summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/old/65978-0.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'old/65978-0.txt')
-rw-r--r--old/65978-0.txt9543
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 9543 deletions
diff --git a/old/65978-0.txt b/old/65978-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index fdcdca5..0000000
--- a/old/65978-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9543 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Champions of the Fleet, by Edward Fraser
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Champions of the Fleet
- Captains and men-of-war and days that helped to make the empire
-
-Author: Edward Fraser
-
-Release Date: August 2, 2021 [eBook #65978]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMPIONS OF THE FLEET ***
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAMPIONS OF THE FLEET
-
-
-_BY THE SAME AUTHOR._
-
- FAMOUS FIGHTERS OF THE FLEET.
- THE ENEMY AT TRAFALGAR.
- THE ROMANCE OF THE KING’S NAVY.
- ETC. ETC.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CHAMPIONS THEN AND NOW: THE _VICTORY_ AND THE _DREADNOUGHT_
-
-_Both ships, and the submarine alongside the “Victory,” are shown on
-the same scale. The picture is reproduced by kind permission of the
-Proprietors of the “Illustrated London News.” Photos by Stephen Cribb,
-Southsea._]
-
-
-
-
- CHAMPIONS
- OF THE FLEET
-
- CAPTAINS AND MEN-OF-WAR
- AND DAYS THAT HELPED TO
- MAKE THE EMPIRE
-
- BY EDWARD FRASER
-
- WITH 19 ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- LONDON: JOHN LANE THE BODLEY HEAD
- NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY MCMVIII
-
- WM. BRENDON AND SON, LTD., PRINTERS, PLYMOUTH
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-These tales of the navy of the fighting days of old are to some extent,
-it may seem, cruises in rather out-of-the-way waters. At the same time,
-they may claim present-day associations that should render them not out
-of place just now. How and why, for instance, the world-famous name
-_Dreadnought_ came into the Royal Navy is a story of interest on its
-own account that ought to be timely. With that also is told something
-of what our _Dreadnoughts_ of old did under fire in the fighting days
-of history: with Drake; against the Armada; with Sir Walter Raleigh;
-against De Ruyter and the Dutchmen; at La Hogue; how one gave the
-_sobriquet_ “Old Dreadnought” to the famous Boscawen; how Nelson’s
-uncle and patron Maurice Suckling captained the same ship in battle; of
-Collingwood in the _Dreadnought_; and of the _Dreadnought_ at Trafalgar.
-We get, too, a passing glance at certain of the “points” of our mighty
-battleship the _Dreadnought_ of the present hour. Again, in the year
-that has seen the name of Clive recalled to the memory of his countrymen
-by an ex-Viceroy of India in connection with the hundred and fiftieth
-anniversary of Plassey, what the navy did for Clive at the most critical
-moment of his fortunes, how without its active support on the field of
-battle Clive would have been powerless, the forgotten, or certainly
-little appreciated, part that the navy took in the founding of our
-Indian empire—should be of interest to English readers. This year again
-sees a new _Téméraire_, one of our “improved _Dreadnoughts_,” added to
-the Royal Navy. The fine story of how the never-to-be-forgotten name
-_Téméraire_—immortalized alike by Turner and by Trafalgar—first came
-to appear on the roll of the British fleet is told here. And it should
-be of interest to recall certain incidental matters concerning the old
-_Victory_ herself: among others the circumstances in which she came to
-be built and was safely sent afloat in spite of expected incendiarism;
-where too those who fought on board at Trafalgar came from, and how
-many representatives each of our counties had with Nelson in his last
-fight. Such are some of the matters dealt with in these pages, which of
-themselves should afford entertainment and help also to make this book
-useful.
-
- E. F.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. OUR _DREADNOUGHTS_:—THEIR NAME AND BATTLE RECORD 1
-
- II. “KENT CLAIMS THE FIRST BLOW” 52
-
- III. THE AVENGERS OF THE BLACK HOLE:—WHAT THE NAVY DID FOR CLIVE 77
-
- IV. BOSCAWEN’S BATTLE:—THE TAKING OF THE _TÉMÉRAIRE_ 126
-
- V. HAWKE’S FINEST PRIZE:—HOW THE _FORMIDABLE_ CHANGED HER FLAG 141
-
- VI. WHEN THE _VICTORY_ FIRST JOINED THE FLEET:—HOW THEY BUILT
- THE _VICTORY_ AT CHATHAM 160
-
- VII. ON VALENTINE’S NIGHT IN FRIGATE BAY 191
-
- VIII. THE PAGEANT OF THE _DONEGAL_:—A MEMORY OF ’98 208
-
- IX. ON BOARD OUR FLAGSHIPS AT TRAFALGAR:—CAPTAIN HARDY AND
- THOSE WHO MANNED THE _VICTORY_—UNDER FIRE WITH
- COLLINGWOOD—“OLD IRONSIDES” AND THE THIRD IN COMMAND 222
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- CHAMPIONS THEN AND NOW: THE _VICTORY_ AND THE
- _DREADNOUGHT_ _Frontispiece_
-
- Both ships, and the submarine alongside the _Victory_, are
- shown on the same scale. The picture is reproduced by kind
- permission of the proprietors of the _Illustrated London
- News_. Photos by Stephen Cribb, Southsea.
-
- _Facing page_
-
- OUR FIRST _DREADNOUGHT_ 10
-
- From a contemporary print kindly lent by Mr. Wentworth
- Huyshe. The _Dreadnought_ is shown as she appeared
- when serving in the “Ship Money” Fleet of Charles the
- First—_circ._ 1637.
-
- “OLD DREADNOUGHT’S” _DREADNOUGHT_ 28
-
- From the original drawing made in 1740 for the official
- dockyard model. Now in the Author’s collection.
-
- THE RED-LETTER DAY OF NELSON’S CALENDAR. HOW THE _DREADNOUGHT_
- LED THE ATTACK ON THE 21ST OF OCTOBER, 1757 34
-
- Painted by Swaine. Engraved and Published in 1760.
-
- WHEN GEORGE THE THIRD WAS KING. OFFICERS AT AFTERNOON TEA ASHORE 38
-
- Thomas Rowlandson. 1786.
-
- MANNING THE FLEET IN 1779. A WARM CORNER FOR THE PRESS GANG 38
-
- James Gillray. October 15th, 1779.
-
- THE COUNTY AND ITS SHIP. THE _KENT_ TROPHY CHALLENGE SHIELD 54
-
- From a photograph kindly lent by the designers and
- manufacturers of the trophy, Messrs. George Kenning & Son,
- Goldsmiths, Little Britain and Aldersgate Street, London.
-
- THE SCENE OF THE OPERATIONS UNDER ADMIRAL WATSON AND CLIVE 76
-
- From Major James Rennell’s “Bengal Atlas,” published in
- 1781. Reproduced by the courtesy of the Royal Geographical
- Society.
-
- ADMIRAL BOSCAWEN’S VICTORY 136
-
- In the foreground to the right is seen the _Warspite_
- attacking the _Téméraire_. Boscawen’s flagship, the
- _Namur_, is in the centre flying the Admiral’s Blue Flag at
- the main, and at the fore the red battle-flag, the “Bloody
- Flag” of the Old Navy. Painted by Swaine. Engraved and
- published in 1760.
-
- HAWKE’S VICTORY IN QUIBERON BAY 152
-
- The picture shows the _Royal George_ (in the centre)
- sinking the _Superbe_, and the _Formidable_ (immediately
- beyond the _Superbe_ and in the background) lowering her
- colours to the _Resolution_ (the ship coming up astern
- of the _Royal George_). Painted by Swaine. Engraved and
- published in 1760.
-
- THE EXECUTION OF ADMIRAL BYNG 164
-
- From a contemporary print.
-
- PORTSMOUTH IN THE YEAR THAT THE _VICTORY_ JOINED THE FLEET 170
-
- From a contemporary print.
-
- AT PORTSMOUTH POINT 176
-
- Thomas Rowlandson.
-
- IN PORTSMOUTH HARBOUR 176
-
- Thomas Rowlandson.
-
- THE _VICTORY_ ON HER FIRST CRUISE 186
-
- Drawn by Captain Robert Elliot, R.N. Engraved and Published
- in 1780.
-
- THE FIRST FIGHT IN FRIGATE BAY, ST. KITTS 198
-
- Admiral Sir Samuel Hood’s squadron of 22 ships (at anchor)
- beating off De Grasse’s opening attack with 28 ships (shown
- coming into the bay under full sail) at 2.30 p.m. on
- January 25th, 1782. Drawn by N. Pocock, “from a sketch made
- by a gentleman who happened at the time to be on a visit at
- a friend’s, on a height between Basse Terre and Old Road.”
-
- OUR FIRST _DONEGAL_ 212
-
- The captured French line-of-battle ship _Hoche_, being
- towed by the _Doris_, 36, Lord Ranelagh, into Lough Swilly.
- Drawn by N. Pocock, from a sketch made from the _Robust_ by
- Captain R. Williams of the Marines.
-
- REPRODUCTION OF THE OFFICIAL DRAWING OF THE _VICTORY’S_
- FORETOPSAIL AFTER TRAFALGAR AS RETURNED INTO STORE AT
- CHATHAM DOCKYARD IN MARCH, 1806 228
-
- TRAFALGAR—12 NOON: AS SKETCHED ON THE SPOT BY A FRENCH OFFICER 252
-
- From a photograph of the original sepia drawing now in
- the possession of a descendant of Captain Lucas of the
- _Redoutable_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAMPIONS OF THE FLEET
-
- To the fame of your name
- When the storm has ceased to blow;
- When the fiery fight is heard no more,
- And the storm has ceased to blow.
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-OUR _DREADNOUGHTS_:—THEIR NAME AND BATTLE RECORD
-
- A name through all the world renown’d,
- A name that rouses as a trumpet sound.
-
-
-The “Massacre of Saint Bartholomew’s Day”—on the 24th of August,
-1572—was directly the cause of the coming into existence of our first
-_Dreadnought_.
-
-Startled and horrified at the terrible news, as the details of the
-ghastly story crossed the channel, Queen Elizabeth replied by instantly
-calling the forces of England to arms. John Hawkins, at the head of
-twenty ships of war, was sent to cruise off the Azores. The rest of the
-fleet was ordered to mobilize and be ready to concentrate in the Downs.
-Instructions were issued for the beacons to be watched. The militia were
-ordered to muster and march to the coast. A subsidy was sent over to the
-Protestants in Holland, and a rush of volunteers followed to join those
-from England already in the field. Huguenot refugees in this country
-were given leave to fit out vessels to help their co-religionists at La
-Rochelle. Four men-of-war for the Royal Navy were ordered to be laid down
-forthwith. They comprised the most important effort in shipbuilding that
-England had made for ten years.
-
-To facilitate rapidity of building, the work on the four vessels was
-divided between the two chief master-shipwrights—or, as we should say,
-naval constructors—of the day: two ships to Matthew Baker, two ships to
-Peter Pett. Both men were at the top of their profession. Peter Pett was
-a distinguished member of the great family of naval shipwrights, whose
-fame has come down to our own times. Baker, who was also of a family of
-naval shipwrights of repute, was considered by many of the naval officers
-of the day as the better man. “Mr. Baker,” wrote one, “for his skill and
-surpassing grounded knowledge in the building of the ships advantageable
-to all purposes hath not in any nation his equal.” Pett and Baker were
-keen business rivals, and their rivalry came into play on the present
-occasion.
-
-The names of the new ships were announced in due course, and represented
-Her Majesty’s mood on the occasion. She herself selected and appointed
-them with intention. It was Queen Elizabeth’s way to give her ships
-“telling” names. “The choice of energetic names for the ships of her
-Royal Navy,” it has been said, “was one of the means employed by the
-heroic and politic Elizabeth to infuse her own dauntless spirit into
-the hearts of her subjects, and to show to Europe at large how little
-she dreaded the mightiest armaments of her enemies.” More than that,
-however, needs to be said. As a rule, in the cases of her bigger ships,
-the Queen chose names that carried, in addition, an underlying meaning,
-that bore direct allusion to some national event of the hour. According
-to one who lived at the time, writing about the first ship launched by
-the Queen, to which, in accordance with old custom, the sovereign’s name
-was given: “The great Shipp called the _Elizabeth Jonas_ was so named by
-Her Grace in remembrance of her owne delyverance from the furye of her
-Enemys, from which in one respect she was no less myraculously preserved
-than was the prophet Jonas from the Belly of the whale.” In like manner
-our first _Victory_ and our first _Triumph_ were given those ever famous
-names, in the first place, of set intention to commemorate the historic
-double-event of the year in which they both joined the Queen’s fleet.
-The _Aid_, or _Ayde_, another Elizabethan man-of-war, was so called
-to commemorate Elizabeth’s first expedition to help the Huguenots of
-Normandy in their forlorn hope struggle for liberty of conscience,
-which was just setting out when the _Aid_ went off the stocks. Our
-first _Revenge_, of immortal renown, did not receive that name at
-haphazard in the year of Don John of Austria’s insolent threat to invade
-England and depose Elizabeth by force of arms. Our first _Repulse_ was
-appointed that name—extant to this day in the Royal Navy for one of our
-older battleships—in memory of the defeat of the Spanish Armada:—_Dieu
-Repulse_ was the earlier form of the name as the Queen gave it. And to
-take at random two other names from the list, it was to commemorate the
-same overthrow of the arch-enemy of England in those times that Queen
-Elizabeth chose the names _Defiance_ and _Warspite_—in curious reference,
-this latter name, to an incident during the fighting with the Armada—for
-two others of her men-of-war.
-
-It was of set purpose that Queen Elizabeth, in the year of the Massacre
-of Saint Bartholomew, chose the name _Dreadnought_ for one of her ships
-of war. The intentions of the Catholic League towards England were
-an open secret in every council chamber of Europe. The papal Bull,
-excommunicating and deposing Elizabeth, had been nailed on the doors
-of Lambeth Palace. It was at their disposal. Alva’s butcheries in the
-Netherlands were fresh in the recollection of the world, and the memory
-of other dark doings came still more closely home to our own people;
-how Englishmen had been “seized in Spain and the New World to linger
-amidst the tortures of the Inquisition or to die by its fires.” Burghley
-and Walsingham, and others as well, had fully understood the menace for
-England and the warning of Lepanto only two years before. Their secret
-agents had supplied them with a copy of De Spes’ confidential report to
-Alva and King Philip to the effect that the ports of England were poorly
-fortified, and that only eleven at most of Queen Elizabeth’s twenty ships
-of war were worth taking into account. They had not forgotten what had
-happened three years before, when, under the guise of an escort for the
-new Queen of Spain from Flanders to the Tagus, an extremely formidable
-Spanish fleet, fully equipped for war, had come north and lain for
-some weeks in the Scheldt, acting throughout in a very suspicious way.
-That was a twelvemonth before Lepanto. Now the situation seemed even
-more menacing for England. The Queen’s so-called Agreement with Spain,
-lately come to, for practical purposes was hardly worth the paper it was
-drafted on. There was Mary Stuart and her partizans to be reckoned with
-also; the restless intriguing of the Roman Catholics all over England;
-open rebellion in Ireland. What might not the consequences of the Paris
-massacre involve in the near future? It was at such a moment that the
-name _Dreadnought_ was first appointed to an English man-of-war, and the
-Queen’s choice in the circumstances partook of the nature almost of an
-Act of State, specially designed to express the temper of the nation.
-In the same spirit of exalted patriotism in which, at a later day,
-Elizabeth, from Tilbury camp, with proud scorn bade King Philip and the
-Prince of Parma and all other enemies of the realm do their worst, the
-great Queen, of her own royal will and pleasure, named for the Royal Navy
-its first _Dreadnought_.
-
-_Swiftsure_ was the name given to the second ship of the set.
-“Swift-suer” was the way the Queen Elizabeth spelled it—“Swift-pursuer,”
-that is—not an inappropriate name for the sister ship of a _Dreadnought_.
-The pair were intended as ships of the line, to use a later day term.
-The other two ships of the group were smaller vessels of the light
-cruiser class of the period, intended for service as scouts, as the “eyes
-and ears of the fleet” at sea. Their names were the _Achates_ and the
-_Handmaid_, expressive names both in their way.
-
-Matthew Baker’s men had the _Dreadnought_ and _Handmaid_ to build; Pett’s
-men the _Swiftsure_ and the _Achates_. They all started work within three
-weeks, and Pett’s men won the race by just a month. The _Swiftsure_ and
-the _Achates_ were both sent afloat on the 11th of October, 1573; the
-_Dreadnought_ and the _Handmaid_ on the 10th of the following month.
-
-An Arctic explorer of those times, whose name lives on our maps—the man,
-indeed, who named the North Cape for us, Captain Stephen Borough (or
-Borogh, as he himself usually wrote it), one of “ye foure Principall
-Masters in Ordinarye of ye Queene’s Maᵗⁱᵉˢ Navye Royall,” by special
-appointment also the Master of the _Victory_, and a son of North Devon in
-her proudest day—had naval charge and supervision over the building of
-the _Dreadnought_ and the other ships at Deptford. He lodged meanwhile
-at Ratcliffe, across the river, and his “traveylinge chardges,” with the
-waterman’s receipt for rowing him to and fro on his weekly visits of
-inspection, signed “Richard Williams of Ratcliff, Whyrryman,” is still
-in existence.
-
-The marshmen and labourers at the dockyard began their digging, “working
-upon ye opening of ye dockhedde for ye launchynge,” during the first days
-of November. That was the first of the preliminaries, necessitated by the
-primitive arrangements of those times. The dock at Deptford in which the
-timbers of the _Dreadnought_ were put together was of the crudest type:
-practically an oblong excavation in the river bank, the sides and inner
-end of which were shored up and kept from falling in by wooden planks.
-The outer end, or river end, was closed and sealed when a ship was inside
-by a water-tight dam of brushwood-faggots, clay, and stones filled in and
-rammed down between the overlapping double gates of the dock. An “ingyn
-to drawe water owte of ye dokke,” worked by relays of labourers, pumped
-out the water inside the dock after it was closed. Before the dock could
-be re-opened the stones, faggots, etc. of the “tamping” or stopping had
-to be dug up and removed. Then at low water the gates would be swung
-back, and the water from the river flow in as the tide rose for the
-launch or float-out of the ship into the river.
-
-On board the _Dreadnought_, meanwhile, the finishing touches were being
-put by the contractors’ workmen—Thomas Hodges, of “Parris Garden,” and
-Thomas Wells, of Chatham, and their men seeing to the ironwork fittings,
-“ye workmanshipp and making of lockes and boltes, keyes and haidges
-[_sic_] for ij newe cabbons, as also for hookes, and stockelockes,
-porthaidges [_sic_], revetts and countre-revetts, shuttynges with
-rings, greate dufftayles and divers other necessaries”; joiners sent by
-“Jullyan Richards of London, widdow,” who had a contract for certain
-other fittings; other joiners from Lewys Stocker, also of London, seeing
-to “ye sellynges [_sic_] and formysling ye cabbins and makyng casements
-for windows, seelings, awmeryes [_sic_], cupboards, settes, bedsteddes,
-formes, stools, trisstelles, tables,” etc. “for her Grace’s newe shippe
-ye _Dreadnaughte_.” Hard by, alongside Deptford creek, were lying the
-masts for the ship, ready to be put in place after she was afloat; with
-“toppes greate and small, mayne-tops, ffore-toppe, mizzen-toppe, and
-toppe-galantes;” besides barge loads from Richard Pope, of “Ereth,”
-of “gravaille for ye ballistynge of hur highness Shipe called ye
-_Dreadnaughte_ at iiijᵈ every time.” Prest-master Thomas Woodcot was
-meanwhile hard at work elsewhere, “travailling about the presting of
-marynnars within the River of Theames for ye Launchynge and Rigging of
-Hur highnes’ ij newe shippes at Deptfordstraund [_sic_] by the space of
-viii daies at iijs iiijd per diem.”
-
-The future “nucleus crew” of the _Dreadnought_, who were to act as
-ship-keepers on board when the ship went round to moor with the rest of
-the fleet laid up in the Medway, had been warned to be at Deptford by
-the morning of the 10th of November. They were drawn apparently from
-the ships lying off Gillingham, just below Chatham, or “Jillingham
-Ordinarie”—the “Fleet Reserve,” as we say nowadays—and numbered,
-all told, ten men and a boy. These were the names of our original
-“Dreadnoughts” of three hundred and thirty-three years ago, and
-their quarterly pay, according to “The Accompte as well Ordinarie as
-Extraordinarie of Benjamin Gonson, Treasurer of ye Quene’s Majestie’s
-Maryn cawses,” 1574, a quaint, bulky, ponderous, parchment covered
-volume, of massive proportions, laced with faded green silk, and bound
-with leather straps, now well worn and in parts frayed nearly away:
-
- THE “DREADNAUGHTE.”
-
- MARYNERS.
-
- Robarte Baxster, boteson:—xij wekes vj daies xxxvijˢ vjᵈ
- Richard Boureman, cooke: xij wekes vj daies xxixˢ vᵈ
- John Awsten: xij wekes vj daies xxjˢ vᵈ
- Nicholas Francton: xij wekes vj daies xxjˢ vᵈ
- Christofer Parr, gromett: xij wekes vj daies xxjˢ jᵈ
- Henry Osbourne: xij wekes vj daies xxjˢ vᵈ
- James Laske: xij wekes vj daies xxjˢ vᵈ
- Richard Shutt: xij wekes vj daies xxjˢ vᵈ
- Robartt Woodnaughtt: xij wekes vj daies xxjˢ vᵈ
- William Appleford: xij wekes vj daies xxjˢ vᵈ
- John Huntt, master gonner: xij wekes vj daies xxxijˢ ijᵈ
-
-This is what the _Dreadnought_ looked like as she lay in the dock on the
-Tuesday morning that saw the ship take the water. Imagine a solid-looking
-heavily-timbered hull, round bowed, with long, raking forward prow
-or beak, reaching out some ten or twelve yards ahead of the actual
-vessel, and with at the after-end a lofty towering poop with shallow
-overhanging balustraded gallery. Amidships the vessel is of a width
-equal to nearly a third of her length. From the “greate beaste,” the
-figure-head—a dragon—“gilded and laid with fine gold,” representing one
-of the supporters of the Queen’s arms, set up on the tip of the beak,
-away aft to the stern gallery is a distance of, over all, about a hundred
-and twenty feet. The body of the hull itself has a keel length of some
-eighty feet—from rudder post to fore-foot. Along the water-line the
-bends are all tarred over, with varnished side planking above, tough oak
-timber from the Crown lands of the Sussex Weald by Horsham. The topsides
-above are varnished to the bulwarks, where a touch of colour shows;
-ornamental carved and painted work in royal Tudor green and white, laid
-on in “colours of oil” and garnished with Her Majesty’s family badges in
-gold, and with here and there, on the balustrades of the quarter-rails
-and stern gallery, an additional touch of red. On the stern, “painted in
-oils,” are the arms of England, with the Lion and the Dragon, the Queen’s
-royal supporters, and below, on a scroll, Her Majesty’s motto, _Semper
-Eadem_.
-
-[Illustration: OUR FIRST _DREADNOUGHT_
-
-_From a Contemporary Print kindly lent by Mr. Wentworth Huyshe. (The
-“Dreadnought” is shown as she appeared when serving in the “Ship Money”
-Fleet of Charles the First:—circ. 1637)._]
-
-These are other things about the ship that would strike the Deptford
-visitor of that day. The square-headed forecastle is low and squat in
-appearance, compared with the piled-up, narrow poop right aft, looking
-over from which a foreign visitor to the Queen’s fleet once declared
-that “it made one shudder to look downwards.” The bottom of the ship is
-coated with “tallow and rosin mingled with pitch.” The square-cut, wide
-portholes, out of which the guns will point when they are on board—the
-Tower lighters will bring them down for mounting in a week or two—were
-the idea, they say in the yard, of Master Shipwright Baker’s father, old
-James Baker, many years ago King Harry’s shipwright, improving on the
-original French style. It was old Baker too, they say, who “first adapted
-English ships to carry heavy guns.” The Reformers wanted to send the old
-man to the stake for “being in the possession of some forbidden books”;
-but King Harry could not afford to let them burn England’s best naval
-architect even for the benefit of Protestantism.
-
-The _Dreadnought’s_ gun-ports should open some four feet clear of the
-water. People have not forgotten the horror of the _Mary Rose_; what
-happened to her; how she came to go down one summer’s day at Spithead.
-The waist bulwarks of the _Dreadnought_, if she swims as she ought, will
-be some twenty feet above the water-line. Nearly four hundred tons in
-burden is our new man-of-war—five tons heavier than the _Swiftsure_, than
-which ship too she is six feet longer, though the pair reckon as sister
-ships. Upwards of six thousand pounds out of Queen Elizabeth’s treasury
-(about £30,000 at present day value) will have been the cost of the
-_Dreadnought_ when she leaves Deptford dockyard.
-
-We will go on board for a brief look round the _Dreadnought_ within. As
-we enter the ship we note how both the half-deck and the fore and aft
-castles are loopholed for both arrow-fire and musketry, so as to sweep
-the waist should an enemy board and get a footing amidships. Some of
-the lighter guns would be able to help. The heavier guns are mostly on
-the broadside, and are mounted on the decks below in a double tier. The
-_Dreadnought_ altogether carries forty-two guns. Sixteen of them are
-heavy guns: two “cannon-periers” of six-inch bore, hard hitters, firing
-twenty-four pounder stone shot; four “culverins,” seventeen and a half
-pounders, twelve feet long and five and half inches in the bore, firing
-iron shot, and able to throw a ball upwards of three miles—“random shot.”
-There are also ten “demi-culverins,” nine-pounders, firing four and a
-half inch iron shot. The lighter guns are six “sakers,” pieces nine feet
-long (five-pounders, of three and a half inch bore) and two “fawcons”
-(three-pounders). The heavier guns are all muzzle-loaders. Distributed
-over the upper decks are eighteen breech-loading guns, for fighting at
-close quarters and rapid firing: “port-pieces,” “fowlers,” and “bases,”
-as they are called. They are on swivel mountings, and fire stone and iron
-shot.
-
-All told, the _Dreadnought’s_ armament weighs thirty-two tons. The guns
-are from Master Ralphe Hogge, “the Queen’s gunstone maker, and gunfounder
-to the Council.” They are of Sussex iron, from Master Hogge’s own foundry
-at Buxted. At this moment they are waiting at the Tower, together with
-the _Dreadnought’s_ supplies of iron shot and cannon balls of Kentish
-ragstone from Her Majesty’s quarries at Maidstone, stacked “in ye Bynns
-upon ye Tower Wharfe each side Traitor’s Gate.” When the _Dreadnought_
-goes into battle she will carry some two hundred officers and men all
-told: a hundred and thirty “maryners”—“Able men for topyard, helme and
-lead,” and “gromets,” or boys and “Fresh men”; with twenty gunners and
-fifty soldiers. To keep her at sea will cost the Queen £303. 6s. 8d. a
-month for sea-wages and victualling. Three weeks provisions and water
-is the most that the ship can stow, owing to the space wanted for the
-ballast, the cables for the four anchors, and the ammunition and sea
-stores. That is why victualling ships have to attend Her Majesty’s fleets
-on service outside the Narrow Seas. The “cook room,” of bricks and iron
-and paving stones, is in the hold over the ballast. Two more notes may
-be made as we return on deck and quit the ship. The captain’s cabin,
-opening on the gallery aft, is neatly wainscoted and garnished with
-green and white chintz, and with curtains of darnix hung at the latticed
-cabin windows. There are three boats for the _Dreadnought_: the “great
-boat,” which tows astern at all times, the cock-boat and the skiff, both
-of which stow inboard. John Clerk, “of Redryffe, Shipwrighte,” built
-the “great boat,” being paid £24, in the terms of his bill, “For the
-Workmanshipp and makeinge of a new Boate for her Highness’ Shipp, the
-_Dreadnought_; conteyninge xi foote Di. in lengthe; ix foote Di. in
-Breadthe; and iij foote ij inches in Depthe.—By agrement.”
-
-A brave show should our gallant _Dreadnought_ make when she goes forth
-to war, with her varnished sides and rows of frowning guns and painted
-top-armours (the handiwork, according to his bill, of Master Coteley, of
-Deptford), and all her wide spreading sails set (“John Hawkins, Esquire,
-of London,” supplied these), and at the masthead, high above all, her
-flag of St. George of white Dowlas canvas with a blood-red cross of cloth
-sewn on.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The appointed day has come, and the time for the sending afloat and
-formal naming of the _Dreadnought_: Tuesday afternoon, the 10th of
-November, 1573.
-
-The ship lies ready for launching at the appointed moment, having been
-duly “struck” upon the launching ways a day or two before, under the
-supervision of Master Baker himself, in the dock where she has been
-building; shored up on either side, and with the lifting screws and
-“crabs” prepared to heave her off. The dockhead has been dug out and
-finally cleared at low tide on Monday, leaving the double gates free and
-in order, ready to be swung back and opened as soon as the tide begins to
-make on Tuesday morning.
-
-We will imagine ourselves on the spot at the time and looking on at what
-took place. It is possible to do so, thanks to a manuscript left by
-Phineas Pett, Peter’s son and successor at Deptford royal yard.
-
-All is ready for the day’s proceedings by a little after noon, when the
-important personages taking part at the launch, “by commandement of
-ye officers of Her Grace’s Maryn Causys,” and the invited guests and
-superior officials of the dockyard assemble for a light refection of
-cake and wine in the Master Shipwright’s “lodging,” preliminary to the
-ceremony.
-
-Who named the _Dreadnought_ on that day? Unfortunately that one detail
-is not mentioned in any existing record, and the Navy Office book for
-the year, where the name would certainly have been found, together
-with the honorarium or fee, paid according to custom, is missing. Most
-probably it was Captain Stephen Borough himself, and we may imagine him
-there, apparelled for the day in crimson velvet and gold lace, in the
-full uniform of one entitled to wear “Her Maᵗⁱᵉˢ cote of ordinarie.”
-His rank and standing as one of the “Principall Masters of the Queen’s
-Maᵗⁱᵉˢ Navie in Ordinarie” qualified him for performance of so dignified
-a duty. The Principal Masters were often deputed by the Lord High Admiral
-to preside on his behalf at the launches of men-of-war and perform the
-name-giving ceremony.
-
-While the high officers are having their refreshments in Master
-Shipwright Baker’s lodging, Boatswain Baxster and the assistant
-shipwrights are stationing the men on board and at the launching tackles.
-The customary “musicke” then makes its appearance, “a noyse of trumpetts
-and drums,” who post themselves on the poop and the forecastle of the
-ship. Next, a “standing cup” of silver-gilt, filled to the brim with
-Malmsey of the best, is set up on a pedestal fixed prominently on the
-poop, and the Queen’s colours are hoisted on board, together with the
-flag of St. George. At the same time pennons and streamers of Tudor green
-and white, and decorated with royal emblems and badges, are ranged here
-and there along the ship’s sides and on the forecastle.
-
-All is ready ere long, and then, forthwith, word is sent to Master
-Shipwright Baker and the gentlemen of the company. Forthwith the
-procession forms itself and sets out in stately fashion to go on board.
-
- With his grey hair unbonneted
- The old sea-captain comes;
- Behind him march the halberdiers,
- Before him sound the drums.
-
-So escorted and attended the personage of the hour paces his way forth
-and proceeds on board the new ship, passing along the decks and ascending
-to the poop where the company group themselves according to precedence,
-near by the glittering silver-gilt wine cup. Master Shipwright Baker then
-gives the signal, and Boatswain Baxster’s whistle shrills out. At once
-the gangs of men standing ready at the crabs and windlasses heave taut,
-and a moment later, as the ship begins her first movement outwards, the
-trumpets and drums sound forth. So, at a leisurely rate at the outset,
-gliding off foot by foot into deeper water, the new man-of-war hauls
-gradually out and clears past the dock gates till well into the stream.
-The anchor is then let go and she brings up. Now it is for Captain
-Borough—allowing it to have been he—to do his part.
-
- Stans procul in prorâ, pateram tenet extaque salsos
- Porricit in fluctus ac vina liquentia fundit.
-
-The trumpets and drums cease as the “Principall Master” steps forward
-and takes up his position beside the standing cup. He raises the
-gleaming cup on high so that all around may see. Then, amid universal
-silence, he proclaims, in a clear resonant voice that every one may
-hear: “By commandment of Her Grace, whom God preserve, I name this ship
-the _Dreadnought_! God save the Queen!” As the Lord High Admiral’s
-representative utters the last word, he drinks from the cup, and a moment
-after ceremoniously pours out a portion of the wine upon the deck. The
-next moment, with a wide sweep of the arm, he heaves the standing cup,
-with a little wine left in it, into the river—a sacrifice, as it were,
-on behalf of the bride newly-wedded to the sea, or that the Queen’s
-cup might never be put to base uses—perhaps, indeed, as a sort of
-propitiatory act. So it was done, says Master Phineas Pett, “according
-to the ancient custom and ceremony performed at such times.” Again there
-is a blare of trumpets and a ruffle from the drums, with cheers afloat
-and ashore for Her Grace, and hearty congratulations to Master Matthew
-Baker on the occasion. After that the _Dreadnought_ is formally inspected
-between decks and below, and the crew’s health is drunk by the high
-officers in ship’s beer—sure to be of a good brew on a launching day.
-
-By the time that all is over the ship has been warped back alongside
-the shore again, and the company adjourn thereupon to wind up the
-day’s proceedings with a good old English dinner, given to the Master
-Shipwright and the officials of the yard at the Lord High Admiral’s
-expense.
-
-Such is a passing glimpse of the memorable scene—as far as one may
-venture to reconstruct it—on “Dreadnought Day” at Deptford Royal
-Dockyard, that Tuesday afternoon, in Tudor times, three hundred and
-thirty-three years ago. It is hard to fancy such doings, at Deptford
-of all places, now. Oxen and sheep for the London meat market nowadays
-stand penned in lairs on the site of the filled-in dock whence the
-_Dreadnought_ was floated out—the same dock whence the Armada _Victory_
-had preceded her, whence Grenville’s _Revenge_ followed her. Master
-Shipwright Baker’s lodging is nowadays a cattle drovers’ drinking bar.
-The old-time navy buildings—their origin even now easily recognisable, at
-any rate externally—serve as slaughterhouses, and so forth, among which
-rough butcher lads, reeking of the shambles, jostle daily to and fro. On
-every side is bustle and clatter and hustling, the rumbling of Smithfield
-meat vans over the old-time cobble stones, the jargon of Yankee
-bullock-men, the bleating of sheep under sentence of death. Strange and
-hard is the fate that in these material times of ours has overtaken what
-was once the premier Royal Dockyard of England, this former temple, so to
-speak, of the guardian deity of our sea-girt realm:
-
- This ruined shrine
- Whence worship ne’er shall rise again:—
- The owl and bat inhabit here
- The snake nests in the altar stone,
- The sacred vessels moulder near—
- The image of the god is gone!
-
-Fallen indeed from its high estate of former days is the ancient royal
-establishment of “Navy-building town.” Where bluff King Hal used to walk
-and talk with Matthew Baker’s father, “old honest Jem”; where our sixth
-Edward paid a long-remembered visit, to be “banketted” (as the royal
-spelling has it) and see two men-of-war go off the ways; where Elizabeth
-knighted Francis Drake, and James and Charles rode down in state on many
-a gala day; where Cromwell paid his second naval visit—his “grandees”
-attending him, and escort of clanking Ironsides—to see the vindictively
-named _Naseby_ take the water; where our second Charles liked to saunter
-on occasion with Rupert at his side, and chattering Pepys and John
-Evelyn in his train; where James the Second, dull and morose of mood,
-for the sands of his monarchy were already running out, paid his last
-historic visit one gloomy autumn afternoon of 1688; where brave old
-Benbow liked best to spend the mornings of his half-pay life on shore,
-and Captain Cook set out on his last voyage; where George the Third drove
-down with Queen Charlotte to do honour to the naming of a _Prince of
-Wales_ man-of-war; where, too, Royalty of our own time has more than
-once visited—is now “a market for the landing, sale, and slaughtering of
-foreign cattle.” The glory has departed—the image of the god is gone!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Dreadnought_ and _Swiftsure_ and the two smaller ships were masted
-and rigged and completed for service during November and the early days
-of December, after which, with the help of a hundred and fifty extra
-hands, “prested in ye river of Theames for ye transportyngs about,”
-they set off on the twentieth of the month to join the fleet lying
-“in ordinary” in the Medway—an eight days’ voyage as it proved, owing
-to squally weather and an east wind. The Queen was to have seen the
-_Dreadnought_ and her squadron pass the palace at Greenwich and salute
-the royal standard with cannon and a display of masthead flags, as was
-the Tudor naval usage when the sovereign was in residence, but there
-had been a domestic misadventure at Placentia just a few days before.
-While talking with her maids of honour one afternoon, one of the Queen’s
-ladies—“the Mother of the Maids”—had suddenly dropped dead in the
-royal presence, and the Court had hastily removed to Whitehall. So the
-_Dreadnought_ had no royal standard to salute. Three days after Christmas
-the Deptford squadron took up their moorings in “Jillingham water.”
-
-“Powerful vessels ... with little tophamper and very light, which is a
-great advantage for close quarters and with much artillery, the heavy
-pieces being close to the water,” reported, in a confidential letter now
-in the royal archives at Simancas, one of the King of Spain’s agents in
-England who saw the _Dreadnought_ and _Swiftsure_ not long after they had
-joined the Medway fleet. So too, indeed, some of King Philip’s sailors
-were destined to find out for themselves.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Dons, indeed, were destined to taste something of the _Dreadnought’s_
-quality more than once; beginning with the memorable event of the
-“Singeing of the King of Spain’s Beard.” There, Drake’s right-hand man on
-many a battle day, commanded the _Dreadnought_, Captain Thomas Fenner, a
-sturdy son of Sussex and a seaman who knew his business.
-
-How thoroughly Drake—“fiend incarnate; his name Tartarean, unfit for
-Christian lips; Draco—a dragon, a serpent, emblem of Diabolus; Satanas
-himself”—did his work among the Spaniards at Cadiz, burning eighteen
-of their finest royal galleons, and carrying off six more in spite of
-fireships and all the shooting of the Spanish batteries, is history.
-The _Dreadnought_, after experiencing a narrow escape from shipwreck
-off Cape Finisterre at the outset of her cruise, took her full share of
-what fighting there was. She was present, too, at the second act of the
-drama, which took place off the Tagus with so fatal a sequel for the
-hapless Commander-in-Chief designate of the Armada, the Marquis de Santa
-Cruz—the “Iron Marquis,” “Thunderbolt of War,” the real Hero of Lepanto,
-by reputation the ablest sea-officer the world had yet seen. First,
-the news that his flagship and the finest fighting galleons of his own
-picked squadron—all named, too, after the most helpful among the Blessed
-Saints of the Calendar—together with his best transports and victuallers,
-had been boarded and taken and sacrilegiously set ablaze to, burned
-to the water’s edge, one after the other, by those “accursed English
-Lutheran dogs.” Worse still. To be then defied to his face, he, Spain’s
-“Captain-General of the Ocean”; to be audaciously challenged to come out
-and fight and have his revenge then and there—Drake and the _Dreadnought_
-and the rest openly waiting for him—in the offing. The shame of the
-disaster was enough to kill the haughty Hidalgo, to make him fall sick
-and turn his face to the wall and die, without Philip’s espionage and
-unworthy insults goading him to the grave. The _Dreadnought_ had a hand
-in shaping the destinies of England, for, in the words of the Spanish
-popular saying, “to the Iron Marquis succeeded the Golden Duke,” whose
-hopeless incompetence gave England every chance in the next year’s
-fighting.
-
-In the opening encounter with the Spanish Armada that July Sunday
-afternoon of 1588, no ship of all the Queen’s fleet bore herself better
-than did the _Dreadnought_. Captain George Beeston, of an ancient Surrey
-family, held command on board the _Dreadnought_. He was a veteran officer
-of the Queen’s fleet—more than twenty-five years had gone by since he
-first trod the quarter-deck as a captain. Leading in among the enemy,
-after the first hour of long-range firing between the English van and the
-Spanish rear had brought both sides to closer quarters, the _Dreadnought_
-with the ships that followed Drake’s flagship the _Revenge_, for nearly
-three hours fought first with one and then with another of the most
-powerful of the Spanish rear-guard ships. After that, forcing their way
-among the Spaniards as they gave back and began to crowd on their main
-body, she had a sharp set-to with the big galleons, led by Juan Martinez
-de Recalde, perhaps the best seaman in all King Philip’s navy, commander
-of the rear-division of the Armada. On the _Santa Ana_ and her consorts
-the _Revenge_ and _Dreadnought_ and the rest made a spirited attack,
-pushing Recalde so hard that eventually Medina Sidonia himself, the
-Spanish Admiral, had to turn back and come to the rescue with every ship
-at his disposal. It was enough; Drake and his men had played their part.
-Before Medina Sidonia’s advance in force, the _Revenge_ and _Dreadnought_
-left the _Santa Ana_, and with the rest of the attacking English van drew
-off. They had done an excellent day’s work.
-
-There was harder work for the _Dreadnought_ in the great battle of
-Tuesday off Portland Bill. First came the fierce brush in the morning,
-when Drake and Lord Howard and the leaders of the English fleet, after a
-daring attempt to work in between the Spanish fleet and the Dorset coast,
-had to tack at the last moment, baffled for want of sea room, and were
-closed with by the enemy in the act of going about. On came the galleons
-exultantly, their crews shouting and cheering, amid a blare of trumpets
-and ruffle of drums, in full confidence to run down and sink the lighter
-built English vessels. It was a moment of extreme peril:—but at the very
-last, suddenly, the fortune of the day changed. As the Spaniards seemed
-to be upon them the wind shifted, the English sails filled, ship by
-ship and all together, and then stretching out with bowsprits pointing
-seaward, the _Revenge_, _Victory_, _Ark Royal_, _Dreadnought_, and the
-others safely cleared the enemy, pouring in so fierce a fire as they
-passed that the Spanish ships had to sheer off. This was the first fight
-of the day. Later, when the wind, going round with the sun, shifted again
-and gave Drake and Howard the weather gage, came on the most desperate
-encounter with the Armada that our ships had yet seen. Lord Howard in
-the _Ark Royal_ and Drake in the _Revenge_, with the _Dreadnought_, the
-_Lion_, the _Victory_, and the _Mary Rose_ near at hand, driving ahead
-before the wind, pushed into the thick of the Spanish main body, and
-attacked the enemy, in a long and furious battle that lasted until the
-afternoon sun was nearing the horizon.
-
-A third day of battle was yet to come—Thursday’s hot fight off the back
-of the Isle Wight, and here again the _Dreadnought_ took her full share
-of what was done, until the long summer day drew to its close and the
-Armada “gathered in a roundel,” sullenly stood off eastward, proposing to
-fight no more until the coast of Flanders had been made.
-
-Next morning the _Dreadnought’s_ captain was summoned on board Lord
-Howard’s flagship, the _Ark Royal_. He returned “Sir George,” knighted by
-the Lord High Admiral on the quarter-deck, in the presence of the enemy.
-
-Sunday night saw the fireship attack, so disastrous to the Armada, and
-next morning followed the crowning victory of the week’s campaign, the
-great fight off Gravelines of Monday, the 29th of July, “the great battle
-which, more distinctly perhaps than any battle of modern times, has
-moulded the history of Europe—the battle which curbed the gigantic power
-of Spain, which shattered the Spanish prestige and established the basis
-of England’s empire.” Here the _Dreadnought_ distinguished herself again,
-fighting in the thick of the fray from eight in the morning to four in
-the afternoon, within pistol-shot of the enemy most of the time.
-
-From six till nearly eight the ships of Drake’s squadron had to bear the
-brunt of the fight, with, for antagonists, Medina Sidonia himself and his
-chief captains, who had gathered to stand by their admiral. Trying to
-rally the Armada after the panic of the night, this gallant band had at
-first, from before daybreak, anchored in a group, to act as rear-guard
-to the Spanish fleet, firing signal guns to stop their flying consorts,
-and sending pinnaces to order the fugitives back. Then Hawkins in the
-_Victory_, with the _Dreadnought_, the _Mary Rose_, and _Swallow_, and
-other ships unnamed, came up and struck in. Now moving ahead through
-her own smoke to plunge into the mêlée and come to the rescue of some
-hard-pressed consort, now working tack for tack parallel with and firing
-salvo after salvo at short range into some towering galleon or huge
-water-centipede-like galleass—so the hours of that eventful forenoon
-wore through on the _Dreadnought’s_ powder-begrimed decks. “Sir George
-Beeston behaved himself valiantly,” records the official _Relation of
-Proceedings_, drawn up for the Lord High Admiral. In vain did the most
-formidable of the Spanish galleons try to close and board. Ship after
-ship was forced back with shattered bulwarks and splintered sides, and
-with their scuppers spouting blood, after each English broadside, as the
-round shot crashed in among the masses of Spanish soldiery, packed on
-board the galleons as closely almost as they could stand.
-
-More Spaniards joined their admiral as Sidonia passed north, the Spanish
-rear and centre squadrons forming together a long straggling array,
-among the ships of which, from nine to after one o’clock, the _Revenge_,
-_Victory_, _Dreadnought_, _Triumph_, _Ark Royal_, and the rest charged
-through and through fighting both broadsides. Shortly after two o’clock,
-the English ships passed on, pressing forward to overtake the Spanish
-van group of galleons. By four o’clock the battle was won, but firing
-went on till nearly six, “when every man was weary with labour, and our
-cartridges spent and our ammunition wasted” (_i.e._ used up).
-
-Once more the _Dreadnought_ followed the fortunes of Drake’s flag
-to battle; again, too, as Captain Fenner’s ship. In the year after
-the Armada she had her part in escorting the Corunna expedition, the
-“counter-Armada,” designed to beat up the quarters of the enemy at home
-and attempt the wresting of Portugal from the Spanish yoke. A landing
-party of “Dreadnoughts” fought ashore. Led by Drake and the general of
-the soldiers, Sir John Norris, they drove the Spaniards before them.
-“Unto every volly flying round their ears,” says old Stow, “the generall,
-turning his face towards the enemie would bow and vale his bonnet, saying
-‘I thank you, Sir! I thank you, Sir!’ to the great admiration of all
-his campe and of Generall Drake.” The wine vaults of Corunna, however,
-interposed on behalf of Spain. Soldiers and sailors alike broke in and
-got drunk, and all that could be done after that was to reship the men
-and write the campaign down a failure.
-
-In the attack on Brest in 1594, when Sir Martin Frobisher met his death,
-the _Dreadnought_ had her share. Two years after that she fought with
-Essex and Raleigh in the grand attack on Cadiz—this time as one of the
-picked ships of Sir Walter Raleigh’s own “inshore squadron.” She sailed
-with Sir Walter again after that in the celebrated “Islands Voyage”; and
-then the curtain rings down on the memorable days of the story of the
-_Dreadnought_ of the Great Queen’s fleet. The old ship lasted afloat
-(after an expensive rebuild in James the First’s reign) until the time of
-the Civil War. She figured in the interim in the Rochelle Expedition and
-also in one of Charles the First’s Ship-money fleets. The _Dreadnought_
-of St. Bartholomew’s Day and Matthew Baker made her last cruise of all in
-the year of Marston Moor.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Six _Dreadnoughts_ in all have flown the pennant since England’s Armada
-_Dreadnought_ passed away.
-
-[Illustration: “OLD DREADNOUGHT’S” _DREADNOUGHT_
-
-_From the original drawing made in 1740 for the official dockyard model.
-Now in the Author’s Collection._]
-
-Charles the Second’s _Dreadnought_ was our second man-of-war of the name.
-Originally the _Torrington_, one of Cromwell’s frigates, and named,
-after the Puritan usage, to commemorate a Roundhead victory over the
-hapless Cavaliers, Restoration Year saw the ship renamed _Dreadnought_,
-under which style she rendered the State good service for many a long
-year to come. In that time the _Dreadnought_ fought, always with credit,
-in no fewer than seven fleet battles. She was with the Duke of York
-when he beat Opdam off Lowestoft in 1665; with Monk, Duke of Albemarle,
-and Prince Rupert in the “Four Days’ Fight” of 1666; at the defeat of
-De Ruyter in the St. James’s Day Fight of the same year. Solebay, in
-the Third Dutch War, was another of our second _Dreadnought’s_ notable
-days, and also Prince Rupert’s three drawn battles with De Ruyter off
-the Banks of Flanders in 1673. Worn out with thirty-six years’ service
-(reckoning from the day that the _Torrington_ first took the water), the
-_Dreadnought_ had set forth to meet the famous French corsair, Jean Bart,
-in the North Sea, when, one stormy October night of 1690, she foundered
-off the South Foreland. Happily, the boats of her squadron had time to
-rescue those on board.
-
-Our fourth _Dreadnought_, William the Third’s ship, fought the French at
-Barfleur and La Hogue, and after that did good service down to the Peace
-of Ryswick as a Channel cruiser and in charge of convoys. She served all
-through “Queen Anne’s War,” by chance only missing Benbow’s last fight.
-Later, the _Dreadnought_ was with the elder Byng—Lord Torrington—at the
-battle off Cape Passaro, in the Straits of Messina, in 1718, where one,
-if not two, Spaniards lowered their colours to her. The _Dreadnought_ on
-that occasion formed one of Captain Walton’s detached squadron, whose
-exploit history has kept on record, thanks to Captain Walton’s dispatch
-to the admiral, as set forth in the popular version of it: “Sir, we have
-taken all the ships on the coast, the number as per margin.” Of that
-dispatch more will be said elsewhere.[1] The _Dreadnought_ ended her days
-in George the Second’s reign, at the close of the war sometimes spoken of
-as “The War of Jenkins’ Ear.”
-
-Two _Dreadnought_ officers, Sir Edward Spragge, who captained our second
-_Dreadnought_ in the “Four Days’ Fight,” and Sir Charles Wager, a very
-famous admiral in his day, First Lieutenant of our third _Dreadnought_ in
-the year before La Hogue, have monuments in Westminster Abbey.
-
-Boscawen’s _Dreadnought_ comes next, a sixty-gun ship built in the year
-1742. She was the first ship of the line that Boscawen had the command
-of, and she gave him his _sobriquet_ in the Navy, “Old Dreadnought,”
-the name of his ship just hitting off the tough old salt’s chief
-characteristic—absolute fearlessness. An incident that occurred on board
-the _Dreadnought_ while Boscawen commanded the ship gave the _sobriquet_
-vogue. It is, too, a fine sample of what Carlyle calls “two o’clock in
-the morning courage.”
-
-It was in the year 1744, when we were at war with both France and
-Spain, one night when the _Dreadnought_ was cruising in the channel.
-The officer of the watch, the story goes, came down after midnight to
-Captain Boscawen’s cabin and awoke him, saying, “Sir, there are two large
-ships which look like Frenchmen bearing down on us; what are we to do?”
-“Do?” answered Boscawen, turning out of his cot and going on deck in his
-nightshirt, “Do? why, d⸺ ’em; fight ’em!” The fight did not come off,
-however, as the suspicious strangers disappeared.
-
-On board Boscawen’s _Dreadnought_ it was that, fourteen years later,
-Nelson’s uncle, Maurice Suckling, who got Nelson his first appointment
-in the Royal Navy, and under whose command the boy Nelson first went to
-sea, made his mark as a post-captain. It was in the West Indies in 1757,
-the year in which Byng was shot, and the day was the 21st of October.
-
-The _Dreadnought_ with two consorts met seven French men-of-war, four of
-them individually bigger and more heavily gunned ships than ours, and the
-other three powerful frigates, and gave them a sound thrashing.
-
-The news was received in England with exceptional gratification as the
-first sign of the turn of the tide since Byng’s defeat off Minorca. That
-was one thing about it that stamped the event in popular memory. A second
-memorable thing was the incident, according to the popular story, of the
-“Half Minute Council of War” that preceded the fight.
-
-The three British ships were the _Augusta_, Captain Forrest; the
-_Dreadnought_, Captain Maurice Suckling; and the _Edinburgh_, Captain
-Langdon. The three had been sent by the admiral at Jamaica to cruise off
-Cape François, in order to intercept a large French homeward merchant
-convoy reported to be weakly guarded. The available French naval force on
-the station was believed to be too weak to face our little squadron. But,
-unknown to Admiral Cotes at Port Royal, fresh men-of-war had just arrived
-from France purposely to see the convoy home. In the result, when our
-three ships arrived off Cape François, seven French ships stood out to
-meet them. In spite of the odds the British three held on their course.
-
-These were the forces on either side, in ships and men:—
-
- BRITISH LINE OF BATTLE.
-
- _Dreadnought_ 60 guns Capt. Suckling 375 men
- _Augusta_ 60 ” Capt. Forrest 390 ”
- _Edinburgh_ 64 ” Capt. Langdon 467 ”
- --- ----
- 184 guns. 1232 men.
- === ====
-
- FRENCH LINE OF BATTLE.
-
- _La Sauvage_ 30 guns 206 men
- _L’Intrépide_ (Commodore) 74 ” 900 ”
- _L’Opiniâtre_ 64 ” 640 ”
- _Le Greenwich_ (formerly British) 50 ” 400 ”
- _La Licorne_ 30 ” 200 ”
- _Le Sceptre_ 74 ” 750 ”
- _L’Outarde_ 44 ” 350 ”
- --- ----
- 366 guns. 3446 men.
- === ====
-
-Directly the French came in sight the senior officer, Captain Forrest of
-the _Augusta_, signalled to the other two captains to come on board for
-a council of war. They came, and, the story goes, arrived alongside the
-_Augusta_ together and mounted the ship’s side together. As they stepped
-on to the _Augusta’s_ gangway, Captain Forrest, it is related, addressed
-the two officers in these terms: “Gentlemen, you see the enemy are out;
-shall we engage them?” “By all means,” said Captain Suckling. “It would
-be a pity to disappoint them,” said Captain Langdon. “Very well, then,”
-replied Forrest; “will you gentlemen go back to your ships and clear for
-action?” The two captains bowed, and turned and withdrew without having,
-as it was said, actually set foot on the senior officer’s quarter-deck.
-
-Within three-quarters of an hour they were in action, the _Dreadnought_
-leading in and attacking the French headmost ship as the squadrons
-closed. Captain Suckling opened the fight by throwing the _Dreadnought_
-right across the bows of the _Intrépide_, a 74, and much the bigger ship,
-forcing her to sheer off to port to avoid being raked.
-
-Backed up by the _Augusta_ and the _Edinburgh_, the _Dreadnought_ was
-able to overwhelm the French commodore with her fire, and force the
-crippled _Intrépide_ back on the next ship, the _Opiniâtre_. That vessel
-in turn backed into the fourth French ship, and she into another, the
-_Sceptre_. The four big ships of the enemy were accounted for. Our three
-ships seized the opportunity. Well in hand themselves, they pounded
-away, broadside after broadside, into the hapless Frenchmen, who were
-too much occupied in trying to disentangle themselves to do more than
-make a feeble and ineffective reply. By the time that they got clear the
-British squadron had so far got the upper hand that the French drew off,
-leaving the British squadron masters of the field. All of our three ships
-suffered severely, the _Dreadnought_ most of all.
-
-In Nelson’s lifetime the day was always observed by the family at Burnham
-Thorpe with special festivities, and Nelson himself often called it, it
-is on record, “the happiest day of the year.” More than that too, Nelson
-himself more than once half playfully expressed his conviction that he
-too might some time fight a battle on another 21st of October, and make
-the day for the family even more of a red-letter day. As a fact, during
-the last three weeks of his life on board the _Victory_ off Cadiz, in
-October, 1805, Nelson, with a prescience that the event justified, used
-these words both to Captain Hardy and to Dr. Beatty the surgeon of the
-flagship: “The 21st of October will be our day!”
-
-Captain Maurice Suckling’s “Dreadnought” sword was bequeathed to Nelson
-and was ever kept by him as his most treasured possession. He always wore
-it in battle, it is said; notably at St. Vincent, when he boarded and
-took the two great Spanish ships the _San Nicolas_ and the _San Josef_;
-and his right hand was grasping it when the grape shot shattered his arm
-at Teneriffe.
-
-The _Dreadnought_ of Boscawen and Maurice Suckling ended her days at
-perhaps England’s darkest hour of national trial—at the time of the
-American War. She was doing harbour duty at Portsmouth at the time, as a
-guard and receiving ship.
-
-At no period, perhaps in all our history did the future and the prospects
-of the British Empire seem so absolutely hopeless. We were fighting for
-existence against France and Spain, the two chief maritime Powers of
-Europe; and at the same time the vitality of the nation was being sapped
-by the never-ceasing struggle with the American colonists, now in its
-seventh year. Holland had added herself to our foes; Russia and the
-Baltic Powers were banded together in a league of “armed neutrality,” and
-stood by sullen and menacing. That, however, was not the worst. The price
-of naval impotence had to be paid. Great Britain was no longer mistress
-of the sea. She had lost command of the sea, and was drinking the bitter
-cup of consequent humiliation to the dregs.
-
-[Illustration: THE RED-LETTER DAY OF NELSON’S CALENDAR. HOW THE
-_DREADNOUGHT_ LED THE ATTACK ON THE 21st OF OCTOBER, 1757
-
-_“Edinburgh.”_ _“Augusta.”_ _“Dreadnought.”_
-
-_Painted by Swaine. Engraved and Published in 1760._]
-
-It was the direct outcome of party politics and short sighted naval
-retrenchments in time of peace, pandering to the clamour of ministerial
-supporters in the House of Commons. The printed Debates and Journals of
-the House between 1773 and 1781 are extant, as are also the summaries of
-the _Gentleman’s Magazine_, for those who care to learn what passed.
-
-Out-matched and out-classed at every point, the British fleet found
-itself held in check all the world over. Colony after colony was wrested
-from us, or had to be let go, while our squadrons in distant seas had
-not strength enough to do better than fight drawn battles.[2] Gibraltar,
-closely beset by sea and land, was still holding out, but no man dared
-prophesy what news of the great fortress might not arrive next. Minorca,
-England’s other Mediterranean possession, had to surrender. The enemy
-were masters of the island, after driving the garrison into their last
-defences at St. Philip’s Castle. Nearer home, Ireland, in the enjoyment
-of Home Rule, was using the hour of Great Britain’s difficulty as her
-opportunity for demanding practical independence, with eighty thousand
-Irish volunteers under arms to back up the threats of the Dublin
-Parliament.
-
-The Channel Fleet, though reinforced with every ship it was possible
-to find crews for, held the Channel practically on sufferance. Once it
-had to retreat before the enemy and seek refuge at Spithead. On another
-occasion the enemy were on the point of attacking it in Torbay with such
-preponderance of force that overwhelming disaster must have befallen it.
-Fortunately for England the French and Spanish admirals disagreed at the
-last moment and turned back.
-
-Hanging in a frame on the walls of the Musée de Marine at the Louvre
-the English visitor to Paris to-day may see a draft original “State,”
-giving the official details of the divisions and brigades and the ships
-to escort them, of one of the French armies which was to be thrown across
-into England. It was no empty menace, and for three years the beacons
-along our south and east coasts had to be watched nightly; while camps
-of soldiers, horse and foot and artillery—the few regulars that had not
-been sent off to America—with all the militia regiments in the kingdom,
-extended all the way round, at points, from Caithness to Cornwall. To
-safeguard London there were camps of from eight to ten battalions each,
-mostly militia, at Coxheath, near Maidstone, at Dartford, at Warley, at
-Danbury in Essex, and at Tiptree Heath. To secure the colliery shipping
-of the Tyne two militia battalions were under canvas near Gateshead. A
-camp at Dunbar and Haddington watched over Edinburgh. The West Country
-was guarded by a big camp of fifteen militia battalions at Roborough,
-near Plymouth, with an outlying camp on Buckland Down, near Tavistock.
-To prevent the enemy making use of Torbay, Berry Head was fortified,
-the ruins of the old Roman camp of Vespasian’s legionaries there being
-utilized to build two twenty-four pounder batteries overlooking the
-passage into the bay. Every town almost throughout England had its “Armed
-Association” or “Fencibles,” volunteers, the men of which, by special
-permission from the Archbishop of Canterbury, drilled after church time
-every Sunday.
-
-The effect on the oversea commerce of the country, penalized by excessive
-insurance rates, was calamitous. From 25 to 30 per cent premium was paid
-at Lloyds on cargoes from Bristol, Liverpool, and Glasgow to New York
-(still in British hands); and 20 per cent to the West Indies. As to the
-reality of the risk. On one occasion the enemy captured an Indiaman fleet
-bodily off Madeira, only eight vessels out of sixty-three escaping,
-with a loss to Great Britain of a million and a half sterling, including
-£300,000 in specie. We have, indeed, at this moment a daily reminder of
-the disaster. One of the unfortunate underwriters was a Mr. John Walter.
-His whole fortune swept away, he took to journalism, and the _Times_
-newspaper was the result. Home waters were hardly more secure. Rather
-than pay the excessive extra premium demanded for the voyage up Channel,
-London merchants had their goods unladen at Bristol, and carried in light
-flat-bottomed craft called “runners,” built specially for the traffic,
-up the Severn to Gloucester, thence to be carted across to Lechlade
-for conveyance to their destination by barge down the Thames. At the
-same time the North Sea packets from Edinburgh (Grangemouth) to London
-refused all passengers who would not undertake to assist in the defence
-of the vessel in emergency. Printed notices were pasted up at the wharves
-announcing that no Quakers would be carried.
-
-To such a pass had the loss of her supremacy at sea reduced Great Britain
-in the closing year of our fourth _Dreadnought’s_ career.
-
-Our fifth _Dreadnought_ fought at Trafalgar. She was a 98-gun ship, one
-of the same set as the famous “fighting” _Téméraire_. The newspapers of
-the day made a good deal of her launch, which took place at Portsmouth
-Dockyard, on Saturday, the 13th of June, 1801. Here is an extract from
-one account:—
-
-“At about twelve o’clock this fine ship, which has been thirteen years
-upon the stocks, was launched from the dockyard with all the naval
-splendour that could possibly be given to aid the grandeur and interest
-of the spectacle. She was decorated with an Ensign, Jack, Union, and the
-Imperial Standard, and had the marine band playing the distinguished
-martial pieces of ‘God save the King,’ ‘Rule Britannia,’ etc. etc. A
-prodigious concourse of persons, to the amount, as is supposed, of at
-least 10,000, assembled, and were highly delighted by the magnificence
-of the ship and the beautiful manner in which she entered the watery
-element. But what afforded great satisfaction was, that, in the passage
-of this immense fabric from the stocks, not a single accident happened.
-She was christened by Commissioner Sir Charles Saxton, who, as usual,
-broke a bottle of wine over her stem. Her complement of guns is to be 98,
-and she has the following significant emblem at her head; viz.—a lion
-couchant on a scroll containing the imperial arms as emblazoned on the
-Standard. This is remarkably well timed and adapted to her as being the
-first man-of-war launched since the Union of the British Isles.”
-
-[Illustration: WHEN GEORGE THE THIRD WAS KING. OFFICERS AT AFTERNOON TEA
-ASHORE.
-
-_Thomas Rowlandson. 1786._]
-
-[Illustration: MANNING THE FLEET IN 1779. A WARM CORNER FOR THE PRESS
-GANG.
-
-_James Gillray. Oct. 15, 1779._]
-
-For twelve months before Trafalgar, the _Dreadnought_ was Collingwood’s
-flagship in the Channel Fleet. Collingwood passed most of the time
-cruising on blockade duty in the Bay of Biscay, where he used to spend
-his nights pacing on deck to and fro restlessly, expecting the enemy at
-any moment, and snatching intervals of sleep lying down on a gun-carriage
-on the quarter-deck. Collingwood only changed from her into the bigger
-_Royal Sovereign_ ten days before the battle. Under the eye of the former
-captain of our first _Excellent_ man-of-war, the _Dreadnought’s_ men had
-been trained to fire three broadsides in one minute and a half—a gunnery
-record for that day.
-
-At Trafalgar the _Dreadnought_ fought as one of the ships in
-Collingwood’s line, and did the best with what opportunity came her way.
-
-“This quiet old _Dreadnought_” wrote Dickens of his visit to the ship in
-her last years, “whose fighting days are all over—_sans_ guns, _sans_
-shot, _sans_ shells, _sans_ everything—did fight at Trafalgar under
-Captain Conn—did figure as one of the hindmost ships in the column which
-Collingwood led—went into action about two in the afternoon, and captured
-the _San Juan_ in fifteen minutes.”
-
-While fighting the _San Juan_—the _San Juan Nepomuceno_, a Spanish
-seventy-four—the _Dreadnought_ had to keep off two other Spaniards and
-a Frenchman at the same time; Admiral Gravina’s flagship, the _Principe
-de Asturias_, of 112 guns, and the _San Justo_ and _Indomptable_, two
-seventy-fours. The _San Juan_ in the end proved an easy prize, for she
-had been already severely mauled by some of Collingwood’s leading ships.
-On being run alongside of she gave in quickly. Without staying to take
-possession, the _Dreadnought_ pushed on to close with the big _Principe
-de Asturias_, and gave her several broadsides, one shot from which
-mortally wounded Admiral Gravina. The Spanish three-decker, however,
-managed to disengage, and made off, to lead the escaping ships in their
-flight for Cadiz. Thus the _Dreadnought_ was baulked of her big prize.
-
-It was the Trafalgar _Dreadnought_ that gave the name to that great
-international institution, the _Dreadnought_ Seamen’s Hospital, at
-Greenwich. This, of course, was long after Trafalgar, for the “wooden
-whopper of the Thames,” as Dickens called the old three-decker in her
-old age, did not make her appearance off Greenwich until a quarter of a
-century later. The fine old veteran of “Eighteen Hundred and War Time,”
-lasted until 1857, and to the end they preserved on board as the special
-relic of interest, “a piece of glass from a cabin skylight scrawled over,
-with somebody’s diamond ring, with the names of those officers who were
-in her at Trafalgar.” Another old three-decker replaced the Trafalgar
-ship until 1870, when the institution was removed on shore. At Chatham
-to-day, in the dockyard museum, visitors may see the _Dreadnought’s_ bell
-which was on board the old ship during the battle, and was removed from
-her when the _Dreadnought_ was broken up. Yet another memento of the
-Trafalgar _Dreadnought_ exists in the Eton eight-oar _Dreadnought_, one
-of the “Lower Boats,” and so-called originally, together with the boat
-that bears the name _Victory_, in honour of Nelson and Trafalgar.
-
-Our sixth _Dreadnought_ is a still existing ironclad turret-ship,
-mounting four 38-ton muzzle loaders, launched in 1875. She is a ship
-of 10,820 tons, and cost to complete for sea £619,739. She served
-for ten years—from 1884 to 1894—in the Mediterranean, and after that
-as a coast-guard ship in Bantry Bay. Paid off finally in 1905, the
-_Dreadnought_ now lies at her last moorings in the Kyles of Bute,
-awaiting the final day of all for her naval career, and the auctioneer’s
-hammer.
-
-To conclude with a flying glance at our mighty battleship, the
-_Dreadnought_ of to-day, the seventh bearer of the name until now, and
-as all the world knows by far the most powerful man-of-war that has ever
-sailed the seas. She is the biggest and the heaviest and the fastest and
-the hardest-hitting vessel that any navy as yet has seen afloat. And
-more than that. The _Dreadnought_ has been so built as to be practically
-unsinkable by mine or torpedo; while at the same time her tremendous
-battery of ten 12-in. guns—huge cannon, each forty-five feet long—makes
-her absolutely irresistible in battle against all comers; a match for
-any two—probably any three—of the biggest battleships in foreign navies
-afloat at the present hour.
-
-These are some of the “points”—some of the leading features—of this grim
-_mastodonte de mer_ of ours, His Majesty’s battleship, the _Dreadnought_.
-With her coal, ammunition, and sea stores on board, the _Dreadnought_
-weighs—or displaces in equivalent bulk of sea water, according to the
-present-day method of reckoning the size of men-of-war—17,800 tons.
-
-Put the _Dreadnought_ bodily inside St. Paul’s and she would fill the
-whole nave and chancel of the Cathedral from reredos to the Western
-doors. Her length would take up the whole of one side of Trafalgar
-Square. Her width would exactly fill Northumberland Avenue, leaving only
-some half-dozen inches between the house fronts on either side and the
-outside of the hull. Two _Victorys_ and a frigate of Nelson’s day, fully
-manned and rigged, could be packed away within the _Dreadnought’s_ hull.
-
-[Illustration: [Our _Dreadnought_ of to-day: deck-plan to scale; showing
-the disposition of the 12-in. 58-ton turret-guns and their arcs of
-training. (Bows to the right.)][3]]
-
-Measured from end to end, from bows to stern, the ship’s hull extends 490
-feet. From forecastle to keel, measuring vertically, is a matter of some
-60 feet down, equivalent to about the normal height of a church tower.
-
-What, however, above everything else, specially distinguishes the
-_Dreadnought_ from all other warships afloat, is her terrific battery.
-Hitherto four 12-inch guns have formed the standard main armament for
-all battleships. The _Dreadnought_ carries ten 12-inch guns of a new and
-more powerful type than any heretofore in existence. They are mounted in
-pairs in “redoubts,” armoured with Krupp steel eleven inches thick, and
-are so grouped on board that when fighting broadside-on with an enemy,
-eight of the ten guns will bear on the enemy and be in action throughout.
-In chase, or fighting end-on, six of the guns are available at all
-times. The firing charge per gun of “modified” cordite weighs by itself
-2 cwt.—the weight of a sack of coals on a street coal-cart. In the hour
-of battle each discharge from the _Dreadnought’s_ broadside will hurl
-into the enemy three tons of “metal”—bursting shells—each shell being
-from three to four feet long, and weighing singly 7½ cwt. With each shot
-also, bang goes £80, the cost of the cartridge and its projectile. Twelve
-thousand yards will be the _Dreadnought’s_ chosen range for engaging—six
-miles—about as far as clear vision is possible above the horizon.
-
-[Illustration: [Curve of flight, or trajectory, of 850 lb. projectile
-from a _Dreadnought_ 12-in. turret-gun fired with full service charge.]]
-
-[Illustration: [The 12-in. gun is about the same weight as an ordinary
-railway passenger train engine.]]
-
-“Mark X” is the official style for the _Dreadnought_ class of 12-inch
-gun. It is the most powerful piece of ordnance in the world. It weighs
-upwards of fifty-eight tons, about the weight of a larger “tank” railway
-engine of the kind that brings the suburban bread-winner up to London
-every morning. Its muzzle velocity—the speed at which the shot flashes
-forth from the gun—is 2900 feet (966⅔ yards, or well over half a mile) in
-a second. The force with which the shot starts off is enough to send it
-through a solid slab of wrought iron set close up in front of the muzzle
-of the gun 4¼ feet thick. When fired with full charges, each gun develops
-a force able to lift the _Dreadnought_ herself bodily nearly a yard up,
-exerting a force equivalent to 47,697 “foot-tons,” in gunnery language.
-The entire broadside of eight 12-inch guns, fired simultaneously, as at
-the gun trial off the Isle of Wight, develops a force sufficient to
-heave the huge vessel herself, 21 feet up—nearly out of the water, in
-fact.
-
-[Illustration: [Extreme range of the _Dreadnought’s_ turret-guns:—Fired
-from in front of St. Paul’s Cathedral.]]
-
-As an instance of the tremendous range of the _Dreadnought’s_ guns:
-mounted on one of the Dover forts, they could easily drop shells on the
-deck of a Channel packet in the act of leaving Calais harbour. Imagine
-one of them mounted in front of St. Paul’s and firing with full charges
-in any direction. Its shells would burst over Slough in one direction and
-over Gravesend in the other. Hertford, St. Albans, Chertsey, Sevenoaks,
-would all be within range. Twenty-five miles is the extreme estimated
-range of a shot fired with a full service charge, and the trajectory of
-the projectile would, at its culminating point, attain a height in the
-air of nearly six miles, twice the height of Mont Blanc.
-
-They are “wire guns,” as the term goes, constructed in each case by
-winding coil on coil of steel ribbon or “tape” (a quarter of an inch
-wide and ·06 of an inch thick), round and round on an inner steel tube,
-the barrel of the piece; just as the string is wound round the handle of
-a cricket bat. The tape or “wire” is then covered by outer “jackets,”
-or tubes of steel. Upwards of 228,800 yards of wire—a length of 130
-miles—weighing some 15 tons, are required for each of the _Dreadnought’s_
-12-inch guns, and it takes from three to four weeks to wind on the wire.
-The rifling of the barrel comprises forty-eight grooves, varying in
-depth from ·08 of an inch at the muzzle to ·1 at the breech. Each of the
-_Dreadnought’s_ guns, separately, employs in its manufacture from first
-to last upwards of five hundred men in various capacities, and costs, as
-turned out ready to send on board, but without sighting and other vital
-appliances, between £10,000 and £11,000.
-
-The _Dreadnought_ carries eleven inches of Krupp steel armour on her
-sides, turrets, and conning tower, and rather thinner armour at the bows
-and stern. Her speed of twenty-one knots makes her a full two knots
-faster than any existing battleship. She is the first battleship in any
-navy to be propelled by the Parsons turbine, to which her speed is due.
-Lastly, the cost of the _Dreadnought_ is officially stated at £1,797,497.
-
-Exceptional in themselves, and of exceptional historic interest as well,
-are the honours that have fallen to the _Dreadnought’s_ lot within the
-few months that our great naval masterpiece has been in existence.
-
-At the outset the _Dreadnought_ had the good fortune to be named and
-sent afloat by His Majesty King Edward personally. That in itself was an
-exceptional honour, and one that has fallen to the lot of very few ships
-of the Royal Navy—to be named and sent afloat by the reigning sovereign.
-There have been just six instances in all, from the earliest times to
-the present day. Queen Victoria launched four men-of-war during her long
-reign; but no King of England ever launched a ship in the four hundred
-years between King Edward and Henry the Eighth: King Edward with the
-_Dreadnought_ and Henry the Eighth with the _Great Harry_ are the two
-historic instances. Many of our sovereigns, of course—practically all
-of them: Edward the Sixth, Queen Elizabeth, the Stuart kings, Cromwell
-also, George the Third, and William the Fourth—attended in state on
-various occasions to witness the launch of some notable man-of-war, but
-they were present only as spectators, and took no part in the actual
-proceedings. Charles the First was to have personally named the famous
-_Sovereign of the Seas_, with the same ceremonial used at the launch of
-our first _Dreadnought_, and rode down with his Court to Woolwich to
-do so; but they could not get the ship out of dock, and the King rode
-back to Whitehall disappointed, deputing the Lord High Admiral to name
-the ship when she did get clear—not till between eight and nine in the
-evening. Charles the Second, in like manner, was to have personally named
-our first _Britannia_, but His Majesty was taken ill on the day before.
-Again too, as it also happened, there was a hitch at the launch. The
-_Britannia_ stuck fast for twelve hours, and then went off at midnight to
-the flare of torches and cressets, after which a courier was hurried off
-at gallop to Whitehall, to acquaint the King, “lest certain base reports
-(i.e. that the _Britannia_ had fallen over in dock) may have reached your
-Majesty.”
-
-Yet another exceptional honour that befel the _Dreadnought_ was after
-the great review of the Home Fleet off Cowes, on the first Monday of
-August this year, when King Edward, with Queen Alexandra, the Prince of
-Wales, and Prince Edward of Wales, with Sir John Fisher and members of
-the Royal suite, went out on board the _Dreadnought_ to beyond Spithead
-to witness target-practice with the _Dreadnought’s_ turret-guns; the
-memorable occasion on which, at 2640 yards’ range, the four 12-in. guns
-that fired, scored within two and a half minutes nine bull’s-eyes and
-two “outers” out of twelve rounds discharged. Never to be forgotten
-was the scene as the _Dreadnought_ passed down the double lines of the
-Home Fleet in the brilliant sunshine; the ships all dressed with flags,
-and with decks manned, and cheering, and firing salutes—the giant ship
-herself flying the Royal Standard at the masthead and at either yard-arm
-the Union Flag, symbol of His Majesty’s rank as Admiral of the Fleet,
-and the Admiralty Anchor Flag, a combination not seen on board a British
-man-of-war of the fighting-line, even in those historic waters, for
-over a century—not, indeed, since that summer’s morning of 1794, when
-the three flags flew together at the mastheads of the famous _Queen
-Charlotte_, denoting King George the Third’s presence on board, with his
-Queen, on his visit to present a diamond-hilted sword of honour to Lord
-Howe, then just arrived with the prizes taken on the Glorious First of
-June. That also was the last occasion, until the other day, on which a
-King and Queen of England were together on board a British man-of-war at
-sea.
-
-The guns fired before the King and Queen were those in the two
-after-turrets, and the targets used were the usual service ones, 16 ft.
-by 20 ft., with a central bull’s-eye 14 ft. square. The range was about a
-mile and a half, and six rounds were fired from each turret. Of the three
-shots placed outside the bull’s-eye, two went through the target, whilst
-the third, which missed, cut away the rope fastening the canvas of the
-target to the framework. Two of the shots in the bull’s-eye went through
-the very centre, through a small circle, about thirty inches in diameter,
-marked in the middle of the target.
-
-We will conclude this outline of our _Dreadnoughts’_ story with a brief
-tabular statement of certain points in detail of comparison and contrast
-between the _Dreadnought_ of to-day and the historic _Victory_.
-
- THE _DREADNOUGHT_ AND _VICTORY_ COMPARED
-
- _DREADNOUGHT._ _VICTORY._
- Time Building 16 months Five years
- ten months
- Total Cost £1,797,497 £89,000
- Displacement 17,900 tons 3400 tons.
- Total Weight Broadside 6800 lb. 1160 lb.
- Extreme Range of Guns 25 miles 3 miles.
- Penetration of armour at six miles 9 in. Krupp Steel
- Penetration at all distances Nil.
- Heaviest Gun 12 inch 6 inch.
- Weight of Charge 265 lb. 10½ lb.
- (M.D. cordite). (gunpowder).
- Time to make Gun 12 to 15 months Four guns a week.
- Cost per Gun £11,000 £57. 15s.
- Average Weight per Gun 58 tons 56 cwt.
- Complement 780 men 850 men.
- Length 490 ft. 226 ft. 6 in.
- Breadth 82 ft. 52 ft.
- Mean Load Draught 26 ft. 6 in. 25 ft.
- Number of Guns 37 104
- Speed 21½ knots 10 knots.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-“KENT CLAIMS THE FIRST BLOW!”
-
- “The Kentishe Menne in Front!”
-
-
-“Kent claims for itself the first blow in battle against alien enemies.”
-The hand that penned these words has lain in the grave for over seven
-centuries; but old William Fitz-Stephen of Canterbury knew what he meant,
-and meant what he wrote. They are words that our fine “county cruiser”
-the _Kent_ of to-day—to which the ladies of Kent have presented a silken
-battle flag and the Men of Kent a silver shield and other gifts, to
-incite the _Kent’s_ bluejackets to shoot straight—might well adopt and
-make the ship’s motto. It was from the County of Kent that the initiative
-came in the movement which has had such excellent results in inducing the
-county people in other counties all over Great Britain and Ireland to
-display a practical interest in the warships that bear the county names;
-and the idea has since spread in other cases throughout the Empire.
-
-The county “Association of Men of Kent and Kentish Men” of their own
-accord took the initial step in the spring of 1899 by approaching the
-late Lord Goschen, then First Lord of the Admiralty, with a request that
-one of four cruisers of a new type, to be built under the supplemental
-programme of the previous August, might be named after the County of
-Kent. The request was heartily received, and in response the name _Kent_
-was announced for the first of the new ships. A little later the Men
-of Kent made a second proposal. They asked permission to establish
-among themselves a “county memorial for the new county-cruiser _Kent_,”
-expressing their “desire and intention to do something to keep up a
-continual connection between the county and the good ship, and to cause
-a sustained interest to be taken in her fortunes and the welfare of
-those on board.” Lord Goschen acceded to that request, and a county
-subscription was immediately set on foot by Lord Harris, the president of
-the Association for the year, to form a Kent county trophy fund for the
-cruiser _Kent_. It was proposed to present the ship, on commissioning,
-with a challenge trophy in silver, to be competed for annually among the
-gun crews of the ship, the champion gun team for each year to have their
-names inscribed on the trophy and receive a special monetary reward from
-a county fund established with the trophy. The trophy itself was to be
-kept on board and to be displayed on special and festive occasions in the
-mess of the winning team. Whenever the _Kent_ was out of commission the
-trophy would be cared for by the Captain of the Royal Naval Barracks,
-Chatham, or at Greenwich Naval College.[4] The movement received cordial
-support from Lord Selborne, Lord Goschen’s successor at the Admiralty,
-and from the late Earl Stanhope, the then Lord Lieutenant of Kent, and
-the late Lord Salisbury, then Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports. More than
-that, indeed. Interested by the patriotic action taken by the County of
-Kent on behalf of its cruiser namesake, His Majesty the King was himself
-graciously pleased to command that in the cases of future ships bearing
-the names of counties the Lords Lieutenant of the counties concerned
-were to be requested by the Admiralty to nominate in each case some lady
-connected with the county to perform the naming and launching ceremony.
-
-[Illustration: THE COUNTY AND ITS SHIP. THE _KENT_ TROPHY CHALLENGE SHIELD
-
-_From a photograph kindly lent by the Designers and Manufacturers of the
-Trophy, Messrs. George Kenning & Son, Goldsmiths, Little Britain and
-Aldersgate Street, London._]
-
-The trophy-shield subscribed for by the Men of Kent, together with an
-album for the names and scores of its winners from time to time, was
-formally handed over to the captain and ship’s company of the _Kent_ at
-Sheerness by representatives of the County Association, the gift being
-received with every mark of regard and genuine welcome. Following on
-that, a deputation of county ladies, headed by the Countess Stanhope,
-the wife of the Lord Lieutenant, presented the favoured ship with two
-flags, a beautiful silken ensign and a silken Union Jack, subscribed for
-by the County Association of “Maids of Kent and Kentish Maids.” The flags
-were brought on board in the beautiful box of Kentish Heart of Oak in
-which they are now kept under the sentry before the captain’s cabin. The
-ensign was bent on the halyards and ceremoniously hoisted to the peak by
-Countess Stanhope in the presence of the assembled officers and crew of
-the _Kent_, and the Jack was hoisted by the Hon. Secretary of the Ladies’
-Committee, Mrs. Bills, the proceedings winding up with a luncheon to
-the ladies on the after-deck by Captain Gamble and his officers, and an
-afternoon dance on board.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That the name of the ancient maritime county of England should be borne
-in the fleet to-day by a modern British warship is in itself a matter
-of historic interest. There are, indeed, very excellent reasons why the
-County of Kent should receive distinguished treatment from the Admiralty,
-why its name deserves to be honourably commemorated in the British fleet
-of to-day.
-
-Kent has a place of its own in regard to the naval annals of England,
-old-time associations with the oversea defence of England and the
-national navy, that stand quite by themselves. The associations indeed go
-back across fifteen centuries, to the earliest days of our “rough island
-story”; so far back, indeed, as the old old times of the “Counts of the
-Saxon Shore.”
-
-Dover and Reculver, the two principal Kentish ports of the days when
-Britain was a Roman province, were central stations in the widespread
-line of outposts along the coast whence watch and ward were kept for the
-coming of the Norseland raiders oversea in the springtime year by year.
-
- Bared to the sun and soft, warm air,
- Streams back the Norseman’s yellow hair,
- I see the gleam of axe and spear,
- The sound of smitten shields I hear,
- Keeping a harsh, barbaric time
- To Saga’s chant and Runic rhyme.
-
-From the pharos on the Foreland in those strenuous times of long ago
-keen-sighted men of Kent kept look-out daily, scanning the horizon from
-sunrise to sunset; ever on the alert to start the alarm and pass it on to
-where the Roman coast defence galleys lay at their moorings off the mouth
-of the Wantsum Channel by Richborough Castle.
-
-Alike on land and sea theirs was the post of honour. At Hastings, led by
-the stout Earl Leofwine, as we know—
-
- A standard made of sylke and jewells rare
- Was borne near Harold at the Kenters Head.
-
-And centuries after that, whenever the King of England was in the field,
-they claimed the right to lead the van—“The Kentishe Menne in front!”
-
-The Kentish contingent—the “Eastern Ports” contingent—formed the bulk and
-the backbone of the Cinque Ports fleets of the Middle Ages, both in ships
-and men. Four of the five “Head Ports” in the famous confederation were
-Kentish ports—Sandwich, Dover, Romney, and Hythe. The “Eastern Ports”
-counted twenty-one limbs, “Members”; the “Western Ports”—Hastings with
-the two “Ancient Towns” attached—ten “Members.” The old Cinque Ports
-Navy, in these times of ours it may be, is little more than a name, a
-faded memory of a dim and distant past, a perished institution of a dead
-old time; yet it was once an actual fact, a living hot-blooded reality,
-the chief guarantee of our national existence, a very real bulwark, the
-foremost defence of England from foreign invasion. “The courage of those
-sailors who manned the rude barks of the Cinque Ports first made the
-flag of England terrible on the seas.” For all that we have to thank, in
-the first place, the Men of Kent, that Kent of which old twelfth-century
-Fitz-Stephen, monk of Canterbury and historian of his own times, was
-thinking when he wrote, “Kent claims for itself the first blow in battle
-against alien enemies.”
-
-The Kentish ships of the Cinque Ports, “Ships of Kent” they are
-explicitly called, took a leading part with the Crusaders’ fleet which
-on its way to the Holy Land for the Second Crusade, in the year 1147,
-captured Lisbon from the Moors. Kentish men fought with that fine
-leader, William Longsword, Earl of Salisbury, “Warden of the Cinque,”
-when he fell on the French King’s fleet at Damme—just three years before
-King John put his mark to Magna Charta.
-
-It was a squadron of the Kentish ships of the Ports’ federation that, in
-the year after Magna Charta, under one of England’s finest heroes and
-greatest men, that grand fellow, stout-hearted Hubert de Burgh, Earl of
-Kent, Chief Justiciar of England and Constable of Dover Castle, Cœur de
-Lion’s favourite pupil in arms, saved England from invasion by rounding
-up the fleet with which the renegade leader Eustace the Monk—“pirata
-nequissimus” one old chronicler calls him—was making for the Thames,
-and dealing the French the first of the series of knock-down blows of
-which Nelson struck the last at Trafalgar. The story of the “Battle
-of Bartholomew’s Day,” the 24th of August, 1217, is one we ought not
-willingly to let die. There is hardly a finer tale in all our history
-than that which tells how De Burgh’s sixteen Cinque Port warships from
-Dover, with nineteen or twenty small craft, stood out to meet the Monk’s
-hundred and odd ships—eighty of them the largest vessels of the time—off
-the North Foreland; swept round them astern, weathered them and closed,
-grappled them fast, under cover of a stinging fire of archery and
-crossbow bolts, cut down their sails, and then, flinging up in the air
-handfuls of quicklime to blow into the faces of the Frenchmen, boarded
-and overpowered the enemy in hand-to-hand fight with falchion and pike
-and battle-axe. They fought it out from early morning until the afternoon
-was spent, when fifty-five ships of the Monk’s fleet had been taken, and
-the rest, except fifteen ships that ran away, all sent to the bottom.
-
-Again, in the tremendous Midsummer Day’s battle in the harbour of Sluys,
-the “Trafalgar of the Middle Ages,” although to most people the event
-is barely a schoolbook memory—the great naval victory that made Creçy
-possible—once more the Ship-and-Lion flag at the masthead of vessels from
-the four Kent ports was to the fore, well up in the van of King Edward’s
-attacking fleet and in the thickest of the fighting. And at the battle of
-“Espagnols-sur-Mer,” off Winchelsea, where again Edward the Third fought
-in person, together with the Black Prince; off St. Mahé; and at Harfleur,
-covering Henry the Fifth’s landing for the march that ended at Agincourt,
-and in many another hard-fought action in the Narrow Seas after that,
-Kentish men in the Kentish ships of the Ports’ Navy full well played
-their part.
-
-It was oak from the Weald of Kent for the most part that built the
-men-of-war of Queen Elizabeth’s fleet which drove the Spanish Armada
-through the Channel and North Sea to its doom on the reefs of Stornaway
-and the quicksands of Connemara—ships timbered and planked with oak from
-the Kentish Weald, and shaped and framed and clamped together in the
-Kentish Dockyards of Deptford and Woolwich. Phineas Pett, a Kentish man
-by birth, designed and built the famous _Sovereign of the Seas_; and his
-grandson, Sir Phineas Pett, designed and built our first _Britannia_. The
-_Great Harry_ was mostly built of Kentish oak; as was, at a later day,
-Sir Richard Grenville’s “little” _Revenge_, and, at a still later day,
-Nelson’s _Victory_, launched at Chatham.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was a Man of Kent who, as admiral in chief command, planned and gave
-the order for the capture of Gibraltar. It was another Man of Kent who,
-as admiral second in command, carried that order out. Sir George Rooke,
-one of the Rookes of Monk’s Horton, Kent—by far the ablest sea-officer
-in the British service in the hundred years between Blake and Hawke—was
-the Commander-in-Chief before Gibraltar. Byng, Sir George Byng, was the
-second in command—the elder of the two Byngs known to naval history,
-“Mediterranean Byng,” as he was called in the Navy in connection with a
-later exploit of his, and remembered nowadays as the Byng who beat the
-enemy and was not shot. He became Lord Viscount Torrington, and may, in
-like manner, be distinguished from the other Lord Torrington of naval
-history (Arthur Herbert) as the Torrington who beat the enemy and was not
-court-martialled and broke.
-
-A famous family of old-time Kent were the Byngs, seated at Wrotham ever
-since the fifteenth century, more than one member of which came to the
-front in the reigns of Queen Elizabeth and the Stuart kings. Such as,
-for instance, the fine old Kentish cavalier of Browning’s rousing song:
-
- Kentish Sir Byng stood for his King,
- Bidding the crop-headed Parliament swing,
- And, pressing a troop unable to stoop
- And see the rogues flourish and honest folk droop,
- Marched them along,
- Fifty score strong,
- Great-hearted gentlemen, singing this song!
-
- Fifty score strong! Fifty score strong!
- Great-hearted gentlemen, singing this song!
-
-Other Kentish men of note associated directly with the Old Navy were Sir
-Thomas Spert, founder of Trinity House, and captain of the _Harry Grace
-à Dieu_ when Henry the Eighth crossed the Straits of Dover in her to
-the Field of the Cloth of Gold; Sir William Hervey, of Kidbrooke, “who
-greatly distinguished himself in boarding one of the vessels composing
-the Spanish Armada,” and was raised to the peerage as Lord Hervey; old
-Captain Dick Fogg, of Repton, near Ashford, captain under Charles the
-First of the tenth whelp and the _Victory_ and of other men-of-war of
-note; Kit Fogg, his son, who fought for England in half a score of
-sea-fights under Charles the Second and down to the time of Queen Anne;
-Christopher Gunman, a bold fireship and frigate captain in the Dutch
-wars, captain of the Duke of York’s flagship at Solebay, who later on
-nearly drowned the future James the Second; George Legge, afterwards the
-Earl of Dartmouth, whose valour in battle at Solebay made his fortune, a
-member of a Kent county family of long descent; two notable Commodores,
-two St. Lo’s of Northfleet; Commodore Boys of the _Luxborough_ galley;
-Sir Piercey Brett, who as a lieutenant went round the world with Anson,
-and lived to be one of the most distinguished officers of his day; Sir
-Thomas Boulden Thompson, who fought under Nelson at Teneriffe, at the
-Nile, and at Copenhagen. These are a few names taken at random.
-
-Sir Sidney Smith, the “Hero of Acre,” the man who made Bonaparte, as the
-Emperor himself put it, “miss his destiny,” was of Kentish birth and
-family, and learned his “three R’s” at Tunbridge School; and it was to
-Lord Barham, as First Lord of the Admiralty, that Nelson reported himself
-in September, 1805, when he volunteered to shorten his leave at home and
-go out at once to fight the enemy at Trafalgar.
-
-It was Kent, too, that gave England Captain John Harvey—one of the
-Harveys of Eastrey, a family that for generations had sent its sons
-into the Navy—captain of the _Brunswick_ on Lord Howe’s famous day,
-the “Glorious First of June,” 1794, who fell mortally wounded in close
-action with the French _Vengeur_. When the two ships first collided, the
-master of the _Brunswick_ proposed to cut the _Vengeur_ clear. “No,”
-answered Captain Harvey; “we’ve got her, and we’ll keep her!” After he
-received his mortal wound he refused to let himself be carried off the
-quarter-deck. He dragged himself down to the cockpit, saying as he went
-off the deck, “Remember my last words: the colours of the _Brunswick_
-must never be struck!” A brother, Henry Harvey, was the admiral whose
-name is still to be met with on old tavern signboards here and there
-in East Kent. Henry Harvey, captain of the _Ramillies_, came to his
-brother’s aid on the 1st of June, and with three terrific broadsides
-finished off the _Vengeur_ for the _Brunswick_, amid resounding cheers
-from the _Brunswick’s_ men, and giving occasion to an officer in another
-ship who was looking on to improvise on King David: “Behold how good and
-joyful a thing it is for brethren to fight together in unity!”
-
-It was this same Henry Harvey who, as a rear-admiral, later in the Great
-War (in 1797), took Trinidad. That the conquest proved an easy business
-was not his fault. The Commander-in-Chief of the Spanish squadron at
-Trinidad, Admiral Apodoca, when he saw Admiral Harvey coming, without
-clearing for action or firing a shot set fire to his ships and escaped
-ashore. He took horse and galloped off, and presented himself, excited
-and panting with his exertions, before the Governor of the island,
-General Chacon. “I have burnt my ships, sir,” he burst in with, “in case
-they should fall into the power of the English.” “Burnt them?” exclaimed
-the astonished Governor; “destroyed them! Have you saved nothing?” “Oh,
-yes I have!” Apodoca replied. “Yes I have! I have! I have saved”—drawing
-a carved and painted wooden image, some fifteen inches long, from under
-his cloak as he spoke—“my flagship’s patron saint—I have saved San Juan
-de Compostella!” That Apodoca’s flagship was the _San Vincente_, and that
-there was no _San Juan de Compostella_ on the Spanish Navy List at the
-time, are details the story does not concern itself with.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yet another interesting connection between Kent and the sea service of
-bygone times is this. H.M.S. _Kent’s_ name is not the only man-of-war
-name associated with the county that has figured in the fighting days
-of old. No fewer than eighteen other man-of-war names connected with
-the county of Kent have from time to time been borne on the roll of
-the British fleet. It was on board a _Canterbury_ that a notable naval
-officer of the earlier part of the eighteenth century, Captain George
-Walton, penned words which have been quoted over and over again as a
-masterpiece of conciseness. He had been in pursuit of a Spanish squadron,
-and on his return, as most of us have read, reported as follows:—
-
- “_To Admiral Sir George Byng, Commander-in-Chief._
-
- “Sir,
-
- “We have taken and destroyed all the Spanish ships and vessels
- which were upon the coast, as per margin.
-
- “I am, etc.,
-
- “GEORGE WALTON.
-
- “Canterbury, off Syracusa, _August 16, 1718_.
-
- “One of 60 guns, one of 54, one of 40, one of 24—taken; one of
- 54, two of 40, one of 30 guns, with a fireship and two bomb
- vessels—burnt.”
-
-As a fact, unfortunately, Captain Walton’s “dispatch” was written
-in quite another way. The captain of the _Canterbury_ really sent
-the admiral a letter of two pages. What is passed off as his whole
-“dispatch,” is actually only the concluding sentence of the letter,
-excerpted and dressed up. An unscrupulous admiralty official, for the
-purposes of a book on the campaign, manipulated the letter and printed
-its last paragraph by itself as the entire despatch. Historians following
-one another have since then simply copied Secretary Corbett.
-
-Our first _Sandwich_ broke the French line at the battle of La Hogue, and
-lost her gallant captain in doing it. Another bore Rodney’s flag in five
-battles—two with the Spaniards and three with the French—and was at the
-first relief of Gibraltar during the Great Siege. Our first _Dover_ was
-present at the taking of Jamaica. Another won fame as Captain Cloudesley
-Shovell’s ship. Commodore Trunnion served on board another _Dover_, if
-Smollett spoke by the card in making him express a wish to be buried “in
-the red jacket which I wore when I boarded the _Renummy_.” Apart from
-the taking of Louis the Fifteenth’s frigate _Renommée_, if we count in
-other French and Spanish frigates and privateers taken, our various
-_Dovers_, in their time, must have brought home captured flags enough
-to deck the town out from end to end. All, of course, have long since
-rotted out of existence. People in old times set little store by such
-trophies. “What are you going to do with all these flags?” a friend once
-asked of a frigate captain who, in his barge, gaily decorated from bows
-to stern with the colours of ships taken during the commission, was being
-pulled in from Spithead to land at the old Sally Port, Portsmouth. “Do
-with them?” came the reply. “Why, take ’em home and hang ’em on the trees
-round father’s garden.”
-
-It was a _Chatham_ whose twenty-four pounders, one May morning, just a
-hundred and forty-eight years ago, gave the Royal Navy our first, and the
-original, “Saucy” _Arethusa_. One _Maidstone_ fought with Blake at Santa
-Cruz de Teneriffe. Another, acting as “guide of the fleet,” led Hawke to
-victory on that stormy November afternoon among the reefs of Quiberon
-Bay, which the French Navy, pillorying the memory of its unfortunate
-admiral, has ever since called “la journée de M. Conflans.”
-
-A _Greenwich_ fought at La Hogue, and was one of Benbow’s squadron in his
-last fight. One _Deptford_ was also at La Hogue, and another with Byng
-off Minorca, where the _Deptford_, at any rate, did her duty. A _Romney_,
-in Queen Anne’s war, after a career of distinction, went down with all on
-board to westward of St. Agnes, Scilly, on the night of the catastrophe
-to Sir Cloudesley Shovell. _Rochester_, and _Medway_, and _Sheerness_,
-are also man-of-war names that have attaching to them interesting
-memories of the fighting days of old, as have too, in one way or other,
-in differing degrees, the remaining names of the group, _Woolwich_ and
-_Faversham_, _Eltham_ and _Deal Castle_, _Margate_, _Queenborough_, and
-_Folkestone_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Our modern-day cruiser the _Kent_ has her own story also as a man-of-war,
-a notable and interesting historic reputation of her own, to uphold.
-This summary will give its points, the “battle honours” which the _Kent_
-would be entitled to bear on her ship’s flag were our ships authorized to
-follow the practice of the army in regard to regimental flags.
-
- H.M.S. _KENT_.
-
- Blake’s victory over Tromp off Portland Feb., 1653
- Blake and Monk’s victory off Lowestoft June, 1653
- Monk’s victory over Tromp off Camperdown July, 1653
- Blake’s bombardment of Tunis April, 1655
- Duke of York’s victory off the North Foreland June, 1665
- Rupert and Albemarle—“The Four Days’ Fight” June, 1666
- Rupert and Albemarle—“The St. James’s Day Fight” July, 1666
- Battle off Cape Barfleur and Attack at La Hogue May, 1692
- Rooke’s battle in Vigo Bay Oct., 1702
- Capture of a French convoy off Granville July, 1703
- Battle of Malaga[5] Aug., 1704
- Siege of Barcelona Sept., 1705
- Action with Duguay Trouin April, 1709
- Capture of the French 60-gun ship _Superbe_ July, 1710
- Sir George Byng’s victory off Messina July, 1718
- Relief of Gibraltar Feb., 1727
- Capture of the Spanish 74-gun ship _Princessa_ April, 1740
- Hawke’s victory off Finisterre Oct., 1747
- Taking of Geriah Feb., 1756
- Recapture of Calcutta and bombardment of Chandernagore Feb., 1757
- Alexandria Mar., 1801
- Service with Nelson off Toulon 1803-4
- In the Mediterranean 1807-12
-
-A peculiarly interesting memento of the _Kent_ in connection with one
-of these battles is in existence. It refers to the part played by the
-_Kent_ of Charles the Second’s navy just before the battle of June, 1666,
-“The Four Days’ Fight,” in which Monk, Duke of Albemarle, during Prince
-Rupert’s temporary absence with a third of the fleet in the Channel,
-without waiting for Rupert to rejoin, rashly flung his weaker force on
-De Ruyter with the whole of the Dutch fleet at hand and brought about a
-general engagement.
-
-The _Kent_ had been sent off on the 27th of May on a scouting cruise
-between “Blackness” (the old name for Cape Grisnez) and Ostend. Late in
-the evening of the 30th of May the following letter was handed to the
-Duke of Albemarle from the captain of the _Kent_, sent across by a Dutch
-ketch that the _Kent_ had taken:—
-
- “May it please yr Grace,
-
- “This morning being off Gravelines in chase of a small ship and
- a ketch belonging to Newport, as they pretend, whom I have sent
- into the Downs to your Grace, I mett with a Swede who came from
- Amsterdam on Sunday last in his ballast, bound for Bordeaux,
- who relates that 75 sayle of the Flemish Fleet sett sayle
- out of the Texel the 21st present, and 28 more from Zealand,
- leaving 6 ships behind them, whose men they tooke out to man
- the rest of the Fleet, & stoode away to the Northwest, which as
- my duty binds me I have thought fit to acquaint yr Grace with:
- & humbly kissing your hands I remain
-
- “Yr Grace’s most humble servant to be commanded,
-
- “THOS. EWENS.
-
- “From aboard his Matⁱᵉˢ shipp _Kent_: this 30th May, 1666.”
-
-The captain of the _Kent’s_ letter was considered so important that
-Albemarle at once sent it off by express to the Admiralty. It is still
-in existence; a stained sheet of yellowish paper with the writing crabbed
-and not easily decipherable, and brown with age and faded. The letter,
-with Albemarle’s covering note, was found many years afterwards among
-some correspondence that had belonged to King James the Second, just as
-the letter had been filed on its receipt at the Admiralty in 1666, when
-James, Duke of York, was Lord High Admiral. It is endorsed:—
-
-“For his Grace the Duke of Albemarle, aboard the _Royall Charles_ this ⸺
-d.dd. In the Downes.”
-
-Albemarle’s covering letter to the Admiralty bears the curiously scrawled
-endorsements of the various postmasters on the Dover Road as they passed
-the courier along on his hurried journey up to London:—“Received ye
-packett at Canterbury, att past 5 in ye Morneing, by Mee, Edw Wheiston”;
-“Sittingborne, past 8 in ye morning, by mee Wm Webb”; “Rochester, past
-ten Before noon, Wm Brooker”; “Gravesend at nowne, Hen White.”
-
-Albemarle was roughly handled and had to beat a retreat for the mouth
-of the Thames—fighting a rear-guard action, skilfully conducted and
-gallantly contested. Rupert joined him just in time to avert disaster,
-but one of the English flagships, the _Prince_, grounded at the last
-moment on the Galloper Shoal, and was taken by the Dutch and burned as
-she lay. This was just as the _Kent_ rejoined the flag, in time for the
-last day’s battle.
-
-Cromwell, it is curious to note, first gave the name Kent to the
-navy for a man-of-war; one November day of the year 1652. On that
-day—Saturday, the 6th of November—an application from the Admiralty
-Committee as to the names for four frigates, two of which were to be
-launched in the following week, was laid before the Lord General Cromwell
-and the Commonwealth Council of State. The reply was that the following
-would be the names: _Kentish_, _Essex_, _Hampshire_, and _Sussex_. So
-a State Paper, now among the national archives in the Record Office,
-explicitly states. In their selection the Council made thereby a new
-departure, and introduced a set of man-of-war names entirely different
-from any before known at sea. The little group of four ships named in
-November, 1652, leads the way at the head of the long series of British
-men-of-war which have borne the names of our counties in battle on the
-sea with distinction on so many historic days.
-
-Why the form “Kentish” was preferred to “Kent” for the first of the
-four ships, is a matter that is not quite obvious. The name, of course,
-may have been appointed for no particular reason. The four names chosen
-were names of four seaboard counties, locally interested in maritime
-affairs, and it may well have been thought that to call one of the ships
-the “Kentish” was much the same thing as calling her the “Kent.” On
-the other hand, there may have been in addition something behind, in
-regard to the name appointed. Everybody knows, _teste_ Lord Macaulay,
-why the Puritan authorities put down bull-baiting; not because it hurt
-the bull, but because it pleased the people. The Puritans rather liked,
-it is to be feared, making themselves deliberately offensive to those
-who saw otherwise to them. It is certainly curious, if not significant,
-that at the Restoration the name “Kentish” disappears forthwith from
-off the official Navy List, and “Kent” appears instead. This was just
-at the time, too, that certain distinctly obnoxious names, bestowed
-on men-of-war by the Puritan authorities, as, for instance, _Naseby_,
-_Marston Moor_, _Worcester_, _Torrington_, _Newbury_, _Dunbar_, _Tredagh_
-(the vernacular for _Drogheda_), were replaced by names such as _Royal
-Charles_, _York_, _Dunkirk_, _Dreadnought_, _Revenge_, _Henry_, and
-_Resolution_.
-
-Was any reference intended in the form “Kentish,” as originally appointed
-for the new ship of 1652, to the “Kentish Rising” of 1648, and its hard
-fate under the sword blades of Fairfax’s troopers? Was the name designed
-as a reminder to the Royalists of South-Eastern England? Was it meant as
-a memento of the penalty that had been paid by so many who, only four
-years before, had buckled on sword and ridden forth so blithely to the
-county marching song:—
-
- Kentish men, keep your King,
- Long swords and brave hearts bring,
- Down with the rebels, and slit their crop ears!
- Hell now is wanting rogues,
- Send there the canting dogges,
- Ride to the scurry, my Kent cavaliers!
- God and our King for grace,
- Leave now your wives’ embrace,
- Up and avenge all their insults for years!
- Ironsides! Who’s afear?
- Pack ’em to Lucifer,
- Ride to the scurry, my Kent cavaliers!
-
-The name “Kentish,” if introduced with such intention, would help in
-serving to recall in the stately mansions of the squires of Kent, and in
-many a humble yeoman’s home as well, why there were vacant places round
-the family board.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A brief comparison between Cromwell’s _Kentish_ and her lineal successor
-of our own day, His Majesty’s ship the _Kent_, may be of interest in
-conclusion.
-
-The _Kentish_ was of 601 tons burthen, 187 feet in length of hull, 32½
-feet beam, and 15 feet draught. Our modern _Kent_ is 440 feet between
-perpendiculars (463½ feet over all), 66 feet beam, and 24½ feet depth.
-The first _Kent_, under full sail, might perhaps do nine knots at her
-best speed; the present _Kent_, with her engines of 22,000 horse power,
-has done twenty-three knots an hour. The first _Kent’s_ guns, forty in
-number, were identical with the guns that Queen Elizabeth’s fleet carried
-when it fought the Spanish Armada; the same kind of guns, practically,
-that Henry the Eighth’s _Mary Rose_ had on board when she capsized at
-Spithead. The same quaint old mediæval style of nomenclature, indeed,
-was still in vogue for the _Kentish’s_ guns. They were called culverins
-(18-pounders), demi-culverins (9-pounders), and sakers (6-pounders). The
-heaviest of them, the culverins, weighed 48 cwt. each, and were 5½ inches
-in calibre. The _Kentish’s_ guns also were of brass, specially cast for
-her; refounded, for the most part, according to an existing Ordnance
-order, out of condemned pieces and captured Royalist cannon. According
-to a curious manuscript list of the ship’s equipment, the _Kentish_ when
-ready for sea had on board as her establishment of war stores—908 round
-shot, 468 double-headed shot, 100 barrels of powder, 60 muskets; and for
-close-quarter fighting, 7 blunderbusses, 60 pikes, and 40 hatchets. The
-modern _Kent_ carries as her main armament 6-inch quick-firing steel
-guns, each firing 100-pounder shot and shell, and able to discharge,
-each piece in half a minute, heavier metal than the whole broadside (270
-lb.) of the original _Kentish_. The old ship, of course, was built of
-wood, oak timber; most of which, as a curious fact, seems to have been
-cut on the confiscated estates of delinquent Royalists in the County of
-Kent. The new _Kent_, built of steel, and with 4-inch Krupp armour along
-her water line, cost to complete for sea upwards of three-quarters of a
-million sterling; the _Kentish_ frigate, guns and all, cost £5000, or in
-present-day money from £20,000 to £25,000.
-
-That the gallant “Kents” of His Majesty’s navy at the present hour
-are quite ready to give a satisfactory account of themselves before
-the enemy, should occasion arise, may be judged from their firing
-record in the “gunlayers competition” for 1907. With the 12-pounder,
-the average per gun for the whole ship was 11·18 hits a minute. Petty
-Officer Nash achieved fourteen hits in fourteen rounds, the run, during
-which the score was made, being only of fifty-five seconds duration.
-In his fifty-five seconds Able Seaman Ramsden fired fifteen rounds,
-the time taken to load and fire each time being just over three and a
-half seconds, and he hit the target thirteen times. During the light
-quick-firing gunlayers’ test, the _Kent_ fired, in the short space of
-fifty-five seconds, 107 rounds, scoring 83 hits, from her 12-pounders;
-and 42 rounds, scoring 35 hits, from her 3-pounders. Some of the guns hit
-the target with every shot they fired, and the loading was wonderfully
-smart, averaging 15 rounds per gun for the fifty-five seconds.
-
-The _Kent_ of King Edward’s fleet was laid down at Portsmouth Dockyard
-on the 12th of February, 1900, as a first-class armoured cruiser, and
-launched on Wednesday, the 6th of March, 1901, Lady Hotham, the wife of
-the Admiral Commander-in-Chief at Portsmouth, naming the ship in the
-orthodox way, with wine grown and produced within the British Empire,
-and specially presented for the ceremony by the Agent General of South
-Australia. The _Kent_ was the first to be launched of our modern set of
-County Cruisers. She was also the first to hoist the pennant and join the
-fleet at sea.
-
-[Illustration: THE SCENE OF THE OPERATIONS UNDER ADMIRAL WATSON AND CLIVE
-
-[From Major James Rennell’s “Bengal Atlas,” published in 1781. Reproduced
-by the courtesy of the Royal Geographical Society.]]
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-THE AVENGERS OF THE BLACK HOLE:—WHAT THE NAVY DID FOR CLIVE
-
- The fathers in glory do sleep
- That gathered with him to the fight,
- But the sons shall eternally keep
- The tablet of gratitude bright.
-
-
-This year, 1907, has witnessed the coming round of the hundred and
-fiftieth anniversary of the establishment of British rule in India. It
-has recalled to memory too, among some of us at any rate, the name of
-one of the great Englishmen of history, Clive, and how he set his hand
-to the work which, in its ultimate outcome, placed the realms of the
-Great Mogul beneath the sovereignty of the British flag. The part that
-the Royal Navy took side by side with Clive and his soldiers is perhaps
-hardly as fully recognized as it should be, considering all that it
-meant. For that reason, among others, the fine story of what took place,
-of the help that our bluejackets of that time gave when the situation
-was most critical, finds its place here. The navy had its own _rôle_ to
-take in the stirring drama, and it fulfilled it—completely, faultlessly,
-resistlessly. Without the navy—the squadron then on duty in Indian
-waters—Clive would have been powerless, and the golden hour for England,
-with its opportunities, would have had to be let go by.
-
-In the summer of 1757 the British East Indies Squadron had not long
-arrived in the Bay of Bengal. It had come out from England four or five
-months previously in anticipation of the outbreak of a war with France.
-After carrying out operations against the pirate strongholds of the
-Malabar coast, it had gone round to take post off Madras, at that time
-the most important of the British settlements in the East. It was in the
-neighbourhood of Fort St. George when, absolutely as a bolt from the
-blue, came the news of the catastrophe at Calcutta, which led to the
-tragedy of the Black Hole.
-
-At that moment news was expected by every ship from England that war had
-been declared with France, and part of the British squadron was on the
-watch down the coast, off St. David’s. It seemed quite possible, indeed,
-that the first intelligence of war might be the appearance on the scene
-of a French squadron from Mauritius, cleared for action. All were keenly
-on the alert, almost from the first arrival of the British force on the
-coast. There was no means of knowing whether the French were not already
-on their way, and every precaution was taken against surprise. A daily
-masthead look-out was kept for six weeks, the ships being maintained in
-readiness every night to clear for action at short notice.
-
-So little was trouble from the north expected, that month of July,
-1757, that an expeditionary force under Clive to assist the Subahdar of
-Hyderabad in his quarrel with M. Bussy was on the point of setting out.
-
-To help the Subahdar a force of three hundred European soldiers and
-fifteen hundred Sepoys of the Madras army was told off, and to counteract
-the consequent weakening of the garrison of Madras, Admiral Watson, the
-Commander-in-Chief of the East Indies Squadron, was requested to bring
-his squadron higher up the coast so as to keep guard in the immediate
-vicinity of Fort St. George.
-
-The Admiral did as he was asked, after which, just as the Hyderabad
-column was on the point of marching off, the blow from Bengal fell.
-
-In the second week of July a letter came from Governor Drake at Calcutta
-with the news that the new Nawab-Vizier of Bengal, Suraj-u-daulah,
-had seized the Honourable East India Company’s factory at Cossimbazar
-and made the officials there prisoners. There was great anxiety at
-Madras, and Major Kilpatrick, of the East India Company’s service, with
-three companies of European troops, was at once sent north, on board a
-Company’s ship, to render what assistance he could. The Bengal military
-establishment at that time comprised only five hundred men—two hundred
-Europeans and three hundred Sepoys. The dispatch of the soldiers for
-Calcutta delayed the start of the expedition for Hyderabad; and then,
-just as marching orders were about to be given for the second time, on
-the 5th of August, a second letter from Bengal arrived.
-
-To the amazement and consternation of all, they learnt that Calcutta had
-fallen. Suraj-u-daulah had swooped down on the settlement with seventy
-thousand men, with cannon and four hundred elephants, and had captured
-Fort William. Governor Drake sent the message from a place called Fulta,
-a riverside village in the Sunderbunds, some forty miles below Calcutta.
-The garrison of Fort William, he said, had made a defence for five days,
-after which, ammunition failing, he and the higher officials had taken
-refuge on board what ships there were in the Hooghly and retreated with
-them to Fulta. The women were safe on board the ships, said the Governor,
-but all were in the utmost distress and great danger. They appealed for
-help at the earliest possible moment. Not a word was said of any one
-being left behind in Fort William; not a syllable about the tragedy of
-the Black Hole. News of that apparently had not yet reached Fulta. But
-without the crowning tragedy, the news, as it reached Madras, was bad
-enough. It came with stunning effect: “A blow as filled us all with
-inexpressible consternation,” to use the words of Dr. Ives, the surgeon
-of Admiral Watson’s flagship, the _Kent_.
-
-To recover Calcutta and take vengeance on the Nawab were the thoughts
-uppermost in every one’s mind at Madras. A sloop-of-war, the
-_Kingfisher_, was hastily dispatched northward on the day after the
-receipt of the news to render assistance to the ships with the refugees
-on board, which would probably be found lying weather-bound in the
-Hooghly. The troops for Hyderabad were ordered to stand fast. An urgent
-message was sent to Fort St. David to summon Clive to the Presidency.
-Clive hurried to Madras, and with Governor Pigott and the Council
-discussed the situation.
-
-Discussion, however, soon disclosed a difference of opinion as to what
-should be done. Some of the leading people at Madras were nervous for
-themselves. Certain members of the Council objected to any weakening of
-the garrison. War with France, they said, was imminent. It was quite
-possible indeed, according to late advices from Hyderabad, that the
-Subahdar and M. Bussy might settle their quarrel and combine against
-Madras. With that possibility before them, was it wise to strip Madras
-entirely of its garrison, now that the worst had already happened in
-Bengal? The Council met day after day, and adjourned without coming to
-any decision. Fortunately in the end the bolder spirits prevailed. By
-a majority the Council decided to equip an expedition and send help to
-Bengal as soon as the weather—it was the monsoon season—would let the
-expedition start.
-
-It was agreed, after a consultation with Admiral Watson, that Colonel
-Adlercron’s regiment (39th Foot) and 1500 Sepoys should be shipped on
-board the men-of-war and some Indiamen then in the Roads, and proceed to
-Balasore, at the mouth of the Hooghly. There the vessels then housing
-the Calcutta refugees would transfer them on board the three larger
-men-of-war, the flagship _Kent_, the _Cumberland_, and the _Tyger_, which
-ships, it was held, drew too much water to cross the shoals at the mouth
-of the Hooghly. The Indiamen and the Calcutta ships would then transport
-the soldiers up the river and recapture Calcutta, escorted and assisted
-by three smaller men-of-war, the _Salisbury_, the _Bridgewater_, and the
-_Kingfisher_.
-
-These arrangements had all been completed when something totally
-unexpected happened. A Bombay runner arrived with dispatches from the
-Admiralty, sent overland, recalling the whole of Admiral Watson’s
-squadron to England at once. “It was,” as Dr. Ives describes, “a terrible
-blow.” But the Admiral proved equal to the situation. He held an informal
-consultation in his cabin with his second in command, Rear-Admiral
-Pocock, and Flag-Captain Speke. Taking all responsibility on himself, the
-Admiral decided to postpone his departure until after the expedition to
-Bengal had been successfully carried through. An emergency had arisen,
-he wrote in his reply to England, which the Admiralty could not have
-foreseen, which imperatively required the continued presence of the
-squadron on the station. Then Admiral Watson went ashore to communicate
-his dispatches to the Governor in Council. His opening intimation that
-the men-of-war had been recalled created, in the words of Dr. Ives,
-“blank consternation.” It would mean, as the Council formally resolved,
-“the total ruin of the Company’s affairs in the Indies.” They expressed
-themselves as helpless without the Navy, and were overwhelmingly
-grateful when they learned that the Admiral had decided, on his own
-responsibility, to disobey his orders.
-
-At the last moment, though, there was further delay; it was over a
-question of military etiquette. Who should command the expedition—Colonel
-Adlercron, a King’s officer, or Lieutenant-Colonel Clive, a Company’s
-officer, who had local rank as colonel? There was further wrangling over
-this matter, and valuable time was lost, until it was finally settled
-that the supreme command of both sea and land forces should be vested
-in Vice-Admiral Watson as senior commissioned officer in the East, with
-Clive in charge of the troops—both King’s and Company’s.
-
-The expedition finally set sail on the 16th of October, two months and
-ten days after the news of the Black Hole first reached Madras. It
-comprised five men-of-war—the _Kent_, _Cumberland_, _Tyger_, _Salisbury_,
-_Bridgewater_, and the _Blaze_, a fireship; three Company’s Indiamen, and
-two country ships. All the ships carried soldiers and army stores.
-
-Vice-Admiral Charles Watson, the Commander-in-Chief in the East Indies,
-was a capable and zealous leader. He was a naval officer of the very best
-type, and in addition, it was admitted on all hands, a noble-hearted,
-considerate English gentleman. He had been very seriously ill while on
-the way out from England—so ill indeed that, on learning soon after his
-first arrival at Bombay that there was a possibility of the expected
-war with the French not breaking out for some time, he had applied to
-go home again at once on sick leave. When he reached Madras he learnt
-officially that war was imminent, and he wrote off at once cancelling
-his application. If that were so there was no going home now for Admiral
-Watson. Ill as he was, he would stay out to fight the French once more.
-It was characteristic of the man—of the captain of the _Dragon_ in
-1743—who, as the Navy of those days well remembered, when detached by
-Admiral Mathews from off Toulon, as a special favour to a smart officer,
-to cruise off Cadiz just when the treasure galleons from the Spanish Main
-were expected to arrive, with additional instructions to go on afterwards
-to Lisbon and carry the merchants’ treasure thence to England—the most
-lucrative employment a naval man could possibly look for—deliberately, on
-hearing at Gibraltar that a battle was likely to take place off Toulon,
-turned his back on a sum of prize-money that would have made him wealthy
-for life, saying, “He thought his ship would be wanted with the fleet.”
-The old heroic spirit of a captain who had been specially mentioned in
-dispatches for gallantry in every battle that he fought in—by Mathews off
-Toulon, and in 1747 by both Anson and Hawke—overcame the bodily weakness
-of an invalid.
-
-It took six weeks to reach Balasore Roads, a distance of only seven
-hundred miles on a direct course. Owing to the delay at Madras they had,
-as the phrase went, “lost the passage.” With the south-west monsoon,
-which held from May to the middle of September, it took ordinarily from
-ten days to a fortnight to sail from Madras to Calcutta. Now they had
-the north-east monsoon to face—head winds all the way. It was not until
-the first week of December that the leading ships of the squadron were
-able to reach Balasore. They had sailed, with the wind, according to
-the flagship’s log, at west-north-west. Next day the wind shifted to
-north-east, dead against them. The strong current in the Bay of Bengal,
-which at that time of year sets down the Coromandel coast at one to five
-knots an hour, swept the squadron down until they came within sight of
-Point San Pedro, in Ceylon, thirteen leagues east of Trincomalee. On some
-days there were dead calms, when they barely made from three to five
-miles’ progress in twenty-four hours. Between the 28th of October and
-the 5th of November only six leagues’ advance was made altogether. Rough
-weather set in, during which the _Salisbury_ sprang a dangerous leak,
-and the whole squadron had to shorten sail and stand by for a whole day
-until the leak had been found and stopped. Finally, a storm scattered the
-squadron far and wide. The _Kent_ and _Tyger_, the two leading ships,
-arrived at Balasore Roads on the 3rd of December by themselves. The
-rest of the squadron were at that time miles astern, trying to weather
-Palmyras Point. Two of the ships, indeed, never got to Balasore at all;
-they had to bear away until they drifted right round Ceylon and anchored
-at Bombay.
-
-At Balasore Admiral Watson got fresh news about what had been happening
-in Bengal. He now heard, for the first time, details of the taking of
-Fort William and of the grim tragedy of the Black Hole. Two English
-pilots who boarded the flagship told the story. The attack, said the
-men, opened on June 15th, Tuesday, and after a vain attempt to hold
-the gaol and Court House and a small redoubt in front of the city, the
-garrison had been driven into the fort. There it was found they had
-only ammunition for three days’ fighting. The women and children were
-thereupon sent on board the ships in the river, lying off the Maidan,
-and in the confusion that followed their departure, Governor Drake and
-most of the leading civilians—according to the pilots—deserted their
-posts, and stole off on board ship to join the women, after which they
-induced the skippers to weigh anchor and drop down the river, leaving the
-garrison cut off and without means of escape. These under Mr. Holwell,
-a member of the Council, had fought on gallantly, keeping the enemy
-off until the afternoon of Sunday the 20th, when, being at their last
-cartridge, they beat a parley. While they were talking from the walls,
-the enemy by treachery got possession of one of the fort gates (that in
-the rear), rushed the guard, and compelled the garrison to surrender
-at discretion. That night the prisoners, a hundred and seventy-five
-in number, were crammed all together into the Black Hole, whence next
-morning only sixteen were left alive. Of the sixteen, Mr. Holwell and
-Mr. Burdett, a writer, with two others, had been heavily ironed and sent
-to the Nawab’s camp. Such was the tale told to Admiral Watson.
-
-The refugees at Fulta, added the pilots, were in a deplorable state;
-fever-stricken and short of food; in terror of their lives; living, some
-in tents on shore, some on board the ships in the river. The Nawab, it
-was reported, had withdrawn to Moorshedabad, but his general, Manikchand,
-was at Calcutta with nearly four thousand men. He was busy throwing up
-batteries at various points along the river bank to bar any approach by
-ships.
-
-Admiral Watson, on hearing that, made up his mind to try and get up the
-Hooghly to Fulta with the _Kent_ at once, without waiting for the rest of
-the squadron or the troops.
-
-The pilots, however, made objection to carrying the flagship into the
-river. It was impossible, they said, to get so big a ship over the
-Braces, the belt of shoals across the mouth of the Hooghly on the
-Balasore side, with the tides as they were. They doubted, indeed, if it
-could be done at all, even at spring tides. On the usual “crossing track”
-over the Western Brace, the deepest channel, they said, was only three
-fathoms. But Admiral Watson had made up his mind to try. On the pilots
-finally declining to assist in taking the flagship into the river Captain
-Speke, the captain of the _Kent_, volunteered to make the attempt. He
-had been up the Hooghly once before, and he could, he believed, find a
-channel deep enough to carry the _Kent_ over the Braces. The _Tyger_ was
-to remain behind to bring on the rest of the squadron on their arrival.
-
-The flagship set out, after a week’s further detention at Balasore owing
-to strong north easterly winds, her boats towing her. Captain Speke
-navigated the ship, and with such success that a channel was found
-through the Western Brace that gave four fathoms of water at half-tide.
-It proved sufficient to float the ship over safely. On the 12th of
-December, they were at anchor off Kedgeree (Khichri), sixty-seven miles
-from Fort William by water. After this the wind changed to westerly and
-the _Kent_ was able to work up the estuary under sail.
-
-Fulta was reached on the 15th, and the rescue of the fugitives from
-Calcutta effected. Major Kilpatrick and his men were found there, and the
-_Kingfisher_. The flagship herself had on board two hundred and fifty
-men of the 39th Foot under Captain Eyre Coote, afterwards the celebrated
-General Sir Eyre Coote. There was also a detachment of Sepoys, who had
-arrived two days before by the _Protector_, a Bombay cruiser, which had
-touched at Madras just after the squadron left there, and had since got
-ahead of them. At Fulta Governor Drake, the ex-Governor of Calcutta, came
-on board to see the Admiral.
-
-The _Tyger_ reached Fulta on the 16th, and the _Salisbury_ and the rest
-of the men-of-war and the Indiamen with the troops on board, between
-then and the 26th. The _Cumberland_ and the _Marlborough_ Indiaman were
-still missing.
-
-The tides, meanwhile, were too low to allow any of the ships to cross the
-sand-bar above Fulta and proceed further up the Hooghly until after the
-27th.
-
-Admiral Watson used the interval to send a letter to Suraj-u-daulah. He
-wrote courteously, but firmly, demanding the immediate restoration of
-Calcutta and compensation for property looted and destroyed. The letter
-was sent off on the 18th of December, but no reply came. None had arrived
-ten days later, when the forward movement up the river began. The _Kent_,
-_Tyger_, _Salisbury_, _Bridgewater_, and _Kingfisher_ comprised the ships
-told off for the recovery of Calcutta. They carried up with them eight
-hundred soldiers and twelve hundred Sepoys—all that were available in the
-absence of the detachments on board the belated ships.
-
-The first fight took place at Baj-Baj, or Budge-Budge, as the name was
-spelled by the English, where a fort on the right bank of the Hooghly
-threatened to bar their passage. Owing to the narrow and tortuous channel
-the ships could only move up in line ahead. They sailed with the _Tyger_
-leading, and the flagship next. The Nawab’s troops were reported to be in
-force at Budge-Budge, which mounted eighteen 24-pounders, and was built
-with bastions and curtains and a wet ditch.
-
-Clive and his Sepoys were put ashore at Mayapore, ten miles below
-Budge-Budge, to act against Manikchand, whose army had taken post in the
-neighbourhood of the fort. Manikchand’s men, though, made only a poor
-stand, and fell back, their position being turned by the steady advance
-of the _Tyger_ and _Kent_.
-
-The ships anchored that night, and proceeded next morning, the enemy on
-shore at the same time falling back before them on Budge-Budge.
-
-Between seven and eight o’clock, as the _Tyger_ and _Kent_ rounded into
-the reach in front of the fort, the Nawab’s gunners opened a brisk
-cannonade.
-
-The two ships took no notice, beyond firing a few guns to cover their
-approach and shroud themselves in smoke, until they had come abreast of
-the ramparts. Then, at three minutes past eight by the _Kent’s_ log, both
-ships let go anchor, and as the _Kent_ ran up the red flag at the fore,
-the first broadside thundered out. The battle lasted for an hour and a
-half before the nearest ships astern, the _Salisbury_ and _Bridgewater_
-could join in. About the same time Clive’s Sepoys got again into action
-with Manikchand’s troops on the further side of Budge-Budge. Captain
-Coote and men of the 39th Foot on board the _Kent_ were now landed to
-reinforce Clive, while the navy dealt with the fort, the key of the
-position. The Nawab’s gunners for their part fought their pieces bravely,
-and the tough chunam and brick of the walls of Budge-Budge stood four
-hours more hard battering. By half-past one, however, the breastwork
-rampart facing the river had been almost smashed down all along its
-length, and the guns there all either dismounted or disabled.
-
-The Nawab’s troops on shore had by this time begun to draw off, and
-the action slackened down to a casual musketry fire here and there.
-The fort, however, still held out, and a sharp fusillade came from its
-walls. Apparently the garrison were looking for Manikchand’s return to
-their relief. Admiral Watson on that sent for Clive, and a Council of
-War was held on board the _Kent_. It was decided to storm Budge-Budge at
-daybreak next morning. Clive’s soldiers were given the afternoon to rest
-after their work of the past twenty-four hours. To assist in the storming
-a naval battalion, made up of an officer, two midshipmen, and forty
-men from each of the men-of-war, was landed, with two of the _Kent’s_
-9-pounders which were to batter in the main gate.
-
-As things turned out there was no need of the storming party. That
-evening, while the troops were bivouacking before the fort, a sailor from
-the _Kent_ took Budge-Budge all by himself. The story is best told in the
-words of Dr. Ives, our correspondent on the spot:
-
-“All was now quiet in the camp,” he begins, “and we on board the
-ships, which lay at their anchors but a small distance from the shore,
-had entertained thoughts of making use of this interval to refresh
-ourselves with an hour or two of sleep, but suddenly a loud and universal
-acclamation was heard from the shore, and soon afterwards an account was
-brought to the Admiral that the place had been taken by storm.”
-
-Great was the astonishment on board at the news, and “great joy” as Dr.
-Ives relates, “the more so as it was quite unexpected.” Then, as it would
-seem, when they heard what had actually taken place, everybody affected
-to be scandalized rather than pleased. “When the particular circumstances
-that ushered in this success were related,” continues the worthy surgeon
-of the _Kent_, “our exultation was greatly abated, because we found that
-the rules so indispensably necessary in all military exploits had been
-disregarded in the present instance, and therefore could not help looking
-upon the person who had the principal hand in this victory rather as an
-object of chastisement than of applause.”
-
-This, to resume with the Doctor, is how Budge-Budge fell:
-
-“During the tranquil state of the camp, one Strahan, a common sailor,
-belonging to the _Kent_, having been just served with grog (arrack mixed
-with water), had his spirits too much elated to think of taking any rest:
-he therefore strayed by himself towards the fort, and imperceptibly
-got under the walls. Being advanced thus far without interruption, he
-took it into his head to scale it at a breach that had been made by the
-cannon of the ships, and having luckily gotten upon the bastion, he
-there discovered several Moors[6] sitting upon the platform, at whom
-he flourished his cutlass and fired his pistol, and then, after giving
-three loud huzzas, cried out—“The place is mine.” The Moorish soldiers
-immediately attacked him, and he defended himself with incomparable
-resolution, but in the rencounter had the misfortune to have the blade
-of his cutlass cut in two, about a foot from the hilt. This mischance,
-however, did not happen until he was near being supported by two or
-three other sailors who had accidentally straggled to the same part of
-the fort on which the other had mounted. They, hearing Strahan’s huzzas,
-immediately scaled the breach likewise, and echoing the triumphant
-sound roused the whole army, who, taking the alarm, presently fell on
-pell-mell, without orders and without discipline, following the example
-of the sailors.”
-
-Completely taken by surprise and scared out of their wits the garrison
-bolted _en masse_, and Budge-Budge was ours. It was found to mount in all
-eighteen guns, mostly 24-pounders—the average size of a siege piece of
-the day—and to have a well stocked magazine.
-
-Neither the Admiral’s official dispatch nor the flagship’s log, as it
-happens, make any mention whatever of Strahan or his exploit. Admiral
-Watson says: “At half-past eight the body of the fort was on fire, and
-immediately after news was received that the Place was taken, but the few
-people in it had all escaped.” The flagship’s log is briefer still. It
-simply notes: “At forty-five minutes past eight Captain Bridge came on
-board with an account of our being in possession of the Fort.”
-
-Next morning, according to the etiquette of the time, the British
-flag was hoisted on the ramparts of the fort and a seventeen-gun
-salute to Admiral Watson, as commander-in-chief of the expedition, was
-ceremoniously fired.
-
-That being done, Strahan was brought before the Admiral by the
-master-at-arms to explain matters. Admiral Watson, we are told, “thought
-it necessary to show himself displeased with a measure in which the want
-of all discipline so notoriously appeared. He therefore angrily accosted
-this brave fellow with: ‘Strahan, what is this you have been doing?’
-The untutored hero, after having made his bow, scratched his head and,
-with one hand twirling his hat, replied: ‘Why, to be sure, sir, it was
-I who took the fort, but I hope there was no harm in it.’ The Admiral
-with difficulty suppressed a smile excited by the simplicity of the
-answer, and the language and the manner which he used in recounting the
-several particulars of his mad exploit. Admiral Watson then expatiated on
-the fatal consequences that might have attended his irregular conduct,
-and with a severe rebuke dismissed him, but not without dropping some
-hints that at a proper opportunity he would certainly be punished for
-his temerity. Strahan, amazed to find himself blamed for an action that
-he thought deserved praise and for which he expected to have received
-applause, in passing from the Admiral’s cabin muttered, ‘If I’m flogged
-for this here action, I’ll never take another fort by myself as long as I
-live!’”
-
-Some of the _Kent’s_ officers, as we are told, afterwards interceded with
-the Admiral for Strahan. They were prompted, according to Dr. Ives, by
-Admiral Watson himself, who made that the excuse for openly pardoning
-the man. The Admiral, it would seem, was also desirous of promoting
-Strahan to boatswain’s mate, with the idea of advancing him later on to
-full boatswain; but unfortunately Strahan was too fond of his grog. His
-irregular ways in other respects were against him, and nothing could
-be done to reclaim him. His own highest ambition, as Strahan himself
-afterwards declared, was to get a cook’s berth on board a first rate.
-Whether he ever got one history has not recorded. All that is known
-of him for certain is that twenty years afterwards he was alive and a
-Greenwich Hospital pensioner.
-
-The troops were re-embarked on the evening of the 30th, all except the
-Sepoys, who were ordered to keep advancing along the river bank. Then
-next morning the squadron moved forward again, keeping the English
-soldiers on board. On the 31st the whole day was spent in laboriously
-working up the river, a difficult and intricate piece of navigation,
-owing to cross currents and dangerous shoals.
-
-New Year’s Day promised to be interesting, for they had Tanna just ahead
-of them, where there was a fort on one side of the river and a battery on
-the other. A stiff fight was looked for here, the position being a good
-one to make a stand at. But news of what had happened at Budge-Budge had
-gone in advance of them. As the _Tyger_ and _Kent_ drew near the works
-the garrisons on both sides suddenly abandoned their guns and bolted.
-Not a shot was fired. The boats of the squadron were promptly sent
-ashore, and the fort and battery taken possession of. Forty pieces of
-cannon in all, many of them heavy guns, were found mounted and all well
-supplied with ammunition. In the afternoon the boats were again called
-away and dispatched up the river, manned and armed. It was reported that
-the enemy had had some half dozen native vessels prepared as fireships,
-and were waiting with them a little higher up, all ready to float down
-with the ebb of the tide that night on the squadron at its anchorage. The
-fireships were boarded and destroyed without serious opposition being
-offered.
-
-Calcutta was in sight next morning. The squadron now comprised the
-_Tyger_, _Kent_, _Bridgewater_, and _Kingfisher_. The _Salisbury_ had
-been left behind at Tanna to demolish the fortifications there and
-prevent their being re-occupied. Admiral Watson had also with him an
-extra vessel, the _Thunder_, a bomb-vessel, one of the country-ships
-found at Fulta and converted there for emergency purposes, in case
-bombardment might be needed to drive the enemy out of Fort William.
-
-As before the attack on Budge-Budge, Clive and the Company’s European
-troops were put ashore early. They were to move on the place overland
-while the ships attacked along the waterside.
-
-Firing began at a quarter to ten from some batteries recently thrown up
-a little below Fort William, but, cowed by the experiences of their
-comrades at Budge-Budge, as the _Tyger_ and _Kent_ closed on them the
-gunners in the outlying batteries cleared out and made off. Fort William
-itself was within range at ten o’clock, and twenty minutes later the
-_Tyger_ and _Kent_ let go anchor abreast of the ramparts and opened fire.
-The fort replied briskly, and kept up a hot fire for an hour and fifty
-minutes. Then suddenly the garrison, numbering some five hundred men
-ceased firing and deserted their guns, streaming off to the rear out of
-the fort. Clive’s soldiers on shore were beginning to work round on the
-further side, and fearful at the idea of their retreat being cut off,
-the garrison gave way and fled in confusion. With the recapture of Fort
-William the main object of the expedition had been achieved. On board the
-squadron the casualties from first to last had been nine seamen and three
-soldiers killed and twenty-six seamen and five soldiers wounded.
-
-Admiral Watson landed a party of seamen and the men of the 39th Foot
-serving on board the squadron, all in charge of Captain Richard King
-(afterwards Sir Richard), of the Royal Navy, a volunteer on board the
-_Kent_, who took formal possession of Fort William in the King’s name.
-Later in the day Clive took over the charge of the place until the next
-morning, when he formally delivered the keys of Fort William over to the
-Admiral, who in turn formally handed them to Governor Drake. The ceremony
-of officially declaring war against the Nawab was at the same time
-ceremoniously performed, Governor Drake proclaiming war in the name of
-the Honourable East India Company, after Admiral Watson had declared it
-in the name of His Majesty King George. Upwards of ninety guns were found
-in Fort William and a large store of ammunition.
-
-The Navy in the events of the six weeks campaign against Suraj-u-daulah
-that followed, bore the brunt of the hard work and had their share in
-the fighting. First, a week after the taking of Calcutta, an expedition
-was sent up the Hooghly to attack the fort at the city of Hooghly,
-thirty miles up the river, the Nawab’s capital of Lower Bengal. All the
-boats of the squadron, manned and armed, with the _Bridgewater_ and the
-_Kingfisher_ carrying two hundred European soldiers and two hundred and
-fifty Sepoys formed the expeditionary force. The fort at Hooghly was
-stormed, a midshipman of the _Kent_, Mr. William Hamilton, and two seamen
-of the flagship being among the killed, and several men were wounded. The
-Nawab’s treasury was looted and the town burned. After that the sailors,
-under Captain Speke of the _Kent_, and with a small military detachment,
-went three miles higher up and burned the immense storehouses and
-granaries of the Nawab’s army at Goongee. Suraj-u-daulah’s advanced guard
-of some five thousand men was encamped close by in force, and attacked
-the little column, but the enemy were handsomely beaten off and the work
-carried through with complete success.
-
-Again we have from Dr. Ives, incidentally, a curious story of much the
-same kind as that already told of Strahan at Budge-Budge. Three men
-from the flagship, as it would seem, on the force returning to Hooghly,
-were missed. There was no trace of them or their fate. Nobody had seen
-them after the opening of the fight. Their disappearance could in no
-way be accounted for, except that they had been shot and overlooked in
-some extraordinary way. They were therefore entered as “killed.” Next
-morning, to the general surprise, the three men made their appearance
-safe and sound, with an extraordinary tale of adventure. “Early the next
-morning,” to quote the doctor’s words, “a raft was observed floating down
-the river, and on it sat with the greatest composure possible our three
-missing sailors, who after they were taken off and brought on board their
-ship, gave the following account of their adventure.” After the fighting
-they had straggled and gone to sleep. “Awakening in the beginning of
-the night, and perceiving their companions had left them, they judged
-it expedient to set fire to all the villages in order to intimidate the
-enemy and make them believe the whole detachment still continued on shore
-which had done them so much mischief the previous day. As soon as the day
-broke they repaired to the water’s edge to search for a boat, in which
-they hoped to be conveyed on board their ship. No such thing, however,
-could be found, but luckily for them this raft at length presented
-itself, on which they resolved to trust themselves.”
-
-The men’s story explained at the same time certain mysterious fires on
-shore during the previous night which it had considerably puzzled those
-on board the ships to account for.
-
-For the remainder of the month the squadron lay quietly at its anchorage
-off Fort William. Things meanwhile were shaping themselves elsewhere for
-more fighting.
-
-Incensed beyond measure at having Calcutta wrested back from him and
-at the destruction of his State granaries at Hooghly, Suraj-u-daulah
-vowed vengeance. He would not rest, he swore, until he had driven every
-Englishman out of Bengal, and he promptly set to work to assemble his
-soldiery and make good his words. While his forces were mustering, to
-gain time the Nawab wrote to Admiral Watson, and expressed himself
-desirous of coming to an arrangement on friendly terms. When his
-preparations were completed he abruptly broke off the negotiations, and
-marched with his whole force directly on Calcutta. The Nawab’s army was
-estimated at between forty and fifty thousand horse and foot, with forty
-guns.
-
-Colonel Clive, on the first information of the enemy being on the move,
-on the 4th of February took post near Dum-dum with all the available
-troops—seven hundred Europeans, thirteen hundred Sepoys, and fourteen
-6-pounders. He was outflanked though at the outset by the pushing forward
-of the Nawab’s advanced guard, and had to send off to Admiral Watson for
-help. It was at once afforded. Within less than an hour a strong naval
-brigade of nearly six hundred men, had landed under arms. It was a
-night march to get to the army, and the seamen reached Clive at two in
-the morning, just as his little force was on the point of setting out
-with the idea of surprising Suraj-u-daulah in his quarters. The sailors
-joined the column, and they started. All promised well until they neared
-the enemy’s lines. Then, at the critical moment, a dense fog, “thicker
-than on the Banks of Newfoundland,” suddenly rolled up. The fog upset the
-native guides. Instead of striking the Nawab’s camp they bore off to the
-left. That brought Clive front to front with a long field work, behind
-which the right wing of Suraj-u-daulah’s army lay entrenched. Almost at
-the same moment the sun rose, and the fog thinned off and dispersed,
-leaving the small English force in a position that at the first glance
-looked well-nigh desperate.
-
-It was not Clive’s way, however, to lose his head. He fell back quickly
-and steadily, making a rear-guard fight of it for six hours, all the time
-keeping the enemy off and dealing great slaughter among their pursuing
-columns by the continuous cannonade from his 6-pounders, until at noon he
-regained the camp. In the fighting two of the guns had to be abandoned
-owing to their carriages breaking down. The loss on the English side
-was: a lieutenant of the _Salisbury_ mortally wounded, twelve seamen and
-twenty-nine soldiers and Sepoys killed, including two captains of the
-Company’s troops, fifteen seamen and between forty and fifty soldiers and
-Sepoys wounded. Suraj-u-daulah’s loss was reported by a spy as being
-upwards of thirteen hundred, including some of his best officers. At any
-rate, it staggered the Nawab. Startled at the audacity of Clive’s attempt
-on his camp and its near approach to success, when the names of his
-fallen captains were told him he lost what little nerve he possessed, and
-in a state of abject fright sent a flag of truce to Calcutta declaring
-his readiness to treat for peace. To prove his good faith, as he said,
-he at the same time ordered his troops to break camp and withdraw
-up-country. The Calcutta Council, for their part, were quite ready to
-come to terms. Their demands included the restoration of their trading
-rights and of the _status quo_ generally, together with the payment by
-the Nawab of a lump sum as compensation for property seized at Calcutta
-in the previous June. The terms were acceded to by Suraj-u-daulah, and
-articles of peace were ratified on the 9th of February.
-
-The Council had agreed with their adversary quickly. They had reason to
-do so. A yet more threatening cloud was lowering on the horizon. The
-settlement with the Nawab came almost as a God-send to the Company’s
-politicians at Calcutta, for the long-expected war between England and
-France had broken out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Official intimation of the declaration of war had been received at Fort
-William five weeks before, but for very urgent reasons it had been
-deemed advisable to keep the news secret if possible. The authorities
-at Calcutta understood that the French garrison at Chandernagore—barely
-twenty-five miles off up the Hooghly river—numbered some five hundred
-Europeans and a thousand Sepoys, and the French also had another garrison
-at Cossimbazaar (Kasim Bazar), within touch of Chandernagore. What if the
-French should make common cause with Suraj-u-daulah, then on his march
-down country, and reinforce his horde of armed men with their drilled
-troops, officered by men who had seen service. The bare idea was a
-nightmare to the Council of Calcutta.
-
-As it happened, Governor Renault at Chandernagore had received the
-news of war with England on the very day (the 6th of January) that the
-officials at Fort William had their information. They, too, for their own
-particular reasons, had decided for the time being to say nothing about
-it. The French at Chandernagore were, as a fact, in a very different
-position from what they were thought to be at Calcutta. The garrison
-actually numbered only a hundred and forty-six European soldiers, many
-of whom were invalids, and some three hundred Sepoys. In addition there
-were between three and four hundred officials, traders, and sailors
-belonging to ships from France in the river. What was to be done was a
-very difficult question. There seemed to be two courses open. One was to
-join with the Nawab in his campaign against Calcutta then—in January—just
-about to open. Suraj-u-daulah had himself already pressed them to side
-with him. He had heard rumours as to the relations between England and
-France. The other course for the French was to temporize, and try to
-form a private treaty of neutrality between Chandernagore and Calcutta.
-This course the French adopted, and they sent an emissary to Calcutta to
-make propositions for a treaty. The emissary arrived at Fort William in
-the third week of January, and found the Calcutta Council not indisposed
-to listen to the suggestion. A deputation was then sent to Calcutta and
-negotiations begun. It took some little time, however, to settle on
-terms; and then came the sudden collapse of the Nawab’s campaign and his
-treaty with the English of the 9th of February.
-
-That altered the situation entirely. The authorities at Calcutta now saw
-matters in quite another light. With the Nawab out of the way, and with
-Clive and the pick of the Madras army at their disposal on the spot, why
-should they not take the opportunity of ridding themselves of their most
-formidable trade rivals once for all?
-
-It was considered politic, however, not to break off the negotiations
-with the French for the moment. The Nawab’s sanction to the carrying
-on of hostile operations within his territories ought to be obtained.
-The negotiations with the French deputation were meanwhile protracted
-on various pretexts. Again the unexpected happened. Suraj-u-daulah’s
-reply was a peremptory refusal to permit operations of war in Bengal.
-The Calcutta Council on that again took up the question of a treaty
-with Chandernagore. It was duly drafted and made ready for signature,
-when Admiral Watson himself, as representing the British Government,
-intervened. The negotiations hitherto had been no concern of his. Now he
-was asked to sign the treaty. The Admiral declined to assent to any terms
-with the French. The French settlement at Chandernagore, he pointed out,
-was legally a dependency of Pondicherry, where any arrangement come to
-would have to be ratified.
-
-At that moment, early in March, a fresh letter from Suraj-u-daulah came,
-in the form of an appeal for assistance against Ahmed Shah, news of whose
-capture of Delhi had reached Moorshedabad. In mortal dread of an Afghan
-raid on the rich plains of Bengal, Suraj-u-daulah offered Clive a hundred
-thousand rupees a month if he would march to his assistance. If Clive
-would do so, the English might have a free hand with the French. Two
-days after the receipt of the Nawab’s letter at Fort William, a message
-came up the river that three ships, bringing a reinforcement of three
-companies of infantry and one of artillery, sent round from Bombay on the
-news of the Black Hole reaching there, had arrived in the Hooghly, and
-that the long-delayed _Cumberland_, with two hundred European infantry
-on board, which had had to put back to Vizagapatam, was at Balasore. Now
-all thought of an accommodation with Chandernagore, or of neutrality, was
-flung to the winds. The French envoys were packed off home with a curt
-message that parleying was at an end. They might take it that war with
-Chandernagore had already begun.
-
-Preparations for an immediate advance on Chandernagore were taken in hand
-forthwith, and pushed on apace. At the last moment yet another letter,
-the third, came in from Suraj-u-daulah, who had got over his alarm about
-the Afghans. The Nawab once more forbade interference with Chandernagore.
-But it was too late.
-
-The formal declaration of war with France was read on board the flagship
-_Kent_, as the ship’s log records, on the 14th of March. Here is the
-entry:—
-
-“March 14—At an anchor off Calcutta. P.M. Cut up 373 Pounds of Fresh
-Beef. Punish’d Joseph Vatier and Thomas Holderness with a Dozen lashes
-each for Disorderly Behaviour on Shore and Read His Majesty’s Declaration
-of War against the French King.”
-
-Clive and his troops, numbering, with the reinforcement of three hundred
-men of the Bombay army that had been hastened up to Fort William, seven
-hundred Europeans and sixteen hundred “Blacks,” as Admiral Watson termed
-the Sepoys, had already crossed the river. They had crossed some days
-before—before, in fact, the French envoys had left Calcutta, it being
-given out that the movement was with a view to be ready to march off
-up-country and assist Suraj-u-daulah against the Afghans. Clive camped a
-little distance up the river, with the _Bridgewater_ and the _Kingfisher_
-sloop to keep him in easy touch with Calcutta.
-
-On the 15th the squadron began to move forward. It comprised three
-men-of-war in this order: the _Tyger_ ahead, then the _Kent_, lastly
-the _Salisbury_. Following them came Clive’s heavy artillery in flats
-towed by row-boats. The ships advanced towing and warping their way up
-for three days, until they came within sight of Chandernagore. Then they
-had to anchor two miles below Fort d’Orleans, as the entrenched work
-forming the defence of the settlement was called. Until the tides became
-higher it was impossible to make further progress with such big ships.
-The artillery were now landed, together with a hundred and forty of the
-seamen, who were to throw up the siege batteries and fight the guns.
-
-These moved across and joined Clive, who, since the early morning of
-the 14th, had been carrying on a skirmishing attack on the outworks of
-Chandernagore on the western or landward side.
-
-At Chandernagore itself, meanwhile, during the brief lull before the
-bursting of the storm, the French were working night and day on their
-defences. The news of the breaking off of the negotiations had come on
-the settlement like a thunderbolt from an apparently clearing sky. Blank
-dismay fell on all, from the Governor downwards, when they learned what
-had happened. For days past they had been confidently looking forward
-to see the envoys arrive from Calcutta with the signed treaty in their
-hands. The envoys returned with the message: “Delenda est Carthago.” It
-was a staggering set-back. But the Governor and his officers were men.
-They set themselves to work with the energy of despair to make the best
-fight for it they could. Messengers were sent galloping off to the Nawab
-and to Cossimbazaar, where the French agent, M. Lawson, had a small
-detachment of picked Europeans, imploring immediate help.
-
-Field works and entrenched positions were thrown up at the most exposed
-points outside the main fort, which constituted the stronghold of the
-settlement, Fort d’Orleans. Six trading ships were sunk across the
-fairway of the Hooghly, a hundred and fifty yards below the fort, to stop
-the English men-of-war coming up, and a covering battery, heavily gunned,
-was placed to enfilade the channel at close range and bring a punishing
-fire on any ships trying to pass the sunken obstacles. A double boom,
-moored fast with chains, was also laid across the river. Two bomb-vessels
-were anchored broadside-on across the fairway, close to the sunken
-vessels, and three fireships were made ready to let drift down stream on
-the enemy. Chandernagore Fort itself was a four-sided brick-faced work,
-two hundred yards each way, with walls fifteen feet high, constructed on
-the regular Vauban system, with a dry ditch and bastions, and a curtain
-between the bastions, and with a ravelin covering the main gate. It
-mounted ten 32-pounders along each curtain, and eight 32-pounders on the
-ravelin. Besides these there was a six-gun battery of lighter pieces
-erected on the roof of the high-terraced church of St. Louis, inside the
-fort.
-
-To man his defences M. Renaud de St. Germain, the French Governor, had
-in all a hundred and forty-six European soldiers and three hundred
-Sepoys, with an auxiliary body of some three hundred Europeans, “men with
-muskets,” raised from among the Chandernagore traders and the crews of
-the French vessels.
-
-Chandernagore in itself seemed capable of making a good defence, and
-the Governor, indeed, as his arrangements drew towards completion, was
-not without hope of being able to hold his own until help, of which
-at an early date he received promise, should arrive from the Nawab.
-Clive and his army gave him little anxiety—or comparatively little. The
-preliminaries of the attack on the land side showed that the French heavy
-guns on the ramparts had a command of fire that gave the defence the
-mastery on that side. It was the broadsides of the men-of-war that M.
-Renaud was anxious about. If only he could stand up against the sailors,
-he thought it possible to hold out until the relief he anticipated should
-arrive.
-
-The British men-of-war in the river had to wait at anchor for four
-days until the tides suited their further advance. Admiral Watson used
-the opportunity to announce the declaration of war to the Governor of
-Chandernagore, demanding at the same time the surrender of the fort.
-Lieutenant Hey, of the flagship, carried the letter. The reply was
-an offer to ransom the place. It was refused flatly. Unconditional
-surrender, Admiral Watson sent back word, were his only terms, though
-private property would be respected. To that the French made no reply,
-but pressed on with their preparations.
-
-The interval was profitably spent otherwise. It so happened that the
-French officers responsible for blocking the fairway had either neglected
-to remove the masts of the sunken vessels or were unable to do so before
-the English squadron came in sight. Anyhow, they were left sticking up
-out of the water—in the cases of five of the six vessels—and showed what
-the enemy’s plans in that direction were. Admiral Watson’s first step was
-to remove the boom and the two bomb-vessels behind the line of the sunken
-vessels, together with the fireships. The boats of the men-of-war were
-sent up with muffled oars after dark on the first night after the arrival
-of the squadron and cleared these off, by cutting through the boom and
-sending the bombs and fireships adrift, causing them to run ashore and
-ground hard and fast. “Mr. Delamotte, the master of the _Kent_,” relates
-Dr. Ives, “on the second day sounded between the sunken vessels, whose
-masts were above water, under continuous cannon shot from the fort, and
-found room for our ships to pass between.”
-
-Treachery, as the French afterwards said, enabled him to do this. One of
-their artillery officers, according to French accounts, had a quarrel
-with the Governor, deserted and sold the secret of the passage for a
-large sum to Admiral Watson. He sent the money, so the story proceeds,
-to help his father in France, an aged and poor man, only, however, to
-receive back again the price of his treason, together with a bitter
-letter of reproach on the receipt of which the traitor hanged himself.
-On the other hand, Dr. Ives, on board the flagship, says nothing of any
-traitor. Admiral Watson in his dispatch simply says that he was delayed
-“until ... I could further discover by sounding a proper channel to pass
-through, which the pilots found out without being at the trouble of
-weighing any of the vessels.” There was hardly need for a traitor, and no
-need at all to pay for information with the masts of the sunken French
-vessels in the river standing up in the air, right across the bed of the
-Hooghly, for every man and boy in the English squadron to see. There was
-a traitor at Chandernagore, De Terraneau, an artillery officer; but he
-deserted to Clive’s camp, and, useful as his information proved to the
-land attack, he knew nothing about the river defences.
-
-By midday on the 22nd all was in order for the squadron to go forward
-to the final fight. The tides now were running higher every day, and
-the next tide would probably serve. That afternoon Rear-Admiral Pocock
-(afterwards Sir George, and a very distinguished commander), the Second
-in Command of the East Indies squadron, came up the Hooghly rowing up
-from Calcutta in his barge. He had hurried up to join, in the hope
-of being in time to see something of the fighting. He had left his
-flagship, the _Cumberland_, at Balasore, unable to enter the river owing
-to the same low tides that had during the past few days delayed the
-_Kent_ and her two consorts in approaching Chandernagore. With Admiral
-Watson’s sanction, Pocock hoisted his flag for the battle on board the
-_Tyger_, to lead the line.
-
-At dusk that evening, as soon as it could be done without observation by
-the enemy, boats crept ahead quietly and lashed lanterns to the masts
-of the sunken vessels, so screened as to show their light only in the
-direction of the English ships. By means of these the ships were to be
-guided before daybreak next morning between the obstacles and across the
-danger zone where the French had marked the range, past the heavy battery
-that overlooked the sunken ships.
-
-The order to go forward was given at daybreak. Within five minutes they
-were on the move.
-
-Anchors were silently weighed between 5 and 6 a.m., and on the top of
-the flood tide the three ships, the _Tyger_ leading, and the _Kent_ and
-_Salisbury_ in her wake, glided ahead through the water with the least
-possible noise. Apparently their getting under way was not observed.
-
-Admiral Watson’s plan of battle was to bring-to directly opposite the
-river face of Fort d’Orleans within pistol shot. The _Tyger_ was to lead
-on until she came in front of the further bastion of the river face of
-the fort, the north-east or “flagstaff bastion,” as it was called, and
-then drop anchor. The _Kent_ was to anchor between the two river front
-bastions at the north-west and south-east angles of the fort, directly
-facing the curtain and the eight-gun ravelin covering the main gate. The
-_Salisbury_ was to post herself opposite the south-east, or St. Joseph,
-bastion.
-
-As the _Tyger_, a few minutes before six o’clock, neared the battery
-covering the sunken ships, the French ashore sounded the alarm.
-Apparently they were surprised. The soldiers in the first battery merely
-fired a few rounds at the leading ship as she passed by, a dim spectre in
-the half-light, and then the men in the battery cleared out at a run, and
-fell back to join the main garrison inside the fort. For their part the
-three British men-of-war passed on for their appointed stations without
-replying with a single shot.
-
-The main garrison now were quickly on the _qui vive_, and the south-east
-bastion took up the firing; but for the moment the light was too
-uncertain for the gunners in Fort d’Orleans to shoot with much effect,
-until the _Tyger_ and _Kent_ had nearly drawn up abreast of the fort.
-Then, however, they got their chance.
-
-The French gunners took advantage of it to the full before the men-of-war
-were in position. As it were by signal, a tremendous burst of artillery
-fire flashed out all along the ramparts from end to end, from bastions
-and curtain and ravelin. The tornado of iron beat on the _Tyger_ heavily,
-but she stood up to it, forging her way ahead stolidly, and then let
-go anchor within her allotted station to a yard. The flagship was not
-so lucky. She was following at a half cable’s length astern—a hundred
-yards—when, almost at the moment that the _Tyger_ anchored, the tide
-turned, and began to race back, swirling down the river. It checked the
-_Kent’s_ way instantly, and she hung back at a dead standstill, unable to
-breast her way against it. At the same moment a heavy concentrated fire
-from the ramparts beat upon her, and the ship, reeling under the terrific
-battering began to drift down, stern first. First one anchor was let go,
-then another. Both anchors dragged, and the big seventy-gun ship drove
-down astern right across the bowsprit of the smaller _Salisbury_.
-
-The Frenchmen yelled and cheered and redoubled their efforts, and there
-was for a space intense excitement. Would the two ships collide and get
-foul? At the moment that the flagship first checked her way, Captain
-Speke had fallen severely wounded, with, close to him, his little son, a
-boy midshipman, acting as aide-de-camp to his father, who was struck down
-by the same shot and mortally wounded.
-
-In a few seconds the _Kent’s_ anchors held, and the ship was brought
-up; but she had got into a bad position. The forward-half of the ship
-lay partially opposite the south-east bastion, with the after-half
-overlapping the southern face of the fort in such a way that some of
-the guns of the further bastion on that side, the south-west bastion,
-could play upon the quarters and stern. Most of the guns mounted on the
-ravelin and along the curtain of the river front could at the same time
-train on her bows with a raking fire, assisted by some of the guns on
-the north-east or flagstaff bastion, facing the _Tyger_, some of which
-could be brought to bear. More serious still was this. The _Salisbury_
-had been pushed entirely out of the fight: had been placed practically
-out of action for the day. The channel was not wide enough to let the
-_Salisbury_ tow ahead and pass the flagship, and the _Salisbury_ had to
-anchor at a spot whence only one or two of her guns could engage. Thus it
-came about that the whole brunt of fighting Fort d’Orleans fell on two
-ships, the _Tyger_ and the _Kent_, by themselves.
-
-Not a shot, according to Dr. Ives, had so far been fired in reply to the
-enemy’s “tremendous cannonade.” The _Tyger_ was waiting for the _Kent_ to
-hoist the red flag. It went up as soon as the _Kent’s_ anchors held. “As
-soon as the ships came properly to an anchor, they returned it with such
-fury as astonished their adversaries.” “Our ships lay so near the fort,”
-says the doctor also, that “the musket balls fired from their tops, by
-striking against the chunam walls of the Governor’s palace, which was in
-the very centre of the fort, were beaten as flat as a half-crown.”
-
-Clive’s men were at work meanwhile on the land side. They had begun
-pushing the enemy hard on the previous afternoon, and had opened a
-brisk attack on the outworks before daylight that morning, under the
-pressure of which the French outposts fell back, until they had abandoned
-practically all their landward positions beyond the walls of Fort
-d’Orleans. Clive’s soldiers after that occupied some bungalows that
-stood not far from the walls, from under cover of which they plied the
-enemy on the ramparts with a continuous fusillade of musketry, and with
-six light guns they had pushed forward. The soldiers, however, could make
-little further progress for the present.
-
-“For three hours nothing was heard but an incessant roll of artillery and
-musketry, the crashing of timbers and masonry, the shouts and cheers of
-the combatants, and the shrieks and groans of the wounded.”
-
-Describing the scene on board his own ship during the first two hours,
-Dr. Ives says: “The fire was kept up with extraordinary spirit. The flank
-guns of the south-west bastion galled the _Kent_ very much, and the
-Admiral’s aides-de-camp being all wounded, Mr. Watson went down himself
-to Lieutenant William Brereton, who commanded the lower-deck battery, and
-ordered him particularly to direct his fire against those guns, and they
-were accordingly soon afterwards silenced.”
-
-Then he relates this incident, which occurred on board just afterwards.
-“At eight in the morning,” says the doctor, “several of the enemy’s shot
-struck the _Kent_ at the same time; one entered near the foremast, and
-set fire to two or three 32-pound cartridges of gunpowder as the boys
-held them in their hands ready to charge the guns. By the explosion the
-wad-nets and other loose things took fire between decks, and the whole
-ship was so filled with smoke that the men in their confusion cried out
-she was on fire in the gunner’s store-room, imagining from the shock
-they had felt from the balls that a shell had actually fallen into her.
-This notion struck a panic into the greatest part of the crew, and
-seventy or eighty jumped out of the portholes into the boats that were
-alongside the ship. The French presently saw this confusion on board the
-_Kent_, and resolving to take the advantage, kept up as hot a fire as
-possible upon her during the whole time. Lieutenant Brereton, however,
-with the assistance of some other brave men, soon extinguished the
-fire. Then running to the ports he begged the seamen to come in again,
-upbraiding them for deserting their quarters; but finding this had no
-effect on them, he thought the more certain method of succeeding would be
-to strike them with a sense of shame. He therefore loudly exclaimed, ‘Are
-you Britons? You Englishmen! and fly from danger! For shame! For shame!’
-This reproach had the desired effect; to a man they immediately returned
-into the ship, repaired to their quarters, and renewed an inspirited fire
-into the enemy.”
-
-The end was in sight by nine o’clock, and it came within a very few
-minutes of the hour.
-
-“In about three hours from the commencement of the attack, the parapets
-of the north and south bastions were almost beaten down, the guns were
-mostly dismounted, and we could plainly see from the main-top of the
-_Kent_ that the ruins from the parapet and merlons had entirely blocked
-up those few guns which otherwise might have been fit for service. We
-could easily discern, too, that there had been a great slaughter among
-the enemy, who finding that our fire against them rather increased, hung
-out the white flag, whereupon a cessation of hostilities took place, and
-the Admiral sent Lieutenant Brereton (the only commissioned officer on
-board the _Kent_ that was not killed or wounded) and Captain Coote of
-the King’s regiment with a flag of truce to the fort, who soon returned,
-accompanied by the French Governor’s son, with articles of capitulation.”
-
-At the moment that the Governor hung out the flag of truce (“waved over
-their walls a flag of truce,” in the Admiral’s own words) the landward
-side of the fort was still holding Clive’s soldiers at bay. The firing
-from the ramparts there continued for some little time after the flag on
-the Governor’s palace had been lowered.
-
-The formal surrender and giving up of the fort took place at three
-o’clock in the afternoon. Says Admiral Watson in his dispatch: “I sent
-Captain Latham of the _Tyger_ ashore to receive the keys and take
-possession of the fort. Col. Clive marched in with the King’s troops
-about five in the afternoon.” The _Kent’s_ log notes this: “5.30 p.m. The
-Fort at Chandernagore fired 21 guns as a salute to H.M. Colours, after
-being hoisted half an hour before.”
-
-So Chandernagore fell. “It must be acknowledged,” to use the words of Dr.
-Ives once more, “that the French made a gallant defence, as they stood
-to their guns as long as they had any to fire. We never could learn
-how many of their men were killed and wounded on the whole, though they
-confessed they had forty dead carried from the south-east bastion. The
-north-east bastion was also cleared of its defenders twice.”
-
-“The fire of the ships,” says the Indian military historian Orme, “did as
-much execution in three hours as the batteries on shore would have done
-in several days.” “Few naval engagements have excited more admiration,”
-says Sir John Malcolm, writing three-quarters of a century afterwards,
-“and even at the present day, when the river is so much better known,
-the success with which the largest vessels of the fleet were navigated
-to Chandernagore and laid alongside the batteries of that settlement is
-a subject of wonder.” Summing up results, Colonel Malleson says: “The
-capture of Chandernagore was not less a seal to French dominion in Bengal
-than it was the starting-point of British supremacy in that province.”
-
-Admiral Watson in his dispatch states the enemy’s force thus: “They had
-in the fort 1200 men, of which 500 were Europeans and 700 Blacks; 183
-pieces of cannon, from 24-pounders and downwards; three small mortars,
-and a considerable quantity of ammunition. Besides the ships and vessels
-sunk below, to stop up the channel, they sank and ran ashore five large
-ships above the fort, and we have taken four sloops and a snow.”
-
-Dealing with the casualties on the British side, Admiral Watson proceeds
-in these words: “The _Kent_ had 19 men killed and 49 wounded, the
-_Tyger_ 13 killed and 50 wounded. Among the number killed, was my first
-lieutenant, Mr. Samuel Perreau, and the master of the _Tyger_. Among the
-wounded was, Mr. Pocock slightly hurt, Captain Speke and his son, by the
-same cannon-ball, the latter had his leg shot off. Mr. Rawlins Hey, my
-third lieutenant, had his thigh much shattered, and is in great danger.
-Mr. Stanton, my fourth lieutenant, slightly wounded by splinters; but the
-greatest part of the wounded have suffered much, being hurt chiefly by
-cannon shot: Several of them cannot possibly recover.”
-
-According to the _Kent’s_ log the flagship had three lower-deck guns
-dismounted and three on the upper deck, and had 138 shot holes through
-her engaged side, besides suffering severe damage aloft to masts and
-rigging.
-
-Next morning Chandernagore paid its formal salute to the victor. From the
-_Kent’s_ log: “March 24th, 10 a.m., the Fort saluted the Admiral with 19
-guns.” Then follows: “Fired 18 guns for the burial of the 1st Lieutenant
-Perreau.” Lieutenant Rawlins Hey and Midshipman Speke died a few days
-later.
-
-After a ten days’ stay at Chandernagore, to rest the troops, arrange
-for the occupation of the place and the disposal of the prisoners, the
-men-of-war and the rest of the expedition returned to Fort William.
-
-Further trouble with Suraj-u-daulah was looming ahead. The Nawab’s
-troops that had started to intervene at Chandernagore had halted at
-Plassey and gone into camp there. It was less than a hundred miles from
-Calcutta, and the authorities strongly objected to their being so near.
-There were no signs of any immediate withdrawal, although letters passed
-continuously to and fro between the Council and Suraj-u-daulah. Each
-side distrusted the other. Then began the series of intrigues between
-certain members of the Council and Clive with Mir Jafier and disaffected
-officials of the Nawab’s _entourage_, which led to the battle of Plassey
-two months later. With the ramifications of the plot, the treachery of
-the crafty Hindu go-between Omichand and how it was foiled, our narrative
-does not concern itself, beyond the passing reference. Everybody knows
-the ugly story of the “White” treaty and the “Red”; one genuine and the
-other sham; one honestly signed at the Council table by Admiral Watson,
-the other with the Admiral’s signature to it forged secretly, either by
-the hand of Clive himself or by some underling at his instigation. The
-battle of Plassey, from which the British _raj_ in the East, by common
-consent, dates its rise, was the sequel, on the 23rd of the following
-June.
-
-To strengthen Clive’s small army the Royal Navy took over the garrisoning
-of Chandernagore for the time being; occupying the place with a hundred
-and forty of the flagship’s men, under Lieutenant Clarke of the _Kent_.
-Communication between Clive’s army in the field and Calcutta was kept
-open by way of Chandernagore and the _Bridgewater_, which ship was sent
-some miles higher up the river and anchored there.
-
-Fifty seaman from the East Indies Squadron with a lieutenant and
-seven midshipmen in charge, accompanied Clive’s army, attached to the
-artillery. Most of them were from the flagship, and one of the _Kent’s_
-midshipmen, Mr. Shoreditch, was wounded in a hand-to-hand encounter with
-one of the Nawab’s French officers.
-
-More than that, however, the sailors had no small share in winning the
-battle for England. At Plassey Clive, as he said, put his trust in God.
-It was the sailors who kept his powder dry. It was their guns that
-did the work in smashing up the dense masses of the Nawab’s levies in
-the critical second stage of the battle, after the deluging monsoon
-rain-storm that burst at noon, swamped the ammunition of Suraj-u-daulah’s
-artillerymen. On such a detail as the smartness of Admiral Watson’s
-handy-men with their tarpaulins and budge-skin powder-covers did the fate
-of the epoch-making day of Plassey practically hinge. Only after it had
-become plain with which side the fortune of the day rested did Mir Jafier
-and his corps pass over and throw in their lot with Clive.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Within two months of Plassey Admiral Watson was dead. The climate killed
-him in the end. For more than four months past he had been ailing,
-and for the past four months had had among his papers the Admiralty’s
-permission to return home on sick leave. But, like Nelson during the
-last eighteen months of his glorious life while watching the enemy off
-Toulon, he would not leave his post while there was duty to be done. The
-inactivity after Chandernagore, in the sultry, steamy heats of the rainy
-season in Lower Bengal, killed Admiral Watson.
-
-A plain obelisk on a heavy square base in the graveyard compound of
-St. John’s Cathedral, Calcutta, marks the Admiral’s resting-place. It
-was erected by Mr. Holwell, the survivor of the Black Hole, during his
-governorship a few years later, and is thus inscribed:—
-
- Here lies interred the Body of
- CHARLES WATSON, ESQUIRE,
- Vice Admiral of the White,
- Commander in Chief of His Majesty’s
- Naval Forces in the East Indies,
- Who departed this life
- On the 16th day of August, 1757,
- In the 44th year of his age.
- _Geriah taken, February 13th, 1756.
- Calcutta freed, January 11th, 1757.
- Chandernagore taken, March 23rd, 1757._
- Exegit monumentum aere perennius.
-
-Monumentum aere perennius? Hardly that. Modern India has no place for
-naval memories. Clive—and Clive only—holds the field.
-
- Hos ego versiculos feci: tulit alter honores
-
-—wrote Virgil once, in a moment of literary bitterness. If it be given
-to those beyond the Veil to know of things on earth, and think, the Shade
-of the gallant admiral might well express itself in terms hardly less
-strong.
-
-The East India Company erected a monument to the Admiral in Westminster
-Abbey, and King George bestowed a baronetcy of the United Kingdom on his
-only son—then a boy—in consideration of his father’s “great and eminent
-services.”
-
- _Est procul hinc_—the legend’s writ,
- The frontier grave is far away,
- _Qui ante diem periit_
- _Sed miles, sed Prô Patriâ_.
-
-Is it too extravagant to suggest that, with things as they then were,
-with nearly five years of continuous war yet to come, and with enemies’
-fleets in every sea, Admiral Watson, a man young in years for his high
-position,[7] might, had he been spared, have well found opportunity for
-achieving yet higher fame, even wider renown? His, too, in 1757, was
-surely in a real sense a “frontier grave”—the grave of one
-
- Who might have caught and claspt Renown,
- And worn her chaplet here:—and there,
- In haunts of jungle-poisoned air,
- The flame of life went wavering down.
-
-The flagship _Kent_, it so happened, did not long outlast her chief.
-She had for some time past shown signs of being nearly worn out, and an
-official survey of her, shortly after Admiral Watson’s death, resulted
-in her condemnation as unfit for sea. She was “cast” and ordered to be
-broken up, and on the 15th of September, a month all but a day from
-the death of her Admiral, the pennant was hauled down on board the
-_Kent_—still lying off Fort William—and the ship’s company were paid off
-and drafted into the _Cumberland_, _Tyger_, and _Salisbury_.
-
-So with the passing of the Admiral and his ship our story reaches its end.
-
-Chandernagore, of course, is nowadays a French possession, a tiny
-territory of three and a half square miles, with a railway station on the
-line to Calcutta, where very few people ever get out. It was restored
-to France six years after Admiral Watson took it, for no particular
-reason it would appear, except that there had been a General Election in
-England, and the new Ministry was desirous of reversing the policy of
-its predecessors. Our beaten enemies got back almost everything that the
-valour of our sailors and soldiers had won for England, in order that
-the Treasury Bench might score a point in party politics. But we for our
-part have no right to throw stones. We of the present day have seen much
-the same thing happen elsewhere. Chandernagore has been twice retaken
-since 1763, and twice given back. It was finally handed back to France
-in 1816, after the Napoleonic War, the Foreign Office being under the
-impression—so, at any rate, the story goes—that it was one of the West
-India islands!
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-BOSCAWEN’S BATTLE:—THE TAKING OF THE _TÉMÉRAIRE_
-
- Over the seas and far away
- “Old Dreadnought” steers to his fight to-day!
-
-
-One of the best known of all our man-of-war names reappears on the roll
-of the British fleet in the name _Téméraire_, now borne by one of our
-new giant 18,000-ton battleships of the _Dreadnought_ type. This is the
-story of how it came to be a British battleship name in the first place,
-the story of the act of war which in the sequel led to that historic
-man-of-war the “Fighting” _Téméraire_ figuring on another day among the
-ships of Nelson’s fleet at Trafalgar, to fight there as the _Victory’s_
-chief supporter in the fiercest of the fray.
-
-How we came to have a _Téméraire_ in the British Navy the name of
-course bears on its face. It was originally borne by one of Louis the
-Fourteenth’s men-of-war, and at the date of its adoption by capture into
-the British service, in 1759—“The Wonderful Year”—had been honourably
-known in the French Navy for upwards of ninety years. The first
-_Téméraire_ to sail the seas was so named, it would appear, by the Grand
-Monarque himself, the name being appointed to a man-of-war of fifty-two
-guns, built by contract in Holland for the French service, in the year
-1668, when a war with England seemed at hand. King Louis, it is said,
-further appointed to the _Téméraire_ on her naming, as a special and
-distinctive figure-head, an elaborately carved and gorgeously coloured
-effigy of himself in his celebrated “Lion’s Mane” wig, sworded and
-spurred and wearing a military _just-au-corps_ tunic of cloth of gold
-over a scarlet vest with crimson breeches and crimson stockings—the
-orthodox attire of a French sea officer of the _Grand Corps_.
-
-This first French _Téméraire_ was a ship that the British Navy of her
-time saw something of. She formed one of the men-of-war present with the
-allied French squadron which played so very peculiar a part when attached
-to the Duke of York’s fleet in the battle of Solebay in 1672, and in the
-same way also she was present at Prince Rupert’s three drawn battles
-with De Ruyter in the following year. As an enemy a few years later, the
-first French _Téméraire_ fought against us both at Beachy Head and in the
-battle off Cape Barfleur, after which the _Téméraire_ escaped and found
-refuge under the harbour batteries of St. Malo.
-
-“_The Rash_” is what an official return on the French Navy, presented
-to Parliament on the 9th of February, 1698, calls the _Téméraire_,
-in accordance with the custom then in vogue of translating foreign
-men-of-war names appearing in British official documents. It seems
-a curious disguise for the name _Téméraire_ perhaps, although even
-then it is hardly so grotesque as the names under which some of the
-_Téméraire’s_ consorts figure in various House of Commons returns: “_The
-Without Danger_,” for instance, for _Le Sans Pareil_; “_The Undertaker_”
-or “_The Understanding_” (as two different official lists give it) for
-_L’Entreprenante_, another ship; “_The Jolly_” for _Le Joli_; “_The
-Fire_” for _Le Fier_; “_The Fiddle_” for _La Fidelle_, a frigate; the
-“_Turkish Lady_” for another frigate, _La Turquoise_, and so on.
-
-Two years after Barfleur—on the 28th of November, 1694—a crippled French
-man-of-war was met with, a few miles to the south of the Lizard, by the
-British man-of-war _Montagu_. She had been dismasted in a storm out in
-the Atlantic and was nearly waterlogged and sinking; and after a few
-shots in reply to the _Montagu’s_ challenging gun hauled her colours
-down. The enemy’s ship was the “_Timmeraire_, of fifty-six guns,” in the
-words of the _Montagu’s_ log. They found it impossible to save the prize,
-either to rig jury masts or to take her in tow, as the weather came on
-thick and stormy, and in the end cleared the crew out, and on the 3rd of
-December abandoned the ship and set her on fire. That was the end of the
-first French _Téméraire_.
-
-Two other _Téméraires_ followed in the French Navy, and then we come to
-the ship that became our own first _Téméraire_. This was the _Téméraire_,
-of seventy-four guns, built in 1748, which, after fighting against us in
-the battle which cost Admiral Byng his life, became prize of war three
-years later to the man whose hand signed the order for Byng’s firing
-party, Admiral Boscawen, on the day of Boscawen’s defeat of the French
-Toulon fleet in Lagos Bay, on Monday, the 19th of August, 1759.
-
-The taking of our future first _Téméraire_ was one result of the
-determined attempt at the invasion of England that the French made in
-1759. They had prepared a large army, and transports were assembled to
-carry it across the Channel as soon as their Toulon fleet, by coming
-round and joining hands with their Brest fleet, had given France the
-command of the Channel by providing a sufficient force, as the French
-counted, to hold the British fleet in check, and see the expedition
-safely over. To leave port, however, was what the French Toulon
-fleet—among which was the _Téméraire_—could not do and would not try,
-until the British force blockading Toulon under Admiral Boscawen was out
-of the way. The Brest fleet, at the same time, watched closely by Hawke’s
-powerful fleet, as a mouse in its hole is watched by a cat, could not put
-to sea with hope of success unless the Toulon fleet evaded Boscawen and
-joined hands with it.
-
-Chance threw an opportunity of escape in the way of the _Téméraire_ and
-her consorts. Various reasons—damage to three of his ships in a somewhat
-venturesome attack on some outlying vessels of the French fleet anchored
-under the batteries that guarded the entrance to Toulon Roads, and a
-general want of water and provisions on board all his ships—induced
-Boscawen, in the last week of July, to withdraw temporarily to Gibraltar.
-De la Clue, the French Admiral, on learning by chance where Boscawen had
-gone and why, snatched at the offered occasion to make his sally. He put
-to sea on the 5th of August, determined to risk the passage round.
-
-The fortune of war at the outset, and for nearly half-way, made a show
-of favouring the French. They managed to escape being sighted by the
-frigates that Boscawen had posted on the look-out between Malaga and the
-Straits. Not an English sail was sighted; nothing to cause disquietude
-happened, until just as de la Clue’s ships were in the act of passing
-Gibraltar.
-
-With a brisk Levanter blowing over their taffrails and a thick haze
-on the sea, towards dusk on Saturday evening, the 17th of August, the
-Toulon fleet, after standing well over to the Barbary shore so as to
-give Boscawen’s ships at Gibraltar the go-by, was being carried rapidly
-past where the British fleet was lying, when suddenly, just as the
-elated Frenchmen were assuring themselves of good success for the rest
-of their cruise, almost by accident, as it were, at the eleventh hour
-they stumbled on the only one of Boscawen’s look-outs that they had yet
-to pass. Just off Ceuta, a little to the eastward of that place, the
-_Gibraltar_, a twenty-gun ship, quite unexpectedly to both sides, loomed
-out of the mist close alongside the passing French fleet.
-
-The mischief, from the French point of view, was done. The captain of the
-_Gibraltar_ realized at once that the strange fleet he saw heading out of
-the Mediterranean and close at hand could only be the enemy from Toulon.
-He promptly went about and hauled in for the Spanish coast, firing signal
-guns of alarm. The French for their part seemed to have been too much
-taken aback to act. As much surprised at the meeting apparently as was
-Captain McCleverty of the _Gibraltar_ himself, Admiral de la Clue made
-no effort to stop or to silence the tell-tale British scout, although
-he might have done so. He simply contented himself with putting out all
-his lights, and then he continued to stand on with all sail set, heading
-west-north-west, so as to get clear away and out into the Atlantic.
-
-It was indeed the slip ’twixt the cup and the lip for the _Téméraire’s_
-Admiral. When, at half-past seven that evening, the alarm guns of the
-frigate _Gibraltar_ were heard, and the ship herself came into the bay to
-report what she had seen, practically half Boscawen’s fleet of fourteen
-ships were undergoing refit, lying with sails unbent and topmasts
-struck. The energy of the British Admiral and his captains recovered
-the situation for England. Taken at a disadvantage as Boscawen’s fleet
-was, all hands turned to with such smartness that within two hours of
-the alarm guns being first heard every ship in Boscawen’s command was
-in sea-going trim, ready for the order to weigh anchor. Before ten that
-night, within two and a half hours of the _Gibraltar_ coming in, every
-line-of-battle ship of the British Fleet was at sea, together with two
-frigates and a fireship, heading through the Straits in chase of the
-French under all sail.
-
-They had their reward before many hours had passed.
-
-At seven next morning, when off Cape Trafalgar, Boscawen got
-sight—although for the moment they were far ahead—of the French fleet:
-what bad seamanship during the night had left of it. No fewer than five
-ships of de la Clue’s original fleet of twelve had parted company with
-their Admiral and gone astray in the night after getting out of the
-Straits. They straggled and dropped astern, and found themselves in the
-morning out of sight, some leagues distant from their flagship and only
-off Cadiz.
-
-This again led to a disastrous mistake on the part of the French Admiral.
-De la Clue, when about seven o’clock he first sighted the leading ships
-of Boscawen’s fleet in the distance, coming up astern, took them for
-his own missing five, and hove-to his whole fleet to give them time
-to join. Worse still: after waiting awhile for them he went about and
-actually stood back slowly to meet them—seven French men-of-war in
-war time bearing up for fourteen English! He refused to believe that
-Boscawen could possibly have got out of Gibraltar so quickly. The French
-Admiral, in fact, held on towards the advancing enemy until, when escape
-had become impossible, on finding his private signals unanswered, the
-horrifying truth of the situation dawned on the unfortunate de la Clue.
-
-It was then too late.
-
-He turned and ran for it. He would try and outsail his pursuers if
-he could; if not he would seek a refuge and shelter in some neutral
-Portuguese port. Boscawen followed promptly, clearing for action as he
-neared, and catching up the enemy all the morning hand over hand.
-
-At noon, a fresh gale helping Boscawen along, he was almost within
-gunshot of the French. At two in the afternoon his headmost ships were
-near enough to open a long-range fire.
-
-All that Sunday afternoon a running fight went on, protracted by the
-wind suddenly dying away to nearly a calm. The rearmost of the French
-squadron, the _Centaure_, a ship of seventy-four guns, practically held
-the leading pursuers in check during most of that time. Nothing could be
-more courageous than the _Centaure’s_ defence, regardless of the odds
-against her. Until nearly nightfall she kept Boscawen’s leading ships
-from closing on her and her consorts. The _Centaure_, under orders to
-cover the retreat, exchanged a never-ceasing cannonade with the ships of
-the English van for five hours, the fight becoming hotter and ever closer
-until just before sunset. Then at length, with her three topmasts and the
-mizen-mast shot away, and the ship herself so shattered and holed between
-wind and water that she was with difficulty kept afloat, the well-fought
-_Centaure_ had to lower her colours. She had played her part. She had
-gained time for her Admiral to seek the shelter of Lagos Bay. In so doing
-the _Centaure_ had lost over two hundred men in killed alone, including
-her gallant captain, de Sabran. Although he had received no fewer than
-eleven wounds, he still kept the quarter-deck until he received his
-twelfth, and death wound.
-
-A little ahead of the _Centaure_ was Admiral de la Clue’s flagship
-_L’Océan_, with the _Téméraire_, and the _Redoutable_ and the _Modeste_
-near by, sailing in a cluster just ahead of her. All four had every now
-and then been assisting the _Centaure_, as now one, now another, of the
-English ships came within range of their guns. Away in the van of the
-French squadron were two more ships, the _Souverain_ and the _Guerrière_,
-which were pushing on at some distance ahead of all.
-
-To escape into neutral waters was the only course practicable to the
-French ships, and all they now aimed at, as they held on during the
-afternoon, crowding canvas to make land—the coast of Portugal near
-Cape St. Vincent—which soon began to rise ahead of them more and more
-distinctly.
-
-A few minutes before the _Centaure_ surrendered there was a sharp
-interchange of broadsides between the two flagships, Boscawen’s _Namur_
-and de la Clue’s _Océan_, both three-deckers. The _Namur_ pushed past
-the _Centaure_, then plainly _in extremis_, within gunshot of his chief
-antagonist. Boscawen fastened on his chosen opponent and engaged the
-French Admiral hotly, until a series of mishaps for the _Namur_, lucky
-hits on the part of the French gunners, temporarily disabled the British
-flagship by shooting down her mizen-mast and main-topsail yard. That
-forced the _Namur_ to drop back out of action.
-
-Admiral Boscawen, the story goes, at once quitted his crippled ship to
-go on board the _Newark_, a seventy-four, the nearest ship among the
-leaders in the British van, and had a narrow escape from drowning in his
-passage from ship to ship; through a cannon-ball which struck his barge
-and smashed a hole in it. The Admiral saved his own life and those of the
-men with him, as it is related, by his presence of mind. The barge began
-to fill and would have sunk under them, had not Boscawen smartly whipped
-off his wig and stuffing it into the hole stopped the inrush of water,
-enabling them to keep afloat until they could get alongside the _Newark_.
-
-There was little more firing that evening after the _Centaure_ had made
-her submission, but the pursuit of the _Téméraire_ and the other French
-ships coastwise went steadily on.
-
-All that night Boscawen chased, keeping the enemy well in sight,
-although, as on the night before, they showed no lights.
-
-Early next morning only four French ships were to be seen. The
-_Souverain_ and the _Guerrière_, the two headmost of the enemy, had
-altered course after dark. Being far ahead already, they managed to slip
-off unobserved and got clear away. The four ships still before Boscawen
-were in themselves, however, sufficient prize. These were now heading
-in directly for the land, and were only a short way ahead of the British
-Fleet.
-
-De la Clue was about to make his second mistake. Admiral Boscawen, he
-apparently imagined, would think twice about following him into neutral
-waters and attacking him there. But the neutrality of Portugal was of
-little account at such a moment. Might was right that August day for “Old
-Dreadnought.” International proprieties notwithstanding, the British
-Admiral “in a very Roman style made free with the coast of Portugal,” as
-Horace Walpole put it. Boscawen swept straight down after de la Clue,
-with his men at quarters and his guns run out.
-
-The final phase opened about eight o’clock on the 19th of August, Monday
-morning, when the French flagship _L’Océan_ was seen to run heavily
-aground. She brought up hard and fast, and the next moment her three
-masts went crashing over the side. Boscawen instantly signalled to the
-leading British ship, a seventy-four, the _America_, to deal with the
-French flagship. The order was carried out promptly. The _America_
-closed nearly alongside the wrecked three-decker and opened fire on her;
-whereupon the doomed _L’Océan_ lowered her flag. In the brief interval
-before the _America’s_ boats, sent off to take possession of the prize,
-could board the French flagship, M. de la Clue himself, mortally wounded
-and with one leg broken, was hastily got away and rowed ashore, to die
-there a little later. Almost at the same time that _L’Océan_ wrecked
-herself, the _Redoutable_ ran on shore close by, breaking her back.
-
-[Illustration: ADMIRAL BOSCAWEN’S VICTORY
-
-_Painted by Swaine. Engraved and Published in 1760._
-
-_In the foreground to the right is seen the “Warspite” attacking the
-“Téméraire.” Boscawen’s flagship the “Namur” is in the centre flying the
-Admiral’s Blue Flag at the main; and at the fore the red battle-flag,—the
-“Bloody Flag” of the Old Navy._]
-
-There remained the _Téméraire_ and the _Modeste_, which two ships, for
-their part, let go anchor close under the guns of a Portuguese fort on
-shore. The _Warspite_, a seventy-four of equal strength with the bigger
-French ship, was told off to deal with the _Téméraire_. She closed on
-her antagonist forthwith, in spite of warning shots from the Portuguese
-fort, and attacked at pistol-shot range. Hopeless as his case was, with
-no possibility of escape open to him, for upwards of an hour M. de
-Chastillon, the _Téméraire’s_ captain, made a fight of it. Then having
-done all he could he gave up his ship. The _Modeste_ surrendered not long
-afterwards, and so Boscawen’s battle ended.
-
-It was Captain Bently, of the _Warspite_, who gave the Royal Navy its
-first _Téméraire_. The story of that morning’s work is told in the
-_Warspite’s_ log:
-
-“August 19th: 4 a.m.—Saw 4 sail of the enemy about 4 or 5 leagues from
-us, running inshore. The other two having altered their course in the
-night were out of sight. Continued chase and before 8 a.m. the French
-admiral ran ashore 6 leagues E. of St. Vincent. All his masts went by the
-board. Soon after saw another ashore, 4 miles W. of the French admiral,
-and his masts too went by the board. The other two anchored close inshore.
-
-“9 a.m.—Little wind and fair weather. Admiral anchored 3 leagues from
-shore and signalled for all captains. At the same time signalled to the
-_Conqueror_ and _Jersey_ to chase N.W. _Warspite_ brought-to.
-
-“Captain Bently returned from the Admiral and stood inshore for the
-easternmost of the enemy’s ships at anchor. The _America_ stood for the
-French admiral. Little wind, hazy. Great swell from S.E. 1 p.m. _America_
-anchored to eastward of the Ocean.
-
-“We continued standing for the other French ships at anchor 2 m. to W. of
-the _Ocean_. Soon after a fort fired several shot at the _Warspite_, but
-hoisted no colours. Several of the shots struck the ship and did us some
-damage.
-
-“We continued standing in near the French ship and fired a few shot at
-her, imagining she would immediately strike her colours; but finding she
-did not, stood on and tacked and came close under her stern, and ¼ before
-3 we began to engage her: ¼ before 4 she struck.
-
-“At that time the Vice-Admiral with the _Jersey_, _Guernsey_, and _St.
-Albans_ stood in to westward of us after another ship on shore and fired
-some guns, when she struck; after which they set her on fire and stood
-in towards the Cape where another French ship was at anchor which they
-brought off. On our beginning to fire, the _America_ fired some guns on
-the _Ocean_: she instantly hauled down her colours.
-
-“We sent a boat on board and took possession of our prize, which proved
-to be the _Téméraire_, 74 guns, 716 men. At ¼ to 5 we cut her cables and
-carried her down to the Admiral.
-
-“In the evening the _Intrepid_ and _America_ set fire to the _Ocean_.”
-
-Boscawen, with his work accomplished and the Toulon fleet accounted for,
-sailed away for England, carrying the _Téméraire_ and the _Modeste_ with
-him under British colours, to add both ships, in their original French
-names, to the British Navy. His battle in Lagos Bay under the shadow of
-the cliffs of Cape St. Vincent, if perhaps few people nowadays remember
-it, perhaps have ever heard of it, yet, in the words of Captain Mahan,
-“saved England from invasion,” and the _Téméraire’s_ name should always
-stand for us as a memento of that fact.
-
-At the time the event made a widespread impression throughout Europe.
-It caused great enthusiasm, as we are told, in the camps of the allied
-armies fighting the French beyond the Rhine, and was honoured by a cannon
-salute. “We were entertained,” wrote a British officer in the army which
-had just fought at Minden, “with a _feu de joie_ within hearing of the
-French camp, in honour of Admiral Boscawen’s success against the Toulon
-squadron.”
-
-The little difficulty with Portugal that ensued was settled amicably. The
-elder Pitt, then Prime Minister, had his own way of dealing with matters
-that would upset the feebler nerved politicians of our modern House of
-Commons. The Opposition in the House tried, of course, to make party
-capital over Boscawen’s breach of Portuguese neutrality. “Very true,” was
-all the answer Pitt deigned to make, “but the enemy’s ships were burned.”
-He sent Lord Kinnoull to Lisbon with a polite expression of regret at
-the unavoidable necessity of the case, and the incident was not heard of
-again.
-
-For many years after her capture by Boscawen the _Téméraire_ was reckoned
-one of the finest seventy-fours in King George’s service, and among the
-“crack” ships of the British Navy. She served England both in European
-waters and across the Atlantic, with all the most notable admirals of the
-time—with Hawke and Boscawen himself; in the Channel Fleet blockading
-Brest; and under Keppel, Rodney, and Pocock in the West Indies. After
-being for nearly twenty years in commission, the old war-prize in her
-closing days—at the beginning of the war with France and Spain, when
-the two nations combined against England to assist the rebel American
-colonists—was converted into a floating-battery hulk for harbour defence,
-on which duty our first _Téméraire_ ended her career. In June, 1784, she
-was sold out of the service for breaking up.
-
-That is the story of our first _Téméraire_, the immediate predecessor of
-the famous “Fighting” _Téméraire_ of Trafalgar fame, which formed the
-subject of Turner’s masterpiece.
-
-One battleship of our ironclad fleet has borne the name. That was the
-_Téméraire_ which was with Sir Geoffrey Hornby when he passed the
-Dardanelles in 1878. She took part also at the bombardment of Alexandria
-in 1882, and still exists, converted for use as a floating workshop at
-Devonport, under the unrecognizable label of _Indus II_.
-
-Our new “improved _Dreadnought_” _Téméraire_ of 1907 is the fourth bearer
-of the name under the British flag.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-HAWKE’S FINEST PRIZE:—HOW THE _FORMIDABLE_ CHANGED HER FLAG
-
- The guns that should have conquered us they rusted on the shore,
- The men that would have mastered us they drummed and marched no more,
- For England was England, and a mighty brood she bore—
- When Hawke came swooping from the West!
-
-
-How the British Navy came by its first _Formidable_ man-of-war, the
-predecessor in the direct line of the fine first-class battleship, the
-_Formidable_ of our modern Navy, is one of the most exciting tales in
-our naval annals. It serves too to commemorate one of the most brilliant
-victories ever won at sea—the dashing encounter on that eventful winter’s
-afternoon in the Bay of Biscay, “When Hawke came swooping from the West”:—
-
- ’Twas long past noon of a wild November day
- When Hawke came swooping from the West;
- He heard the breakers thundering in Quiberon Bay,
- But he flew the flag for battle, line abreast.
- Down upon the quicksands, roaring out of sight,
- Fiercely beat the storm-wind, darkly fell the night.
- But they took the foe for pilot and the cannon’s glare for light,
- When Hawke came swooping from the West.
-
-How the _Formidable_ passed that day from France to England is, indeed,
-something of which both England and France may be jointly proud. Never
-fought men more heroically on both sides—the enemy to keep, we to
-take—amid all the horrors of a furious storm and ever imminent shipwreck
-and catastrophe.
-
-This is the story of how, where, and when the Royal Navy won its first
-_Formidable_, the first of a famous line.
-
-It was the afternoon of the 20th of November, 1759, a Tuesday. The scene
-was among the black-fanged reefs of granite rock, and the treacherous
-quicksands that fringe the “sickle-shaped sweep” of Quiberon Bay on the
-coast of the Morbihan, in Lower Brittany, in the north-eastern quarter of
-the Bay of Biscay. The battle was fought in the height of a wild raging
-storm from the Atlantic, a tremendous gale from the north-west, howling
-blasts of wind, and torrents of hissing rain, and thick, dark weather,
-with the sea lashed to fury all round, and gigantic breakers running “so
-high that no boat could live for a moment among them,” as one who was
-present described. “A network of shoals and sandbanks” is what a French
-writer calls Quiberon Bay, “with heavy surf breaking along the shore on
-the calmest days of summer, and ugly cross-currents swirling to and fro
-with the strength and rush of a mill race”; a place “lined with reefs
-that the navigator never sees without alarm, and never passes without
-emotion.”
-
-Hawke and his captains swept down on the French fleet, cornered between
-the storm and the shore, in the midst of the rocks and quicksands;
-without charts themselves, and for the most part without pilots, or, at
-least, pilots that they could trust; flinging themselves on the enemy
-heedless of gale and breakers, attacking ship after ship of the French as
-each was met with, “to make,” in Hawke’s own expressive words, “downright
-work of them.”
-
-De Conflans, Maréchal de France, commanded the French Fleet. He was one
-of a batch of eight marshals created, _honoris causa_, some two years
-before; a boon companion of royalty, one of the “flying tables” set, a
-fine figure of a man to look at, as his portrait at Versailles shows
-him, handsome, tall, and well made, a hard rider to hounds at Compiègne
-or Fontainebleau, with a pretty wit in the boudoir and over the card
-table; also one of the Pompadour’s courtier friends, which was perhaps
-the main reason why a man of de Conflans’ stamp as a naval officer found
-himself in chief command at that place that day. There were marshals of
-the French Navy as well as of the army under the _ancien régime_. The
-rank was first instituted by Louis XIV when he solaced Admiral Tourville
-with the _bâton_ and its consequences—a big salary, the title of
-“Monseigneur,” and court precedence at the head of the Grand Officers of
-State—to make up for his ill-fortune at La Hogue.
-
-As an admiral Conflans proved an utter failure. That morning, when he
-first, some forty miles to westward of Belleisle, saw Hawke approaching,
-he formed line and brought-to. He would fight the English, he said, in
-the open sea to the south of Belleisle. As Hawke came nearer, when it was
-too late, he changed his mind and ran off pell-mell to take shelter among
-the reefs and shoals of Quiberon. With Conflans were de Beauffrement,
-Vice-Admiral, the second in command, and the Comte de Verger,
-Rear-Admiral, the third in command, who had his flag in the _Formidable_.
-De Verger’s squadron formed up astern, its place in the line of battle.
-
-As Hawke’s leading ships began to overtake the French the gallant
-Rear-Admiral shortened sail and dropped back. He would await his fate at
-what in the circumstances was the post of honour, as rearmost ship of
-all. There, practically single-handed, the _Formidable_ bore the brunt of
-Hawke’s opening attack.
-
-Hawke’s van ships caught up the rear of the French Fleet just to the
-south-east of Belleisle, as it was in the act of heading to round the
-Cardinals, a chain of dangerous rocks and outlying islets, and stand in
-for Quiberon Bay, then still ahead of them some eighteen to twenty miles.
-Conflans was that distance from his intended refuge when the first shots
-went off. Both fleets began to fight as they overlapped, the British
-coming up under every stitch of canvas which their masts could stand—“not
-a topsail was reefed”—the ships now wallowing in the trough of the waves,
-now plunging and rolling and staggering forward on the crest, while heavy
-surging cross-seas burst and broke in deluges of seething foam over
-the ships’ bows. So terrible was the weather that on board some of the
-British ships men were flung down on deck or hurled helplessly about and
-seriously injured and maimed. In one or two men were washed overboard and
-never seen again. The guns were double-breeched; eight men were at the
-wheel in every ship. So on that awful November afternoon did Hawke swoop
-down to strike.
-
-On the French side there were twenty-one ships—with Hawke, twenty-three;
-but the French ships were on the average bigger vessels than ours, and
-carried heavier guns. That for fighting purposes in such weather gave
-Conflans the advantage. Another thing was this: all the fighting that
-day was done by barely two-thirds of Hawke’s fleet. A full third of the
-British Fleet were too far in rear—out-paced in the chase—and were unable
-to come up in time to have any influence on the fortune of the fight.
-
-Ship after ship of the advancing British Fleet as they reached the enemy
-attacked the _Formidable_ hotly. First, the _Dorsetshire_, of seventy
-guns, captained by Peter Denis, an Irishman (Anson’s dashing lieutenant
-of the old _Centurion_ days), gave her a flying broadside as she swept
-by to windward; passing on then and driving ahead, making for the French
-van. Then the _Defiance_, another seventy-gun ship, following fast in the
-_Dorsetshire’s_ wake, gave the _Formidable_ a second broadside.
-
-Lord Howe, in the _Magnanime_, a powerful seventy-four and a prize from
-the French on a former day, came next. Thierri, best of pilots for
-that coast, was at the con. He had volunteered for the _Magnanime_,
-as he explained, “parceque le capitaine ’Owe est jeune et brave!”
-Howe as he came on meant merely to brush past the _Formidable_ with
-as brisk interchange of fire as might be, and then push ahead like
-the others to wing the flyers in the van; but a shot from the French,
-as he came abreast de Verger, carried his foreyard away and checked
-the _Magnanime_. “Black Dick”—Howe’s name in the Navy—closed with the
-_Formidable_ instantly. He “bore down upon the Rear Admiral,” in the
-words of an eye-witness, “and getting under his lee opened a most
-tremendous fire from his thirty-twos and twenty-fours.” “Lord Howe, who
-attacked the _Formidable_,” says Horace Walpole, “bore down upon her with
-such violence that her prow forced in his lower tier of guns.” In the
-collision, as we are told by some one else, the _Formidable’s_ port lids
-“were wrenched clean away.”
-
-Ten minutes later up came the _Warspite_, Sir John Bently, the captor of
-the _Téméraire_ in Boscawen’s battle, who had recently joined the Channel
-Fleet. Hauling up near at hand, she joined with the _Magnanime_ in the
-attack. The two ships were two of the smartest in all the British Navy,
-and under their terrific pounding the _Formidable_ was dismasted and
-reduced almost to a wreck. “In half an hour,” says our eye-witness, “they
-made a dreadful havoc in the _Formidable_, whose fire began to slack.”
-
-De Verger’s flag, though, still flew defiantly, as did the French ensign
-at the staff astern, although the gallant Admiral had already fallen,
-as well as his first captain (de Verger’s younger brother), and most of
-the other officers, with, in addition, upwards of two hundred men. The
-Comte de Verger himself, we are told, was badly wounded at the outset
-of the fighting. He was carried below, and had his wounds dressed, but
-he refused to stay in the cockpit. He had himself brought up again in a
-chair and set down on the quarter-deck. There a little later a second
-shot struck him dead.
-
-Standing up valiantly to Captain Bently and Lord Howe, the _Formidable_
-was as yet to all appearances far from being subdued. She was still
-gallantly resisting when a third British ship, the _Montagu_, arrived on
-the scene. Her arrival gave the Frenchmen a breathing space. In trying
-to cut in between the other two British ships and the _Formidable_ she
-ran foul of both her two consorts and caused a serious collision. The
-_Montagu_, “instead of pursuing ahead, must needs run between Lord Howe
-and the French Admiral, and fell on board the _Magnanime_ and forced her
-upon the _Warspite_; thus our three ships were entangled and totally
-prevented from continuing the action, but lay all of a heap alongside
-the _Formidable_, who might have torn them to pieces if she had not been
-almost a wreck herself.” What made the _Formidable’s_ position much the
-worse was that she was practically isolated, cut off from the rest of
-her fleet. No fewer than seven French ships in her part of the line had
-refused combat from the first. They had run off without firing a single
-gun—“sans avoir,” in the words of the French naval historian Troude,
-“reçu un seul coup de canon.”
-
-It was now about three in the afternoon. By that time eight or nine of
-Hawke’s ships had got into action, and were engaging the enemy as they
-overhauled them all along their line.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The pick of the French army meanwhile was looking on from the shore, as
-big a crowd of spectators, from all accounts, as ever watched a naval
-battle. Duplessis-Richelieu, Duc d’Aiguillon, Commander-in-Chief, watched
-it from the windmill of St. Pierre, as did from another point the Second
-in Command, De La Tour D’Auvergne, father of the “First Grenadier of
-France,” then a schoolboy of fourteen. Along the beach forty regiments
-of soldiers, horse and foot, were looking on. They formed the army
-that the _Formidable_ and her consorts had come to escort across the
-Channel, in the transports lying at anchor in Quiberon Bay, for that
-projected invasion of England with which all Europe had been ringing
-for months past. There they stood, drenched to the skin, all anxiously
-looking out over the tumbling waste of waters to see what was to come
-of it; motley masses of men crowding out of camp and massed along
-the sand dunes and rock ledges of the Quiberon peninsula, or lining
-the batteries and ramparts of the forts round the bay—a medley of
-cocked-hatted, white-coated officers and men from every arm of the French
-king’s service; come down to the shore to see the show. Sturdy linesmen
-of Boulonnais and Contis, of Saint Chamond, and old d’Artois stood
-there—marching regiments these, that had seen more than one battlefield
-elsewhere, but never anything like this. Here were the red waistcoats of
-de Bourbon and de Cossé and de Quercy; there the green collars and cuffs
-of Beauvoisis, the blue of de Foix, the red coats with yellow facings
-of the Irish regiment of Clare; all intermingled with Dragoons de la
-Rochefoucauld and de Tessé; Dragoons de la Reine, in their queer-looking
-“bonnets de guerre” of royal blue; Dragoons du Dauphin in green coats
-with violet facings, silver buttons and silver lace, and helmets covered
-with leopard’s skin; Dragoons de Mailly, and the long red cloaks of the
-Penthièvre horsemen, adding a flower-bed touch of colour to the scene.
-Coast militiamen were in the throng, garbed like the regulars in the
-white coats of the line; heavy artillerymen, in sombre blue and dull
-red—there were two brigades of them on shore at Quiberon, de Chabrie, and
-de la Brosse—the whole mingled together in a motley crowd that stretched
-for miles round the bay, gazing their hardest to seaward and facing the
-gusts of blinding rain in their anxiety to see what they might of the
-battle thundering out in the storm over yonder. Quite a third of the
-“État Militaire de France,” of King Louis’ army list, formed the audience
-for Hawke and Conflans on the day that saw the _Formidable’s_ name
-entered on the roll of the British Fleet. The soldiers, indeed, too, had
-a personal interest in the battle beyond the general issue. Some of their
-comrades were on board the fleet with Conflans, doing duty as marines;
-among them two whole battalions of Saintonge, and a draft or two of the
-regiment de Guyenne. They had been shipped at Brest. Poor wretches!
-If it was bad for the lookers-on to stand here in the open, drenched
-to the skin and chilled to the marrow, what was it over there, out
-yonder—heaving and pitching and rolling, at the mercy of a raging storm,
-sea-sick and helpless and hopeless, and being shot at with English cannon
-balls all the while!
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was not until some little time after their collision that the
-_Montagu_ and the two other British ships, the _Warspite_ and the
-_Magnanime_, got clear of one another. By that time they had drifted to
-leeward of the _Formidable_, and were too far off to reopen their attack.
-But fresh foes for the brave de Verger’s ship were soon at hand.
-
-First of these the _Torbay_, Commodore Keppel’s ship, a smart and
-powerful seventy-four, ranged alongside. Setting-to briskly by himself,
-Keppel gave the Frenchmen a cruelly trying quarter of an hour, after
-which the _Resolution_ and the _Swiftsure_, both seventy-gun ships, drew
-near to take their part. Keppel, according to his own log, “had silenced
-her,” and without waiting to see her colours come down, as the new
-arrivals neared the spot he moved off, intent on finding a single-handed
-fight for himself further ahead.
-
-Keppel did so immediately, and settled the fate of the hapless _Thesèe_,
-a seventy-four, the same size as his own ship, which went to the bottom
-with awful suddenness as they were fighting yard-arm to yard-arm, struck
-by a fierce squall that burst on her and heeled her over just as she had
-opened her lower-deck ports to leeward in order to give the _Torbay_ a
-broadside. Swamped by a tremendous sea, the luckless _Thesèe_ filled
-and sank like a stone. Out of eight hundred men on board, not twenty in
-all were saved, picked up from floating wreckage. The _Torbay_ herself
-narrowly escaped sharing the _Thesèe’s_ fate. Her lower-deck ports had
-just been opened too. “Keppel’s,” relates Horace Walpole, “was full of
-water, and he thought he was sinking; a sudden squall emptied his ship,
-but he was informed all his powder was wet. ‘Then,’ said he, ‘I am sorry
-I am safe.’ They came and told him a small quantity was undamaged. ‘Very
-well,’ said he, ‘then attack again.’”
-
-The _Resolution_ and _Swiftsure_ were in turn joined by the _Revenge_,
-and then the _Essex_ added herself to the long suffering _Formidable’s_
-foes. Still, though, the _Formidable_ kept her colours flying, while shot
-after shot—at intervals—came sullenly from her tiers of ports. She was
-practically silenced, but not as Keppel had thought, absolutely. There
-was little satisfaction in such odds, and three of the British ships
-moved away, leaving the _Resolution_ to finish the business off.
-
-[Illustration: HAWKE’S VICTORY IN QUIBERON BAY
-
-_Painted by Swaine. Engraved and Published in 1760._
-
-_The picture shows the “Royal George” (in the centre) sinking the
-“Superbe,” and the “Formidable” (immediately beyond the “Superbe” and in
-the background) lowering her colours to the “Resolution” (the ship coming
-up astern of the “Royal George”)_]
-
-The _Formidable_ was plainly at her last gasp, as it were; a wreck above
-and below, her masts down and her rigging lying in tangled heaps of torn
-canvas and cordage over the side, the bulwarks shattered to the level of
-the deck, the hull gashed with gaping holes from which streams of sea
-water spouted in cascades at every roll of the ship. Still, with all
-that, her gallant first lieutenant, the sole surviving naval officer on
-board, would not give in. The _Formidable_ was a flagship, he declared,
-and, as a point of honour, to a flagship only should she strike. Manning
-what guns he could, he made his final effort to hold out just a little
-longer. It was magnificent, but it was hardly war. It was heroic, but it
-proved impossible. The gallant young Frenchman’s ambition was destined
-not to be realized. There was no time for it. The big _Royal George_,
-with Hawke’s blue flag flying out at the main, could be seen approaching,
-but she was not yet quite alongside. Before the _Royal George_ could
-challenge, the deadly fire of the _Resolution’s_ guns had done its
-work, and all hope of further resistance was at an end. Yet another
-British ship also, the _Burford_, was fast approaching the scene, intent
-apparently on joining in with the _Resolution_. It was hopeless now to
-wait for the _Royal George_, and the heroically defended ensign of the
-_Formidable_ had to come down. The _Formidable_ lowered her colours to
-the _Resolution_—exactly at five minutes to four o’clock.
-
-Towards the end, Conflans himself in the _Soleil Royal_, with de
-Beauffremont and one of his captains, tacked and doubled back as if to
-the rescue of the _Formidable_, but they were too late.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What took place elsewhere on the scene of battle, during the short
-three-quarters of an hour that the waning daylight of the stormy winter’s
-afternoon lasted, before the fighting had of necessity to cease, are
-beyond our limits. How, for instance, the master of the _Royal George_,
-getting anxious about the reefs and sandbanks that showed up amid the
-breakers on either side as they surged ahead into the fight, declared
-that he dared not take the big three-decker further inshore, and drew
-from Hawke’s lips the heroic words, “You have done your duty in pointing
-out the danger; now go on and lay me beside the French Admiral!”; how the
-_Royal George_ herself after that came within an ace of shipwreck as she
-fought; of the catastrophe to the French _Superbe_, sent to the bottom
-in attempting to keep the _Royal George_ from closing with her flagship,
-by one terrific broadside from the _Royal George_, to the horror of the
-British flagship’s crew themselves as the smoke of the guns blew off and
-they saw three topmasts disappear under water, “in a hideously sudden
-manner,” where thirty seconds earlier had floated a noble man-of-war; how
-finally Conflans himself sheered off before the _Royal George’s_ guns,
-and ran away to wreck his flagship and burn her next morning:—to recount
-in detail these and the many other dramatic incidents of that “thunderous
-miscellany of cannon and tempest,” as Carlyle called the battle of
-Quiberon Bay, are beyond our present scope.
-
-All was over about five o’clock. As soon as might be after that, victors
-and vanquished alike let go anchors where they lay, each ship where best
-she could, as the guns gave over firing in the dark, to ride the fearful
-night out as well as it was possible on both sides, each holding to
-her anchor for dear life, and powerless to help others. “In the night
-we heard many guns of distress fired, but, it blowing hard, want of
-knowledge of the coast, and whether they were fired by a friend or an
-enemy, prevented all means of relief.”
-
-As the result to England of the afternoon’s work, two French ships were
-sunk and one was burned; two surrendered (one stole away before the
-weather would allow a boat from an English ship to take possession of
-her), one—the _Formidable_—was taken and secured. Of the rest of the
-enemy some scraped over the mud-flats at the mouth of the little river
-Vilaine, a few miles off, and lay there with broken backs, unable ever
-to put to sea again; a small remnant got into Rochfort, losing one of
-their number by shipwreck on the way. In killed and wounded and drowned,
-the total loss to France in the battle, it has been calculated, numbered
-between four and five thousand men. It was probably nearer the higher
-figure, for most of the French ships were crammed with men. There were
-twelve hundred, it was said, sailors and soldiers, on board Conflans’
-flagship, the _Soleil Royal_, alone. A thousand officers and men were
-returned as on board the _Formidable_.
-
-The French wounded, with a few men rescued from the ships that were sunk,
-were sent on shore by cartel to the Duc D’Aiguillon, as soon as the
-weather had moderated sufficiently. With them were sent also a hundred
-and twenty French soldiers, the poor remnant of a half-battalion of the
-regiment of Saintonge, and a company of militiamen gunners from Brest,
-who had served on board the _Formidable_.
-
-Two of our own ships were wrecked in Quiberon Bay, one on the night of
-the battle. That was the _Resolution_, to which ship the _Formidable_
-had hauled down her flag. The other was the _Essex_, which was cast away
-early next morning while trying to secure Conflans’ flagship. The storm
-continued to rage with unabated fury during the whole of the day after
-the battle. To Hawke, though, their fate was only part of the price for
-the risk incurred in bringing the French to battle.
-
-This was the victor’s summing up on the day’s work. “When I consider the
-season of the year,” wrote Hawke to the Admiralty, in his modestly worded
-dispatch, “the hard gales on the day of action, the shortness of the day,
-and the coast they were on, I can boldly affirm that all that could
-possibly be done has been done. As to the loss we have sustained, let
-it be placed to the account of the necessity I was under of running all
-risks to break this strong force of the enemy. Had we had but two hours
-more daylight the whole had been totally destroyed or taken, for we were
-almost up with their van when night overtook us.” In this plain way did
-the victor of Quiberon Bay render his account to the nation, this grand
-old fighting seaman and leader to whom England has not yet found room for
-a monument, either at the Abbey or in St. Paul’s.
-
-The battle of Quiberon Bay sealed the fate of France at sea for the Seven
-Years’ War. The building of “flat bottoms” stopped after that; there was
-no more mustering of armies along the French coast, no more discussion in
-the Pompadour’s boudoir of schemes for the invasion of England.
-
- The guns that should have conquered us they rusted on the shore,
- The men that would have mastered us they drummed and marched no more,
- For England was England, and a mighty brood she bore—
- When Hawke came swooping from the West!
-
-“It seems as though France is never to have a navy,” said King Louis
-morosely, while sitting at supper with the Pompadour on the night that
-the Quiberon dispatches reached Versailles.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A British officer who went on board the _Formidable_ on the morning after
-the battle, wrote down a description of the scene that met his eyes
-there. “A lieutenant and 80 men,” he says, “being ordered from our ship
-on board the _Formidable_ to assist in repairing her rigging, etc., I
-embraced the opportunity of seeing the havoc that had been made by the
-fire of so many large ships who had battered her. The destruction of
-her upper works was dreadful, and her starboard side was pierced like
-a cullender by the number of shots she received in the course of the
-action. The loss of men was prodigious in killed and wounded, amounting
-to more than 500; among the former the Admiral, M. St. André de Verger
-and his brother, the first captain, all the other officers either killed
-or wounded, except a lieutenant-colonel, who assured me that every man of
-his detachment, drawn up on the quarter-deck and forecastle, etc., had
-been either killed or wounded but himself; that he had served in the army
-for thirty years, had been present at the bloody field of Fontenoy, but
-had never before witnessed such a scene of carnage. The grand-chamber was
-filled with wounded officers, many of whom had suffered amputation....
-Monsieur major invited me below to certify the number of his patients,
-and there a melancholy scene presented itself. The large gun-room and
-every space between the guns on the lower deck was crammed with wounded
-soldiers and sailors, besides three rows of cradles in the hold,
-containing 60 seamen, and many not yet dressed.... I am afraid that few
-of the wounded could recover, considering their very miserable situation
-and circumstances.”
-
-As soon as the weather would allow her to start the _Formidable_ was sent
-off to England under escort. She arrived at Plymouth “almost in a sinking
-state, from the shot-holes she had received, and only kept afloat with
-great difficulty.” She rolled away her jury masts, we are told, and the
-cook’s coppers were washed out of the ship. The prize crew, the officers
-and men from the wrecked _Essex_, and the prisoners, had to live for four
-days on the boatswain’s tallow.
-
-The _Formidable_ was taken into the British Navy, and the name was
-registered on the roll of King George’s fleet in its original form; but
-the ship had suffered too severe a mauling to be fit for sea service
-again. Some ten years after her capture Hawke, as First Lord of the
-Admiralty, signed the death warrant of his old prize—the order that
-delivered his old Quiberon trophy over to the shipbreaker.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One final word. The _Formidable’s_ magnificent defence was the redeeming
-event for the other side of the “Journée de M. Conflans,” as the French
-Navy, pillorying the memory of its unfortunate Admiral, has ever since
-called the battle. So, too, France has recognized it. A new _Formidable_
-was laid down in France at the first fitting opportunity, so named in
-honour of the Comte de Verger’s gallant man-of-war. The French battleship
-_Formidable_ of to-day—not so long since, with her armour plates of 44
-tons weight each and 75-ton guns, the pride of her fleet, and still, as
-reconstructed, a ship capable of striking a hard blow for the honour of
-her flag—commemorates the heroism of de Verger and his gallant men for
-the twentieth-century French Navy.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-WHEN THE _VICTORY_ FIRST JOINED THE FLEET
-
- Thou great vessel, whose tremendous claim
- So well is proved to Victory’s famous name!
-
-
-In stately guise, all smart and trim, rides the _Victory_ to-day at the
-flagship’s moorings in Portsmouth Harbour, flying at her masthead the red
-St. George’s Cross flag of the Admiral holding the chief command at the
-principal naval port of the British Empire. To see her now, spick and
-span and as smart as paint can make her, she looks at the first glance
-barely a day older than the latest launched of the old style wooden
-men-of-war that are yet left among us doing harbour duty in various
-capacities. The old _St. Vincent_, which passed away only the other day,
-a worn-out veteran, was launched ten years after the _Victory_ had fired
-her last shotted gun. The still existing _Asia_, at Portsmouth, was
-launched thirteen years after the _Victory_ had finally retired from the
-sea. The _Victory_ as a fact had been some years afloat and had fought
-her first battle long before the great-great-grandfathers of most of us
-were old enough to trundle a hoop or spin a top. She forms in herself,
-indeed, a direct and actual link between our own day and the times of
-George the Second.
-
-Two famous Admirals of the Seven Years’ War time, Anson and Boscawen,
-were the Lords of the Admiralty who signed the order to lay the
-_Victory’s_ keel. The names themselves take us back into history well
-over a century and a half. And the difference between things then and now
-is wider than the gap of years. It is difficult indeed, as we nowadays
-see the _Victory_ in Portsmouth Harbour, amidst the stir and activity
-of a modern naval port, to realize how wide a space her lifetime really
-covers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Imagine yourself as a visitor at Portsmouth on any afternoon almost
-of the present year of grace, and observing what takes place in the
-harbour round the _Victory_. Here comes along, sliding swiftly past
-between ship and shore, a long, low-built black torpedo-boat; or a yet
-more grim-looking sleuthhound of the sea, a thirty-knot destroyer, with
-squat funnels and high-raised forecastle, from which peers forward the
-long barrel of a twelve-pounder, shearing its way ahead on business of
-its own. Now a snub-nosed gunnery-school gunboat passes, returning from
-a day’s target-practice out beyond the Warner lightship, with a weapon
-that can fire from twelve to twenty aimed shots in a minute. Then, it
-may be, a brand new twenty-three-knot cruiser passes, coming back
-from a trial run, or a huge high-sided four to five hundred feet long
-battleship of from fifteen to eighteen thousand tons, stern and resolute
-of appearance, her giant barbette guns of massive bulk and enormous
-length, weighing each from fifty to sixty tons, and able to send an
-eight hundredweight twelve-inch shell from fifteen to twenty miles, and
-with the certainty of being able to hit the mark with each shot at half
-that range—the horizon limit from on board. It was not so long ago that
-one of our battleships (the _Commonwealth_), firing at eight thousand
-yards at a target representing an enemy’s battleship, dropped successive
-twelve-inch shells into a space the size of a lawn-tennis court, and, at
-the same distance at the third round, shot away a boat’s flagstaff that
-topped the target. At all times, too, there is a passing and repassing
-of Navy steam-launches and pinnaces, and now and again the busy forging
-to and fro of puffing harbour tugs and yard craft of all sorts. Such are
-every-day sights in Portsmouth Harbour in these times of ours.
-
-Then carry your mind back to the year in which the _Victory_ first
-figured on the Estimates of the Navy—1758. Imagine yourself standing
-on the Hard as a sightseer in the Portsmouth of the Seven Years’ War
-time—on, say, a day in October of the year when my Lords at Whitehall
-were making their final decision about the ship’s dimensions.
-
-At this same moment, by the way, there is lying in a far-off parsonage,
-in an out-of-the-world locality on the Norfolk coast, a puny baby boy, a
-fortnight or three weeks old, so sickly that he is not thought likely to
-live. So weakly, indeed, is the child that his baptism—at which the name
-Horatio was given to the small babe—has taken place privately, just six
-days after his birth.
-
-You would, in Portsmouth Harbour on that October afternoon of 1758, have
-seen something very much like this.
-
-First of all, almost opposite the Hard, and just where the _Victory_
-herself now lies, there is moored a big yellow-sided two-decker of
-foreign build flying the British flag. Just now, perhaps, there is no
-man-of-war name all the world over of more unpleasant notoriety than
-hers. She is the _Monarque_, a seventy-four, taken from the French, and
-it was on her quarter-deck, some eighteen months ago, on a dull and
-cloudy March day, that they shot Admiral Byng. The _Monarque_ has now
-just returned from “Straits” service, and if you went on board her you
-would see, still there, and part of the ship’s company, the men of the
-platoon of marines who formed Byng’s firing party.
-
-Near the _Monarque_ lies a big ninety-gun three-decker—a yellow-sided
-vessel also, for all men-of-war are so painted. It is the _St. George_.
-In her cabin Byng’s court martial sat some twenty months ago. The court,
-by a grim coincidence, was held in the very cabin that had been Byng’s
-own thirteen years before that, when Byng was captain of this same _St.
-George_. There, on a snowy January day, as plenty of people at Portsmouth
-can tell you, for they were looking on, Byng stood to hear his sentence
-in his own old cabin, crowded almost to suffocation with spectators,
-stuffy and close, and the walls “sweating down” with trickling beads of
-water; the hapless, doomed British Admiral, standing there, firm and
-erect, with squared shoulders, calmly facing his judges, with his own
-sword lying on the table, its point turned towards himself.
-
-To the very last, they say, Byng expected an acquittal. He had not
-anticipated, at the worst, a sentence more severe than a reprimand. So
-he himself said in the cabin of the _Monarque_, on the very morning of
-the 27th January, when the Admiralty Marshal came to accompany him on
-board the _St. George_ to hear the finding of the court. He learnt the
-dread reality first as he came up the side of the _St. George_. At the
-entering port a personal friend, instructed privately by the President of
-the Court to do so, stood waiting to give the Admiral a word of warning.
-As he met his friend, Byng saw instantly from his downcast countenance
-and embarrassed manner that things had gone adversely and that the
-sentence was a hard one. “What is the matter,” asked the Admiral, “have
-they broke me?” The bearer of the news, convinced that Byng had no idea
-of what was coming, hesitated and stammered. Byng stopped short. He
-gazed fixedly at his friend for a few seconds, and then changed colour
-as he seemed to take in the situation. A moment later he had recovered
-himself. Exclaiming in a calm tone, “Well, well, I understand: if nothing
-but my blood will satisfy them, let them take it,” he passed with set
-countenance into the presence of the Court.
-
-[Illustration: THE EXECUTION OF ADMIRAL BYNG
-
-_From a Contemporary Print_]
-
-Beyond the _St. George_ lies another “Mediterranean ship,” just returned
-home—the _Revenge_, one of the ships in Byng’s battle. It was the damning
-evidence of the _Revenge’s_ captain—Frederick Cornwall, now at home on
-half-pay—as they all say in the fleet, that settled Byng’s fate. “If I
-cannot disprove what you have said, Captain Cornwall,” exclaimed Byng, as
-the one-armed captain of the _Revenge_ turned to leave the cabin, after a
-futile attempt at cross-examination on the part of the Admiral, “may the
-Lord have mercy on me.” There is no need to go further.
-
-If you could look round to Spithead from the Hard, you would see the
-old _Royal Sovereign_ on duty as the port flagship. On board her it was
-that, on the morning of the execution, Admiral Boscawen put his signature
-to Byng’s death warrant, and the order for the firing party. She is the
-oldest ship in the King’s Navy, in which connection the _Sovereign_
-has other memories of her own. The great Duke of Marlborough named her
-at her launch in the year that William the Third died, and it was in
-her great-cabin, during the _Sovereign’s_ first cruise, that Rooke’s
-council of war planned the swoop on the Vigo treasure galleons, which
-Vigo Street, in London, serves to commemorate. Some of the old ship’s
-timbers, it is the fact, formed part of the frame of Charles the First’s
-world-renowned _Sovereign of the Seas_, and were salved, by special
-Admiralty order, out of the _débris_ when the _Sovereign of the Seas_
-was burned at Chatham in January, 1696, by the carelessness of a sleepy
-bos’un’s mate.
-
-Out yonder at Spithead, too, at this moment, rides at anchor yet another
-veteran of our old-time navy, the _Royal Anne_. They have a really
-marvellous continuity of service, some of these ancient men-of-war. The
-_Anne_ carries us back to the time of the Dutch raid up the Medway. She
-was launched as the _Royal Charles_ to fill the place of the _Royal
-Charles_ that the Dutchmen carried off. William the Third renamed her
-the _Queen_, in honour of his consort, and the ship kept that name until
-George the First came over. King George, having at that time his legal
-consort under lock and key in Germany, promptly renamed the ship. He
-called her after himself, _Royal George_—the first of the series. Three
-kings, indeed, have been present at this ship’s various “christenings.”
-Charles the Second was present at her first naming as the _Royal
-Charles_; William the Third saw her renamed the _Queen_. George the
-First paid a special visit to Woolwich when she received the name _Royal
-George_, and gave £300 to be divided among the dockyard men employed at
-the float-out, in honour of the occasion. The name _Royal Anne_ was given
-to the ship only two years ago, when the present _Royal George_, Hawke’s
-flagship in the Channel Fleet, was launched. She exchanged the name for
-that borne on the stocks by the _Royal George_.
-
-Within sight from the Hard is an 80-gun three-decker, the _Royal
-William_, just back from the capture of Louisbourg, Cape Breton. She,
-too, was launched as long ago as Charles the Second’s reign, under
-the name _Royal Prince_, and she fought her first battle at Solebay,
-eighty-six years ago. She carried James Duke of York’s flag during part
-of the battle, and Prince Rupert in turn had his flag in her in a later
-battle. William the Third gave the ship her present name, and under it
-she fought at La Hogue as Sir Cloudesley Shovell’s flagship, not without
-distinction.
-
-If one might dip into the future and witness events just one year later,
-the visitor to Portsmouth would then see the _Royal William_ there again,
-and again just arrived from across the Atlantic. This time she would be
-in other guise—a ship “in mourning,” all over funereal black, with yards
-set to point in all directions—“a-cockbill,” as the old term went—and
-colours at half-mast, firing minute guns, and with a funeral procession
-of boats putting off from alongside to bear to the shore the body of
-General Wolfe.
-
-Off the dockyard, on this October afternoon of 1758, awaiting their turn
-for repair, are two jury-rigged ships. One is a small, old-fashioned
-sixty-four, firing a broadside of some 540 lb. weight of metal. The other
-is a giant 80-gun ship of French build, and brand new. She is bigger than
-the finest first-rate in King George’s service, a fair match for the new
-_Royal George_, and fires the tremendous broadside of 1136 lb. weight of
-metal. Yet the little ship took the big one in a midnight battle last
-February. It was as fine a feat of arms as the Navy has seen. The two
-are the _Monmouth_ and the _Foudroyant_. They have just come into port,
-and both show plenty of marks by way of battle scars. If you were to row
-round the _Foudroyant_ you would find her, on her larboard side, where
-the _Monmouth_ made her attack, battered almost to splinters. The fight
-lasted four and a half hours, from eight till after midnight, and went on
-for most of the time within pistol-shot. The _Monmouth_ in that time used
-up four tons of powder and about ten tons of cannon-balls. At Gibraltar,
-where they repaired the _Foudroyant_ to bring her to England, they had
-to plug over seventy shot-holes at the water-line—and two or three
-cannon-balls had gone through some of the holes.
-
-One more word of the _Foudroyant_. It would seem as though, in the
-Portsmouth of these times, we cannot lay the shade of Admiral Byng. The
-_Foudroyant_ was flagship of the fleet that Byng failed to beat, and
-Arthur Gardiner, who later commanded the _Monmouth_ when she took the
-_Foudroyant_, was Byng’s flag-captain. Captain Gardiner, after Byng’s
-battle, it is said, swore that if ever he got another ship, however
-small, and met the _Foudroyant_, he would attack her and take her, or
-sink alongside. He got the _Monmouth_ and met the _Foudroyant_ and kept
-his word; meeting himself a heroic death on his own quarter-deck in the
-heat of the battle.
-
-A second French man-of-war, taken on the same occasion and also badly
-mauled—the _Orphèe_, a smart 70-gun ship, prize to the _Revenge_—lies
-near the _Foudroyant_; also recently brought to England from up the
-Straits.[8]
-
-All the day long there keeps on a continuous passing up and down the
-harbour of small war-vessels and dockyard craft of every sort. Here a
-fireship goes by, a small two-masted vessel, readily distinguishable by
-the heavy iron double hooks and grapnels that tip the yard-arms; and that
-little boat towing astern. The hooks are meant to grip and hold fast the
-fireship’s destined prey as she sheers alongside. The fireship’s crew set
-the quick match-train leading to the stacks of pitch-barrels and other
-combustibles all over the vessel, ablaze at several points just as they
-are closing the enemy, and the little boat is for them to escape in at
-the last moment. Now a bomb-ketch passes, a clumsy craft with masts set
-well aft and two heavy 13-inch mortars, trained for firing over the bows
-right ahead, set side by side in the fore part of the ship, where the
-foremast would stand in an ordinary vessel. A rakish-looking Portsmouth
-privateer, it may be, now comes by, towing a prize astern of her—some
-captured French “sugar ship” from Martinique, snapped up off Ushant. Then
-there passes, on the way to one of the guardships or “receiving” ships,
-a press-gang tender, coming in from a run along the South Coast. She has
-been out for some days to pick up hands for the fleet, and some of those
-on board could tell more than one ugly story of high-handed doings among
-the villages and farmsteads on the coast, within a night’s march from
-the sea. In confinement under hatches on board, it is quite possible, is
-also the unfortunate crew of some homeward-bound merchantman, waylaid and
-boarded almost within sight of home, off the back of the Isle of Wight.
-It is very sad, but this is war time, and the fleet must be manned.
-
-All day long duty-boats keep going up and down. Now it is an admiral’s
-twelve-oared barge with the flag at the bows; now a captain’s gig, or
-a pinnace, pulling between ship and shore; now a midshipman’s boat
-scurrying off to answer the flagship’s signal. Ships’ long-boats with
-water-casks and pursers’ stores for various men-of-war in harbour, pass
-and repass, and beer hoys and yard craft of all kinds. You can always
-tell a dockyard boat by the heavy way in which the “maties” row, giving
-their elbows a curious lift with each stroke. At intervals, also, ships’
-launches and wherries go past, and lighters carrying cables or anchors,
-spars and sailcloth, or gangs of shipwrights from the yard on their way
-to Spithead to attend to pressing repairs to some Channel Fleet ship or
-frigate just come in and impatient to be off again.
-
-[Illustration: PORTSMOUTH IN THE YEAR THAT THE _VICTORY_ JOINED THE FLEET
-
- _1. North Dock._
- _2. Boat-Houses._
- _3. Officers’ Houses._
- _4. Dock Clock._
- _5. Commissioner’s House._
- _6. Sail and Mould Loft._
- _7. Rope House._
- _8. Royal Academy._
- _9. Landing Place at the Dock._
- _10. Rigging House._
- _11. The Common._
- _12. Officers’ Lodging in the Gun-Wharf._
- _13. Lamport Gate._
- _14. Portsmouth Church._
- _15. The Point._
- _16. Flag on the Platform._
- _17. Round Tower._
- _18. Spit-Head._
-
-_From a Contemporary Print._]
-
-Now and again, two or three times a month perhaps, a line of ships’
-launches from newly arrived vessels from Spithead are to be seen
-following one another up the harbour, crammed with men—swarthy
-foreigners, poor, ragged, dejected-looking wretches for the most part.
-Each boat has its guard of red-coated marines, standing under arms at
-the head and stern, all with bayonets fixed. The boatloads comprise
-prisoners of war, taken at sea and on their way to undergo confinement
-in Porchester Castle,[9] going to join their two thousand compatriots
-already there. A favoured few in due course may obtain exchange by
-cartel, but the greater number must perforce endure their captivity to
-the end of the war.
-
-Such were some of the every-day scenes to be witnessed in Portsmouth
-Harbour at the very time that the Admiralty order for the building of the
-_Victory_ was being drafted.
-
-Ashore in the streets of Portsea, old salts who had fought with Vernon
-when he took Porto Bello, are to be met with any day of the week. You may
-come across, indeed, an occasional old fellow who can remember Benbow,
-and how the news first came to England of the taking of Gibraltar. And
-sitting at his door on a sunny morning you may yet find an old Portsmouth
-grandsire here and there who can carry his memory further back still, and
-tell you how the bonfires blazed in High Street in honour of the battle
-of La Hogue.
-
-Turn away now from the harbour and the Hard and take a short walk through
-the streets of Portsmouth town. Soldiers in the uniform that Corporal
-John’s men wore at Blenheim and Ramillies, rub shoulders with you every
-hour of the day. Some are for Canada, some for the West Indies, some
-for Northern Germany. All are passing through Portsmouth on the way to
-the great depôt camp in the Isle of Wight where the troops for oversea
-service assemble. Most are men of the foot regiments, with long-skirted
-red coats, red waistcoats, and red breeches with high white gaiters. Some
-wear the big cocked hat that came in with George the First; others the
-tall sugar-loaf grenadier cap of the Prussian pattern. Those with buff
-facings are “Howard’s” men; those with yellow facings, “Kingsley’s”;
-those with willow green, “Rufane’s”; those with blue, “Duroure’s.” For
-six or seven years past our regiments have had numbers, but the men
-still hold to the old way, and each regiment calls itself for preference
-according to the custom of the army for these eighty years past. Now and
-then a party of dragoons pass through the streets, red coated and wearing
-black leather fur-crested helmets and long jack-boots. These come from
-one of the cavalry camps at Chichester or Southampton. Occasionally, too,
-cocked-hatted artillerymen are to be met with, in blue coats with red
-waistcoats and breeches and white gaiters.
-
-Batches of men of the standing garrison of the Fortress of Portsmouth,
-the “Royal Invalids,” as the corps they belong to is called, are to
-be seen about the streets at all hours; veterans drafted from off the
-Chelsea Hospital out-pension list as being sufficiently able-bodied for
-home-service fortress duty, old war-worn warriors bearing scars, many of
-them got in action at Dettingen and Fontenoy.
-
-A Portsmouth visitor would certainly, too, have seen in and about the
-town a personage of some notoriety in those times: Governor Hawley,
-Commandant of the Garrison, the Duke of Cumberland’s hard-riding,
-hard-drinking friend. “Bloody Hawley” was what the soldiers called him,
-taking the _sobriquet_ from the name that years before the hapless
-clansmen of the north gave the man who led “Butcher” Cumberland’s
-dragoons in the merciless chase after Culloden. In General Hawley you
-would have seen perhaps as badly hated an officer as ever held a King
-of England’s commission. “Chief Justice Hawley” the rank and file also
-called him: and the reason for it any one would have seen for himself by
-walking round Governor’s Green any day of the week, or passing beyond the
-postern and strolling out across the Portsmouth ramparts to the glacis on
-an execution morning.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The talk of the place—and of all England too at the moment—is of a French
-invasion.
-
-England, in 1758, had not yet recovered from her last bad fit of nerves,
-brought on by truculent vapourings from Versailles at the outset of the
-Seven Years’ War. Government was urgently pushing on arrangements for
-forming an efficient militia force to fill the place of the regular
-battalions fighting abroad in Germany and in America, in view of the
-invasion scare that was threatening in the near future. Already reports
-had come to hand from France of the building of flat-bottomed beach-boats
-and preparations for large encampments next summer in the vicinity of
-the French Channel ports—at Dunkirk and Calais, Havre and St. Malo, and
-in Lower Brittany on the shores of Quiberon Bay. In every county of
-England and Wales the local authorities were getting ready for the early
-muster of the new militia levies—now, for the first time in our history,
-to be formed into regiments. Along the coasts of Sussex and Kent,
-from Selsea to beyond Dungeness and Hythe, where the open coast-line
-might seem to invite attack—at Littlehampton, Brighton, Blatchington,
-Seaford, Hastings, Rye, Hythe, Folkestone—the sites for four- and six-gun
-batteries were being pegged out by military engineers, to be thrown up
-by local labourers under expert supervision. At every point along the
-seashore from Spurn Head to the Lizard the beacons were being watched
-night and day, while the local authorities of every seaboard district had
-standing orders to be ready, on the first alarm of a hostile landing, to
-transport the women and children in farm carts to the nearest towns, and
-drive inland the horses and sheep and cattle.
-
-We have to turn over many pages of the world’s history to get to the year
-that saw the _Victory_ brought into the British Navy. The Seven Years’
-War itself, the exigencies of which called the _Victory_ into existence,
-is nowadays but a schoolbook term. Frederick the Great, in the year that
-the _Victory_ first figures in the Navy Estimates, was the man of the
-hour. Peter the Great’s daughter ruled in Russia. The “Old Pretender”—the
-“warming-pan baby” of Whitehall, of the year 1688—was still alive,
-dragging out his last years in Rome as a pensioner of the Pope. Captain
-Cook was as yet an unknown master’s mate, serving on board a man-of-war
-away across the Atlantic with Boscawen. Nelson, as has been said, was
-a long-clothes baby; Napoleon and Wellington were not yet born. The
-Commander-in-Chief of the British Army, Viscount Ligonier, was a French
-Huguenot refugee, born a subject of the Grand Monarque, who first saw war
-under Marlborough at Blenheim. Wolfe was an unheard of Major-General,
-nearly at the bottom of the list. News of Clive’s victory at Plassey had
-not long reached England. The elder Pitt, “the Great Commoner,” had only
-been in power for little over a twelvemonth. William Pitt was not yet
-born. Smeaton was building the Eddystone Lighthouse. James Watt was a
-Glasgow mathematical instrument maker, his ideas about steam hardly yet
-in embryo. Burke was a young Irishman in London, making a poor living out
-of essays for Grub Street magazines. Lord Chesterfield was still writing
-his letters. Dr. Johnson’s Dictionary was a new book, being advertised
-in publishers’ announcements, in two bulky quarto volumes at £4. 10s.
-Garrick was playing nightly at Drury Lane.
-
-It was still the custom at Bath to announce the arrival of lords and
-ladies and “nabobs” with peals on the Abbey bells and serenadings by
-the Assembly band. Brighton was hardly on the map as yet; it was merely
-Brighthelmstone, a Sussex fishing village, just beginning to be visited
-for sea bathing by the handful of people who had heard of it through Dr.
-Russell’s pamphlets. Old London Bridge still had houses on it. Traffic
-in imported merchandise throughout the country was still carried on
-by pack-horse. One coach—or “machine”—a month, ran between London and
-Edinburgh, and took a fortnight on the road. A similar conveyance between
-London and Portsmouth took, under the most favourable conditions, two
-whole days. The mails went by postboy, and hardly a week passed without
-people failing to get their letters, because the local postboy had been
-stopped by a highwayman. Gibbets, indeed, with the bleached bones of
-these gentry in chains, stood on every main road out of London. Pirates
-were still from time to time publicly borne from the Old Bailey down the
-Thames in boats, heavily chained, to be hanged at Execution Dock and
-gibbeted at Galleons Point—on the average half a dozen a year. Just as
-the Admiralty draughtsmen were outlining the plans of the _Victory_, the
-news of the hour for nine people out of ten in England was the committal
-of Eugene Aram to York Castle for the murder of Daniel Clark.
-
-[Illustration: AT PORTSMOUTH POINT
-
-_Thomas Rowlandson._]
-
-[Illustration: IN PORTSMOUTH HARBOUR
-
-_Thomas Rowlandson._]
-
-On the day that the _Victory’s_ keel was laid two men were pilloried in
-Cheapside for blackmailing a City merchant, and a bad egg accidentally
-hitting the Sheriff’s officer in charge of the proceedings led to a riot
-and fighting with drawn swords. On the day before the _Victory_ was
-launched, one Mary Norwood, an unfaithful wife, condemned at Taunton
-Assizes for poisoning her husband, was publicly strangled in the
-market-place of Ilverston, her home, and her body tied to the stake and
-burned before several hundred spectators.
-
-So far back does the life-story of our “old” _Victory_ take us, touching
-at either end the middle of the eighteenth century and the opening years
-of the twentieth, directly linking King George the Second with King
-Edward the Seventh.
-
-
-HOW THEY BUILT THE _VICTORY_ AT CHATHAM
-
-This is the story of the building of the _Victory_ at Chatham Dockyard,
-and how, why, and when the order to set to work on this particular
-first-rate man-of-war was given.
-
-On the 20th of September, 1758, Lord Anson, First Lord of the Admiralty,
-after commanding at sea on Special Service off the coast of France all
-the summer, arrived in London to resume his duties on the Board. Nine
-days later, in the old parsonage house of Burnham Thorpe in Norfolk, was
-born into this world the infant boy to whom six days later was given the
-name Horatio Nelson. The two dates are a coincidence of interest in our
-story of the _Victory_.
-
-Anson came back to town to hold conference with Mr. Secretary Pitt,
-the War Minister. Pitt had laid his plans for the future, and was
-ready. There were first of all to be no more half-military, half-naval
-expeditions up and down the coast of France. They had done little real
-harm to the enemy, and in two cases had ended in downright failure. The
-wits of St. James’s were not to get a second chance for a sneer that
-“the French were not to be conquered by every Duke of Marlborough” (an
-allusion to the general commanding the troops employed—the second Duke).
-The Channel Fleet was not to be received a second time on returning to
-Spithead with a dumb peal on the bells of Portsmouth Church. That plan
-of campaign had been to some extent a legacy to Pitt from the previous
-Ministry; he was prepared now to set on foot his own scheme. Great
-Britain would henceforward take the offensive vigorously and deal with
-the enemy at all points. Pitt’s plan was to make it first and foremost
-a naval war, to attack the oversea possessions of France all the world
-over, utilizing every ship at the disposal of the nation. The striking
-success achieved by Boscawen at Louisbourg had shown the way, and what
-could be done.
-
-The War Minister’s projects made known to him, Anson acted. On the 14th
-of October the First Lord called on the Navy Board—the Department
-charged with the general administration and dockyard business of the
-Navy—for a detailed return of every seaworthy ship in the fleet, and
-of every ship capable of being made seaworthy. On the 24th of October
-he called for a Supplementary Return of the older ships, which, if for
-the present available, would necessarily, through wear and tear, go
-off the effective within three years and need replacing. Both returns,
-from details specially supplied by each dockyard, were presented to the
-Admiralty on the last day of November. They were considered forthwith,
-and a decision in regard to them was come to on the 13th of December.
-Five days later, as the result, a shipbuilding programme to add twelve
-ships of the line to the fleet was laid, with the Navy Estimates for
-the coming year, on the table of the House of Commons. Nine of the
-twelve men-of-war proposed were to be put in hand at once—five in the
-dockyards and four in merchants’ yards. At the head of the list was a
-new first-rate of a hundred guns, as to the preparations for which the
-Commissioner of Chatham Dockyard had already received instructions. That
-ship was the future _Victory_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-They were ready at Chatham. They had been expecting an order of the
-kind for some years. Ever since, indeed, the autumn of 1746, when the
-Admiralty had made inquiries at Chatham in regard to a new first-rate
-that it was then proposed to build at Chatham, “in the room,” as the
-official term went, of the three-decker _Victory_, old Admiral Balchen’s
-ship, lost with nine hundred men and officers on board, on the Casquets
-in the terrible shipwreck of October, 1744. The project for various
-reasons had been shelved, but the dockyard authorities at Chatham had
-not lost sight of it. To that fact, probably, we owe it that the next
-_Victory_, when she at length did come into existence, lasted to fight at
-Trafalgar, and also, in some degree, that the _Victory_ remains afloat at
-the present hour.
-
-Any summer’s day in the early Fifties of the eighteenth century the
-wayfarer among the uplands of the Kent and Sussex Wealds would have met
-processions of “tugs,” as the local timber conveyances were called, drawn
-by teams of oxen, laboriously hauling along the rough oak trunks, lopped
-and barked, stamped with King George’s broad arrow, and each numbered
-with a smear of red paint, that were in the course of events to form the
-frame and side timbers of the _Victory_. From Frant and Ashdown, Eridge
-and Mabledon, over all the wooded country round Tunbridge Wells where
-Kent and Sussex march, by Wadhurst, Buxted, and Mayfield, from Horsham
-on the north to nearly as far south as Lewes, they might have been seen
-working slowly along the clay-bound forest roads, two-and-twenty oxen
-to one trunk in wet weather sometimes, in charge of smock-frocked,
-leather-breeched Wealden peasants (“them leather-legged chaps o’ the
-Weald”), toiling from cross-road to cross-road towards Maidstone,
-where, alongside Messrs. Prentice’s wharves, the Medway timber hoys for
-Chatham lay in waiting. Kent and Sussex oak was proverbial at that day
-as being without equal in strength and toughness for the frame timbers
-and sides and upper works of a man-of-war—the fighting parts of a ship.
-And, at the same time, the wayfarer in another land, wandering where the
-Vistula rolls its sluggish course northwards to the Baltic, would have
-met a great part of the rest of the future _Victory_ in the long rafts
-drifting downstream from the oak forests of Poland and East Prussia,
-floating slowly along, to arrive at length at the Dantzic contractor’s
-yard, and thence finally pass oversea to the saw-pits of Chatham. For
-the under-water timbers and planking of our old-time men-of-war and
-other parts of a ship exposed to salt water there was no timber in
-the world, so it was generally considered at that time, to compare in
-durability with “East Country” oak—“‘K’ brand, Dantzic,” in particular.
-Also it was cheap. By the end of the year 1754 the pick of the best
-shipbuilding timber in England and in all Europe had been placed in store
-on the berths and racks at Chatham, available for the expected big ship,
-thenceforward to season gradually and improve in keeping year by year.
-
-The order to the Dockyard Commissioner at Chatham to get ready to take
-the _Victory_ in hand was dated the 13th of December, 1758. It directed
-Commissioner Cooper to “prepare to set up and build a new ship of
-100-guns as soon as a dock shall be available for the purpose.” A sum
-of £3200, it also informed the Commissioner, would be set aside in the
-coming Navy Estimates for preliminaries. It was the custom at that time
-to build first-rates in a dock; they were thought too big to build on a
-slip.
-
-The new ship—no name was as yet officially announced for her—was to be,
-as we should nowadays say, an “improved” _Royal George_ (the _Royal
-George_ was our latest completed big ship, the same _Royal George_
-that came at a later day to so unfortunate an end), and for six months
-the draughtsmen in the office of the Surveyor of the Navy, under the
-supervision of Mr. Thomas Slade (afterwards Sir Thomas), Senior Surveyor
-of the Navy, the designer of the _Victory_, were busy on the working
-plans. These were completed by the first week of June, 1759, and laid
-before the Admiralty. They were formally passed on the 14th of June, and
-a few days later the Rochester stage-waggon from London stopped at the
-dockyard gates to deliver the box with the duplicate plans, all ready to
-be laid off and chalked down in detail, each part of the ship the actual
-size, on the mould loft floor. Master-Shipwright Lock would then get
-his mould-boards and have the saw-pits set going, in readiness for the
-arrival of the regulation Navy Board Order to commence building. That
-order came on the 7th of July.
-
-The dock allotted for the building of the new ship at Chatham was that
-then known as the “Old Single Dock,” the dock now called “No. 2 Dock,”
-near the Admiral Superintendent’s Office and opposite the old yard clock
-and bell turret. There, on a Monday morning, the 23rd of July, 1759—an
-auspiciously bright and sunny morning as it befell—the keel of the
-_Victory_ was laid.
-
-The ship was to be afloat, according to Admiralty calculations, within
-thirty-three months—by the 31st of March, 1762. That meant, in the
-existing state of things at Chatham, working on her, at any rate during
-the earlier stage of getting the vessel into frame, day and night. They
-had two 90-gun three-deckers and two seventy-fours in various stages of
-building, besides the _Victory_ to take in hand; and in addition they had
-nearly every week extra refits or repairs to undertake for ships coming
-in from the fleets at sea—a complication of tasks which involved the
-keeping of every man and boy of the two thousand and odd hands then on
-the muster-sheets of Chatham yard hard at work from Monday at daylight to
-Saturday at dusk. Half the establishment alternately were on overtime,
-working on Sundays and nightly through the week, for spells of three
-or five hours after bell-ringing—in dockyard lingo, “double tides” and
-“nights.” It was the same just then in all our dockyards; the day-gangs
-as they worked having each man’s meals brought from home into the yard to
-him, to eat in the half-hour allowed, near by his job; the night-gangs
-all toiling on under the flaring light of cressets and links, without a
-break, until past ten o’clock.
-
-Amid such surroundings at Chatham they began building the _Victory_,
-a hundred and fifty men being employed on the ship at first, to set up
-and bolt together the various frames and floor timbers, and fit and fix
-together in place the stem and stern pieces and brackets and the huge rib
-timbers and beams, as fast as the converter and the sawyers could supply
-them. So things went on from August to the following January (1760). Then
-the gangs of shipwrights employed on the _Victory_ were reduced, and the
-rate of working allowed to slacken down. With the French Mediterranean
-Fleet broken up by Boscawen—one half taken or burned and the other half
-cut off and shut up at Cadiz—and the French Channel Fleet shattered by
-Hawke, and its refugee ships lying broken-backed and stranded up the
-Vilaine, on the sandbanks above the bar, the stress of the war was past.
-And there was little need to trouble for the immediate future with only
-M. Berryer at the Ministry of Marine.
-
-By August, 1760, the hull timber-work had been put together into the
-outline of a ship, and was practically complete in frame, the skeleton of
-the future man-of-war. The workmen were then almost all called off, and
-the ship, according to custom, was left aside for a space, to “stand in
-frame” and season. She had cost so far, according to the Navy Estimates,
-upwards of £14,000 in materials and labour.
-
-Two months later, on the 28th of October, the Admiralty officially named
-the _Victory_. On that day their lordships signed an order that “the new
-100-gun ship building at Chatham,” as the vessel had hitherto been styled
-in all official documents, should take the name of the _Victory_. At the
-same time a notification was sent to the Navy Board, directing them “to
-cause the name appointed by my Lords to be so registered in the List of
-His Majesty’s Navy,” and “communicated” to Chatham Dockyard.
-
-The name, of course, from the first had been an open secret. There were
-at that period seven British warship names which were tacitly accepted
-as set apart for first-rate ships of war. They were: _Royal Sovereign_,
-_Britannia_, _Royal William_, _Royal Anne_, _Royal George_, _London_, and
-_Victory_. These seven had stood at the head of the Navy List as a group
-by themselves, in successive ships, for some seventy years and more.
-The name _Victory_, in 1760, was the only one not appropriated to any
-existing ship. It had been wanting ever since the disaster of 1744, and
-the new 100-gun ship, as a first-rate, had a right to it in accordance
-with the custom of the service. Thus our present _Victory_ man-of-war is
-linked directly with the old-time veterans of her name; thus, indeed,
-from the Armada to Trafalgar, in a line of continuous succession—
-
- Victory to Victory ever
- Hands the torch of Glory on.
-
-But that is not quite all. In a special sense no more appropriate name
-could have been given to the British man-of-war laid down as the special
-first-rate of the year 1759. In that sense the _Victory_ commemorates in
-her name the most brilliant year of warlike achievement in our annals,
-the most successful year for British arms that the world ever saw. In
-her name, in this regard, our Nelson’s _Victory_ of to-day stands as an
-abiding national memorial of England’s greatest year of victory; the
-“Wonderful Year,” as our forefathers themselves called it, the year of
-Minden and Lagos Bay and Quiberon and Quebec. “We are forced,” wrote
-Horace Walpole, in October, 1759, “to ask every morning what victory
-there is for fear of missing one.”
-
-March 31st, 1762, came—the date by which the _Victory_ was to have been
-afloat. She was, though, still in frame, hardly advanced beyond that; her
-bottom planked over, but all above practically as yet only in skeleton,
-little advanced, in fact, beyond the stage at which the shipwrights had
-left her eighteen months before. The Admiralty’s change of plans after
-the French collapse at sea at the end of 1759 had put her completion off
-for two years. It was, however, not entirely lost time. An additional
-£12,000 had been laid out meanwhile for the ship in preparing and working
-up materials to be used in her, and seasoning them in readiness to push
-on with the building when work on the vessel was resumed.
-
-[Illustration: THE _VICTORY_ ON HER FIRST CRUISE
-
-_Drawn by Captain Robert Elliot, R.N. Engraved and Published in 1780._]
-
-The new date for completion, March, 1764, came in its turn, but again
-the _Victory_ was not ready. Upwards of £50,000 had by now been spent on
-her, and the ship was four-fifths finished, her sides planked to the
-upper works and the decks laid. They had slackened off considerably in
-regard to new construction at Chatham after the war ended. The dockyard
-establishment had been reduced by two-thirds and overtime stopped.
-General repairs were the order of the day, to make good the wear-and-tear
-of war service at all the dockyards, and practically a third part of the
-whole sea-going navy fell to Chatham’s share of mending.
-
-Another six months was then officially granted for the finishing of
-the _Victory_; but this time the Admiralty themselves, and the French
-incidentally, caused fresh delay. My Lords did their share by coming down
-to Chatham at the end of May, 1764, on a visit of inspection, walking
-over the _Victory_ and leaving suggestions for alterations to be made
-which would take at least four additional months to carry out. The French
-hindered the intended progress by a display of aggressiveness towards
-England over the Newfoundland fisheries question, as left arranged by
-the recent Treaty of Paris. That trouble at the outset looked so serious
-that the workmen at the dockyards were drawn off all ships building and
-repairing in order to get part of the Ordinary, the ships in reserve,
-into sea-going state at once. So the _Victory_ had her completion again
-put off.
-
-In the midst of this French “disturbance”—as our ancestors of that time
-termed international unpleasantnesses of the kind—we may conveniently
-take our leave of the _Victory_ on the stocks at Chatham, in the midst of
-a series of strange scenes the like of which, happily, have not often
-been witnessed in an English dockyard.
-
-The Newfoundland difficulty was still unsettled, when, at the end of
-October, 1764, secret information of a startling nature suddenly reached
-the Admiralty from abroad. It was to the effect that a plot was on foot,
-with the connivance of the French Government, to destroy the English
-dockyards by incendiarism and fire the ships of war under construction.
-There proved to be reason to consider the news in a most serious light,
-and extraordinary measures of precaution were forthwith ordered at all
-the yards.
-
-At Chatham, the nightly guard-boats patrolling the line of ships laid
-up at moorings in the Medway Ordinary, were doubled. Strict orders were
-issued to those in charge of the ships in Ordinary to keep their gun-room
-ports close shut all night, to send adrift before dark all shore boats
-lying astern, to hoist in all the ship’s boats, to haul up on board at
-night all the Jacob’s ladders over the stern used by the ship-keepers
-for getting on board. All fishing boats and hoys passing up and down
-the Medway were kept under observation. All doubtful or strange boats
-of any kind on the river were to be challenged and reported. Special
-dockyard guard-boats were told off to patrol from sunset to sunrise
-along the river front of the yard. All persons landing at the yard from
-the guardships after dark were to come alongside and disembark only at
-certain specified points. Strangers visiting the yard on business during
-the day were to be accompanied throughout their stay; no foreigner of
-whatever quality or rank was to be allowed to pass the gates without a
-written permit from the Commissioner. The yard-warders posted ashore
-on look-out round the walls of the yard were doubled, and marines were
-drafted into the yard to keep watch at night, “conformable to the
-strictest rules of Garrison duty.” A captain’s guard was posted at the
-dockyard gates, and a subaltern’s guard at the North-East Tower. A
-special parole with countersign was given out by the Commissioner every
-twenty-four hours. Constant patrols of marines were kept on the move
-round and about the yard all night. Armed sentries were posted on the
-river front, by the workshops and storehouses, the hemp and rope houses,
-and the timber berths. No fewer than twenty-two of these sentry-posts
-were appointed in and about Chatham dockyard, and each man going on duty
-was supplied with three rounds of ball.
-
-To safeguard the _Victory_, the pride of Chatham, “the finest man-of-war
-ever built for the Royal Navy,” as they already spoke of her, a
-cocked-hatted, high-gaitered marine sentry, loaded firelock on shoulder,
-was kept pacing up and down with steady tramp alongside the dock where
-the ship lay, all the night long. His orders were to challenge all
-suspicious persons and loiterers, and all persons approaching the ship,
-twice—“Halt, who comes there!” If not answered after that, he was to
-fire. To prove himself on the alert, at every quarter of an hour, when
-the warders on the wall look-out towers struck their bells, the sentry
-had to call out the number of his post, passing it on to the next sentry,
-and echoing back the hail “All’s well!” A fresh man came on duty every
-two hours. To further ensure the safety of the _Victory_, once at least
-during every night a “visiting rounds” patrol, comprising an officer
-from the main guard and a corporal and file of marines with lantern and
-jingling keys, boarded the ship to explore between-decks and below for
-lurking evil-doers or any combustibles that might be secreted.
-
-But Jack the Painter’s time had not yet come. Nothing in the way of
-incendiarism happened at Chatham, or at any of the other dockyards in
-1764, and after two or three months of unrest, things resumed their
-normal state of tranquillity.
-
-Nothing more happened after that to hinder or delay the completion of
-the _Victory_, and by the following March her bulkheads and magazines
-were fitted, the port-lids and the rudder hung, and the poop lanterns
-in place, and the caulkers and painters were getting through with their
-finishing touches.
-
-On St. George’s day, April 23rd, 1765, the Commissioner at Chatham
-reported the _Victory_ to the Admiralty as ready to be launched. The
-requisite order in reply, dispatched through the Navy Board, arrived
-on the 30th of April. It directed the launch to take place at the next
-spring tides These were due on the 7th of May.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-ON VALENTINE’S NIGHT IN FRIGATE BAY
-
- If we go forward, we die;
- If we go backward, we die;
- Better go forward—and live!
-
-
-The story of what happened once in Frigate Bay, St. Kitts, in the West
-Indies, recalls one of our “forgotten glories”; a feat of arms that nine
-out of ten people, one may be quite certain, have never heard of. Nor
-do our general histories say much of it, even of those whose pages make
-reference to it. Yet it is one of the very smartest, and neatest, and
-cleverest displays that, it may be, any British Admiral ever made, and
-it was managed, too, in the face of heroic odds. In every sense it was a
-daring and dashing deed of arms, and its moral effect on the enemy at the
-time was immense and widespread. It was in February of the year 1782, in
-the closing year of England’s long war with France and Spain in alliance
-with the rebel American Colonists. At that moment the French under the
-Comte de Grasse were in overpowering force in the West Indies, and were
-about, as they loudly vaunted, to make a sweeping attack on the five
-remaining British Islands, which, they declared openly, would prove an
-easy prey.
-
-Rodney, the British Commander-in-Chief in the West Indies, had gone home
-on sick leave for a short time at the end of the preceding season. He
-was now on his way out again, with what reinforcements the sorely-tried
-Admiralty, at their wits’ end for ships and the men to man them with,
-could get together for him; but he had not yet arrived. Sir Samuel Hood
-(the famous Lord Hood of a later day), Rodney’s second in command, was
-in charge of the station in Rodney’s absence. It was by him that the
-brilliant exploit which forms our story here was achieved in Frigate Bay,
-St. Kitts.
-
-Hearing in December, 1781, that the French Admiral, de Grasse, who had
-been co-operating with Washington in the Chesapeake, had arrived with
-his whole force at Martinique, and was on the point of sailing thence,
-or had already sailed, with a large force of troops on board to attack
-and capture Barbados, Hood at once followed; to try and hold the enemy in
-check till Rodney joined. He had only twenty-two ships of the line to de
-Grasse’s twenty-six, but he meant to make a fight of it in any event.
-
-Six of Hood’s ships, it should be noted, were only 64-gun ships, the
-smallest class of vessels placed in the line of battle; and two of the
-fleet, also, the _Invincible_ and the _Prudent_, were old vessels, worn
-out and crazy. Both, indeed, had been officially reported on as unfit for
-sea. Hood’s biggest ship was his own flagship, the _Barfleur_, a 90-gun
-ship. De Grasse’s ships, on the other hand, comprised the most powerful
-man-of-war in the world—the gigantic _Ville de Paris_ of 112 guns; and
-the French had as well twenty seventy-fours and three sixty-fours.
-
-On his way to Barbados, Hood put into English Harbour, Antigua, the
-naval head-quarters of the Leeward Islands Station. There he heard fresh
-news. The blow had fallen elsewhere. De Grasse had been delayed on his
-way to Barbados by bad weather. He had turned aside, and swooped down
-on St. Kitts. He had already begun a fierce attack, it was reported,
-and the small British garrison of regulars in the island were in a very
-precarious position. They were, however, still holding out. They occupied
-an impregnable position on Brimstone Hill, but their supplies were short
-and there was treachery among the islanders.
-
-Hood received details at Antigua of the attack on St. Kitts. Taking on
-board the 28th and 69th Foot and two companies of the 13th, part of the
-garrison of the island, and arranging also to form two battalions of
-marines, made up from the marines serving on board his fleet, Hood sailed
-at once to try and save the island. “He sailed,” to use the words of one
-of Hood’s officers, “with the inadequate force of 1500 troops, which was
-all he could get from the general commanding at Antigua, on the 23rd of
-January, to relieve St. Christopher’s, attacked by 9000 Frenchmen under
-the Marquis de Bouville” [_sic_] (i.e. de Bouillé).
-
-Hood proposed to surprise de Grasse at anchor and attack him at daybreak
-on the morning of the 24th of January. He knew that the enemy were lying
-in Basseterre Roads, a few miles from Brimstone Hill. To counterbalance
-the numerical superiority of the French fleet, Hood, in his plan of
-attack, proposed to throw the entire British squadron on one portion of
-the enemy, which he hoped to overwhelm before the rest could weigh and
-come to the rescue. Then he would be able, he expected, to match himself
-effectively against what would remain of the French. The plan was foiled
-at the outset by the blundering of the officer of the watch on board
-the _Nymphe_, a frigate, which, during the night of the 23rd, in the
-dark got across the bows of the _Alfred_, a seventy-four, the leader of
-the battle-line. She caused a collision that damaged the _Alfred_ very
-seriously, and nearly cut the _Nymphe_ in two.
-
-Owing to the collision Hood’s entire plan had to be altered. The repairs
-to the _Alfred_ took all day on the 24th and until ten o’clock on the
-morning of the 25th, before the ship was again fit for service, and
-during that time the rest of the British fleet lay-to. They were already
-in sight of St. Kitts, with the result that the news of Hood’s arrival in
-the neighbourhood, up to then unsuspected, reached the French Admiral.
-Now there was no longer a question of surprise. Before he actually
-sighted the British fleet, de Grasse had got ready for Hood, and had had
-time to get under way and stand out to meet him.
-
-Hood, disappointed though he was, was not baffled. He had a second plan
-of action in his mind. He next began to manœuvre as if he did not wish to
-come to close quarters with de Grasse—as, indeed, might well be the case,
-looking at the odds. He made a series of feints, as though he desired to
-shirk a battle and slip away, on which the French Admiral, becoming more
-and more confident, stood boldly out to sea after him. That was Hood’s
-game. He drew de Grasse clear of St. Kitts and to leeward of the island,
-manœuvring meanwhile so as to keep the weather-gage for himself. Then,
-suddenly hauling his wind, Hood dashed in, making for the anchorage the
-French had quitted in Basseterre Roads.
-
-He swept in so close along the shores of Nevis—to prevent the enemy
-getting within him—that one of his frigates, the _Solebay_, “was wrecked
-from not having room to pass between the line-of-battle ship she was
-abreast of and the western point of Nevis.”
-
-Holding his way ahead, Hood slipped right past the French and raced de
-Grasse for his own anchorage. Hood won the race on the post. After a
-flying interchange of broadsides he brought in his whole fleet, well in
-hand, right into Frigate Bay, Basseterre Roads, exactly where de Grasse
-had been lying previously, and occupied the very moorings that the French
-had originally had. In that way he placed the British fleet between the
-French troops on shore and their supporting fleet It was a masterstroke.
-Hood had turned the tables exactly. He completely cut off the French
-troops on shore from receiving aid from their fleet.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Completely surprised and outwitted by the British Admiral’s daring move,
-all that de Grasse could do was to attempt to overpower Hood while he was
-in the act of anchoring. What happened is described by the officer in the
-British fleet who has already been quoted.
-
-“When he perceived the whole fleet following their leader, he tacked
-his fleet together ... and, in consequence, the French fleet approached
-within gunshot at a little before three o’clock. De Grasse, who was in
-the centre of his line, fetched in the _Ville de Paris_ nearly abreast
-of the _Canada_, while the headmost ship of his fleet was drawing in
-abreast of Sir Samuel Hood’s ship, the _Barfleur_. Their whole van boldly
-advanced towards the _Barfleur_, which reserved her fire until the
-brave Frenchman approached within musket shot, when she opened such a
-well-directed and quickly repeated fire, that in a few minutes the French
-ship had her jib-boom shot away, her sails nearly cut into ribbons, and
-her rigging so cut up that she quickly put her helm a-weather, and bore
-away from her redoubted antagonist. De Grasse perceiving an opening in
-our line, boldly attempted to sever it; but Cornwallis placed himself
-in the breach, which he so ably defended that his gigantic opponent was
-glad to relinquish the hazardous enterprise. Hood looked on undismayed
-at this attack upon his rear, knowing that he could confide in every
-individual captain, and very coolly ordered the signal to be made for the
-ships ahead to make more sail, in order to hasten their anchoring as soon
-as possible. In the meantime, the _St. Albans_ (the leading British ship)
-had taken up her station, and anchored at 3 p.m., and the other ships did
-the same in succession, while the centre and rear were closely engaged
-with the enemy, who pressed them close until every ship was anchored,
-when the French wore in succession and stood out to sea.”
-
-De Grasse made two fierce attacks on Hood next day.
-
-“On the morning of the 26th, at half-past eight,” continues our officer
-eye-witness, “the French fleet were seen coming round Nevis Point,
-intending to force a passage, but so singularly felicitous was the
-position taken up by the British Admiral, that when the enemy’s leading
-ship approached, the wind headed her, so that she could not fetch
-above the third ship in our line. The springs of our van ships were so
-admirably attended to that the broadsides of four of them were brought
-to bear at the same time upon the unfortunate Frenchmen, and were opened
-with tremendous effect.
-
-“The crash occasioned by their destructive broadsides was so tremendous
-on board the ship (the _Pluton_), that whole pieces of plank were seen
-flying from her off side ere she could escape. The French ships generally
-approached the British van with more caution, with the exception of
-some, among them being the _Ville de Paris_. De Grasse, in order to
-prolong the individual encounter as much as possible, counterbraced his
-after-yards to retard his ship’s way through the water along the British
-line; and so the French flagship was detained a considerable time abreast
-of the _Resolution_, _Prudent_, _Canada_, and _Alfred_ in succession, as
-the _Ville de Paris_ slowly forged ahead and fired upon them.
-
-“During this short but tremendous conflict between the respective
-combatants, nothing whatever could be seen of them for upwards of twenty
-minutes, save De Grasse’s white flag gracefully floating above the
-immense volume of smoke, or the pendants of the other ships.
-
-“In the afternoon the French made a second attack on our line. It
-commenced at fifty minutes past two, and was principally directed against
-the centre and rear, the morning attack having convinced them that the
-British van was not to be assailed with impunity. Never, perhaps, was a
-superior enemy so completely foiled as de Grasse was on this occasion.”
-
-Hood used all the means in his power to make good the advantage that he
-had gained, as we are further told:
-
-“Sir Samuel Hood not only secured his fleet from any assault by sea, but
-also took measures to prevent the enemy from molesting it from the land,
-where it was infinitely more vulnerable: for could they have thrown up
-any batteries on the hill situated above Green Point, his position would
-have been no longer tenable. To prevent such an attempt on the part of
-the enemy, he landed the troops that accompanied the fleet in Frigate
-Bay, where they took post on the eminence that commanded the narrow neck,
-which continues the southern point of St. Christopher’s with the main
-island.”
-
-[Illustration: THE FIRST FIGHT IN FRIGATE BAY, ST. KITTS
-
-_Admiral Sir Samuel Hood’s squadron of 22 ships (at anchor) beating off
-De Grasse’s opening attack, with 38 ships (shown coming into the bay
-under full sail) at 2.30 p.m. on January 25th, 1782._
-
-_Drawn by N. Pocock, “from a sketch made by a gentleman who happened at
-the time to be on a visit at a friend’s, on a height between Basse Terre
-and Old Road.”_]
-
-The troops made an effort to join hands with the garrison on Brimstone
-Hill as soon as possible after they had landed. They advanced rapidly,
-and in their first fight with the French covering force met with some
-success. Driving in the enemy’s outlying detachments, they advanced
-some way towards the French main position. Then the situation altered.
-De Bouillé himself, at the head of 4000 men, came on the scene. General
-Prescott, the British army officer in charge of the relief operations,
-had with him only 1,500 men, the soldiers from Antigua. He had refused
-to take the two battalions of marines (each of 500 men) which Hood had
-had prepared for service on shore and had urged him to take as well.
-Hopelessly outnumbered General Prescott had to fall back. In the end he
-was compelled to evacuate his camp near the sea and re-embark all his
-soldiers on board the fleet. That meant the doom of Brimstone Hill, and
-the colony of St. Kitts with it.
-
-The garrison under Governor Shirley and Brigadier Fraser—comprising the
-1st Battalion of the Royals, and the flank companies of the 15th Foot and
-a detachment of Royal Artillery, with a handful of local militiamen—from
-a thousand to twelve hundred men in all, still held out, doing their
-best. As long as they held out Hood made up his mind to stay where he
-was. Rodney was overdue now with his promised reinforcement from England,
-a dozen ships of the line. If Rodney arrived while the British flag was
-still flying in the island and could join hands with Hood, there was yet
-a chance of checkmating the enemy and of saving St. Kitts. But could
-Brimstone Hill hold out? It was more than doubtful.
-
-The place was naturally an impregnable fortress, but the fortifications
-had been badly placed. The garrison were not numerous enough to line the
-walls. They had no heavy guns mounted, and the enemy were day after day
-bombarding them with a pitiless fire that closed in on them more and
-more, and became fiercer and more deadly and destructive every hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is an ugly story—the tale of the fortifications of Brimstone Hill.
-Strong entrenchments had been planned a year before, and heavy guns sent
-out from England to be mounted on the ramparts. But the local authorities
-had not troubled to follow the plans, and what fortifications had been
-built had been run up incompletely and carelessly. The guns specially
-sent out from Woolwich for the works—brass 24-pounders and 13-inch
-mortars—had never been mounted at all. They had, as a fact, been left
-lying at the foot of the hill near the seashore, just as they had been
-landed, together with their gun carriages and every kind of equipment
-complete, besides tons of shot and shell. For over a year the local
-authorities had paid no heed to the repeated requests of the governor,
-and the general in command of the garrison in the island, to provide
-the labour and appliances indispensable for transporting the guns and
-material to the top of Brimstone Hill. Rodney himself during the previous
-summer had repeatedly urged the island local authorities, as a matter of
-public safety, to do their duty in the matter, but all had been in vain.
-The result was that de Bouillé and his army had on landing seized the
-guns and their ammunition, all lying there ready to hand. The French, in
-fact, had formed out of them the very siege train by means of which they
-were now able to batter down the weak fortifications on the hill above.
-The garrison, on the other hand, had only the few light 3-pounder and
-6-pounder field pieces belonging to the Royal Artillery, with which to
-reply.
-
-With the heavy guns provided from England in position, Brimstone Hill
-might well have held out till Rodney and his reinforcements had arrived
-and joined Hood, when the enemy must have paid dearly for their attempt.
-And, at the same time, without the English garrison guns at his disposal,
-de Bouillé would have been harmless. By an extraordinary coincidence the
-ship carrying the French siege train for St. Kitts had been wrecked on
-its way, and the second ship, carrying the French siege ammunition, had
-been captured by Hood. The French had actually no other siege artillery
-or ammunition nearer than in the gun park on shore at Martinique.
-
-Rodney, indeed, on learning the facts of the case at St. Kitts after
-his arrival, did not hesitate to write to England and to make other
-serious imputations on the loyalty of the colonials all through the whole
-business. “The inhabitants of Basseterre in St. Christopher’s,” he wrote,
-“suffered the enemy to land without firing a single gun, though they had
-three good batteries which might have done good service and destroyed
-many of the enemy, and certainly prevented their landing at Basseterre.”
-“Nor during all the time that Hood was lying off the capital, in Frigate
-Bay,” added Rodney, “did a single inhabitant come on board or afford the
-least intelligence.”
-
-The disaffection at St. Kitts, unfortunately, was no isolated case, as
-Rodney reported in the same dispatch. Actual treason, indeed, was rife
-among the white populations throughout the British West Indies, except in
-loyal Jamaica and at Antigua. The planter-militia forces in the various
-islands were worse than useless. “Barbados,” wrote Rodney, “is in no
-state of defence, and their legislature will not raise a penny to repair
-the fortifications.... They wish to be taken, but the rogues shall be
-disappointed while I remain here!” Dominica fell into the enemy’s hands
-through the vilest treachery. There the garrison of the principal fort
-defending the island, near Roseau, the capital, were made drunk by the
-colonials, who at the same time plugged up the touch-holes of their
-cannon and rendered the soldiers’ muskets useless by putting sand into
-the gun locks; after which they signalled to a French expeditionary
-column, which had secretly been assisted ashore that same night, to
-advance and take possession.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At sea, meanwhile, off Frigate Bay, de Grasse watched and waited,
-contenting himself with “observing” Hood from just outside gunshot range
-of the British fleet. During the three weeks between the 26th of January
-and the 13th of February, Hood’s men were, as the Admiral described,
-“under arms night and day,” but doing their duty all the time, as Hood
-put it, “with a cheerfulness and good humour which charmed me.” This
-was in spite of much privation. They were deficient in provisions and
-stores, having had but little time to take in anything at Antigua—short
-of water and “practically without bread, living on yams and country flour
-to eke out their own.” Powder and shot, too, were short in some of the
-ships. None of the fleet, indeed, had had an opportunity of replenishing
-magazines since they arrived in the West Indies after the fighting in the
-Chesapeake in the previous September.
-
-“The enemy’s fleet made frequent demonstrations of attacking us, but
-never came near enough to engage. On the 12th February their fleet
-amounted to thirty-two ships of the line, a strong reinforcement from
-France having joined, which not only supplied the place of their
-disabled ships, but contributed to swell their numbers. On the 13th the
-Comte de Grasse despaired of being able to assail with any prospect of
-success our little fleet of twenty-two ships, and prudently anchored off
-Nevis.”
-
-The end came for the Brimstone Hill garrison on the 13th of February.
-Further resistance was hopeless, and there seemed no prospect of relief
-reaching them. The ramparts had been beaten down; their ammunition
-was exhausted, most of their guns were disabled. De Bouillé summoned
-the place, announcing his intention of storming the works. Unable to
-offer more resistance the garrison surrendered, on terms that were
-complimentary to the very gallant resistance that they had made.
-
-Hood, at his anchorage in Frigate Bay, learned the unwelcome news by
-a flag of truce from the French camp near Basseterre next morning,
-Wednesday, the 14th of February. It meant that he must now look out for
-himself. The situation had changed to one of very serious danger for
-him. Not only was there de Grasse outside, with a fleet that was being
-reinforced almost daily with fresh ships from Martinique, but there
-was also the French army on shore. They had already begun throwing
-up batteries in which they were mounting the same heavy long range
-English guns by means of which they had reduced Brimstone Hill. The
-shot and shell from these would speedily render further continuance at
-the anchorage impossible. The enemy, moreover, had found an excellent
-position for their purpose on a lofty bluff whence they could sweep the
-anchorage from end to end.
-
-De Grasse’s fleet numbered ten ships more than Hood had; and most of the
-recent arrivals were 80-gun ships.
-
-De Grasse’s withdrawal to Nevis for a few hours in order to refit his
-fleet out of some storeships that had just arrived from France gave Hood
-his chance. The French Admiral made sure that in the circumstances there
-was no possibility of the British fleet escaping complete destruction.
-Off Nevis he could keep the English fleet in sight, and only a couple
-of hours sail from him. Hood seemed, as it were, between the upper and
-nether millstones: between the French fleet in overpowering force on one
-side, and the batteries on shore on the other, which also, as de Grasse
-knew, were to be ready to open fire next day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Once more, though, it was to be the old story of the slip between the cup
-and the lip. Hood essayed one desperate chance, and won it. He proved
-himself a good deal more than a match for de Grasse and de Bouillé on
-shore combined.
-
-The British Admiral lost no time over his preparations. He had made up
-his mind what to do within an hour of receiving the news of the fall of
-Brimstone Hill. And then he acted forthwith.
-
-At noon on the 14th Hood signalled for a lieutenant from every ship to
-come on board the flagship _Barfleur_. Certain special instructions
-were given out, and the officers were directed to come on board for
-further orders after dark—at nine o’clock that night. In accordance
-with the admiral’s instructions, at four in the afternoon every ship
-ostentatiously lowered top-gallant yards, making things snug for the
-night to all appearances, to spectators at a distance. Immediately it
-was dark, as quickly as possible stream-anchors were got in, and every
-preparation was rapidly made for putting to sea. These left every ship
-riding with only one anchor down, the small bower. At nine o’clock,
-as had been ordered also, top-gallant yards were quietly rehoisted
-and crossed on board every ship. Then the officers told to return for
-further orders, pulled silently off to the _Barfleur_ again and reported
-everything ready.
-
-Each officer on arriving was requested to go down to the _Barfleur’s_
-cabin. Hood was there, and he saw each one set his watch exactly by
-the flagship’s clock. Then all were ordered to return on board their
-respective ships. As the hands of the officers’ watches pointed to
-eleven, every ship was to cut her cable, come to sail at once, and
-get under way in line of battle ahead, every ship moving out to sea
-independently, steering to the westward, keeping on a given line of
-bearing. On no account must there be any noise—no hailing, no signalling
-whatever. Not a match must be struck on board, and all lights must be
-screened.
-
-Not a single mishap, not one mistake, from all accounts, marred the
-execution of the bold manœuvre.
-
-It was a black and moonless night. As six bells—eleven o’clock—clanged
-out on board the _Barfleur_, the other ships each struck six bells. The
-next moment a couple of heavy blows with an axe chopped the bower cable
-through on board every ship. Then, simultaneously, sails were let fall
-silently from the yards everywhere, and were swiftly and silently sheeted
-home. At once now, in unison, the whole fleet began to forge ahead,
-moving all together through the water. To aid in deceiving the enemy as
-to what was happening, lighted ship’s lanterns were left behind, lashed
-to poles set up on the casks that had served as cable buoys, making it
-appear from a very short distance off as though the fleet were still
-there, riding at anchor in the roads.
-
-The masterly _ruse_ succeeded to the full. The watch on board the English
-fleet could see the lights of some of de Grasse’s ships away to seaward.
-They themselves, one and all, entirely unobserved, passed out in the
-darkness. Not a trace of Hood’s twenty-two ships was visible when de
-Grasse came on deck on board his flagship, the _Ville de Paris_, next
-morning.
-
-They met Rodney at sea a few days later;—and then, in due course Rodney
-and Hood together smote the French once for all for that war, in the
-great battle of “The Glorious Twelfth of April,” 1782.[10]
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-THE PAGEANT OF THE _DONEGAL_:—A MEMORY OF ’98
-
- Joy! joy! the day is come at last, the day of hope and pride—
- And see! our crackling bonfires light old Bann’s rejoicing tide,
- And gladsome bell and bugle-horn from Newry’s captured towers,
- Hark! how they tell the Saxon swine this land is ours—is OURS!
-
- Come, trample down their robber rule, and smite its venal spawn,
- Their foreign laws, their foreign Church, their ermine and their lawn,
- With all the specious fry of fraud that robbed us of our own;
- And plant our ancient laws again beneath our lineal throne!
-
-
-The name Donegal has a significance to the Royal Navy that is all its
-own. It was designated by the Admiralty as a county cruiser name, for one
-of the ships of the _Kent_ and _Monmouth_ group; but there is more than
-that behind the name. _Donegal_ lettered on the stern of a man-of-war
-has its own traditions—associations of a yet wider interest to the
-British fleet. The name, as a fact, owes its appearance on the Navy List
-to a very special occasion. H.M.S. _Donegal_, in its origin, is only
-incidentally connected with County Donegal. The cruiser through her name
-stands, in fact, to remind the world that the Royal Navy does not “fear
-to speak of ’98.”
-
-It is quite a little drama how this particular man-of-war name first
-came to make its appearance on the roll of the British fleet; and in
-that form, perhaps, one may most effectively tell the story—as a sort
-of pageant, bringing the details forward in, as it were, a series of
-tableaux.
-
- * * * * *
-
-First we have the opening scene, in bustling Paris, in the month of
-August, 1798, something after this fashion:
-
- The Marseillaise is pealing! the crowds are mad with joy,
- With flags and failtë fêting the gallant Paris Boy,
- Who leads the bright procession of Frenchmen gay and bold?,
- The Students of the Quarter, the Latin Quarter Old;—
- They’re girt with dainty rapiers, they’re gloved with gloves of white,
- The knightly Gallic Swordsmen who love the People’s Right!
- They bear in bright procession a pledge from France’s shore,
- The busts of Hoche and Humbert beneath the Tricolour!
-
-Then we have a September scene far away. We are now among the wild,
-unkempt kerns and peasants of County Donegal, in their villages and rude
-moorland huts of turf and boulders, dotted among the lonely valleys
-far away amid the bare, desolate, wind-swept uplands and bleak, gaunt,
-long-backed ridges, shrouded for half the year in rolling grey mists from
-off the ocean, that range along the coasts of North-Western Ireland.
-Everywhere the men are hard at work, seated in groups round their peat
-fires, all actively engaged in pointing pikes and grinding axes, lashing
-scythe-blades to short poles, and putting a fresh edge to ugly crooked
-knives; crooning to themselves the while over their toil:—
-
- Oh, the Frinch are on the say,
- Says the Shan Van Voght—
- Oh, the Frinch are on the say,
- Says the Shan Van Voght—
- The Frinch are in the Bay,
- They’ll be here without delay,
- And the Orange will decay,
- Says the Shan Van Voght.
-
-Again we are on the coast; by Donegal Bay. It is the morning of Friday,
-the 12th of October, ’98, between seven and eight o’clock. Eager-faced,
-excited watchers line the crags of Bloody Foreland. From the wide, flat
-expanse of sea below comes up on the wind the dull, heavy, throbbing
-sound of a distant cannonade. It has been getting nearer since daybreak.
-It now comes nearer and nearer still; and by degrees, from the direction
-of Tory Island, on the horizon over yonder, where a grey rolling cloud of
-powder-smoke lies heavy over the sea, two squadrons of men-of-war, two
-straggling lines of ships, most of them firing fiercely, come dimly into
-view. One is assuredly the long-looked-for French—Commodore Bompart’s
-squadron from Brest, bringing three thousand French soldiers and Wolfe
-and Matthew Tone. They were to have landed at Lough Swilly yesterday
-and raised the country-side. The other is the English fleet—a British
-squadron that has followed round from Cawsand Bay under press of sail
-to look after M. Bompart. They picked up news of him off the Fastnet
-and Achill Island, and pushed on here. On the previous day at noon—as we
-learn later on—off Malin Head in a stiff north-westerly gale, the British
-look-outs sighted the French squadron; and they have been working to
-bring Monsieur Bompart to battle ever since.
-
-It looks likely to go hard with the French. At the last moment a mishap
-checked their attempt to give the British the go-by. Their best ship, the
-_Hoche_, a fine 80-gun two-decker, and M. Bompart’s own flagship, got
-disabled in a squall last night. Her maintopmast carried away, bringing
-down with it the main and mizen top-gallant masts and tearing a gaping
-rent in the mainsail. So Sir John Borlase Warren, the British Commodore,
-has been able to get level with his enemy, on whom he is now tacking
-to bring the fight to close quarters, in conditions where his superior
-force—three line-of-battle ships and five frigates to one line-of-battle
-ship, eight frigates, and a schooner—ought to decide M. Bompart’s fate
-before dinner-time.
-
-Eleven o’clock. The inevitable has happened. The Frenchmen have been
-overpowered at all points and broken up. The French Commodore is now only
-holding out as long as possible _pour l’honneur du pavillon_. In the
-centre of the battle, a dismantled wreck, with the scuppers running blood
-at every heave of the vessel on the swell, lies M. Bompart’s flagship,
-the hapless _Hoche_. Three British ships together—a sixty-four and two
-frigates—are pouring broadside after broadside into her without ceasing
-for a moment.
-
-Wolfe Tone, the story goes, was on board the _Hoche_, and refused at
-the outset a chance that was offered him to get away by a boat to the
-_Biche_, a fast-sailing schooner then about to make off, or to one of
-the French frigates, by which means alone it was possible for him to
-escape. “The action is hopeless,” said the French officers to him on the
-quarter-deck; “with the odds against us it can only have one end. We
-shall be prisoners of war; but what will become of you?” “No!” replied
-Tone. “Shall it be said that I fled when the French were fighting the
-battle of my country? No; I shall stand by the ship.” He went below and
-took charge of a division of guns in one of the batteries.
-
-The end, as the watchers on land soon see, comes swiftly. Further
-resistance would be murder. Beaten to a standstill, riddled like a sieve,
-with twenty-five guns disabled, more than half her men put _hors de
-combat_, her lower masts shot through and every moment threatening to go
-over the side, her rudder smashed to splinters, with five feet of water
-in the hold—down perforce has to come the _Hoche’s_ tricolor. So the
-battle ends.
-
-[Illustration: OUR FIRST _DONEGAL_
-
-_The captured French line of battle ship “Hoche,” being towed by the
-“Doris,” 36, Lord Ranelagh, into Lough Swilly. Drawn by N. Pocock, from a
-sketch made from the “Robust” by Captain R. Williams of the Marines._]
-
-It is just twenty minutes past eleven. Three other French ships,
-overtaken at their first attempt at flight, have already surrendered. The
-rest are making off, scattering over the horizon with British frigates
-in pursuit, to be run down and taken in the end—all of them except
-two.[11]
-
-The fourth tableau rings down on the piece. The last scene closes some
-weeks later in the quiet waters of the Hamoaze off Devonport Dockyard,
-whither the _Hoche_ was taken round, with the arrival of an Admiralty
-messenger at the Port Admiral’s office. He brings in his dispatch wallet
-an official memorandum that “My Lords have been pleased to direct Sir J.
-B. Warren’s prize to be registered in the List of the Navy by the name of
-the _Donegal_.”
-
-In this way it was that the name Donegal came originally into the Royal
-Navy for a man-of-war, and the battle of October, ’98, off the coast of
-Donegal is our present cruiser’s principal bond of connection with the
-county.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The luckless Wolfe Tone passed from the quarter-deck of the _Hoche_ to
-the condemned cell and a suicide’s grave. It came about in this way. The
-_Hoche_ was towed into Lough Swilly and the prisoners were landed and
-marched to Letterkenny. The Earl of Cavan invited the French officers
-to breakfast. Tone was amongst the guests. He was in a French military
-uniform. An old college companion at T.C.D., Sir George Hill, recognized
-him. “How do you do, Mr. Tone?” said Hill pointedly. “I am very happy
-to see you.” Tone greeted Hill cordially, and said, “How are you, Sir
-George? How are Lady Hill and your family?” The police, who had had
-information that Tone would be among the prisoners, lay in waiting in an
-adjoining room. Hill went to them, pointed to Tone, and said, “There is
-your man.” Tone was called from the table. He knew what it meant—that
-his hour had come, but he went cheerfully to his doom. Entering the
-next apartment, he was surrounded by police and soldiers, arrested,
-loaded with irons, and hurried off to Dublin Castle. There he was tried
-by court-martial and sentenced to be hanged within forty-eight hours.
-His request for a firing party was curtly refused. Curran got a writ of
-habeas corpus from Lord Chief Justice Kilwarden. But he was too late.
-Tone anticipated the execution of the law, and died by his own hand—with
-a penknife.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Donegal_ man-of-war served Great Britain for forty-seven years,
-keeping up to the last her reputation of being one of the swiftest
-two-deckers afloat.
-
-Trafalgar should have been one of her battle honours. One of the very
-smartest captains that ever trod a British quarter-deck, “a dear
-Nelsonian” of exceptional ability and merit, the gallant and chivalrous
-Sir Pulteney Malcolm, commanded the _Donegal_ at that time. The
-_Donegal_ had been sent by Nelson to Gibraltar to shift the low tier
-of water-casks just four days before the battle. While there, at two
-o’clock on the morning of Trafalgar day, Monday, the 21st of October, the
-_Weazle_ sloop-of-war came bustling into Gibraltar Bay, and firing alarm
-guns. She brought the fateful news that the enemy had left Cadiz and were
-at sea. Captain Blackwood, of the _Euryalus_, in command of Nelson’s
-inshore frigate squadron, had packed the _Weazle_ off to Gibraltar to
-call up the six ships of the line, recently detached from Nelson’s fleet,
-that had gone in there to fill up water-casks and refit.
-
-The _Donegal_ was lying with her sails unbent from the yards, her
-bowsprit out, and her fore-topmast and foreyard struck. All her powder
-had been landed, and the ship was fast alongside the Mole. The crew had
-not turned in, as Captain Malcolm was keen to rejoin Nelson off Cadiz at
-the earliest moment. When the _Weazle’s_ guns were first heard, they were
-hard at work shifting the lower tier of casks in the hold.
-
-Instantly the order was given to prepare for sea. With extraordinary
-celerity the casks were got back into their tiers, and the powder was
-hurried into the magazines. The foremast was set up and the bowsprit
-replaced, the running rigging rove, and the sails were bent to the yards.
-Every man of the seven hundred on board the _Donegal_ was working his
-hardest in one way or another. It proved, though, a twenty-two hours’
-job; it would have been a four days’ business in ordinary times. Before
-one o’clock on the morning of the 22nd they were hauling out from the
-Mole into the bay. Then sea-stores and provisions were taken on board.
-Before noon the _Donegal_ was ready for battle; a performance on which
-all concerned might justly pride themselves.
-
-Not one of the other five ships was nearly so well advanced, although
-they also had been striving their hardest. Gibraltar is distant from the
-scene of the battle off Cape Trafalgar, as the crow flies, just fifty
-miles; but no sound of the firing reached there as it would appear,
-although at places further off, both in Spain and on the African coast,
-they heard the cannonading plainly. All on board the ships at Gibraltar
-still hoped to be in time for the expected battle, as it was to them.
-
-A new spar had been ordered from the dockyard for the foreyard. It had
-not arrived by noon on the 23rd. It was forthcoming only at the last
-moment, just indeed as the _Donegal_ was in the act of weighing anchor.
-Sail was made at once, and they went out of Gibraltar Bay with the
-foreyard towing in the water alongside the ship, not yet hoisted on board.
-
-They had to beat out in the teeth of the wild storm, blowing a hard gale
-from the south-west, that, up the coast beyond Tarifa, was wrecking
-our Trafalgar prizes. Clawing out against the head wind, the _Donegal_
-won her way foot by foot, and by nightfall had gained the mouth of the
-Straits. Then they had to let go anchor, so as not to be swept back in
-spite of themselves. Next morning they weighed anchor, and once more
-went forward, forcing their way ahead against wind and storm and swamping
-seas.
-
-Damaged British ships began, one by one, to come in sight during the
-forenoon. The _Belleisle_ was made out, totally dismasted, in tow of
-a frigate. Then the _Victory_ was seen, partially dismasted and also
-in tow. The _Donegal_ made her number to the flagship as she passed.
-A little time afterwards a third British man-of-war, with her three
-topmasts gone, came into view. It was the _Téméraire_. The _Donegal_
-passed quite near, and hailed across: “What news?” The answer was shouted
-back from the _Téméraire_ through a speaking trumpet: “Nineteen sail of
-the line taken and Lord Nelson killed!”
-
-On board the _Donegal_ all were listening with straining ears. As the
-trumpet bawled the direful intelligence across, a shudder, we are told,
-seemed to run through the whole ship, followed by a deep, long drawn-out
-groan, plainly heard on board the _Téméraire_ as that ship swept past on
-her way.
-
-They reached Collingwood and the rest of the fleet off San Lucar a few
-hours later. At once the _Donegal_ found work to do in finishing off and
-taking possession of the stricken and dismasted Spanish three-decker _El
-Rayo_, one of the forlorn-hope squadron that had made the sortie from
-Cadiz on the 23rd, hoping to find the British fleet in serious distress
-after the battle and the storm, and to be able to recapture some of the
-prizes.
-
-Most of _El Rayo’s_ men were taken on board the _Donegal_. In connection
-with one of them, Captain Brenton tells this story. “A man fell overboard
-from the _Donegal_ in a gale of wind on this occasion; the usual cry was
-raised, when some one thoughtlessly called out, ”He is only a Spaniard.”
-“Supposing he is only a Spaniard?” said a gallant English seaman, seizing
-the end of a rope, and darting into the sea at the same time; “no reason
-the poor ⸺ should be drowned!” Happy am I to say, from the information of
-Sir P. Malcolm, both men were picked up.
-
-Besides that, the _Donegal_ rendered invaluable assistance to several of
-the badly-damaged British ships during the second gale between the 25th
-and the 28th; and in rescuing men from some of the prizes that had been
-driven ashore, or were in peril among the reefs here and there along the
-rock-bound coast.
-
-Wrote Collingwood a day or two afterwards: “Everybody was sorry that
-Malcolm was not there, because everybody knows his spirit and skill would
-have acquired him honour. He got out of Gibraltar when nobody else could,
-and was of infinite service to us after the action.”
-
-By way also of appreciation and acknowledgment of the magnificent
-services rendered by the _Donegal_ after the battle, the officers and men
-of the Trafalgar fleet, without one dissentient voice, agreed that the
-_Donegal_ should be specially permitted to have a share, equally with
-themselves, in the Nelson Monument, which the ship’s companies that
-fought at Trafalgar immediately after the battle jointly subscribed for,
-as their own personal tribute to their dead chief—the tall obelisk on
-Portsdown Hill at the back of Portsmouth Harbour.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Donegal_, three months later, was in the thick of the fighting in
-the brilliantly successful battle in the West Indies, when Vice-Admiral
-Sir John Duckworth, with a squadron detached by Collingwood off Cadiz,
-on special service, captured or destroyed an entire French squadron of
-five ships of the line from Brest, including the finest three-decker
-in the world, the great 110-gun ship _L’Impérial_, so named in honour
-of Napoleon himself. It was in this battle that the British flagship
-_Superb_ led down into the fight with a portrait of Nelson lashed to the
-mizen stay, and her band playing “Nelson of the Nile.”
-
-Three of the five French ships lowered their colours to Captain
-Malcolm and the _Donegal_. First she led off with a rattling exchange
-of broadsides with the mighty French flagship _L’Impérial_. Then she
-fastened on a second French ship, and after a sharp set to at close
-quarters made her give in. Passing on, the _Donegal_ engaged another
-French ship till her colours in turn came down. Then she ran on board
-one more Frenchman, the _Jupiter_, a ship that had already been hotly
-engaged. The _Jupiter_ surrendered to the _Donegal_ after next to no
-defence. Such was the _Donegal’s_ work that day, in a battle that is
-really unique in the completeness of its results, but which, owing to
-its having taken place within three months of Trafalgar, the world paid
-little heed to at the time, and we have since quite forgotten—lost sight
-of in the dazzling lustre of the greater event near home.
-
-Until after Waterloo had been won, the _Donegal_ helped to keep the seas
-for England, and on more than one occasion with shotted guns in the face
-of the enemy.
-
-Our second _Donegal_, a wooden 91-gun two-decker, built in the Fifties of
-the last century, was one of the very last sent afloat of our old “wooden
-walls.” She still exists, under the name of the _Vernon_, torpedo school
-ship at Portsmouth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The direct association between the _Donegal_ of the Royal Navy and County
-Donegal came into existence first of all in the case of the present
-armour-clad cruiser, the _Donegal_ of King Edward’s fleet. She is a
-sister ship of the _Kent_, and was launched and named by the Duchess
-of Abercorn, as wife of the Lord Lieutenant of Donegal, and at express
-desire of the King. The _Donegal_ of to-day was the second ship of our
-county cruisers to receive the honour of a special county presentation in
-commemoration of the name she bore. The presentation was made before the
-assembled officers and men of the ship by the Marquess of Hamilton, as
-M.P. for Derry City, and comprised a service of silver plate, inscribed
-as the gift of “the King’s subjects in the County of Donegal and the City
-of Derry.”[12]
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-ON BOARD OUR FLAGSHIPS AT TRAFALGAR
-
-
-CAPTAIN HARDY AND THOSE WHO MANNED THE _VICTORY_
-
- Heard ye the thunder of battle,
- Low in the South and afar?
- Saw ye the flush of the death-cloud,
- Crimson o’er Trafalgar?
- Such another day, never,
- England shall look on again,
- When the battle fought was the hottest,
- And the hero of heroes was slain!
-
-This is a glance at Captain Hardy, the captain of the _Victory_ at
-Trafalgar, his lieutenants and other quarter-deck officers of Nelson’s
-flagship, and also something of the men who manned the _Victory_ and
-where they came from.
-
-Incidentally this should be said of Nelson’s own personal connection with
-the _Victory_. Nelson’s first association with the _Victory_ dated back
-to many years before Trafalgar—ever since, indeed, the year in which
-he entered the Navy as a boy of twelve. At that time the _Victory_, in
-her seventh year afloat, was lying up in reserve at Chatham, the pride
-of the Medway, as the finest and biggest first-rate man-of-war in the
-British Navy. The boy Nelson while at Chatham saw her day after day for
-months, and must have gone on board her. Later on, during the four years
-that Nelson served in the Mediterranean under Hood and Jervis, between
-1793 and 1797, the _Victory_ was flagship of the fleet, and Nelson, as we
-know, was constantly on board her on business with the Admiral. It was on
-the _Victory’s_ quarter-deck also that Sir John Jervis, after the battle
-of Cape St. Vincent, publicly embraced Nelson and congratulated him on
-the magnificent display of heroic daring that he had made that day. In
-October, 1805, Nelson had flown his flag on board the _Victory_ for two
-and a quarter years, ever since the war began, having at the outset
-gladly accepted the offer of her for his flagship from what he knew of
-her as the fastest three-decker afloat.
-
-At Trafalgar “Nelson’s Hardy,” Captain Thomas Masterman Hardy, was
-captain of the _Victory_. He was not the “Captain of the Fleet,” that
-post being officially vacant during Captain George Murray’s absence on
-leave in England owing to urgent private affairs. Hardy’s charming manner
-and tact, however, and his pleasant way of “getting on” with everybody
-he had to do with in all circumstances, enabled Nelson to manage for
-the time being without so invaluable an aid as “Friend Murray” had ever
-proved himself. Hardy and Nelson had served together for nearly nine
-years on and off, ever since they first met, when Hardy was a lieutenant
-in the _Meleager_, a frigate in Nelson’s flying squadron off the Eastern
-Riviera. When Nelson hoisted his broad pennant on board the _Minerve_,
-towards the end of 1796, Hardy went with him, and he owed something to
-Nelson during the cruise. Just before the battle off Cape St. Vincent,
-when the _Minerve_ was passing the Straits off Gibraltar, with the
-Spanish fleet in pursuit of her, Hardy, then first lieutenant, put off
-in a boat to rescue a man who had fallen overboard. The man was picked
-up, but the boat was swept by the current right across the bows of the
-fast approaching enemy. On board the _Minerve_ they gave the boat up for
-lost, when Nelson, risking the capture of the ship and all on board,
-brought-to. “By God,” he called out, “I’ll not lose Hardy!” “Back the
-mizen topsail!” They picked the boat up almost under the bowsprits of
-the enemy, and got off scot-free. After that, the brilliant way in
-which Hardy led the _Minerve’s_ boats at the cutting out of the French
-brig-of-war _Mutine_ won him his post-captaincy and the command of his
-prize, in which he served until after the battle of the Nile when Nelson
-moved him into the _Vanguard_ in place of Flag-Captain Berry, sent home
-with the dispatches.
-
-Ever since the battle of the Nile Hardy had followed Nelson’s fortunes
-as his flag-captain in the various ships on board which Nelson had his
-flag—in the _Vanguard_ first of all, then in the _Foudroyant_, the _San
-Josef_, and the _St. George_. It was Hardy also who, on the night before
-the attack on Copenhagen, with cool daring, pulled with muffled oars
-close alongside the ships of the Danish line and took the soundings
-which practically enabled Nelson to win the battle.
-
-“A bachelor of 35, rather stout in build, with light eyes, bushy
-eyebrows, square broad face, plenty of chin, and a mouth whose corners
-played between humour and grimness,” is the portrait that a contemporary
-gives of Captain Hardy in 1805.
-
-Hardy—he lived to be Sir Thomas and K.C.B.—now lies in the mausoleum of
-the old pensioners’ burial ground at Greenwich Hospital—a veteran laid
-to his rest among veterans. No more fitting last abode surely could have
-been found for “Hardy of the _Victory_” than amongst those with whom he
-had lived and fought and had his being.
-
- And this be the verse that you grave for me,
- Here he lies where he wished to be;
- Home is the sailor, home from the sea,
- And the hunter home from the hill.
-
-He has his monument elsewhere: in his native Dorset, where there stands a
-massive column of stone, which the men and women of his county in their
-pride and affection subscribed for, and set up on a spur of Blackdown (or
-Blagdon) Hill, overlooking the little village of Portisham where Hardy
-lived as a boy, whence also he set out to accompany Nelson to Trafalgar.
-It stands in sight of the house where the Captain of the _Victory_ was
-born, on the one hand; while on the other it looks out across the vales
-towards the sea, not many miles away: a lonesome, wind-swept spot; a
-place to visit by oneself, say on some calm December afternoon, a little
-before the shortening winter twilight closes round, and look out from,
-seaward for choice—
-
- ... where afar
- The grey sky pales to the dim horizon,
- And the murm’ring Channel with its wand’ring sails,
- Drifts down through the winter’s day.
-
-Looking seaward from the top of the monument, standing there over nine
-hundred feet above the sea—twice and a quarter the height of St. Paul’s
-Cathedral—“the eye rests on an unbroken panorama of coast-line, extending
-from the Isle of Wight and St. Katherine’s Point on the east, to Start
-Point and the Tors of Dartmoor on the west.... Far down below lie,
-clearly spread out as if on a map, Weymouth and the Backwater, as well as
-Portland and the Chesil Beach, whilst St. Aldhelm’s Head and the Purbeck
-Hills to the left, and Thorncombe Beacon with Golden Cap beyond it to the
-right, stand out in prominent grandeur.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-These were Captain Hardy’s officers on board Nelson’s flagship, a
-complete list of the lieutenants and other quarter-deck officers serving
-in the _Victory_ on the 21st of October, 1805:—
-
-Lieutenants—John Pasco [Flag-Lieutenant] (wounded); John Quilliam; John
-Yule; Edward Williams; Andrew King; George Miller Bligh (wounded); George
-L. Brown; Alexander Hills; William Ram (killed).
-
-Master—Thomas Atkinson.
-
-Surgeon—William Beatty.
-
-Purser—Walter Burke.
-
-Chaplain—Rev. John A. Scott.
-
-Secretary—John Scott (killed).
-
-Gunner—William Rivers.
-
-Boatswain—William Wilmet.
-
-Carpenter—Wm. Bunce.
-
-Marine Officers—Captain—Charles W. Adair (killed); Lieutenants—Lewis
-Buckle Reeves (wounded); James G. Peake (wounded); Lewis Roteley.
-
-Master’s Mates and Midshipmen—William Chaseman; J. R. Walker; Thomas L.
-Robins; Samuel Spencer; Wm. H. Symons; Robt. C. Barton; James Green;
-Richard Bulkeley (wounded); John Carslake; Henry Carey; John Felton;
-Festing Grindall; Daniel Harrington; John Lyons; David Ogilvie; Alexander
-Palmer (killed); John Pollard; James Poad; Oliver Picken; William Rivers
-(wounded); James Robertson; Richard F. Roberts: Robert Smith (killed);
-Philip Thovez; Thomas Thresher; James Sibbald; Daniel Salter; Francis E.
-Collingwood; George A. Westphal (wounded).
-
-Surgeon’s Mates—Neil Smith; William Westenburgh.
-
-Clerk—Thomas Whipple (killed).
-
-First Class Volunteers—Henry Lancaster; Charles Chapell; J. R. Walker.
-
-Midshipman William Ward Perceval Johnson of the _Childers_ sloop-of-war,
-a former first-class Volunteer in the _Victory_, was on board the
-flagship at Trafalgar as the guest of his former messmates. He died in
-December, 1880, at the age of ninety, one of the five last survivors of
-Trafalgar, and the last surviving officer of those on board the _Victory_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At Trafalgar the _Victory’s_ nominal complement as a first-rate,
-comprising the “ship’s company,” numbered 837 officers and men, including
-in the total as well, 40 boys, 145 marines, and 8 “widows’ men.” She
-had actually on board on the 21st of October 804 of all ranks and
-ratings, with, in addition, 26 “supernumeraries for victuals”—under
-which category Nelson himself and his secretary and personal suite and
-certain others were returned. There were 24 officers, including Captain
-Hardy and 9 lieutenants, and the various warrant officers; and 31 mates,
-midshipmen, and clerks. In action 50 men were at the quarter-deck guns;
-20 were stationed on the forecastle; 150 on the main-deck; 180 on the
-middle-deck; and 225 on the lower-deck, where the heaviest guns were.
-These, it may be observed, had 15 men told off to each, as compared with
-12 men each to the middle-deck guns, and 10 men each to the guns on the
-main-deck, quarter-deck, and forecastle. The signal-staff, comprising
-a lieutenant, with a mate, 3 midshipmen and 9 men, were on the poop,
-where the marines had also their post. Forty-eight men and boys were
-employed in and about the ship’s three magazines in handing and passing
-cartridges, besides 19 more at the hatchways. All these were in addition
-to the powder-men—one man to each gun—employed on the battery decks in
-supplying the guns’ crews in action. Six men were told off to attend
-to the wounded in the cockpit under the orders of the surgeon and his
-mates—not a very large number in the circumstances; and there were also
-the small-arm men, the carpenter’s gangs to stop shot-holes and attend
-to leaks, men told off to see to the state of the rigging, and others in
-the various storerooms, at the helm, and so on. This brief _résumé_ will
-give an idea of the distribution of the _Victory’s_ ship’s company at
-quarters.
-
-[Illustration: REPRODUCTION OF THE OFFICIAL DRAWING OF THE _VICTORY’S_
-FORETOPSAIL AFTER TRAFALGAR AS RETURNED INTO STORE AT CHATHAM DOCKYARD IN
-MARCH, 1806]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ship’s books account for the nationality, or place of birth, of
-633 of the officers and men on board the _Victory_, as mustered on the
-17th of October, the last muster day before the battle (the Thursday
-before Trafalgar), not taking into reckoning the marines or the boys
-and supernumeraries. Of the total, 411 were of English birth, 64 were
-Scotsmen, 63 Irishmen, and 18 Welshmen. Three men were from Orkney
-and Shetland, 2 from the Channel Islands and 1 (Lieutenant Quilliam)
-from the Isle of Man. The remainder—71 men, were foreigners, from all
-quarters of the known world almost, got together, for the most part, out
-of merchant ships under impress warrants: 7 Dutchmen, 22 Americans, 2
-Danes, 3 Frenchmen, 1 Russian, 3 Norwegians, 6 Swedes, 2 North Germans
-from Hamburg and 1 Prussian, 9 from various islands in the West Indies,
-2 Swiss, 2 Portuguese, 1 African, 1 from Bengal and 1 from Madras, 4
-Italians, and 4 Maltese.[13]
-
-Of the Englishmen on board: Kent, the old maritime county of England
-in the day of the Cinque Ports, and the county of Admiral Rooke,
-who won Gibraltar for the British Empire, contributed twenty-seven;
-Devonshire, the county of Drake and Raleigh, twenty-four; Hampshire,
-twenty; Somerset, the county of Blake and Rodney and the Hoods, four;
-Hardy’s county, Dorset, sent fourteen, one of them from Captain Hardy’s
-own native village of Portisham; Nelson’s county, Norfolk, contributed
-fifteen; Suffolk, whence came Admiral Vernon and Broke of the _Shannon_,
-twelve; Essex, nine; Sussex, five; Cornwall, the county of Grenville
-of the _Revenge_, and “the great twin brethren” of the Seven Years’
-War, Hawke and Boscawen, seven; Northumberland, Yorkshire (the county
-of Martin Frobisher and Captain Cook), and Lancashire, eighteen each;
-Durham, seventeen; Lincolnshire, seven; Herefordshire and Oxford, six
-each. Wiltshire and Gloucester, five each. Old Benbow’s county of
-Shropshire had one representative on board the _Victory_ at Trafalgar.
-The other counties, men from which were in Nelson’s flagship that day,
-represented by four men each, or fewer, were Berkshire and Bedford,
-Worcestershire, Hereford and Cheshire, Surrey, Cambridgeshire, Notts,
-Middlesex, Leicester, Staffordshire (the county of Anson and St.
-Vincent), Derby, Northampton, Cumberland, and Westmoreland. London was
-represented on the _Victory’s_ books by a hundred and fifteen men,
-Liverpool and Shields by ten each, Newcastle by fourteen, Bristol by
-five, Sunderland by four, Manchester by three. Birmingham, Leeds, Bury,
-Winchester, Canterbury were among other places represented on board; and
-nearly every coast town from Tweedmouth, Hull and Grimsby, and round
-to Falmouth and St. Ives, had two or three men with Nelson. There were
-Scotsmen there from nearly every Scottish county, from Caithness and
-Banff, Ross, and Cromarty, Aberdeen and Inverness, Fife and Forfar,
-Berwick, Renfrew, Galloway, Lanark, the county of that _preux chevalier_
-among British naval officers, Cochrane, Lord Dundonald, “the daring in
-war,” Ayr and Argyll. Eleven men from Edinburgh were on board; five from
-Glasgow; seven from Dundee, the birthplace of Duncan of Camperdown; with
-men from Leith, and Peterhead, Dumbarton, and Greenock. From Ireland, in
-like manner, men from Donegal fought the _Victory’s_ guns side by side
-with men from County Down and Roscommon, Meath and Carlow, Galway and
-Sligo, Cavan, Wexford and Waterford, Tipperary and County Cork. Fourteen
-men from Dublin were in the British flagship at Trafalgar; eleven from
-Cork; ten from Waterford City and Belfast; Carrickfergus and Kinsale were
-also represented on board.
-
-There were men of all ages between twenty and fifty in the crew of the
-_Victory_ at Trafalgar, and boys from ten years old—the age of little
-Johnnie Doag, an Edinburgh boy, rated as a “First Class Boy,” and
-probably the youngest person present on either side at Trafalgar—to lads
-of eighteen or nineteen. Four others of the thirty-one in the flagship
-(nine short of the complement) were just twelve years old, and six
-others, thirteen. The great majority of the men on board were from twenty
-to thirty years of age. About 10 per cent were over forty, the majority
-of these being between forty-seven and fifty. One of the “powder-monkeys”
-on board the _Victory_, it was discovered later, was a woman. Her
-husband was also on board the ship. She was a native of Port Mahon, and
-an officer who saw her there in 1841 described her as being then “a
-sturdy woman of 70.” The last survivor of the seamen and marines on board
-the _Victory_ at Trafalgar died at Dundee in November, 1876.
-
-This interesting detail in regard to the _Victory’s_ crew should be
-mentioned in addition. Practically 30 per cent of the seamen were
-volunteers, so the ship’s muster-book states. It records in the column
-headed “_Whence and whether Prest or not_,” the word “Vol” against 181 of
-the names, out of a total of 628 able and ordinary seamen and landsmen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There were, of course, men of all callings in civil life among the
-crew—as swept on board by the press-gang for the most part. According to
-inquiries made by officers on their own account, almost every trade and
-calling of every-day life contributed its quota in those times to the
-assortment on board our men-of-war. Collingwood, it is on record, had
-among the impressed men sent to one of his ships, a black San Domingo
-general, who had somehow found his way across the Atlantic; and also
-a Sussex market gardener, and a milkman, these last sent to him for
-top-gallant-yard men—poor fellows!
-
-On board the _Elizabeth_, a seventy-four, for instance, out of a ship’s
-company 395 in number, only 177, it is on record, were seamen or of
-callings connected with the sea: merchantman-sailors, fishermen,
-watermen, and dockyard hands. The other 218 were stated thus: 108
-labourers, 5 joiners, 6 tailors, 14 weavers, 5 coopers, 6 blacksmiths,
-3 whitesmiths, 1 slater, 1 umbrella-maker, 1 butcher, 10 shoemakers, 1
-poulterer, 2 stocking-makers, 1 dry-salter, 7 farmers, 1 coppersmith,
-4 servants, 3 gardeners, 2 curriers, 1 mattress-maker, 1 tobacco
-manufacturer, 1 fustian-cutter, 1 cotton manufacturer, 1 clockmaker,
-1 watchmaker, 2 waiters, 1 brickmaker, 2 bricklayers, 1 soldier, 1
-stonecutter, 2 sawyers, 7 painters, 1 corn-factor, 1 staymaker, 1
-glassmaker, 2 hatters, 1 wiremaker, 1 potter, 1 miller, 1 mason, 1 miner,
-1 chimney sweep. The same kind of mixture was found on board another
-seventy-four, with these additional items: 1 linen draper, 1 artificial
-flower-maker, 1 milliner, 1 hinge-maker, 6 more hatters, 5 more barbers,
-and another umbrella-maker, 1 button-maker and 1 thimble-maker, 2 flax
-and hemp dressers, 3 coach and harness makers, 4 dyers, 1 tanner, 1
-maltster, 1 calendarman, 2 wool-combers, 1 pipe-borer, 1 warehouseman, 1
-tallow-chandler, 1 sadler, 3 pedlars, 1 violin-maker, 1 schoolmaster, and
-1 optician. All was fish that came to the press-gang’s net.
-
-Again, too, to take another case. Captain T. Byam Martin (afterwards Sir
-Thomas and Admiral of the Fleet), of the _Implacable_, in May, 1808,
-checked the composition of his ship’s company man by man, and sent the
-results of his investigation to his brother. “I have just now,” he wrote,
-“been amusing myself in ascertaining the diversity of human beings which
-compose the crew of a British ship of war, and as I think you will be
-entertained with a statement of the ridiculous medley, it shall follow
-precisely as their place of nativity is inserted in the ship’s books:
-English 285, Irish 130, Welsh 25, Isle of Man 6, Scots 29, Shetland 3,
-Orkneys 2, Guernsey 2, Canada 1, Jamaica 1, Trinidad 1, St. Domingo 2,
-St. Kitts 1, Martinique 1, Santa Cruz 1, Bermuda 1, Swedes 8, Danes 7,
-Prussians 8, Dutch 1, Germans 3, Corsica 1, Portuguese 5, Sicily 1,
-Minorca 1, Ragusa 1, Brazils 1, Spanish 2, Madeira 1, Americans 28, West
-Indies 2, Bengal 2. This statement does not include officers of any
-description, and may be considered applicable to every British ship, with
-the exception that _very few of them have so many native subjects_.”
-
-Of those who fought on board the _Victory’s_ special companion-in-arms
-at Trafalgar, the “Fighting” _Téméraire_, Ireland contributed just
-two-fifths of the total ship’s company—220 men out of 550.[14] They
-came from all parts, according to the ship’s books, mostly from
-Waterford, Belfast, Limerick, and Wexford; and about a third from
-Dublin, Newry, Kildare, Galway, Kilkenny, and Cork. Scotland supplied
-the _Téméraire_ with 58 men; hailing, the greater number of them, from
-Aberdeen, Inverness, Dundee, Greenock and Glasgow, Leith and Edinburgh.
-Wales contributed 38 men all told; from Swansea, Cardiff, Pembroke,
-and Milford, for the most part. Of all the Englishmen on board the
-“Fighting” _Téméraire_ at Trafalgar, one county by itself contributed
-practically a third of the number—Devonshire. They counted 52 men,
-drawn from all over the county: Bideford and Barnstaple, Exeter,
-Tavistock, Dorlish [_sic_], Ilfracoome [_sic_], Tiverton, and Dartmouth
-and Paignton. From London came 30 men in all. Lancashire had as many
-representatives in the ship as all Wales, 38—all except three hailing
-from Liverpool or Manchester. Somerset had 24, Cornwall 20, Yorkshire
-13, Northumberland and Durham 10 each. These are the numbers from the
-other English counties: Norfolk 8 men, Hampshire 7, Kent 6, Cumberland
-and Gloucestershire each 5; Essex, Dorset, Chester each 4; Middlesex 3;
-Derbyshire, Warwick, Sussex, Cambridge, Worcester, and Suffolk each 2;
-Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Shropshire, Leicester, Surrey, Hereford,
-and The Isle of White [_sic_] 1 man each. There were 8 Manxmen at
-Trafalgar on board the “Fighting” _Téméraire_; 2 Jerseymen, and 1 man
-from Guernsey. Jamaica had 1 man on board, and Newfoundland 2 men. As
-usual, a number of foreigners figure on the books—66 altogether. They
-included: 28 Americans, 9 Germans (mostly from Hamburg and Emden),
-6 Swedes, 5 Portuguese, 3 Frenchmen, 3 Spaniards, 1 Dutchman, 1
-Cape-Dutchman, 1 from “Sclavonia” (Peter Valentine by name), 1 Viennese
-(Emil Joaquim), 1 from Old Calabar (a negro named Ephraim) and the
-remainder from Santa Cruz and other non-British islands in the West
-Indies.
-
-The log of the _Victory_ for the day after the battle accounts for all
-who fell on board Nelson’s flagship, whether killed or wounded. It sets
-out the full list in this form:—
-
-“A return of men killed and wounded on board his Majesty’s ship
-_Victory_, bearing the flag of the Right Honourable Lord Viscount Nelson,
-K.B., Duke of Bronté, Vice-Admiral of the White and Commander-in-Chief,
-on the 21st day of October, 1805, in an engagement with the combined
-fleets of France and Spain off Cape Trafalgar. Thomas Masterman Hardy,
-Esq., Captain.
-
- KILLED
- _Names_ _Quality_
- The Right Hon. Lord
- Viscount Nelson, K.B.,
- Duke of Bronté Commander-in-Chief
- John Scott, Esq. Secretary
- C. W. Adair Captain, Royal Marines
- William Ram 9th lieutenant, R.N.
- Robert Smith Midshipman
- Thomas Whipple Captain’s clerk.
- James Mansel Ab.[15]
- Thomas Daniels L.M.
- Thomas Thomas (1st) Ab.
- James North Ordinary
- Alfred Taylor Do.
- James Parke Do.
- William Shaw L.M.
- Richard Jewell Ordinary
- Charles Davis (1st) Do.
- John Bowlin L.M.
- William Brown (1st) Ab.
- William Mark Do.
- George Smith (1st) L.M.
- John Wharton Ordinary
- John King Quarter-gunner
- Robert Davison Ab.
- Edward Waters Do.
- John Cowarden Ordinary
- William Thompson (3rd) Ab.
- Thomas Johnson Quartermaster
- Andrew Sack Yeoman of signals
- Alexander Walker Ab.
- Arthur Hervin Ordinary
- John Welch (2nd) Ab.
- William Skinner Ordinary
- Joseph Ward Do.
- James Skinner Do.
- Stephen Sabine 3rd class (boy)
- George Welch 2nd class (boy)
- Collin Turner 3rd class (boy)
-
- _Royal Marines_
-
- George Cochran Corporal
- James Berry Drummer
- James Green Private
- John Brown (1st) Do.
- Lambert Myers Do.
- Samuel Wilks Do.
- George Kennedy Do.
- Daniel Hillier Do.
- John Brannon Do.
- James Norgrove Do.
- Jeremiah G. Lewis Private
- George Wilmott Do.
- Bernard McNamara Do.
- John Ebbsworth Do.
- William Coburne Do.
- William Jones Do.
- William Perry Do.
- John Palmer Do.
-
- WOUNDED DANGEROUSLY
-
- John Pasco Signal-lieutenant, R.N.
- William Rivers (2nd) Midshipman
- Alexander Palmer[16] Do.
- John Bush Ordinary
- Daniel McPherson L.M.
- John Bergen Ordinary
- Henry Cramwell[16] L.M.
- William Jones (3rd) Do.
- Hans Andersen Ab.
- David Buchan Do.
- Joseph Gordon[16] Ordinary
- William Smith (2nd)[16] Do.
- John Smith (2nd) Do.
- John Saunders 3rd class (boy)
-
- _Marines_
-
- William Taft Corporal
- Thomas Raynor Private
- John Gregory Do.
- William Knight Do.
- James Bengass Do.
- William Wells Do.
- Benjamin Cook Do.
- James Hines Do.
- Benjamin Matthews Private
- Thomas Wilson Do.
- Nicholas Dear Do.
-
- BADLY WOUNDED
-
- George M. Bligh 6th lieutenant, R.N.
- Lewis B. Reeves 2nd lieutenant, R.M.
- William Honnor Quarter-gunner
- Jeremiah Sullivan Ab.
- Peter Hale L.M.
- Thomas Green (1st) Ab.
- John Francois Ordinary
- William Castle Ab.
- George Burton Ordinary
- James Parker Do.
- Edward Dunn Do.
- Edward Padden Private, R.M.
-
- SLIGHTLY WOUNDED
-
- J. G. Peake 1st lieutenant, R.M.
- George A. Westphal Midshipman
- Richard Bulkeley Do.
- John Geoghegan Clerk to agent victualler
- Josiah McPherson L.M.
- Thomas Graham Ordinary
- Thomas Collard Ab.
- Robert Phillips L.M.
- John Kinsale Ordinary
- Charles Legge L.M.
- David Conn Do.
- Daniel Leary Ab.
- William Taylor Ordinary
- John Simm Ab.
- Samuel Cooper Do.
- William Gillett Ordinary
- John Bornkworth Do.
- Robert Gibson Ab.
- Angus McDonald Do.
- George Quinton Quarter-gunner
- Edward Grey Ordinary
- Samuel Brown Yeoman of powder-room
- William Butler Ab.
- Samuel Lovett Do.
- Daniel Munro Do.
- James Curry Do.
- Michael McDonald Ordinary
- William Fall Ab.
- Michael Pennill Do.
- Thomas Pain Do.
- John Knight Boatswain’s mate
-
- _Marines_
-
- Giovanni Giunti Private
- Charles Chappele Do.
- Samuel Green Do.
- James Fagen Do.
- Isaac Harris Do.
- John Dutton Do.
- George Graves Do.
- James Rogers Do.
- George Coulston Do.
- Nicholas le Contre Do.
- Thomas Crofton Do.
-
- Killed 54
- Dangerously wounded 25
- Badly wounded 12
- Slightly wounded 42”
-
-One or two eye-witnesses’ accounts from on board the _Victory_, at and
-immediately after Trafalgar, give interesting glimpses of what went
-on in the ship during the fight. First of all, there is the formal,
-matter-of-fact tale as set out in the log:—
-
-“At 11.30 the enemy opened upon the _Royal Sovereign_. At 11.40 the
-_Royal Sovereign_ commenced firing on the enemy. At 11.50, the enemy
-began firing on us and the _Téméraire_.
-
-“At noon, standing for the enemy’s tenth ship, with all possible (sail)
-set. Light airs and cloudy. Standing towards the enemy’s van with all
-sail set. At 4 minutes past 12, opened our fire on the enemy’s van in
-keeping down their line. At 20 minutes past 12, in attempting to pass
-through the enemy’s line, we fell on board of the 10th and 11th ships,
-when the action became general. About 1.15, the Right Honourable Lord
-Viscount Nelson, K.B., and Commander-in-Chief was wounded in the shoulder.
-
-“At 1.30 the _Redoutable_ having struck her colours we ceased firing
-our starboard guns, but continued engaging the _Santisima Trinidad_ and
-some of the enemy’s ships on the larboard side. Observed the _Téméraire_
-between the _Redoutable_ and another French ship of the Line, both of
-which had struck. Observed the _Royal Sovereign_ with the loss of her
-main and mizen-masts, and some of the enemy’s ships around her dismasted.
-At 3.10 observed four sail of the enemy’s van tack and stand along our
-line to windward. Fired our larboard guns at those which could reach
-them. At 3.40 made the signal for our ships to keep their wind and
-engage the enemy’s van coming along our weather line. At 4.15 the Spanish
-Rear-Admiral to windward struck to some of our ships which had tacked
-after them. Observed one of the enemy’s ships blow up, and 14 sail of the
-enemy standing towards Cadiz, and 3 sail of the enemy standing to the
-southward. Partial firing continued until 4.30, when a victory having
-been reported to the Right Honourable Lord Viscount Nelson, K.B., and
-Commander-in-Chief, he then died of his wound.”
-
-Then we have this personal narrative from one of the men on deck, as told
-in a quaint letter which James Bagley, a marine of the _Victory_, wrote
-home to his sister, while the ship was lying at Spithead with Nelson’s
-body on board, awaiting orders to proceed round to the Nore:—
-
- “_Victory_, SPITHEAD, _Dec. 5, 1805_.
-
- “DEAR SISTER,
-
- “Comes with my kind love to you are in good health so thank God
- I am; for I am very certain that it is by his mercy that me and
- my country is, and you and your religion is kept up; for it
- has pleased the Almighty God for to give us a complete victory
- of the combined fleets of France and Spain; for there was a
- signal for them being out of Cadiz the 19th of October, but we
- did not see them till the 21st, in the morning, and about 12
- o’clock we gave three cheers, and then the engagement began
- very hot on both sides, but about five o’clock the victory was
- ours, and twenty sail-of-the-line struck to us. They had 34
- sail-of-the-line and we had 27 of the line, but the worst of
- it was, the flower of the country, Lord Nelson, got wounded at
- twelve minutes past one o’clock, and closed his eyes in the
- midst of victory. Dear sister, it pleased the Lord to spare
- my life, and my brother Thomas his, for he was with the same
- gentleman. It was very sharp for us, I assure you, for we had
- not a moment’s time till it was over, and the 23rd of the same
- instant we got a most shocking gale of wind, and we expected
- to go to the bottom, but, thanks be to God, He had mercy on
- us, for every ship of ours got safe into harbour, and all the
- French but four got knocked to pieces on the rocks. So that is
- the most I can tell you of it, for the English is in a right
- cause you may depend on it, or else the Lord would not have had
- the mercy on us as He has had, for we made five ships strike to
- the ship has I am in. We had 125 killed and wounded, and 1500
- in the English fleet killed and wounded, and the enemy 12,000;
- so I shall leave you to judge how your country fight for the
- religion you enjoy, the laws you possess, and on the other hand
- how Bounaparte has trampt them causes down in the places he has
- had concern with, for nothing but torment is going forward. So
- never think it is disgrace to having brothers in service; but I
- have had pretty well on it, and when you write to our mother,
- give my love to my sister Betty and my poor mother, and send
- me word about her and you shall have your loving brother’s
- thanks. So must conclude with hoping this will bring you peace
- and love and unity. Then you and me and our dear mother will
- meet together to enjoy the fruits of the island as I have been
- fighting for. My dear, I shall just give you a description of
- Lord Nelson. He is a man about five feet seven, very slender,
- of an affable temper; but a rare man for his country, and has
- been in 123 actions and skrimmages, and got wounded with a
- small ball, but it was mortal. It was his last words, that it
- was his lot for me to go, but I am going to heaven, but never
- haul down your colours to France, for your men will stick to
- you. These words was to Captain Hardy, and so we did, for we
- came off victorious, and they have behaved well to us, for they
- wanted to take Lord Nelson from us, but we told Captain as we
- brought him out we would bring him home; so it was so, and he
- was put into a cask of spirits. So I must conclude. Your loving
- brother,
-
- “JAMES BAGLEY.”[17]
-
-After her arrival in English waters with Nelson’s body on board, the
-_Victory_, while on her way round to the Nore, was delayed for some days
-by head winds in the Downs. A very interesting letter from a visitor to
-her, dated from Dover, the 16th of December, 1805, is in existence.
-
-“I am just come from on board the _Victory_,” says the writer. “She is
-very much mauled, both in her hull and rigging, has upwards of 80 shot
-between wind and water: the foremast is very badly wounded indeed, and
-though strongly fished, has sunk about six inches: the mainmast also is
-badly wounded, and very full of musket shots: she has a jury-mizen mast,
-and fore and main top masts, and has a great many shot in her bowsprit
-and bows; one of the figures which support the Arms has both the legs
-shot off. I clearly ascertained that Lord Nelson was killed by a shot
-from the main top of the _Redoutable_: he was standing on the starboard
-side of the quarter-deck with his face to the stern when the shot struck
-him, and was carried down into one of the wings: he lived about one hour,
-and was perfectly sensible until within five minutes of his death. When
-carrying down below, although in great pain, he observed the tiller ropes
-were not sufficiently tight, and ordered tackles to be got on them, which
-now remain. The ship he engaged was so close that they did not fire their
-great guns on board the enemy, but only musketry; and manned the rigging
-on board; but nearly the whole that left the deck were killed. The ship
-had 25 guns dismounted by the _Victory’s_ fire. A shot carried away four
-spokes from the wheel of the _Victory_, and never killed or wounded any
-of the men steering. Temporary places have been fitted up between the
-decks for the wounded men, which are warmed by stoves.”
-
-We will take our leave of the _Victory_ for the present with a second
-letter, dated “Sheerness, the 24th of December,” on the _Victory’s_
-arrival in the Medway, bound for her home port, Chatham, to repair there
-after the battle. It was just two days after Nelson’s remains had been
-removed to Greenwich Hospital on the way to St. Paul’s.
-
-“The inhabitants of this place had yesterday the satisfaction of
-welcoming the old _Victory_ and her gallant crew to the River Medway: the
-noble ship passed close to the Garrison Point, and was received with an
-enthusiastic cheering from the shore, which was returned by her crew. The
-civilities of the officers of the _Victory_ have been beyond belief in
-satisfying the anxious curiosity of numbers who have been on board to see
-the ship and the spot where our gallant Nelson fell and died. The fatal
-bullet that deprived him of his valuable life is in the possession of the
-surgeon of the _Victory_, just as he extracted it from the body, with
-part of the epaulet and coat adhering to it. Many of the poor wounded
-fellows are on board, nearly well and in good spirits. The bullets in the
-lower part of the mainmast are so thick that it is surprising how anyone
-on the quarter-deck could have escaped, especially the brave Captain
-Hardy, whose amiable character seems to be the greatest alleviation the
-officers and crew of the _Victory_ have for the loss of their Nelson.”
-
- UNDER FIRE WITH COLLINGWOOD
-
- And when the loving cup’s in hand,
- And Honour leads the cry,
- They know not old Northumberland
- Who’ll pass his memory by.
-
- When Nelson sailed from Trafalgàr
- With all his country’s best,
- He held them dear as brothers are,
- But one beyond the rest!
-
-The splendid service that the _Royal Sovereign_ rendered on the 21st of
-October, 1805, should appeal to every British man and boy. In the words
-of Captain Blackwood—“Nelson’s Blackwood”—who watched the fight, written
-immediately after the battle, “of the _Victory_ and the _Royal Sovereign_
-it is impossible to say which achieved the most.” The _Royal Sovereign_
-had been with Nelson off Toulon in 1804. She had gone home to refit when
-Nelson went across the Atlantic in pursuit of Admiral Villeneuve. She
-rejoined the British fleet off Cadiz just ten days before Trafalgar, when
-Collingwood, who had hitherto had his flag in the _Dreadnought_, moved
-into her.
-
-Two interesting preliminary glimpses of Admiral Collingwood on board
-the _Royal Sovereign_, on the morning of Trafalgar Day, are given us by
-his biographer, Mr. G. L. Newnham Collingwood, who had access to the
-Admiral’s papers and letters after his death, and took all possible pains
-to get together everything that could be gathered about him from those
-who served with Collingwood in the great battle.
-
-Admiral Collingwood’s “personal conduct on that memorable day well
-deserves to be recorded. It has been said that no man is a hero in the
-eyes of his valet de chambre, but that this is not universally true
-is proved by the account which was given ... by Mr. Smith, Admiral
-Collingwood’s valued servant. ‘I entered the Admiral’s cabin,’ he
-observed, ‘about daylight, and found him already up and dressing. He
-asked if I had seen the French fleet, and on my replying that I had not,
-he told me to look out at them, adding that in a very short time we
-should see a great deal more of them. I then observed a crowd of ships to
-leeward, but I could not help looking with still greater interest at the
-Admiral, who, during all this time, was shaving himself with a composure
-that quite astonished me.’”
-
-This is what Collingwood said to his flag-lieutenant and the other
-officers, on the Admiral’s first coming up on deck: “Admiral Collingwood
-dressed himself that morning with peculiar care, and soon after, meeting
-Lieutenant Clavell, advised him to pull off his boots. ‘You had better,’
-he said, ‘put on silk stockings, as I have done; for if one should
-get a shot in the legs, they would be so much more manageable for the
-surgeon.’ He then proceeded to visit the decks, encouraged the men to
-the discharge of their duty, and, addressing the officers, said to them,
-‘Now, gentlemen, let us do something to-day which the world may talk of
-hereafter.’”
-
-Then we have this incident, which occurred in the forenoon, as the
-British fleet was closing on the enemy:—
-
-“Lord Nelson had been requested by Captain Blackwood (who was anxious for
-the preservation of so invaluable a life) to allow some other vessel to
-take the lead, and at last gave permission that the _Téméraire_ should
-go ahead of him, but resolving to defeat the order which he had given,
-he crowded more sail on the _Victory_ and maintained his place. The
-_Royal Sovereign_ was far in advance when Lieutenant Clavell observed
-that the _Victory_ was setting her studding-sails, and with that spirit
-of honourable emulation which prevailed between the squadrons, and
-particularly between these two ships, he pointed it out to Admiral
-Collingwood, and requested his permission to do the same. ‘The ships
-of our line,’ replied the Admiral, ‘are not yet sufficiently up for
-us to do so now, but you may be getting ready.’ The studding-sail and
-royal halliards were accordingly manned, and in about ten minutes the
-Admiral, observing Lieutenant Clavell’s eyes fixed upon him with a look
-of expectation, gave him a nod, on which that officer went to Captain
-Rotherham and told him that the Admiral desired him to make all sail. The
-order was then given to rig out and hoist away, and in one instant the
-ship was under a crowd of sail, and went rapidly ahead. The Admiral then
-directed the officers to see that all the men lay down on the decks and
-were kept quiet.”
-
-The _Royal Sovereign’s_ captain at Trafalgar, Collingwood’s
-flag-captain, was, like his Admiral, a gallant Northumbrian, Edward
-Rotherham, the son of a Hexham doctor. Of him that day the following
-story is told. As the battle was about to open, it was pointed out to
-Captain Rotherham that the unusually big cocked hat that he wore would
-probably render him a special target for the marksmen in the enemy’s
-tops. “Let me alone,” was all Rotherham’s reply, “Let me alone. I’ve
-always fought in a cocked hat and I always will!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-As pre-arranged by Nelson, the British lee column at Trafalgar, fifteen
-ships strong, began the action before the weather column, by leading down
-and breaking the enemy’s line near its centre. The manœuvre was begun a
-few minutes before noon, when, at Collingwood’s order, the _Sovereign_,
-with every sail set and every reef shaken out, dashed forward by
-herself, sailing “like a frigate,” ahead of the whole British fleet.
-Taking on herself the fire of the enemy’s line, centre and rear, as she
-advanced, she swept resistlessly under the stern of the Spanish flagship
-_Santa Anna_, a gigantic 112-gun three-decker, nearly a mile in front
-of Collingwood’s second astern, the _Belleisle_—“the most remarkable
-incident of the battle, a feat unparalleled in naval history,” as it has
-been called. “See,” exclaimed Nelson with delight to Captain Hardy, as he
-watched the _Sovereign’s_ advance; “see how that noble fellow Collingwood
-carries his ship into action!” Just at the moment, as it happened, on
-the _Royal Sovereign’s_ quarter-deck, Collingwood himself was saying to
-his captain, “Rotherham, what would not Nelson give to be here!”
-
-We know from what a French officer at Trafalgar wrote, that the confident
-daring of the _Sovereign’s_ single-handed advance “positively appalled
-Villeneuve!”[18]
-
- * * * * *
-
-King George the Third, in effigy, led his own fleet that day. The _Royal
-Sovereign’s_ figure-head was an immense full-length carving of the King,
-represented in the battle-day panoply of a Roman Emperor, his sword at
-his side and a sceptre in hand, his red war cloak (_paludamentum_) on his
-shoulders, with two attendant winged figures, Fortune and Fame, blowing
-trumpets on either side.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As the _Sovereign_ closed on the enemy, a French ship, the _Fougueux_,
-ranged up close under the stern of the _Santa Anna_, as though to bar
-the passage through the line to Collingwood. Captain Rotherham noted
-this, and pointed it out to the Admiral. Collingwood’s reply was: “Steer
-straight for the Frenchman and take his bowsprit!” So they closed,
-and then, driving through the line just under the towering Spanish’s
-ship’s stern, the _Sovereign_ opened the fight with her full broadside
-treble-shotted. The terrific discharge, at one blow, it has been related,
-disabled fourteen guns, and put a large part of the crew _hors de
-combat_. “El rompio todos” were the words of an officer of the _Santa
-Anna_. After that the Sovereign ranged alongside the big Spaniard to
-leeward to fight the battle out gun-muzzle to gun-muzzle.
-
-[Illustration: TRAFALGAR—12 NOON: AS SKETCHED ON THE SPOT BY A FRENCH
-OFFICER
-
-_French flagship, “Bucentaure,” 80 guns._
-
-_“Redoutable,” 74 guns, from which Nelson was shot._
-
-_Collingwood in the “Royal Sovereign” opening the attack._
-
-_The “Victory” (Nelson’s flag should be at the fore, not as here.)_
-
-_From a photograph of the original sepia drawing now in the possession of
-a descendant of Captain Lucas of the “Redoutable.”_]
-
-“In passing the _Santa Anna_” relates Mr. Newnham Collingwood, “the
-_Royal Sovereign_ gave her a broadside and a half into her stern, tearing
-it down, and killing and wounding 400 of her men. Then, with her helm
-hard a-starboard, she ranged up alongside so closely that the lower yards
-of the two vessels were locked together. The Spanish Admiral, having seen
-that it was the intention of the _Royal Sovereign_ to engage to leeward,
-had collected all his strength on the starboard, and such was the weight
-of the _Santa Anna’s_ metal, that her broadside made the _Sovereign_ heel
-two strakes out of the water.”
-
-Even a moment like that, though, did not in the least perturb
-Collingwood. “Her studding-sails and halliards were now shot away, and
-as well as a top-gallant studding-sail were hanging over the gangway
-hammocks. Admiral Collingwood called out to Lieutenant Clavell to come
-and help him to take it in, observing that they should want it again some
-other day. These two officers accordingly rolled it carefully up and
-placed it in a boat.”
-
-No sooner was the _Sovereign_ alongside the _Santa Anna_ than four other
-enemies—two French ships, the _Fougueux_ and the _Indomptable_, and two
-Spanish, the _San Leandro_ and the _San Justo_—closed round and joined in
-to help the _Santa Anna_.
-
-So hot a cross fire did these four ships keep up on the single British
-ship during her, at first, unsupported fight, that, in the words of those
-on board the _Sovereign_, “We could see their shots meeting and smashing
-together in mid-air round us.” The _Fougueux_, we are also told, “at
-one time got so much on the quarter of the _Sovereign_ that she almost
-touched.” It was indeed a battle of the giants—a heroic defiance of
-heroic odds.
-
-So magnificent, indeed, did the situation of the _Royal Sovereign_
-appear, fighting single-handed in the thick of the enemy, that it drew
-remarks from some of our captains, for the time being lookers-on, on
-board the nearest ships that were then coming up astern. “The English
-ships,” to quote Admiral Collingwood’s biographer again, “were pressing
-forward with their utmost speed in support of their leader, but doubtful
-at times of his fate, and rejoicing when, on the slackening of the _Santa
-Anna’s_ fire, they discerned his flag still flying above the smoke. One
-of his most gallant followers and friend, the captain of the _Tonnant_,
-has often expressed the astonishment with which he regarded the _Royal
-Sovereign_ as she opened her fire, which, as he declared, ‘so arrested
-his attention, that he felt for a few moments as if he himself had
-nothing to do but to look on and admire!’”
-
-How Collingwood bore himself in the battle we hear from two sources. Both
-accounts speak of Collingwood’s unmoved demeanour and cool courage under
-fire.
-
-“The Admiral,” says one, “directed Captain Vallack, of the Marines, an
-officer of the greatest gallantry, to take his men from off the poop,
-that they might not be unnecessarily exposed; but he remained there
-himself much longer. At length, descending to the quarter-deck, he
-visited the men, enjoining them not to fire a shot in waste; looking
-himself along the guns to see that they were properly pointed, and
-commending the sailors, particularly a black man, who was afterwards
-killed, but who, while he stood beside him, fired ten times directly into
-the portholes of the _Santa Anna_.”
-
-“The Admiral spoke to me,” related Smith, Collingwood’s servant, “about
-the middle of the action and again for five minutes immediately after
-its close; and on neither occasion could I observe the slightest change
-from his ordinary manner. This, at the moment, made an impression on me
-which will never be effaced, for I wondered how a person whose mind was
-occupied by such a variety of most important concerns could, with the
-utmost ease and equanimity, inquire kindly after my welfare, and talk of
-common matters as if nothing of any consequence were taking place.”
-
-Twenty minutes after the _Sovereign_ had by herself beaten off the
-_Fougueux_, the leading British ships following astern of the _Sovereign_
-began to reach the spot, and to take off her enemies one by one, except
-the _Santa Anna_. With Admiral Alava’s flagship the _Royal Sovereign_
-continued in close encounter, until the _Santa Anna’s_ colours came down.
-It was just at that moment that Collingwood received, by an officer of
-the _Victory_, Captain Hardy’s first message that Lord Nelson had been
-“dangerously wounded.”
-
-The stubborn stand that the _Santa Anna_ made was a disappointment,
-it would appear, to the _Sovereign’s_ men. Their terrible raking
-broadside at the outset had plainly “sickened” the Spaniards—as our
-men expressively put it—and many on board believed that the enemy must
-surrender forthwith. Captain Rotheram, indeed, “came up to the Admiral,
-and, shaking him by the hand, said: ‘I congratulate you, sir; she is
-slackening her fire, and must soon strike!’” The gallant fellows who
-were fighting at the _Royal Sovereign’s_ guns actually thought, it is on
-record, that their ship would have the proud distinction of capturing an
-enemy’s flagship in the midst of her own fleet before another British
-ship had got into action. In the end, though, they had this consolation:
-when at length the _Santa Anna_ did surrender; “No ship besides ourselves
-fired a shot at her,” wrote one of the _Sovereign’s_ officers, “and you
-can have no conception how completely she was ruined.” “Her side,” wrote
-Collingwood himself, “was almost entirely beat in.”
-
-“The _Santa Anna_,” to quote Mr. Newnham Collingwood, “struck at
-half-past two o’clock, about the time when the news of Lord Nelson’s
-wound was communicated to Admiral Collingwood, but the _Royal Sovereign_
-had been so much injured in her masts and yards by the ships that lay on
-her bow and quarter that she was unable to alter her position. Admiral
-Collingwood accordingly called the _Euryalus_ to take her in tow, and
-make the necessary signals. He dispatched Captain Blackwood to convey the
-Spanish Admiral on board the _Euryalus_, but he was stated to be at the
-point of death, and Captain Blackwood returned with the Spanish captain.
-That officer had already been to the _Royal Sovereign_ to deliver his
-sword, and on entering had asked one of the English sailors the name of
-the ship. When he was told that it was the _Royal Sovereign_, he replied,
-in broken English, while patting one of the guns with his hand, ‘I think
-she should be called the _Royal Devil_!’”
-
-The _Royal Sovereign_, on the _Santa Anna_ surrendering, pushed off from
-her giant prize—so big a ship, indeed, that, in Collingwood’s own words,
-she “towered over the _Sovereign_ like a castle.” She moved away to seek
-another enemy. But the fall of her main and mizen-masts, cut through
-and through by shot, prevented her from taking a further part in the
-battle until after being taken in tow by the _Euryalus_ frigate, Captain
-Blackwood’s ship. The _Sovereign_ was able after that, during the rest
-of the action, to employ her broadsides here and there. Her last piece
-of work was at the very close of the battle, when she formed one of the
-group of ships that Captain Hardy summoned round the _Victory_ to support
-the dying chief’s flagship against a threatened attack on the _Victory_
-from the fresh ships of the French van squadron as they passed down the
-line.
-
-The _Royal Sovereign’s_ list of casualties, as officially reported on
-the morning after Trafalgar, amounted to forty-seven men killed and
-ninety-four wounded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-How Collingwood first heard of Nelson’s fate he himself has told us:
-
-“When my dear friend received his wound,” wrote the Admiral, “he
-immediately sent an officer to tell me of it, and give his love to me.
-Though the officer was directed to say the wound was not dangerous, I
-read in his countenance what I had to fear, and before the action was
-over Captain Hardy came to inform me of his death. I cannot tell you how
-deeply I was affected; my friendship for him was unlike any thing that I
-have left in the Navy—a brotherhood of more than thirty years.”
-
-Writing to the Duke of Clarence, an old service friend of Collingwood’s
-and of Nelson’s as well, he said this:
-
-“He (Nelson) sent an officer to inform me that he was wounded. I asked
-the officer if his wound was dangerous. He hesitated, then said he hoped
-it was not; but I saw the fate of my friend in his eye, for his look told
-what his tongue could not utter. About an hour after, when the action was
-over, Captain Hardy brought me the melancholy account of his death.”
-
-Another detail of Trafalgar that may be news to some of us is the fact
-that Collingwood was wounded in the battle. He said nothing about himself
-to any one in any of his letters at the time, nor did he include himself
-in the return of wounded sent to the Admiralty. It was only in response
-to an anxious inquiry from his wife, who, some months afterwards, heard
-a rumour about it and wrote to inquire, that Collingwood, five months
-after the battle, first made mention of the matter. His letter to Lady
-Collingwood is dated March 29, 1806, and in it the Admiral says:
-
-“Did I not tell you how my leg was hurt? It was by a splinter—a pretty
-severe blow. I had a good many thumps, one way or the other: one on
-the back, which I think was the wind of a great shot, for I never saw
-anything that did it. You know nearly all were killed or wounded on the
-quarter-deck or poop but myself, my Captain, and Secretary, Mr. Cosway,
-who was of more use to me than any officer after Clavell.
-
-“The first inquiry of the Spaniards was about my wound, and exceedingly
-surprised they were when I made light of it, for when the captain of the
-_Santa Anna_ was brought on board, it was bleeding and swelled, and tied
-up with a handkerchief.”
-
-What was really troubling the frugal north-country mind of Admiral
-Collingwood at that moment, as far as he was individually concerned, far
-more than his wound, was his out-of-pocket expenses owing to the damage
-that the enemy’s shot had done in his steward’s store-room. Writing to
-Lady Collingwood, he tells her this:—
-
-“I have had a great destruction of my furniture and stock. I have hardly
-a chair that has not a shot in it, and many have lost both legs and
-arms, without hope of pension. My wine was broke in moving, and my pigs
-were slain in battle, and these are heavy losses where they cannot be
-replaced.”
-
-One gets an idea of the kind of man Collingwood was also from the
-characteristically sympathetic way in which he wrote in a private letter
-about one of his officers (Mr. William Chalmers, the master of the _Royal
-Sovereign_) who was killed near the Admiral, on the quarter-deck, at his
-post by the wheel.
-
-“I have written to Lloyd’s about Mr. Chalmers’ family. He left a mother
-and several sisters, whose chief dependence was on what this worthy man
-and valuable officer saved for them from his pay. He stood close to me
-when he received his death. A great shot almost divided his body; he laid
-his head upon my shoulder, and told me he was slain. I supported him till
-two men carried him off. He could say nothing to me, but to bless me; but
-as they carried him down, he wished he could but live to read the account
-of the action in a newspaper. He lay in the cockpit, among the wounded,
-until the _Santa Anna_ struck, and joining in the cheer which they gave
-her, expired with it on his lips.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The only personal description of Collingwood’s appearance in existence
-is from the pen of a young officer (Midshipman Crawford, of the _Royal
-George_) who had an audience of him, to present a letter of introduction,
-in October, 1806, just a year after Trafalgar:
-
-“Being provided with a letter of recommendation to Lord Collingwood,
-the Commander-in-Chief, I took an early opportunity to wait upon his
-Lordship.... Lord Collingwood was between fifty and sixty, thin and
-spare in person, which was then slightly bent, and in height about five
-feet ten inches. His head was small, with a pale, smooth, round face,
-the features of which would pass without notice, were it not for the
-eyes, which were blue, clear, penetrating; and the mouth, the lips of
-which were thin and compressed, indicating firmness and decision of
-character. He wore his hair powdered, and tied in a _queue_, in the
-style of officers of his age at that time; and his clothes were squared
-and fashioned after the strictest rules of the good old sea school. To
-his very ample coat, which had a stiff, stand-up collar, were appended
-broad and very long skirts—the deep flaps of his single-breasted white
-waistcoat, descending far below his middle, covered a portion of his
-thighs; and blue knee-breeches, with white stockings, and buckles to his
-shoes, completed his attire....
-
-“On entering his presence, he took a rapid searching survey of me from
-head to foot; then ... in a quiet tone, amounting almost to gentleness,
-he put a few questions to me in nautics, which I believe I answered to
-his satisfaction.”
-
-Of Collingwood in lighter vein we also get a glimpse. How, a short time
-after Trafalgar, he got one of his officers to write up his biography for
-a pertinacious newspaper editor is a story that the Admiral himself tells
-in a letter to his wife.
-
-“The editors of the _Naval Chronicle_ have written to me for the history
-of my life and progress, for which they are pleased to say the world is
-very impatient. Now this rather embarrasses me, for I never could bear
-the trumpeter of his own praise. So, to get rid of it as well as I can,
-I have employed ⸺ to write a history for me. For my birth and parentage
-he has selected two or three chapters of Bamfylde Moore Carew; for my
-service in the West Indies and on the Spanish Main he has had good
-assistance in the _History of the Buccaneers_; and for my shipwreck he
-has copied a great deal out of _Robinson Crusoe_; all which, with a few
-anecdotes from the _Lives of the Admirals_, a little distorted, will
-make, I am inclined to think, a very respectable piece of biography.”
-
-Collingwood’s dog, Bounce, was on board the _Royal Sovereign_ at
-Trafalgar, tied up out of the way below, in comparative safety, on the
-orlop deck. According to Collingwood himself, Bounce did not like cannon
-firing. Wrote Collingwood about him, before the battle: “Bounce is my
-only pet now, and he is indeed a good fellow; he sleeps by the side
-of my cot, whenever I lie in one, until near the time of tacking, and
-then marches off, to be out of the hearing of the guns, for he is not
-reconciled to them yet.” After the battle, on his master being raised to
-the peerage, Bounce—as Collingwood whimsically describes in one of his
-home-letters—seemed to grasp the new situation and took to giving himself
-airs. “I am out of all patience with Bounce. The consequential airs he
-gives himself since he became a right honourable dog are insufferable.
-He considers it beneath his dignity to play with commoners’ dogs, and
-truly thinks that he does them grace when he condescends to lift up his
-leg against them. This, I think, is carrying the insolence of rank to the
-extreme, but he is a dog that does it!”[19]
-
- * * * * *
-
-As all the world knows, Collingwood never set foot in England after
-Trafalgar, doomed, poor homesick fellow, never more to see—
-
- The pleasant strand of Northumberland
- And the lordly towers thereby.
-
-He wore out his life on duty, waiting and watching at sea for nearly five
-long and weary years, for an enemy who did not dare to face him. The
-Admiralty could not spare him to come home.
-
-“He stepped into his boat from Plymouth Dock,” says the writer of a
-biographical sketch of Collingwood published shortly after the Admiral’s
-death, “on the last day of April, 1805, and returned, five years after,
-a peer and a corpse.” Immediately before he embarked, Collingwood
-had been conversing with a brother officer, who records an affecting
-incident. “The last time I ever saw Lord Collingwood,” wrote Sir T.
-Byam Martin, “he was on the point of stepping into his boat, never
-again to touch the British shore. We walked together for half an hour,
-and as long as I live I shall remember the words with which, in his
-accustomed mildness of expression, he alluded to the sacrifices our
-professional duties exact of us. He told me the number of years he had
-been married, and the number of days he had been with his family since
-the war commenced (then of many years duration). ‘My family are _actually
-strangers to me_.’ He was greatly overcome by the feelings thus excited,
-and, taking me by the hand, he said, ‘What a life of privation is
-ours—what an abandonment of everything to our professional duty, _and how
-little do the people of England know the sacrifices we make for them_!’
-With this he turned from me to hide the tear which ran down his manly
-cheek, and saying ‘Farewell!’ walked to his boat.”
-
-Slowly killed, if ever man was, by downright hard work, Collingwood died
-on the 7th of March, 1810, on board his flagship in the Mediterranean.
-On the day before he died his old spirit flickered up once more, and he
-murmured to his captain, who bent down over the brave old face, “I may
-live to fight the French once more.” The end drew on apace after that,
-and the soul of one of the grandest veterans of England at her best,
-passed calmly away to the presence of the God in Whom throughout every
-hour of his blameless life his trust had been as that of a little child
-for its earthly father. “He met death,” said the surgeon who attended
-Collingwood, “as became him, with composure and a fortitude which have
-seldom been equalled and never surpassed.”
-
-We know something of how his sailors loved “Old Cuddy,” as the whole
-fleet called Collingwood, from what happened at Collingwood’s funeral on
-that May day of 1810, when Nelson’s brother-in-arms was laid to his rest
-beside his old messmate, friend, and companion in the crypt of St. Paul’s
-Cathedral. Lord Chancellor Eldon, beside whom, as a little boy of nine,
-the Admiral had sat in class at school, was a mourner at the funeral.
-“It was very affecting,” he describes, “his sailors crowded so around,
-all anxious to see the last of their commander. One sailor seized me by
-the arm, and entreated that I would take him in with me that he might be
-there to the end. I told him to stick fast to me, and I did take him in;
-but when it came to throwing some earth on the coffin (you know the part
-of the service ‘dust to dust’), he burst past me and threw himself into
-the vault!”
-
-No truer description of the man as a fact was ever penned than the words
-that Thackeray years afterwards used of Collingwood: “Another true knight
-of those days was Cuthbert Collingwood, and I think since heaven made
-gentlemen, there is not record of a better one than that.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Collingwood’s officers at Trafalgar, those who served with him on board
-the _Royal Sovereign_, were these. According to the muster book the ship
-was two lieutenants short on the 21st of October.
-
-Captain—Edward Rotherham.
-
-Lieutenants—John Clavell, Joseph Simmons, James Bashford (wounded),
-Edward Barker, Brice Gilliland (killed), Francis Blower Gibbes.
-
-Master—William Chalmers (killed).
-
-Surgeon—Richard Lloyd.
-
-Purser—Brinsley S. Oliver.
-
-Chaplain—Rev. John Rudall.
-
-Secretary—W. R. Cosway.
-
-Gunner—Nicholas Brown.
-
-Boatswain—Isaac Wilkinson (wounded).
-
-Carpenter—George Clines.
-
-Marine officers:—
-
-Captain—Joseph Vallack.
-
-Lieutenants—Robert Green (killed), Armiger W. Hubbard, James Le Vescomte
-(wounded).
-
-Assistant Surgeons—Primrose Lyon, Henry Towsey.
-
-Master’s Mates and Midshipmen—Thomas Altoft, Charles A. Antram, Richard
-Davison Pritchard, William Sharp, William Watson (wounded), John
-Aikenhead (killed), John Doling Morey, Sam Weddle, Thomas P. Robinson,
-Charles Coucher, Joseph Del Carrotto, John Chaldecott, Henry Davis,
-William Budd Boreham, Gilbert Kennicott (wounded), Thomas Currell,
-Granville Thompson (wounded), George Castle, John Parr, Thomas Dickinson
-(wounded), John Campbell (wounded), Thomas Braund (mortally wounded),
-John Farrant (wounded), John Redwood, John Dobson, William Stock, James
-Rudall.
-
-First Class Volunteers—Meredith Milnekoff, Robert Julian, Archibald
-Nagle, Robert Duke Hamilton, John Hill, Claudius Charles, William Lloyd,
-Charles Lambert, Charles Chiswick.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From the officers we proceed in natural sequence to the men, and with
-regard to these, at the outset, there hangs a tale.
-
-A very curious story is related of Collingwood on the morning of
-Trafalgar Day which most of those who have written about him have
-repeated. Collingwood, we are told, as the British fleet was approaching
-the enemy, went round the decks of the _Royal Sovereign_ and bade the men
-at the guns “show those fellows what the tars of the Tyne can do!” More
-than that, there is an old print in existence (a copy of which is in the
-possession of Earl Nelson) artistically depicting the story, and labelled
-with the legend, “Tars of the Tyne.” The ship’s books unfortunately
-give quite another version. There were fewer North countrymen on board
-the _Royal Sovereign_ at Trafalgar, perhaps, than in any other ship
-of the British fleet. Altogether, according to the muster book, there
-were in the ship hardly thirty all told, including Collingwood himself
-and Captain Rotherham and the youngsters, “the northern boys,” as
-Collingwood called them. Of the seamen—A.B.’s, ordinary, and landmen—the
-_Sovereign’s_ books name only four as coming from Newcastle, two as
-coming from Shields, and one as coming from “Northumberland” at large.
-Sunderland sent four men, and the rest were from Durham, three men, with
-from Berwick-on-Tweed two, Whitehaven six, Westmorland one. That exhausts
-the North-country contingent in the _Royal Sovereign_.
-
-More than a third of the entire ship’s company on board were Irishmen—240
-men and boys. Scotland, including Shetland and the Hebrides, contributed
-forty men, and Wales twenty-one. The London contingent with Collingwood
-at Trafalgar was the next largest after the Irishmen—seventy-five men
-and boys altogether. Lancashire was represented by forty-six men, Devon
-by thirty-four, Hampshire with thirty, Cornwall with twenty-four,
-Gloucester (Bristol) and Somerset each by eighteen, Yorkshire and Kent by
-ten men each; Lincolnshire, Cheshire, and Dorset each by eight; Norfolk
-and Suffolk by seven men each; and so on down to Cambridge, Bedford,
-Leicester, Hertfordshire, and Worcester with one man each.
-
-Yet another interesting point is brought out by the muster book of the
-_Royal Sovereign_. We have been told how Collingwood, in the middle
-of the fighting, commended a “black man” for his straight shooting.
-Apparently the man was a West Indian. There were no fewer than seventy
-foreigners and aliens on board Collingwood’s flagship at Trafalgar,
-according to the ship’s books, the list being thus made up: Twenty-four
-Americans (hailing for the most part from New York, Boston, Philadelphia,
-Baltimore, and New Jersey); seven Dutchmen—Dirks and Franz’s and Hendriks
-and Rutters—from Friesland, Delft, Maestricht, Amsterdam, and Rotterdam;
-one Belgian, from Brussels; three Portuguese from the Azores and Lisbon;
-four Prussians and one Pole from Dantzic; two Danes, two Frenchmen, one
-Norwegian, one Venetian, one Neapolitan, one Maltese, seven Lascars—two
-of them entered as “Jonan” and “Lowannah”—from the East Indies; two
-Malays from Batavia, entered as “Soloman” and “Ballee”; one from Bengal,
-one from Madras, a third Malay entered as “George”; fifteen West Indians,
-from St. Kitts, Barbados, Jamaica, and from Berbice, in British Guiana.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two interesting letters from the _Royal Sovereign_ may serve to conclude
-our narrative. One was from a Hampshire lad, one of those fighting below
-at the guns. It runs thus:—
-
-“Honoured Father,—This comes to tell you I am alive and hearty except
-three fingers; but that’s not much, it might have been my head. I told
-brother Tom I should like to see a greadly [_sic_] battle, and I have
-seen one, and we have peppered the Combined rarely; and for the matter of
-that, they fought us pretty tightish for French and Spanish. Three of our
-mess are killed, and four more of us winged. But to tell you the truth of
-it, when the game began, I wished myself at Warnborough with my plough
-again; but when they had given us one duster, and I found myself snug
-and tight, I ... set to in good earnest, and thought no more about being
-killed than if I were at Murrell Green Fair, and I was presently as busy
-and as black as a collier. How my fingers got knocked overboard I don’t
-know, but off they are, and I never missed them till I wanted them. You
-see, by my writing, it was my left hand, so I can write to you and fight
-for my King yet. We have taken a rare parcel of ships, but the wind is so
-rough we cannot bring them home, else I should roll in money, so we are
-busy smashing ’em, and blowing ’em up wholesale.
-
-“Our dear Admiral Nelson is killed! so we have paid pretty sharply for
-licking ’em. I never sat eyes on him, for which I am both sorry and glad;
-for, to be sure, I should like to have seen him—but then, all the men in
-our ship who have seen him are such soft toads, they have done nothing
-but blast their eyes, and cry, ever since he was killed. God bless you!
-chaps that fought like the devil, sit down and cry like a wench. I am
-still in the _Royal Sovereign_, but the Admiral has left her, for she is
-like a horse without a bridle, so he is in a frigate that he may be here
-and there and everywhere, for he’s as _cute_ as here and there one, and
-as bold as a lion, for all he can cry!—I saw his tears with my own eyes,
-when the boat hailed and said my lord was dead. So no more at present
-from your dutiful son,—SAM.”
-
-A pathetic interest attaches to the other letter. It was written on the
-morning of the battle by a midshipman of the _Royal Sovereign_, Mr. John
-Aikenhead, who was killed in the action. It was apparently meant for his
-parents and family in general:—
-
-“We have just piped to breakfast; thirty-five sail, besides smaller
-vessels, are now on our beam, about three miles off. Should I, my dear
-parents, fall in defence of my King, let that thought console you. I feel
-not the least dread on my spirits. Oh my parents, sisters, brothers, dear
-grandfather, grandmother, and aunt, believe me ever yours!
-
-“Accept, perhaps for the last time, your brother’s love; be assured I
-feel for my friends, should I die in this glorious action—glorious, no
-doubt, it will be. Every British heart pants for glory. Our old Admiral
-(Admiral Collingwood) is quite young with the thoughts of it. If I
-survive, nothing will give me greater pleasure than embracing my dearest
-relations. Do not, in case I fall, grieve—it will be to no purpose. Many
-brave fellows will no doubt fall with me on both sides.”
-
-The letter added that the writer had made his will and put it in his
-desk. It gave also a statement of the property deposited in his chest,
-with £10 savings, added since the will was made. “Do not be surprised,”
-says the lad in his letter, “to find £10 more—it is mine.”
-
-
-“OLD IRONSIDES” AND THE THIRD IN COMMAND
-
- “Britannia Victrix”
-
-The 100-gun three-decker _Britannia_, was the flagship of the third in
-command at Trafalgar, Rear-Admiral the Earl of Northesk. In honour of the
-part that the _Britannia_ took in the battle Lord Northesk was created
-a Knight of the Bath, and was granted by George the Third the right to
-place the name “Trafalgar” on his coat-of-arms, with special heraldic
-augmentations. Ever since 1805 the supporters of the heraldic shield of
-the earls of Northesk have each borne a staff with a Rear-Admiral of the
-White’s flag on it bearing the inscription, “Britannia Victrix.”
-
-“Old Ironsides” was the _Britannia’s_ every-day name in Nelson’s fleet,
-due to the fact, it is said, that the _Britannia_ was the oldest
-man-of-war in the fighting line of the Navy. The veteran three-decker on
-the 21st of October, 1805, had been afloat just forty-three years and two
-days. She was our second _Britannia_, and the first three-decker launched
-in George the Third’s reign, the launch taking place at Portsmouth
-Dockyard on the 19th of October, 1762, in the presence of twenty thousand
-spectators, “who all had the pleasure of seeing as fine a launch as ever
-was seen.”
-
-Trafalgar was the _Britannia’s_ fifth battle. She had had her first
-meeting with the enemy as flagship of the Second in Command in the
-“Grand Fleet” under Lord Howe, which achieved the relief of Gibraltar
-in 1782—a feat that nowadays perhaps we think little of, but which
-was thought enough of at the time for such a personage as Frederick
-the Great to write an autograph letter of congratulation on it to the
-British Admiral. After that she had taken part at Lord Hood’s occupation
-of Toulon, in Admiral Hotham’s two actions off Genoa and off Hyères,
-as commander-in-chief’s flagship, and on the 14th of February, 1797,
-“Glorious Valentine’s Day,” as flagship of the second in command in the
-battle off Cape St. Vincent.[20]
-
-At Trafalgar the _Britannia_ went into action as the fifth or sixth ship
-astern of the _Victory_. She had three of the enemy’s ships firing on
-her as she ranged forward into the battle under full sail. She broke
-the enemy’s line, firing both broadsides as she drove through, after
-which she engaged an 80-gun ship and promptly dismasted her opponent. A
-little later, we are told, a French officer “was seen to wave a white
-handkerchief from the quarter-deck in token of surrender.” Leaving
-another of our ships to take possession, the _Britannia_ passed on
-forthwith to deal with others of the enemy, and was constantly engaged,
-we are told, sometimes with two or three ships of the enemy at once and
-fighting on both broadsides.
-
-This is how the _Britannia’s_ log records her part at Trafalgar, in the
-dry, matter-of-fact style usual with such documents:—
-
-“12.50. We began to engage three of the enemy’s ships, having opened
-their fire upon us while running down. 1.10. Observed the ship we were
-engaging on our larboard quarter totally dismasted, continued our course
-in order to break through the centre of the enemy’s line, engaging on
-both sides in passing between their ships. At 3 passed through the line.
-4.30. Hauled to the wind on the larboard tack per signal. 5.30. Ceased
-firing. Observed the _Achille_, a French line-of-battle ship, on fire,
-which soon after blew up.”
-
-Fortunately the log is not all that we have to rely upon for the story
-of the _Britannia’s_ doings at Trafalgar. Some of the officers wrote
-down their experiences and impressions, from which we get a remarkably
-interesting idea of how things fared on board during the battle. Says, to
-begin with, Lieutenant John Barclay in his journal:—
-
-“½ past 12. Vice-Admiral Collingwood, in the _Royal Sovereign_, commenced
-the action, by an attack upon the whole of the enemy’s rear, in the most
-gallant manner, and without any immediate prospect of support, from being
-so far ahead of the lee division. Took in our studding sails. About ¼
-before 1, Lord Nelson, after having sustained a most galling fire in
-running down, opened both sides of the _Victory_ on the headmost ships
-of their centre division. He was close followed up by the _Téméraire_,
-_Neptune_, _Conqueror_, _Leviathan_, and this ship, and pushed through
-their line about the 14th from the van. Several raking shot called forth
-exertions about 10 minutes after our noble chief. Here began the din of
-war. It became impossible to trace farther except at intervals, when
-the smoke cleared away _a little_. At ¼ past 1 the masts of the ship
-we were most particularly engaging (larboard side) fell by the board:
-supposed to be the _Bucentaure_, but without any flag observed flying.
-Continued edging on slowly, for there was very little wind, and our main
-topsail in particular was shot almost entirely from the yard. At 3, got
-to leeward of their line and hauled up a little on the larboard tack.
-Until ¼ past 4 kept up a heavy fire occasionally on both sides on every
-French or Spanish ensign flying near us, when we hauled to the wind on
-the larboard tack per signal. ½ past 5, all firing ceased except from the
-_Achille_, a very fine French ship—wrapt in flames. The cutters instantly
-repaired to her assistance, and saved the crew, soon after which she blew
-up with a tremendous explosion.”
-
-Signal-Midshipman John Wells, in a letter home, written during the
-week following the battle, has this to say of what he went through and
-witnessed:
-
-“I am very happy to say that the _Britannia_ was certainly a very
-fortunate Ship during the whole time, as we had not above 10 killed and
-41 wounded although we were the fourth Ship in Action and the last out
-of it, and I doubt not that it will be found that she does honour to all
-who belong to her, as our fire was not directed to One particular Ship,
-but as soon as one had struck to us we immediately made to others and
-at one time had five ships blazing away upon us, but we soon tired them
-out. As I told you before, I was stationed at the Signals and Colours in
-the time of Action and being on the Quarter Deck I had an opportunity
-of seeing the whole of the Sport, which I must own rather daunted me
-before the first or second broadside; but after then I think I never
-should have been tired of drubing [_sic_] the Jokers, particulary [_sic_]
-when my ship mates began to fall arround [_sic_] me, which in the room
-of disheartening an Englishman only encourages him, as the sight of his
-Country Man’s blood makes his heart burn for revenge.
-
-“I am very sorry to inform you that my worthy friend our signal
-Lieutenant was knocked down by a double-headed shot close by my side and
-immediately expired, much lamented by his brother Officers and every one
-in the Ship; I had several very narrow escapes from the Enemy’s Shot,
-but thanks be to the Lord he [_sic_] has still spared me thro’ his great
-goodness.
-
-“Too much credit cannot be given to Lord Northesk and Captain Bullen for
-their gallant Conduct during the Engagement, indeed it was the case with
-every Officer and Man in the Ship. Immediately the Enemy had struck I
-went on board one of the French prizes to take possession of her, and
-when I got there I may well say I was shocked to see the sight as I
-believe there was not less than 3 or 400 Bodies lying about the Decks,
-cut and mangled all to pieces, some dying and others Dead. We took the
-remainder of the men that were alive on board of our own Ships, at which
-they seemed very glad. And from the Information that we can get from
-them they really came out of Cadiz with an intention of fighting, not
-thinking us to be above 17 sail of the line and them under the command of
-Sir Robt. Calder (but he was not with us at all), and that Lord Nelson
-was in England sick. So they thought they were an equal match for our 17
-with there [_sic_] 37—and in fact made themselves so sure of taking us
-into Cadiz that several Private Gentlemen came out of Cadiz as passengers
-on purpose to see the Action and have the pleasure of towing us in, but
-they were once more deceived in our Wooden Walls. Amongst the prisoners
-in our Ship there are 5 or 6 of these Gentlemen of pleasure, and I think
-they are in a fair way for seeing an English prison before they return to
-Cadiz again.”
-
-Another of the _Britannia’s_ officers, who made use of his opportunities
-for seeing what was going on round him, was 2nd Lieutenant L.B. Halloran
-of the Royal Marines. He noted this down in his private diary from his
-own personal experiences and observations:
-
-“We piped to breakfast at eight o’clock, and the ship being clear and
-ready about nine o’clock, we went to quarters. The Fleet then formed in
-two lines, standing slowly and steadily, with every sail set, before the
-light breeze, with ensigns and colours flying. Our ship, the _Britannia_,
-was the third from the _Victory_, which led the Larboard or Lee line;
-we were next the _Neptune_, 98 guns. For some time after the men were
-at quarters, before the firing began we heard many of them amusing
-themselves with nautical jokes, or reciting scraps from a Prologue which
-I had spoken at one of our last Dramatic performances. Among the lines
-repeatedly quoted the following seemed the favourite:—
-
- We have great guns of Tragedy loaded so well,
- If they do but go off, they will certainly tell.
-
-“About 11.30, the _Royal Sovereign_, Admiral Collingwood, which led the
-Starboard or Weather line, after sustaining for nearly half an hour
-severe firing from the enemy as she approached without returning a
-shot, opened her tremendous Broadsides close alongside the _Sta. Anna_,
-a Spanish Admiral’s ship. Our people were highly amused, and passed many
-jokes on seeing the _Sta. Anna_, almost immediately dismasted and falling
-out of line with her colours down. We had not much time to admire the
-gallantry of the _Royal Sovereign_ and the ships succeeding her, for it
-was our turn to commence, and in passing we poured a most destructive
-fire (the guns being double-shotted) into the _Bucentaur_, which ship had
-already received the first fire of the _Victory_ and _Neptune_. Her masts
-were at once swept away, and her galleries and stern broken to pieces;
-her Colours being shot away, some-one waved a white handkerchief from the
-remains of the Larboard Gallery in token of Surrender.
-
-“We then encountered the _Santisima Trinidada_, 240 guns [_sic_] on
-four decks (the largest ship then known). We passed under stern of this
-magnificent Ship, and gave her a Broadside which shattered the rich
-display of sculpture, figures, ornaments, and inscriptions with which she
-was adorned. I never saw so beautiful a ship. Luffing up alongside her
-four-decked side, of a rich lake colour, she had an imposing effect.
-
-“We proceeded, and now got into the middle of the Action, where the
-denseness of the smoke, the noise and din of Battle, were so great as
-to leave little time for observation. Nearly about this time, between
-one and two o’clock, a shot struck the muzzle of the gun at which I was
-stationed (the aftermost gun on the larboard side of the lower deck),
-and killed or wounded every one there stationed, myself and Midshipman
-Tompkins only excepted. The shot was a very large one, and split into a
-number of pieces, each of which took its victim. We threw the mangled
-body of John Jolley, a marine, out of the stern port, his stomach being
-shot away; the other sufferers we left to be examined. The gun itself was
-split, and our second lieutenant, Roskruge, who came down at that moment
-with some orders, advised me to leave the Gun as useless. He had scarcely
-left us, when he was brought down senseless with a severe wound in his
-head: he breathed, but continued senseless until nine o’clock, when he
-died.
-
-“The Battle continued until five o’clock. Seeing no signal from the
-_Victory_, and also missing Admiral Collingwood’s flag, we were in much
-uneasiness on Board. The scene presented a strange contrast to the
-morning; twenty-one or twenty-two sail of the Enemy’s Line, Prizes and
-dismasted, one (_L’Achille_) burning furiously, which soon after blew up,
-the sky lowering in the distance, a heavy sea rising, and an awful kind
-of pause succeeding the crash of falling yards and masts and the roar of
-the guns.
-
-“Having sent a boat to the _Victory_, we ascertained the death of Lord
-Nelson, our Commander-in-Chief.
-
-“With hearts fraught with blended feelings of sorrow and of triumph, we
-set about putting the ship to rights. The evening was fine, though a
-storm seemed to be coming up, and around us as the darkness closed in
-the scattered and forlorn wrecks lay floating in disorder, while the
-conqueror’s ships were repairing damages, shifting prisoners, or making
-sail. It was a scene of desolation, helpless prizes and dismantled
-victors rolling heavily, as the sea began to roughen with the breeze....
-
-“The whole night was occupied in receiving prisoners, and preparing for
-stormy weather, which was coming on.”
-
-This is from the letter that a seaman on board the _Britannia_, James
-West, an A.B., wrote to his parents at Newhaven in Sussex:—
-
-“I am sorry to inform you that I am wounded in the left shoulder, and
-that William Hillman was killed at the same time: the shot that killed
-him and three others wounded me and five more. Another of my messmates,
-Thomas Crosby, was also killed; they both went to their guns like men,
-and died close to me. Crosby was shot in three places. Pray inform their
-poor friends of their death, and remind them that they died at the same
-time as Nelson, and in the moment of glorious victory. Remember me to
-all my relations and friends; tell them I am wounded at last, but that I
-do not much mind it, for I had my satisfaction of my enemies, as I never
-fired my gun in pain I was sure to hit them; I killed and wounded them
-in plenty. Should have written you sooner, but the pain in my shoulder
-would not let me.”
-
-During the week following Trafalgar the _Britannia_ received 381 French
-prisoners on board: 48 from _L’Aigle_, a captured seventy-four; 140 from
-the recaptured _Berwick_, a former British seventy-four; the rest from
-the captured _Intrépide_, another seventy-four. The names of all the
-prisoners are carefully entered in the _Britannia’s_ books, and among
-them appears the name of a Turk, mentioned also by Lieutenant Halloran as
-being received on board—Abdalla Fadalla, a prisoner from the _Intrépide_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-According to the ship’s books these were the officers, in addition to
-Lord Northesk, serving on board the _Britannia_ at Trafalgar:—
-
-Captain—Charles Bullen.
-
-Lieutenants—Arthur Atchison; Francis Roskruge (killed); John Houlton
-Marshall; Charles Anthony; Richard Lasham; William Blight; John Barclay;
-James Lindsay.
-
-Marine Officers.—Captain—Alexander Watson. Lieutenants—William Jackson;
-L. B. J. Halloran; John Cooke.
-
-Master—Stephen Trounce (wounded).
-
-Surgeon—Allen Cornfoot.
-
-Purser—James Hiatt.
-
-Chaplain—Rev. Lawrence H. Halloran.
-
-Gunner—Michael Aylward.
-
-Boatswain—(not joined).
-
-Carpenter—John Simpson.
-
-Master’s Mates and Midshipmen—John Adamson; Thos. Goble; James Sudbury;
-Silvester Austin; James Rattray; Henry Canham; Em. Blight; John Lang;
-William Snell; John W. Pritchard; William Grant (wounded); Francis D.
-Lauzun; William Geikie; Josh. Thorndyke; John Coulthred; Andrew Parry;
-Charles Thornbury; James L. Peyton; John Brumfield; George Hurst;
-George Morey; Charles Pitt; James Robinson; Radford G. Meech; Richard
-Molesworth; Charles Wilson; John Bidgood; John Lawrence; William Pinet;
-Richard B. Bowden; Benjamin Sheppard; William Pyne.
-
-Surgeon’s Mates—John Evans; John Owen Martin.
-
-Clerk—Richard Whichelo.
-
-First-class Volunteers—James R. Sulivan; Bowkum Tomkyns; Josh. Bailey.
-
-A glance at the composition of the ship’s company of the _Britannia_,
-according to the muster book, shows that the foreigners among the seamen
-on board numbered 53 in all. Of that total 18 were Americans, 11 Germans,
-6 Danes, 4 Frenchmen, 1 Swede, 4 Dutchmen, 1 East Indian, 2 Africans,
-2 Italians, and 4 from the West Indies. Ireland contributed 189 seamen
-ratings (the total number of seamen on board the _Britannia_, as mustered
-by the ship’s books on Sunday morning, the day before the battle, was
-599); Scotland, 42; Wales, 25; the Isle of Man, 6; the Channel Islands,
-5; and the Scilly Isles, Shetland, and Skye, 1 each. The full total of
-all ranks and ratings on board the _Britannia_ at Trafalgar, as mustered
-on the 20th of October, numbered 31 officers, 599 seamen ratings (petty
-officers, able seamen, ordinary seamen, and landmen), 28 boys, 126
-marines, 5 supernumeraries, and 8 “widows’ men,” making 797 in all.
-The ship’s official complement as a first rate was 837, so that the
-_Britannia_ was really 40 men short in the action.
-
- * * * * *
-
-One incidental fact that we learn from the _Britannia_ may be added. It
-throws a useful sidelight on life and ways at sea in the navy of Nelson’s
-day, dealing as it does with the relations that existed between officers
-and men on board while waiting off Cadiz for the expected battle. It
-proves for one thing also that Lord Northesk’s flagship quite deserved
-the designation of a “happy ship.” This was their favourite way of
-passing the time off duty, according to Lieutenant Halloran’s journal.
-
-“August 22nd. Heard that enemy had gone into Cadiz. We steered direct for
-that port. Here we remained blockading the place until the arrival of
-Lord Nelson in the _Victory_. During this time the officers and ship’s
-company amused themselves with dramatic performances. Our first drama,
-acted in the Admiral’s cabin, was as appears in the following playbill:—
-
- This evening, September 4th, 1805, will be performed a drama
- called
-
- ‘LORD HASTINGS.’
-
- DUKE OF GLOUCESTER, Mr. Hurst.
- EARL OF DERBY, Mr. Martin, assistant surgeon.
- RATCLIFFE, Mr. Rattray.
- CATESBY, Mr. Thorndyke, midshipman.
- HASTINGS, Lieut. Halloran.
-
- After which will be performed a drama called
-
- ‘THE TRIUMPH OF FRIENDSHIP; OR, DAMON AND PYTHIAS.’
-
- DIONYSIUS, Mr. Hurst.
- GELON, Lieut. Halloran.
- PALNURIUS, Mr. Austen.
- ARGUS, Mr. Rattray.
- DAMON, Mr. Martin.
- PYTHIAS, Mr. Thorndyke.
-
- Doors to be opened at 6.30. To begin at 7.
-
-“Wednesday, September 4th. Off Cadiz. The ship’s company also performed
-two or three plays on the main deck, one of them called ‘Miss in her
-Teens’: very well done.
-
-“Thursday, September 12th. We acted another play, called _The Siege
-of Colchester_, in which Rattray, Wilson, Bowden, and I took part.
-Between the acts I recited the romance of _Alonzo and Imogene_. On this
-occasion, the Admiral’s fore-cabin being found too small to hold stage
-and audience both, the fore bulk-head of the cabin was taken down, and
-the cabin itself turned into a stage, leaving the two side doors for
-the stage exits, and the cabin open to the main deck. The stage being
-decorated with colours, festoons, wings, etc., with front lights, had a
-very pretty effect. The main deck, fitted up with seats, made a capacious
-theatre, and all the officers and ship’s company attended. All the future
-performances will be represented in the same manner.
-
-“September 27th. Another party of the officers, under Lieut. Blight’s
-direction, performed (with the addition of some good scenery, painted
-by Mr. Adams, master’s mate) _The Mock Doctor_. Characters taken by
-Messrs. Pitt, Laurence, Johnstone, Geikie, Martin, and Peyton, with
-Masters Lauzun and Snell as Dorcas and Charlotte. The ship’s company,
-whose theatre was amidships, near the main mast on the main deck, also
-performed _The Tragedy of Pizarro_ and at the end of the first act was
-recited _The Soliloquy of Dick the Apprentice_.
-
-“Wednesday, October 9th. We had the play of _Columbus; or, A World
-Discovered_, and Rattray, Thorndyke, Wilson, Hurst, Pitt, Austin,
-Bidgood, and myself acted, the character of the High Priest of the
-Sun being taken by Wichelo, and ladies by Midshipmen Pinett and Pyne,
-Priestessess by Masters Shepherd, Bowden, Lever, Jones, etc. On the
-playbill it was announced, ‘In the course of the Performance will be two
-splendid Processions—a view of the Interior of the Temple of the Sun,
-with a Grand Altar burning Incense, etc. Grand Hymn of the Priestesses,
-etc. Towards the close of the Play the Destruction of the Temple by an
-Earthquake accompanied by Thunder, Lightning, and Hail-Storm! with the
-rescue of Cora from the Ruins by Alonzo!!
-
-“_Catherine and Petruchio_ was the last performance, a few days before
-the action of Trafalgar, together with a Play called _The Village_, which
-I wrote.
-
-“It was on the evening of the 19th of October—Saturday—while I was with
-some officers in my cabin in the Gunroom, where we were preparing for
-another Play for the following Monday, and we were rehearsing, when one
-of the Midshipmen came to inform us that a Frigate was joining the Fleet,
-with signals flying ‘That the Enemy were at sea.’ We immediately broke up
-our theatrical conference. That night was partly passed in the bustle of
-preparation, while we stood under easy sail towards Cadiz.”[21]
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have in addition the text of a prologue to one of the midshipmen’s
-plays, presented before Lord Northesk and the officers. It gives one the
-best possible idea of the magnificent self-confidence with which the
-British Fleet anticipated the issue of Trafalgar.
-
- ADDRESS.
-
- [_Spoken on board his Majesty’s ship “Britannia,” off Cadiz._]
-
- My Lord and Gentlemen,—Alas! off Cadiz,
- How hard it is we can’t address the ladies,
- For “if the brave alone deserve the fair,”
- Britannia’s sons should surely have their share!
- But, since their valour, tho’ upon record,
- Like other merits, is its own reward,
- Tho’ female charms inspire us not—again
- We welcome you—my Lord and Gentlemen!
- You, too, brave fellows! who the background tread,
- Alike we welcome—jackets blue or red;
- And humbly hope that while we give our aid
- “To cheer the tedium of a dull blockade,”
- To banish _ennui_ for a few short hours,
- However feeble our theatric powers,
- Our well-meant efforts to amuse awhile,
- Will meet the wish’d reward—your fav’ring smile.
-
- For tho’, while thro’ our parts we swell and pant,
- We stun your ears with mock-heroic rant;
- We trust “to pay their suff’rings through your eyes,”
- By the bright splendours of the gay disguise
- In which our heroes (nor let critics grin),
- Bedight in robes of “bunting laced with tin,”
- As kings or emperors, with mimic rage,
- Strut their short hour upon this “floating stage.”
- In times of yore, as grave old authors write,
- Poets possess’d a kind of “second sight,”
- And could (tho’, _entre nous_, ’twas all a hum)
- Inform you clearly of “events to come.”
- Oh! could the Bard, who, to amuse your time,
- Has manufactur’d all this “doggerel rhyme,”
- From mortal mists clear his desiring eyes,
- And pry into your future destinies:
- He would foretell (nor ask you, as a charm,
- Like other soothsayers, “to cross his palm”)
- What—yes, he sees!—must on your courage wait,
- “An happy fortune, and a glorious fate!”
- Yes!—he foresees—confirm his prospects, Heav’n,
- “Yon coop’d up boasters,” to your wishes giv’n;
- Sees their proud ensigns from their standards torn,
- Their vanquish’d navies in glad triumph borne;
- Sees added laurels grace our Nelson’s brow,
- And Victory hovering o’er his glowing prow;
- His conqu’ring banners o’er the waves unfurl’d,
- And Britain’s thunder rule the wat’ry world.
- If aught of prescience to the Muse belong,
- Soon, soon, the scenes that animate her song,
- In glowing colours shall salute your eyes,
- And Heav’n shall bid th’ auspicious morn arise;
- When France and Spain shall be again subdued,
- And your “brave leader’s” victories renew’d.
-
- Then, to reward your persevering toils,
- With honours crown’d—enrich’d with hostile spoils—
- (Her bravest sons—her guardian sailors’ friend)
- “Your grateful country” shall her arms extend,
- To greet your glad return with conscious pride,
- And in her bosom bid your cares subside.
- And, while our fam’d “Britannia” shall resort,
- In awful grandeur to her wished-for port,
- Her loveliest daughters shall with pleasure meet,
- And bless “the heroes of the British fleet!”
- Your wives, your children, and your friends shall come,
- With tears of joy to bid you “welcome home.”
- Nor storms nor battle more your bliss shall mar,
- But “Peace and Plenty crown the toils of war!”
-
-At this point we may fitly end the story of “Old Ironsides” at
-Trafalgar—and this book.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] See _post_; p. 65.
-
-[2] Our West India possessions, except Jamaica, Barbados, and St. Lucia,
-and Antigua were lost; and the four named were about to be attacked when
-Rodney’s victory saved them. Demerara, our West African settlements,
-Trincomalee and Ceylon, Minorca, and the American Colonies went also—all
-because the Ministry of the day refused to keep the Fleet up to the “Two
-Power standard” of those times, “superior to the combined forces of the
-House of Bourbon,” _i.e._ France and Spain, who had the two next powerful
-fleets after Great Britain. In cash, the war cost England £200,000,000.
-
-[3] I am indebted to the courtesy of the proprietors of the _Graphic_ for
-permission to reproduce the diagrams here given.
-
-[4] The Kent Trophy Challenge Shield, of which an illustration is given,
-is of silver. In the centre chief point appears a representation of
-H.M.S. _Kent_, taken from a drawing supplied by the Admiralty. This is
-embossed and oxydized. It is surmounted by an enamelled shield, bearing
-the Arms of the Association of “Men of Kent and Kentish Men.” Underneath
-the ship, entwined with branches of laurel, are scrolls to take the
-names of the Officers Commanding. The lower part of shield shows the
-arms and motto of the County of Kent, while turrets with protruding
-guns form an artistic background. Below is a large ornamental tablet
-displaying the presentation inscription, and round the edge of the
-shield flows a beautifully modelled pattern of Kentish Hops, Cherries,
-Oakleaves, and Cob-nuts, each spray of which is separately modelled and
-bent into position, forming an excellent contrast with the white and
-burnished groundwork shield. The whole is mounted on a stout polished-oak
-shield, size 2 ft. 6 in. by 2 ft., and surrounded by thirty silver
-wreath-medallions, to be inscribed each year with the name of the winning
-gun-crew’s captain. The total weight of silver used is 146 ozs.
-
-[5] A _Kent_ should have been with the two Kentish admirals Rooke and
-Byng at the taking of Gibraltar. She was with the fleet, but during
-the bombardment was stationed to keep watch off Cape de Gata, for the
-possible appearance on the scene of the French Toulon Fleet, which
-Rooke fought at Malaga, a month later. From on board the _Kent_, as
-the officers’ journals describe, they heard the sound of Rooke’s guns
-attacking Gibraltar, and uncertain whether the Toulon Fleet might not
-have got round by hugging the African coast, and the firing be that of
-the fleet in action with them, the _Kent_ turned back to Gibraltar,
-arriving in time to witness the first hoisting of the British flag on the
-fortress.
-
-[6] The usual term with Europeans in the East at that time for the
-“natives,” as we say nowadays.
-
-[7] Nelson was forty-seven when he fell; three years older than Admiral
-Watson was at his death. They were both also Vice-Admirals of the White.
-
-[8] For a full account of the _Monmouth’s_ midnight battle and Captain
-Gardiner’s fate, see “Famous Fighters of the Fleet,” pp. 16-35.
-
-[9] Visitors to modern Southsea, going over what remains of the old keep
-of Porchester Castle, will find scrawled all over the stonework of the
-walls of the upper apartments many names of the French prisoners of this
-time, with sometimes the names of their ships and the dates of their
-capture added.
-
-[10] A full narrative of the campaign and battle is given in “Famous
-Fighters of the Fleet,” pp. 52-161.
-
-[11] Mr. William Stuart, who died at Gortley, Letterkenny, in April,
-1903, at the reputed age of one hundred and twenty, used often to relate
-how he, as a boy, saw a British frigate arrive in Lough Swilly towing the
-French captured flagship, and with Wolfe Tone among the prisoners.
-
-[12] Incidentally, and to end the present story, it may be interesting
-to recall to mind that the Marquess of Donegall is Hereditary Admiral
-of Lough Neagh, the largest lake in the United Kingdom. The office had
-a real significance formerly, for Lough Neagh in the past, well within
-historic times, had a fleet of its own. Sir John Clotworthy, the ancestor
-of Viscount Massereene, who lived at Antrim Castle, had a patent for
-building as many vessels as might be needed for the King’s service on
-Lough Neagh. His fleet set out from Antrim Castle in 1642 to attack the
-Irish in their fort at Charlemont. The battle between the fleet on the
-lake and the land forces resulted in the defeat of the men on shore, with
-their fort, and important consequences. The second Viscount Massereene
-was as strong a supporter of William of Orange as his ancestor had been
-of the Stuarts. He was made captain of Lough Neagh, and received 6s. 8d.
-a day, being bound to build and maintain a gunboat on the lake. The Lough
-Neagh Navy has disappeared, but the lake has still its admiral in the
-Marquess of Donegall.
-
-[13] Having regard to the number of foreigners on board the _Victory_,
-these facts are in point. For more than fifty years previous to 1794,
-foreigners were permitted by Act of Parliament to enter on board British
-merchantmen trading overseas to the extent of three-quarters of the
-crew. After 1794, “for the encouragement of British seamen,” an Act
-was passed reducing the proportion of foreigners to one-quarter of the
-ships’ companies, which, however, still left a large number available at
-various places for the purposes of impressment for the Navy. As to the
-“Impress Service”: in 1805, to keep up the supplies of men, forty-three
-permanent stations or “rendezvous” were maintained in Great Britain and
-Ireland, with an establishment of twenty-seven captains and sixty-three
-lieutenants, permanently on duty, established “in those parts of the
-United Kingdom where seamen chiefly resort, at which stations volunteers
-and impressed men are asked, and deserters from the Naval Service are
-apprehended.” They were distributed as follows: London and Thames, two
-captains and ten lieutenants; Deal and the Downs, Liverpool, and Dundee,
-a captain and three lieutenants at each place; Falmouth, Hull, Cork,
-Cowes, Poole, Waterford, Bristol, Londonderry, Leith, Shields, Dublin,
-Portsmouth, and Gosport, a captain and two lieutenants at each place;
-Newcastle, Sunderland, Yarmouth, Glasgow and Greenock, Dunbar, Limerick,
-Southampton, Romsey, Exeter, Lynn, Swansea, Folkestone, Ramsgate,
-Margate, Lerwick, and the Isle of Man, a captain and one lieutenant, or a
-lieutenant independently, at each place.
-
-[14] How the _Téméraire_ played her part at Trafalgar is fully related in
-“Famous Fighters of the Fleet,” pp. 231-275.
-
-[15] “Ab.” stands for Able Seaman; “Ordinary” for Ordinary Seaman; “L.M.”
-for Landman or Landsmen, the lowest general rating on board a man-of-war,
-comprising new and raw hands for the most part not yet worked up into
-shape, though capable of deck duties and at the guns.
-
-[16] Died of their wounds in the week following the battle.
-
-[17] The letter was published in some of the newspapers in the last week
-of December, 1805. According to the _Victory’s_ muster book there was a
-“James Bagley” among the Marines.
-
-[18] See “The Enemy at Trafalgar” for what they witnessed from the French
-and Spanish fleet; also for a Spanish picture of Collingwood’s duel with
-the Spanish admiral.
-
-[19] Bounce remained Collingwood’s faithful companion to the end; all
-through those five long, weary years of continuous cruising between Cadiz
-and the Dardanelles and off Toulon, until just before, for the worn out,
-prematurely-aged warrior himself, death came at length to close his
-sufferings, poor Bounce one dark night fell overboard and was seen no
-more.
-
-[20] Trafalgar was also, as it happened, the _Victory’s_ fifth fight.
-Collingwood’s _Royal Sovereign_ had been eighteen years launched, and
-had been twice in battle. The _Sovereign_ also was actually the biggest
-ship in the British fleet that day, 2175 tons burthen, as compared with
-the 2162 tons of the _Victory_, and the 2091 tons of the _Britannia_. The
-_Téméraire_, again, was the hardest hitter in the whole fleet, owing to
-the exceptionally heavy ordnance that she carried on her upper deck. Of
-other ships, the _Agamemnon_, the third oldest ship present at Trafalgar,
-had fought her first two battles with Kempenfelt and Rodney—names
-that already had passed into history. Other ships of Nelson’s fleet,
-contemporaries mostly of the _Royal Sovereign_, had taken part in as many
-as four fleet battles. Four of them had been in Lord Howe’s fleet on
-the “Glorious First of June,” three at St. Vincent, five with Nelson at
-the Nile, three at Copenhagen. Three of the _Britannia’s_ consorts—the
-_Belleisle_, the _Tonnant_, and the _Spartiate_—were French-built ships,
-prizes won in battle. Two of them, indeed, had been captured by Nelson
-himself at the Nile. The average age of the ships of Nelson’s Trafalgar
-fleet was seventeen years, an age at which in the case of our modern-day
-battleships they are reckoned as off the active list and in sight of the
-sale list. Only six were less than five years old. One ship only was, so
-to speak, a new ship, the _Revenge_, in October, 1805, serving her first
-commission within seven months of leaving the stocks at Chatham Dockyard.
-
-[21] Of the names mentioned, Mr. Johnstone may possible have been John
-Johnson, an ex-midshipman, rated an A.B. in July, 1805. Mr. Jones may
-have been Mr. Charles S. Jones, the captain’s coxswain. There were
-sixteen Jones’s altogether on the _Britannia’s_ books, but none were
-among the officers, master’s mates, and midshipmen, or the first-class
-volunteers. There was no Lever on board the _Britannia_ in any capacity.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- “Able men,” 13
-
- Adlercron, Colonel, 81, 83
-
- Admiralty visit to Chatham 1764, 187
-
- Ages of the _Victory’s_ crew at Trafalgar, 232
-
- Ahmed Shah, 105
-
- Aikenhead, J., midshipman, 271
-
- Alarm at Chatham 1764, 188-90
-
- Albemarle (Monk), Duke of, 28, 68-70
-
- Anson, Lord, Admiral, 62, 161, 177, 178
-
- Antigua, 193, 199, 203
-
- Apodoca, Spanish Admiral, 63
-
- Armada, Spanish, 22-7, 59
-
- “Armed Associations,” 37
-
- Arrest of Wolfe Tone, 214
-
-
- Baker, Matthew, 2, 6, 16, 17, 28
-
- Baker, “Old Honest Jem,” 11, 19
-
- Balasore Roads, 81, 84, 85, 86, 105, 112
-
- Banks of Flanders, Battles of, 28, 127
-
- Barbados, 192, 193, 202
-
- Barclay, J., Lieut., 275
-
- Barfleur, Battle off Cape, 29, 67, 117, 127, 128, 143, 167, 171
-
- Barham, Lord, Admiral, 62
-
- Bart, Jean, 29
-
- Bartholomew’s Day, Battle of, 58
-
- “Bases,” 12
-
- Basseterre Roads, 194, 195, 202, 204
-
- Battle Honours of H.M.S. _Kent_, 67, 68
-
- Baxster, Boatswain, 9, 16
-
- Beatty, Dr., 34
-
- Beauffremont, de, French Admiral, 144, 153
-
- Beeston, Sir George, Captain, 22, 25, 26
-
- Belleisle, 143
-
- Benbow, Admiral, 19, 29, 60, 171
-
- Bengal Army, 79
-
- Bently, Captain, 137, 146, 147
-
- Berryer, M., Minister of Marine, 184
-
- “Black Dick,” 146
-
- Blackwood, Captain, 215, 248, 250, 257
-
- “Black Hole,” The, 78, 80, 83, 86, 105
-
- Blake, Admiral, 66
-
- “Bloody Foreland,” 210
-
- Bombay, 82, 86, 88, 105
-
- Bomb-ketch, 169
-
- Bompart, Commodore, 210-12
-
- Borough, Captain Stephen, 6, 7, 15
-
- Boscawen, Admiral, 30, 127, 129, 139, 161, 165, 184
-
- Boscawen’s wig, 135
-
- Bouillé, de, Marquis, 193, 199, 201, 204
-
- “Bounce,” Collingwood’s dog, 262, 263
-
- Boys, Commodore, 62
-
- Braces, The, 87, 88
-
- Brereton, W., Lieutenant, 116, 117, 118
-
- Brest, Attack on, 27
-
- Brest Fleet, 129
-
- Brett, Sir Piercey, 62
-
- Brighton, 176
-
- Brimstone Hill, 124, 199-204
-
- Bristol “runners,” 38
-
- “Britannia Victrix,” 272
-
- Budge-Budge, Attack on, 89, 93, 94, 95, 99
-
- Bullen, Captain, 277
-
- Bussy, M., 79, 81
-
- Byng, George, Lord Torrington, 29, 60
-
- Byng, Hon. John, Admiral, 31, 129, 163, 164, 165, 168
-
-
- Cadiz, 21, 27
-
- Calcutta, 78, 79, 80, 88, 96, 102
-
- Calcutta’s Council, 102, 104
-
- Cannon-periers, 12
-
- Cape Finisterre, 21
-
- Cape St. Vincent, 134
-
- Cape François, Battle off, 31, 34
-
- Cape Trafalgar, 132
-
- “Captain-General of the Ocean,” 22
-
- Career of the _Britannia_, 273, 289
-
- Carlyle, 30, 154
-
- Casualty List of the _Victory_, 237
-
- Celebration of Boscawen’s victory, 139
-
- Chacon, General, 63
-
- Chalmers, W., Master of the _Royal Sovereign_, 260
-
- Chandernagore, 103, 104, 105, 106, 112-120, 121, 125
-
- Charles I, King, 19, 48, 49
-
- Charles II, King, 19, 48, 49
-
- Charlotte, Queen, 19, 50
-
- Chastillon, de, Captain, 137
-
- Chatham Dockyard, 177, 179-85, 187-90
-
- Chesterfield, Lord, 175
-
- Cinque Ports Fleet, 57
-
- Clarke, Lieutenant, 121
-
- Clavell, Lieutenant, 194, 250, 253
-
- Clive, 77, 78, 81, 83, 96, 97, 100, 104, 105, 106, 109, 115, 116,
- 118, 124
-
- Clue, de la, French Admiral, 130, 131, 134, 136
-
- Collingwood, 39, 40, 218, 248-71;
- biography, 262;
- G. L. Newnham, 248, 253;
- wounded, 259
-
- Commodore Trunnion, 65
-
- Comparison between the _Dreadnought_ and _Victory_, 51
-
- Conflans, de, French Admiral, 66, 143, 145, 153, 155, 158
-
- Conn, Captain, 40
-
- Cook, Captain, 19
-
- Cooper, Commissioner, 181
-
- Coote, Sir Eyre, 88, 90, 118
-
- Copenhagen, Bombardment of, 62
-
- Cornwall, Frederick, Captain, 165
-
- Cornwallis, Hon. W., Captain, 196
-
- Corbett, Secretary, 65
-
- Corunna Expedition, 27
-
- Cossimbazaar, 79, 103, 108
-
- Cotes, Admiral, 31
-
- “Counter-Armada,” 27
-
- Counties represented at Trafalgar, 229-32, 235, 236, 267, 268, 284
-
- “Counts of the Saxon shore,” 56
-
- Court-martial on Admiral Byng, 163-5
-
- Crew of the _Victory_ at Trafalgar, 228, 233
-
- Crew of the _Téméraire_, 235-6
-
- Crew of the _Royal Sovereign_, 268-9
-
- Crew of the _Britannia_, 283, 284
-
- Cromwell, 19, 48, 71
-
- Crusaders at Lisbon, 57
-
- Culverins, 12, 73
-
-
- D’Aiguillon, Duc de, 148, 155
-
- Death of Admiral Watson, 123
-
- Defence of the French _Centaure_, 133-4
-
- Delamotte, Mr., master of the _Kent_, 110
-
- “Demi-Culverins,” 12-73
-
- Deptford Dockyard, 6, 7, 11, 14, 18, 59
-
- Designing the _Victory_, 182
-
- De Spes, Spanish Ambassador, 4
-
- Don John of Austria, 3
-
- Donegal Bay, battle of, 210-12
-
- Donegal peasants, 209
-
- Dorset and Captain Hardy, 225-6
-
- Dover, 56
-
- Dover Road Postmasters, 70
-
- Drake, Sir Francis, 19, 21, 22-7
-
- Drake, Governor, 79, 80, 86, 88, 96
-
- “_Dreadnought_ Seamen’s Hospital,” 41
-
- Duckworth, Sir J., Admiral, 219
-
- Dumb peal on Portsmouth bells, 178
-
- Dum-Dum, 100
-
- Dutch raid in the Medway, 166
-
-
- “Eastern Parts,” 57
-
- Edward VI, King, 48
-
- Edward VII, King, 48
-
- ” ” and the _Dreadnought_, 48-50
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, 1-5, 19, 48
-
- England’s darkest hour, 34, 38
-
- “English Lutheran days,” 22
-
- “Espagnols-sur-Mer,” 59
-
- Essex, Earl of, 27
-
- Eton boat _Dreadnought_, 41
-
- ” _Victory_, 41
-
- Eugene Aram, 177
-
- Eustace, the Monk, 58
-
- Evelyn, John, 19
-
- Ewens, Captain, of the _Kent_, 69
-
- Execution Deck, 179
-
-
- “Fawcons,” 12
-
- Fenner, Thomas, Captain, 21, 27
-
- Figure head of the _Royal Sovereign_ at Trafalgar, 252
-
- Fireships, 169
-
- Fireships in the Hooghly, 96
-
- Fitz-Stephen, 2, 52, 57
-
- Fogg, Dick, Captain, 61
-
- Fogg, Kit, Captain, 61
-
- Forrest, Captain, 31, 32
-
- Foreign men-of-war names translated, 127, 128
-
- Foreigners in the British fleet at Trafalgar, 229-30, 235, 236, 269,
- 283
-
- Fort d’Orleans, 107, 108, 112, 113, 115
-
- Fortifications of Chandernagore, 109
-
- Fort St. George, 78, 79
-
- ” St. David, 78, 81
-
- ” William, 80, 88, 97, 99, 102, 104, 105, 106
-
- “Four Days’ Fight,” 28, 67-70
-
- “Fowlers,” 12
-
- Fraser, Brigadier, 199
-
- Frederick the Great, 175
-
- “Fresh Men,” 13
-
- “Friend Murray,” 223
-
- French troops at Quiberon, 148, 150
-
- Frigate Bay, St. Kitts, 191, 193, 195, 203, 204, 207
-
-
- Gardiner, Arthur, Captain, 168
-
- Garrick, 176
-
- Garrison of Chandernagore, 103, 109, 119
-
- George I, King, 166
-
- George III, King, 19, 48, 50
-
- Gibraltar, 35, 65, 68, 130, 131, 168, 171, 215, 216
-
- Gillingham (or Jillingham), Ordinary, 9, 20
-
- “Golden Duke,” 22
-
- Gonson, B., Treasurer, “Accompte of,” 9
-
- Goongee, 98
-
- Goschen, Lord, 53, 54
-
- Grasse, de, French Admiral, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 198, 203,
- 204, 205, 207
-
- Gravelines, Battle of, 27
-
- Gravina, Spanish Admiral, 40
-
- Green Point, St. Kitts, 198
-
- Greenwich Hospital Mausoleum, 225
-
- Greenwich Palace, 20
-
- “Gromets,” 13
-
- “Gunlayer’s test,” H.M.S. _Kent_, 75
-
- Gunman, C., Captain, 61
-
- Guns of the _Dreadnought_, 44-7
-
-
- “Half Minute Council of War,” 31
-
- Halloran, L. B., Lieutenant, Royal Navy, 278, etc.
-
- Hamilton, W., Midshipman, 98
-
- Hardy, Sir T. M., Captain, 34, 223-226
-
- Harvey, John, Captain, 62, 63
-
- Harvey, Henry, Captain, 63
-
- Hastings, Kentish flag at, 50
-
- Hawke, Lord, Admiral, 66, 141, 143, 144, 145, 153, 155, 158, 184
-
- Hawkins, Sir John, 1, 14, 28
-
- Hawley, General, 173
-
- Henry VIII, King, 11, 19, 48
-
- Herbert, Arthur (Lord Torrington), 61
-
- Hervey, Lord, Captain, 61
-
- Hey, Rawlins, Lieutenant, 109, 120
-
- Highwaymen in 1760, 167
-
- Hill, Sir G., 213, 214
-
- Hogge, Ralphe, 12
-
- Holwell, Mr. T., 86, 123
-
- Home Fleet Review, 49
-
- Hood, Sir Samuel, Admiral, 192-207
-
- Hooghly, City, 98
-
- Hooghly, River, 81, 82, 87, 88, 89
-
- Horsham, 10, 180
-
- Howard, Lord, Lord High Admiral, 24, 25, 26
-
- Howe, Lord, Admiral, 50, 145, 146, 147
-
- Huguenots, 2-3
-
- Hubert de Burgh, 58
-
- Hyderabad, 79, 81
-
-
- Invasion of England, 37, 129, 174
-
- “Iron Marquis,” The, 22
-
- “Islands Voyage,” 27
-
- Isle of Wight, 24
-
- Ives, surgeon of the _Kent_, 80, 91, 92, 93, 98, 110, 111, 115, 119
-
-
- “Jack the Painter,” 190
-
- Jamaica, 16
-
- James I, King, 19
-
- James II, King, 19
-
- James, Duke of York, 28, 70, 167
-
- Jervis, Sir John (Earl St. Vincent), Admiral, 223
-
- Johnson’s _Dictionary_, 175-6
-
-
- “K” Brand, Dantzic, 181
-
- “Kent claims the first blow,” 52, 57
-
- Kent County Shield, 52, 55
-
- “Kentish Menne in Front,” 52
-
- “Kentish Rising,” 62
-
- Kentish ragstone cannon-balls, 13
-
- Kedgeree, 89
-
- Keppel, Commodore, 150, 151
-
- Kilpatrick, Major, 79, 88
-
- Kinnoull, Lord, 139
-
- King, Sir Richard, Captain, 97
-
-
- Lagos Bay, Battle of, 136-9
-
- Langdon, Captain, 31, 32
-
- La Tour D’Auvergne, 148
-
- Launch of the _Britannia_, 272
-
- Launch of the first _Dreadnought_, 14-18
-
- Launch of Collingwood’s _Dreadnought_, 38-9
-
- Launch of H.M.S. _Kent_, 75
-
- Launches, royal, 48
-
- Lawson, M., 108
-
- Legge, George, Lord Dartmouth, 61
-
- Lepanto, Battle of, 4, 5
-
- Letter from H.M.S. _Kent_, 68
-
- Letter from a _Victory_ marine, 245-6
-
- Letter to Suraj-w-daulah, 89
-
- Letters from Collingwood’s flagship, 269-71
-
- Letters from the _Britannia_, 275-81
-
- Ligonier, Viscount, 175
-
- Lloyd’s Policies, 37
-
- Lock, Master-Shipwright, 182
-
- Log of the _Britannia_ at Trafalgar, 274
-
- Log of the _Victory_, 242-3
-
- ” _Warspite_, 137-8
-
- Longsword, William, 58
-
- Lord High Admiral, 15, 17, 18, 70
-
- Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, 54
-
- Louis XIV, 127
-
- Louis XV and Quiberon, 156
-
- Louisbourg, 167, 178
-
-
- McCleverty, Captain, 131
-
- Madras, 78, 81, 91, 93, 94, 96, 97, 100, 105, 106, 109, 110, 116,
- 118, 119, 122, 123
-
- Mahan, 139
-
- Maidstone, 13, 181
-
- Maids of Kent, Flag from, 55
-
- Malcolm, Sir John, 119
-
- Malcolm, Sir Pulteney, Captain, 214-219
-
- Malleson, Colonel, 119
-
- Malmsey, 16
-
- Manikchand, 87, 89, 90, 91
-
- Marlborough, Duke of, 165, 178
-
- Marshals in the French Navy, 43
-
- Marshmen, 7
-
- Mary Norwood’s Execution, 177
-
- Mary Stuart, 5
-
- “Maryners,” 13
-
- Marston Moor, 28
-
- Martin, Sir T. B., Admiral of the Fleet, 234, 264
-
- Massacre of St. Bartholomew’s Day, 1, 28
-
- Mathews, Admiral, 84
-
- Mayapore, 89
-
- Medina Sidonia, 21, 23, 25, 26
-
- “Mediterranean” Byng, 60
-
- Men and Manners in 1758, 175-7
-
- “Men of Kent and Kentish Men,” 52-5
-
- Militia Camps, 37
-
- Minden, 186
-
- Minorca, 21, 86, 165, 168
-
- Mir Jafier, 121, 122
-
- Monument to Admiral Watson, 123, 124
-
- “Moors,” 92
-
- Moorshedabad, 87, 105
-
- Morbihan, 142
-
- “Mother of the Maids,” 20
-
- Musée de Marine, 36
-
- Murray, Geo., Captain, 223
-
-
- Naming of the _Dreadnought_, 1, 4, 5, 14-18
-
- Naming of the _Kent_, 71
-
- ” ” _Victory_, 184-6
-
- Naval Estimates of 1759, 179, 182
-
- Nawab, Vizier of Bengal, 79, 80, 87, 98, 99, 100, 102, 103, 104, 106
-
- Nelson, 30, 33, 163, 177, 222-4, 245, 246, 247, 256, 258, 290
-
- Nelson and the _Victory_, 222-3
-
- ” Monument, Portsdown, 218
-
- Nelson’s “Dreadnought” sword, 34
-
- Nelson’s “happiest day,” 33, 34
-
- Nile, battle of, 62
-
- Newfoundland “disturbance,” 187, 188
-
- Nevis, 195, 204, 205
-
- North Cape, 6
-
- North Devon, 6
-
- North-East Monsoon, 85
-
- North Foreland, Battle off, 58, 67
-
- North Sea Packets, 38
-
- Northesk, Earl of, Admiral, 272
-
-
- Officers of the _Britannia_ at Trafalgar, 282-8
-
- Officers of the _Royal Sovereign_ at Trafalgar, 266, 267
-
- Officers of the _Victory_ at Trafalgar, 226, 228
-
- “Old Dreadnought,” 30, 127, 136
-
- “Old Ironsides,” 272
-
- Old London Bridge, 176
-
- “Old Pretender,” the, 175
-
- Old Single Dock, Chatham, 182
-
- Omichand, 121
-
- Opdam, Dutch Admiral, 28
-
- Order to build the _Victory_, 181-2
-
- Order naming the _Donegal_, 213
-
- Orme, Indian historian, 119
-
-
- Party Politics and the Navy, 35, 125
-
- Passaro, Cape, Battle of, 29
-
- Peasants of the Weald, 180
-
- Pepys, Samuel, 19
-
- Perreau, S., Lieut., 120
-
- Pett, Phineas, 17, 59, 60
-
- Pett, Peter, 2, 6
-
- Philip II, King of Spain, 22, 23
-
- Pigott, Governor, 81
-
- Pitt, Lord Chatham, 139, 178
-
- Plan of attack at Chandernagore, 112-13
-
- Plassey, the sailors’ part at, 121-2
-
- Pocock, Sir G., Admiral, 82, 111, 120
-
- Pompadour, Madame de, 143, 156
-
- Porchester Castle, 171
-
- Portisham, Hardy’s birthplace, 225
-
- Portland Bill, 23
-
- Porto Bello, 171
-
- Portsmouth in the Seven Years’ War, 161-77
-
- “Port-pieces,” 12
-
- Port Royal, 31
-
- Prescott, General, 199
-
- Presentation to H.M.S. _Kent_, 52-5
-
- Presentation to H.M.S. _Donegal_, 220-1
-
- Press-gang, working of, 169, 170, 233, 234
-
- “Prencipall Master,” 6, 15, 17
-
- Puritan method of naming the Navy, 28, 71-3
-
-
- Quebec, 186
-
- Quiberon Bay, 66, 142, 144, 148, 154, 156
-
-
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, 27
-
- Recalde, J. M. de, 23
-
- Refugees from Calcutta, 80, 81, 86, 88
-
- Regiments named—
- 1st Royals, 199
- 13th Foot, 193
- 15th Foot, 199
- 28th Foot, 193
- 39th Foot, 81, 88, 90
- 69th Foot, 193
- Royal Artillery, 199
-
- Relics of the Trafalgar _Dreadnought_, 41
-
- Renault de St. Germain (Governor of Chandernagore), 103
-
- Rescue of Spaniards after Trafalgar, 217, 218
-
- Rivalry between the _Victory_ and _Royal Sovereign_ at Trafalgar, 251
-
- Rochelle Expedition, 28
-
- Rochfort, 155
-
- Rodney, Sir G., Admiral, 65, 192, 200, 201, 202, 207
-
- Rodney’s report on the disaffection in the West Indies, 202-204
-
- Rooke, Sir George, Admiral, 60, 165
-
- Rotherham, E., Captain, 250, 251, 252
-
- Rupert, Prince, 28, 68, 70, 117, 167
-
- Ruyter de, Dutch Admiral, 28, 68, 117
-
-
- “St. James’s Day Fight,” 28, 67
-
- St. Vincent—Nelson in action, 34, 223
-
- St. Lo, Commodore, 62
-
- Sabran de, French Captain, 134
-
- Sailor’s devotion at Collingwood’s funeral, 265
-
- “Saker,” 17, 74
-
- Santa Cruz, Marquis de, 22
-
- Saxton, Sir C., Commissioner, 39
-
- Ships of Kent, 57
-
- Ships—
- _Achates_, 6
- _Achille_ (Fr.), 274, 276, 280
- _Aid_ or _Ayde_, 3
- _Aigle_ (Fr.), 282
- _Alfred_, 194, 198
- _America_, 136, 138
- _Arethusa_, 66
- _Ark Royal_, 24, 25, 26
- _Augusta_, 31, 32, 33
- _Asia_, 160
- _Barfleur_, 192, 196, 206, 207
- _Belleisle_, 251
- _Berwick_, 282
- _Blaze_, 83
- _Bridgewater_, 82, 83, 89, 90, 96, 98, 106, 121
- _Britannia_, 49, 60, 185, 272, 273, 274, 276, 278, 281, 282, 283,
- 284
- _Brunswick_, 62, 63
- _Bucentaure_ (Fr.), 275, 279
- _Canada_, 196, 198
- _Canterbury_, 64, 65
- _Centaure_ (Fr.), 133, 134, 135
- _Centurion_, 145
- _Chatham_, 66
- _Childers_, 227
- _Commonwealth_, 162
- _Conqueror_, 137, 275
- _Cumberland_, 82, 83, 89, 105, 112, 125
- _Deal Castle_, 67
- _Defiance_, 4, 145
- _Deptford_, 66
- _Dieu Repulse_, 4
- _Donegal_, 208, 214-20
- _Dorsetshire_, 145
- _Dover_, 65, 66
- _Dragon_, 84
- _Dreadnought_, 1, 4-9, 11-51, 72, 126, 140, 248
- _Dunbar_, 72
- _Dunkirk_, 72
- _Edinburgh_, 31-33
- _El Rayo_ (Sp.), 217, 218
- _Elizabeth_, 233
- _Elizabeth Jonas_, 3
- _Eltham_, 67
- _Entreprenante_ (Fr.), 128
- _Essex_, 71, 151, 158
- _Euryalus_, 215, 257
- _Faversham_, 67
- _Fidelle_ (Fr.), 128
- _Fier_ (Fr.), 128
- _Folkestone_, 67
- _Formidable_, 141-3, 145, 148, 150, 151, 158
- _Foudroyant_, 168, 169, 224
- _Fougueux_ (Fr.), 252, 254, 255
- _Gibraltar_, 130, 131
- _Great Harry_, 60, 61
- _Greenwich_, 66
- _Greenwich_ (Fr.), 32
- _Guernsey_, 138
- _Guerrière_ (Fr.), 134, 135
- _Hampshire_, 71
- _Henry_, 72
- _Hoche_ (Fr.), 211, 212, 213
- _Impérial_ (Fr.), 218
- _Implacable_, 239
- _Indomptable_ (Fr.), 40, 254
- _Indus II_, 140
- _Intrépide_ (Fr.), 33, 82, 138, 282
- _Invincible_, 190
- _Jersey_, 137, 138
- _Joli_ (Fr.), 128
- _Jupiter_, 219
- _Kent_, 52, 53, 55, 67, 75, 80, 82, 83, 85, 87-92, 94, 95, 98, 106,
- 107, 110, 112, 113-18, 120, 122, 124, 125, 128
- _Kentish_, 71, 73, 74
- _Kingfisher_, 80, 82, 88, 89, 96, 98, 106
- _Leviathan_, 275
- _Licorne_ (Fr.), 32
- _Lion_, 24
- _London_, 185
- _Luxborough_ galley, 62
- _Magnanime_, 145, 146, 147, 150
- _Maidstone_, 66
- _Margate_, 67
- _Marston Moor_, 72
- _Marlborough_, 89
- _Mary Rose_, 11, 24, 26, 73
- _Medway_, 67
- _Meleager_, 224
- _Minerve_, 224
- _Montagu_, 128, 147, 150
- _Modeste_ (Fr.), 134, 137, 139
- _Monarque_, 163, 164
- _Monmouth_, 168, 208
- _Mutine_, 224
- _Namur_, 134, 135
- _Naseby_, 19, 72
- _Neptune_, 275, 278, 279
- _Newbury_, 72
- _Nymphe_, 194
- _Ocean_ (Fr.), 134, 136, 138
- _Opiniâtre_ (Fr.), 32, 33
- _Orphèe_ (Fr.), 169
- _Outarde_ (Fr.), 32
- _Prince of Wales_, 20
- _Principe de Asturias_ (Sp.), 40
- _Protector_, 88
- _Prudent_, 192, 198
- _Pluton_ (Fr.), 197
- _Queen Charlotte_, 50
- _Queen_, 166
- _Queenborough_, 67
- _Ramillies_, 63
- _Redoutable_ (Fr.), 134, 136, 242, 246
- _Renommée_ (Fr.), 65
- _Resolution_, 72, 150, 151-3, 155, 198
- _Revenge_, 3, 18, 23, 24, 26, 60, 72, 151, 165, 169
- _Repulse_, 4
- _Royal Anne_, 166, 185
- _Royal Charles_, 70, 72, 166
- _Royal George_, 152-4, 166, 167, 182, 185
- _Royal Prince_, 167
- _Royal Sovereign_, 40, 165, 166, 185, 242, 248, 250, 251-8, 260,
- 262, 266, 267-71, 275, 278, 279
- _Royal William_, 167, 185
- _Rochester_, 66
- _Romney_, 66
- _St. Albans_, 138, 197
- _St. George_, 163-5, 224
- _St. Vincent_, 160
- _Salisbury_, 82, 83, 85, 88, 89, 90, 96, 101, 107, 112, 113-15, 125
- _Sandwich_, 65
- _San Josef_ (Sp.), 34, 224
- _San Juan Nepomuceno_ (Sp.), 40
- _San Juan de Compostella_ (Sp.), 64
- _San Justo_ (Sp.), 254
- _San Leandro_ (Sp.), 254
- _San Nicolas_ (Sp.), 34
- _San Vincente_ (Sp.), 64
- _Sans Pareil_ (Fr.), 128
- _Santa Anna_ (Sp.), 23, 251-7, 259, 260, 279
- _Santisima Trinidad_ (Sp.), 242, 279
- _Sauvage_ (Fr.), 128
- _Sceptre_ (Fr.), 32, 33
- _Shannon_, 231
- _Sheerness_, 67
- _Soleil Royal_ (Fr.), 153, 155
- _Solebay_, 195
- _Souverain_ (Fr.), 134, 135
- _Sovereign of the Seas_, 48, 60
- _Superb_, 219
- _Sussex_, 71
- _Swallow_, 26
- _Swiftsure_, 6, 11, 20, 21, 150, 151
- _Téméraire_, 126-9, 131, 134, 135, 137, 139, 140, 146, 217, 235,
- 236, 250, 275
- _Thesèe_ (Fr.), 151
- _Thunder_, 90
- _Torrington_, 28, 29, 72
- _Tredagh_, 72
- _Triumph_, 3, 36
- _Turquoise_ (Fr.), 128
- _Tyger_, 82, 83, 85, 88, 89, 90, 95-7, 107, 112, 113, 115, 118,
- 120, 125
- _Vanguard_, 224
- _Vengeur_ (Fr.), 62, 63
- _Vernon_, 220
- _Victory_, 3, 6, 18, 24, 26, 34, 43, 50, 51, 60, 126, 160, 163,
- 171, 175, 187, 189, 190, 217, 222, 223, 225, 226, 228, 229,
- 231, 232, 233, 235, 237, 241, 243, 245, 248, 250, 256, 257,
- 274, 275, 278, 279, 280, 284
- _Ville de Paris_ (Fr.), 193, 196, 199, 207
- _Warspite_, 137, 138, 146, 147, 150
- _Weazle_, 215
- _Woolwich_, 67
- _Worcester_, 72
- _York_, 92
-
- Shirley, Governor, 199
-
- Shoreditch, Midshipman, 122
-
- Shot, Sussex iron, 12
-
- Shovell, Sir Cloudesley, 65, 66, 167
-
- Slade, Sir T., 182
-
- Sluys, Battle of, 59
-
- Smith, Sir Sidney, Admiral, 62
-
- Smith, Collingwood’s valet, 249, 255
-
- Soldiers at Portsmouth, 172, 173
-
- Solebay, Battle of, 28, 29, 167
-
- Spert, Sir Thomas, 61
-
- Speke, Flag-Captain, 82, 87, 98, 114, 120
-
- Speke, Midshipman, 114, 120
-
- Spragge, Sir E., Admiral, 29
-
- Standard at the Main, 49, 50
-
- Standing Cup, 16
-
- Stanhope, Countess, 55
-
- Stanton, Lieutenant, 120
-
- Strahan, of the _Kent_, 91, 93, 94, 95
-
- Suckling, M., Captain, 30, 31, 32, 34
-
- Suraj-u-daulah, 79, 80, 87, 89, 98, 100, 101, 102, 104, 105, 106
-
-
- Tagus, 5, 22
-
- Tanna, Fort at, 95, 96
-
- “Tars of the Tyne!” 267-8
-
- Teneriffe, St. Cruz, etc., 62, 66
-
- Terraneau, de, 111
-
- Theatricals on board the _Britannia_, 284-9
-
- Thackeray on Collingwood, 265-6
-
- “The Wonderful Year,” 128, 186
-
- Thierri, Pilot, 146
-
- Thompson, Sir T. B., Captain, 62
-
- Three sailors on a raft, 99
-
- “Thunderbolt of War,” 22
-
- Tilbury camp, 5
-
- Timber for the _Victory_, 180-1
-
- _Times_, origin of, 38
-
- Tone, Wolfe, 210, 212, 213-14
-
- Torbay, fortifications at, 37
-
- Toulon Fleet, 130, 192
-
- Toulon, 129, 130, 131
-
- Tourville, 143
-
- Tower Wharf “Bynns,” 13
-
- Trafalgar, Battle of, 39, 41, 215-19, 222, 289
-
- Treachery in the West Indies, 200-3
-
- Trincomalee, 85
-
- Trinidad, Capture of, 63
-
- Turner, 140
-
-
- Verger, Cte. de, French Admiral, 144, 146, 147, 157, 158
-
- Vernon, Admiral, 171
-
- Victoria, Queen, 49
-
- Vigo Street, London, 165
-
- Villeneuve, Admiral, 248, 252
-
- Visits to the _Victory_ after Trafalgar, 245-7
-
- Visit to the first _Dreadnought_, 9-14
-
- Vizagapatam, 105
-
- Volunteers on board the _Victory_, 233
-
-
- Wager, Sir Charles, 30
-
- Walpole, Horace, 136, 146, 151, 186
-
- Walter, Mr. John, 38
-
- Walton, Captain, 9, 30
-
- “War of Jenkins’ Ear,” 29
-
- Warren, Sir J. B., Admiral, 211-13
-
- Watson, Charles, Admiral, 79, 83, 84, 86
-
- Weald of Kent, 59
-
- Wells, John, Midshipman, 276
-
- “Western Ports,” 57
-
- William III, King, 165, 166, 167
-
- Wine Vaults of Corunna, 27
-
- Wolfe, General, 167, 175
-
- Woodcot, T., “Prest-master,” 8
-
-
-
-
-A HISTORY OF THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE ROYAL NAVY AND OF MERCHANT
-SHIPPING IN RELATION TO THE NAVY
-
-From 1509 to 1660
-
-BY M. OPPENHEIM
-
-With an Introduction treating of the earlier period
-
-_With Illustrations. Demy 8vo. =15s.= net_
-
-
-=Times.=—“Full of historic detail of great interest and novelty derived
-from a variety of documentary sources hitherto unexplored.”
-
-=Athenæum.=—“The first thing that will strike the reader of the ‘History’
-is the extreme amount of original research which is embodied in it.”
-
-=Daily News.=—“This admirable first volume of an exhaustive work....
-The subject has never been dealt with adequately by any previous
-historian.... All students of English naval history will look forward
-with eagerness to Mr. Oppenheim’s subsequent volumes.”
-
-=Pall Mall Gazette.=—“This is a wholly admirable book. It is based upon
-patient and careful work done in this much-neglected subject for the
-first time. The mass of information he has gathered and digested is
-simply appalling.... Though the subject sounds an astonishingly dry one,
-Mr. Oppenheim has managed to make it interesting.... He is impartial and
-exhaustive, and in his investigations sheds very considerable sidelight
-upon various debatable points in English history.”
-
-=Army and Navy Gazette.=—“One of the most important contributions to
-naval history lately issued from the press.... Hitherto naval histories
-have avowedly been devoted to executive operations, and never before have
-we had a history concerned with that organisation which renders executive
-operations possible.... Mr. Oppenheim’s knowledge of his special subject
-is unrivalled, and he is admirable in the careful and exhaustive manner
-in which he deals with the details of it. These are marshalled with
-consummate skill. We shall look with interest for the appearance of his
-next volume.”
-
-
-
-
-THE SPANISH CONQUEST IN AMERICA
-
-BY SIR ARTHUR HELPS
-
-Edited, with an Introduction, Maps, and Notes, by
-
-M. OPPENHEIM
-
-_In Four Volumes. Crown 8vo. =3s. 6d.= net each_
-
-
-=Athenæum.=—“A handsome reprint.... Mr. Oppenheim has provided a sensible
-and suggestive introduction and additional notes of a useful type. We are
-glad to see he does not join in the wholesale condemnation of Spanish
-rule in America that is common among ill-informed writers.”
-
-=Literature.=—“A book, apart from its literary value, of great interest
-in the history of the dealings of conquering civilised nations with
-aborigines.”
-
-=Spectator.=—“A very welcome new edition. The book has a singular charm
-of its own. It catches that romance, that strange mixture of brightness
-and melancholy, which belongs to all early American history.... Sir
-Arthur Helps’s literary enthusiasm and his charming touch were made
-to deal with such a subject.... The introduction is very interesting,
-and the maps, a new feature of this edition, are quite invaluable to a
-student of early American history.”
-
-=Saturday Review.=—“The publisher is wisely bringing out a new edition of
-a standard work. Mr. Oppenheim has written a judicious introduction.”
-
-=Literary World.=—“The editor of the volume before us—we await with
-pleasure the three that are to follow—has written an illuminative
-introduction, but that is the least of his contributions. Many notes,
-additional or corrective, greatly add to the value of this edition, and,
-a most important concession to practical usefulness, Helps’s notes, when
-consisting of quotations in foreign tongues, have been translated.”
-
-=Literary World= (_re_ Vol. II.).—“In all that goes to make a book
-pleasant to eye and hand it leaves nothing to be desired.... Our renewal
-of long-time acquaintance warrants a hearty recommendation of this best
-edition of the ‘Spanish Conquest.’ In it intrinsic worth and literary
-excellence are supplemented by the capable work and business enterprise
-of editor and publisher.”
-
-
-
-
-JANE AUSTEN’S SAILOR BROTHERS
-
-By J. H. and F. C. HUBBACK
-
-Being the Life and Adventures of Sir Francis Austen, G.C.B., Admiral of
-the Fleet, and Rear-Admiral Charles Austen.
-
-_With numerous Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d. net._
-
-
-PRESS OPINIONS.
-
-=Daily Telegraph.=—“This pleasant book ... an unpretentious but really
-interesting volume; a volume which, although its chief attractions
-are literary, has also distinct value for its glimpses of life abroad
-during the early years of the nineteenth century ... a capital series of
-portraits and facsimiles.”
-
-=Daily Chronicle.=—“It is a pleasant picture this book gives of English
-life a hundred years ago ... clear-cut little pictures of what it meant
-to serve the king at sea in the days when Napoleon was pictured in the
-imagination of all British subjects as waiting to spring like a tiger
-across the ‘ruffled strip of salt.’”
-
-=Morning Post.=—“Contains many letters from Jane Austen and the sailors,
-a number of interesting portraits, so that this volume may be welcomed
-as an important addition to Austeniana; but it is besides valuable for
-its glimpses of life in the Navy, its illustrations of the feelings and
-sentiments of naval officers during the period that preceded and that
-which followed the great battle of just one century ago.”
-
-=Westminster Gazette.=—“The worshipping company of dear Jane’s friends
-will, without a doubt, hail this volume with unmixed delight.”
-
-=Pall Mall Gazette.=—“In this timely issued book we get a tolerably clear
-idea of the home life of the Austens, and of life in the Navy in the
-opening years of the nineteenth century.”
-
-=Daily News.=—“A very interesting book ... much interesting historical
-matter. The illustrations from portraits and original drawings are
-excellent.... It deserves to be read for the fascinating glimpses it
-gives of life at sea under our great admirals in eighteen hundred, and
-war time.”
-
-
-
-
-NAPOLEONIC LITERATURE
-
-
-NAPOLEON AND THE INVASION OF ENGLAND. By H. F. B. WHEELER and A. M.
-BROADLEY, Author of “The Three Dorset Captains at Trafalgar,” etc. With
-108 Illustrations (8 in colours). 2 vols. 32s. net.
-
-THE FALL OF NAPOLEON. By OSCAR BROWNING, Author of “The Boyhood and Youth
-of Napoleon.” With numerous Illustrations. 10s. 6d. net.
-
-THE BOYHOOD AND YOUTH OF NAPOLEON. Some Chapters on the Early Life of
-Buonaparte, 1769-1793. By OSCAR BROWNING. With Portraits. Crown 8vo. 5s.
-net.
-
-THE DUKE OF REICHSTADT. A Biography compiled from new sources of
-information. By EDWARD DE WERTHEIMER. With numerous Illustrations, 2
-Photogravure Portraits, and a Facsimile Letter. Demy 8vo. 21s. net. 2nd
-Edition.
-
-WOMEN OF THE SECOND EMPIRE. Chronicles of the Court of Napoleon III.
-By FREDERIC LOLIÉE. Translated by ALICE IVIMY. With an Introduction by
-RICHARD WHITEING. 51 Portraits, 3 in Photogravure. Demy 8vo. 21s. net.
-
-MEMOIRS OF THE COUNT DE CARTRIE. A Record of the Extraordinary Events
-in the Life of a French Royalist during the War in La Vendée, and of
-his Flight to Southampton, where he followed the Humble Occupation of
-Gardener. With an Introduction by FRÉDÉRIC MASSON, Appendices and Notes
-by PIERRE AMÉDÉE PICHOT and others, and numerous Illustrations, including
-a Photogravure Portrait of the Author. Demy 8vo. 16s. net.
-
-NAPOLEON’S CONQUEST OF PRUSSIA, 1806. By F. LORAINE PETRE, Author of
-“Napoleon’s Campaign in Poland, 1806-1807.” With an Introduction by
-FIELD-MARSHAL EARL ROBERTS, K.G., V.C., etc. With numerous Maps, Battle
-Plans, Portraits, and other Illustrations. Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d. net.
-
-NAPOLEON’S CAMPAIGN IN POLAND, 1806-1807. By F. LORAINE PETRE. A Military
-History of Napoleon’s First War with Russia, verified from unpublished
-official documents. With Maps and Plans. New Edition. Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d.
-net.
-
-RALPH HEATHCOTE. Letters of a Young Diplomatist and Soldier during the
-Time of Napoleon, giving an Account of the Dispute between the Emperor
-and the Elector of Hesse. By COUNTESS GÜNTHER GRÖBEN. 20 Illustrations.
-Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d. net.
-
-
-
-
-BY EDWARD FRASER
-
-THE ENEMY AT TRAFALGAR
-
-_Illustrated. Price_ =16s.=
-
-
-EXTRACTS FROM PRESS NOTICES
-
-“The idea of the book is ‘to render tribute to the gallant men at
-whose expense Nelson achieved fame,’ and this idea is admirably
-realized.”—TIMES.
-
-“Mr. Fraser has achieved the apparently impossible feat of presenting the
-battle of Trafalgar to the British public from an entirely new point of
-view.”—MORNING POST.
-
-“Its dramatic pages cannot fail to be of absorbing interest.”—DAILY
-TELEGRAPH.
-
-“It indirectly adds to the glory of the victory.”—DAILY GRAPHIC.
-
-“The tone and spirit of the book are worthy of the two nations
-whose death-grip in 1805 has at last resulted in the embrace of
-friendship.”—DAILY CHRONICLE.
-
-“A notable and most fascinating addition to the literature of the grand
-deliverance.”—GLOBE.
-
-“The book has a strong and lively interest for general readers who like
-to find in true stories things more sensational and strange than come
-within the invention of romance.”—SCOTSMAN.
-
-“This fascinating and useful book.”—SATURDAY REVIEW.
-
-“Mr. Fraser has discovered a gap in our knowledge, and filled it in a
-very interesting manner.”—ATHENÆUM.
-
-“English history would gain if there were more books like Mr.
-Fraser’s.”—MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.
-
-“There is a manly ring about the honest enthusiasm that pervades the
-pages of this bulky volume, and it is not possible to read them without
-being carried away by it.”—GRAPHIC.
-
-“A series of tableaux and portraits which are as vivid as they are
-important.”—ROYAL NAVY LIST.
-
-“To say that the work is interesting is to pay it a poor compliment.
-It is interesting and instructive, and, above all, it breaks new
-ground.”—IRISH TIMES.
-
-
-
-
-BY EDWARD FRASER
-
-FAMOUS FIGHTERS OF THE FLEET
-
-_Illustrated. Price_ =6s.=
-
-
-EXTRACTS FROM PRESS NOTICES
-
-“A graphic and instructive book.”—TIMES.
-
-“We heartily commend the book.”—STANDARD.
-
-“Full of life and action.”—DAILY TELEGRAPH.
-
-“Mr. Fraser has told the story clearly and vividly. His book is a good
-book.”—MORNING POST.
-
-“It is just such history as this that goes to make patriotism.”—DAILY
-GRAPHIC.
-
-“It will help all who read it to realise upon what a foundation of solid
-glory our present Navy is built up.”—DAILY CHRONICLE.
-
-“Full of rich narrative quality and the stuff that moves the blood to new
-patriotism and new hopes.”—PALL MALL GAZETTE.
-
-“A volume teeming with romance, adventure, excitement; the picturesque
-detail of personal heroism.”—GLOBE.
-
-“Admirably forcible and clear.”—SPECTATOR.
-
-“Mr. Fraser’s book is one to live.”—ATHENÆUM.
-
-“These are noble stories and Mr. Fraser tells them admirably.”—GUARDIAN.
-
-“More attractive than any imaginary narrative.”—BRITISH WEEKLY.
-
-“It stirs the blood to read.”—LITERARY WORLD.
-
-“Brisk, strong, and spirited, full of the subtle flavour of the past,
-and crammed from cover to cover with picturesque incident brilliantly
-told.”—NAVY LEAGUE JOURNAL.
-
-“It combines in admirable form matters of present-day interest and
-historic renown.”—LEEDS MERCURY.
-
-“It will be read with a keen zest by everyone.”—SCOTSMAN.
-
-“The reader is made to feel like an actual spectator.”—DUNDEE ADVERTISER.
-
-“Admirers of dashing bravery on the high seas will find delight in Mr.
-Fraser’s volume.”—NEW YORK DAILY TRIBUNE.
-
-“All capital yarns, chock-full of salt, sulphur, and saltpetre.”—THE
-NATION (U.S.A.).
-
-“Fraser’s Buch lässt nicht zu wünschen.”—ALLGEMEINE SPORT-ZEITUNG.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE LIBRARY OF GOLDEN THOUGHTS
-
-_Pott 8vo (6 × 3¾ in.)_
-
-_Bound in Cloth. Price 1s. net_
-
-_Bound in Leather. Price 2s. net_
-
-
-FIRST VOLUMES
-
- GOLDEN THOUGHTS FROM THE GOSPELS
- GOLDEN THOUGHTS FROM THOREAU
- GOLDEN THOUGHTS FROM SIR THOS. BROWNE
-
-Printed upon a paper specially manufactured for the series, with end
-papers and cover design by Charles Ricketts, and border designs by
-Laurence Housman. Each volume has a frontispiece, and is bound in a
-manner which will recommend the series specially appropriate for presents.
-
-JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD, VIGO ST., LONDON, W.
-
-
-
-
-Flowers of Parnassus
-
-_A Series of Famous Poems Illustrated_
-
-UNDER THE GENERAL EDITORSHIP OF FRANCIS COUTTS
-
-_Size 5½ × 4½ in., gilt top_
-
-_Bound in Cloth. Price 1s. net_
-
-_Bound in Leather. Price 1s. 6d. net_
-
-
-LIST OF VOLUMES
-
- GRAY’S ELEGY AND ODE ON A DISTANT PROSPECT OF ETON COLLEGE
- BROWNING’S THE STATUE AND THE BUST
- STEPHEN PHILLIPS’ MARPESSA
- ROSSETTI’S THE BLESSED DAMOZEL
- THE NUT-BROWN MAID
- TENNYSON’S DREAM OF FAIR WOMEN
- TENNYSON’S DAY DREAM
- SUCKLING’S A BALLADE UPON A WEDDING
- FITZGERALD’S RUBAIYAT OF OMAR KHAYYAM
- POPE’S THE RAPE OF THE LOCK
- WATTS-DUNTON’S CHRISTMAS AT THE MERMAID
- BLAKE’S SONGS OF INNOCENCE
- SHELLEY’S THE SENSITIVE PLANT
- KEATS’S ISABELLA: OR THE POT OF BASIL
- WATSON’S WORDSWORTH’S GRAVE
- RELIQUES OF STRATFORD-ON-AVON
- MILTON’S LYCIDAS
- WORDSWORTH’S TINTERN ABBEY
- LONGFELLOW’S THE BUILDING OF THE SHIP
- WATSON’S THE TOMB OF BURNS
- A LITTLE CHILD’S WREATH
- MORRIS’S THE DEFENCE OF GUENEVERE
- HOGG’S KILMENY
- TENNYSON’S MAUD
- DAVIDSON’S THE BALLAD OF A NUN
- WORDSWORTH’S RESOLUTION AND INDEPENDENCE
- THE SONG OF SONGS, WHICH IS SOLOMON’S
-
-JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD, VIGO ST., LONDON, W.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMPIONS OF THE FLEET ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
- you are located before using this eBook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.