rum, money, or tobacco, but forward
-it was the roughest kind of rough man-handling; and the victims were
-happy indeed when they got their deep-water credentials. The details of
-procedure in this remarkable rite differed somewhat on different ships,
-but the essential elements of play and torture were the same in all cases.
-
-The day before the line was to be reached both wardroom and forecastle
-would receive a manifesto setting forth the intention of the god of the
-seas to honor their poor craft and ordering all those who had not paid
-tribute to him to gather forward to greet him as he came over the side. At
-the hour appointed there was a commotion forward, and a figure, wearing
-a pasteboard crown that surmounted a genial red face adorned with oakum
-whiskers, made its appearance over the windward nettings and proclaimed
-its identity as Neptune. Behind him was a motley crew in costumes of any
-kind and all kinds--or no kind--who had girded itself for this ungentle
-art of bull-baiting. The deep-water men intended to have an ample return
-for what they themselves had suffered, not many years back, when they had
-rounded the Horn or Cape of Good Hope.
-
-The unfortunates, stripped to the waist, were brought forward, one by one,
-to be put through their paces. After a mock trial by the jury of buffoons,
-the king ordered their punishment meted out in doses proportioned directly
-to the popularity of the victims as shipmates. The old long boat, with
-thwarts removed and a canvas lining, served as a ducking-pond. After
-vigorous applications, of "slush,"--which is another name for ship's
-grease,--or perhaps a toss in a hammock or a blanket, they were pitched
-backward into the pool and given a thorough sousing, emerging somewhat the
-worse for wear, but happy that the business was finally done for good and
-all.
-
-To-day the roughest sort of bullying no longer takes place, and much of
-the romance seems to have passed out of the custom.
-
-The punishments, too, have lost their severity. The "gray mare" swings to
-an empty saddle, the "spread eagle" is a thing of the past, and the "cat"
-is looked upon as a relic of barbarism. Things are not yet Pinafore-like,
-but the cursing and man-handling are not what they used to be. There are
-a few of the old-timers who still believe the "cat" a necessary evil,
-and would like to see an occasional "spread eagle," but the more moderate
-punishments of to-day have proved, save in a few hardened cases, that much
-may be done if the morale of the service is high.
-
-The fact of the matter is, that the standard of the man behind the gun has
-kept up with the marvellous advance of the ships and the ordnance. To-day,
-the naval service of the United States is worthy of any seaman's metal. As
-a mode of living, sea-faring on American men-of-war attracts as many good
-men as any other trade. Machinists, electricians, carpenters, gunners,
-and sail-makers, all have the chance of a good living, with prizes for
-the honest and industrious.
-
-The seaman himself, in times of peace, may rise by faithful service to
-a competency and a retiring pension more generous than that of any other
-nation in the world. The discipline is the discipline of right relations
-between superior and inferior men of sense, and the articles of war govern
-as rigorously the cabin as the forecastle. Republican principles are
-carried out, as far as they are compatible with perfect subordination,
-and there exists no feeling between the parts of the ship, except in
-extraordinary instances, but wholesome respect and convention. There is
-little tyranny on the one side or insubordination on the other.
-
-The training of the young officer of the old navy was the training of
-the larger school of the world. "Least squares" and "ballistics" were
-not for him. He could muster a watch, bend and set a stun'sail, work out
-a traverse, and pass a weather-earing; but he toyed not with the higher
-mathematics, like the machine-made "young gentleman" of to-day. What he
-knew of navigation he had picked haphazard, as best he might.
-
-At the age of twelve his career usually opened briskly in the thunder
-of a hurricane or the slaughter of a battle, under conditions trying to
-the souls of bronzed, bearded men. Physical and even mental training of
-a certain kind he had, but the intellectual development of modern days
-was missing. The American officer of the days before the Naval Academy
-was founded was the result of rough conditions that Nature shaped to her
-own ends with the only tools she had. Though these "boys" had not the
-beautiful theory of the thing, they had its practice, and no better seamen
-ever lived.
-
-At the beginning of the century, the crusty Preble, commodore of the
-blockading fleet before Tripoli, was sent a consignment of these "boys"
-to aid him in his work. The names of the "boys" were Decatur, Stewart,
-Macdonough, Lawrence, and Perry. Excepting Decatur, who was twenty-six,
-there was not one who was over twenty-four, and two or three of them were
-under twenty. The commodore grew red in the face and swore mighty oaths
-when he thought of the things he had to accomplish with the youngsters
-under his command. But he found before long that though youth might be
-inconvenient, it could not be considered as a reproach in their case.
-
-Decatur, with a volunteer crew, went under the guns at Tripoli, captured
-and blew up the "Philadelphia" in a way that paled all deeds of gallantry
-done before or since. The dreamy Somers went in with a fire-ship and
-destroyed both the shipping and himself. In the hand-to-hand fights on
-the gunboats, Lawrence, young Bainbridge, Stewart, and the others fought
-and defeated the best hand-to-hand fighters of the Mediterranean. The Dey
-of Algiers, when Decatur came before him to make terms of peace, stroked
-his black beard and looked at the young hero curiously. "Why," he said,
-"do they send over these young boys to treat with the older Powers?"
-
-When the war was over, Preble no longer grew red in the face or swore. He
-loved his school-boys, and walked his quarter-deck with them arm-in-arm.
-And they loved him for his very crustiness, for they knew that back of it
-all was a man.
-
-These youthful heroes were not the only ones. Young Farragut, an infant
-of twelve years, with an old "Shoot-if-you're-lucky," quelled a promising
-mutiny. At eighteen Bainbridge did the same. Farragut, at thirteen, was
-recommended for promotion to a lieutenancy he was too young to take. Perry
-was about thirty when he won the victory of Erie.
-
-A youngster's character bears a certain definite relation to the times he
-lives in. Skies blue and breezes light, he shapes his life's course with
-no cares but the betterment of his mental condition. Baffling winds create
-the sailor, and storm and stress bring out his greater capabilities.
-The Spanish war has proved that heroes only slumber, and that the young
-gentleman with the finely-tempered mind of an Annapolis training is
-capable of the great things his father did.
-
-The blue-jacket of to-day has plenty of hard work to do, but he is as
-comfortable as good food and sleeping accommodations, regular habits, and
-good government can make him. As a class, the United States Jacky is more
-contented, perhaps, than any other man of similar conditions. Unlike the
-soldier, he does not even have to rough it very much, for wherever he goes
-he takes his house with him.
-
-Jacky sleeps in a hammock strung upon hooks to the beams of the deck
-above him. When he turns out, he lashes his hammock with its lashing, and
-stores it in the nettings,--the troughs for the purpose at the sides of
-the ship,--where it must stay until night. If Jack wants to sleep in the
-meanwhile, he chooses the softest spot he can find on a steel-clad deck;
-and he can sleep there, too, in the broad glare of daylight, a hundred
-feet passing him, and the usual run of ship's calls and noises droning in
-his ears.
-
-Jacky's food is provided by the government, while his superior of the
-wardroom has to pay his own mess-bill. He is allowed, in addition to his
-pay, the sum of nine dollars per month, and this must purchase everything,
-except such luxuries as he may choose to buy from his pay. The ship's
-paymaster is allowed a certain amount of money to furnish the supplies,
-and between him and the ship's cook the problem is settled. At the end
-of the month, if the amount served out is in excess of the computation
-for rations, the brunt falls upon the "Jack-of-the-Dust,"--the assistant
-to the paymaster's yeoman,--who has the work of accurately measuring the
-rations which are given to the cook of the ship.
-
-The ship's cook receives from the government from twenty-five to
-thirty-five dollars a month, according to the size of the ship, and, in
-addition, certain money perquisites from the different messes, which gives
-him a fair average. He has complete charge of the ship's galley and the
-cooks of the messes, and must be able to concoct a dainty French dish for
-the wardroom as well as the usual "salt horse" or "dog" for the Jacky.
-
-"Salt horse" is the sea-name for pork. "Dog" is soaked hardtack, mixed
-with molasses and fried; and, though it is not pleasant twenty-nine days
-out of the month, it is healthful, and tastes good to a hard-working
-sailor with the salt of the sea producing a splendid appetite.
-
-The mess-tables hang by iron supports to the beams of the deck above,
-and when the mess has been served and eaten,--as only Jack knows how to
-eat,--they are triced up into their places, and all is cleaned and made
-ship-shape in the twinkling of an eye. A half-hour is allowed for dinner,
-and this time is kept sacred for Jack's use. A red pennant flies from the
-yard-arm, that all may know that the sailor-man is eating and must not be
-disturbed by any importunate or curious callers.
-
-In the dog-watches of the evening, after supper, from six to eight P.M.,
-the blue-jacket is given his leisure. It is then that pipes are smoked,
-vigilance relaxed, boxing and wrestling bouts are in order, and Jacky
-settles down for his rest after the day of labor. From somewhere down on
-the gun-deck comes the tinkle of a guitar or banjo, and a tuneful, manly
-voice sings the songs of France or Spain, and, better still, of beloved
-America, for the shipmates.
-
-The sailor of to-day is also a soldier. Back in the days of Henry the
-Eighth, when England first had a navy, the sailors only worked the ships.
-The fighting was done by the soldiers. Later, when the ships were armed
-with many guns and carried a greater spread of canvas, there was no space
-for great companies of soldiers, and the sailors became gunners as well.
-A few soldiers there were, but these did only sentry duty and performed
-the duties of the ships's police. As such they were cordially hated by
-the jackies.
-
-This antipathy has come down through the ages to the present day,
-and marines are still looked on by the sailor-men as land-lubbers and
-Johnnies--sea-people who have no mission upon the earth save to do all
-the eating and very little of the rough work.
-
-The new navy has done much to change this feeling. The mission of the
-marine is now a definite one. Always used as a sharpshooter, he now mans
-the rapid-fire batteries, and even guns of a larger caliber. He has done
-his work well, and the affair at Guantanamo has caused the sneer to fade
-from the lip of the American sailor-man. Two of the ablest captains of our
-navy, always the deadliest opponents of the marine corps, upon assuming
-their latest commands, applied immediately for the largest complement of
-marines that they could get.
-
-Any ship, old or new, is as frail as the crew that mans it. The strength
-of any vessel varies directly with its discipline and personnel. Hull,
-Jones, Decatur, Bainbridge, and Stewart, in the old days, knew with some
-accuracy the forces they had to reckon with. Their guns were of simple
-contrivance, and their men knew them as well as they knew how to reef
-a topsail or smartly pass a weather-earing. They feared nothing so long
-as they were confident of their captain. New and mysterious contrivances
-for death-dealing were unknown to them, and hence the morale of the old
-sea-battles was the morale only of strength and discipline. There were
-no uncertain factors to reckon with, save the weight of metal and the
-comparative training of the gun-crews.
-
-To-day the unknown plays a large part in warfare. Intricate appliances,
-mysterious inventions, new types of torpedo-boats, and submarine vessels
-form a new element to contend against and have a personal moral influence
-upon the discipline of crews. To combat this new element of the unknown
-and uncertain has required sailors and men of a different stripe from the
-old. Where, in the old days, ignorance and all its accompanying evils held
-sway over the mind of poor Jack, and made him a prey to superstition and
-imagination, to-day, by dint of careful training of brain as well as body,
-he has become a thinking creature of power and force of mind. He knows
-in a general way the working of the great mechanical contrivances; and
-in the fights that are to come, as well as those that have been, he will
-show that the metal the American Jacky is made of rings true and stands
-well the trial by fire.
-
-
-THE OLD SHIPS AND THE NEW
-
-With much hitching of trousers and shifting of quid, the old longshoreman
-will tell you that sea-life isn't at all what it once was.
-
-He will gaze out to sea, where the great iron machines are plying back
-and forth, and a reminiscent sparkle will come into his eyes as he turns
-to his lobster-pots and tells you how it was in the good days of clippers
-and sailing-frigates, when sailor-men were sailor-men and not boiler-room
-swabs, machine-made and steam-soaked. He will also yarn, with much d--ning
-of his eyes (and yours), of how fair it was in the deck-watches of the
-"Saucy Sally" barque, with everything drawing alow and aloft, grog and
-'baccy a-plenty, and never a care but the hurry to spend the voyage-money.
-And not till he's mumbled all his discontent will he haul his sheets and
-give you right-of-way.
-
-He forgets, sheer hulk that he is, that he's been in dry-dock a generation
-or more and that swift-moving Time has loosed his gear and dimmed his
-binnacle-lights. Despite his ancient croaking, tricks at the wheel are
-to-day as ably kept, eyes as sharp as his still peer into the dimness
-over the forecastle, and the sea-lead takes as long a heave as in the
-early sixties, when he hauled up to New York with a thousand dollars
-in prize-money and a heart full for the business of spending it. It has
-always been so. There has never been an age that has not had its carper
-to tell you of the wonders that once were.
-
-Yet it was truly beautiful. With the tide on the ebb and the wind a-piping
-free, never was a fairer sight than the Atlantic clipper as she picked
-her speedy way through the shipping to the harbor's mouth; and nothing
-so stately as the gallant frigate in her wake, with all sail set to
-ga'n's'ls, her topsails bellying grandly to the quartering breeze, which
-whipped the filmy wave-tops against her broad bows, under which the yellow
-curl lapped merrily its greeting. The harbor clear and the capes abeam,
-aloft flew the nimble sail-loosers. The royals and the stu'n-sails flapped
-to the freshening wind, sheets went home with a run, and the yards flew
-to their blocks.
-
-Then, her departure taken, like a gull she sped blithely on her course.
-The rays of the afternoon sun gilded her snowy canvases until she looked
-a thing of air and fairyland, not of reality. On she flew, her tall spars
-dipping grandly to the swells--a stately farewell courtesy to the clipper,
-hull down to leeward. On the decks the boatswain piped his cheerful note,
-and everything came ship-shape and Bristol-fashion for the cruise. The
-running-gear was neatly coiled for running, the guns secured for sea,
-and the watches told off. The officer of the deck walked to and fro,
-singing softly to himself, casting now and then a careful eye aloft to the
-weather-leeches, which quivered like an aspen as the helmsman, leaning to
-the slant of the deck, kept her well up to her work.
-
-And yet the poetry has not gone out of it all. The poetry of the
-sailing-frigate was lyric. That of the steel battle-ship is Homeric.
-
-Nothing save a war of the elements has the power of a battle-ship in
-action. Ten thousand tons of steel,--a mighty fortress churning speedily
-through the water fills the spirit with wonder at the works of man and
-makes any engine for his destruction a possibility. Away down below the
-water-line a score or more of furnaces, white-heated, roar furiously under
-the forced draught, and the monster engines move their ponderous arms
-majestically, and in rhythm and harmony mask their awful strength. Before
-the furnace-doors, blackened, half-naked stokers move, silhouetted against
-the crimson glare, like grim phantoms of the Shades. The iron uprights and
-tools are hot to their touch, the purple gases hiss and sputter in their
-very faces, yet still they toil on, gasping for breath, their tongues
-cleaving to their mouths, and their wet bodies steaming in the heat of it.
-
-[Illustration: MODERN SEA MONSTERS IN ACTION]
-
-The deck above gives no sign of the struggle below. Where, in the old
-days, the sonorous trumpet rang out and the spar-deck was alive with the
-watch who hurried to the pin-rail at the frequent call, now all is quiet.
-Here and there bright work is polished, or a lookout passes a cheery call,
-but nothing save the man at the wheel and the officer of the watch shows
-the actual working of the ship.
-
-Seamanship, in the sense of sail-handling, is a thing of the past. Though
-there is no officer in the navy who could not in an emergency handle
-a square-rigger with the science of an old sea-captain, the man on the
-bridge has now come to be first a tactician and after that a master of
-steam and electricity.
-
-In the sea-battles of 1812 the captain was here, there, and everywhere in
-the thickest of the fight, inspiring by his personal magnetism the men at
-the guns. He was the soul of his ship. To-day the sea-battle is a one-man
-battle. The captain is still the heart and soul of the ship, but his ends
-are accomplished in a less personal way. His men need not see him. By the
-touch of a finger he can perform every action necessary to carry his ship
-to victory. He can see everything, do everything, and make his presence
-everywhere felt by the mere operation of a set of electrical instruments
-in front of him.
-
-The intricacies of his position are, in a way, increased. He may lose
-a boiler, split a crank, or break an electrical connection, but the
-beautiful subtleties of old-fashioned seamanship have no place whatever
-on the modern war-ship.
-
-Let it not be understood that the handling of the great ocean fortress of
-to-day may be mastered by any save a craftsman of the art. With plenty
-of sea-room and a keen watch alow and aloft the trick is a simple one,
-for the monster is only a speck in the infinity of sea and sky, and there
-is never a fear save for a blow, or a ship, or a shore. But in close
-manoeuvre, or in harbor, the problem is different. Ten thousand tons of
-bulk cannot be turned and twisted on the heel with the swish and toss
-of the wieldy clipper. Observant transpontine voyagers, who have watched
-the gigantic liner warped out from her pier into a swift tide-way with a
-leeward ebb, will tell you what a complicated and difficult thing it seems
-to be.
-
-The captain of the battle-ship must be all that the merchant captain is,
-and more besides. Mooring and slipping moorings should be an open book
-to the naval officer, but his higher studies, the deeper intricacies of
-the science of war, are mysteries for the merchant captain. All of it
-is seamanship, of course. But to-day it is the seamanship of the bridled
-elements, where strength is met by strength and steam and iron make wind
-and wave as nothing.
-
-The perfection of the seamanship of the past was not in strength, but
-in yielding, and the saltiest sea-captain was he who cajoled both ship
-and sea to his bidding. The wind and waves, they say, are always on the
-side of the ablest navigators, but it was rather a mysterious and subtle
-knowledge of the habits and humors of God's sea and sky, and a sympathy
-born of constant communion, which made both ship and captain a part of
-the elements about them, and turned them into servants, and not masters.
-
-The naval captains of 1812 had learned this freemasonry of sea and sky,
-and one incident--a typical one--will show it as no mere words can do.
-Its characteristics are Yankee pluck and old-fashioned Yankee seamanship.
-
-The frigate "Constitution"--of glorious memory--in 1812 gave the British
-squadron which surrounded her startling proof of the niceties of Yankee
-seamanship. There never has been a race for such a stake, and never will
-be. Had "Old Ironsides" been captured, there is no telling what would have
-been the deadly effect on the American fortunes. It was the race for the
-life of a nation.
-
-The "Constitution" was the country's hope and pride, and Captain Hull
-knew it. He felt that "Old Ironsides" could never fail to do the work
-required of her. So for four days and nights the old man towed her along,
-the British frigates just out of range, until he showed clean heels to
-the entire squadron. The ingenuity and deft manoeuvring of the chase has
-no parallel in the history of this or any other country in the world.
-
-With hardly a catspaw of wind, Hull drifted into sight of the British
-fleet off the Jersey coast. Before he knew it, they brought the wind up
-with them, and his position was desperate. There were four frigates and
-a ship-of-the-line spread out in a way to take advantage of any breath
-of air. Hull called away his boats, and running lines to them, sent them
-ahead to tow her as best they might. The British did still better, for
-they concentrated the boats of the squadron on two ships, and gained
-rapidly on the American. Hull cut ports over the stern, and ran two
-18-pounders out of his cabin windows, where he began a continuous fire on
-the enemy. The British ships shifted their helms and took up positions on
-the quarters of the frigate, unable to approach too closely with their
-boats for fear of the "Constitution's" stern-guns, which dropped their
-hurtling shot under their very bows.
-
-The desperate game had only begun. Hull, finding that he had but one
-hundred and fifty feet of water under him, decided to kedge her along. In
-a few minutes the largest boat was rowing away ahead with a small anchor
-on board, stretching out half a mile of cable. The anchor dropped, the men
-hauled in roundly and walked away with the line at a smart pace. It was
-heart-breaking work, but the speed of the ship was trebled. By the time
-the vessel was warped up to the first anchor another one was ready for
-her, and she clawed still further out of the enemy's reach. The British
-did not at first discover the magic headway of the American, and not for
-some time did they attempt to follow suit.
-
-Then a breeze came up. Hull hauled his yards to it, picked up his boats
-without slacking sail, and went ahead. But hardly were the sails drawing
-when the wind died away again. One of the ships came into range, and there
-was nothing for it but to go back to the kedging. Three times did this
-occur, the captain, with his eye on the dog-vane, jockeying her along as
-a skipper would his racing-yacht. The men had now been at their quarters
-for thirty-six hours without rest or sleep. But at the order they dropped
-into the boats again, ready for anything.
-
-Another breeze sprang up now and held for two hours. Like logs the
-sailor-men tumbled over on the decks, nearly dead for lack of sleep. On
-the afternoon of the third day of the chase the "Constitution" lost the
-wind and the enemy kept it. Back again to kedging they went, weary and
-sick at heart.
-
-But relief was in sight. A great cloud hove up on the southeastern
-horizon, and the black squall that followed was a Godsend to the
-"Constitution" and her weary crew. Hull knew the Englishmen would not
-like the looks of the squall. No more did he. But he kept his boats at
-the towing, nevertheless.
-
-He stationed his men at the halyards and down-hauls, and had everything in
-hand for the shock. He calmly watched the on-coming line of froth, growing
-whiter every minute, while his officers came to him and begged him to take
-in his sail. But wait he did until the first breath stirred his royals.
-Then the shrill pipe of the boatswain called the boats alongside of the
-"Constitution."
-
-They were not a moment too soon. As the men were hooking the tackles the
-blast struck the ship. Over she heeled, almost on her beam ends, the boats
-tossed up like feather-weights. The yards came down with a rush, and the
-sails flew up to the quarter-blocks, though the wind seemed likely to blow
-them out of the bolt-ropes. She righted herself in a moment, though, and
-so cleverly had Hull watched his time that not a boat was lost.
-
-Among the enemy all was disorganization. Every sail was furled, and some
-of their boats went adrift. Then, as the friendly rain and mist came down,
-the wily Yankee spread his sails--not even furled--and sailed away on an
-easy bowline at nine knots an hour.
-
-The race was won. Before the Englishmen could recover, Hull managed by
-wetting his sails to make them hold the wind, and soon the enemy was but
-a blur on his western horizon. Then the British gave it up.
-
-The superiority of Yankee seamanship was never more marked than in this
-chase. The British had the wind, the advantage of position, the force,
-and lacked only the wonderful skill and indomitable perseverance of the
-American, who, with everything against him, never for a moment despaired
-of pulling gallant "Old Ironsides" out of the reach of his slow-moving
-enemy.
-
-The difficult manoeuvre of picking up his boats without backing a yard
-or easing a sheet he repeated again and again, to the wonderment of his
-adversaries, whose attempts in this direction failed every time they tried
-it in a smart breeze. Hull's tactics at the coming of the squall were
-hazardous, and under any other circumstances would have been suicidal. For
-a skipper to have his boats two cable-lengths away from his ship, with his
-royals flapping to the first shock of a squall, is bad seamanship. But if
-tackles are hooked and men are safe aboard there is no marine feat like
-it.
-
-The naval history of this country is full of such instances. Captain
-Charles Stewart, on the same ship, did a wonderful thing. In his fight
-with the "Cyane" and the "Levant" he delivered a broadside from both
-batteries at the same time. Then, shifting his helm under cover of the
-smoke, he backed his topsails and drew out sternward from the enemy's
-fire, taking a new position, and delivering another broadside, which
-brought about their surrender.
-
-The war-ship of fifty years ago was as different from the battle-ship
-of to-day as a caravel from a torpedo-boat. With half the length and a
-third the tonnage, the old "ship-of-the-line" had three times as many men
-as the modern sea-fighter. Yet, with a thousand men aboard, she had work
-for them all. More than two acres of canvas were to be handled, and over
-a hundred guns were to be served, loaded, and fired. A thousand pieces
-of running-gear were to be rove and manned. The huge topsails, weighing,
-with their yards, many tons, needed on their halyards half a hundred
-men. Great anchors were to be broken from their sandy holds, and the
-capstan-bars, double-banked, hove around to the sound of the merry chantey
-and deep-voiced trumpet. Homeward bound, the business of anchor-hoisting
-turned into a mad scene, and many a rude jest and hoarse song turned the
-crowded fo'c's'le into a carnival of jollity.
-
-In matters of routine and training the crews of the American frigates
-differed little from those of England. The sailor-men of the United
-States, though newer to the work of navigating the big ships, were smart
-seamen, and could cross or bring down their light yards, send down their
-masts, or clear for action with the oldest and very best of England's
-men-o'war's-men.
-
-The ships themselves differed little in general construction. During the
-war of 1812, of large frigates we possessed but the "Constitution," the
-"President," and the "Constellation." Though built upon models patterned
-after the accepted standards of the period, they were somewhat smaller
-than the British vessels and usually carried a lighter armament. Their
-unbroken list of victories during the war with England is remarkable when
-one considers what the young nation was contending against, both at home
-and abroad, and how little aid Congress had given the infant navy.
-
-It seems really wonderful how a large body of men, numbering from three
-hundred to six hundred, and later a thousand or more, could find comfort
-and a home from one year's end to another in a space only two hundred feet
-long and fifty feet wide.
-
-But Jack is nowhere so comfortable as aboard ship. He is used to
-prescribed limits, and crawls into his hammock at night happy that
-the space is no greater. There is a companionship, he thinks, in close
-quarters, and he likes them.
-
-In the old ships it was a matter of great importance to provide
-comfortable quarters for the great crews they were obliged to carry.
-In England, during the first years of the century, the complement of a
-"Seventy-four" was five hundred and ninety, and even six hundred and
-forty men. Hammocks seem to have been used during the reign of Queen
-Elizabeth, when they were called "nets," probably because they were made
-of rope-yarn.
-
-The officers were then, as now, given the after part of the ship. A wooden
-bulkhead separated the cabins of the officers from the main-decks, where
-the men lived, though when the ship was cleared for action the bulkheads
-were taken down and all movable property both of officer and man was taken
-below-deck.
-
-This gave a clean sweep of the deck from bow to stern. The steerage had
-from two to six broadside-guns in it, and even the captain had to live
-with a couple of brass stern-chasers and a broadsider or two.
-
-The grandest line-of-battle-ship ever built for this country was the old
-"Pennsylvania." She was made of wood throughout, two hundred and twenty
-feet long and fifty-eight feet beam, with a draft of twenty-five feet
-of water and thirty-five hundred tons displacement,--just one-third of
-that of the modern "Iowa." Eleven hundred men could swing their hammocks
-on her wide decks, where no modern gun-carriages or steel compartments
-broke the long sweep from the cabin forward. Her sides were of oak, with a
-thickness of eighteen inches at the upper gun-ports and thirty-two inches
-at the water-line, almost heavy enough at long range to resist the shot
-of a modern rifle. Her sixteen inches were proof against her own fire at
-a mile. On her three fighting-decks she carried sixteen 8-inch guns, the
-heaviest they had in those days, and one hundred and four 32-pounders. Her
-mainmast was over two hundred feet long, and with all sail set she could
-leg it at twelve knots an hour.
-
-But compare her with the modern "Indiana." The "Pennsylvania" weighed less
-than the armor of the "Indiana" alone. The "Indiana" has but sixteen guns,
-against one hundred and twenty on the "Pennsylvania;" but that broadside
-can send two tons of tempered steel at a single discharge. The old 8-inch
-guns of the "Pennsylvania" could send a shell through fifteen inches of
-oak at a distance of a mile--the equivalent of half an inch of steel.
-
-The range of a modern rifle is from five to twelve miles; the
-penetration is almost anything you please in the way of steel armor.
-The "Pennsylvania's" shells at point-blank range would hardly make a
-perceptible dent in the "Indiana's" steel armor, and the old cast-iron
-shot would roll harmlessly down the new ship's sides. But one explosive
-shell from the "Indiana" would go through the "Pennsylvania" from stem to
-stern, and would splinter and burn her beyond repair.
-
-The "Pennsylvania" cost the government, in 1837, nearly seven hundred
-thousand dollars; a fabulous sum for a battle-ship in those days. The
-"Indiana" cost three millions and a half,--only two hundred and fifty
-thousand dollars less than the sum paid for that vast territory bought
-from Napoleon, and known as the "Louisiana Purchase," and about half the
-sum paid for the acquisition of Alaska from Russia.
-
-The statistics are interesting. According to official authority, in
-putting this vessel together seven hundred tons of rivets alone were used.
-About four hundred plans were made for the hull and about two hundred and
-fifty plans and drawings were made for the engines. These would take a
-force of one hundred men a year to complete.
-
-The engines and machinery alone weigh about nine hundred tons. The
-smoke-stacks are about sixteen feet in diameter. Each of the main engines
-is so enormous that under the great frames, in the economy of space and
-construction, are two smaller engines, the sole mission of which is to
-start the big ones. There are about sixty-six separate engines for various
-purposes. The condensing-tubes, placed end to end, would cover a distance
-of twelve miles. Thirty tons of water fill her boilers, which would stand
-a pressure of one hundred and sixty pounds to the square inch. Three
-dynamos provide the electricity,--a plant which would light a town of five
-thousand inhabitants. There are twenty-one complete sets of speaking-tubes
-and twenty-four telephone stations.
-
-The two great turrets are clad with nineteen inches of toughened steel.
-In each of these turrets are two 13-inch guns. Each of these guns is about
-fifty feet long and weighs sixty-one tons. There are eight 8-inch guns on
-the superstructure, in sets of twos, and amidships on the main-deck are
-four 6-inch rifles. In ten minutes, firing each 13-inch gun once in two
-minutes, and using all the other guns at their full power, the "Indiana"
-could fire about sixty tons of death-dealing metal.
-
-The millennium has not yet been reached, but such awful force makes
-universal peace a possibility. What the immediate future holds forth in
-naval architecture and gunnery is a matter which excites some curiosity,
-for it almost seems as though perfection, according to the standard of the
-end of the century, has been reached. And yet we already know of certain
-changes, improvements, and inventions, the direct outcome of the Spanish
-war, which are to be made on the vessels now contracted for, which affect
-importantly the government of the ship; and so it may be that the next
-twenty years will show as great an evolution as have the two decades just
-past.
-
-But whatever the future may bring, it has been a marvellous and momentous
-change from the old navy to the new. Since the "Monitor"-"Merrimac" fight
-no country has been quicker to profit by the lessons of the victory of
-iron over wood and steel over iron than the United States.
-
-But the navy that is, however glorious its achievements, can never dim the
-glory of the navy that was, though sailor-men, old and new, know that in
-a test of ship and ship, and man and man, the flag of this country will
-continue to fly triumphant.
-
-
-
-
-FARRAGUT IN MOBILE BAY
-
-
-It was Friday, the 5th of August, 1864. The first violet streaks of dawn
-stole through the purple clouds that the wind had tossed up during the
-night. Admiral Farragut sat in his cabin, quietly sipping his tea, his
-fleet-captain, Drayton, by his side. Through the open ports they could
-see the dim masses of the ships of the fleet as, lashed two and two, they
-stretched in a long line to seaward. The wind no longer blew, and the
-shrill pipes and the creaking of the blocks as the light yards came down
-echoed clearly across the silent water.
-
-"How is the wind, Drayton?" said the admiral, at last.
-
-Drayton walked to the port.
-
-"About west-sou'west, sir, I should say."
-
-The admiral smiled.
-
-"A good omen. Our smoke will blow over their batteries."
-
-He raised his cup, drained it, and set it back on its saucer. Then he rose
-to his feet and walked slowly up and down the cabin, looking first at his
-watch and then out through the starboard gallery, where the fleet lay. He
-turned, his genial face all aglow in the cool light of the morning, and
-reached to the table for his side-arms.
-
-The moment had arrived.
-
-"Well, Drayton," he said, "we might as well get under weigh."
-
-Drayton knew, and Farragut knew, that the momentous day before them
-would decide the fate of the West Gulf and of the nation in the South.
-It was the supreme moment in the admiral's career. But as he clasped his
-sword-belt his hands were as firm as though on inspection.
-
-With a cheery "Aye, aye, sir," Drayton went out of the door and up the
-companion, and soon the deck above resounded with the nimble feet as the
-men sprang joyfully to quarters. Old Knowles, the quartermaster, deftly
-sent his little ball of bunting, ready for an hour, to the yard-arm, and
-in a moment the row of multi-colored flags, tipped with the glow of the
-brightened east, fluttered proudly out into the morning breeze.
-
-Then the bright answering pennants flew up from all the vessels of the
-fleet, and the black smoke poured from their dusky funnels as the white
-water churned up behind them on their way into line.
-
-The admiral, on the quarter-deck, glass in hand, saw the black turrets of
-the monitors, with their grim, shiny muzzles, drift slowly inland towards
-the batteries, not a ripple showing behind them as they moved on their
-deadly mission towards the frowning battlements of Fort Morgan. Ahead of
-the "Hartford" was the broad stern of the "Brooklyn," as she churned her
-way slowly onward, her smoke drifting in great clouds over her starboard
-bow towards the water-batteries. Beside the admiral, one hand on the rail,
-was Drayton, cool as though on a practice drill, and as he looked over
-the swarthy backs that shone bare in the morning sun he knew well that
-the flagship would give a good account of herself.
-
-Behind him stood Watson, Gates, McKinley, and Brownell, watching the
-progress of the monitors. The calmness of the scene was sublime. Only
-an occasional order to the tacklemen, given in a quiet voice by the
-gun-captains, showed the deadly work ahead.
-
-As the "Hartford" drew into range, the admiral walked over to the main
-rigging and clambered up into the shrouds; and his men below him at the
-batteries lovingly watched their "old man" as step by step he mounted
-to get a clearer view. They knew him for a gallant old sea-dog. They had
-seen him steam past the batteries at Vicksburg and Port Hudson, and they
-smiled at his sternness at the capture of New Orleans, for they loved
-him. But at Mobile they learned that he feared nothing above the ocean
-or under it, if it stood in the way of the cause of his country. At this
-point Farragut stood a few feet above Jouett, on the wheel-house of the
-"Metacomet" alongside, and could hail the top above him, where Freeman,
-his trusty pilot, gave him his soundings and bearings.
-
-At length the battle opened. A great puff of white smoke rolled along
-the water from the turret of the "Tecumseh," and a yellow cloud of dust
-above the water-batteries marked where the shot had struck. Fort Morgan
-immediately replied, and, as the gunners got the range, the angry splash
-of the shots as they skipped across the water came clearly to the crew
-of the "Hartford," who stood at their guns silent and motionless. As
-the shots rained about them and great white splinters were torn from the
-nettings and flew across the decks, they only looked up at their admiral,
-who, leaning slightly forward, was slowly scanning the breastworks. In his
-face there was no impatience, no irritation, no sign of anxiety, and while
-he could calmly wait, they could. The courage of the leader was reflected
-in his men. It was the very perfection of human discipline.
-
-Would the order to fire never come? Already a fragment of shell had struck
-a gun-captain in the breast, and they saw him carried past them, moaning
-piteously. A shot had struck the foremast, and a jagged splinter from the
-mainmast flew up and lodged in the rigging below where the admiral stood.
-They saw him take the glass from his eyes, and, turning towards Captain
-Drayton, hold up his hand.
-
-The guns, already trained, belched forth their iron greeting to the
-gunboats, and the battle was on in earnest. Calm before, the men were
-calmer now, and they went about their work as though at target practice.
-The powder-boys flew like sprites, and the gunners sponged and loaded with
-rapidity. It was as if each gun and its crew were parts of one mechanism.
-
-"Steady, boys, steady. Left tackle a little. So! so!"
-
-And then came another broadside, followed by an eager cheer as the enemy
-were driven away from their water-battery.
-
-[Illustration: THE ADMIRAL LASHED TO THE RIGGING]
-
-As the smoke from the broadsides increased and obscured his view, the
-admiral, ratline by ratline, ascended the rigging until he found himself
-partly above the futtock bands and holding on to the futtock shrouds.
-The watchful eye of Drayton saw him perched high up, all unconscious of
-himself, thinking only of the great movements about him. A shock, and
-he would be thrown into the sea. The captain gave an order to Knowles,
-the quartermaster, who lay aloft briskly with a piece of lead-line. The
-admiral did not even see him, and only when Knowles passed the line around
-him did Farragut take his glasses down. "Never mind," said he, with a
-smile, "I'm all right." But the quartermaster lashed him, nevertheless,
-and lay below.
-
-Then from his lofty position the admiral saw a magnificent but terrible
-thing. The monitor "Tecumseh" was up well with the fort, and drawing
-slowly on, when, without a warning, a great column of water shot up under
-her starboard bow. She heeled over to port and went down with every soul
-on board. She had struck a torpedo. Captain Craven, in his eagerness to
-engage the "Tennessee" in battle, had passed to the west of the fatal
-buoy.
-
-This disaster was not immediately realized by the men. Some supposed the
-"Tennessee" had been sunk, and cheer after cheer was taken up and echoed
-along the line.
-
-But the admiral knew the danger that was coming. His anxiety was not
-decreased when the "Brooklyn," just ahead of him, suddenly stopped. The
-frown on his brows deepened, and loudly he hailed his pilot, Freeman, in
-the top, a few feet above him,--
-
-"What's the matter with the Brooklyn?" he shouted. "She must have plenty
-of water there."
-
-Freeman's head appeared promptly at the lubber's hole.
-
-"Plenty and to spare, admiral," he answered.
-
-Then the admiral knew. Captain Alden had seen the "Tecumseh" go down,
-and the heavy line of torpedoes across the channel made him pause. The
-backing screw churned up the water, and the "Hartford" every moment was
-bearing down on her. The vessels in the rear, pressing on those in the
-van, created a terrible confusion, and in the uncertainty the batteries
-of Farragut's ships ceased fire, while the whole of Mobile Point was a
-living flame. Disaster was imminent.
-
-But not a second did Farragut pause. A harsh voice from the "Hartford"
-broke the brief but ominous silence.
-
-"What's the trouble?"
-
-Then Alden's voice from the "Brooklyn" answered,--
-
-"Torpedoes."
-
-"Damn the torpedoes!" shouted the admiral. "Four bells. Captain Drayton,
-go ahead. Jouett, full speed."
-
-And the "Hartford" dashed forward, passed the "Brooklyn," and assumed the
-head of the column.
-
-Over the line of mines they flew at full speed, and the men below could
-hear them as they scraped along the hull. It was the one way out of the
-difficulty, and a second's hesitation would have closed even this escape
-from a frightful calamity. The admiral looked astern at the manoeuvring
-of his vessels with a smile of satisfaction. It was a magnificent sight.
-At first they appeared to be fouling each other in dire confusion, at the
-mercy of the guns which still belched forth a merciless fire. But as the
-"Hartford" dashed forward, one by one, as if by magic, they took their
-places. And he knew a grand tactical movement had been accomplished.
-
-Nor did he forget the poor men of the "Tecumseh," struggling in the water
-where their ship had gone down, but, going down the rigging, ordered
-Jouett to lower a boat immediately and pick up the survivors.
-
-The "Hartford" was nearly a mile ahead before the line could be
-straightened, and single-handed she fought the batteries and the gunboats,
-making straight for Buchanan's invincible ram, the "Tennessee." Amid the
-fire of shot and bursting shell the admiral walked calmly back to his
-quarter-deck, giving a word of advice here and an order there. But soon
-the other vessels were able to pour in a storm of shot and shell that
-completely silenced the batteries.
-
-One by one he saw the gunboats sink, until only the "Tennessee" had to be
-accounted for. The admiral tried to ram her, and the solid shot of his
-broadsides rolled down her iron sides; but she slipped away, pouring in
-a terrific fire at close range. She riddled the "Brooklyn," "Richmond,"
-and "Monongahela," all three of which dashed at her, bows on, at fearful
-speed. The admiral again struck her a fearful blow, but apparently with
-no effect whatever.
-
-The ram had one great advantage: she was surrounded by enemies and could
-fire continually, while the Union vessels had to use the utmost care not
-to fire into or collide with one another. An accident of this kind now
-happened to Farragut's ship. The "Hartford" and the "Lackawanna" were both
-making at full speed for the ram. The "Hartford" had the better position;
-and the "Lackawanna," sheering off to avoid another ship, ran into the
-quarter of the flagship, just where the admiral was standing, cutting her
-down nearly to the water's edge. The shock of the impact nearly took him
-off his feet, but in a moment he was climbing over the side to see what
-damage had been done.
-
-His crew thought he was looking out for himself. Immediately there was a
-cry, "Get the admiral out of the ship." The whole thought of his crew,
-unmindful of themselves, was to get him to a place of safety. It was a
-mere sudden impulse. But Farragut was not the man to look to himself.
-Having satisfied himself that the "Hartford" could last, he again gave
-the order, "Full speed," and set his prow again for the "Tennessee."
-
-But in the meanwhile the monitors had been hammering away at her with
-their heavy shot. Her rudder and smoke-stack were shot away, and her
-shutters jammed, and as the "Hartford" bore down upon her for the third
-time she showed her white flag and surrendered.
-
-The "Hartford" was greatly cut up,--twenty-five killed and twenty-eight
-wounded,--but the admiral had not a scratch to show for his deadly
-encounters. He came on deck just as the poor fellows who had been killed
-were being carefully laid out on the port side of the quarter-deck.
-
-"It was a great victory, Drayton," said he, sadly, "but----"
-
-And the men saw him turn aside, tears coursing down his cheeks.
-
-In truth, "there is nothing half so melancholy as a battle lost, except
-a battle won."
-
-
-
-
-AT THE NAVAL ACADEMY
-
-
-In times like those we have but recently passed through, when the theories
-and studies of thirty years are being put to tests of fire and the sword,
-it is interesting to turn for a moment to our naval school at Annapolis,
-where the officers who planned our campaigns, directed our battles and
-our blockades, and commanded our ships were first trained to the serious
-business of war. Though the years which have passed since 1861 have made
-changes in the personnel system and appearance of the Naval Academy, the
-city of Annapolis itself is the same sleepy, careless, happy-go-lucky town
-of earlier days.
-
-Once a year, and only once, it rouses itself from its lethargy and assumes
-an air of gayety and importance which it may not even have shown when it
-earned for itself the title of "The Gayest Colonial Capital." During the
-latter part of May and the first of June each train that pulls into the
-ramshackle station bears a load of pretty young women,--sisters, cousins,
-sweethearts,--who come for the two-weeks' exercises, when the naval cadets
-are graduated, and for the June ball. It has been so since the founding of
-the Naval Academy, and will be so as long as youngsters in brass buttons
-are brought up to be professional heroes.
-
-In the old colonial days Annapolis was rich. There was an English
-governor, and grouped about him were some of the oldest English families.
-In the middle of the eighteenth century Annapolis had become refined, gay,
-elegant, and even dissipated.
-
-Not only was Annapolis in these old days the most lucrative place in
-the colonies for the practice of law, but it was the birthplace of such
-lawyers as Daniel Dulaney, William Pinckney, Charles Carroll, and Reverdy
-Johnson. In those days, too, after the Revolution, Charles Carroll of
-Carrollton, the richest man in America, was one of the citizens. To-day,
-while the descendants of some of these families are still in possession of
-the homes of their forefathers, the seat of power and money of Maryland
-has changed to the commercial capital, Baltimore. The centre of social
-gayety, therefore, is to be found in the Naval Academy.
-
-The social feature of the life of the cadet must not be underestimated.
-The youngsters who present themselves as candidates for admission,
-appointed politically, come from all parts of the country, and represent
-every shade of opinion and training in the United States. They are a
-smaller image of the large mass of our people. The problem of bringing
-these different natures into accord with the conditions which they must
-face is no easy one; and the weeding-out process, which immediately
-begins, is conducted by the superintendent--usually a captain in the
-navy--and the officers under his command, under rules which have been
-adopted after sixty years of previous administrations.
-
-There is an indefinable something in the organization of the place that
-makes an indelible impression upon the mind of the candidate, and as he
-enters upon his duties it does not take long to discover whether he is
-mentally and personally fitted for the long task before him. It was said
-in the old days that a seaman was born and not made. But modern warfare
-has so changed the conditions that, while the officers of the navy must
-always command men and have the instincts of the sailor, high mental
-attainments are also the requisite, and those instincts can be formed by
-experience and association.
-
-The course, then, in brief, is the training of the mind and the body,
-the school of the soldier and sailor, and the school of the gentleman.
-Here, then, is where the social influences of the Naval Academy are felt.
-Politics, like misfortune, makes strange bedfellows, and the scion of
-your Eastern banker may soon find himself detailed as the room-mate of the
-most impecunious and unpretentious of Uncle Sam's younger sons. It is the
-democracy of military training, in which every man's standing is governed
-alone by his professional qualifications. Money or position can in no way
-affect his life. His rise or fall depends entirely upon his own worth.
-
-To the young man fortunate enough to secure an early appointment from his
-representative in Congress, his new home, in the month of May, presents
-every attraction. From the moment he passes the gate, passes the marine
-guards, his eye meets the beautifully kept lawns of the campus and
-drill-ground, sweeping gradually down to the sea-wall on the north and
-east sides, where the Severn River flows, stretching out to the blue
-waters of Chesapeake Bay, only three miles from old Fort Severn. To the
-left, as he enters, are the New Quarters and hospital. To the right, the
-sacred precincts of "Lovers' Lane," into which he cannot go, under pain of
-displeasure of his upper classmen, until he has passed through the first,
-or "plebe," year, and this rule is stringent.
-
-To pass the examinations successfully the candidate must be physically
-sound, and must have a knowledge of arithmetic, geography, United States
-history, reading, writing, spelling, English grammar, and the first
-principles of algebra. The number of appointees is limited by law to one
-naval cadet for every member or delegate of the House of Representatives,
-one for the District of Columbia, and ten at-large; the District of
-Columbia and the at-large appointments being made by the President. The
-course of the naval cadets is six years,--four years at the Naval Academy
-and two years at sea,--at the expiration of which time the cadet returns
-for the final graduation.
-
-The fourth-class man who enters in May has a certain advantage over the
-September appointee, for he has the advantage of four months of practical
-instruction, which hardens his muscles and gets his mind into excellent
-shape for the harder work of the year. Having passed his examinations,
-the youngster goes to the office of the superintendent, where he takes
-the oath of allegiance which binds him to serve in the United States navy
-eight years, including his time of probation at the Naval Academy, unless
-sooner discharged. He deposits a sum of money for his books, and such
-other amount as may be necessary for his outfit, and is put to no further
-expense.
-
-His pay is five hundred dollars a year while at the Naval Academy,
-but, while he acknowledges its receipt to the paymaster by signing the
-pay-roll, he is furnished with only sufficient pocket-money to get along
-on. This sum of money is microscopic, and is usually spent as soon as
-received. Having procured his outfit from the storekeeper, he reports on
-board the "Santee." The "Santee" is one of the old sailing-frigates in the
-navy, and has for years been anchored at the naval dock as quarters for
-cadets during the summer time and for practical instruction in the drill
-of the old Dahlgrens. Here, too, is where the fractious cadets are placed
-in durance.
-
-Until within a very few years the new fourth-class men were sent
-upon the summer cruise of cadets, first on the "Dale," then on the
-"Constellation" and the "Monongahela." But by a change in the curriculum
-the May appointees in the fourth class do not take the summer cruise. The
-"Monongahela," one summer, carried the line division of the first class,
-the second class, and the third class. Before this change the life of the
-"plebe" on the summer cruise was not a bed of roses. The cadets of the
-third class, until recently "plebes" themselves, were prepared to wreak
-upon their juniors all of the pent-up exuberance of the previous year.
-
-Hazing, in the old sense, has died away, and even the "running" of ten
-years ago has been reduced to a minimum through the efforts of Captains
-Ramsey, Sampson, and Phythian; but the "plebe" was made to step around in
-a very lively manner, and to do most of the hauling on the heavy gear,
-while the third-class men did the complaining. On the "Monongahela" the
-first, second, and third classes are now, as in the old days, considered
-as sailors, although a number of the blue-jackets are retained on the
-vessel. The cadets do their share of the work, and perform all the
-duties of men-of-war's-men except scrubbing, holy-stoning, and cleaning
-brass-work. The lower-class men are divided into watches with the regular
-blue-jackets, side by side with whom they assist in performing all the
-evolutions in working the ship.
-
-The cruise which follows is usually a pleasant one. There is a lot of hard
-work to do, and in a short while the hands and muscles get hard, the white
-suits conveniently tarry, and the skins of the youngsters as brown as
-leather. But the life has its compensations, for at Fortress Monroe they
-get into their uniforms again and go ashore to the dances given there at
-the time of their arrival and departure.
-
-Meanwhile the engineer division of the first class is off on a cruise to
-visit the various navy-yards and docks of the Atlantic coast. Their course
-of instruction differs from that of the cadets on the "Monongahela,"
-and they are shown the practical side of engineering work on sea-going
-ships. Away down below the water-line of their vessel, in the stoke-hole,
-engine-room, or boiler-room, covered with grease or coal-dust, they do all
-the work of oilers, engineers, stokers, and mechanics, so as to be able
-to know accurately all the duties of those men, and to be able to command
-them in the years to come.
-
-In October the study-term begins, and the cadets are then given their
-quarters for winter. Most of them are in the building known as the New
-Quarters, while the others, cadet officers of the first class, are placed
-in the Old Quarters. The subtle distinction in the titles of these two
-sets of buildings is hardly appreciated at the Naval Academy, since they
-have both been built for thirty or forty years, and are in a frightful
-state of dilapidation. Two cadets of the same class are quartered in
-each room, and the discipline of household, as well as of person, begins
-immediately. Each room is plainly furnished, and contains two beds, two
-wardrobes, two looking-glasses, two iron wash-stands, a common table, and
-a broom. The charge of the room is taken by each cadet every other week,
-and this cadet is responsible for its general order and cleanliness.
-If the officer in charge should happen to inspect the quarters in his
-absence, and find anything contrary to regulations, the cadet in charge
-is the one who is reported at the next morning's formation, although his
-room-mate may have been the delinquent.
-
-Throughout the year the reveille sounds at six o'clock. At a quarter
-to seven is morning formation, roll-call, and inspection. The ranks
-are opened, and the keen-eyed officer in charge, followed by the cadet
-officer-of-the-day and his ominous scratch-pad, with keen eyes looks for
-grease spots, specks of dust on blouses, tumbled hair, or unblackened
-boots. After breakfast the sick-call is sounded, and cadets who are ill,
-or who think they are, report to the hospital. At eight o'clock the study
-begins, and lasts until half-past twelve. The cadets of each class are
-divided into sections of from six to a dozen each, and at the bugle-call
-are formed by sections and marched to their recitation-rooms for study.
-The morning is divided into two parts, and each part is divided into two
-periods, one for study and one for recitation.
-
-Briefly, the course of instruction is as follows: Fourth class, first
-year: algebra, geometry, English, history of Greece and Rome, French,
-naval history of the United States, Spanish. Third class, second year:
-descriptive geometry, trigonometry, the Constitution of the United States,
-analytical geometry, mechanical drawing, physics, and chemistry. Second
-class, third year: seamanship, principles of mechanism, differential
-calculus, integral calculus, physics, chemistry, mechanical drawing, and
-navigation. First class, line division: seamanship and naval tactics,
-ordnance and gunnery, theory and practice of navigation, hydrographic
-surveying, least squares, applied mechanics, naval construction,
-ballistics, armor, and torpedoes. The engineer division has marine
-engines, boilers, machinery designing, mechanics, and naval construction.
-
-The first part of the course, it will be seen, deals with the simpler
-branches of study. The plan is not to burden the mind of the cadet with
-unnecessary knowledge, yet every branch which will directly, or even
-indirectly, contribute to his ultimate efficiency has its place in the
-curriculum. The end--the making of a thoroughly trained seaman--is kept
-constantly in view. The simpler studies train the mind of the cadet to the
-technical work which follows in the third and fourth years, and in those
-two years he gets his principal technical and practical training. Each one
-of the departments in which he studies has a head, usually a naval officer
-above the rank of lieutenant-commander. All of these heads of departments,
-with the superintendent and commandant of cadets, who is also head of the
-Department of Discipline, form the Academic Board. The afternoon classes
-begin at two and last till four, after which comes the afternoon drill,
-which lasts until 5.30 and completes the daily duties.
-
-It does not seem with all this work as though the cadet had very much
-time to himself, but the cadet is not unhappy. Wednesday and Saturday
-afternoons are given over as recreation-hours, and football and baseball
-with neighboring college teams bring crowds of visitors into the Academy.
-The band plays upon the lawn, and the pathways are filled with fair
-visitors, who walk with their respective heroes along the shady lanes.
-Saturday night, too, during the winter, hops are given, sometimes by
-officers and sometimes by cadets, and a gymnastic entertainment once a
-year gives the cadets the opportunity to show their prowess in boxing,
-fencing, and work on the gymnastic paraphernalia.
-
-Towards the end of May the annual exercises begin. The examinations
-finished, the arrival of the Board of Visitors is announced by the booming
-of cannons from the sea-wall. The cadets receive them on dress-parade,
-and the work of showing their progress during the year is at once
-begun. The Board of Visitors go out on one of the government tugs into
-Chesapeake Bay, and there they see the upper-class men tack, wear-ship,
-box, haul, and perform all the evolutions in a seamanlike manner on the
-old "Monongahela." Light yards are swung across with the precision of
-old men-of-war's-men; sails are reefed, furled, or set in an incomparably
-short space of time; and the cadets are down from aloft for their target
-practice. The target is towed out by a launch, anchored, and gun by gun,
-battery by battery, division by division, or by broadside, the cadets
-hammer away at it as though it were the vessel of a hostile power, more
-often than not blowing it entirely to pieces.
-
-[Illustration: REEFING TOP-SAILS]
-
-Back again at the yard, they go through with their drill as infantry
-or artillery; and last, but not least, comes the drill by companies for
-the honor of bearing the Naval Academy flag during the coming year. The
-judges in this competition are usually army officers, and every movement
-is carefully watched and marked. The captain of each company, before going
-to this drill, selects its sponsor,--a very pretty girl, who, the drill
-over, presents the flag to the victorious company amid loud cheers from
-the whole battalion.
-
-The exercises are over. The cadet of the first class is now ready to be
-graduated. Companies are formed up in hollow square, and the secretary
-of the navy in the centre, with a pleasant word to each, presents the
-diplomas to the graduates amid cheers from the companies. As quickly as
-he can the first-class man goes to his quarters and shifts into his new
-uniform, and comes back to the campus for the congratulations of his
-friends. That night the June ball takes place, and the graduate bids
-farewell to his old associations and goes out into the world.
-
-Few articles that have been written about the Naval Academy have given
-anything of the personal side of the life of the cadet,--the side of his
-life that is an escape-valve from books and drills. There was a time,
-years ago, when smoking was permitted by the superintendent, and this is
-how the privilege was granted: One night, in January, 1879, an alarm of
-fire was sounded just before ten o'clock. The cadets, then nearly ready
-for turning in, appeared in all sorts of costumes, but reported promptly
-in the hall. When the battalion was assembled at fire-quarters, word
-passed that there was a fire in the city and they were expected to aid.
-
-With a cheer the cadets dashed to the engines, and, in spite of the cold
-and their scanty costumes, rushed out to the State-House circle, where
-seven or eight buildings were all ablaze.
-
-It was found that the hydrants could not supply enough water, so the cadet
-officers immediately took charge and ran a line of hose to the river.
-Four houses were already past help, but attention was immediately directed
-towards saving the others.
-
-In order to save three buildings it was found necessary to pull one of
-these burning structures down. A heavy chain was passed through the doors
-and one of the windows, which was manned by the cadets and townsfolk, and
-the building was in a short time demolished. In some unaccountable way,
-after part of the building had been pulled down, the chain was unshackled,
-and the townsfolk, who were now manning it, shot half-way up the street.
-So the cadets, in spite of their hard work, could always find time for
-skylarking. One officer, who was not very much liked, received the full
-force of the hose, which was in charge of two cadets, directly under the
-chin. Of course, apologies were in order, but the officer had to go home.
-At four o'clock in the morning the cadets, wet and tired out, returned to
-their quarters.
-
-The next day they found that it was generally considered that they had
-not only saved the buildings but the greater part of the business portion
-of the town, as the wind had shifted, and the part of the town towards
-the harbor would have been completely destroyed. At formation the order
-of the superintendent was read. It said that, "Whereas, the cadets had
-shown great bravery in the performance of their duty the night before,
-and had conducted themselves in a creditable manner, the superintendent
-desired to express his appreciation and grant to them the privilege of
-using tobacco." Ten minutes after breakfast there was not a man in the
-battalion of nearly four hundred who was not puffing away furiously on
-pipe, cigar, or cigarette, although not an ounce of tobacco had been drawn
-from the stock of the storekeeper. Whence it came is a mystery.
-
-The privilege was taken away in 1881; and though to-day there is no
-smoking allowed, and smoking is considered one of the most serious
-offences, yet it is safe to say that in many a secret nook this contraband
-is safely hid from the eye of the officer in charge. In the old days,
-after taps, or lights out, poker-parties were the order of the night.
-The windows and transoms were covered with blankets, and every ray was
-hidden from the eye of the zealous officer and watchman. But to-day
-the discipline is different, and the cadet, to pass the rigorous mental
-examination, has no time to transgress the written and unwritten law.
-
-There are, of course, many criticisms from various quarters as to the
-methods of instruction at the Naval Academy, but it is not desirable
-to make rapid changes, in spite of new conditions, in a course that has
-proved successful for many years. It is asked that if cadets are to man
-steamships without sails, what is the use of educating them to officer
-sailing-vessels? What was the necessity of building the "Bancroft," if she
-was not to be used for the practice-cruises of the cadets? Why has it been
-proposed to build wooden vessels for their instruction? The superintendent
-of the Naval Academy, Captain Cooper, Secretary Herbert, and Secretary
-Long have contended that officer-like qualities can best be attained by
-experience in sailing-vessels. They believe that intrepidity and alertness
-come from the old school of sailing-ships.
-
-On the other hand, many of the older officers believe that there is too
-much book-learning at the Academy and too little practical instruction;
-but most of them are willing to admit that the naval officer of to-day
-must be a scientific man to properly meet requirements of modern ships,
-and that he cannot acquit himself properly unless he has a complete
-theoretical training. It is certain that the cadet graduated now from the
-Naval Academy is thoroughly trained in his profession. He has never yet
-been shown deficient in knowledge of any duty which he has been called
-upon to perform, nor incapable of mastering the intricate parts of modern
-ships. Considering the age at which he leaves the Academy, he is better
-educated in his profession than the college graduate, and is also trained
-in those qualities for command which make the American naval service what
-it is to-day. He goes forth thoroughly equipped for his life-work.
-
-
-
-
-OUR NATION'S NEW HEROES
-
-
-The great General Grant, when a cadet, went through his course at West
-Point with one foot out of the Academy and the other in. So curiously
-deficient was he in all the arts and sciences which theory insists must
-go to make the perfect soldier that he was always in the "Immortals."
-
-"Immortals" is the name of the section at the foot of the class, admission
-to whose profane cult means small marks and the possible privilege of
-resigning at the end of the half-year. Immortals is a neat contraction of
-"Les Immortals,"--that is, lazy mortals. Immortal Grant became, but not
-in the way the academic reports of the time would have indicated.
-
-This has proved true again and again among the graduates of the Naval
-Academy, as well as those of West Point. Though the "child is father to
-the man" in general tendencies and character, it does not follow that
-mere mental attainments are an indication of great genius in the practical
-operation of the great military professions. Works of the brain and works
-of the body and spirit are two things; and though the finely-ordered mind
-controls to a degree both body and spirit, no such mechanism can ever
-accomplish great deeds in which heart and spirit are needed, though it
-may plan the details with a nicety to challenge criticism. A combination
-of all these qualities is rare, for the bookworm is seldom an enthusiast
-on any subject which gets very far away from his theories.
-
-
-DOES SCHOLARSHIP COUNT IN WAR?
-
-The Spanish war has shown that it is not always the men who stand at the
-heads of their classes who lead in the more practical duties of ship and
-camp. Admiral Sampson, one of the greatest thinkers and most profound
-students in the navy, as a boy and as a man always led in everything he
-undertook; but, on the other hand, Hobson, though one of the leaders of
-his class at Annapolis, was demure and retiring, hardly the man one would
-select to lead a forlorn hope into the jaws of death.
-
-One may go through the list man for man, and find as many backward in
-their studies as those who have carved high niches for themselves in the
-Academy records.
-
-No proposition could cover the situation in a general way, for, after
-all, the men we have heard from were perhaps only lucky,--lucky in being
-chosen as the instruments of the result. There are hundreds--thousands--of
-officers in the service, some brilliant, some wise, some brave, some
-strong, as good as they, who have lacked only opportunity. The singling
-out of any names for special mention seems an injustice to them,--"the
-heroes of the heart."
-
-
-TAYLOR AND EVANS AS SCHOOL-MATES
-
-Forty years ago Harry Taylor and Bob Evans were boys together in
-Washington. They were school-mates and chums, fighting each other's
-battles and longing for the day when they would be old enough to go to the
-Naval Academy and fight for their country. They were both lively, active
-lads, Taylor perhaps the quieter of the two.
-
-As their characters developed, Taylor became more of a student than Evans,
-and that became the distinguishing feature of their entire careers.
-While Captain Taylor has been the student of books, Captain Evans is
-known throughout the navy as a student of men and a "man's man" in the
-best sense of the term. The friendship of youth continued without break
-throughout their young manhood and prime. The bond was strengthened when
-Evans, at the close of the Civil War, married his chum's sister.
-
-They were both in the famous three-year class which was admitted to the
-Naval Academy in 1860. They had hardly entered on their careers long
-enough to get the smell of the brine into their nostrils when the Civil
-War broke out. Here was the very chance they were longing for. But they
-ruefully saw two upper classes go out, and they knew that fighting of the
-larger sort was not yet for them.
-
-For two years they were kept at their books, when finally the welcome news
-came that they would be graduated in three years instead of four, if they
-could pass the examinations. In spite of their many disappointments, there
-was a wild whoop of joy up and down the corridors, and they set about
-their work in earnest, studying with a concentration which no diversion
-could dissipate.
-
-Taylor and Evans both left the Academy before having been graduated,
-and were ordered to duty with the blockading squadrons along the Gulf
-and Southern coasts. They went to their ships gleefully, bearing the
-proud titles of "acting ensigns," but in reality merely midshipmen of
-three years' standing,--destined, however, to do the duties and have
-the responsibilities of men many years their seniors in theoretical and
-practical service.
-
-
-HOW CAPTAIN EVANS SAVED HIS LEG
-
-Evans was in both attacks on Fort Fisher, and in the second fight he was
-shot twice. The wounds were severe, and he was sent into hospital. His
-leg was shattered badly, and after examining it carefully the doctors told
-the young sufferer bluntly that they would be obliged to amputate it.
-
-When they went out Evans made a resolution that his leg was not to be cut
-off. He came to the conclusion that he would rather quit right there than
-to go through life one-legged. It was his own leg anyhow, and nobody had
-a better right to decide the question than himself.
-
-By some means he got hold of one of the big navy revolvers, and had
-it secreted under his pillow when the surgeons, with a blood-curdling
-array of knives and saws, made their appearance on the scene and began
-preparations to carry their threat into execution. But when the chief
-surgeon turned to the bed to examine the wounds he found himself looking
-into the black barrel of young Evans's navy revolver.
-
-[Illustration: THEY DID NOT TOUCH HIM AND HIS LEG WAS SAVED]
-
-"Now, see here," said Evans, as the doctor retired in some alarm; "I want
-that leg to stay on. I need it. I will get well with that where it is, or
-not at all, and that's the end of it. That leg does not come off. Do you
-understand what I mean?"
-
-The doctor was dismayed. But he understood perfectly, and Evans carried
-the day. The wounds were dressed and healed rapidly. In several months he
-was out again. But he limped then, and will as long as he lives.
-
-
-SIGSBEE AS A PRACTICAL JOKER
-
-Charles D. Sigsbee, writer, artist, hydrographic expert, mathematician,
-inventor, and incidentally the central figure, composed and dignified, in
-the greatest marine tragedy of modern times, is the kind of a man most
-people--men, women, and children,--like to see and know. His brow can
-be stern, and no one knows that better than the people who have sailed
-under him; but he loves peace better than war, and the twinkle behind his
-glasses never quite dies out.
-
-As a midshipman he was always the prime mover in any affair which could
-contribute to the gayety of existence; was a better judge of people than
-he was of test-tubes, and a practical joker of ability, which is saying
-much. The fascination which the ocean holds for all boys of sound mind
-gained an early sway over young Sigsbee. He received his appointment to
-the Naval Academy just before the Civil War, in 1859.
-
-He liked the practical work, but could never settle down to the
-desperate grind of the academic course. He found himself more often
-making caricatures of "Dom Roget," the teacher of Spanish (a language
-he has since mastered), than in poring over the verbs and adverbs in the
-text-book. They were good caricatures, too, and when the other youngsters
-in the section saw them there was merriment which poor Dom Roget could not
-understand. But the professor solved the matter satisfactorily by marking
-all the delinquents on a low scale of credit, and, to be certain of the
-right culprit, Sigsbee lowest of all.
-
-The young artist used to make pictures of everything and everybody he
-saw, and write pieces about them,--sprightly literature which went from
-one end of the Academy to the other. And so when the end of the year came
-round he found that, instead of being enrolled on the academic scroll of
-fame, he was relegated to the lower half of the class, which they called
-the "wooden" half.
-
-He went back into the next class,--which entered in 1860,--and with
-the advantage of a year of experience he obtained a position in the new
-class which he held until graduation time. He never quite got over his
-propensities for making fun.
-
-He began as a joke, and afterwards kept it up, an anonymous correspondence
-with a member of his class. Sigsbee disguised his hand, and in the
-guise of "Lily Gaines," a very fascinating young woman of susceptible
-tendencies, wrote to Midshipman Mullan in such endearing terms that
-for three months that young gentleman was kept in a state of alternate
-suspense and rapture. At last, in a burst of confidence some one told
-Mullan of the deception, and the correspondence suddenly ceased.
-
-But in spite of all this Midshipman Sigsbee went out into the world to
-practise his profession in stirring times, and ever acquitted himself as
-a valiant officer and accomplished gentleman. As the months rolled into
-years the naval service could boast of no officer who studied harder or
-who brought more steadfast qualities into his work.
-
-
-THE BRAVE COMMANDER OF THE "WINSLOW"
-
-Lieutenant John B. Bernadou was the commander of the "Winslow" in the
-fight at Cardenas, at which Ensign Worth Bagley, his second in command,
-was killed. The story of the fight these young officers made, until Bagley
-was killed, Bernadou was wounded, and the "Hudson" came and towed them out
-of danger, has been told again and again, and the tale of it will go down
-into the history of the Spanish-American War as one of the pluckiest of
-which there is record. Bagley, being the only naval officer killed during
-the war, was heard of from one end of the country to the other, but little
-was told of Bernadou, his commander.
-
-Bernadou's early career showed in several instances the fearlessness
-of his disposition and the sturdiness of his character. The boy's first
-idea was to go to West Point. Failing in this, he secured an appointment
-to the Naval Academy, where he entered with a fine standing, which he
-maintained until he was graduated. He was always a brilliant worker, and
-in gunnery and foreign languages showed a most remarkable aptitude. To-day
-he speaks eight languages, and is one of the foremost men in the navy as
-an authority on smokeless powder.
-
-
-THE MAN WHO NEVER KNEW FEAR
-
-Bernadou's classmates say that he fears nothing on earth or water. His
-fearlessness overcomes any consciousness of self.
-
-One afternoon in October, 1881, the United States steamer "Kearsarge,"
-Captain G. B. White, lay at anchor in Hampton Roads. The weather had been
-stormy for a day or two, and the wind had kicked up a heavy sea. There
-was a strong tide running, and the vessel swung out on a long cable. A
-seaman by the name of Christoverson, who was boat-tender in one of the
-cutters swinging at the lower booms, went out and down the Jacob's ladder.
-In stepping to the thwart his foot slipped, and those on deck saw him
-disappear under the gray water.
-
-There was a hoarse cry of "man overboard." Seaman Robert Sweeny, who saw
-the accident, running out along the boom, plunged in without delay, just
-as the man came up the second time. Bernadou, then a cadet-midshipman,
-heard the cry, and rushing to the gangway, saw the terrible struggle
-of Sweeny with the drowning man as the tide swept them out towards the
-sea. Bernadou tossed off his coat, and was overboard in an instant.
-Christoverson, in his fierce struggle, carried Sweeny down with him, the
-latter only breaking away to be carried down again.
-
-Bernadou by this time was within reach, and catching the drowning man from
-behind, managed to relieve Sweeny until a line was thrown to them, and
-they were finally hauled aboard in an exhausted condition. For this act
-both Bernadou and the sailor received the recommendations of their captain
-and the thanks of William H. Hunt, then the secretary of the navy.
-
-
-ONLY NAVAL OFFICER KILLED IN THE WAR
-
-Worth Bagley's career at the Naval Academy was a triumph of the heart
-rather than of the mind. While he loved the service and hoped some day to
-fill a useful place in it, he found more to attract him in football and
-athletics than in calculus and least squares. But no man who ever entered
-was more beloved than he, and no man had better friends in the service and
-out of it. He was turned back twice, but entered, in 1891, the class of
-'95, in which year he was graduated. He was a member of the "Five B's,"
-composed of Bennett, Barnes, Bagley, Breckinridge, and Baldwin, men who
-were close friends while they were at the Academy.
-
-But football was Bagley's ruling passion. During this time, too, the
-great series of games between West Point and Annapolis, between the army
-and navy, over which the entire United Service went mad, were played,
-and Bagley was on the victorious team of '93, and was named for the
-"All-America" team.
-
-Bagley roomed during the four years' course with his chum Breckinridge,
-who was washed off another torpedo-boat, the "Cushing," and drowned, as
-he was trying to get into Havana a few days before the blowing up of the
-"Maine."
-
-"Worthless" Bagley (as his intimates called him) and Breckinridge were
-never left much to themselves in their quarters, for their room was always
-crowded during recreation-hours with cadets skylarking or asking advice
-or assistance. There was another intimate and classmate of Bagley, D.
-R. Merritt, who was killed in the "Maine" disaster a few days after the
-drowning of Breckinridge.
-
-
-ROOSEVELT SAVED BAGLEY FOR THE NAVY
-
-When Bagley came up for graduation at the end of the four-years' course
-the doctors thought they discovered an irregular movement of the heart,
-and recommended that he be dropped. Bagley took his case to Theodore
-Roosevelt, then assistant secretary of the navy.
-
-Roosevelt, looking at him through his glasses with a quick, critical
-glance, said,--
-
-"You are Bagley, the football player, are you not?"
-
-Bagley said he was.
-
-"Well, you are to stay in the navy while I am here. The service needs more
-men just like you."
-
-Then Bagley went on his two-years' cruise, and when he came back he was
-passed through without question.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Captain Cook, Admiral Schley's chief-of-staff on the "Brooklyn," Captain
-Clark, of the "Oregon," and Commander Davis were room-mates in the
-famous class of Crowninshield, Taylor, and Evans. The "Brooklyn" and the
-"Oregon," commanded by classmates and room-mates, fought almost side by
-side down the desperate flight to the westward, the "Oregon" farther
-inland, but both thundering their iron missiles on the "Colon" as she
-struggled to her doom.
-
-It is an interesting fact that Captain Clark, then holding the title of
-acting ensign, but really a midshipman, was the first one to communicate
-with the captain of the ram "Tennessee" when she was captured at
-Mobile Bay, while it was Captain Cook who received the surrender of the
-"Cristobal Colon." The third member of this trio was retired several years
-ago or he would have had a command in the same action. The affection which
-these youngsters bore one for the other was very much like that which
-existed between Captains Evans and Taylor.
-
-
-CLARK'S HEROISM AT THE BATTLE OF MOBILE BAY
-
-In the battle of Mobile Bay young Clark was on the forecastle of the
-"Ossipee," then holding an important position in the line of ships that
-swung past the torpedoes after the gallant Farragut in the "Hartford."
-
-The forecastle was bare of any defence, and the position was exposed
-to all assaults of the fire, first from Fort Morgan and then from Fort
-Gaines, farther up. When the forts were passed, there followed a fierce
-fight with the gunboats and the invincible ram "Tennessee." Again and
-again the "Hartford," "Ossipee," and other vessels of the fleet rammed her
-in succession, and young Clark saw her terrible ports fly open and send
-out just by him their awful discharge.
-
-At last, however, she became unmanageable, her shutters were jammed, and
-the "Ossipee," under full head of steam, was making for her. But while
-Clark was straining his eyes through the smoke, a white flag was hoisted
-in token of surrender. Clark shouted to Johnson, the commander of the
-ram, to starboard his helm. But the reply came that his wheel-ropes were
-shot away. It was too late to keep from striking her, but the force of
-the blow was broken by the manoeuvre. This early experience was followed
-by the bombardment of Fort Morgan,--two important actions before Clark
-had got into his early twenties. His fearlessness then, as now, needs no
-mention.
-
-
-POPULARITY OF CAPTAIN PHILIP AS A CADET
-
-It has been said that Captain Philip's public acknowledgment of God on
-the decks of the battle-ship "Texas," after the fight before Santiago, was
-the natural expression of a deeply religious nature. But his classmates at
-the Naval Academy and the men who have sailed with him say that he is not
-more religious than other men in the navy,--not so religious as many, who
-always have their Bible on the table in their cabins and read it regularly
-when at sea or in port.
-
-They believe that he spoke on the impulse of the moment, his heart
-devoutly thankful that the victory had been achieved at so slight a loss,
-and willing that all men should witness his profession of faith.
-
-[Illustration: HER LAST DUTY]
-
-As a boy at the Academy, while he never surreptitiously drank, as others
-did, he made no pretence of being religious. He smoked whenever he got
-a chance, in his quarters or in the darknesses back of old Fort Severn,
-between the watchmen's rounds. He never, as other cadets did, gave his
-word not to smoke, and so he felt a perfect freedom to do it if he could
-keep from being caught. Like Sigsbee, he was a practical joker, and if
-you should go to any of the members of his class and ask them who was the
-most popular man in it, they would say, "Jack Philip."
-
-
-THE VERSATILITY OF ADMIRAL SAMPSON
-
-In Admiral Sampson, the boy was father to the man. From boyhood his was
-a life of unneglected opportunities. Born of very humble parents, by the
-hardest of work and the most sincere endeavors he succeeded in obtaining
-his appointment to the Naval School. His mind, naturally studious, turned
-to the beginnings of the new profession with avidity, and so fine was his
-mind even then that, without trying himself unduly, he easily distanced
-his entire class and took first honors for the course.
-
-His classmates say that he was studious, but they do not say that he
-applied himself so closely to the work that he shut himself off from
-the diversions or recreations of the rest-hours. On the contrary, he was
-foremost in most of the sports of the day, and was, in his own way, one
-of the best athletes in his class.
-
-He was then, as he is now, an "Admirable Crichton," but his versatility
-did not diminish for him the serious aspect of any of the things he
-attempted. Some of his classmates called him cold, as his contemporaries
-out in the service do now, but when they wanted advice on any subject
-which seemed to require a reasoning power entirely beyond their own,
-they said, "Ask Sampson." He was not only high in his class councils,
-but dearly beloved, as he is to-day, by every man in it and every man
-who knew him. If people thought him cold then it was because they did not
-understand him. If they think him cold to-day it is because he does not
-care to be understood by the men with whom he has no interest or sympathy.
-If arrogance begins to be a virtue, then repression born of modesty is a
-crime.
-
-To those men he cares for--now as in his youth--he has always a warm
-handshake and an open heart. His eye is calm, sympathetic, penetrating,
-stern, as the humor dictates, anything you please,--sometimes cold,
-but always hypnotic. If he wants the friendship of man or woman he is
-irresistible. To-day he is the authority on naval ordnance, an expert on
-explosives, a capital seaman, a famous tennis-player,--the best-equipped
-man in the service for any work--or play--that can be put before him.
-
-
-BLUE, WHO DISCOVERED CERVERA'S FLEET
-
-Victor Blue, who in his uniform made the fearless expedition ashore at
-Santiago, and actually saw for the first time the Spanish fleet within
-the harbor, is the kind of a man who does not have very much to say for
-himself, which is often a sign that a person is to be found ready when
-wanted. He was a member of the class of '87, in which his work was fair,
-but not remarkable in any way. He lived quietly, receiving his quota
-of good and bad marks, but having no special distinction, even in his
-offences against the oracles of Stribling Row.
-
-He did not care much for "fems" (girls, in the vernacular), but towards
-his first class-year began to "take notice." He played a guard on the
-"Hustlers," the scrub football team which struggles with the "Academy"
-eleven on practice-days, but never made the "Team." He had plenty of grit,
-but was too light for the centre and not active enough for the ends. Blue
-is a fair specimen of the type of men who without ostentation have made
-our new navy what it is. Many men envy him, but no man begrudges him his
-numbers recently awarded for "extraordinary heroism."
-
-
-YOUNG DEWEY AS A FIGHTER
-
-George Dewey entered the class of '58 at the Naval Academy at the age
-of seventeen. He was not a large boy, but fairly up to middle height,
-and strong and active in all athletic sports. It was not long after his
-entrance that he found an opportunity to show the fighting spirit that was
-in him. It was not altogether of his own seeking, but when he was weighed
-in the balance, even then he was not found wanting.
-
-The line between the Northern boys and the Southerners was clearly
-marked, and one day one of the Southerners called the young Vermonter a
-"dough-face."
-
-Young Dewey awaited a favorable opportunity, and struck his opponent so
-fair a blow that he knocked him down. There was a rough-and-tumble fight
-then and there, and Dewey's adversary came out second best.
-
-Later on another one of the Southerners insulted the young admiral, and
-there was another battle. But full satisfaction could not be obtained in
-this prosaic fashion, so the Southerner finally challenged young Dewey.
-The offer was promptly accepted, seconds were chosen, and the time and
-place were definitely settled upon. But some of Dewey's classmates,
-seriously alarmed at the aspect of affairs, and knowing that neither one
-of the principals was of a temper to falter, hastily informed the academic
-authorities, and the whole affair was nipped in the bud but a few hours
-before the hour set.
-
-Dewey was graduated in 1858, and stood fifth in his class. Of the
-sixty-five who had started in as candidates, but fourteen received their
-diplomas at the end of the four years' course.
-
-
-THE UNRECOGNIZED HEROES OF THE WAR
-
-Much has been said and written of the heroes of action and movement. The
-country from one end to the other has rung with their praises. But what of
-the unknown heroes, unhonored and unsung? What of the men who, because of
-their superior abilities in other lines, were doomed to physical inaction?
-who performed their secret missions and labors skilfully, faithfully,
-uncomplainingly, while their classmates were being given numbers over
-their heads, and the chance of a lifetime for great deeds was being
-quietly passed by?
-
-
-THE REAL BRAINS OF THE WAR
-
-Captain A. S. Crowninshield, the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation, bore
-the brunt of the brain-work for the men and ships at the front.
-
-His bureau has to do with the ordering of all ships and all men, and
-Crowninshield, when he accepted the office, knew that the odds were
-against him. He knew that by his own orders he would put forward above
-him men who were many years his juniors in the service. He never winced,
-but went on perfecting the target-scores of the men behind the guns.
-When war was declared, he felt that, gun for gun, our navy could whip
-anything afloat. But he did not get out of the office. He could have had
-any command in Sampson's fleet. But he preferred to stay and carry out
-the work he had begun, in spite of the fact that each week, as younger
-men went over him, he saw the chances of hoisting the pennant of a
-fleet-commander grow fainter and fainter.
-
-If you were to ask Secretary Long who did the real brain-work of the war,
-he would unhesitatingly answer, "Captain Crowninshield." Ask the younger
-officers in command of gun-divisions who is responsible for the straight
-shooting of the gun-captains, and they will say, "Captain Crowninshield."
-Ask any captain of the fleet of victorious battle-ships and cruisers of
-Santiago or Cavite who contributed most to the victory of Santiago and
-Manila, and they will say, "Captain Crowninshield."
-
-These are the facts, and no one in the service disputes them for a moment.
-If the people are in ignorance, it is because Captain Crowninshield will
-never talk of himself or his own affairs under any circumstances.
-
-Captain Crowninshield comes of a distinguished New England family. He is
-a grandson of Jacob Crowninshield, an early secretary of the navy, and
-a great-nephew of Benjamin Crowninshield, also a secretary of the navy.
-Like all the Crowninshields of Salem, he was full of love of the sea. His
-father was a graduate of Harvard and a founder of the Porcelain Club.
-
-
-FILLING THE DUKE'S SHOES WITH MUCILAGE
-
-Captain Crowninshield as a lad read and studied all the books he could
-find about the sea, upon which his ancestors, near and remote, had sailed.
-From the first he was determined to be a naval officer. To this end he
-went to a village where lived a member of Congress, who, he thought, might
-make him his appointee. The young man found the old member of Congress
-out in his field, ploughing. He liked the looks of the boy and gave him a
-half-promise of the appointment. Young Crowninshield was forced to wait a
-month, but at last the letter came, and with trembling fingers he broke
-the seal of the letter which made him a midshipman (a title which it is
-to be hoped will be restored ere long to the service).
-
-Some of his classmates were the present Captain Clark, of "Oregon" fame,
-Captain Harry Taylor, Drayton Cassell, Captain Wadleigh, and Captain Cook,
-of the "Brooklyn." His room-mate was Pierre d'Orleans, and many a time
-did Captain Crowninshield rescue the young foreigner when the jokes became
-too fast and furious. A favorite amusement with the midshipmen was to fill
-"Pete" d'Orleans's shoes with mucilage. This practice, so far from making
-him feel like sticking to this country, persuaded the young duke to return
-to his native land, where there were no wild American boys to tamper with
-his dignity.
-
-When the Academy was removed from Annapolis to Newport, young
-Crowninshield, of course, went with the school, with Evans and the others.
-He was told that those who could pass the required examination at the end
-of three years could go out to the war as officers.
-
-Half of the class passed the examination. When one considers that no
-studying at night was allowed, that an officer made the rounds after
-lights were supposed to be out, and that at the sound of his footsteps
-the delinquent who was burning the midnight oil would be obliged to tumble
-into bed with his clothes on, throwing the wet towel which bound his head
-into the corner of the room, feigning sleep while a candle was passed
-across his face, one can understand why more young men of that class did
-not graduate at the end of the three-years' limit.
-
-
-SCOUTING IN THE ENEMY'S COUNTRY
-
-There are many other gallant navy men of whom the public has not heard,
-but two more will suffice. Within a week after the declaration of war two
-young ensigns, Ward and Buck, the former in the Bureau of Navigation and
-the latter at the Naval Academy, disappeared from the face of the earth.
-So completely did they destroy all traces of themselves that for all the
-Bureau of Navigation or their relatives seemed to know they might have
-ceased to exist.
-
-Speculation was rife concerning them, but nothing could be learned of
-their duties, the impression being, even among Navy Department officials,
-that they were installing a system of coast-signals in New England.
-Ward, it appears, disguised himself as an Englishman, and went straight
-into the heart of the enemy's country, making his headquarters at Cadiz,
-the principal Spanish naval station, and from there sending the Navy
-Department continuous and accurate reports of the fighting strength and
-actual movements of the Spanish fleet.
-
-He was under suspicion, but watched his time, and succeeded in getting
-away to Porto Rico. There he was arrested as a suspicious character and
-spy. He managed, it is supposed through the British representatives, to
-obtain his release, and, escaping from San Juan, cabled the department a
-full account of the state of defences there and the movements of Cervera's
-fleet. While Ward was in Porto Rico, Buck was following Camara's fleet
-in the Mediterranean, keeping watch on its movements, and sending daily
-reports of its condition, armament, and plans.
-
-We do not know what is in the hearts of men. We do not know whether the
-men who did the creditable things during the war did them in spite of
-themselves, or whether in the glory of action and adventure they took
-their lives into their hands gladly, fearlessly, for their country. We do
-know that there were hundreds ready and willing to court danger and death
-for a useful end who for lack of opportunity could not.
-
-
-
-
-HEROES OF THE DEEP
-
-
-All the long winter the "Polly J." had slept snugly in Gloucester Harbor,
-rigging unrove and everything snug aloft that the wind could freeze or
-the ice could chafe. Careful eyes had watched her as she swung at her
-moorings, and rugged hands had gripped the familiar gear as the skipper
-or some of the men had made their periodical visits. But however gray
-and desolate she loomed, with her topmasts housed and the black lines of
-ratline and stay across the brightening sky, nothing could hide the saucy
-cut-under of the bow and the long, free sweep of the rail.
-
-The afternoon sun of March melted the snow on the south slopes of the
-fish-sheds, and great gray-and-green patches came out here and there
-against the endless white.
-
-A brisk breeze, with a touch of the spring, blew up from the south, and
-the "Polly," heedless of the tide, turned her head to it, sniffing and
-breathing it, bobbing and jerking nervously at her anchor, impatient to
-be dressed in her cloud of canvas, and away where the wind blows free and
-the curl dashes high under the forefoot.
-
-
-WHEN THE SNOW MELTS
-
-Ashore in Gloucester town there are signs a-plenty of the work to come.
-The sleepy village throws off her white mantle and rises from the lethargy
-of the winter past. The spring is in the air, and the docks and wharves,
-white and ice-trussed during the long, bleak winter, are trod by groups
-of men, rubber-coated and "sou' westered," moving briskly from one shed
-to another.
-
-In the town they gather like the stray birds of spring that flutter under
-the eaves of the store-houses. By twos and threes they appear. On street
-corners they meet, pipe-smoking, reminiscent, gloomily hopeful for the
-future, and grateful that they have helped themselves over "March Hill"
-without a loan from owner or buyer. And as they lounge from post-office
-to store, from store to shed, and back again, their talk is of dealings
-with owners and skippers, of vessels and luck.
-
-For luck is their fortune. It means larger profits by shares, new dresses
-for the wife and little ones, and perhaps an easy time of it in the winter
-to follow. It means that there will be no long, hard winter of it at the
-haddock-fisheries at "George's," where trawls are to be set in weather
-which makes frozen hands and feet, and perhaps a grave in an icy sea,
-where thousands have gone before.
-
-The skipper of the "Polly," even before he gets his men, has broken out
-his gear and reckoned up his necessities for the run up to the Banks. If
-he ships the same crew he had the year before, they work in well together.
-The "Polly's" topmasts are run up with a hearty will and a rush. There
-is a cheerful clatter of block and tackle, and the joyous "Yeo-ho" echoes
-from one schooner to another as sail and rigging are fitted and run into
-place.
-
-The snow yet lingers in little patches on the moors when some of the
-vessels warp down to an anchorage. Dories are broken from their nests
-and skim lightly across the harbor, now alive with a fleet in miniature.
-Jests and greetings fill the air, as old shipmates and dory-mates meet
-again,--Gloucester men some of them, but more often Swedes, Portuguese,
-and men from the South.
-
-For to-day the fleet is not owned in the villages, and Gloucester, once
-the centre of the fishing aristocracy, the capital of the nation of the
-Banks, is now but a trading- and meeting-place for half the sea-people
-who come from the North and East.
-
-The skipper of the "Polly J.," himself perhaps the scion of three
-generations of fishing captains, may wag his head regretfully, for
-fishers cannot be choosers; but he knows that his fishing has to be done,
-and, after all, a "Portygee" is as good a sailor-man and dory-mate as
-another,--better sometimes,--if he keeps sober.
-
-So long as the ship-owner makes his credit good at the store for the
-people at home, the fisherman takes life as joyfully as a man may who
-looks at death with every turn of the glass. If he takes his pleasures
-seriously, it is because he lives face to face with his Maker. Nature, in
-the awful moods he knows her, makes trivial the little ills that flesh is
-heir to.
-
-So when the crews are aboard, and the stores and salt are being hoisted
-in, there is a hurry to be among the first away. Chains and windlasses
-creak and clang, nimble feet fly aloft, hoarse voices ring across the
-rippling water, and many a cheerful song echoes from ship to shore and
-back again.
-
-Willing hands, strangers for months to hemp and tar, lay on to the tackle,
-as spar and boom are run into place. The fish-bins below are cleaned and
-scrubbed to the very quick. Bright-work, if there be any, is polished,
-and sail-patching and dory-painting and caulking are the order of the day,
-and most of the night. The black cook, below in the mysterious blackness
-of the galley, potters with saucepan and kettle, and when the provisions
-are aboard serves the first meal. There is coffee, steaming hot in the
-early hours of the morning, and biscuit and meat,--plenty of it. There is
-not much variety, but, with the work to be done above and below decks, a
-full-blooded appetite leaves no chance for grumbling.
-
-At last the bag and baggage of the crew are tossed aboard,--packs of
-tobacco innumerable, new rubber clothes, all yellow and shiny in the
-morning dampness, boots and woollens to keep out the cold of spring on
-the Bank Sea,--all bought on credit at the store, to be charged against
-"settling-day."
-
-
-WAVING GODSPEED TO THE FISHER-FOLK
-
-It is morning, just before the dawn. The "Polly J.," her new paint all
-silver in the early light, rides proudly at her anchor in the centre of
-the tideway. The nip of winter lingers in the air, but the snow is gone
-and the rigging is no longer stiff to the touch.
-
-It is just daylight when the last dory is hoisted aboard into its nest.
-Three or four figures on the wharves, outlined against the purple sky and
-hills, stand waving Godspeed to their fisher-folk. Women's voices ring out
-between the creakings of the blocks, "Good luck! Good luck! 'Polly J.';
-wet your salt first, 'Polly J.'" It is the well-wishing from the hearts
-of women, who go back to weep in silence. Which one of them is to make
-her sacrifice to the god of winds and storms?
-
-There is a cheerful answer from the "Polly," drowned in the flapping of
-the sails and creaking of the windlass. The anchor, rusty and weed-hung,
-is broken out and comes to the surface with a rush, while sheets are
-hauled aft, and, catching the morning breeze, the head of the schooner
-pays off towards Norman's Woe, the water rippling merrily along her sides.
-
-The figures on the wharves are mere gray patches in the mass of town and
-hills. The big sails, looming dark in the gray mists of the morning, round
-out to the freshening wind, and push the light fabric through the opal
-waves with ever-increasing speed. By the time the first rays of the rising
-sun have gilded the quivering gaff of the main, Eastern Point is left
-far astern, and the nose of the vessel ploughs boldly out to sea, rising
-with her empty bins light as a feather to the big, heavy swell that comes
-rolling in, to break in a steady roar on the brown rocks to leeward.
-
-There is man's work and plenty of it during those sailing days past
-"George's," Sable Island, and the St. Lawrence. The provisions and salt
-are to be stowed and restowed, ballast is to be shifted, sails to be made
-stronger and more strong, fish-bins to be prepared, old dories to be made
-seaworthy, rigging to be tautened, and reels and lines to be cleared and
-hooked. Buoy-lines and dory-roding are to be spliced, and miscellaneous
-carpenter work takes up the time about the decks. For a skipper unprepared
-to take advantage of all that luck may throw in his way does an injustice
-to his owner and his crew. But, busy as the time is, the skipper has his
-weather-eye open for the "signs." The feel of the air, the look and color
-of the cold, gray Bank Sea, tell him in so many words how and where the
-fish will be running. At last a hand takes the heavy sea-lead and moves
-forward where the line may run free. Deliberately the line is coiled
-in great turns around the left hand, and then, like a big pendulum, the
-weight begins to swing with the strong right arm.
-
-
-IN THE EXCITEMENT OF THE FIRST CATCH
-
-There is a swirl of the line as the lead goes all the way over, a splash
-forward, and, as the skipper luffs her up into it, the line comes upright,
-and gets a depth of thirty fathoms. As she comes up into the wind, the
-noisy jib flaps down with a run, and the anchor drops to the sandy bottom.
-Now the buckets of bait are tossed up from below, and the skipper leaves
-his helm to take to the lines. Over the sides and stern they go, dragging
-down to leeward.
-
-There is quiet for a moment, and then a line runs out. There is a tug as
-the strong arm checks it and hauls it in quickly, hand over hand. There
-is a gleam of light, a swish at the surface, and the fish flies over
-the rail, flopping helplessly on to the deck, the first catch of the
-season,--a big one.
-
-Another tug, and another, and soon the work is fast and furious. It takes
-honest elbow-muscle, too, to haul ten pounds of floundering cod up five
-feet of freeboard to the rail and deck. Soon the deck is covered with the
-long, slim, gleaming bodies, and the boys of the schooner have man's work
-in tossing them into the gurry-pen amidships. Before the pen is filled,
-the fishes stop biting as suddenly as they struck on, and there is a rest
-for a while to bait-up and clean down.
-
-If the signs hold good, the skipper will order the men out to set trawls,
-for the smell of the dead fish sometimes drives the school away.
-
-
-HANDLING THE TRAWLS
-
-The "trawls" are only an elaboration of the hand-lines. They are single
-lines, several hundred feet in length, with short lines and baited hooks
-at intervals. They are taken out by members of the crew in their dories,
-buoyed and anchored. It is the work of tending these trawls that takes the
-greatest skill and fearlessness. It is in the work of hauling and baiting
-the lines in all weathers that the greatest losses of life occur. There is
-no room on the decks of the schooners for heavy boats, and as many such
-craft are needed, five or six are piled together amidships. A block and
-purchase from aloft are their hoisting-tackle.
-
-They are handy boats, though light, and two men and a load of fish can
-weather the rough seas, if your fisherman is an adept with his oars. But
-they are mere cockle-shells at the best, and are tossed like feathers.
-The "codders" are reckless fellows, and they will put out to the trawls
-day after day in any kind of weather, fog or clear, wind or calm, with
-not even a beaker of water or a piece of pilot-bread.
-
-
-A LONELY NIGHT ON THE BROAD ATLANTIC
-
-A night alone on the broad Atlantic in an open dory seems to have no
-terrors for them. Each year adds its lists of casualties to those that
-have gone before. Fogs have shut in, seas have risen, and morning has
-dawned again and again with no sign of the missing men. Sometimes an
-upturned dory is found, with her name--the "Molly S.," or the "Betty T.,"
-in honor of the owner's shore-mate--on her pointed bow, but only the gray
-ocean can tell the story of the missing men.
-
-When the "Polly's" day's luck is run, all hands take stations for dressing
-down. It is the dirty part of the business; but so quickly is it done that
-the crew seems part of a mechanism, working like clockwork. Two men stand
-at the gurry-pen, their long knives gleaming red in the sunset. The fish
-is slit from throat to tail with one cut, and again on both sides of the
-neck. It then passes to the next man, who with a scoop of his hand drops
-the cod's liver in a basket and sends the head and offal flying. The fish
-slides across the dressing-table, where the backbone is torn out by the
-third man, who throws it, finally, headless, cleaned, and open, into the
-washing-tub.
-
-The moment the tub is filled, the fish are pitched down the open hatch to
-the fifth man, who packs them with salt snugly in the bins. So quickly
-is the work done that the fish seem to travel from one hand to another
-as though they were alive, and a large gurry-pen is emptied and the bin
-packed and salted in less than an hour.
-
-
-WHEN THE DAY'S WORK IS DONE
-
-The head of the black cook appears above the hatch-combing, and his mouth
-opens wide as he gives the welcome supper call. Down the ladder into the
-cuddy they tumble, one and all, and lay-to with an appetite and vigor
-which speaks of good digestive organs. Conversation is omitted. Coffee,
-pork-and-beans, biscuit,--nectar and ambrosia,--vanish from the tin
-dishes, until the cook comes in with the sixth pot of steaming coffee.
-
-At last, when the cook vows the day's allowance is eaten and the last drop
-of coffee is poured, the benches are pushed back, tobacco and pipes are
-produced from the sacred recesses of the bunks, and six men are puffing
-out the blue smoke as though their lives depended on it.
-
-The schooner rolls to the long ground-swell, her lamp-bracket swinging
-through a great arc and casting long, black shadows, monstrous
-presentiments of the smokers, which move rapidly from side to side over
-the misty beams and bulkheads like gnomes. A concertina, a mouth-organ,
-and perhaps a fiddle, are brought out, and a sea-song, an Irish jig,
-or something in unspeakable Portuguese, rises above the creaking of the
-timbers and the burst of foam alongside.
-
-But the work is not done yet. It is never done. The ship is to be cleaned
-down and the gurry-pen and dory are to be sluiced out in readiness for
-the morrow. A vigil is to be kept, watch and watch, and woe be to the
-youngster who tumbles off his hatchway to the deck from sheer weariness.
-
-
-WHEN A STEAMER LOOMS UP IN THE FOG
-
-If there should be a fog,--and hardly a day or a night passes without
-one,--the danger is great. When the white veil settles down over the
-schooners the men on deck can hardly see their cross-trees. Foot-power
-horns are blown, the ship's bell is tolled steadily, while conch shells
-bellow their resonant note from the trawlers in the dories. But it is all
-to no purpose. For the great siren comes nearer and nearer every second,
-and the pounding of the waves against the great hulk and the rush of
-resisting water grow horribly distinct.
-
-There is a hazy glimmer of a row of lights, a roar and a splutter of
-steam, a shock and the inrush of the great volume of water, a shout or
-two from the towering decks and bridge, and the great body dashes by
-disdainfully, speed undiminished, her passengers careless, and unmindful
-that the lives and fortunes of half a dozen human beings have hung for a
-moment in the balance of Life and Death. But records have to be made, and
-the gold-laced officers forget to mention the occurrence. The men on the
-schooner do not forget it, though. More than one face is white with the
-nearness to calamity.
-
-"What was she, Jim?"
-
-"The 'Frederick.' I'd know her bloomin' bellow in a thousand."
-
-They lean out over the rail and peer into the gray blackness, shaking
-their fists at the place where she vanished in the fog.
-
-The man who gets his name in the newspaper and a medal from his government
-is not the only hero. And the modesty with which the Gloucester fisherman
-hides his sterling merit is only convincing proof of the fact,--Gloucester
-is a city of heroes.
-
-For grit and devotion the case of Howard Blackburn surpasses understanding.
-
-
-THE COURAGE OF THE UNNAMED HEROES
-
-Blackburn and his dory-mate left their schooner in a driving snow-storm.
-Before they had been at the trawls long the weather had become so thick
-that they couldn't see ten feet from the dory's gunwale. The wind shifted
-and put them to leeward of their vessel. There was never a sound of bell
-or horn through the thickness, and, though they pulled to windward, where
-they thought their skipper lay, the vessel could not be found. They were
-lost, and the sea was rising. Then they anchored until dawn.
-
-When the snow stopped falling, they saw the schooner's light, a tiny
-speck, miles to windward. To reach it was impossible. The situation was
-desperate. Wave-crest after wave-crest swept into the dory, and all but
-swamped her. Time after time she was baled out, until it seemed as if
-human endurance could stand it no longer. Blackburn made a sea-anchor for
-a drag, but in throwing it out lost his mittens overboard. It was horrible
-enough to fear drowning in the icy sea, but as he felt his hands beginning
-to freeze the effort seemed hopeless.
-
-With hands frozen, Blackburn felt that he was useless, for his dory-mate
-was already almost helpless with exposure. So he sat down to his oars and
-bent his freezing fingers over the handles, getting as firm a clutch as
-he could. There he sat patiently, calmly, keeping the dory up to the seas
-meanwhile,--waiting for his hands to freeze to the oars. The dory became
-covered with ice, and pieces of it knocked against the frozen hands and
-beat off a little finger and a part of one of the palms. During the second
-day Blackburn's dory-mate gave it up, and Blackburn laid down beside him
-to try and warm him. But it was useless. The dory-man froze to death where
-he lay.
-
-
-FOR FIVE DAYS ADRIFT AND STARVING
-
-When Blackburn felt the drowsiness coming over him, he stood up and baled
-as the boat filled. The third day dawned without a ray of hope, and not a
-morsel to eat or a drop to drink, so he stuck the oar through his wounded
-fingers and rowed again.
-
-The fourth day he saw land. He did not reach it until the afternoon of
-the fifth day, when he landed at a deserted fish-wharf. No one could be
-found, and he was too weak to move farther. So he lay down, more dead than
-alive, and tried in vain to sleep, munching snow to quench his thirst.
-
-The next day he went out in the dory to try to find some signs of life,
-and in about three hours, the last remnant of his strength being gone, he
-saw smoke and the roofs of some houses, and he knew that he was saved.
-Even when he reached the shore in a pitiable condition, he would not go
-into the house until they promised him to get the body of his dory-mate.
-
-This heroic man lost his hands and the most of his toes, but he reached
-Gloucester alive. The story of his grit and devotion to his dory-mate are
-to-day told to the young fishermen of the fleet, and the men of the Banks
-will sing his praises until Time shall have wiped out all things which
-remain unrecorded.
-
-
-WHERE THE COD ABOUND
-
-On some of the schooners, by the middle of the season most of the salt
-is "wet." It is then that the "Polly J." follows the fleet up to the
-"Virgin."
-
-This is a rocky ledge, many miles out in the desolate Bank seas, which
-rises to within a few feet of the surface of the ocean. Here the cod and
-camplin abound, and here, when it is time for them to run, most of the
-schooners come to anchor, sending out their little fleets until perhaps
-two thousand dories and schooners are afloat at the same time, within a
-distance of two or three miles of one another. When the schools of camplin
-come to the surface and begin to jump, the dories all close in on them,
-for the fishermen know that the cod are after them. Almost as quickly
-as the lines can be baited and cast overboard the fish strike on, and
-the work is steady and hard until the dories, loaded down almost to the
-gunwales, have made several trips of it, and the salt in the bins shows
-a prospect of being "all wet" before the week is out.
-
-The few days towards the end of the season at the "Old Virgin" are a race
-between the ships at catching and dressing down. The rival crews work from
-dawn until dark.
-
-At last the big mainsail of the victor--perhaps the "Polly J."--is hauled
-out, the chain is hove in short, and the dories from less fortunate
-schooners crowd alongside with good wishes and letters for the folks at
-home. Anchor up, the flag is hoisted,--the right of the first boat off the
-Banks,--and the proud schooner, low lying in the water with her fifteen
-hundred quintal, bows gracefully to each vessel of the fleet at anchor as
-she passes them, homeward bound.
-
-
-WHEN THE SCHOONERS MOVE UP THE HARBOR
-
-Homeward bound!--there is magic in the word. Though the first vessel
-to head to the southward is proud among the fleet, she has a burden of
-responsibility upon her, for she carries every year news of death and
-calamity that will break the hearts of many down in Gloucester, and the
-flags she flaunts so gayly must come to half-mast before she sights the
-hazy blue of Eastern Point.
-
-During those long summer months a lonely wife goes about her household
-duties down in Gloucester town. There is a weight upon her heart, and
-until the fleet comes in and she sees the familiar face at the front gate,
-happiness is not for her. Day after day she listens for his footsteps, and
-after supper, when the season draws to a close, she walks down to where
-she can look far out to sea.
-
-Then a schooner, heavy laden, appears around the Point. She comes around
-and moves up the harbor slowly,--oh, so slowly. The flag the wife has seen
-is half-masted, and she knows that some woman's heart is to break. Will
-it be hers?
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-By Sydney George Fisher
-
-Men, Women, and Manners in Colonial Times.
-
- Illustrated with four photogravures and numerous head and tail
- sketches in each volume. Two volumes. Satine, in a box, $3.00;
- half calf or half morocco, $6.00.
-
-_SECOND EDITION._
-
-"The author's work is a blending of grave history, amusing anecdote,
-extracts from diaries, and graphic word pictures. He has an admirable
-knack of liveliness that is quite Frenchy, and stimulates the reader into
-a ravenous delight. Puritan, Pilgrim, Cavalier, Quaker, and Catholic are
-made to re-enact their Colonial parts, and the resulting drama is full of
-action, humor, wit, and pathos."--_Boston Globe._
-
-"These two volumes, in delicately colored satine, are fascinating in their
-panoramic view of a whole era that abounds in picturesque and diverting
-incident. Discretion and taste were required in the selection, and
-literary art in the presentation. These are revealed by Mr. Fisher, and
-the result is social history in the most engaging style."--_Philadelphia
-Press._
-
-The Making of Pennsylvania.
-
-The Evolution of the Constitution of the United States.
-
-Each volume. 12mo. Buckram, $1.50.
-
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
-
-
-BY SYDNEY GEORGE FISHER.
-
- THE TRUE BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.
-
- With numerous illustrations, portraits, and fac-similes. Crown
- octavo. Cloth, $2.00. Uniform with "THE TRUE GEORGE WASHINGTON."
-
-"Mr. Fisher has done a service to American literature and history which
-is not to be measured alone by the facts supplied in his book. There is
-a sentimental value to his study, which resides in its effect upon the
-public mind in making us realize the true proportions of one of our few
-great men. Washington and Franklin are the true figures in our early
-history to which the verdict of the world has given lasting fame. Paul
-Leicester Ford has changed Washington from a myth into a human being.
-Mr. Fisher has done the same for Franklin. Of the two heroes Washington
-was the less understood. But the popular conception of Franklin in its
-way was also far from the truth. The result of Mr. Fisher's analysis of
-Franklin will be to make him more distinctly a great American than ever
-he was to us before. Mr. Fisher evidently has made a careful study of
-Franklin; first, as he reveals himself in his own writings and in his
-life; and, secondly, as his biographers and those who were contemporary
-with him have estimated him. He destroys some popular delusions concerning
-him, and, on the other hand, brings out more clearly and forcibly than
-heretofore the greatness of certain qualities of his character which have
-been rather lost sight of or neglected. Mr. Fisher has done his work with
-the painstaking care and skill that have made his various other books
-along historical lines of recognized merit. He writes clearly, frankly,
-and without prejudice."--_Philadelphia Evening Bulletin._
-
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
-
-
-The True George Washington
-
-BY
-
-PAUL LEICESTER FORD,
-
-Author of "The Honorable Peter Stirling," etc.
-
-With twenty-four full-page illustrations. Crown 8vo. Cloth, deckle edges,
-$2.00; three-quarters levant, $5.00.
-
-"This book is a monument of industry."--_New York Nation._
-
-"This is a wonderfully interesting book."--_Buffalo Commercial._
-
-"Mr. Ford's book is rich in new matter which commends itself as
-interesting as well as valuable."--_Washington Times._
-
-"Mr. Ford has delved with diligence and with rich reward into contemporary
-records, correspondence, and traditions, and gives an entertaining
-account of colonial times and of the personal traits of the Father of His
-Country."--_Chicago Advance._
-
-"Mr. Ford's book is important out of all proportion to its size, and
-will probably be read so long as the name of Washington continues to be
-revered. Brushing aside the hysterical panegyrics of would-be biographers
-and historians as well as super-laudatory passages in works otherwise
-trustworthy and meritorious, Mr. Ford resolutely set out to acquire
-real knowledge of the man, George Washington. Few of the other heroes
-of history could pass unscathed through an examination so thorough and
-so rigid. Every attainable fact that helps to show the Father of His
-Country as he was in his social and family relations has been carefully
-considered."--_Boston Evening Gazette._
-
-"This work challenges attention for the really valuable light which it
-throws upon the character of George Washington. The picture which Mr.
-Ford here draws of him is careful, life-like, and impressive in the
-extreme. While his exhaustive researches have resulted in humanizing
-Washington 'and making him a man rather than a historical figure,' a fair
-and intelligent reader, we submit, will arise from the glowing chapters
-of Mr. Ford's work with a larger conception of the character, endowments,
-and equipment of the first of Americans.... The work embodies a surprising
-measure of information on a most important as well as interesting
-subject."--_Philadelphia Evening Bulletin._
-
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
-
-
-BY HON. JOHN BIGELOW.
-
- THE LIFE OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.
-
- Written by himself. Now first edited from original manuscripts and
- from his printed correspondence and other writings. Revised and
- corrected, with additional notes. Three volumes. Crown octavo.
- Cloth, $4.50; half calf, $9.00; three-quarters calf, gilt top,
- uncut edges, $9.75.
-
-FOURTH EDITION.
-
-"Mr. Bigelow has again revised his splendid work, first published
-twenty-three years ago, and incorporated such discoveries as have been
-made in the past five years. The editor may well boast that time has
-indicated the artistic principle upon which the work was constructed of
-letting Franklin tell his own story in his own way, beginning with the
-autobiography and continuing the narrative with a most careful mosaic of
-Franklin's voluminous letters. And it is to be credited to Mr. Bigelow
-that the ever-increasing fame of Franklin has made such substantial
-advance in our own day, since such contemporary impetus was given to the
-study of the man and his services by this very 'Life of Franklin.' It
-is a unique biography, or rather autobiography, and, of course, it is
-unapproachable in the case of its own particular subject. Until an equally
-tireless and copious letter-writer as Franklin can be found another such
-work is impossible."--_Philadelphia Press._
-
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Missing periods and quotation marks have been supplied where
-obviously required. All other original errors and inconsistencies
-have been retained, except as follows:
-
- Page 68: changed attemts to attempts
- (that further attempts at flight)
- Page 145: changed then to them
- (and tumbling them both down)
- Page 248: changed gradutes to graduates
- (among the graduates of the)
- Page 282: changed bated to baited
- (lines and baited hooks at)
- Ads page 4: changed bioggraphy to biography
- (a unique biography, or rather)
- Ads page 4: changed tireles to tireless
- (an equally tireless and copious)
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pike & Cutlass, by George Gibbs
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