ill .^ ■'^: aV^ \' .r- O ^> u u .^ ^. .c^^ .^> -^-t "<>. c^^ A^ . ^ ^ " . -^C^ V. V ^^ c.~^ -^> v.^\- A>' O 0> -^.^ "■ ,..\;- %,.^' <^' -■'.,■ .<> ^% -y ,9' ■;-'"/ C' \ -^ -'^. ,X^^ x\' •/', \X' .P ^^ - >■ ^ x' •X X <0 c- 0> -^.z. ' x^^ ,0 'J,. .<\' .:>*-.-wiS^ .x ^ ' -''"./ .. ' ■> ■^/. ,,x^ •,X'' X^^' ■'■r-- ■r. ' ' '■■ X/. . ^'^^ ■ "^'^^^ .-W ,/. .\ cV^^ A HISTORY OF AMERICAN PRIVATEERS BY EDGAR STANTON MACLAY. A History of American Privateers. IFiiform with "A History of the United States Navy." One volume. Illustrated. Svo. Price, I3.50. After several years of research the distinguished historian of American sea power presents the first comprehensive account of one of the most pic- turesque and absorbing phases of our maritime warfare. The miportance of tlie tlieme is indicated by the fact that the value of prizes and cargoes taken by privaieers in the Revihition was three times that of the prizes and cargoes taken by naval vessels, while in the War of 1812 we hail 517 privateers and only 23 vessels in our navy. The intimate connection between privateers and the navy, the former serving often as a training school for the latter, is brought out in the author's narrative. From forgotten monographs, the records of historical societies, from unpublished log books, and from de- scendants of noted privateersmen, he has obtained intimate and vivid accounts of ihe fitting out of the vessels, the incidenls of their voyages, and the thrilling adventures of the brave sailors who manned them. Mr. Maclay's romantic tale is accompanieil by reproductions of contemporary pictures, portraits, and documents, and also by illustrations by Mr. George F. Gibbs. A History of the United States Navy, From 1775 to 1898. By EuGAR Stanton Maclay, A. M. With Technical Revision by Lieutenant Roy C. Smith, l^ S. N. In two volumes. Illustrated. Svo. I'cr vol., cloth, 83.50. This work has been adopted as the Text=Book upon United Stales Naval History in the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. " It is full of patriotic inspiration, and one that contains in it some of the brightest, most stirring and inspiring chapters of our national history." — AVzc ] '0; /■ Indcpoidiut. The Private Journal of William Maclay, United States Senator from Pennsylvania, 1789-1791. With Portrait from Original Miniature. Edited by Ed- gar S. Maclay, A. M. Large Svo. Cloth, I2.25. The first session of Congress was in many respects the most impoitant gathering in the history of that body. It was a session about which little has been publicly recorded. The members met behind closed doors, and the official records of the sitting an- lost. During his two years in the .Sen- ate William Maclay kept a journal of his own in which he minutely re- corded the transacti ins of each day. In this way he filled three large ledgers of .ibont 400 pages each, which are preserved to this day by the descendants of the Senator. This record throws a flood of light on the doings of our first legislators both in and out of Congress, and is invaluable to the student of American history as well as to the general reader. 1). APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. A HISTORY OF AMERICAN PRIVATEERS BY EDGAR STAMTON MACLAY, A.M. AUTHOR OF A HISTORY OF THE UNTIED STATES NAVY, REMINISCENCES OF THE OLD NAVY EDITOR OF THE JOURNAL OF WILLIAM MACLAY (U. S. Senator from Pennsylvania, 1789-1791) ILLUSTRATED NEW YORK D. APPLETON AND COMPANY 1899 \y\-k- I. ("OPYBIGHT, 1800, By D. APPLETON and COMPANY. Electrotyped and Printed at the appleton press, u.s.a. TO THEODORE EOOSEYELT, PIONEER OF THE MODERN SCHOOL OF NAVAL WRITERS, THIS W O R K IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. April, 1S9S. PREFACE. The liistory of flic United States navy is so in- timately <-onne('trivateers tliat the story of one wouhl be incomph'te witlioiit a fall record of the other. In each of onr wars with (h-eat Britain many of the ca]>tains in tlie navy assnmed command of ]»i-ivateers, in wliich they frerivateersmen fnrnished the navy with a lai-j^e nnm- hcr of officers, many of whom IxM-ame fanions. In onr strnii'iile for indei)endence more than sixty American <-raft armed by pi-ivate enterprise were c(»mnian(lers and men of the l\(ni(/, carryinjji,- more than thirteen thousand <;uns and swivels. These vesscds captured or destroyed about six hun- dred British vess(ds. In the War of 1812 the r(\<>ular navy of the United States on the ocean numbered only twenty-three vessoi*tance of the part taken by our ])rivateo]»le, who for generations have been taught that our independence was a(dneverinci])ally by the operations of our armies, flu^se^ statements of the comparative values and amount of work done on sea and land will ])rove a matter of surpris(\ Every reader of American history is familiar wifh the capture of Stony Point and its Ili-itish garrison of five hundred and forty- three men; of Ticonderoga, with its garrison of fifty men; of the battle of Trenton, with nearly one thou- sand ]>rison«M's. I?ut it is doubtful if many have heai-d of the ca])ture of three hundred British sol- diers, with their colonel, in two transports, by the little State cruiser Lo, «d' the two hundred TTioh- X PREFACE. 1775-1815. landers and twenty army officers of the Seveuty- tirst Kej^iment by our Andrea Bona, of twenty-four ]^i-itisLi army officers by Captain John Burroughs Hopkins' sipiadron, of the two hundred and forty Hessians captured by the privateer Mars, of the company of drai^oons taken by the privateer Maxxa- clnisctt.^,' of the sixty-three Hessian cliasstMirs made ])risoners by the |>rivateer Tjiraiiiih-Ulc, of the capture of a colonel, four lieutenant a, and that the Ann^ri- cans and French secured about seven thousand at Yorktown; but it is not so generally known that in th(^ same period fully sixteen thousand ]>risoners were made by our s(ni forces. While fewer tlian six thousand ])risoners were taken by our land forces in the AVar of 1812, fully thirty thousand were taken by our sea forces. A careful review of British newsi>aiKU-s, period- icals, spee(dies in l*arliament, and public addresses for the periods covered by these two wars will show that our land forces, in the estimation of th(^ British, ])layed a very insiiiuificant ])art, while our sea forct^s were constantly in their minds when "■ th(^ Ameri- can war" was under discussion. AVhen Eiijuiand de- tcM'mined to coerce the refractory Americans, she little thou<;ht that she was invitinji; danj;(>r to hei- own doors. Her idea of an American war was a somewhat expensive trans])ortation of (Terman mer- cenaries across the Atlantic, where the dispute would be settled in a wilderm^ss, far rcMnoved from any ])ossible chance of interference with British in- terests in other parts of the world. The British mer- chant looked forward to the war with no small de- gree of com])lacency; for, in s])ite of the provisions of the Navigation Acts, which were designed espe- 1775-1815. POTENCY OP OUR SEA POWER. Xl cially to protect him from colonial com])etition, he keenh^ felt American rivalry for the carrying' trade of the world. It \yould cost several million pounds annually to send Hessians to America, but this would be more than offset by the British merchant secnr- ing; the colonist's share of commerce. This was the view j^enerally taken by EnjLilishmen before hostilities bei^an. I>nt had they anticipated that American cruisers and })rivateers would cross the Atlantic and throw thiMr coasts into continual ahirm; that their shi]>pinritish commerce would be almost an- nihihited; that sixteen thousand seamen and eiiiht liundred vessids would be taken from them — they \\ouhl have entered upon a coercive policy with far ^i-eater hesitancy. Without her shi]»s and sailors Ennlaiul would be reduced to one of the least of the Euroi)ean powers, and, while she could afford to lose a few thousand Hessians, the loss of her maritime ascendency touched her to the quick. It was this attacdc on England's <-ominerce that struck tlie mor- tal blows to British su])remacv in America — not Saratoga nor Yin-ktown. Dr. I'ranklin early saw the S2,reat iinportanc(^ our marine forces would play in this stru*i\iile. Writiui^' fi-oiu Paris, May 2(1, 1777, to the Committee on I'^or- einn Affairs, he said: " I have not the least doubt but that two or three of the Continental fri;i;ates sent into the German Ocean, with some less swift-sailinp,' craft, niiiiht intercept and seiz(^ a ureat part of the Baltic and Northern trad(\ One frioate would be suilicient to destroy the whole of the Greenland tish- eries and take the Hudson Bay ships returning." Not havinii' the friiiates available, th(» ^Farine Com- mit<(M^ sent the cruisers Reprisal and Jj-.i-'nuifoii; and in June these little vessels, with tlie 1(l-iiim cutter Dolphin, made two comidete circuits of Ir«dand, occa- Xll PREFACE. 1777. sioiiing tiie oreatest alarm, and after securing fif- teen prizes tliey returned to France, where the prizes were sold to French merchants. TIk^ proceeds thus realized afforded ninch ncMMhMl i)ecnniary assistance to the American commissioners who were i)leadini2; the cause of the colonists in European courts. The two celebrated expeditions of Captain John Paul Jones are e(]ualed in the annals of marine history only by th<^ daring and success of our privateers. So great was the alarm (u-casiontMl by the exploits of the American maritime forces that Silas Dean, writing to the Marine Committee^ in 1777, said: " It effectually alarmed England, ]»revented the great fair at Chester, <»ccasioney if we can ^i^ot any- thing for money, by n^ason of the quantity of vessels taken by the Americans. A fleet of vessels came from Ti-elaud a few days ago. From sixty vessels that d('])arted from Ti-eland not above twenty-five arrived in this and neighl)oring islands, the others. 1776-1778. PARLIAMENT INVESTIGATES. xill it is thought, being all taken by Amerieau priva- teers, (lod knows, if this American war continues nnich longer we shall all die with hunger. There was a ship from Africa with four hundred and fifty negroes, some thousand weight of gold dust, and a great many elei)liant teeth — the whole cargo being computed to be worth twenty thousand pounds — also taken by an American privateer, a brig mounting fourteen cannon." So loud were the protests of the British nu'rcantile «dasses against carrying on the American war that every pressure was brought to bear on Pari lament for its discontinuance. It will be int(M*estiug to note that in all the memo- rials presented 1o TarliauK'nt the arguments used to bring about peace with America was the unprec- edented destruction rivateers u]) to October, 1777, could not be short of eleven million dollars." In 177() Cap- tain Bucklon, of the Kl-gun ]>rivateer }f()iif- war than what onr land forces could do. The Lon- don Statesman said: " Every one must recollect what thev did in the latter part of the American war. The books at Lloyd's will recount it, and the rate of assurances at that time will clearly prove what their diminutive stren opinion of an intelligent English writer as to the potency of American maritime en- 1812. AMERICAN MARITIME ENTERPRISE. XV terju'ise iu the pendiiii;- war. About the same time Mr. Nih\s, of Baltimore, wrote: " How far will the revenue [of (rreat Britain] be touched by the irre- sistible activity and enterprise of one hundred thou- sand American seamen, prepared or preparing;- them- selves, to assail British commerce in every sea — to cut off supplies from abroad and forbid exportation with safety! The Americans will prove themselves an enemy more destructive than (ireat Britain ever had on the ocean — they will do deeds that otlier sailors would not dare to reflect on. Witness their ex])loits in the IJevolutionary War and at Tripoli, in whicli, perhaps, not a sin<>le instance occurred of 1 heir bein^" defeated by an equal force, thoufiii many cases to the contrary are numerous. What part of the enemy's trade will be safe? France, duly esti- matinj;- the capacity of America to injure a common enemy, will oi)en all the ])orts of the continent as ])laces of refuj^e and deposit for our privateers, and all the fleets of England cannot confine them to their harbors, at home or abroad. The British Channel will be vexed by their enterprises, and one hundred sail of armed vessels will be inadequate to the pro- tection of the trade passin<»- throuji'h it. For the probability of these things let Lloyd's lists from 1777 to 1788 be referred to. Terror will pervade the com- mercial mind and miiiiity bankruptcies frivateer for several weeks; that was the l/iirl('(jiiiii, a new vessel, elej^antly fitted, from an east(^rn ]»ort. She was taken by the 74-fj;un shi]> of the line Jiiilirork by a strataii'em. The depredation of the American privateers on the coasts of Ireland and Scotland had ])roduced so stronjn' a sensation at Lloyd's that it was difficult to remiums. Thirteen inuineas fov one hundred ixtunds was ]>aid to insure vessels across the Irish Cliannel! Such a thing, we b(dicve, never ha]>]»en(Ml before." A numlx^r of meetings of merchants, shipowners, and others interested in trade were held in Livcr]»ool, Glasgow, and at other im]>ortant shipping centers at which the dc])i'(-dations of American ])ri\ateers were deplored. Sucli a meeting was Indd, September, 1814, in (ilasgow by public advertisement, and ludd by special i-eiiuisition on the Lord Provost. At this gathering it was resolved unanimously: ''That the number of ]»rivateers with which our channels have been infested, the audacity with which they have approa(dieint of effect on the public mind by their successes at sea. To the list of tlieir cai)ture8, which we can never i)eruse without the most painful emotions, is now to be added that of I lis Majesty's sliij) IxciiKlccr, takiMi after a short but most desperate action by the United States sloop of war Wasp.'' We do not find the English studying our army tactics, with a view of profiting by any superior ar- rangements which American ingenuity and fore- thought may have suggested; but we do find them examining most minutely into the construction and discipline in our war ships, and frankly acknowl- edging our superiority in many important details. When tlie London Times learned of the result of the Enter prisv-Bod-cr fight, it said: ''The fact seems to be but too clearly established that the Americans have some superior mode of firing, and that we can not be too anxiously employed in discerning to what circumstance that superiority is owing." AVe do not find English military officers changing their methods of army management after models devised by Ameri- cans, but we do find the Admiralty adopting Ameri- can naval ideas in a most radical and sweeping man- ner. We introduced 24-pounders in ou^ frigates, which at first the enemy ridiculed, but before the war was over they were compelled to imitate, and finally they paid us the compliment of building and 1820-1898. vVMEIilCAN NAVAL CONSTRUCTION LEADS. xix lidiiiji," out cTuisci's on the "exact lines'' of tlie Aniericnu 44-j^uii frigates. In the introduction to a new edition of Mr. James' History of the British Navy, (lie editor I'cnrai'ks: "It is but justice, in re- gard to America, to mention tliat England lias bene- liled by Jier | America's | e.\am])le, and tliat the lar^'e (dasses of frigates now em|)loyed in the liritisli serv- ice (1S2(I) are UKMhded aftei' those of the ITniled Slates." Oui- fi'ii;ates were called ''terrible non- (les(ri|»ts," and one of the I*]n<;lish 74-<»un line of bat- tle ships actually sailed from Cadiz for the Xoi'lh American station (H.sj/iiiscd as a frij;ate. I'he Linidon (N)urier of -lanuai-y 1, 1S1:>, ncdes that some (d" the most famous JJrilisli line of battle ships some of them having' been under Tscdson's orders — imdudini;- the (UillixUii, MoiKii'cli, 'rinuKlcicr, and l\<'.s<)lnfi(tii, wei'e S(decleert, speaking- of the (lolidlli (1S!)S) as the latest and most powerful battle shij) <'ver constructed in (Jreat I>i'itain, says: "It is of hisloi-ic interest that the niodei'ii ironcdad, with its turrets and massive jdates, had its root idea in the famous moniloi-s lii-sl desii;iiut even under favorable conditions they could lire only one round in three minutes; and, al- though that measure of offensive capacity was capa- ble of (lest j'oyinii' Jniy other contemporary man-of- war, it would be of no account at the present day. Ericsson, however, _i;ave the cue to naval desij^ners all over the world, and his elementary principle has oTdy been (levelop(Ml and moditled durinj;- th(^ years t hat have ela])sed." For capturing- the (Itc.stipcalr Captain Broke re- XX PREFACE. 1812-1813. ceived a sword from the city of London, the Tower aiins were tired in honor of the victory, and the free- dom of the city was presented to him — honors seldom granted. When the news of the Chesapeake's defeat readied London Parliament was in session and Lord Cochrane was severely criticising the Government's naval administration of the war. Mr. Croker " rose to answer him with the annonncement that the ^^hait- Hoii had captured the ChcsapeaJie. This was received with the loudest and most cordial acclamations from every part of the Ilonse '" — simply because an Eng- lish ship had captured an American of equal force. It is in vain that we search the English news- papers for those expressions of fear and humiliation on the report of their land reverses which they so freel3^ indulged in on hearing of the loss of their ships. When the Loudon Times learned of the loss of the first British frigate in 1812 it said: " We know not any calamity of twenty times its amount that might have been attended with niorc^ serious con- sequences to the worsted party had it not been counterbalanced by a contemporaneous advantage [alluding to Welliugtou's successes in Spain | of a much greater magnitude. As it was, the loss of the (iiierrii're spread a degree of gloom through the town whicli it was painful to observe." The news of the second naval defeat was at first discredited: "There is a report that another English frigate, the Mawdouian, has been captured by an American. We shall certainly be very back- ward in believing a second recurrence of such a national disgrace. . . . Certainly there was a time when it would not have been believed that the American navy could have appeared upon the high seas after a six months"' war with England; mucdi less that it could, within that period, have been twice victorious, ^ed fempora mutantur.-'' On the follow- ing day, when the news was confirmed, the Times exclaimed : " In the name of God, what was done with 1813. OUR NAVAL VICTORIES IN ENGLAND. XXl this immense siii)eri()rity of force!" Aud the next day it says: " Oh, what a charm is hereby' dissolved! What hopes will be excited in the breasts of our enemies! The land spell of the French is broken [alluding to Napoleon's disastrous retreat from Moscow], and so is our sea spell.'' The London Chronicle asked: " Is it not sickening to see that no experience has been sufficient to rouse our Admiral- ty to take such measures that may protect the Brit- ish flag from such disgrace." The news of the loss of the third British frigate, the Java, was commented upon by the Times as f(d- lows: ''The public will learn, with sentiments which we shall not presume to anticipate, that a third Brit- ish frigate has struck to an American. . . . This is an occurrence that calls for serious reflection — this and the fact stated in our paper of yesterday, that Lloyd's list contains notices of upward of Ave hun- dred British vessels captured in seven months by the Americans. Five hundred merchantmen and three frigates! Can these statements be true? And can th(^ English people hear them unmoved? Any one who had predicted such a result of an American war this time last year would have been treated as a madman or a traitor. He would have been told, if his opponents had condescended to argue with him, that long ere seven months had elapsed the American flag would have been swept from the seas, the contemptible navy of the United States annilii- lnt(Ml, and their marine arsenals rendered a heap of ruins. Yet down to this moment not a single American frigate has struck her flag." It is interesting to note, in connection with this subject, that James' History of the British Navy was inspired by the naval occurrences between the Ignited States and Great Britain. James first wrote a small pamphlet, entitled An Inquiry into the ^lerits of the Principal Actions between Great Brit- ain and the Ignited States. This work met with XXll PREFACE. 1814. such encouragement that he wrote his Naval Oc- cnrrences of the Late War between Great Britain and the United States, a single octavo volume. The reception given to these two works induced him to write his History of the Tiritish Navy, which for more than half a century has been regarded as the standard work on that subject— the result, as the author himself declares, of the naval operations of the Ihiited States maritime forces.^ In summing up the results of this war, the Times for December 30, 1814, says: " We have retired from the combat with the stripes yet bleeding on our ba(dlayed as commander of tlie Ihtrid Porter and the Leo, is far short of a standard history. In writing his History of the United States Navy, the author had the official re])orts and other reliable records on which to base his work; but in attempting a history of American ])rivateers he found himself entirely cut off from tliis soli (7 i'^e«/ and the Laura — The Loiter i/'s gallant defense against English boats — Remarkable career of the Dol- phin — Her heroic tight against British boats — Other Dolphins in this war — The Eagle makes an "impudent" seizure — The Ilonfgomery repels an English attack — Under the enemy's guns —The Syren-Landrail fight 462-473 CHAPTER XXII. PRIVATEERS OF BALTIMORE. The lievenge and Bolla put to sea — Exploits of the Sarah Aun and the Expedition — The Sabine and Baltimore make ]irizes — " Hardy must be a noble fellow " — Doings of the YorJc and Perry — The xebec Ultor — Services of the Pike and Late re?ice — Careers of the Amelia, Syren, and Whig 473-483 CHAPTER XXIII. GUY R. CHAMPLIX. Action of the General Armstrong off the Surinam River — Under the enemy's guns — A desperate struggle — Many prizes taken by this famous privateer — Chainplin commands the Wa7'rior — A clever stratagem — His return to port with a rich cargo . . . 484-490 CHAPTER XXIV. BATTLE OF FAVAL. Captain Rrid commands the General Armstrong — Eluding the block- ading squadron — Playing at *' long balls " with an English xxxviii CONTENTS. PAGE cruiser — Reid's audacity — Arrival in tlie port of Fayal — Confer- ence with the American consul — Approach of the English squad- ron — British boats advance to attack — Spirited defense of the General Armstrong — Repulse of the enemy — The second attack — A sanguinary fight — The losses on both sides — Comparison of this battle with the frigate actions of the war — Reid's reception on his return home 401-503 CHAPTER XXV. CONCLUSION. American privateering limited to our two wars with Great Britain — Declaration of Paris in 1856 — Jefferson Davis issues letters of marque — Confederate privateers — Cases of the Jeff Dan's, Bean- regard, Judah, and Savannah — Sinking of the Petrel — Summary of privateering in the Revolution and in the War of 1812 — Our gallant privateersmen after the war 503-507 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE Overawing the enemy. By George Gibbs . . . Frontispiece The pirates fought with the ferocity of despair. By George Gibbs Facing ?A Captain Abraliain Whipple 47 The affair of the Gaspe Faciiu/ 49 The " Boston Tea Party '• 51 Birtliplace of Colonel Jeremiah O'Brien, near Machias, IMaine . . 53 O'Brien's Brook, near Machias, Maine, where the patriots held their secret meetings 54 Edward Preble 60 Silhouette of Colonel Jehu Eyre, of the Piiiladelphia firm of ship- builders 76 Joshua Barney 79 John Barry 84 Thomas Truxtun 87 Stephen Decatur 88 David Porter 90 Esek Hopkins 91 Silas Talbot 93 Scene of Captain Silas Talbot's exploits in Rhode Island waters . 96 Scene of Captain Talbot's cruises 104 Instructions to privateers, 1776 Facing 133 Barney's escape from 31111 Prison. By George Gibbs . . Facing 154 Joseph Peabody 313 The President's letter of marque to the privateer Herald . Facing 318 Rescue of the British cruiser CornwalUs from the French privateer La Olnire by American merchantmen .... Facing 330 Captain Silsbee . 331 Certificate of membership in the Salem ]Marine Society . Facing 338 Ma[) of Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds 360 Capture of the British cruiser *SV. Lawrence by the United States privateer Chasseur Facing 398 Facsimile of a page in the America's log kept during her third cruise Facing 333 The America, owned by George Crowninshield & Sons, the most noted Salem privateer 335 xxxix xl LIST OP ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE Dartmoor Prison, where iHcany American prisoners were confined . 368 , , Scene of the Orand Turk's operations 394 } | Entrance to the harbor of La Rochelle, France . . . Facing 403 Crowninshield's Wharf, Salem, Mass., in 1812 . . . Facing 410 Battle between the schooner Saratoga and the brig Racliel Facing 436 Certificate of shares in the privateer Warrior . . . Facing 487 Samuel Reid 494 The United States sailing frigate aSY. Laicrence sinking the Confed- erate privateer Petrel Facing 508 For the use of the three illustrations by Mr. George Gibbs mentioned in this list Messrs. D. Appleton and Company desire to aelcnowledge the courtesy of the Curtis Publishing Company, publishers of the Saturday Evening Post. Acknowledgment should j also be made to Charles T. Harbeck, Esq., for his loans of rare prints and documents. | !l PART FIRST. THE WAE OF THE REYOLUTIOR CHAPTER I. PRIVATEERS AND PRIA'ATEERSMEX. There seems to be iimcli confusion in tlie minds of sonic i)co])le as to what a i)nvateer is. With many, (lovcrnment crnisers, privateers, and even pirates, liave been chissed nnder one head — namely, a vessel inl ended for fiohtiuji'; and, as will be seen in the chap- ter on Colonial Privateers, there was a time when there was little to distinjunish the privateer from the rover of the sea. In some instances, notably that of Captain Kidd, officers of the lioyal Navy turned to piracy. In one of the first records we have of privateering-, that in which a ship belonging to Sir Thomas Stanley, son of the Earl of Derby, brought a ])rize into the Mersey amid '' great rejoicing," the opinion was expressed that, after all, the capture might liave been an act of piracy. .Mr. I*ei)ys, who is a recognized authority on matters pertaining to the early history of the British navy, notes: ''The Coii.stdnf-WanvicJi was the first frigate built in England. She was built in 1649 by :\[r. Peter Vvit for a privateer for the Earl of War- wick, and was sold by him to the States. Mv. Pett took his model of a frigate from a French frigate which he had seen in the Thames; as his son, Sir Pliineas Pett, acknowledged." This admission, taken in connection with the fact just noted — -namely, that the son of the Earl of Derby owned a privateer — would seem to indicate that the P>ritish peerage, if not the originators of the ])ractice of ])rivateering, were at 3 4 PRIVATEERS AND PRIVATEERSMEN. 1756 least deei)ly enjj^aged in it at this time. The Constant- Warwick was a formidable craft for her day. She measured about four hundred tons and carried twenty-six guns, divided as follows: Eighteen light demi-culverins, or short 10-pounders, on the main deck; six light sakers, or short 5-pounders, and two minions. It was not very long before the American colonies had secured their indejjendeuce of Great Britain that privateering had come into vogue as a recognized profession. During the reign of George II privateers began to play a i)rominent part in the sea jiower of England, and then the Rritons seem to have been driven to it only because of the disastrous activity displayed by their Continental rivals. On the out- break of the Seven-Years War, 1750, French priva- teers hovered about the coasts of Great Britain and almost annihihited her commerce, that of Liverpool being especially exposed. French privateers found their way into the Irish Sea, and at one time actually blockaded the port of Liverpool, then England's greatest shipping center. Insurance rose to prohib- itive rates, while trade was at a standstill. The " black ivory " trade at that time had been especially profitable and the British merchant had the alterna- tive of sitting idly with folded hands or engaging in the same amateur warfare that his French brother was so vigorously waging. Acting with his usual energy, when once the plan was decided upon, the British merchant not only equipped his useless traders as armed cruisers, but began the construction of many swift-sailing vessels designed especially for privateering. These craft were sent out, and not only succeeded in making it dangerous for the enemy to venture near the coast, but captured a large num- ber of merchantmen. One of the first of these privateers to leave Liver- pool returned in a few weeks with a French West Indiaman as a prize, which was computed to be 1744-1756. A CELEBRATED ENGLISH PRIVATEERSMAN. 5 worth twenty tliousaud pounds. Other captures of equal value quickly followed; and ''then," records nil Enj;lish writer, ''the whole country became mad after privateering- and the mania even spread to the ccdonies " — meaning America. Certain it is that about this time privateering became extremely ac- tive in these colonies. On the whole, however, the Liveri)ool merchant was opposed to this kind of war- fare. It was strictly as a business venture that he was induced to engage in it, in the first instance; for, notwithstanding the fact that his privateersmen were eminently successful, having taken in the first four years one hundred and forty-three prizes, he found that the final results were disastrous to trade. When llie war with the American colonies broke out the liritish morchant was loath to resort to privateering, and while the Americans were sending out dozens of those craft tlie Liverpool people did little. In fact, it was not till the French had joined in the war that the Liverpool merchant bestirred himself in this line — the only paying occupation left to him. One of the most celebrated of Liverpool's priva- teersmen was Captain Fortunatus Wright. As early as 1744, shortly after the outbreak of the war with I'rance, this man, with the assistance of some Eng- lish merchants residing in Leghorn, fitted out a privateer, which they called the Fainst the enemy. His plans became known to the French, and a xebec mounting sixteen guns was stationed at the entrance of tlie harbor to nip his mischievous project in the bud. As the xebec carried a complement of two hundriMl and eighty men, which was more than Wright could hope to bring together, the chances of his getting to sea were small, especially as it was well known that the French king had promised a reward of three thou- sand livres a 3'ear for life, the honor of knighthood, and the command of a sloop of war to whomsoever brought this particular Wright, dead or alive, into France. The prodigality' of these offers for the head of the doughty Englishman is sufficient evi- dence of the vast amount of harm he had occasioned French commerce. Stimulated b^^ the prospect of thes(^ glittering rewards, the people in the xebec maintained a suc- cessful watch on the Ht. (Jcorgc. At that time the Tuscan Government was in sympathy with that of France, and it added to the critical position of Wright by insisting that he must leave port with no more than four guns and twenty-five men. In keeping with these instructions Wright sailed from Leghorn, July 25, 175(3, in the *S7. Gcorfic, having in company three small merchantmen. When clear of the harbor he took on board (Mglit guns which he had concealed in his convoys. Wright also had induced some fifty-five volunteers, consisting for the most part of Slavoni- ans, Venetians, Italians, Swiss, and a few English- men, to enter his convoys in the same way, and they also Avere transferred to the aS7. (ilforf/e. With this armament and complement he awaited the attack of the xebec. The action was begun about noon in full view of thousands of spectators, nearly all of them sympa- thizers of the French. In three quarters of an hour the xebec had her commander, lieutenant, and eighty- eight men killed, some seventy more wounded, and 1776. "GENTLEMEN SAILORS." 7 the ship herself was so cut up that the survivors were glad to make their escape toward the shore. Wright had only live men killed, one of them his lieutenant, and eight wounded. The result of this action so angered the Tuscan authorities that they seized the St. (icor(j(', and in all probability would have detained her indefinitely had not Admiral llawke, with two ships of the line, appeared off Leghorn shortly after- ward and brought them into a more friendly state of mind. In March of the following year Wright was lost at sea while on a voyage from Leghorn to Malta. The privateer, as understood at the outbreak of the war for American independence, was a ship armed and fitted out at private expense for the pur- pose of preying on the enemy's commerce to the profit of her owners, and bearing a commission, or letter of nianpie, authorizing her to do so, from the (lovern- ment. Usually tlie Crovernment claimed a portion of the money realized from the sales of prizes and their cargoes. The owners, of course, had the lion's share, though a considerable portion was divided among the officers and crew as an additional incentive to secur- ing prizes. In fact, it Was this division of the spoils, rather than the wages, that induced many of our best seamen to enter this peculiarly dangerous service. It frequently happened that even the common sailors received as their share, in one cruise, over and above tlieir wages, (uie thousand dollars — a small fortune in those days for a mariner. This opportunity to get rich suddenly gave rise to a ])eculiar class of seamen, who became known as " gentlemen sailors.'' All seai)orts sending out priva- teers were thronged with these tars of exalted d(\gree, and, in many cases, of long pedigree. Usually they were of highly respectable parentage, and in some in- stances belonged to well-known families. They went to sea, not as common seamen, but as adventurers to whom the chances of making ])rize money were suffi- cient inducement to undergo the hardshi])s and perils 8 PRIVATEERS AND PRIVATEERSMEN. 1800. of the sea. Being better educated and well trained to the use of arms — especially excelling the ordinary sailor in the hitter accomplishment — they were wel- comed in the privatc^er, and the commander was glad to give them unusual privileges. They were not assigned to the ordinary work of the seaman, but formed a sort of a marine guard, standing between the officers and the regular crew. This arrangement came to be understood when the " gentleman sailor " shipped. The common seamen were to do the real drudgery of ship work, while these privileged tars were to be on hand when fighting was to be done. It seems that the " gentlemen sailors " were not confined to the male sex, for when our schooner RcreiKje was cai)tured by the British privateiM- Belle P(joJv the American i)risoners were ordered to Ports- mouth i)ris()n, ui)on which one of the prisoners an- nounced '' himself " to be a woman. Her love for adventure had induced her to don male attire, and she had been serving many months without her sex having been known. The officers and crews of our Government war ships also received a proportion of the money re- sulting from taking a prize, and even when they failed to bring the vessel to port, and in some cases where they lost their own ship, they received their share of prize money. According to a law made April 13, 1800, the following rule for distribution of prize money was made for Government cruisers: "When the prize is of equal or superior force to the ves- sel making the capture, it shall be the sole prop- erty of the captors. If of infericu' force, it shall be divided equally between the United States and the officers and men making the capture." The act regu- lates the proportion in which the officers and men shall divide the prize money. " All public ships in sight at the time of making prize shall share equally. Twenty dollars to be paid by the United States for each person on board an enemy's ship at the com- i 1800-1813. DISTRIBUTION OP PRIZE MONP]Y. 9 mencement of au engagement wliicli shall be burned, sunk, or destroyed by any United States vessel of equal or inferior force. All prize money accruing to the United States is solemnly pledged as a fund for payment of pensions and half pay should the same be hereafter granted. If this fund be insufficient, the faith of the United States is pledged for the defi- cienc,y; if more than sufficient, the surplus is to go to the comfort of disabled mariners, or such as may de- serve the gratitude of their country.'' By an act made June 2(>, 1812, the prize money from captures made by private armehans and disabled seamen." The Government also paid twenty dollars bounty for every man in the captured vessel at the beginning of the engagement. Congress voted fifty thousand dollars to the offi- cers and crew of the Coii.sfitufioii when they ca]>tui'(MT the (jKcrrii'rc, and the same amount when she took the Jdid, notwithstanding the fact that each craft was desti'oyed at sea. The same sum was given to the c;i])tors of the MdcciJonidii. The rule for distributing ])rize money in the navy was to divide the total amount into twenty equal parts. Where the sum was fifty thousand dollars the result was as follows: Three l^arts, or seven thousand five hundred dollars, to the cai)tain; two parts, or five thousand dollars, to the sea lieutenants and sailing master; two parts, or five thousand dollars, to the marine officers, sur- geon, pursei', boatswain, gunner, carpenter, mas- ter's males, and chaplain; three parts, or seven thousand five hundred dollars, to the midshipmen, surgeon's mates, captain's clerk, schoolmaster, boat- swain's mates, steward, sailmaker, master-at-arms, 4 10 PRIVATEERS AND PRIVATEERSMEN. 1812. armorer, and coxswain; three parts, or seven thou- sand five hundred dollars, to the gunner's yeomen, boatswain's yeomen, quartermasters, quarter gun- ners, coopers, sailmaker's mates, sergeants and cor- porals of the marines, drummer, flfer, and extra petty officers; seven parts, or seventeen thousand five hundred dollars, to the seamen, ordinary seamen, marines, and boys. As the last item, seventeen thousand five hundred dollars, was divided among some two hundred men and boys, it gave about eighty-seven dollars to each man, or nearly an equiva- lent to a year's wages. To the commander, whose pay varied from six hundred dollars to twelve hundred dollars, the sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars Avas a snug fortune. Each of the sea lieu- tenants got a little less than one thousand dollars, their regular pay being four hundred and eighty dollars. In case of actions between sloops of war Congress generally allowed twenty-five thousand dollars to our officers and crews if victorious, even in the case of ^Master-rommandant Jacob Jones, where he lost not only his prize, the Frolic, but his own ship. For the battle of Lake Erie Captain Chauncey, being the sup(n-ior officer on the Great Lakes — although taking no itart in the action — received twelve thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; Master-Commandant Perry, twelve thousand one hundred and forty dol- lars, his pay being only seven hundred and twenty dollars; Blaster-Commandant Elliott, seven thousand one hundred and forty dollars; each commander of a gunboat, lieutainst Brit- ish authority in America; and the RaiKjcr, Captain William Simpson, broniiht eiiiht merchantmen into Boston, their car<;oes beini;,- valued at over a million dollars. One of the boys in the RdiKjcr, fourteen years old, who less than a month before had left a farm to ship in this cruiser, received as his share one ton of suii'ar, from thirty to forty gallons of fourth proof Jamaica rum, some twenty pounds of cotton, and about the same quantity of liin^er, loj^^wood, and all- s])ice, besides seven hundred dollars in money. In many instances durini;- the War of 1812 American cruisers took prizes valued at over a million dollars. The Chcsapcdh' has been credited with bein^- one of the unlucky cruisers in that war, yi^i in the cruise just before her meetinii' with the t^Jidinioii she cai)tured one ship, the YoJiudvvr, the carmo of which was valued at seven hnndred thonsand dollars; and in the same cruise she took the Ellen, whose cari^o was sold in IJoston for seventeen thousand five hundred and sixty dollars. The little sloop Peaeocl:, Master-Commandant Lewis Warriuiiton, in one cruise took prizes valued at six hundred and thirty-five thousand dollars. The Government usually allowed a bounty for each prisoner broui^ht into port. This bounty amount(Hl to about twenty dollars a head, but in most cases the ]n'ivateersman ])referr(Ml to rid him- self of prisoners at the earliest possible monuMit. There were several reasons for this. Ev(Mi had the bounty been as hiiih as (»ne hundred rivate(M'sman to nccunndate ])risoners, es])ecially when on a louii' voy- auc and thei-c could be no Idling' how loiii;' a cruise would last — for the cost of f(HHlinii- amounted to a lar^e sum. Then the dan<;er of haviu<;' too many 12 PKIVATEKRS AND PKl VATKEKSMEN. 1S12-1S1:?. pi'isonci's was sliowii dozens of tiiiR's wluMi tlu^ cap- tun'd rose on llicir (•ai)tors, aiul not only ivcovered tlieii' own vossol, bnt made prisoners of the priva- teersnien. On Aniens! 2, ISlo, a law was enacted providinii' a bonnty of twenty-five dollars on each prisoner. The lirst and ureatost element of success with a privateersman was audacity. Withont that, above all other things, lie was doomed to iii'noniinions fail- nre. The reunlar man-of-warsman nii<;ht lio and come on his crnises withont mec^ini;- an enemy or taking- a i)rize and yet suffer little in the estinmtion of the dei>artmeut. In fact, in our lirst essays arivateersmen is had in the case of the rem] Joins, of New York. This vessel put to sea at the outl)r(»ak of tlu^ War of 1S12 with a comple- ment of one Innidred and tw'enty men, but with only th]-ee liuns. Almost her tirst ])rize was the heavily armed ITritish merchantman Hassan, carryinii' four- teen iiuns and a crew of twenty men, while her carii'o Avas worth some two liundred thousand dollars. The Paid J ones, though carrying- only three liuns, was ])ierced for seventeen. It is said that the commander of the Paul -I ones sawed off sonu' si)are masts to the leniith of liuns, ])ainted tluMu black, and, beincj mounted on buckets, rolled them out of his empty 1812-1778. THE ENGLISH Pill VATEERSMAN OP 177s. |;>, ])<)i'ts ns clTectivc imitations of lioavv ordnance. Then filling- his i-ii;ginjj;- witli his snperfluons force of men, so far overawed the enemy that they surrendered as soon as tlie privateer, witli her dnmmj onns^ o-ot fairly ah)nu,side. The Americans then helped them- selves to such of the Jfa.ssdir.s onns and ammunition as they lUMMled and went on their way rejoicing. The ^]n^lish privateersmeu of 1778 are described by one of their countrymen of that period as " a. reck- less, dreadnauulit, dare-devil collection of human b(Mnj;s, half disciplined, but yet ready to obey every order. The service was poj^ular; the men shipi)ino- in privateers, being' safe from impressment, the most dashing and daring of the sailors came out of their hiding holes to enter in them. Your true privateers- man was a sort of half horse, half alligator, with a streak of lightning in his composition — something like a inan-of-warsman, but much more like a ])irate — with a superabundance of whisker, as if he held, with Samson, that his strength was in the quantity (»f his hair." So far as the " dare-devil " and '' dread- nanght " (jualities of this description go, they fit the American ])rivate(M'smen wcdl enough; but so far as the " whiskei-," " half h(>rse, half alligator," and " ])i- rate" itai'ts of it are conceruiMl the author is satis- lied that tlH\v are widely shy of the mark. We can readily beli<'v<% howevei', after reading the foll<>wing account of a battle betAveen an English and a l^^'remdi |»rivaleei', ])n])lisliei'itish ])rivateei-sman is not (ivei'draw n: "December 23, 1777, ('a]>tain Death, of, the i)rivateer TvrrUtJv, of London, was killed in an engageuHMit with the yciKicniivc, a ])rivateer of St. Malo. 'IMie auuals of mankind can not show an effort of more (h'spei'ate coui-age than was exerted under the command of ('ai»taiii Death. He had in the begiiiuing of his cruise made a prize of a rich merchantman with whicli lu' was returning to Eng- land in trium])h when he had the fortune to fall in 14: PRIVATEERS AND PRIVATEERSMEN. 177S-1812. Willi llio Ycnijidiici', iinu'li his sii]H'ri(n- in force, tliiHv- six to twoiit y-six iiuiis. The 'rciTihh'.s iirizo ayjis soon taken and converted against her; bnt so nne(|ua]l,y matched, Captain Deatli maintained a fnrions en- piiiement. The l''ren<'h cajttain and his second in command wei*e kiUed with tw<> thii-ds of his com- l»any, bnt mnch more dr(Moatswain Bntcdier, (^)nartei-master Debbie; lannched ont of Ex(M-ntion Dock, London." In i2,eneral, the condnct of Amei-ican ]»rivateers- men on the hi_'hen the schooner fiKJiistri/, ('a]»tain licnneanx, a ]>rize to the ]»rivateer lUiijiDiilii Frdiililiii, C'ai)tain Ini^crsid, of New York, reached that i)ort, An.unst 24, 1S12, it was learned that the craft be- loriii(Ml to a widow whose only (b'pen(h'nc<' \vas on the earniniis of that vessel. Althon^h the hhliislri/ had two thousand dollars' worth of ^oods aboard, the Americans restored her and her cariio to the widow. Many of oni' ]»rivat«M>rsmeii were iihmi en- atriotic citizens will .i;(Miei'ally become fisjicfs of sjiips/'' Soon after tlu^ ontbreak of the War of 1S12, Xiles, in his liCiiister, notes: "^^ The enemi(^s of the United States have used manv efforts to discredit the bnsi- 1S12-1814. HUMANITY OF AMERICAN PRIVATEERSMEN. 15 iiess of privateorino- in proclainiiiii;', ina!j,iiifyiii.ii', and reiteratiiin', under many new sliajx'S, any enormity that may have been committed by any of onr private armed vessels, and some must be expected. lint it confounds tliese wretclies, and affords nt the American jack tar is a iienerons fellow, and nothinj;" aj»peals so sti-on.iih' to his com])assion as a fellow-seaman in distress, and on this occasion the l»eople of the Lircl// extended every assistance to their enemies and hroniiht them safely into port. So w idespread had become the i)ractice of priva- teering that by the oiitbi-eak of the TJevolntion Brit- ish merclnnitmen had two, a!id only two, well-defined methods of ^oinii' to sea: I'irst as a ]>art of a fleet con- voyed by a snitable force of wai- shi])S, or as stroni^ly armed '' running ships." I'leet sailing with the Brit- ish was the favorite^ practice and i;rew to enornions pro])ort ions, a th'et of one hundred merchantmen not bciiiu iiiinsnal. and it is i-ecorded that as many as six huiidred ha\'e saih'd at one time. On some occasions sc^veral months were s]>ent in collectini;' the Heet at a ]»ort convenient to the Eni^lish or Irish Channels — "icnei-ally at Bortsmonth or Dublin — and on a stated day they sailed for the East or West Indies, escorted by a nnmber of war ships. Of course, in the case of such a lar^e fleet sailing' its (h'i)artui-e and destination were wid(dy advertised in Enjiland several months before, so tliat Ann^-ican agents had eNcry op]»ortunity to inform their friends across the Atlantic of the facts. Tiie rc^sult was that as soon as a fleet sailed American cruisers or jiriva- te(M's were in waiting on llu' course the fleet must take, and Avere ready to ])onnce ujxtn any stray mer- chantman that had the ill luck to be sej)arated from the convoy. If it was a lariic fleet, the fla.ushi]) of the convov usuallv was a line of battl(» shij> commanded IS JMUVATEERS AND PRIVATEERSMEX. 177()-17S-2. by an adiiiiial, and was accoinpanit'd by one or two friiiatcs aiul a number of slo(»ps of war or brij^s. If a small tiiH't, a friuato witli one or two slooi)S of war was considcriMl sulTlicicnt. When ready for sea the admiral siunaled for all commanders to eome aboard, when wriiren instrnctions or " sailin<»- orders" were iiiven as to the meaniniLi' of the A'arions siiinals that mijiht be used in the course of the yoya<>e, and also su(di other information as niiiiht conduce to their safety. On leaving' ]tort the tlaiishi]) usually took the lead, and Avas known as the vanship, while a fast-sail- inu friuate took her i»osition in the rear so as to tow u]) any dull-sailinii' nu'rchantman that otherwise miiiht be left behind. The sloo]>s and briiis of war did guard duty on earivateers actinjj;- in concert stood a much better chance than om^ — es]tecially if it was a small fleet, ('sc(»rted by only one vessel; for, while the '* biiU- doii' "' was furiouslv chasino; one of th(^ swift-sailins; ]»rivateei's, the other managed to pounce upon the prey unseam by the escort. In such cases the quick- est kind of N\(U-k was necessary, for althongh the l»ri/es wei'e i-ich and easily made, the '' bulldo.t;' •' niiuht be back at any monuMit. For this reason prize crews were ready, at the word, to be thrown aboard the pi-ize, run her to leeward, and then steer in riz(\ In «lo,iiging a meridiant fleet acr(»ss the Allaiitic the ]»rivateersman usually can do nothing in the way of taking i)rizes if the weather is tine, but siiouhl it conu^ on thick, or a strong gale, he has a gohh'U o]>]»ort unity. At such times the merchantmen become widely scattered, and the deft ju-ivateei- i-uns from one to the otluM-, making easy captni-e. As a riil(% the si>ecie and most valuable goctds are hastily transferred to the privat(M'r, a i)rize crew phiced aboai'd the merchantman and ordered to s(»me port, wliih' the ])iivateer hastens to other conrivateer which was ]»urchased in France in 1795 b}^ George Crowninshield and was cominissioiKMl as a ])rivateer in 1802. Many of our merchant vessels, transformed into privateers, ]»roved to be formidable ci-aft. In fact, a large ])ro]»ortion of them w(M-e built with a view to siteed; for, thanks to British interference in our mercantile affairs, the American shipowner had found it ]»i'efcrable to sacrifice a little canw- ing s])ace in his ships to additional S])eed, as it would enable him to outsail the British cruiser and thus avoi»l disastrous delays and degi'ading impress- ment. Speed in the American merchant marine had been fostered also by the forced running trade to France and the West Indies, so that when the War of 1812 broke out the American merchantman found himself abundantly sui»]»lied with swift-sailing ves- sels. If was just this circumstance that proved to be the founlement of officers and seamen, sending them out in (juest of his cousin's ships. Thus it was that ag- gressive liritish impressment on the high seas, several years before the war, had caused the development of a fleet of American merchant ships which soon ])roved to be a terrible scourge in the hands of the daring and skillful American skipper. CHAPTER II. l)A-\(iEKS PECl'LIAK TO ritlYATEERING. OitDiNAKiLY tlKM'c was little olory or sympathy for the pi-ivateersinan. The navy man went to sea kiiowiiiii' that if he made a ^ood ti,i;ht, even thono'li de- feated, his })i*ofessional standing' wonld in no Avay be im])aired; on the contrary, deeid(Mlly improviMl. He knew that if he fell he, at le;ist, wonld have the grate- ful record of history. Almost any man can be brave if he be conscions that the eye of the world is npon him. The average man can perform deeds of heroism when he knows that substantial rewards and jn-ofessional advancement are in stoi'e for him. Bnt it nMpnres a man of nnnsnal bravery to face dang(n' nntiinch- ingly when he realizes that no one will be cognizant of his articii»ants, and when loss of life or limb will be regarded merely as his own ]t(M-sonal misfortnne. Our i)rivateersmen did not have the stimnlns and advantages of an organized scM'vice. They left port with the avowed intention of ]dnndering the enemy. If tlH'y were successful, their only reward was a division of tht- s]»oils; if failure attended them, they were kicked abont like the nnder dog in the tight. " Sei-ved them right," said their envions brothers on \i\u(\. " 'I'liey wanted to get rich too fast, while we poor leH(»ws are obliged to ph»d along in the nsnal sh»w, poking way." If the offi<"ers and men sacrificed life (U- liuib to s(M-ure a i)rize, no pension awaited them or their families. If thev came ont nnscathed 1776-1814. AN "IMPUDENT CAPTURE." 23 they were rewarded, perliaj^s, witli a cold '' thank yoii/' aiid received their share of the protits calcu- lated down to the last C(Mit with mathematical exact- ness. There was no <;ener()ns (\)ni;ress to vote fifty thousand dollars to them if they sank their prize in the effort to capture her, as was the case with the captors of the (iiicrriifc and Jam; neither could they expect twenty-five thousand dollars if they lost both prize and their own ship, as was the case in the Wa.'^p-Frolic tiAver shows that it is replete with deeds of hiM'oism. An instance of the daring of American 24 DANGERS PECULIAR TO PRIVATEERING. 1776-1815 privateersmen is related witli charaeteristic frank- ness in a London periodical of the year 1777: "An American privateer of twelve guns came into one of tlie ports of the Jersey Islands, in the En.nlish Chan- n(d, yester indiscriminately, rolled along the, deck not qnite decid(Ml what to do next. An American sailor picked it n]* and wrote on it with a jdece of chalk, " Postpaid and retnrned with the conii)liments of Yankee Doodle; " then putting the shot in a cannon fired it back to its owners. In privateers s])eed Avas a great and ruling con- sideration, and in tlieir efforts to attain it the build- ers — having no (lovernment or public o})inion to check them — were a])t to get their craft dangerously top-heavy. This eagerness to acquire speed resulted "<'ss('ls, oi- one for every gun in tlie sloo]», it will be seen Ihat the l''rivateer Ihiiicock. In the following year the hJat/lc was blown up in New York. A cas(^ somewhat similar to this was that of the privateeer ^'(iiiJc<<\ ("'a]»tain Johnson, of ^Fassachu- setts. This craft carried nine guns, sixteen swivels, and forty-thr(M' nuui. She was one of the first to get to sea in the war for American inde])emh'nce. Leav- ing ])or1 she made directly for English waters, and 26 DANGEliS PErriJAll TO PRlVATEERIXa. 17Tf^-lSl2. in -Inly (•;i|»1i]i('(l i\\o inorcliMiit ships ( 'rc'n/Iiloii and ZdrlKim ijulcii witli nnn and suL:,ar. riacin«i- pi-izc crews in tlicsc vessels, ('a]>tain Johnson was conlinn- inii' I'is crnis*' in Ihcir (•onij)any whres(Mice of a nnmber of mercdiants and others, that he Avonld '' follow and 1ak(^ the damned Yankee priva- teer if he went to hell for her." When Captain ^liller sailed ont of the harbor, the SiiJttlc followed and iiave chase. Not wishing- to (miiaiie a man-of-war, the Americans cari'ilish- men also s])rearessui-e, a s(inall came u\). Tht^ Americans adroitly took in their canvas so as to receive the brunt of the blow under bar(^ ])oles, but their ])ursuer was ca])sized. In a few minutes the scpiall l)lew over, and Ca]»tain Miller, failing- to discover the sliiihtest trace of his foe, was moved by motiv(»s of humanity to retrace his course. On i-eachini; the S]»ot where the ^^lll)ll(^ Avas last seen he found a few caps and ham- , mocks tloatinii in the watei'. This Avas all that was ', left of the Siihllc, all of her ]>eo])le haviui;' _i;'one down 'f with her. if Little or nolhinii was done to ]iension oi* assist > the families of unfortunate ]n-ivateers in our war for iiule]»en(lence, but on June 5, 1813, the Navy Depart- ]si:!. PENSIONING PRIVATEERSMEN. 27 nieiii issued tlio following' ordiM': "To oiinblo those who may bo wounded or disabled in any eii«iaj;eiueii1 with tlie enemy to obtain certificates entitlinj^; them to pensions, tlie like r(\iinlations and restrictions as are used in relation to the navy of the United t^tates are to be observed, to wit: That the commandinjj;- officer of every vessel having a commission, or letters of marqne or reprisal, cause to be given to any officer or s(^aman wlio, during his cruise, shall 'have been wounensiou certificates upon forwarding to this office i>roof from the commanding officer of the vcss(d to whiL( ).\ 1 A 1> I'Kl N'ATF.KRS. The first Aniei-icaii sea fi^ht of which we have reooi'd was in tlie nature of a i)rivate enterprise. In May, 1 (;:>(;, Mr. Ohlliam, wliiU' sailing in Lono Island Sound, near Plum Island, in a tradini^' vessel, was niurdc^'cMl by the Narra.iiansett Indians and his vessel seized. Scareely had the savai;es taken possession of tlieii' ]>riz(* when J(din (Jallop, who also Avas eruis- inii ill that vicinity in a twonty-ton sloop, came upon the scene and reco|L;nized the vessel as Mr. Oldham's, the latter havini;' sailed only a f(^w days before with a crow of two white boys and two Narragansett In- dians. Api)rt>achinjL; Oldham's vessel (xallop hailed, and reeeivini; no answer he ran (dose alongside and discovered fourteen Indians huvj; on the deck appar- ently endeavorinj; to avoid detection. Noticing that a canoe manned by Indians and loaded witli i^oods was leavini;' the craft, (lallo}) was convinced that somethinii was wronii'. This belief was stren;L;th('n again rammed, the anchor Huke crashing through the side of the jti'ize. The white men tiien began firing down the hold, but, finding that this did not dislodge the remaining natives, Clal- lo]) sheered off and ]»re])ared to bunt again. Before this could be don(% three or four more Indians rushed to the (h'ck and jum]»ed into the sea, where they also perished. One Indian now a[»])eare, anlan for ov(M'powering him Oallop caused him to be thrown into the sea. There were now oidy a few Indians remaining aboard tlie ]>rize, but they were ai'uied, and occu]»y- ing a small a]>artment b(d(>w, whei'e they could not be easily reached, tliey ]U'e]>ared to sell their lives deai-iy. IJeiiio\ing all tlie goods in the prize to his ship, (Jalh)]) hauh-d u]) for tlu^ Connecticut shore with the sh)o]» in tow. As tlie wind increas<^d soon after- ward, Ihe tow was ctit adrift, and finally Avent ashore somewhei-e in Xai*ragans(^tt l>ay. Oldliam's body, horribly mutilated and still warm, had been discov- chmI by ( Jalh»]). When tlu^ news of this affair r(Niched he authorities in .Massachusetts an exi)edition was Mit out under Mi-. Kndicott, and the Narragansett idians were severely ])unished. In 1(14.") a coloiual shij) cai*rving fourteen guns and irty m<'n had an all-day fight with a rover of Bar- rv which is said to have carried twentv cuus and 30 COLONIAL PRIVATEERS. iwr,. seventy men. The action took place near the Straits of Gibraltar. Xi^lit ]>nt an end to the strnoi.le and the vessels separated, the rover with a loss of her rudder. The American ship was bnilt at Cambridge, Massachns(4ts, and had been tradinjn' in the Canaries. For the first hundred years and more after the establishinj^' of the colonies in the New World, the dis- tinction b(4ween ]»rivateers, slavers, i)irates, and even Government cruisers was vai;ue, and at times obliter- ated altogether. It was a period in which, on the high seas, might was right; and when their home Governments were at war with each oth(n' — and some- times when at }»eace — the colonial seaman scdzed whatever he could, whether he was a i)irate, i)riva- teersman, or a king's otticer. Tin' astonishing growth of commerce in the New Welled to maintain cruisers at tln^r own exi)ense, while traders wore as carefully prepared for hghting as for carrying merchandise. In some sea])orts ther(^ was a general connivance on the jKirt of the peo]»le at this state of affairs so long as th(^ (le])redations were directed against '' others." At Charleston, South Carolina, ]drates of all degrees walked the streets Avitli im])unity. Men well known for their ]»articipation in ]>iratical deeds were welcomed by those among whom they S])ent their ill-gotten gains. In some cases th(\y were tried, but the juries always managed to return a negative verdict. One authority says: ^^ It is true that as long as the pirates ])reyed on Spanish shi])s, and were free in sjK'uding S])anish gold and silvei* in Charleston, they wei'e welcomed thm charges were made gave security for good behavior till the Lords Proprietors could grant a general ])ardon. And no trouble was taken to ob- serve how they behaved themselves when away from Charleston. Governor Ludwell was ordered to change the manner of securing juries so as to enable the authorities to convict the pirates, and the Pro- prietors ordered that they be tried under the laws of England, which were more severe than those of Cart>]ina. Put by lavish ex])enditure of nione}^ the sea robbers made so many friends that it was diffi- cult even to bring them to trial and impossible to convict. They secured the best legal talent in the colony, and their strong defense by the prominent and influential men who w(M'e the lawyers in those days had its effect upon that class which made up the juries. '' Many of the pirates retired on their fortunes, purchased laniracy can not be UK^isured by present lights. In those times of almost incessant war, when one Government commissioned individuals to rove the seas and rob its enemies' ships 82 COLONIAL PRIVATEERS. 170(i-16!)0. of coiiinicrce, the step from the privateer to the pirate was natural, and the moral difference not very marked. Men of very good family became pirates becanse they loved adventure; it was i)rofitable if they were not hanged, and they had nothing to do at home except tight." We can better understand this leniency toward the outlaws when we remember that in the Spanish attach on Charleston in 170(1 the authorities did not scrui>le calling on these " desi)erate " nu^n to enlist in the vess(*ls hastily pre]>ared for defensi^ of the town. The S]>ainsli force, command(Ml by a French admiral, consisted of four war shiits and a galley. To o])pose them Li(Mitenant-(\>lonel lihett, with a commission of vice-admiral, collected all the armed vessels in i)ort and offered battl(% bnt the enemy, having suffered reverses on shore, tied j)recipitately. A f(nv days afterward the colonists learn(Ml that a large shii) be- longing to the enemy was on the coast. (Joing out with two (d' his vessels, Khett captured lier.^ It was when these rovers of the seas began to plunder the colonists themselves that real steps were taken to ])ut a sto]> to their unlawful practices. In 1(59!) the culture of rice in Carolina had developed to such prop(U*tions that tli(M-e were not enough ships available to transport the commodity to England. In that year a ])iratical ship was fitted in the W<^st In- dies and captured several vessels bound for Charles- ton, their crews being s(uit aslior(^ in boats. Owing lo a (juarrel over the division of booty nine of the pii-ates were set on shore, and, making t\nnv way to Charleston, were recognized by some (d' the men cap- tured in the merchant vess(ds. The enormity of ]>iracy was then ap]»arent to the colonists, and these men were S(Mzed and seven of tluMu were hanged, whiledhe other two were imprisoned. ' Foi- tlio several exi)e(liti(iiis against tlie French in Canada see Maclay's History of the Xa\ y, vol. i, pp. 7-13. 1718. STEED BONNETT. 33 Early in the eii;hteeiitli centiiry a nest of pirates was established on the island of Providence, in the Bahamas, from which place they sent out ships to prey on commerce. Another headqnarters of the sea robbers was opened near the month of Cape Fear Iviyer, and for many years these parts of the Atlantic were completely in their possession. Shipowners in England in 171S appealed to the Crown, and Captain Woods Rogers saile for the pnrpose and sail aj^ainst these ontlaws. One of the tv/o piratical craft was a sloop carrying; ten liuns and commamhMl by Ca])tain Steed Ronnctt, " a hand- some yonnji,' fellow," who was said to be a mcmb(n' of an old Enjilish family. Being reckless and wild he had chosen to be a pirate chief. The second vessel, commanded by Richard AVorley, carried only six gnns. These two i*overs had be(Mi in the habit of boldly crnising ofl' Charl<*st(>n harbor for days at a time and in i>lain sight of the town, waiting for the first mer- chantman that might ventur*^ ont. At the time Rhett sailed, St lionnett sailed for Ca])e I'ear River, hotly ]»nrsne(L AMien within the entrance of the river Rhett came uj) with tlu' ]»irate, aiul after tiring a few shots induced the fre(^fore cons<'nting to give themselves nj), however, the pirates sti]nilated, nn(h'r threats of bloAving np their ship and involving their cai)tors in 34 COLONIAL PRIVATEERS. 1046-1660. the explosiou, that they should receive no imuishment for their offenses. Khett could only promise that he wouhl use liis influence in their belialf, upon which the pii-ates, 1o the number of forty, were brought into Charleston with their sloop. (lovernor Johnson then sailed in search of Worley, taking command of the colonial cruiser in person. He met the piratical craft about seyenty-flve miles north of Charleston and a desixM-ate action immedi- ately was begun. The pirates fought with the ferocity of despair, well knowing the fate that awaited them in case of capture. Although much inferior in force they inflicted great damage in the colonial cruiser, killing a number of imui and wounding more. Final- ly, every man in the ])iratical ci-aft was killed or dis- abled, saying Woi-ley himself and his second m com- mand. These two fought a gun until d(^sperately wounded, when they surrendered. They were taken into Charleston and hanged. In the case of Steed Bonnett there were the old- time delays and legal hitches, so that it was about a year after his capture before he was hanged. His forty com]>ani<)ns, however, were ])rom])tly executed after conyiction, which was a few days after their ar- riyal in ])ort. They were all hang(Ml on the same day, on the spot where the beautiful Battery now is, and their bodies were buri Massaclnisclts alone liad constrneted over seven liimdred vessels, varyinji' in toniiai;e from six to two hnndred and tifty tons, and C'onneeticnt boasted of one thousand tons of shipping;', it is not strange that we find the colonial governments fitting ont war craft at their own ex- pense, and that merchants armed their vesscds with cannon. It was not long before buccaneers began to scent this rich booty. This class of sea rovers seems to have originated in the West Indies. They wore outlaws who swarmed aronnd Tortngas, and at tirst contented themselves by attacking vessels from the s]ior(\ Keii- dered bold by their first successes they increased in numbers, and gradually ventured farther, until they began to infest the (Mitire North American coast. Less than a dozen years after the landing of the Pil- gi'iiiis, one David Bull, with a crew of fifteen English- men, committed acts of ])iracv on New England fisher- men, and even attacked settleni(»nts. AVitli a view to captui-ing him and guarding against other freebooters the lilrs.s'uiji of flic lidi/, a bark of thirty tons, in 1().32, was launcluMl. l?(d'oi*e this boat could get to sea, how- ever, tlie fishermen themsclvc^s liad manned sevull wei-e somewhat exaggerated, as the stern I'liri- tans were apt to regard levity of any kind as souk^- thing akin to crime. It is stated that one of the " serious accusations " against Bull and his men was thai wlien the New England fisli(n-men assembled on deck at the hour of ])rayer Bull caused his men to sing boisterous songs and shout meaningless jdirases, which might well horrify tlu^ strict Puritan, Avho has been known to condemn A\'omen to death on the mere suspicion of witchcraft. A certain Stone also was seized bv the New Englanders in 1G33 and bounden 36 COLONIAL PRIVATEERS. Ififl6-1701. to n|)]»(';u' Mt the Admiralty courts in England, as InAuix soiiieliow foniuM'ttMl with piracy. The i;Tand jury discliariix^d hiui, aud it is b(4icved that the real cause of his ari-est was a charge of adultery. The cas(^ of Captaiu \\'illiaui Kidd is a ^<»od illus- tratiou of the ueueral looseuess on the hinili seas at this time. A lar^e uumber of ])riyateers had been fitted out at New York, aud there were reasons to believ<' that they did not always <-outiu<^ their atten- tions to the enemy's commerce, but ai)proi)riated o'oods of the colonists. A\'ith a view to (du^ckinjLi,' these de]>redations a ]>rivateer was fitted out, with sanction of the (Jovernment, and (\i])tain Kidd was ])laced in couiuiaiKl of her. In this enterprise thc^ ITioh Lord (Miaucellor aud s<'veral other distiniiuished iu)blemen had shares, while on(" tenth of the ])rofits were to re- vert to theCi'own. The vessel sailed from Plymouth, Eui^land, in l(t9(J, but instead of directing' his energies against the lawless privateers and pirates on the American coast Kidd spent three years in the Indian Ocean i)luudering the commerce of all nations. Pie finally turned his prow toward America, and, anchor- ing iu (lardiner's Bay, buried some of his treasures on (lardinei-'s Island, whicdi for many years has been owned by a family of that name. Kidd intrusted Mr. (lai'diner with his secret and then sailed away, bury- ing other treasures at different })oints along the shore. Ki(bl then ]»aid and dis(diarged his creAV, and, ap- pealing in I>oston in KJOll, was arrested. Among his ]>a]»ers was found a list of his buried tr(^asures, and when the ofHcials ])resented themsidves to Mr. Gar- diner the rover's box of booty was r(M-overed. The ])lunder consist (m1 of bags of gold dust, gold and silver bars, jewelry, lam]»s, etc.; in all valued at about twenty thousand ihdlars. Kidd was sent to England and tri<'d, and it is a curious comuieiitary on the times to ii(»te that, on ^lay tl, 1701, he was executed, not for l>iracy, but on the charge of killing one of his own crew. 1705. MURDER OF LIEUTENANT HOUGH. 37 We ran easily believe that siieli a eareer as that of Captain Kidd's was possible — and that many other similar depredations, on a smaller scale, were per- petrated — when we come to investii>ate the condition of society in the colonies duriug- this period, for it appears that not only were the i)rivateersmen lawless on the high seas, but were quite as nnrnly when in port. ^Nlany mnrders in which this class of mariners acted as principals were committed in the streets of New York, so that it was unsafe for citizens to a])pear w^hen any considerable number of these craft ^yov^' in port. On the ni^ht of September 19, 1705, an unusually large number of i)rivateers hai)i)ened to be in the har- bor, many of them recently returned from successful voyages, and as a consequence the ale and win<^ houses were crowded and the streets wrivateersmen was in ])ort. One record says: '' The ])i-ivateersmen, when they came into port, were the terror of the town, and committed many excesses. So ontra,u«'ous did their conduct become that in 1T7S the mayor of Liverjtool issued a procla- mation cantionin;Li' these lawless jiersons that he wonhl in futiiic call in the aid of the militai*y for th<^ pi-otection of th(^ lives and itroperty of the peaceable inhabitants." Piracy incr(Nised rather than diminished on the North American coast after the peace of 171.'^; the ship Whiddli, of twenty-three liuns and one hnndred and tliiity men, nn«ler the command of ('a])tain Samnel Uellamy, seizing vessels off' the X(nv En<;land coast as late as 1717. His career was cnt short by a storm, in \\hich his vessel was wr(M'ked off' (^ape Cod, more than one lnindr(Ml bodies beini^' washed ashore. Six of his men who escaped the sea were seized, tried in l>oston, and executed. These drastic measures did much toward cleai-iiiii' the coast of free- 17123-1745. ACTIVITY OP EARLY PRIVATEERS. 39 booters, but did not (wti^i'iiiinate them (Mitircly, for wo find that in 1723 a British sh>oj) of war ontorod New- port with tw(^nty-five pirates wlio were sentenced to be hanjied. After the peace of rtre(dit most of the ('oh)nies maintained small armed vessels for the i>r()t(M'tion of their coasts an])ening that a singh^ cruise netted a common sailor on<^ hundrcMl ])ounds, while in one instance it is recorded that one hundi'ed ami sixty ]>ou:ids were riMlizc^l by each seaman — a re- spectable fortune for a sailor in those days. After the 2(l-gun shi]> »s7n'r/f //, ('a]>tain Kouso, had com]>leted her work in the Louisburg ex]»e(lition, May, 1745, sh(^ se])arated froiii lu^r consorts and cai»tured eight l*^r(Mic]i vessels, two of which made a deter- mined r(^sistanc(\ l-'or this service Captain l\ous(^ receiv(Ml a captain's commission in the king's service. In June, 1744, th<^ ju'ivateers llcxtcr and PoUji en- tered New York hai'bor with a ])rize, a new brig laden with cocoa, the share of each American sailor being eleven thousand pounds of the cargo. In August of the following year the ])rivateer ^ See MiU'liiy's History of the iS^avy, vol. i, \)\). 10-18. 40 COLONIAL PRIVATEERS. 1745-1 746. ('HhIoh l)i'(»n:L!,lit into the saiiio jtort Lrize might be tal-ceii by a strataj;eiii. After dos^giiiii' tlie fleet three days he came upon the Ri.s'ui;/ ^^loi separated from the other vessels. Piit- tiuj;- on a bold front, the American commander affect- ed to b(^ a i-eiiular man-of-war and demanded the sur- render of the /lisiin/ Sim. To assist him in the decep- tion Captain Tins on their heads, and arranj^-ed to have those im])osin_ii' hearotests. The Ris'ukj Shii arrived off Sandy Hook early in April. Her carj^o consisted of one thousani)(^are(l in New York harbor in a sorry ])light. They had with them as a ])i-ize the S])anish privateer (iraudv Diahlo, which they had manned and used as a consort. The three vessels subseciuently, while ci'uising in the (Julf of ^fexico, fell in with a S]>anish war shij* nu)unMng thirty-six guns and manned by three hundred men. The privatcH^-s began an attack on the cruiser and kept it u]) for two days. By that time the four shi])s had been reduced to wrecks, and the Americans, having exhausted their ammunition, hauled off. The Spaniard had her flag shot away in the course of the engagement, but re- hoisted it on the withdrawal of Ihm' assailants. That the line between privateering and piracy was not very distinctly drawn by the middle of the eight- eenth century is shown in an item published in one of the " news])apers " of New York in 1747: " ('ai)tain Trou]>, in the privatcHH* brig Roi/tiJ Ilcslcr, of this port, G 4^2 . COLONIAL PRIVATEERS. 1^44-1758. lately met with a Danish vessel that had a Spanish niei'chantinan with ei carrying twenty-six gnns and credited with a com])lement of two hundred men. In fact, a majority of the colonial i)rivateers carried heavy armaments and large complements, the aver- age probably Ixnng not far from eighteen guns and one hundred and thirty men, making them really more formidable than the average cruiser of that day. Kee])ing this fact in mind, it will n«>t be ditticult to believe the statt^ment made in the Weekly lV)st Boy of September 3, 1744: '' Tis comi)ut(Ml there will be before winter one hundred and thirteen sail of ])rivateers at sea from the British-American colonies, most stout v(^ssels and well manned. A naval force, some say, ecpial that of (Jreat Britain in the time of Queen Elizabeth." In January, 1758, the 14-gun jn-ivateer Tlindoe, Captain ]Mantle, having a complement of eighty-four men, had a hard-fought action with the French ])ri- vate armed ship Les Deux Aiiiis, Captain Felix. The Frenchmen carried only ten guns, but had a comple- ment of ninety-eight meared at Newport, and for several months great- ly exasperated the townsfolk by ini])ressing seamen from vessels entering the harbor, and in taking men from boats and other small craft plying in the bay. The ( limax of tln^se outrages was reached when a brig from Africa, entering New])ort harbor, was sto])p(Ml by the Md'uhsfonc and her entire crew im- pressed. That night a crowd of about five hundred men and boys seiztMl ouo of the M the ('oiiniieii, burned it in fi'ont of the conrlhcMise amid the (U'risive shouts of the ])eoph'. " This affair was so sudcU'ulv concocted and carried into effect tliat the anthoi'ities had no time to inter- f(M'e.'* ' Five years after this occurrence, or in ITGl), the commissioners of customs sent Captain Heid to New- ])ort, in tlie armed sloop lAbrrtji, who exhibited ex- traordinary zeal and unncM-essai-y arrogance in car- ryint!,' out liis instrm-tions. M'liih' cruisin*;' in Lon,i;- Island Sound, July IT, IKJl), Keid seized a brig and a sloop belonti'inj;' to Connecticut and broui^ht them into Newport. Captain Packwood, of the bricj, liad duly reported his cariio, and had conforuKMl to all the re(|uirements of law. After waitinii' two days, and tiiulini;- that no j)roce(MliniLiS had been instituted against him, he went aboard th<^ Lihoii/, and — Cap- tain Keid being ashore at the time — some difficulty took ])lace between Pack wood and the men in the LiJiciiif wlii(di resulted in sev<'ral musket sliots being tircMl at Tackwood's l)oat as it was returning shore- ward. Exas])(M*ated by this unwari-antable ])roceed- ing the ]»eoplc of Ncwpoi't boai'dcd the I/ihcrli/, cut her cables, anort your tAvo insolent lettiM'S to my officer [Lieutenant Dudingston] to his majesty's secre- taries of stat(% and leave to them to determine what right you have to demand a sight of all eoplc of New])ort talk of fitting out an armed vessel to rescue any vessel the king's schooner may take carrying on an illicit trade. Let them be cautious what they do, for as sure as they attempt it, and any (tf them are taken, I will hang them as pirates." Dudingston evidently realized that many of his seizures were illegal, for he feared to venture ashore, as many suits at law were threatened against him by the owners of goods and vessels he had taken. The suit brought by Jacob (ireene »S: Go. was instituted after Dudingston had been taken ashore by the cai)tors of the (Idspr. Affairs were in this critical state wIkmi, on June 9, 1772, the packet Htniudh, Ga])tain Benjamin Lindsey, left New]tort for Providence. Soon after meridian the (id-spr gave chase and ordered the packet to come to. Lindsey refused, and, favored by the wind, led ' the scliooner a 2r)-mile race u]) the bay. When off " Namquit l*oint, wlii(di runs off from the ' .Idlin Rus>>cll Bartlett. ^g BEGINNING HOSTILITIES. 1772. farm iu Warwick, about seven miles below Provi- dence, now owned by Ur. John Brown Francis, our late Governor," ^ the Uauuah stood w^estward, while the (Saxp(\ in close i)nrsuit, changed her course and or<»und(Hl on the Point. " Lindsey continued on his course up the river and arrived at Providence about sunset, when he immediately informed Mr. John Brown, one of our first and most respectable mer- chants, of the situation of the (Ui>^pf. He [Brown] immediately con(luded that she would remain im- movable until after midniiiht [as the tide was be- ginnini^' to ebb], and that now an opportunity offered of puttinj;- an end to the trouble and vexation she daily caused. ]Mr. Brown immediatcdy resolved on her destruction, and he forthwith directed one of his trusty shipmast(M-s to ccdlect eiiiiit of the largest lon.i;boats in tlu^ harb(»r, with five oars each; to have the oars and rowlocks well mufHcd, to prevent noise, and to ]dacc them at FcMiucr's \\'harf, directly oppo- site the dwcdlini;- of 3Ir. James Sabin, who kept a house of board and ent(n'tainment for g-entlemen. . . . About the time of shuttinin-up <>f shops, soon after sunset, a man pased aloui;' the main street beatinj; a drum, and informinm- the inhabitants of the fact that the (hispr was ai;round on Namquit Point and would not float (df until three o'clock the next morniui;, and invitiui; those persons who fcdt disposed to ji'o and destroy that trliraini Bowcn, llic last survivov of the men who nuade the attack on tlie Gaspe, written August 29, 1889, 1772. ATTACK ON THE GASPE. Wharf and ODibark, wliicli soon took i)la<-p, and a sea captain acted as steersman of ea(di boat." ' Abraham AVhippk^ was chosen commander of the enterprise, havino- as his lientenant John Enrron^hs Captain Abraham Whipple. From a painting in possession of the R. I. Historical Society. Hopkins, botli of whom afterward became captains in the Continental navy. Others known to liave taken part in tlie attempt were John Brown, Ben- ' Account of Epliraiiir Bowon. 48 BEGINNING HOSTILITIES. 1772. jaiiiiii Dnnii, Sjiiiiuel Diniii, J<)S(q)li Biickliii, Dr. John ^lawiicy, DickeiisoD, Benjainiii Page, Tiir- piii Siiiitli, J(>s('])li Tillingliast, and Simeon H. Olney. Dr. Mawnev wrote, in 1S2(»: "' I went to Corlis's Wiiarf with ('a])tain J(>sei)h Tilliniihast, who coni- nianded the bai'i^e, it bi^nii the hist boat that pnt off. In i;<>in«i (h)wn we st<>])])ed at Captain Cooke's Wharf, wh(M-e we took in staves and pavinm' stones; whi( h (h)ne, we folhtwcd onr comnuuKh'r [AMiipple], and came u\) witli th(MU a considerable distance (h)wn the river." AA'lien the ])arty came in si«;ht of tlic (luspv, Whip- ph^ formed his boats in a line abreast, taking the immediate command on tin' right, while IIo])kins had charge of the left. Whi]»])lo arranged his attacdc so as to approach directly njx)!! the bow of the (laspr, wher(^ she conld not bring a gun to bear. " W<' rowed gently along," continues Dr. Mawney, "till we got near the S( hooner, wIkmi W(^ were liaihMl from on board with the words: *' ' Wlio comes t lier<^? ' "('aj»tain \\'hi])]»l(^ r(^]»li(Ml: " ' 1 want to come ou board.' " The reply was: " ' Stand off! Vou can't come on board.' ''On whicdi AA'hipj)le roared out: " ' I am the sheriff of the Tonnty of Kent; I am come for the commander <»f this vess(d, and I will have liim, dead or alive. .Alen, spring to your oars! ' " Accoi-ding to otliei- reliable accounts Whipple, in this brief ]»ar]ev, em])liasiz<'(l his words with a re- luarkable amount of i-eal sailordike profanity, possi- bly with a view of concealing his identity. By this time Dudingston had a])i)eared on de away, and on their ]»ersistent ai»]»roa(li discdiarged his pistol, while seveial of his meu also tired. Tolonel Bowen says: " I took uiy seat on the main thwart, near the larl)oard |]»or1] roAvbxd-;, with my gun by my right s^ 1772. DUDINGSTON WOUNDED. 40 side, faciiijj; forward. As soon as Dndiiiiistoii hoiiaii to hail, Jose])h l^iicdcliii, wlio was staiKliiiii' <»ii the main thwart, by my ri^lit sid(\ said to iik^: ' E])hp, reacdi me A'oiir i;iin and I can kill that foHow.' I reached it to liini accordiniily, Avlien, dnrinj^ Captain Whii>])h^'s rei)lyiu<;', Bn(lclin fire])le's reply the boats were alon<>- side the (Idspr and [we] boarded without ojtposi- tion. The men on (bndv retreated below as Diiding- ston entered the cabin." Dr. Mawney thus describes the boarding' of the (Saspv: *' We were in an instant under her bows. I was then sittinji with Captain Tillini^liast in the stern of the bari>e and sprani;' immediately forward, and seeiui; a rope haninii down the hold, 1 imm«Mliately followcMl, when I ordererown what the nmtter was 1h^ re- ]>lie(i. 'I)(»n't call names, but i;o immediately into 5Q BEGINNING HOSTILITIES. 1772-177:5. the cabin; there is one wounih^d and will bleed to death.' 1 hastened into the cabin and found Lien- tenant Dndin-ston in a sitting- posture, gently re- clinini;- to the left, bleeding profusely, with a thin white woolen blanket loose about him, which I threw aside, and discovered the effect of a musket ball in his left groin. Thinking the femoral artery was cut, 1 throw open my waistcoat, and taking my shirt by the collar tore it to my waistband. ^Ir. Duding- ston said: 'Pray, sir, don't tear your (dothes; there is linen in that trunk.' Upon wlii(di I reucklin to break o])en the trunk and tear the linen and scra])e lint, whi( h he immediately at- tempted, but, finding the linen new and strong, could not make lint." l>iscovering that dawn was rapidly ai)roacliing Dr. Mawnoy tore the linen into strips, and, bandaging Dudingstini as well as he could, placed him in one ()f the boats where the other pris- oners had bc(Mi collcct. All those taking part in the afi'air were nior(' or loss disgnist'd at tlu^ time. This s]»irited atta<'k was follow(Hl, in June, 1773, by the famous '* Poston Tea l*art v." This was somewhat in the nature of a private maritime enterprise. One of the nieasures adoi)ted by England to coerce the colonists was to jdace a heavy tax on tea. The latter eva(hMl it by agreiMug not to im]>ort or use the article, the result being that the nuTchandise soon accumu- THE WAR ON TEA. 51 lated ill the warelioiises of the East India Company. At Charleston the people caused the tea to be stored in damp cellars, where it si)oiled, while the Xew York- Tlie •' Boston Tea Tarty." From ail old print. ers and Philadel]>liians com]>ell(Ml some ships to re- turn without unloadinii,-. Three rar;Li<>es arrivcMl at Boston which the people endeavored also to send ba<"k, but the Crown oflicials refused to i;ive the necessary clearances. Determined to ]»revent the landiu^j,- of the oftensivc^ arti(d(\ a num- b(M' of the inhabitants, disiiuised as Indians, on the nijLiht of December 17, ITT.'*, suddcudy ajtpeared on the wharf, took ]»ossessi(»n of the ships, and, openina,' the hatches, broke o])en the chests and poured the tea into the bay. Thrrovisions," " of which the people were in <;reat need. According- to the t(M-ms of this paper, or contract, the inhabitants were to " in- dnl<;e Captain Jones in carryinj;- lumber to Boston, and to protect him and his property at all events." On June (>th the peoi>l(^ held a meetini; and decided not to «;rant his recpiest for lumber, ui)on which Jones reported the matter to ^Ioor(% who caused the slooj) and tln^ Marf/nrdtd to anchor near the village, where his i;uns would command the houses. This had the effect of cliani;ini;- the attitude^ of the inhabitants, to the extent that a majority voted to allow Jones to j^-et the lumber and to permit the citizens individually to i)urcliase i)rovisions. But there were many who votee()]>le cotdd assemble a town meetini;'; pcn-haps the town would ai;ree to take down the liberty pole. The town met, as was proi)osed, and voted not to take it down. Mr. Jones, who was in considerable favor with the English commander, ])ersuaded liim to defer execution of his threat until a second town meeting; could be calh^d, it being stated that the first was not fully attended."* ' Anticii>ating that there would be trouble over the liberty i>ol<' the inhabitants of Machias secretly sent word to Pleasant Kiver village, about twenty miles distant, and to a few other settlements within reach, askinu' for reenforcements. Before this aid could ' Aeeimnt nf .Tolm O'lirien. one of tlie partii'ipants in the affair. 1775. PREPARING TO ATTACK. 55 come the people had hehl another meeting — a secret one — on Sunday, June 11th, in tlie woods at the back of the settlement, at which the project of capturing tlie Crown boat and her convoy was discussed. After some talk Benjamin Foster, of East Falls, Machias — Pizarro-like — st(^i)ped across a brook near by and called upon all, who would take part in an attempt, to follow him. He was ])romptly supported by the sturdy men at the gathering, and Foster was dele- gated to proceed to East Machias to secure a schooner lying there, which was well adajtted for the undertaking. IMeantime Moore and Ichabod Jones, with several of their men, ignorant of the fact that a secret meeting was being held, had attended religious service in the meetinghouse. Some of the villagers, in anticipation of trouble, carried their guns to church, but took care to keep them out of sight, John O'Brien concealing his under a board. He observed Moore when the latter entered the edifice, and took a seat directly be- hind the British officer. In the (Muirse of the service ]\Ioore happened to look out of the open window, and he saw up the river, at a distance of about half a mile, a number of men crossing the stream on logs, holding guns in their hands. ^ These were the reenforcements coming from IMeasaut Biver village. The English commander at once surmised their object and realized the peril of his situation. At that time the meeting- house was unfinished and there were no pews, the con- gregation using temporary benches.- Making his way over these seats ^[oore reached a window, juni])ed out, and managed to make his way to his vessel, tluMi anchored at White's Point. Ichabod Jones to(dv to the woods, where he secreted himself several days. Stei)lien Jones, who also was at the meeting, was taken prisoner and h<'ld under guard. ' Account of John O'Brien, one of the participants. - Collections nf tlie ^faine lilstoi-ical Society. 56 BEGINNING HOSTILITIES. 1775. Tlie t('iii]»('r of these Elaine people is foiichinglj shown h\ an incident that occnrred th(^ followiucj day. The men who came from Pleasant Iviver were short of powder, having- only two or three ciiar<;es each. It ai)i>ears that one of them, J(>siah ^^'eston, of Jones- boro, forgot his ]M)wderhorn. Ills wife Hannah, after his depai-tnre, noticed the oyersi ('iiifn, and forty of the men of Machias went aboard her, while another party took the second sloo]) anht her up to the wharf. " On examining' their e(]nipments of warfare, only twenty i^uns could be ])roduced, many of which were meri^ fowlinii' ])ieces, cai'i-ying scatter shot, and of ])owder, ball, and shot thei'e were no more than three rounds to each firearm. The remainini;- W(M])ons consist(^d of thirteen ]>itch forks, a few scythes, and ten or tAvcdve axes."- The M(ir-])ounders and fonrtecui swivrien and Bf^njamin Foster, both of whom had served in the expedition against Louis- ' Collc'i-lioiis of the Mivhw Tlisturical Sdciety. '-' (i. W. l>alch, a desc-emlaiit of Morris O'lJrien. 1775. ATTACK ON THE MARGARETTA. 5Y burg. Morris was now incapacitated by extreme age. Jeremiah O'Brien, then tliirty-one years old, a son of Morris O'Brien, was cliosen commander of the Unit I/, and Edmund Stevens was made his lieutenant. Wliile this had been going on a number of the in- habitants had gathered on the highhmd overloolving the Ma ]•(/(( niter 8 refuge ncnir tlie Narrows, and threat- ened to attaclv if slie did not surrender. Beceiving for answer " fire and be damned," they opened lire, which ^Foore returned, but liiuling himself at a disad- vantage again got und^r way, and, running into a bay, anchored n(^ar the continence of two streams. Here he lashed tlu^ Mtirijiirvttd alongside a small sloop com- manded by a Mr. Toby, whom Mo(n-e compelled to come aboard the Crown cutter and act as pilot. It was not until ^londay morning, June 12tli, that the patriots were reaart of the Ameri- cans one was kilhMl and six were wounded,- one of the lattei' afterward i-i(ni ^^'alker, a (h^seend- ant of .Morris O'Brien, the anthoi* learns that it nn- qnestional)ly was JcnMuiah who had the honor. The confusion vei y naturally aris(^s fi-oni the fact that there were six ()']>riens in the ti,ulit, throe of them havino- tlio h^tcr "J " as their initial. As many of the early records liivc only the hrst letter, "J," to the commander, douht easily arose as to which O'BricMi was int<'nd(Ml. The six brothers were Jere- miah, (iide(»n, 4osei»h, Dennis, John, and William. Their father, Morris, came from Dublin, Ireland, in 1740, and settled in Scarborit',^ then in Massachu- setts. Alxtut 17(»0 the family moved to .Machias on account of the facilities there offei-ed in the lumber business.- They built and owned sawmills. The gunboat Macliids, of our present navy, was muned for the town wlxnx' the tiiiht tocdv ])lac(\ The news of this h^ht greatly enraged lii-itish navy officials, and about a month lat(M- tlnw sent two aruH'd sloo]»s, the J)Hi]»roa(di, O'l'rien sailed from ^la- chias with llie I iiifi/ and the coasting vessel Porfhnid Paclcl, commanded l)y lienjamin h^>ster, to anticii)ate them. They luet July 12, 1775, in the Bay of Fundy, and by attacking them se])arately the Americans took both and brought tlicMU in trium]di to Watertown. For this truly bi-illiant affair O'Brien was nuuh^ a cai»tain in the Massa(diusetts State marine, and with his last two i>riz(^s, whi(di he nauHnl Mdchhis Llhcri}! and J)'i!)(i(iic<\ he went out to cruise after I>ritish trans]»orts, O'lirieii commanding the Mritish slooj) of war FdJvoii, that were o])eratin^- in (Jloucester Bay. In this captni'e the Americans had one man killed and two w(»unded. Tliese maritime successes so exasperated Admiral (Iraves, then commander on the Korth American station, that he sent out a squadron of four war ves- S(ds uudcM' Captain Mowatt to " overawe " the coh)uists. Mowatt destroycMl the town of r^almouth, Maine (now Pot'tland), in OctobtM', com- jxdliui;- many women and "jv^ children t(» seek cover in hastily constructiMl huts at the b(\i;innin_<;' of the severe northei-n winter. Amono- these i'ieu afterward entered the privateer service, commanding- the armed ships L'lfflc y'lnceuf, Cyrus, and 'rUjcr, of X(^w IIam]>shire. Late in September, 1777, he ca]>tured olT ('a])e N(\u,ro a vessel from Ire- land laden with ])ork for the Jii'itish army. This craft had been taken by an American jn-ivateer, was recajdured by the l>i-itish cruiser Scdrltorfnn/Ji, and was aii,ain seized by Captain O'Brien.^ ^ c^-ud/rd tx^^^i^^^ ' Kidder's Eastorn Maine. 1780. O'BRIEN'S ESCAPE PROM MILL PRISON. • 01 Later in the war Jeremiah, ^Yith his brother Jolin and several others, built at Newburyi)ort a shi)) called the ffdiniilxil, carryino- twenty ^nns and a com- plement of one hundred and thirty men. On her first cruise, to I*ort an Prince, slie was commanded by John O'Brien. li(^turnin«»- from this voyai^e with sev- eral i)rizes, the Uitniilhal was under the command of Jeremiah O'Brien. Meeting' with varied succ(^ss in a cruise of considerable lenjith the UmniUxiJ, in 1780, was cai)tured, aft(^r a chase of forty-eiii'ht hours, by two British fririsou ship Jcr.siif, where they wcrc^ subjected to lin^at hardsliip. After six months of im])risonment tlie lldinillxiVs crew was exchanged, with tlie <'xc(q»tion of ('a]»tain O'Brien, who it seems, by or- the notice of the kee])ers at the eveninjn' round-up, In^ was left out of the ((dls after they were locked for tlie niiiht. He (^seajted fi-om the yard l)y ]tassin_i'itish i)risons, John O'Brien had pnrchased the fast-sailin;L;' brii;- Hihcniid, caiTvini; six 3-i)onnders and sixty men. lie sailed from Xewbnry]>ort in this vessel June 1), 1779, and on the 21st ca]>tured an Eni^lish briii and sent her into port. Abont noon, Jnne 2r)th, ('ai»tain John O'Brien ened tire about threes o'clock in the afternoon. Tlie stranii;er was the British cruiser (Uiimd Pdtiisoii, Lieut(Miant (Mii(Mie, from New York for Eniiland, carryini;-, besides her regular comple- ment, a numlter of British oflicers homeward bound. She was armed with 0- and 0-pounders. After a de- sultory cannonading, lastinii,' from tliree to tivc^ o'clock in the afternoon, ('a]»tain O'BritMi drew off, feeling satisfied tliat the (Miemy was too strong- to b(^ taken. In this affaii- the Americans had three men killed and several wounded,' the loss of the (Miemy beinj:,' un- known. Scai'cely had the 1/ iJxriiid hauh^l off from the (iciicral rdfli.sdii when a British frii^ate hovc^ in siulit and i;ave the Americans a hard chase until midnii2,ht, when she (h'sisted. Continuinu' her cruise, the ///- hrniid, on July 7th, took a schooner wliicli was sent into Newbury]>ort. Three days later she fell in with the 12-!j,iin ]n'ivateer I'dlli/, of Salem, Massac husetts, ('a]>tain J. Leach. Leach was a successful i»i'ivateers- man thi-oumhout th<^ war. In Se])t(^mber, 177(>, while in command of the jtrivate armed schooner Dolphin, ' Tjo"' of till' Ilibernia. 1775-1783. A DARING ATTEMPT ON A FLEET. C3 carrying only eight swivels and twenty-five men, he eaptnred the brig Roi/dl (h'onje, with a cargo of pro- visions, and also a sloop laden with fish. Before Leach got the Dolphin she was coniinandetaiii Leach commanded the privateer aS7. Marifs, a brig of one hundred and twenty-eight men. A number of spirited affairs like that of the Mpointed to protect Boston Light- honse, then under repair, and who was in command of an armed transport, on observing the privateers tire upon tlie I/iinlcr, set sail and reached the trans- ports in time to save them from destruction." In A])ril, 1775, several \vhal(4)oats under the com- mand of one N. Smith captured the British schooner Vohnifc in Martha's Mneyard. The Vohiiifc was a tender to the I^ritish frigate Snirhoroiu/h^om' of whose })rizes, as we have just seen, was captured by Cap- tain Jeremiah O'Brien. Tn I)(M'cmb(n' of the same year four boats und(M: tlie command of James Bar- ron, afterward a ca]»tain in the navy, ca])tured a Brit- ish tender in (Miesaitcake Bay. A whaleboat carry- ing three swivels and twiMity-two nnui, under the com- mand of one B. Bormer, in the same year seized an English sloo]) mounting six guns, and afterward re- captured two i)rizes off Ocracoke Inlet, North Caro- lina. From November 13, 1775, to the evacuation of Boston by the British, ]March 17, 1770, thirty-one Eng- lish vessels, while endeavoring to gain port, were cap- tured by the vigilant Americans. In this i)eriod there were only a few State cruisers in commission off' Boston, so that a good share of these captures must be cre(litrivate enter]U'ise. (Jeneral Washing- ton, on his own responsibility, borrowed two vesscds from Massachusetts and sent them into tlu^ (Julf of St. Lawrence to intercejit military supplies consigned to the enemy. These mmm'c the schooners TjI/iicJi and 1775-1776. WASHINGTON SENDS OUT CRUISERS. 65 Franklin, the first caiTving six guus, ten swivels, and seventy men, under the command of Captain Nicholas Broughton; and the seconfain Charles. Dyar, her tirsi and siM-oml officers being Thomas Dote and Joim A\'iggleswort h. The />rc l)elongerizes were brought into ])ort, and the I/dinidirs cargo alone netted twenty-five thousand dollars to her caidors. On the same day the Hdrnxon captunMl the scliooner I iidusirii ami the sloo]) PoIIi/. Soon after tliis lucky stroke she was chased into (Uoucester by the l)ritish cruiser Falcon. By running close inshore the />rc infiicted considerable injury on her ]»ursuer and escaped. This is the second unlucky exjx'ricm-e we hav(^ not(Ml the Fiilcoii as having with Americans, for in this same bay the FuJcon's boats were re])uls('d in an attemi)t to take one of Captain .T(M'emiali O'l'ricn's ])rizes. l^'or tln^se valuable serv- ices Maidy rcccivcMJ a commission, A])ril 17, 1776, as ca]»tain in the Continental navy, and the command of the .*>2-gun frigate llniicocl: was given to him.^ On tlic retirement of .Manly from the command of th<^ Lcr, Ca])tain Waters, as has been noted, assumed charge of tliat cruiser. Eai-ly on th(^ morning of June 17, 177(>, the Lt<\ in com]tany with thi'ee small priva- teers out of New England ports, fell in with two ' I'^ir ^Iniily's stil)stM|Ufnt, brilli;iiit c-ureer in tliis war see Chapter XV, " Cui>t;iiii .lolin Manly." 1770. CAPTURING A THIRD OF A REGIMENT. ^7 heavily aniKMl IJi-ilisli 1i'ans])()i'ts, the AimnhcUtt and the Iloirr, aiiaii a riiiiiiiiin' li<;hl with them, the enemy piittinji' ou all sail to escape. They finally evaded the Americans by running;' into Nantasket Koads. Toward evenin*;' the Americans met the ^lassa- chnsetts State cruiser Defense, Captain Seth Ilardinii-, which had sailtMl from Plymouth that morning, and, beinji;' attracted by the heavy tirin<;', drew toward the scene of hostilities. An arrangement was soon made between Ilardinji,', Waters, and the ]>rivateersnien, and about eh^ven o'clock the Defense boldly ran int(> the K<»ads, and iic^tinu:,- between the two transports, within i»istol-sliot distance, IlardinjL;' called upon the British to strike their colors. A voice from one of the trooi)sliii>s was Inward, in re])ly, " Ay, ay — Til sti'ik(%" and a broadside was ]»oured into the Defense. The Americans }»romptly resjyonded, and after an hour of heavy hrinii, the British calhMl for quarter. The trans]»orts were found to have on board about two hundred reuulars of th(^ Seventy-tirst Kei^iment. AmoniLi' the ])risoners was Lieut(Miant ('ani])bell. Ei<2,hteen of the Knulislimen had been killed in the action and a lar^ci- number wcn-e wounded. On the ]>art of the Americans not one was killed and only nine wer<^ injured. Amoni; the British dead was Major M(''nzi(^s, ^^il() had answered the summons to surrender with " Ay, ay — I'll strik(\'" Lientaii;ns against (li'cM'ue. Ou fh(^ followinjn- morninu,- the Americans discov- ered another sail in the offinii', whirivate ai'me(liti()n. J^lome of the other States also fitted out cruisers at the outbreak of hostilities. On November 14, 1775, Clement Lemi)riere was plac(Ml in command of the South Carolina shi]) rrospcr. On the 11th of the same month the ai'uied schooner Dcfcuxc, also belonging to that State, \Yhile sinking some hulks in Ilog Island Cr(vk, Charleston harbor, was tired on bj the British Kl-gun shij) Teriod, it is surprisin.u' in how many instances we tind American privatiMM-s chased by their own conntrymen, and in some instances i;uns, ]irovisions, and other e(]ni])aj;e were thrown away in frantic effort to escape from friends. Amoni;' the first of thes(» privateers to net to sea were the Ydithcc, the Ymthr Ifcro, and the YaiiJxfc lidiifin-, all of Massa<-hnsetts. Like the vessels bear- inji the name " Yankee " in the War of 1S12, this trio of Revolutionary Yankees had sini^nlarly excitin<2,' and varied exjM'riences. The Yaiilrc was a lari^e sloop, carryinn nine nuns and a complement of sixteen men, under th<' command of Caittain Johnson. She j;<)t to sea early in the war, and in July, 1770, captured the valuable British merchantmen (Uyit/litoii and /jnchara, laden with rum and su,L!,ar. Johnson rize crews. T^ach of the British crews numbered more than the (Mitire crew of the Y(dled the ])rivateer to surrender. The (Ur}land, with their l)rize, the )'tur(Ml a ship laden witii rum, sugar, wiiu', and logwood. The 12- gun brig (liarinuKj I'ef/m/, Captain J. Jaiiucey, in ()ctob(M', 177(>, seized a small vessel having a cargo of provisions, and the schooner Dolphin, Ca]»tain LcNicli, in September, 177(1, ca]»tured tlu' bi'ig h'oi/dl (Sconje (also laden with ])i'ovisions) and a sloojt loaded with fish. The brig Hannah and Mollif, Ca]»tain Crabtree, in the sanu^ yeai' took a slii]) mounting foui- guns and eight swivels, one brig, two schooners, and a sloop — a very successful cruise for that day. These vessels were taki^i by a stratagtnn in the harbor of Liver- pool, Nova Scotia. The (l-gun scliooner I ndependiiiee, Ca])tain Nichols, in Se]>tember, 177(5, ca]>tured six vessels; while the / ndependenej/. Captain (Jill, in the same month took a brig, but it was retaken by the prisoners. In Sei»tember, 177(>, the S-gun brig Joseph, Ca])taiu C.Babl)idge, afterward commanded by Ca])tains I'^ield and West, mad(^ a ])rize of a schooner in ballast, and two mouths later took a valuable ship. In Septem- ber, 177(J, the l(»-guu brig Massachuxells, Ca])tain I). Soutlier, ca]>tHred a bi'ig of six guns and twenty-eight men, having on board a couipauy of dragoons. About the same tiuie the 12-guu sh)oj> licpiiltlic, (\»])tain John 72 FIRST TWO YEARS. 1776, Foster Williams,^ captured two valuable ships, one named JiiVius Casar, and sent tbeni into Boston. The Retaliation, a 10-gun briji' commanded by a Mr. Giles, took, in the same .year, after a severe action of two hours' duration, a ship armed with two guns. ]kIost successful of all the privateers commissioned from Massachusetts in the first two years of the war was the 12-. Africa, which was maintained with mucli obstinacy until a sliot iguit(Ml the Africa's uuigaziuc, blowing the craft to ])ieccs, only three of her complement of twenty-six uu'U being saved. The Rorcr also took the brigs Mar// and Janic.s, l^arah Ann, and (lood latent, besides the snow Lirelif. On October 14, ITTC), the (J-gun schooner General Gates, Captain B. Tatem, ca])tured a schooner, but shortly afterward, while off Portsnu)uth, New ITamp- shire, was herself taken by the English brig Hope. The American commander and his men escaped by swimming ashoi'e. While cruising off Boston, June, 177(>, the sloo]> Lad/i WaxltinijUn^ Captain Cunning- ham, was attacked by four aruu^d barges from British war shi]ts. The ])rivat(M'r beat the boats off, killing several of the Englishmen. In October the Lady Was]iin-gun sloop Bearvv, Captain S. Dean, sailed from New York in 1770, 1779, and again in 1781. In June, 1779, she captured a sloop. A privateer schooner of tliis name, but carrying twice the nuiuber of guns, was commissioned from Connecticut in 1778, under the command of Ca])tain I). Scoville, and one from Pennsylvania, commanded by Captain W. Har- ris. Betwec^n August :> and (>, 1770, the 10-gun sloop Brooin, Captain AW Knott, of Connecticut, ca])tured the shi]) (lurrlvs aii' on board one buudrod soldiers. Several weeks later this priva- teer captured the shi}) Isaac and Pic>pi/ and Shark cruised for some time with Captain Hopkins' Siiuadron, and in August, 177G, the former took the shi}* Hope, and in the f(dlowing month the schooniu- Man/ ami Elizabeth, both prizes being laden with coffee and sugar. In 1771) the Shark made four prizes. Of the privateers that ])ut to sea early in the war those from Pennsylvania seem to have mci with the greatest success. The Chance, a little sloop mounting four guns, under the command of ('a])tain J. Adams, in .May, 177(>, took the valuable sliii) Ladi/ Juliana. The 24-gun ])i-ivateer (^ornet, about tlu^ same time, while off St. Kilts, fell in with a heavily arnK^l Brit- ish merchantman, and for thre(^ hours engaged her at close (piarters, when the Englishmen managed to escape with the loss of their mizzenmast. Th(^ audacity of Captain S. Cleaveland, of the brig Despalch, is ty]»ical. This vessel left Philadelphia witluuit a gun aboard, her commander taking his chances of turing some kind of an armament on the ]>assage across the Atlantic or of jmrchasing guns in France. Caittain Cleavelaml had not been to sea many days befoi-e he captured a vessel, and, trans- ferring the guns to his own shi]), continued his cruise. The 12-gun brig (leneral Miffiin, Captain J. Hamil- ton, in 177(J m;ide directly for British waters, where she took severid valuable vessels, one of them being a shi]) with a cargo of wine. On her return i>assage the General Mifflin fell in with a British i^rivateer carrying eigldeeii guns ami eighty men. An action was imuHHliately begun, and the lOngiishmeu, after havinsi' sustained a loss of twentv-two killed or 1776-1775. PENNSYLVANIA GUNBOATS. 75 wounded, inoliuliug their comiiiaiider, suiTendered. The American casualties Avere thirteen. In October of the same year the (Uiicnil Moiit- qotiK'fi/, a brig of twelve gnns and one hundred men, under Captain Montgomery, came across a fleet of one hundred merchantmen, convoyed by several Brit- ish war ships. By adroit maneuvering the privateer managed to cut out one of the merchantmen, the shi]> Thvti.s, with a cargo of rum and sugar. Other privateers commissioned from Pennsylvania that got to sea early in the war were the G-gun brig Xaucif, the 14-gun snow Rs I'osc and I'lidiii.v in Hudson iJiver. In tins alfair the Spilp'rc had one man killed and three wonnded. IVnnsylvania also had a fire ship called the J'Jfiui, com- manded by William Canible. The IxdiKjcr, a craft hastily fitted for harbor defense, in ()ctobtain Hnme, cap- tured a West India ])rivateer. The vessel was carried by boarding, the English having some fortA' men killed or wounded before they surrender(Ml. Amono' the fii'st jn-ivateers to oet to sea from South Carolina was the 14-i;un briii (UhiicI, (^aptain J. Turj)in. This vessel sailed on her first cruise with- out instructions. On November 2, 177(1, she captured the shi]» C/r///.s-.s7/, the scdiooner Marin, and the sloop f/royv/r. The Chirissd was laden with lumber and had on board forty nei^i-oes. New York, liavini; her most available seaport in the hands of the <'n(Mny during the urc^ater j)art of the war, did not send out her usual (•a])(cliiiiil('i\ Captain J. Smith, in Jnno took a ship having- on board twenty prisoners. In An^^nst the Scliiij/Jcr seized tive other vessels and re<'a])tnred the Naiivji. Tln^ valley MltifuH/, Captain McCleave, on An*;nst 3, 17T(», took ])art in the attack on tlu^ British war shii)s Rose and /'lidni.r, the galley having one man killed and fonr wonnded. The only privateer from New Jersey that sne- eeeded in i^c^tinii to sea early in the war was the schooner Eiitcrprlsv, Captain J. Campbell. In Jnly and An<;nst, 177(>, she eaptnred the shi}) Ldiicasfcr, earryinji' fonr <»nns and sixteen men; the ship llhtcl- Hudlr, with a cargo of rnni and sngar; the snow Jdiiics, having twenty-three men and a cargo of nndasses and rnm, and the ship Modcxfi/, laden with sngar. On Jnly 22d the Eiifcrprixc eaptnred the slii]) EarJ of IJrroI, monnting six guns and having a cargo valned at one hnndred thonsand dollars. On the same day the Enterprise took the ship Xeris after a spirited action of one honr. New Hampshire, in 1776, sent ont the 12-gnn brig Pufitaiii, Captain J. Harman, which in one crnise cap- tured a slii]) and fonr schooners. Other private armed craft sent out from I'ortsmonth in this year were the brig Enterprise, Captain I). Jackson; the 14-gnn sloop If (name not given) laden with rum, 78 FIRST TWO YEARS. 177G. sugar, cotton, aud the brig TUufnilu, with a cargo of tobacco. In the following October the brig Favorite, Captain Coffin, captured a ship and a schooner, with cargoes of pimento, rum, and sugar. Two 3'ears later the same privateer, while under the orders of Cap- tain Lamb, captured a ship armed with sixteen guns having a cargo of logwood. The 10-gun brig IiKlitstri/, Captain Child, in 177G, captured a brig, and then had a drawn battle with a ship of ten guns. The action lasted two hours, with a loss of two killed and six wounded on the part of the American. In October the IG-gun ship Moiiti/oiiicrj/, Captain Bucklon, captured the ships Rover, IsahelJa, and llarlcqiiiii and the brigs Devonshire and Henry. The 12-gun brig Put nam, Cap- tain Ferguson, took four ships; and the same vessel, while under the command of Captain C. Whii)])le, captured two snows, one brig, and had a severe action with an armed ship. The J n an exceptionally capable iLironj) of officers, and not a little of the niarvelons snc- ^ cess attained by the infant navy of the United States is directly traceable to this circnmstance. Amoni;- the first of our navy officers to engage in privateerinj^' was TJentenant Joshna Barney.^ Bar- ney had been taken prisoner early in the war, and after a confinement of nearlv five months in the ' For Pianicy's brilliant servici's in (Ih' War of 1813 see Maelay's His tory of tlif Xavy, vol. i, pp. 5S8-.585. 79 80 NAVY OFFICERS IN PRIVATEERS. 1778-1779. prison sliips at New York lie was oxchanjied for an EDij;lisli officer of equal rank — the first lieutenant of the British frigate Mermaid, which had been com- pelled, by the approach of the French fleet, in July, 1778, to run ashore on the Jersey side of the Dela- ware. Makinj;' his way to Baltimore, Barney secured the command of a trading- vessel, which was described as "■ a fine little schooner, armed with tw<> <>uns and (M^lit men,'' having,' a cariio of tobacco bound for St. Eustatia. This craft had a short and unfortunate careei-. In risoners, he landed them at Cinai)uxent, on the eastern shore of the Chesapeake, and sailed away with the prize. Lieutenant Barney returned to Baltimore, where, after several weeks S})ent in a vain endeavor to secure another vessel, he met his old commander, Captain Isaiah Robinson, whose creditable career in the navy also has been recorded.^ These two officers soon cauK^ to an ap;reement by whi(di IJobinson was to secure the command of a i)rivateer and Barney was to serve in her as first officer. ^Mmdi difficulty was found in secui-iiii:, a suitable vess(d, and still more in jncttiuii,' tlu' necessary arms, ammunition, and men, so that it was not until February, 1779, that they were abh^ to leave Ah^xandria on a private cruise. The craft they secured was the brii^' Poiiioiki, carrying- twelve guns, of varying calibers, and a crew of thirty-five men. ^^lle was loaded with tobacco con- signed to Bordeaux. The adventures of these two navy officers began on the third day after clearing the Capes, when they ' Sec Maolay'y History of the Navy, vol. i, p. 45. 1779. THE POMONA-ROSEBUD FIGPIT. 81 were discovered by a vessel aud chased. As Captain Robinson's first object was to get the cariio of tobacco safel}^ to France, he made every endeavor to avoid the stranger, bnt she proved to be a reniarkabl}" fast sailer. At eight o'clock in the evening, a fall, un- clouded moon giving the chase every opportunity, the stranger came within hailing distance, and, run- ning up English colors, asked, " What ship is that?" The only answer Kobinson made was to show his flag, whi(di Ihe Englishman immcdiatel}^ ordered down. The PoiitoiKi tlien delivered her broadside, which brought down the enemy's fore-topsail, cut away some of their rigging, and ai)])arently caused much sur- prise and confusion on board. The Englishman re- sponded with his battery, and a running fight was kept up until nearly midnight. Early in the fight the enemy discovered that the Ameri<'ans had no stern gun ports, and availing themselves of this they ma- neuvered for positions oil' the Poiiiona's stern and quarters where she could not ivturn their fire. As an evidence of the confusion into which the enemy had been thrown by the first broadside from the Pomona, it was noted that, with all their advantage of position, the English gunners were able to fire only one or two shots every half hour. Noting this, Kobin- son caused a ])ort to be cut in his stern and a long 3-pounder whipi)ed up from the gun deck and run out of it. This was accomplished about midnight, when the Englishmen were drawing near for another shot. Apparently they had not discovered the shift in the PomonifH armament, for they drew (piite near, and received such a discharge of gra])e that they hauled off and did not again come within gunshot that night. The light of day showed the Americans that the stranger was a brig of sixtcH'U guns, and as several officers could be seen through her ports w^earing j^O NAVY OFFICERS IN PRIVATEERS. 1779. uniforms, it was belicn-ed tliat she was a regular cruiser. Afterward it was learned the stranger was only a jirivateer, and her officers had resorted to the trick of donning uniform and displaying themselves in conspicuous places, so as to lead the Americans to believe that they were contending against one of the king's cruisers. This, the English thought, would show the Americans the hopelessness of the struggle, and Avould induce them to surrender without further resistance. But Captain Ixobinson was not to be frightened by gcdd buttons and epaulets, and when about sunrise the stranger ran close under the PoiiioiKr.s stern for the ])uri)ose of boarding the Americans made every ])reparation for giving her a warm reception. The solitary o-])()under in the stern ^^■as loaded with gra])eshot, and the charge was topped off by a crowbar stuck into the muzzle. Just as th<' English were about to board Barney, with his own hand, discharg(Ml this gun, and with such accurate aim that the l^ritish were completely battled in tluMi* attem]it, their foresails and all their weathei' foreshrouds being cut away. The loss of these sui)ports com]»elIed th<* Englishman to wear in order to save his foremast from going by the board. This UKUumver gave the Americans an excellent chance foi' raking, and ])romptly going about Bobin- son delivei-ed an effective broadside. The enemy did not again return to the attack, so the Poiiioita resumed her course, an-iving in Bordeaux without further in- cident. Captain Bobinson afterward learned that his an- tagonist was the ])riYateer Rosrivat(MM-s put to sea in this condition and met with astonish- ing success. The PoiiioiKi sailed from the Clu'sapeake with guns, it is true, but with less than she was pierciMl f(U', and the cannon she did cari-y were of varying and small calibers, which maoi-deaux ('a]>- tain llobinson sold his cargo of tobacco, and from the proceeds loaded with brandy and purchased eighteen 6-pounders, the regular armament of the brig, and a sufficient quantity of ])owder and shot. He also succeeded in enlisting thirty-tive additional men, raising his complement to seventy. Sailing from Bordeaux in the early part of August, 177!), in this much-improved condition, the Poiiioiki sha])ed her course for the return passage to America. One morning at daylight, wIumi about halfway across the ocean, Captain IJobinson made a sail which, from her peculiar maneuvers, seemed to be " feel- ing " the P()iii()iHi\s strength. By the time the sun rose the vessels had come within gunshot and several broadsides were exchanged, but at the end of the first half hour the stranger crowded on sail befoi'e the wind to escape. The Americans were ])]'om]»tly in chase, but being heavily laden tlu^ Poiiioiki steadily fell be- hind, although she managed to keep the enemy in sight all that day. 84 NAVY OFFICERS IN PRIVATEERS. 177il. Toward oveiiiiii;' a sqiinll of wind and rain camo on. Availinii' liinisolf of tliis Captain Itobinson crowdiMl on canvas, and on ai^ain coniinii,' np with the straniicM' oxclianiiod several more broadsides, the Englishman still end(^avoriu,<>- to escape. During the night the chaso was hrst sight of, bnt on the follow- ing morning slio was made ont, in the somewhat thick weallicr, fonr or live miles ahead, it tlu^n being calm. <'a]>tain K(dniison now got ont his swe(q)S, and by dint of hard rowing managed to got alongside of his foe for the third time, when the stranger, without waiting for another broadside, surr<'ndered at the hrst summons. The prize was found to be an Eng- lish i)rivateer carrying sixteen guns, G- and !l-]»ounders, and a crew of seventy men. Twelve of her ])eoj)le had been killed and a number wounded, besides which she had been seriously injui-ed in her hull, rig- ging, and spars. The only man killed in the roiiioiKi was a lad who had slii])[)ed at Bordeaux as a ])assenger. Two of tlie Americans were wound(Ml. Lieutenant Rarn<\y, with a prize crew, to(dv possession of the private(M% and both vessels arrived safely at Pliihid(d]»hia in the following- October. Both Caidain Robinson and Lieutenant Barney realized a liandsonu^ fortune in this au- dacious venture.^ One of the most successful commanders in the 1 For the (■untiiiiiat ii)ii of IJarney's hfilliaiit career in the privateer serv- ice, see chupters xii and xiv, Part Fiist. 1779-1781. THE PROSPERITY'S HARD FIGHT. 85 uavy of the llevoliitioii was Captain John Barry.^ This enterprising otlrtcer, like most of his In'others in the service, at times was unable to on tlie cutter carried her by boarding,the Amer- ' For IJari-y's naval career, see Macla-y's History of the Navy, vol. i, p].. ;5!», 42, 43, 92-94, 145-147. 2 See Maclay's History of the Navy, vol. i, iip. 105, 167, 187, 197, 235. 86 NAVY OFFICERS IN PRIVATEERS. 1779-1777. icans having four killed and several wonnded. In the following year Murray, then commanding the Re- vciKjc, cut out a brig from a convoy of fifty sail. Arm- ing his prize and placing a good crew aboard, Captain JMurray continued his cruise in company with his prize as a '' commodore." Soon afterward he fell in with another American privateer, when the little s(iuadron was attacked by three English privateer schooners in company with an armed ship and a brig, one of the first instances of a *' fleet action " we have in which privateers were the sole participants. Soon r(»alizing that they were dealing with ships better stored with shot and powder than with rich merchan- dise, the American and British privateersmen de- sisted and resumed their search for more temi)ting ]>riz('s. While cruising on the Newfoundland Banks the licrciH/c captured a British i)rivateer. Then standing for the English coast, Captain ^Murray was chased and captured by a frigate. rerha]>s the most successful of all the navy offi- cers who served their ai)prenticeship in the i)riva- teei'S of the Bevolution was Thomas Truxtun, whose battles with two Erencli frigates, a ftnv years later, won for him imperishable renown.^ We first note Truxtun in the 10-gnn ship fii<1c]Kii<1('iic(\ of Bennsyl- vania. In 1777 he caphired a shi]) having a cargo of sugar. This merchantman was armed with sixteen guns, and did not surrender without a stout resist- ance. While in the IiKJfjniKloicr Truxtun also cap- tur(Ml a brig and a slooj) with cargoes of rum, etc. Two years \i\tvv we find him in command of the armed ship AiKlrcir (UihJirvU, of ten guns, which craft he shortly exchanged for the fine 24-gun ship Mar,^. In th(^ latter Truxtun cruised some time in the Brit- ish Channel, making a number of prizes which w^ere sent into Quiberon Bay, France. • See :\raflay'.s History of the Navy, vol. i, i)p. IGO. 105, 17(5, 177-183, 193-197, 233. 1781-1782. ATTACK ON THE ST. JAMES. So great bad been the siu-eess of Captain Truxtuu that in 1781 be was intrusted witb tbe perilous task of convoying across tbe Atlantic Mr. Barclay, our con- sul-general to France. Tbe splendid 20-gun priva- teer St. James; baving a complement of one bundred men, was placed under bis command, William Jones, afterward tbe Secretary of tbe Navy, serving in ber as tbird officer. It seems tliat tbe Britisb bad h'arned of tbe iH'oi)()sed sailing of Mr. Bar(day for France, and being especially anxious to intercept bim tbey sent out a sloop of war from New York for tbe exi)ress purpose of capturing bim. How accurately informed tbe enemy were of our secrc^t movements is sbowii by the fact tbat tbis sloop of wai* fell in witb tbe Sf. ■/(iiiics a sbort time after sbe cleared land. A severe action was immediately begun, wbiarity of forces, Truxtun pre- pared to give battle, and bad been sbarply engaged witb one of these vessels for twenty minutes, when a frigate hove in sight and com])ell(M] tbe Commerce to make all sail to esca])e. In tbis battle tbe Ameri- cans bad om^ man killed and two wounded, while the loss of tbe I>ritisb is ])laced at fourteen killed and twentv-four wounded. NAVY OFFICERS IN PRIVATEERS. 1778-1781. Stephen Decatur, Sr., the father of one of the heroes of the War of 1812, eoninianded five different privateers in tlie Kevolntion. The younger Decatur also served in somo of these craft, and received that training which in later years tured the king's cruisers.^ For these bril- liant services Stephen De- catur, Sr., was taken into the navy as a cajdain. Daniel ^IcNeil, noted alike for his eccentricities <»f < haracter and bravery as an officer, had the honor, in 1778, while in com- uiand of tli(^ 20-gun ])rivateer (Uiicnil Mifflin, to re- ceive a salute from the I'remdi admiral at Brest. This so offenriva- teer of eij^hteeu gnus and eighty men. The English- men tinally snrrendered, having had their com- mander and twenty-two men killed or injnred. Mc- Niell's next command in the privateer servic<> was the 10-gnn slii]> I Ij/sscs. In 1782 we tiiid him in com- mand of the (>-gnii brig Wa.sp, with a complement of twenty men. Two other navy olticers who served in privateers must be specially noticed, Daniel Waters and (leorge Little. Waters, in 177S, commanded the l()-gnn shij) Thorn, ill wliich vessel he gave battle to the British IG-gnii brig (hn'viiior Tfi/oii, Captain Stebbins, a (lov- ernment craft. She had in com]»aiiy the 18-gnn brig iS'/r WiUidiii /'JrsJxiiir, Captain Hamilton, another king's ship. Wat<'rs had receiv«Ml his commission becanse of his extraordinary attack on the British troopship Dvfciiffc in 177(1,^ and in the i)resent instance lie showed himself to be a privateersman of true mettle. He (dosed on both the British 'vess(ds at the 'same time, and after a spirited action of two hours com- pelled them to snrreiider. Captain Stebbins being among the many killed. On his homeward passage Waters, after an action of fifty minntes, captnred the English ship HiKirlaii, monnting eighteen gnns and having a ('oni])lement of ninety-seven men. Just be- fore gaining Boston harbor Arith his three prizes. Waters had the misfortnne to los<' the Gorcnior Tfj/oii, that vessel escaping under cover of niglit. The Sir WilJ'uiiii hJr.sliiic and Sparlaii, however, were bronght safely into ])ort. (i(Mtrge Little, who commanded the liostoii in her remarkable action with th<^ l^rencdi corvette />< reran, ISOO,- was in (diarge . (•ai)tiir(Ml two Eiiiilisli privatcMM-s, and soon after cut out the l>i-itisli ai-iiicd bi-ii; McfUnu that was Iviug iu the PiMiobscot with a prize shx)}). Tlic W'iiitltrop made several other coiisiderabh- prizes before the eh)se of the war, aiiioiijj, 1 hem bart in onr early o|)erations in the Medi- terranean. Some other navy officers who commanded i)rivateers in this strui»;['le were David Porter, in the Aiin^ni and the ncli(llii\ Nicholas Iiiurrou:nlis Hopkins, in the L<( and the Success; Sannud Tucker, in the /y/'rr OaJ,- and llioiii; -Tames Sever, in the riiilo and the l\- kins had just arrived after his sn<-cessfnl expedition to the Bahamas. Hopkins a])]die(l to Washinjj,ton for two hnndi*ed volunteers to assist his scpiadron in reachinin Providenc(% and Talbot was one of the first to olfer himself. He proccH'ded in the squadron to the desired haven, and then, with his nn^n, rejoined the army befoi-e N(nv Yoi-k. At that tinu' several tire shi])s were in course of 91 Esek Hopkins. 92 CAPTAIN SILAS TALBOT. 1776. constriicticni, which it was hoped wonhl destroy some of the vessels of the British fleet then at an- chor near New York. When these vessels were nearly ready, (''a])tain Talbot and Ensign Thomas, of the same regiment — the latter also havinii- been a seaman — ai)i>li(Ml for and were placed in command of two of these fire craft. When Washington re- treated to Harlem Ileiiihts, the I>ritisli fl(H't mov(Ml np llndson Kiver, the Amc^rican fire ships kc('}>in_ii;- jnst ahead of them and ancliorini;- above Fort Wash- ington. Here they remained three days, when Tal- bot received a letter from Major Anderson direct- ing him t<> take the first opportnnity to destroy the British vessids with his fire ships. Abont this time three of the enemy's vessels ancdiorcd seven miles above the city, Avith the view of tnrning the right wing of the American army. The folloAving night i)roving fair, (''ai)tain Talbot, abont tw(> o'( lock in the morning, wn one of Ids nuMi, named Priestly — an expert swimmer — to lie down on the forecastle with a lighted niatcli so as to fire the trains the instant they fouled the enemy's ship. Selecting the largest of the three ships, the fH-gim ship of the line Asia, Talbot avaihMl liimself of the darkest honr, jnst before daylight, and moved roa(diing fir<^ shi]> was still some distance (df a bey aboai-d tlie d.s'/'f/ disc(tv- ered her and gave the alarm. Tlu^ enemy prom]>tly o]tened a r;ii>i, no serious damage was done. In a f<'W minnt(\s the vessels fouled, mat(dies 1776. ATTEMPT ON THE ASIA. 93 were applied to the fore and aft trains at the same instant, and so rapid was the proi;ress of the flames that thev bnrst forth from all sides, while Talbot himself was compelled to grope aronnd in the lire and received severe bnrns before he f(mnd the sally port thronii'li whi(di he and his men were to escape. The brave Trii^stly, who had nndertaken the peril- ous task of _i;ivin,n' direct tire to the trains, was comixdhMl to jump overboard, but Avas rescued by the boat. The greatest confusion pre- vailed aboard the Asia, (luns were fired while boats from the other British war craft i>ut off to her assistance and to intercept the daring- adventunn's. The brilliant flames from the fire shi}) soou illuminated the river for miles, rendering the little boat containinii' the Anu'ricans a fair tariii^t. All the Eniilish ships opened on her with round and i>rape shot, but owinji' to th<' excite- ment of the moment only tw(t small shot passed throuiih the frail craft. After ^reat effcn-fs the Brit- ish succeeded in extiu^uishiuL!,' the flames, but the enterprise had made sm h an impression upon their commanders that they immediately slipped their cables, and, fallinii' down the river, anidiored below New York. Captain Talbot and his men reached the Jersey shore in safety, but he was so buriUMl and blistered by the tire as to be blinded, and his nu'U led him through the woods to English Neighborhood. " Ac<'ommodations were solicited for him there at several houses, but to no pui*]>ose, the people alleg- ing generally that his a])])earance was so horrible he would fi'ighten their childi'cn. At last a poor widow who lived in a small log hut that had but one room in it took him in, where he was laid on the '^/^ 94 CAPTAIN SILAS TALBOT. 1777-177S. lloor and covered witli a blauket, and his \h)ov hostess procured for him every consolation in her power. But in the course of the day General Knox and Dr. Enstis, passing that way and hearini;' of his distress- inj;- situation — for he was at that time deprived of his siji'ht — they called in to see him, and the doctor gave dircM-tions for liis more pro])er treatment. AAlien the cai)tain was a little recovered he left this poor but hospitable abode and went to Ilackensack, wluM-e he remained till he Avas able to join his regi- ment." ' I''or this gallant affair Congress ])romot(Ml Talbot to the rank of major. Ensign Thomas brought his tire shi]) alongside a British tender of fourteen guns in Tappan I>ay and destroyed her, but the gallant officer himself perished in the flames of his vessel. In the liritish attack on Fort Mil^lin in Novem- ber, 1777, Avhere Talbot was stationed, he received a niusk(4 ball through his left wrist. Notwithstand- ing the excruciating i)ain, he continued at his ])ost with a handkerchief tied round the injured ])art. Soon afterward a ball pen(4rated his hip, and, being totally disabliMl, Talbot was placed in a boat and transferred to lied Baidv, and tluMice to the hos])ital at Princeton, deceiving pi»earer Tallxd was or- dered to superintend this work, and in a short time had eighty-six boats in readiness, sixteen of whieh were built in one day, and calked by candhdight in an open field the following night. " .Major Tal- bot, by the middle of tho night, put everything in train for having all ready by the next morning; and then, being worn out with fatigue and want of rest for sevt^ral days, laid down under oiu' of the boats, that the dew might not fall ui)on him, and slept soundly, not wit listanding the calkors worked over his head part of tlu^ tim<' to finish the boat." ^ The embarkation of the American army began Au- gust Utli, anlomatically offering to share their forage with him. Taking their sid<^ arms, Talbot marched them u]) the road before him into tlu^ American lines. Owing to the failure of tln^ Fn^ich fieet to co- o])erate with the Americans, the attack on New])ort was not made, and on August 2Stli our army began its retreat to the mainland. When tlu^ I'^rench shi])S first a])])eared off Xew])ort, July 2r)th, tin' English burned several of tlieir men-of-wnr and s;iid< the frigate lloni, at that time heaved down on the bea CAPTAIN SILAS TALBOT. 1 77«S. iiij,aiii closing" 11i(>s(» clKniiiels, the British, after the (le]»artiire of the I-'reiich vessels for Boston, coii- vei't(Ml a stout bi'ii;- of some two Imndred tons into a galley. Her upper deck was removed, and on the lower deck (Hglit 12- pounders from the Flora were mounted, besides ten swivels, and being provided with strong board- ing nettings, and manned by forty- five men, she be- came a formidable auxiliary to the British land forces. This craft, named in honor of the British commantiug the important commerce carried on through that chauiud. Determined to captui-e oi' di^stroy this miscdiie- vous vessel, Talbot early in Octolx^r obtained (len- eral Sullivan's i)ermissi(»n to tit out a craft and <-all for volunteers. Tlu^ small coasting sidiooner Ilairl; of seventy tons, was secured, and in two days was pre- ]>are(l for th<' eutei'prise with two 8-pounders and sixty men under Talbot, Lieut(Muint Bakei* being sec- ond in command. These daring men promi)tly made 1778. FITTING OUT THE HAWK. 97 wail, and had proctMMled aboul eiiilit miles below Providence when the wind faihMl, so that they were obliged to remain at ancdior all that uiinht and the following day. In l, ((HicliKliiiii' his rciiiarks with ail cxliortat i(»ii, iiri;iiiii the men to kccj) cool, and iiiaUiiiii" a ('oiisi(h^i'abl(' personal reward for the mail who first gained the iialh^v's deck. Tlie men res])onded to tlie harangue with (dieers, and proinpt- Iv at nine o'l lock Ihe Ihtirk o'ot nnder way and pro- ceeded down t he river. ill niakin.u his i)rei)arations for the attack, Talbot showed true ^'ankee in<;ennity bv bishinm' a kedi^-e amdior fast to tlie end of his jib boom, so that when the II (I irk ran against the riijol tlie kedn'e would tear a wide chasm in the m^tinus. A grapnel Jilso was held in readiness to throw aboard the enemy so as to h(dd the vessels tojLicther. As the Americans approached tlM' fort at I'ouland l'\M-ry, Talbot low- ered his sails so that the Ihtirk would drift j)ast undei- bai-e ]>oles, thercdiy reducinii the thances of discovery. On the succ<'ssfnl ]>assa_ii(' of this fort nn- discoverelack Toint, and would have been warned of the a]»])roachini; daniicr by the sound of iiuns. So onward in the darkness lilided the silent Ihiirk, with every sound hushed and every liiiht carefully screened, and thounh she drew so near the eartli- \Norks as to <'nable her jM'ople to clearly distinguish the sentimds every time they ])assed the li;Lilit at the window (d" the barrack she continued on her way do^^■n st ream undetecte\'n the river with all hands at (piarters. <)A\iu!4 to a ]>ossible o^■eran.\iety Talbot did not i;ain a \iew of the Pujol as soon as he had e.\i>ecled, and, fearing; that he had passed her in the darkness, he came to anchor, and, licttiinj,' into his boat, ]iulled \\\\\\ mut'Hed oars do\\'n the stream and went in search of his enemy. He had not jiro- c(mm1(m1 far when tlu^ galley smhbMily loomed up directly ahead. To make absolutely sure of suecess 1778. THE AISIERICANS BOARD. 9*) this (liscHM't officer, instead of exhibit iuc; nncluo haste by pnllin*; iniinediately baclv to liis craft, moved closer to tlie fi^/ot, and haviuj^- satistied him- self as to how sli<^ rode with the tide and wind, re- turned to the Hiurlx. (Jettiuji' his schooner under Avay a<»aiu, Talbot bore directly- down on the "alley. Soon her dark outlines were distin,uuished in the sur- rounding' n'loom, and almost at the same instant a challen<>e was heard across tlu^ water. The hail was rejx^ated several times, and as no answer was mad(^ a small volley of musketry was d(divered at tlu^ AnuM'icans, which occasioned little or no injury, as the crew had been ordered to lie down behind the bul- warks. Kefori^ the British could tly swuni;' aboard, held the two craft tojiether. The Americans then rose, and, carrying only two 3-l)ounders, manned excdusively by S(ddiers — though many of them had l)een seamen — bnrst into tears, sayinj^' that he '' fancied himself to stand as fair for ])romotion as any lieutenant in the navy, but thai now all those agreeable hopes were swe]>t away." .Major Talbot, in a magnanimous spii-it, endeav- ored to console the crestfallen officer. Ilavinm- as- certained that not a man on eitliei' side had been killed, Talbot sent his prisoners below, where they wei-e sort had been <;i"eatly dei)i'essed, was raised, and the intercourse by sea, which, to the immense preju- dice of this i»art <»f the country, had loni;- been shut up, was now opened.'" For this handsome exploit Con<;ress i)romote(l Talbot to the rank of lieutenant colonel, wliih' the (ieneral AsscMubly of Khode Island presented both Talbot and Ibdm with a sword. Stimulated by liis successes ajiainst the Asia and Pif/ot, Talbot soon formed a i)lan for destroying the 50-gun shi]) Uinoirji, whicli the enemy, late in 1778, stationed off' liliode Island. An old, high-sided mer- chant ship, of about four hundred tons, was carried down tlie river a few miles below Providence, and a stag<' was built on her deck, as if for carrying cattle. " Tliis stage was calculated to be about seven feet higher above the surface of the water than the up- per tier of guns in the Jiciioini, and was s])read out over the sides in order to facilitate boarding when tlie two vessels lay (dose togi^tluM', and its height would not only enable the men to command the decks of the enemy, but place them above the fire of tludr guns. To drive the enemy from their up]»er decks, the colonel ])rovided a great number of stout earthen ])ots, eacdi of which held three pounds of dry gun])owder and tliree hand grenades ready <'harged. These fire pots Avere securcdy (dosed, and, then, to preserv(^ them from any accidental W(4, cov- ered with shee]) or lamb skin, with the wool on the outside. Over all w(n'e laid two pieces of slow match that were so long that when lashed on with a cord made a handle to h(dd it by, while the ends of the mat( h hung below the ])ot as nnndi as twelve inches. 1778. ATTEMPT AGAINST A FRIGATE. lol By repeated experiments tlie eolonel foniid thnt any man of eoniniou strength conld throw these pots to a distance of forty feet witli considerable cer- tainty. Their fall on the deck would infallibly break them and scatter the contents, when the fire of the slow match wonid c- party might, without great difficulty, succeed in getting possession of the quarter-deck of the man- of-war." ^ Talbot also counted on, as a consi(ha*able item in the success of this enterprise, the reported lack of discipline aboard the Rciioini, he having learned from some prisoners who had been detained aboard this craft that her officers were es])ecially negligent at night. On the evening selected for the attempt, Hic American vessel dropped six miles far- ther down Ihe river, while a body of nearly four hun- dred men marcdied along the shore, abreast of her, ready 1o embark and take part in the att(Mn])t when all was ready. ITnfortunatidy for the projectors of this daring S(dieme, the weather that night sud- denly came on vinw cold, the ice forming so rapidly in the river as to ])revent the land force from getting aboard, and when morning dawned it was found that the river was frozen over, holding both the Ixciioini and the mercliantman immovable all that winter. 1 Caritat's Life of Silas Talbot. 1,1^ CAPTAIN SILAS TALBOT. 1778-1779. To u'liaid aiiiiiiist any attack on the Rcitoint over the ice, th(^ British ])lace-])ounders. This craft was made out early in the morning, the .Irr/o promi)tly giying clias(\ Aft(M' a hard run of five hours, in which the Tory made eyery effort to avoid a hght, Talbot succeeded in get- ting up with her and compelled her to strike. She was sent into ])oi't. Three or four days after this the .\r sighted two English ]>]'ivat(MM'S, whiih ]»i'oved to be from the AVest Indies, heavily laden antain Hazard Avas a native of Rhode Island, and had IxM'U universally esteenu'd till he took connuand of this ])rivateer for the base i)ur])ose of ])lundering liis neighbors and old friends. A\'henever the . ! rvo went (Hit from Brovidence, Stonington, New London, or any other ]>ort in that (juart^^r, where she occa- sionally ran in for the night, it was the common wish of the inhabitants that she might take or sink Captain Hazard." - ra]>tain Talbot soon had the satisfaction of grati- fying this i)atriotic desire of the New Englanih^rs; for on his second cruise, when about one humlred ' r.-uitnt's Life (.r Sil;is T;tl!)(>t. 2 Ibid. 104 CAPTAIN SILAS TALBOT. 1779. and twenty miles sonth of Lonj;- Island, the day beino- exceptional, Ix'antifnl and calm, a vessel was si.niittMl abont noon, whiaired damages when anotlier sail was re])orted. This was the Eng- lish privateer brig IhiiiiKiJi, of two hnndred tons, armed with twelve 12-ponnders and tw(» 0-ponnders. Although a vessel twice the size and force of the Ar(/(), ('(domd Talbot did not hesitate to attack her. Soon after the action began the American priva- te(n' M(ic(i)(nii, ("upt'd'iw D. Keybold, of Pcninsylvania, a brig cd' six gnns and twenty men, drew near, npon which the l/diiiKili surivndered. She was sent into New Bedford in coni]»any with the DrtK/oii. " When th<' Ari/o retni'iied lo jtort with these last ]»rizes'slie was so mncdi shivered in her hull and rigging by the shot whi(di had pierced her in the last two engage- nuMits that all who b(di(dd her were astonished that a vess(d of her diminutive size could suffer so nnndi and yet get safely to ])ort. The c(uintry ])eople came down from a considei*able distance, only to sch' C^ap- tain Talbot and his ])rizes and to count the shot marks about the A) ."' ^ On Se]»tember 17, 1779, Cougress gave Talbot a coiumission as captain in the navy, and further de( tared tliat his ])i\y as lien- tenant colon(d should continue until lu^ could be eni- ployiMl by the mai-ine coiumittee. After refitting, the Aif/o put to sea, and, skirting the southern coast (d' Long Island, appeared off Sandy Hook, where she fell in. with the privateer S(i(i, Cajdain ^Iuni'o(\ of Providence. While these two vessels were cruising in company off this ' A eonteinpoi'iiry ticcount. 1779. CAPTURE OF THE DUBLIN. 107 port, on a clear mooiilii»lit nigiit, the English priva- teer Duhliii, Captain Fagan, fitted out by the Tories in New York, was discovered coming out. After a short consultation between the American command- ers, it was agreed that, in order to induce the DiiJtlin to give battle, the little Aff/o should boldly approach Sandy IIo(dc and (diallenge the Tories to action, the Diihrui carrying two more guns tlian tlie Kliode Ishmd sloop. In accordance with this programme, Talbot stood (dose in, and, after exchanging hails with ra]>tain Fagan, engaged him in a spiritinl light. For two liours tlie crews fouglit with great deter- mination, the Americans wp, sir.' " ' You lie, you blackguard! She goes away lask- ing. Hard a-wcathcr, I say again.' "■ ' It is hai-d a-weatlier, iud(HMl, sir,' was the only re])ly tlu^ helmsman could make. " Ca])taiu Munroe was astonished, and could not conceive ' what the devil was the matter with his vessel.' He took in the aft(^]'-sails and made all the lieadsail in his power. ' All ' would not do, and IQ^ CAPTAIN SILAS TALBOT. 1779. away she went. He was in the utmost vexation lest Captain Talbot slionld think him actnally running away. At last one of his nnder officers sningested that possibly the iron tiller had not entered the rud- der head, which on examinatii>n was found to be the case. The blunder was soon corrected, and the S!(ifai()(/a was made to stand toward the enemy; and that some satisfaction mi<;ht be made for his long absence Captain Munroe determined, as soon as he got up, to give them a whole broadside at once. He did so, and the Diihliii immediately struck her colors." ^ The ]»rivateers carried their prize into Egg Harbor. The day following the capture of the Duh- Jiii th(^ Art now believed that she was a large transi)ort boun to Ikm*. The stranger was running dead before the wind, which was her best point of sailing, but about ten o'clock the wind died away. Being within gunshot the Americans made every ])reparation for battle, the 1 C'aritat's Life of Silas Talbot. 1779. A NARROW ESCAPE. lO'.) stranger all the time keeping her stern toward her pursuer, so that it was impossible to ascertain her force. Just as the A/7/0 was getting ready to open fire, the people in the chase were observed getting out their sweeps, and in a few minutes they had brought their broadside to bear, and to the astonishment of the Americans the stranger ran out thirty guns and delivered a terrific broadside. The little Argo had been chasing a ship of the line, and was now be- calmed under her guns! Captain Talbot promptly set all hands at his sweeps. Fortunately the Eng- lishmen fired with more haste than accuracy, though several of their shots hulled the sloop, killing one of the crew and wounding another in his right arm. By great exertions the Americans gradually worked their sloop to a position on the Englislimairs quarter, and in the c(Kirse of sev(M'al hours managcMl to get beyond the reacdi ierced for sixteen liuns, bnt nKUintinii' oidy tw(dve ()-ponnders, with a crcnv of tliii'ty-einht nuMi. She was bonnd for Xew ^'ork, and harivateer,*' belonii'ed to ^Ir. Low, who, beinu in New York at the lime, could not be reached l)y the American authorities, aud the sloop was seized without his permission. This little vessel had taken, while under Talbot's command, tw(dve prizes, and had rendei*rizes, with three hun- dred ]»risoners, but in o])enin!:i' navigation so that the army under (Jeneral Cates could i-cM-eive much- needed su])])lies. After his relinquishment of tlie command of the .{)'(/<) every eifoi't was made by the anthorities to 1780-1782. LOSS OP THE GENERAL WASHINGTON. m sociire another vessel for this successful privateers- man. In the sninnier of 1780 the private cruiser (tciicrdJ \]'(t.sliiii(/l()ii, of Providence, inonntinjT; twenty (J-jxninders and manned hy one hundred and twenty men, was fitted out and ]»laced niuh^r Tallxd's orders. In Ids first cruise in this formidable vessel Talbot ca])tnre(l a valuabh' merchantman from Charleston foi' Ijondon, wlucdi was sent into Boston. Afterward h(^ took a P>ritish ship from the West Indies for Ire- land, but tins ]>rize was reca})tured before reaching port. IJunninu' up to Sandy Hook after this cap- tur(% Talbot inadvertently ran into the British fleet under Admiral Arbuthnot. Fie made sail to escape, holly pursued. The wind soon came on to a strong gale, and one of the Englishmen, a 74-gun ship of the line, carried away her foreyard and dropped astern. The ship of the line CnUodvit, however, continued the (diase, and finally captured the privateei*. Captain Talbot was taken aboard the RohuHiv, Captain Cosby — afterward admiral — and was treated with cour- tesy. From this vessel Talbot was transferred to a tender and taken to New York, and was confined in the ./cr.sr//, where he received the usual ill treatment. Toward the (dose of the year 1780, Talbot, with a number of other Anieri<'an ofticers and seamen, was phKM'd in the ship of the line YiiiiiutuiJi, Captain Lut- widge — afterward admiral — and taken to England. The barbarous treatment of the prisoners aboard the TdriiioHih is narrated in the ter " An Escai>e from Old JMill Prison." After being incarcerated in Plymouth I*rison some months, Talbot, in October, 1781, was rcdeased and made his v>ay to France. Early in February, 1782, he sailed from Nantes for lihode Island in a brig commanded by Ca])tain 1^^>1- gei'. When fifteen days out the v(^ss(d was capturiMl by the British privateer Jiipiffr, Captain Craig, who treated his ju-isoners with kindness. Falling in with a British brig from Lisbon for New York, Captain Craig i>laced Talbot aboard her, remarking that Tal- 112 CAPTAIN SILAS TALBOT. 1799. bot had been a prisoner so long, and bad suffered so much, that be onglit to bave tbe earliest opportunity to reacb borne. Arriving at New York, Talbot took passage in a lumber boat to Stony Brook, Long Island, from wbieb place be walked some fifteen miles to a tavern kept b^^ one Mnnroe, at Hunting- ton, liemaining bere a week, be crossed tbe Sound at niglit in a boat and landed at Fairfield, Connecti- cut, from wbicb place be made bis way overland to Providence. After tbe war Talbot was regu- larly^ attaidied to tbe navy, and commanded tbe famous frigate Coiisfitiitioii in 1701), wlien sbe bad ber merry race witb a Britisb war sbi]> of tbe same class. ^ One of tbe torjx'do boats of our new uav^^ bas been named after Silas Talbot. ^ See Mac-lay's History of the Navy, vol. i, pp. 173, 174. CHAPTER VITl. RAPID CKOWTII OF PKl VATi:i:UIX(^. That onr privateers were a p()w«'i-fnl ajxeiiej in briiigiu^- about tlie successful termination of the war for independence is seen in tlie marvelous develop- ment of that form (►f mai-itime warfare. While our Govei'nment war vessels steadily diminished in num- ber and force, from thirty-one vessels, with five hun- dred and eiii'hty-six rivateers to ])erform missions of national importance. One of the first privjiteers to get to sea in 1778 was the KJ-gun brig Jldzurd, Captain John Foster Williams, <»f Massachus(4ts. Slie ca])tured a brig and a schooner. On the Kith of .March, 1779, the /fdzdn], wliile tured a shi]) armed with sixteen i;uns, havini;' a cari;<> of loi>wood. The (J-Liun shto]) IJ(i(/l(\ Ca])tain E. Conkliujii-, had a more excitini>' ex})erience. She went to sea with only thirty men, and in one cruise made six prizes. Tn manninii' these vessels Captain Conklinp; reduce- before the British prisoners rcnilized the critical position in which the Americans had been l»laccd, and, scizinji' a favorable opportunity, tliey rose on their ca]»tors, and killiuij, all exc(^pt two boys took ]»ossession of the IJiK/h' and endeavor(^d to run 1km* iut(> a British port. Before reachium' a i)lace of safety, however, the Edijh' fell in with the American priva- teer llaiicovl' and was retaken. In 1771) the Eiuilr, while in New York, was blown up. 116 RAPID GROWTH OP PRIVATEERING. 1778. The splendid privjiteor ships General Putnam and Marlborough got to sea in the spring of 1778. The former, carrying twenty gnns and one hundred and fifty men, nnder Captain T, Allen, from Connecticut, ca])tnre(l a l)rig with a cargo of proyisions. The Marl- boroinjli, Captain Babcock, from Massachnsetts, was one Of th(^ most successful ])i*iyateers in this war, haying made, in all, twenty-eight prizes; one of them a 5?layer with three hundred negroes aboai-d. -^ ^Perhaps next to the MarJJtorouijh in ]K)int of num- ber of ]>rizes was a ukm-c l)oat armed with only two guns and manned by twenty men. In spite of her unpi'epossessiug name tliis boat, called the Skinik, commissioned in New Jeisey, is reported to haye sent " in no less than nineteen prizes, many of them of con- siderable yalu<'. In dune, 177S, the armed sloop VoJatite, Captain ^ Daniel, of Conn(Mti. The last was in charg<' of a midshi]»man in the Poyal Nayy, wlio had four men with him. l^^tr American ]>riyateersnien September secuus to haye been the lucldest mouth in the year 1778. On Sejttember (>th the l(l-gun brig (hrttrd, Ca])taiu J. Josiah, of Pennsylyania, while cruising in comi)an3^ witli tlie American ])rivateei' (Univcnilon, met a sail which iiumediat(dy aroused suspicions. Chase was proni])tly giyen, and in s])ite of the utmost endeavors of the peoi)le in the cliase the American privateers 1778. BATTLES OF THE VENGEANCE. 1]7 soon had her under their guns. On investigation the stranger proved to be an American privateer, the sloop Active, wliieli, liaving made several prizes, had taken aboard a number of prisoners. These prison- ers, as in the case of the sloop Ed'jlc, just noti('e\u their regiments in America. On Angust 14, 1771), while under the command of Captain Thomas, the VviKjcancv was destroyed in the Penobscot cxixMlition. Another armed vessel, monnting sixteen gnns, called \'<'tnjc(Uici\ while under the command of <'a]>tain Deane, in October, 1779, had a well-contested action with the British brig l>cfi(iiicc, carrying fonrtiMMi gnns and seventy-two men. The Englishmen tinally were overcome, hav- ing fifteen of their nnmber killed or wonnded, while the American loss Avas eight. It was on Se]>tember 10, 177S, that one of the most dramatic actions in which an American priva- teer was concerned to(tk ]»lace. lieatember llMli, this sea ti'agedy was repeated, with the diffei-ence that this time it was the Hritish, not the American, that was blown n]». On tlu^ day nuMitioned the ])rivateer (IciicniJ flaii- cock, Captain Hardy, of Massachnsetts, carrying twenty gnns and a crew of one lunnlred and fifty men, fell in with the liritish 32-gnn shi}) Lcraiif, Cap- tain J. Martin, manned by over one hnndred men. Aftei- an action of about three hours a shot from the (iciicrdJ //(iiicoch- i-eached the Lcraiirs magazine and blew her u|), all on board ])erisliing excei»ting the boatswain and seventeen men. It is a singular coin- cidence that both the ill-stai-red lUindolplt and Lcraiit eari'ied the same nnmber of gnns. Soon after this Ca|)tain Hardy came across a fleet 1778-1779. TFIE TRUE AMERICAN AND BLACK PRINCE. ]10 of twenty-one sail uiuler the protection of several war vessels. By adroit inanenverini;' Hardy nianai;ed to cut ont the 8-i»nn ship Ladji Erfd-Uw. In this affair the GciicniJ IhiiicocJx was assisted by the American priva- teer livdwr. The little privateer slooj) Proridciicc, ('a])tain J. fonner, of Pennsylvania, made several snccessfnl ven- tnres in 177S and in 1779, capturing the shl]) Naiicif, the brigs (Ikisc and lUUti, and the schooner Frlcud- ship. Captain Conner ])laced a prize crew aboai-d the Nanci/, with orders to make for the most available American ]>ort. When tlu^ ])rivateer had disappeared below the horizon, the British prisoners in the Xaiic}/, seizing a favorable oi)])ortnnity, sni-omised to con- sider the offer. He remained aboard the Grff/houiid while she ran down to Old York, a small port nine miles east of ]*ortsmouth, in the h<)])e of enticing more seamen aboard. The officers of the Grci/houiid went ashore, put up at a tavern, and gave what they called " a jovial evening," to which all seafaring men were invited. Wlien tlie company had become suffi- ciently "jolly," the officers went among the men en- deavoring to imluce them to enlist. Several were ship])ed in this manner. Stopping at sevei-al other ports for the same pur- pose the (lni/]ioiiii(] i)ut to sea and api)eared off Hali- fax. Here, during a gale of wind, she was (diased by a large schooner and overtaken, but the stranger proved to be an American privateer. Running close into Halifax harbor, Taptain Willis discovered a ship that ap])eared to be in distress, and believing that she might prove a rich prize he ran down, and did not realize that she was a British cruiser until within gunshot. The (Urjihotnul turned in flight, with the " crip])led merchantman " in full chase. In a few minulcs it was seen that the stranger was neither crippled nor a dull sailer, for she rapidly overhauled the American and would have captured her had not a heavy fog rolled over, completely enveloping both vessels and enabling the (InifJioinKj, by changing her course, to escape. After this adventure Captain Willis changed his cruising ground to the mouth of the St. Lawrence. A large number of sails were seen, but they all proved to 11 JL22 A BOY PRIVATEERSMAN. 1781. be Americans on tlie same bnsiness as the (hri/Iioimd., Touchini; at a small lii-onp of islands, where the priva- teer took aboard several dozen bnshels of wild bird ej^i^s, Captain Willis fell in with " an iiidei)ens, tw(> of which were manned and orank before night, an ami locked in the fish room — a dark, noisome place, whei-e they had everything taken from them except the (dothes they wore. Even their shoes were approi>riated. In this filthy h(de they were conveyed to a little harbor called Cornish, where tlu^v found the owner of the '' inde- ix'udent fishing boat," who treatiMl tlu^n kindly, of- fering them a loaf of bread and a ])late of butter. The Americans were hxdvCMl u]) overnight in this place in the warehouse, and on the following morn- ing they were taken six miles u]) the river and landed so as to strike across the hnnl to Tape IMacentia Bay. In this nuirch of twenty miles the privateers- men suffered greatly, as, being without shoes, their feet soon becann^ lacerated. About five miles from their destination they met an old Jerseyman who 1781. DUCHESS OF CUMBERLAND WRECKED. L^.") owned a luiraber of sliallops, several of wliieli had been captured by Ameriean privateers. When the old man discovered who the prisoners were, he be- came hiiihly (^xasperat(Ml, and insisted that they ouji'ht to be put to death, and, had it not been for the i^nard of seven sturdy men, he might have car- rie1ain V(M) was the fa(li(']' of Sir James Lucas Y(M>, w li<» bccaiiic iiot(tvi(ms in our naval war with (h-cat lii-itain in 1S12, and it is ])r()bable that James was aboard the Fwn forward in irons." We now get onr tirst insight into the character of the Yeos. Yonng Sherburne describes Ca])tain Yeo as a " com- plete tyrant." He writes: " \\'illis and myself were called upon the quarter-deck, and, after being asked a few (questions by Captain Yeo, he turned to his ofticers and said: ' They are a con])le of tine lads for his majesty's service. ^Ir. Cray, see that they do their duty, one in the for(M(»]) and the other in the niainto]).' I said that T was a prisoner of war, and that I could not consent to serve against my coun- try. With very hard words and several threats we were oi-dered off the <|uarter-deck and commanded to d(> our- duty in the waist. . . . AVhile lying at St. John's w(^ bad an o]>portunity of seeing some of Cap- tain ^'eo's character exhibited. It was contrary to orders to bring any s]nrituous liquors aboard. It was the cust(»m to licnst in the boat at night, lest any of the nu'u should elude the guard, steal the boat, and run away. One evening, as the boat was hoisted in, there was a bottle of rum discovered in the boat. No one of the boat's crew would own the bottle, and the next morning the whole crew, six in number, were seized up to the gangway, with their shirts stripped off, and ea( h received a dozen lashes. It was very common for this captain to have his men thus whip])ed for very trifling faults, and some- times when faultless. At a certain hour the cook 1781. CAPTAIN YEO THE ELDER. 127 gives out word to the men and officers' waiters that they ma3' have hot water to wash their dislies, etc. One day a midshipman's boy called on the cook for hot water. The cook had none, and reprinunnhMl the lad for not coming in proper season. Tlu^ boy complained to his master, whose rank on !)oard was no higher than the cook's, and who was himself but a boy. The midshipman came forward and began to reprimand the cook, who told him, that had the boy come at the proper time ho wonld have had hot water enough, but that he should not now furnish him or any one else. This young blood made his com- jtlaint to the captain that he was insulted by the vook, who was a man in years, and who for this af- front, offered to a gentleman's son, must be brought to the gangway and take his dozen lashes. I b(^- lieve that the laws of the navy do not admit of a warrant officer being punished without he is first tried and condemned by a court-martial. I under- stand that the captain had violated the laws of the navy in a number of instances. He had a number of men in irons on the whole passage to England." On arrival in Plymouth, Captain Y(m) was super- seded in the command of the Fair/f by a now cap- tain. Young Sherburne notes tlu^ (diange of com- manders as follows: "Captain Y«m) took leave of his ship without any ceremony of r<'S])ect being shown him fi-om the crew. Shortly aft<^r the new ca])tain came on board, and was salut(Ml with three cJKMn's from the crew." Til striking contrast to the brutal temperament of Captain Yeo, we have that of the Fnirjfs carpen- ter. Two days after Y(m) had comjicdled the two Amei'ican lart without making a prize, and a number were cap- tured by the enemy. On the other hand, some of these private armed craft took as many as twenty in a single cruise, and on one occasion twenty-eight prizes. But, admitting that one hundred and sev- enty-four of our privateers got to sea, we tind that, taking the aggregate of seven hundred and thirty- three vessels, our amateur man-of-warsmen averaged more than four prizes each. Allowing the moderate estimate of iifteen men to each captured British merchantmen, Ave have a total of ten thousand nine hundred and ninety-tive prisoners made on the high seas by our enterprising and daring privateersmen, or fully as many prisoners as our land forces took iu the same time, with this important difference — namely, that many of the prisoners taken by our land forces were foreign mercenaries, who could be replaced so long as the stock of Hessians lasted, while the men captured by our privateers were sail- ors, a class of men absolutely necessary to Eng- land's existence as a great power, and a class she could not afford to lose. The year 1779 opened inauspiciously for Ameri- can privateers. On January 7th c^ne of the newest and best of our armed craft, the 20-gun brig Gcii- cml Ariiohl, Captain J. ^Nlagee, of Massachusetts, was driven ashore near Plymouth, and seventy-five of her complement of one hundred and twenty men perished. In the same month the 6-gun sloo]) General St<(r]x, with twenty men aboard, was wrecked on Xautucket Shoals, and all hands lost. In congress, WEDNESDAY, April ^, 1776. INSTRUCTIONS tj the Commanders of Private Ships or Vejjds of War, li'hich Jhall have Coiiimiffims or Letters of Marque and Reprfal, author fmg them to makt Captures of Brit if ^ Vefj'els and Cargoes. I. YO U may, by Force of Arms, atlack, fubduc, and talcc all Ships and other VelTels bclon;mg to the Inhabitants of Great-Britain, on the High Seas, or between high-water and low-water Maiks, except Ships and VelTds bringing Pcrfuns who intend to fettle and refidc in the United Colonics, or bringing Arms, Ammunition or Warlike Stores to the faid Colonies, for the Ufe of fuch Inhabitants thereof as are Friends 10 the American Caiife, which you Ihall fufier to pafs unmolclled, the Commanders thereof permitting a peace- able Search, and -ivmg fatisfaftory Information of the Contents of the Ladings, and Dcftinations of the Voyages. I!. You may, by Force of Arms, attack, fubdue, and take all Ships and other \'c(Icls whatfocvcr carry i no Soldiers, Anns, Gun-powder, Ammunition, Provifions, or any other contraband Goods, to any of the BruiQi Armies ■or Ships of War employed sgainft thefe Colonies. III. You (lull bring fuch Ships and VelTcIs as you (hall take, with their Guns, Riegin;, Tackle, Apparel,. Fur- niture and Ladings to I'ome convenient Port or Ports of the United Clonics, that Proceedings may thereupon be had inducFoim before the Courts which are or lliall be there .nppointcd to hear and determine Caufcs civil and maritime. IV. You or one of your Chief Officers fhall bring or fend the Mafter and Pilot and one or more principal Perfon or Perfons of the Company of every Ship or VelFel by you taken, as fjon after the Capture as may be, to the Judge or Judges of fuch Court as afiirefaid, to be examined upon Oatli, and make Anfwer to the Interrogatories which may be propounded touching the Intereft or Property of the Ship or Veffel. and her Lading ; and at the fame Time you Iball deliver or caufe to be delivered to the Judge or Judges, all PalTes, Sea-Briefs, Charter-Parties, Bills of Lading, Cocket!, Letters, and other Documents and Writings found on Board, proving the faiJ Papers by the Affidavit of yourfcif, orof fome other Perfon piefentat the Capture, to be produced as they were received, without Fraud. Addition, Subduclion, or Embezzlement. V. You (hall keep and pre.'ervc every Ship or Velkl and Cargo tiy you taken, until they fliall bv Sentence of a Court piopeily authoiifcd be adjudged lawful Prize, nat felling, fpoiling, walling, or dimiiiKIi'ing the fame or breaking the Bulk thereof, nor fuftering any fuch Thing to be done. VI. If you, or any of your Officers or Crew fliall, in cold Blood, kill or maim, or, by Torture or otherwife, cruelly, inhumanly, and contrary to common Ufageand the Praflice of civilized Nations in War, treat any Per. fon or Petfuns furprized in the Ship or Vellel you ftall take, the Offender (hall be fcvercly punilhed. VH. You (lull, by all convenient Opportunities, fend to Congrcfs v/ritlen Accounts of the Captures you (hall make, with the Number and Names of the Captives, Copies of your Journal from Time to Time, and Intelli- gence of what may occur or be cifcovered concerning the Defigns of the Enemy, and the Dertinations, Motions, and Operations of their Fleets and Armies. VIII. One Third, at the leaft, of your whole Company (hall be LanJ-.Mcn. I.X. You (lull not ranfome any Prifoners or Captives, hut (hall difpnfc of them in fucli Manner as the Congrcfs, or if that be not fitting in the Colony whither they (hall be brouglit, as the General Afiemblv, Convention, or Council 01 Committee of Safety of fuch Colony (hall direft. X. You fhall obferve all fuch further Inflruaions as Congrcfs (hall hereafter give in the Prcmifc:, when ycu (h.ill have Notice thereof. XI. If you (hall do any Thing contrary to thefe Inftruflions, or to others hereafter to be given, or willingly fii(P:r fuch Thing to be done, you fliall not only forfeit your Commiffion, and be liable to an Aflion for Breach of the Condition of your Bond, but be refponfible to the Party grieved for Damages fullaincd by I'uch Alal-setfation. By Order of Congrefs, "" "" ESIDENT. ^^^^^^.i5^^S?;^P R Inxtinifliona to privatpers. 1770. From an orij^iiial. 1779. THE PROTP]( TOR-ADMIRAL DUFF FIGHT. 13;3 The General !^t(irk, also, was conimissioiied from Massachusetts. These reverses were in some degree eoniiterbal- anced by the Massachusetts 2G-guii ship Protector, Captain John Foster Williams, which, while cruis- ing at sea January 0th, fell in with the British pri- vateer Admiral J>i(ff\ Captain M. Strange, carrying- thirty guns and about one hundred men. The Pro- tector had a conii)lenient of nearly two hundred men and boys. The two ships quickly canu^ to (dose quar- ters, and for an hour and a half maintained a tim-ce contest, when a shot from the Protector penetrated the Englishmen's magazine and blew them u]), only fifty-tive of their crew being saved. Edward rr(d)le, afterward famous in the navy, was a young midshij)- man at this time, si^'ving in the I'rotcctor. Soon after this the Protector hatures. The .lc//rr carried fourteen guns, with sixty men, and cai)tured, after a slight resist- ance, the British privateer Mercurn, of eight guns, commanded by Captain Campbell. The Aiiiericaii Revenue, armed with twcdve guns and manned by about one hundred men, took the 8-gun schooner ^4 THE WORK OF 1771). 1779. scliooiior with seventy men, under Captain E. Ledger, of Pennsylvania, made one capture, while the In- Ircpid, of New Ilampsliire, a slii]) of twenty guns and one liniHli'ek four vessels from the enemy. Early in 1779 the 14-j;un brig llihcrnlti, Captain ]{. Collins, manned by only thirty-live men, fell in with a king's cruiser mounting an equal number of guns, but having a comi>lement of eighty men. A severe action followed, and it was only after sev- eral had been killed on ea(di side that the vessels mutually separated. Anothei' jn-ivate armed brig bearing this name, also from I'ennsylvania, but com- manded by Captain J. Angus, while on a voyage to Teneriffe, ha-gun brig Ifolhr, manned by one hundred men, under Captain M. Lawler, of Pennsyl- vania, Avhile at sea captur D'kiiki, having on board, as a part of her cargo, eighty cannon, sixty swivcds, ten co(diorns, and other military sui»i(lies. In the f(dlowing Au- gust this ITolhr captured three brigs lad(Mi with rum and sugar, one of which was wrecked off Cape 1779. DESPPniATE FIGHT AGAINST AN INDIAMAN. i;^,5 May. Before i-etiirniiig to port the Ilolkcr took a (l-j»nn sloop laden with (lryest privateers ((nnniissioned from New Hampshire was the Ilaiiipdcii, nionuting twenty- two o'uns and manned by one hnndred and fifty men. While under the command of Captain Salter the HatupdcH, in latitude 48° north, lonoitude 28° west, fell in with a larlain G. Ilemfield — afterward commanded by Cai)tain (Jray — of ^Massachusetts, while cruising off Salem, ca])tured the liritish privateer Castor, of eiglil guns and sixty men. In June, 1771), tlie lO-gun sloop Hancock, Captain [36 THE WORK OF 1779. 1779. T. Chester, of Conneetieut, captured the British armed schooner Ilawlce, and in the same month the little schooner Tcrrihlc, Captain J. Baker, of Penn- sylvania, made a prize of a schooner. In August the 18-gun brig IJancoclx, Captain P. Ilichards, of Connecticut, captured three brigs laden with rum. In the following month prizes were taken \)y the 8-gun brig Iiiipcrfiiioif, Captain J. Young, of Penn- sylvania, by the (»-gun brig Macaroni, and by the 12-gun brig ^yihl (Uif. It was on July Gth that the fjiipvrliitciif fell in with a suspicious-looking sail, and [)rom])tly gave chase. The American brig rapidly gained, and it was seen that the stranger was light- ening hers(df by throAving overboard heavy articles, some of which afterward were known to have been her cannon. In spite of these extreme measures the fleeing Englisliman — for sucdi the stranger proved to be — st(^adily lost ground, and soon was under the TuipvriUiviifs guns. The stranger surri^idered at the first summons, and on sending a boat aboard Cap- tain Young Icariicd that it was the king's cruiser IlarJcm, of fourteen guns, with a crew of eighty-five men. The commander of the Harhw, when he found that he must be overtaken, got int<> a b(jat with a few men and endeavored to (^scape, but before they had proceeded any great distance the boat upset, and all hands were lost. A brig and two schooners were captured by the Macaroni, Cai)tain D. Keybohl, of Penns^dvania, in July, and on the 13th of the same month the 14-gun craft ^Vihl Cat, with a complement of seventy-five men, after a severe action, took the king's schooner E(/iiioiif, commanded by a lieutenant in the Koyal Navy. Before the Wild Cat could secure her prize, however, she was ca]>tured by the British frigate ^^llrpr}sc. One of the first pi-izes made by an American pri- vateer in August, 1779, was the brig Pitt, loaded with rum and sugar, which was taken by the 18-guu 177$). TAKING A KING'S SHIP. I37 schooner Jcuj, Captain Conrter, with one hundred men, from Pennsylvania. Abont the same time the li-gnn brig- J/«y.s', Captain Y. Taylor, of the same State, captured the Britisli sloop Active, mounting twelve guns, under the command of Captain Irvine. This vessel was taken by boarding, the English hav- ing their first officer and steward killed. The Mars also captured the transport brig Pollj/, having on board two hundred and fourteen Hessians, besides a snow of fourteen guns and forty-five men. These vessels were taken off Sandy Hook. The snow was retaken by the British on the following day. It was in August of this year that the 12-gun sloop PoUy, with one hundred men, under Captain Leech, of Mas- sachusetts, took a brig laden with tobacco. In September the 6-gun sloop Ilapp// Return, Cap- tain J. Leach, of New Jersey, took a brig, and two sloops laden with fustic and rum, and in the follow- ing month Ca])tain Craig, of the Continental arm^-, with a detachment of his company, captured the British sloop Xeptiine, carrying ten guns, four swiv- els, and two cocdiorns, manned by twenty-one men, near Elizabethtown. Before her cargo could be got ashore, however, a British war ship appeared and recaptured the Neptune. Some of the other ])rivateers making prizes this year were the 18-gun ship Olirer Cruiiiirett, Captain Parker, of M.*s^;aidmsfctts, which captured a tender of ten guns belonging to the ship of the line aSV. Oeon/e — the Oliver Croiiurell also took a ship and a schooner, making sixty prisoners in all — tlie Pttllds, of ^Massachusetts, which took a ship loade-gun brig Uesotiition, Captain Z. Scare, of ]Massachusetts, Avliich made five prizes. The private armed sloop ^aUii, Captain J. Smith, of New York, had a severe battle with a British trans- port carrying eight guns. The vessels finally sepa- rated by mutual consent, the Americans having a loss of five killed and twelve wounded. (^HAPTEK XL JONATHAN IIAKADEN. The action botwoon tlio luar^unjc and the Ala- haiua, foTiiilit off Cliorhonri;-, Jinio 10, l.S(;4, has justly been r(\i;ai'(l(Ml as oiio <»f tlio most dramatic naval duels on record, Farragnt, in a letter to his son, said of it: '' I wonld sooner have fonj^ht that fight than any ever f ought on the ocean. Only think! It' was fought like a tournament, in full view of thou- sands of French and English, with a perfect confi- dence, on the part of all but the Union people, that we would be wlii]i])e(l." There was an action fought between an American and an English privateer off the Spanish coast nearly a hundred years before this, however, whi(di may w(dl be called the " Kinr- 8(1 )■(}(■ Ahthona fight of the Kcvolution." Like the famous naval duel in the civil war, this action took l)lace near land, where thousands of people Avatched the struggle in breathless eagerness or wildly S])eculated on the result. The battle referred to was fought off Bilboa, June 4, 1780, between the American pi-ivateer (Ivncnil Pirhriiu/, commanded by Jonathan llaraden, and the British letter of marque Arliilhs, of London. The (leiicral Pirl^vrhnj was from Salem, where she had been fitted out and manned. She was a ship of one hundred and eighty tons, mounted fourteen G-pounders — the ordinary caliber in shi])s (►f her class, in that day— and car- ried a crew of forty-five men and boys. Haraden was one of the most dai'ing and skillful 138 1776. A SEAMAN OF EXTRAORDINARY ABILITY. 139 navigators that ever sailed from Salem, and that is saying' a great deal when we come to consider the long list of successful commanders who have hailed from that port. He belonged to that group of men who have made old Salem town famous the world over, such as John Carnes, Benjamin Crowninshield, Thomas Benson, John Felt, William Grav, Joseph Waters, Simon Forrester, Thomas Perkins, and John Derby. Ilaraden had the reputation of being one of the most intrepid commanders known even to Salem ship lore. It has been said of him, that " amid the din of battle he was calm and self-poss<'Ssed. The more deadly the >strife, the more imminent the peril, the more terrific the scene, the more perfect seemed his self-command and serene intrepidity. He was a hero among heroes, and his name should live in honored and affectionate remembrance." Bather lavish praise, but the man deserved it, as will soon appear. Ilaraden certainly was a daring sailor and a sea- man of extraordinary ability. His many successes in the struggle for independence fully bear out this statement, and entitle him to be placed with such naval heroes of the Bevolutiou as Connyngham, Whipple, Hopkins, and John Paul Jones. He was born in Gloucester, Massachusetts, in 1745, and died in Salem in 1803, spending most of his active life on the sea. He came to Salem as a boy and entered the service of Bichard Cabot, father of the presi- dent of the famous Hartford Convention. Soon after hostilities broke out between the American colonies and the mother country he hastened to draw his sword in defense of his native land, and early in ITTO was appointed a " lieutenant " in the Tjiran- iiicidc, commanded by Captain J. Fiske, of Salem. The name of this vessel is sufficiently suggestive of the spirit of her owners and crew, and she soon justified the appellation in a striking manner by capturing a royal cutter and carrying her in tri- 140 JONATHAN HARADEN. 177G-1779. niiiph into Saldii, the prize beiiiij;' bound from Hali- fax to New York with important papers aboard. In the same crnise the Tiira)niH'l(h\ June 13, ITTG, had a spirited action witli the British pael^et seliooner l)(\sp wounded. In the following month the Ti/ntiniicidc captured the armed ship (ilasfiou' and made thirty prisoners. In August she took the brig *^7. John and the schooner TJnrc BrotJicr.s. In the following year this vessel, while in comi)any with the privateer brig }fasso- chiiscff.s, of that State, attacked the British bark Tj(nnis(la](\ and after a struggle lasting three hours cai)tured her. The enemy had three men killed. In the same cruise the MasMfichiiscffs took a ship and six other vessids, in one of which were sixty-three Hessian (diass(Mirs. On the 20th of iNIarcdi, 1779, the Ti/niiiinci<]<', while cruising off Bermuda, fell in with the English brig Ixvrvii'jv, Captain Kendall, carrying fourteen guns and - the prisoners to die before reaching port. On coming aboard the ship of the line these officers were stowed away in the lower hold, next to the keel, under five decks, and many feet below the water line. Here in a twelve-by-twenty-foot room with npcurving floor, and only three feet high, the seventy-one men were stowed for lifty-three days like so much merchandise, without light or good air, unable to stand upright, with no means and with no attempt made to remove the accumulating filth! TluMr food was of the poor- est quality, and was supplied in such insufficient quantities that whenever one of the prisoners died the survivors concealed the fact until the body b(\gan to putrify in order that the dead man's allowance might be added to theirs. The water served them for drink was so thiidc with repulsive matter that the prisoners were com]»('lled to strain it Ix^ween set tcH'th. From the time the Yt in this loathsome dungeon. Kh^ven died in delirium, their wild ravings and i)ierciug shrieks a])i»alling their comrades, and giving them a foretaste^ of what they themselves might soon expect. Not even a surgeon was per- mitted to visit them. Arriving at Plymouth the pale, emaciated, festering men were ordered to come on deck. Not one obeyed, for they were unabh^ to stand upright. Consequently they were hoisted up, the ceremony being grimly suggestive of the manner in which they had been treated — like merchandise. And what were they to do, now that they had been placed on deck? The light of the sun, whitdi they had scarcely seen for tifty-thrse of diyerting the just indigna- tion of the landsfolk, which surely would be aroused if they saw such brutality practiced under St. Geori;e's cross. Waiting', then, until the captiyes could at least endure the light of day, and could walk without leaning on one another or clutidiing at eyery object for support, the officers had them moyed to Old ^Nlill Prison. Nor must it be forgotten that these Ayeak captiyes were thus moyed with a " strong military guard '' — certainly not to preyent their escape; probably to guard against the curious gaze of the people. First they w^ere taken before a certain tribunal — whether military or ciyic the prisoners did not know — Ayhere a number of ques- tions Ayere put to them, the words " reyolt," " al- legiance," " rebels,'' predominating, after which they wei-e taken to the })rison. ^lill Prison was a massiye stone building in the center of an extensiye court. The court was sur- rounded by a high wall, and twenty feet b(\yond that was another wall, parallel to the first, complotely surrounding it. The only apertures in these walls were a gate in each, the inner one being formed with massiy(^ iron bars eight feet high. The outer gate during the day usually was left open so as to albtw free communication between the keepers ami llioir dwellings which were placed just outside the outer wall. Between eight o'cdock in the morning and ' See page 111. 152 AN ESCAPE FROM OLD MILL PRISON. 1781. sunset the prisoners were allowed the privilege of the inner court, but at night they were securely locked in the prison house. Many sentinels were stationed among the prisoners in the inner court and in the prison itself, besides the regular patrols on the two encircling walls and at the gates. To the unfortunate Americans who had just ar- rived from the Yarmouth this place seemed a para- dise, for at Mill Prison they could at least get light, air, and exercise. Yet even here there were many causes for complaint, for the American prisoners seem to have been picked out for severe treatment. It was shown that they were " treated with less hu- manity than the French and Spaniards, . . . they had not a sufficient allowance of bread, and were very scantily furnished with clothing."^ In 1781 the Duke of liichmond presented a memorial to the House of Peers. " Several motions were grounded on these petitions, but those proposed by the lords and gentlemen in the Opposition were determined in Ihe negative; and others, to exculpate the Gov- ernuKMit in this business, were resolved in the affirmative. It appeared upon inquiry that the American prisoners were allowed half a pound of bread less per day than the French and Spanish prisoners. But the petition of the Americans pro- duced no alterations in their favor, and the con- duct of the administration was equally impolitic and illiberal." - Many attempts to escape were made by the Americans during the period of their confinement in Mill Prison, and some of them were successful. On one occasion a number of them volunteered to at- tempt escape through the common sewer that emp- tied into the river. Several days and nights were s]ient in sawing the iron bars that guarded the en- trance to the sewer, and when an opening was made > British Anni;al Register for 1781, p. 152. ^ Ibid. 1781. BARNEY'S PLAN TO ESCAPPl I53 it was agreed that a few of tlie prisoners should endeavor to escape throujuii it, and if they did not return in a given time it was to be understood that they had been successful and that (dhers might fol- low. The pioneers in this attempt were lowered into the foul hole, anlit be discovered, and as the alarm would immediately be oiven to Ad- miral Digby's fleet, which was anchored in the mouth of the river, the closest inspection would be made of every craft passin^' out. As not one of Barne.y's companions knew how to handle a rope, all the work of navigating the craft devolved upon him, but as he was a thorough seaman he soon had the smack standing down the river. With a fine breeze and ebbing tide the adventurers were soon in the midst of the formidable fleet of war vessels, the frowning batteries of which yawned at them in sullen silence, while the sentinels paced to and fro, casting unsuspicious glances at the innocent-look- ing craft. With the fleet safely behind him, Barney boldly stood out to sea and made for the French coast. His companions were more helpless now even than before, as they were prostrated by sea- sickness, so that the entire safety of the party was in the hands of the lieutenant. Just as the shores of England began to fade, and the adventurers were congratulating them- selves on their escape, a sail loomed up on the hori- zon, and was soon made out to be a swift-sailing vessel evidently in pursuit of the smack. In a few minutes she had come alongside, and, after ordering the craft to heave to, sent a boat aboard with an ofiflcer. The sail proved to be a privateer, out from (ruernsey, and to her officer's demand of what w^as on board the smack, and where she was bound. Lieu- tenant Barney replied: 1781. DETAINED BY A PRIVATEERSMAN. I57 " I have nothing' on board, and am bound to the coast of France." " Yonr bnsiness there? " asked the officer. "I can not disclose to you my business;" and iintTing the rope that bound liis greatcoat around him Barney showed his British uniform. The sight of tlie uniform had its desired effect. Tlie ])riva- teersman instantly changed his commanding tone to one of respect and touched his hat. Following up his advantage Barney said, in a severe tone: ''Sir, I must not be detained; my business is urgent, and you must suffer me to proceed or you will, perhaps, find cause to regret it." To this the boarding officer politely replied that he would im- mediately go aboard and report to his commander. This he did, but in a few minutes the captain of the privateer himself came aboard, and, though very polite, he desired to know what business could carry a British officer to the enemy's coast: "■ I should be very sorry to stop you, sir," he said, ''if you are on public business; and if this be the fact it must surely be in your power to give me some proof of it without disclosing the secrets of Government, which I have no desire to know." Barney repli(Ml tliat to show him sucli proofs would be to hazard the success of his mission, whi(d] dep<'nd(Ml entii'cly on its being kept absolutely secret from all save thosc^ intrusted in its execution. " Then, sir," replied the privateersman, " I shall be under the necessity of carrying you to Fngland." " Do as you please," said Barney calmly, " but, remember, it is at your peril. All I have to say fur- ther, sir, is that if you persist in interrupting my voyage I must demand of you to carry m<^ directly on board Admiral Digby's flagship, at Plymouth." The American officer well knew that this was an unpleasant request for the privateersman, for if he ventured in the fleet he might expect to be re- lieved of some of his crew by the admiraFs press 158 AN ESCAPE FROM OLD MILL PRISON. 1781. gangs, Avho were coustantly on the lookout for men. Barney hoped this would induce the priva- teei'snian to let him go, and in fact the Englishman did hesitate for a few minutes. Barney followed up the stroke by commenting on the fine, manly ap- pearance of the privateer's crew. But all to no pur- pose, the Englishman deciding to take them to Plym- outh. All that night the two vessels were beating their way back to the English coast, and on the following morning entered a small port about six miles from Plymouth. Here the English commander, leaving Barney aboard the privateer, went ashore to make his report to Admiral Digby, and under pretense of keeping out of the way of press gangs nearly all the crew went ashore also. The few that remained aboard treated Barney Avith the respect due to his assumed character and he was allowed every lib- erty save that of going ashore. Seizing a favorable opportunity, when those aboard were at dinner, Barney slid down a rope over the stern and got into a boat. In doing this he badly injured his leg, but unmindful of the pain he rapidly sculled ashore un- seen by any of the privateersmen. As he api)r()ached the beacli many of the idlers came to the landing to watch him, but made no at- t(Mnpt to interfere. Boldly jumping ashore he called for aiortant person that he had nothing of a contraband nature, and complaining of the liurt on liis leg — tlie blood now plainly oozing out from his stocking — he made that an excuse for hurrying away to get " something onto it." Before leaving, however, he dispelled whatever suspicions might 1781. BACK IN PLYMOLTTH AGAIN. 159 have been lingering in tlie customhouse officer's mind by aslving : " Pray, sir, can you tell me where our people are ? '' " I think, sir, you'll find them all at the K(m1 Lion, the very last house in the village." " Thank you, sir. I wish you a very good morn- ing; " and with that the American walked off in the direction indicated. It was the least of Barney's desires to meet any of '' our people," but he found that there was only one street in the village, so that he was compelled to pass the Ked Lion. He passed the tavern un- perceived, as he thought, but just as he had turned the corner he heard a gruff voice calling after him: "Hollo, lieutenant! I'm glad you're come ashore. We was jist some on us to off arter you." "And what for, pray?" asked Barney with con- siderable uneasiness. " Why, may be as how some on us might ship if we knowed a thing or two." Barney saw at once that his assumed disguise had gained full credence among the sailors in the privateers, and that some of them believed, through his interest, they could get better berths in Admiral Digby's fleet. Engaging the man in conversation, and at the same time walking rapidly away from the Bed Lion so as to get away from the rest of the men, Barney gave encouragement to the sea- man's idea of shipping in the fleet, when the latter suddenly asked: " Where are you going? " " To Plymouth. Come, you might as well go along with me." The tar hesitated a moment, seemed to think better of his plan of entering a navy noted for its cruelty to seamen, and finally said he'd go back to his old shipmates. As soon as the tar was out of sight, Barney 160 AN ESCAPE FROM OLD MILL PRISON. 1781. qnickened his pace into a run lest lie be overtaken by others of the crew. Eealizing, also, that as soon as the captain of the privateer had explained his capture to Admiral Dii^by his escape from the prison would in all probability be discovered, and a i^nard be sent to secure him, he deemed it advis- able to jnmp over a hedj^e and seclnde himself in a l>rivate warden. This precaution was donbly neces- sary, as the hijihway (tn which he was traveling was the direct ronte from Plymonth, and the one a guard would take in coming for him. On leaping over the hedge he found himself in the su])ei'b private grounds of Lord Edgecombe. Wandering about in search of the servants' house, he was discovered by the gardener, who was much incensed by the intrusion. Barney pacified him by explaining that he had injured his leg and was seek- ing the shortest way to Plymouth. Giving the gar- dener a tip, Barney was conducted to a private gate opening on the river, and hailing a butcher who was going by in a small wherry with tAvo sheep to market our adventurer got aboai-d. By this means Barney avoided the necessity of crossing the river by the ])ublic ferry, and also that of passing b}^ Mill Prison aud of a (diance of meeting the guard. ImuHMliately on receiving the report of the priva- teer's commander, Admiral Digby caused an inquiry to be made in all the prisons and places of confine- ment in or near Plymouth, and at the time Barney was sliding down the rop(^ over the privateer's stern to get into a boat his esca])e from ^Nfill Prison was discovered; and at the moment he passed through Lord Edgecombe's private gate to the riverside the tramp of the soldiers — all of whom were familiar with Barney — was heard passing the very hedge he had just vaulted over on their way to take him back to ])rison. That night ]>arney gained the house of the ven- erable ( leriivman that he had left onlv the morn- 1781. PASSING THE SENTRY. 161 iiig' before. The same evening Colonel Richardson and Dr. Hindman arrived at this honse also, having been released from the privateer after the guard from ^lill Prison had inspected them. While these fugitives were seated at supper laugliing and jok- ing over their liai)less adventures, tlie bell of the toAvn-crier was heard under the windows, and the reward of live guineas for the apj)reh(Mision of Joshua Barney, a reb(d deserter from ^lill Pi-ison, was pro(daimed. For a moment it was thought tliat the prochimation was adain.] Site was to sail immediately for Bilboa, there to take a cargo on board which was h'ing ready for her, and to sail to America. Sev- 164 AN ESCAPE FROM OLD MILL PRISON. 1781. era! of lis — among whom wore Major Jat-ksou, who had been secretary to Colonel John Laurens in his late mission to France, Captain Barney, Mr. Brom- field, and Charles Adams — tired of the management of the l>(()uth (UiroliiKi, endeavored to get a passage to liilboa on board of this ship, and were permitted to go on board their [the C/rr/v/.v] prize, a tine Brit- isli Lisbon pacdcet. The usual time required to run from Ciu'una to Bilboa was two to three days. We were again unfortunate; the wind being east, dead ahead, we were twenty-one days in making the pas- sage. . . . At the end of eighteen days we fell in with a little fleet of Spanish coasters and fishermen, running to the westward before the wind, who told us that when off the bar of Bilboa they had seen a ship and two brigs, wliicdi tlu^A' believed to be Brit- ish cruisers, and cautioned us to keep a good look- out. Captain Hill immediately hailed his prize, a ship of sixteen guns, and a fine brig of sixteen guns, which was also in com])any, and directed them to k('c]> close to him and ])r<'])are to uhm^ an enemy. At sunset we saw whal a]»]»('ar(Ml to be the force described, and about midnight found we were within hail. The Cn-cro ran (dose alongsi and hailed her in English — no answer; in Frencdi — no answer. Tlu^ men who were at their guns, impa- tient of d the Hon. John Russell Rartlett, of Providence, Rhode Island, vonug Drowiie says: " As yon are interested in the blaek art, I beg yoiir ae- ceptanee of a copy of Dr. Drowne's journal, in 1780, on the Hope, from the undersigned, his great grand- son. It was printed by two boys, ■Master Moroau and myself, both novices in the art." The original mann- scri])t of Dr. Drowne's journal was prepared for these yonng Fraidvlins by lleiiry Thayer Drowne, brother of Dr. Solomon Drowne, together with a few explanatory notes; and the result is one of the most complete records of a privateering cruise during the war for iiidep(^iideiice. " An emergency at home," says Mr. IT. T. Drowne, ''caused him [Dr. Solomon Drowne] to embark as surgeon in the 7/o/>c." This privateer was a sloop, mounting seven guns, with a complement of twenty men, undia* the command of (""aptain J. ^lunroe, and was fitted out for a cruise at Providence, Rhode Island, in the fall of 1780. " Tuesday, October 3d,'' writes Dr. Drowne in his journal, " [we] sailed from Providence on board the sloop Hope. Wind at north- east, drizzly, dirty weather. Outsailed ^Ir. John Rrown [one of the leading shipowners in Rhode Island] in his famous boat. Put about for Captain ^luni'oe and take ]Mr. Rrown and Caiitain S Smith on boarc, having circled, (Vdonel Nightingale, etc., depart and we pro- ceed on our course. Toward evening come to anchor between Dutch Island and Conanicut [opposite New- port] to get in readiness for the sea. [I] officiate as clerk, copying articles, etc. " October Itli. — This morning sail from Dutch Island harbor. At 7 a. m. pass the lighthouse walls on Reaver Tail. Wind northeast, hazy weather. A heavy sea from the southw^ard. I begin to be exces- sively seasick, but do not take my station upon the 1780. A HEAVY GALE. 160 lee quarter till that side is pretty well manned. [Evidently a large portion of the Hope's crew were rendered helpless by this evil of the sea, and we can not but admire the doughty doctor in holding out so long as lie did. — E. S. M.] This is a sickness that is indeed enough to depress the spirits even of the brave. ''October 5th. — Fresh breezes and cloudy. Treble reef mainsail. Excessive sickness. Hove to. A heavy sea, with scjualls of rain. "• October Oth. — [I] keep the cabin. Strong gales and s(]ually; still lying by. Saw a ship and made sail from her, then brought to again. ''October 7th. — Get the topmast down; balance the mainsail and lie to. Put our guns in the hold, etc. [In the] afternoon the gale becomes violent. Only one long-practiced seaman on board avIio says he ever knew it more tempestuous. Nail down our hatches and secure everything in the best manner possible. [We] have a hole cut through the store- room to oi)en a communication fore and aft below the deck. The storm increases. Ship a sea, which carries away some of our crane irons [davits]. Get oui* axes into the cabin, ready to cut away the mast should there be occasion. A becoming fortitude in general ])redominates on board, though horror stalks around. They who go down to the sea in ships do indeed see the wonders of the Lord in the deep. The description of a tempest, translated by Roileau from Longiniis, occurs to my mind with peculiar energy: ' Comme Ton volt les flots, souleves pai' TC )rao-e, Fondre sur un Vaisseau qui s'oppose a levir Rage, Le vent avec Fureur dans les Voiles fremit ; La Mer blanchit d'ccnme, et I'air an loin gemit Le Matelot trouble, que son Art abondonne, Croit voir dans chacjue Flot qui Tenvironne.' '' 1 like this description, because there are no tri- ' 14 fling incidents thrown in. 'Tis short and energetic — 170 CRUISE OF DR. SOLOMON DROWNE. 1780. iirand aii.s7 iiaJtila, PliaJms! A beantifnl morning. How (dieering are the beams of the snn! I view him almost with the sentiments of a Persian. Those snrly billows that erewhile bnffeted ns to and fro, and wonld snffer ns no peace, are composed as the infant that has bawled its(df to rest. A large nnmber of whale of the s])ermaceti kind [are] play- ing ronnd ns this morning, and let tlnMu sport. The Father of the nnivers(^ has given them the ex]»anded ocean for llie wide scene of their happiness. Noth- ing of said sail to be sec^i. Have an observation for the first time. Latitnde oS^ :3T'. My variation chart of no nse for Avant of an azimnth compass. [In] afternoon discovcn- a shi]) standing to the eastward. " Octob(M- loth. — No remarkable occnrrence. Latitnde 54'. 1780. A £20,000 PRIZE. 171 " October 11th. — Whilst at dinner a sail is cried. Immediately give chase and discover another. One a sloop, which bears down npon iis, the other a brig. ]\[ake every preparation for an engagement, bnt on approaching and hailing the sloop she proves to be the JidinloJpli, Captain Fosdick, from New Tvondon, monnting eighteen 4-ponnders. The brig, with only two guns, her prize from England, taken at eight o'clock tins moi-ning. Captain Fosdick says her cargo amonnted to twenty thonsand ])onnds ster- ling." The learned doctor now apparently begins to think better (or worse) of his privateering, for he continnes: ''"What goo'. Soniidings nineteen fathoms. I^ost sight of tlie Ran- doJpli by the chase. " October 13th. — A foggv morning and Scotch 172 CRUISE OP DR. SOLOMON DROWNE. 1780. mist. Clears away pleasant. Latitude 39° 31'. This afternoou a sloop is discovered under the lee bow staudinii' before the wind. All hands [are] upon deck preparinj;- for the chase. [There is] but little wind, so the oars are to be plied. I must go and see how we come on. Night obliges us to give over the pursuit. '' October 14th. — A sail [is] seen from the mast- head; proves a ship. We chase. Catch a herring hog, which makes us a fine breakfast and dinner for the whole crew. Another sail heaves in sight. Upon a nearer approach the ship appears to be of the line [the heaviest class of war ships]. Several in sight. Toward evening signal guns heard. We take them to be men-of-war standing in, northwest by west. Longitude, by reckoning, 73° 30"; latitude 39° 31'; twenty-six fathoms. A i)leasant moonlight evening. Spend it in walking the quarter-deck. '' October 15th. — A pleasant day. See a sail to windward. As she rather approaches us we lie a- hull for hei'. I think it is more agreeable waiting for them than rowing after them, (let a fishing line under way. Catch a hake and a few dogfish. It being Sunday, try tlie efficacy of a clean shirt, in order to be something like folks ashore. Give chase, as the vessel comes down rather slow. On approach- ing discover her to be a snow.^ She hauls her wind and stands from us. Sails very heavy, and Captain Munroe is sanguine in the belief we shall make a prize of licr. (let everything in readiness to board her. " There seems something awful in the prepara- tion for an attack and tlie immediate^ prospect of an action. She hauls u]) her courses and hoists English colors. I take my station in the cabin, where [I] re- main n(>t lonii' before I hear the huzza on deck in 1 A vessel eciuipped with two masts, resembling tlie main and fore masts of a sliip, and a tliird, small mast, just abaft the mainmast, carrying a trysail. 1780. THE BURDEN OF WEALTH. I73 consequence of her striking. Send onr boat for the captain and his papers. She sailed from Kingston, Jamaica, upwards of forty days since, in a fleet, and was bound to New Yorlv, Captain William Small, commander. She has ten men on board and four ex- cellent 4-pounders. Her cargo consists of one hun- dred and forty-nine puncheons, twenty-three hogs- heads, three quarter casks and nine barrels of rum, and twenty hogsheads of muscovado sugar. [We] send two prize masters and ten men on board, get the prisoners on board our vessel and taking the prize in tow. Stand towards Egg Harbor. We hard- ly know what to do with the prize. The wind shift- ing a little we stand to the eastward. '' October IG. — Keep on eastern course to try to get her into our harbor, if possible. Now we are terribly api)reliensive of seeing a sail. About sunset a sail is seen from the masthead whi(di excites no small anxiety. Cast off the snow's hawser, etc. However, night coming on, and seeing no more of the sail, pursue our course. Sound forty-two fath- oms of water. '' October 17th. — Strong gales at north — north- west and very cold. Latitude 40° 30'. Afternoon, moderates somewhat. fWe] take the old snow in tow again. We expect to bring up somewhere in the neighborhood of Martha's Vin(\vard. A squall with hail and snow comes up which splits the snow's jib to pieces. A little bird came on board, rendered quite tame by its long, hazardous flight. Amuse myself with looking ovta* a quarter waggoner taken out of the snow. Take a drink of grog, made of snow water. A^ery heavy squalls indeed this night, with a rough, bad sea. Obliged to cast off the dull snow and let her go her pace. About forty-two fathoms water. Sleep little. ''October 18th. — Boisterous weather still, a tum- bling sea going. Feel qualmish. Latitude 40° 40'. The wind so contrarv that we make but slow ad- 17-1: CRUISE OP DR. SOLOMON DROWNE. 1780. vances towards our desired liaveii. Just as I was pleasino- myself with the idea of a speedy conclusion to this disai^reeable cruise a sail is cried, which per- haps will protract it, if not show us [New] York in our way home. The sail appears to be a brijj,' and not standin<;' for us, as we at first ai)prehended. We chase till night prevents. Lose sight of the snow. Fire signal guns, show Hash fires and a lantern, but see no answer. " October lOtli. — The snow is in sight again this morning. Run alongside and take her in tow again. They say they answered our signals, though unseen by us. A i)retty bird caught on board, the Carolina redbird. ]More moderate weather. Latitude 40° 30". At this rate, the West Indies will bring us up sooner than Martha's Vineyard or Nantucket. Forty-nine fathoms. Have our pistols hung up in the cabin, to be in readiness for the }>risoners should they take in it into theii* heads to rise upon the wat(di in the night. " October 20th. — Thicdc weather and the wind contrary. Depth of water seventeen fathoms. Sure- ly we must be nigh some land, and, were it not for such weather, perha]>s | we] might see it. Latitude 30° 50". A good southwardly breeze last evening shoved us up to this latitude. Here we are, be- calmed and fairly lost; for, whether w^e are to the eastward of Nantu(dvet, or between ^Fartha's Vine- yard or Blo(dv Island, or the last and ^lontauk Point ^ I a little to the southward of them all], is a matter in (juestion amongst our seamen. About sunset I go on board the snow at Captain SmalTs request to do sitmcthing for his rlummatic knee and see a very si(dv boy. After prescribing for him, examining the UKMlicine box, giving directions, etc., return to the sloop. ''Oct(d)(^i' 21st. — Verv calm. Not a breath to ^ For map, see page 104. 1780. . JOYOUS RETURN TO PORT. I75 ruffle the ocean. How uneasy every one on board is, fearini;- to lose tlic prize! But if \y(' can't stir lience otliers can't come lun-e to molest ns. Four- teen fathoms of water with yellowish, small <;rayel stones — accordin,i;- to some the sign of No Man's Land, to othei-s ^lontauk. 1 hope we shall know where we are soon. The hoi-izon ton hazy yet to see far. Half i)ast ten o'clock. At length the agree- able prospect presents itself. Martha's ^Mneyard, etc., full in yicAV. What an excellent landfall! To one who was never out of sight of land a whole day before the seeing it again is very ]>leasing, though after only seventtn^n days' de])riyation. ]t is very disagreeable tossing about in so small a vessel at this season of the year. Latitude 41° 17'. A pilot conies on board, and soon another, but too late. We go in between No Man's Land and (xi\j Head, so called from its exhibiting a variety of colors when the sun shines bright uixni it — especially just after a rain. Elizabeth Islands in sight on the starboard side, Cuddy Hunk the west most. Ten o'ldock r. m. We now have Sakonnet Point astern [see map on page 90], therefore are safe. Pass up the east side of Rhode Island. Our men are in uncommon spirits. Amdior about a league u]) the i)assage. ''October 22d. — Sunday. Very foggy. What wind there is [is] ahead. AVeigh anchor and [get] out oars. A fair, gentle breeze springs from the south. Pass through Bristol Ferry way with hard tugging about the middle of the afternoon. r^)me to anchor in the Bay, but wIkmv rendered uncertain by the fog having come u]) again. About six o'clock Captain Munroe and I, with four of the hands, set off for Providence in the boat. Being envcdoped in an uncommon thick fog, take a compass and a lan- tei'u on board. P>ut proceed not far, the smallness of the boat and the inex])ertness of the row(M's occa- sioning a motion agitating onr compass beyond use. Therefore we are glad to find the wav back to the 176 CRUISE OF DR. SOLOMOxN DROW^JE. 1780. Hope, which is offectod by their fixinped as a midshi]nnan in the frigate Airfhifsa, Captain Hammond. The first ac- tive service of young Bodgers was on the North American station, where he followed his commander to the 44-gun frigate RochncJc. In ^Marcli, 177G, Bodgers was detailed, with the s(M'ond lieutenant of 177 178 CAREER OP THE GENERAL WASHINGTON. 1776-1782. tlie Ikochiicl-, to man an armed tender of the frigate, with orch'i's to surprise the town of Lewes, within the Capes of the Delaware. The tender siieeeeded in capturing a sloop, and IJodgers was placed aboard with several of his men. The British prize crew, however, proved nntriie to their colors, and, cons])iring with the American prisoners, I'an th(^ slooj* ashore while Mr. IJodgers was asleej) and made a ])risoner of him. He was taken into the interior and sent to Williamsburg, Virginia, and then through Kichmond to Charlottes- ville, " where he pleasantly si)ent (dght months with other jtrisoners. Thoir chief enjoyment was to ramble among the woods and mountains and to gather Avild fruits and salads, with whicdi tli(\y would regale themselves during the noontide heats on the banks of some sheltered rivulet." In April, 1777, t]\v ju'isoners were marc hed to Alexandria, from which ]>lace Modgers and several others contrived to escape, and after an exhausting tramp of four hun- di'ed miles rcacdied tlu^ Delaware, where they were fortunate enough to find the Uovhiich and get aboard. From this time on Kodgers was entirely engaged in predatory expeditions on the shores of Virginia and INfaryland, and succeeded in cutting out several aruKMl vess(ds. TTc was in the Eochnch when she, with other British war shi])S, came up the Delaware in August, 177S, to bombard Fort MifHin. After- ward he distinguished hims(df at the siege of Charles- ton. On the fall of that ])lac(^ Admiral Arbuthnot gave IvodgfM'S the command of the (Jciirral WasJiiiif/- toii, then called (iniffdl MOiik. During the two years Ivodgers commanded this vessel he took and assisted in taking more than sixty vessels, his services in conneclion with the capture of the TnnnhtilJ, Cap- tain Nicholson, having been noted. ^ On the evening of April 7, 1782, while the General ' See Macliiy's History oi tlie N;ivy, vol. i, jip. 142, 143. 1782. MERCHANTS PIT OUT A CRUISER. 179 Monk was cruising off Cape Henlopen in company witli the frigate Qnrhcc, Captain Mason, tlie sails of eight vessels were discovered lying at anchor in Cape May Roads. Believing them to be Americans waiting for an opportunity to get to sea, Captain Mason anchored his ships so as to prevent the strange sails from getting to sea under cover of night. These vessels were merchantmen under the convoy of the Pennsylvania merchant shi}) Under AUif. At this period of the war it was the custom of the British to fit out privateers in New York and send them to cruise in thc^ Chesapeake and off the Delaware, to caitture merchantmen passing in and out. iNlany vessels were taken in this way. Another source of danger in these waters was the swarm of refugee boats. Usually these were light-draught vessels manned by Tories and other disaffected Americans. They concealed their craft in the small bays and creeks, and under cover of night attacked unsuspecting merchantmen. The damage inflicted by these boats became so great that on April 9, 1782, the Pennsylvania Legis- lature determined to equip a war vessel at the ex- pense of the State — as Congress, at that time, was unable to give adequate protection — for the purpose of cruising in these waters. Twenty-five thousand pounds were appropriated, and authority was grant- ed to borrow twenty-five thousand pounds more if necessary, and ^Fessrs. Francis Ciurney, John Patton, and AVilliam Allibone were aj)p()inted commission- ers to secure the necessary vessels. The merchants of Philadelphia, however, had anticipated this meas- ure, and on their own responsibility, in March, 1782, j)ui'clias(Ml of John Willcocks the trading vessel Hjidcr All//. At the time the merchants concluded to tak(^ this step, the TIjitler AJI1/ drojiped down the river, outward bound, with a cargo of flour. As she was the only vessel in any way snitetain ^lason on the following morning ordered Kodgers to enter the roads and reconnoiter, and, in case the vessels were not too strong for him, to attack, while the Qiichcc would proceed higher up, so as to prevent them from entering the Delaware. Before Captain Rodgers could carry out his instructions, he saw three sails standing toward him, which were soon made out to be British privateers fitted out at New York, one of them being the Fair A}iieric" American promised to co-operate, but the other two held aloof, prefer- ring to take their chances in independent action. The (ioicnil Manl- stood into the Boads with the Fair Aincriraii, and about noon rounded Cape May Point. This discovered them to the convoy, and sig- naling the merchantmen to make sail up the bay Lieutenant Barney maneuvered so as to cover their 1783. A STRATAGEM. ISl retreat. Both the English vessels made straight for the convoy. The Fair American in passing the Hyder AUy gave her a broadside, to which the Ameri- cans made no reply, and then hastened on in chase of the fleeing traders. One of these, a ship, surren- dered at the first summons; another, the only armed vessel, aside from the Hi/dcr AJh/, in the convoy, ran ashore and was deserted by her crew, who escaped over the jib boom, while a brig and tw(> ships en- deavored to enter ^Morris Kiver, and in the effort to cut them off the Fair A)iirricaii ran aground. This left the Ilijdvr AUi/ and the (General Monk alone to dispute the supremacy of the Konds. Cap- tain Rodgers made for the Ili/dcr AJJi/ with the inten- tion of discharging his broadside at close quarters, and then boarding in the smoke. When witliin pistol shot the Americans poured in their broadside, and perceiving that it was the enemy's programme to board Barney instructed his men at the wheel to execute the next order " by the rule of contrary." Just as the ships were about to foul, Barney called out to the helmsmen in a loud voice, which was in- tended to be heard aboard the enemy's ship: " Hard aport your helm! Do you want him to run aboard us? " The helmsmen understood their cue, and clap- ping the wheel hard to starboard brought the Eng- lishman's jib boom afoul of the Hi/dcr Alljf.s fore rig- ging, which exposed the (ivncral Monk to a raking fire from the entire American broadsid<'. It took but a minute for the Americans to lash the ships together, and then th<\v began didivering a (h^struc- tive, raking fire, to which the enemy was unable to make reply except with small arms. The Englishmen (Muh^avored to board, but Lieu- tenant Barney had made sucli admirable defense against this that they were frustrated. The enemy then endeavored to ])ick off' the Americans with their small arms, and a lively, rattling fire of musketry was the consequence. Many of the marines in the 182 CAREER OF THE GENERAL WASHINGTON^ 1T82. Ill/dcr All If were tliorc Highbred " baekwoodsmen," to whom the use of firearms was as natural as walking. One of these men, a Bncdc County rifleman, particu- larly attracted the attention of Captain Barney. In the hottest of the fight, when both sides were mak- ing every exertion to gain the victory, this man sev- <;'ral times asked his commander, " Who made this gun I'm using?" Su(di a seemingly useless ques- tion in the heat of battle, as might be expcM-ted, drew a rough answer frcun the captain. But Barney knew the man had nev(^r been on a ship before, and that fact prevented severer treatment for his breach of marine etiquette. The man, however, was not idle. The coolness and deliberation with which he fired showed that he was not in the least excited, and seeuKMl as nun h pleaxscd as if he were engaging in some harmless pastime. Asking the question for the third time. Captain l>arney sharply inquired why he wanted to kn(>w. " W-a-a-l," replied the man, with the drawl i)eculiar to tlu^ mountaineers, "this 'ere bit o' iron is jes' the best smoothbore I ever fired in my life." A few minutes after this another Buck County "marine," who was equally ignorant of nautical etiquette, with the familiarity of a backwoodsman called out to Barney: "Say, Cap, do you see that fellow with the white hat?" and firing as he spoke Captain Barney looked in the direction indicated, and saw a man with a white hat on tli(^ enemy's (l(M-k jumi> at least three foot and fall to ris(^ no more. "Cap," again calhMl out the marksman, " that's the third fellow I've made hop." After the battle was over the Americans found that every one of the Englishmen who had been killed or wounded by small arms had been strucdv either in the head or breast. During the heat of the action Captain Barney, in order that he might g(4 a l)etter view of the battle, stood on the binnacle on the quarter-deck, 1783. BARNEY'S NARROW ESCAPE. ]83 where be presented an excellent tarjiet for the enemy's sharpshooters — as he soon found out. One ball from the enemy's tops passed throngb bis bat, just iirazing the (■ro^yn (►f bis bead, while another tore off a part of the skirt of his coat. Objecting' to this treatment, he called out to his marine officer, Mr. Scully, to direct the fire of bis men at the enemy's tops and it was obeyed, and with such effect that every shot brought down its man, so that in a few minutes the tops were cleared. At the opening of the battle, just as (''ai)taiu Barney had taken bis station on the binnacle, be ob- served one of his otbcers with the cook's axe up- lifted in bis hand, about to strike one of bis own men who had deserted his gun and was skulking behind the mainmast. At this moment a round shot hit the binnaide on which Barney was standing and threw him to the deck. Supposing that bis com- mander was hurt, the officer threw down tlu' axe and ran to Barney's assistance, but the commander quickly regained his feet, uninjured, whereupon the officer deliberately i)icked up the axe and again sought the skulker. ]>y this time, however, the fel- low had got over bis '^ first scare," and was found at his gun, where be fought courageously to the close of the battle. A brother-in-law of Captain Barney, Josepli Bed- ford, was serving in the /fi/dcr Alhj at this time as a volunt(Mn' and behaved with marked gallantry. He was stationed in the maintop, and was wounded by a musket ball in tlu^ groin, but so interest(Ml was he in the strife that he did not discover his hurt until after the action, when he descended to the deck and fell exhausted from loss of blood. Captain Bodgers made heroic attempts to extri- cate bis ship from her unlucky position, but the Americans seemed to anticipate every move. They cut his shrouds and running rigging so that be could not handle the sails. After the battle had lasted 1S4 CAREim OF TIIP] GENERAL WASHINGTON. 1783. twenty iiiiiiutes nearly half the British had been shiin or injured. Their decks were eoyered with the kiUed or wounded, the first lieutenant, purser, sur- geon, boatswain, gunner — in fact, every officer in the ship (excepting one midshipman) was either killed or injured. Captain Kodgers himself had received a painful wound in the foot. Finding that the Quehec was too far away to render him immediate assist- ance, Captain Kodgers, thirty minutes from the time the action opened, surrendered, having had twenty men killed and thirty-three wounded. The Ilijdcr AUji had four killed and eleven wounded. When the American first officer came aboard to take possession Captain Kodgers ordered one of his men to go into his cabin and bring up his fowling piece — a beautiful silver-mounted gun — and in the ])resence of the boarding officer threw it overboard, remarking: ''This shall never become the property of any d d reb(d ! " Cai)tain Kodgers, however, forgot to destroy his book of signals, which fell into the hands of the Americans, and materially assisted them in eluding the frigate, as will be seen. Throwing a prize crcnv of thirty-five men aboard the (Iciicnil Moiil', Barney, without waiting even to learn the name of his priz<\ ordered her British ensign to b<^ rehoisted, and showing English colors on the Ifi/dcr Mhi he i)ut up the bay as if in chase of the merchantmen, while the lli/
ed into the wharf to land their killed and wounded, and curi- osity induced nu% as well as many others, t<» go on board each vessel. . . . The Ociicral Moiik^s decks were in every direction besmeared with blood, cov- ered with the dcnid and wounded, and r<'S(Mnbled a charuel house. Several of her bow i)(>rts were knocked int(» one, a plain evidence of the well- directed fire of the /fi/thr MJif. The killcMl and wounded were carried ashore in hammocks. " I was present at a conversation whicli took place on tlu^ ([uarter-deck of the (rciicrdl MoiiJ: be- tween Captain Barney and several merchants in Philadelphia. I remember one of them observing: ' Why, Captain Barney, you have been truly fortu- nate in capturing this vessel, considering she is so far superior to you in point of size, guns, men, and metal.' ' Yes, sir,' Barney replied. ' I do consider myself fortunate. When we were about to engage, it was the opinion of myself, as well as my crew, that she would blow us to atoms, but we were determined she should gain her victory dearly.' One of the wounded British sailors observed: 'Yes, sir. Cap- tain Bodgers said to our croAV, a little before the action commenced, " Now, my boys, we shall have the Yankee ship in five minutes," and so we all thought, but here we ar(\' " For a long time after the batth^ the mizzen staysail of the (}ciianiola, and if the Freucdi and S])anish fleets should n(»t be there you must proceed to the place where they may be, and when you sliall have found them you are to deliver to the Frenidi and Spanish admirals the inclosed letters. I expect that, in consc(iuence of these let- ters, a frigate will be ordered to convoy you to Havana, and thence to America. You Avill go to Havana, where you will deliver the inclosed letter to Robert Smith, Esq., ag(Mit for the l^nitassi)ort, lest the money might tempt them to detain her. She arrived safely at Philadel- phia, ]\rarcli 12th. In the following June the (ivucral WiishliKjton, then the only United States war vessel in commission, again sailed to England, still under the command of Captain Barney. Returning from this cruise, she was sold in 1784. CHArTER XV. CArTAIN JOHN MANLY. If further evidence is ueeded to show the inti- mate relationship between tlie United States navy and onr early privateer service, we have it in the fact that of our twenty-five tori)edo boats bearing the names of officers commanding in the navy of the Revolution and in the War of 1812 fifteen were named after men who at one time commanded priva- teers. Torpedo boat No. 22 bears the name of one of onr successful privateersmen, Jcdin ^lanly. Under a resolution of Congress, October 10, ITTG, Manly was i)laced second on the list of the twenty-four captains in the navy, being ranked only by James Nicholson. His first command was the Massachu- setts State cruiser Lrc, in which vessel he made one of tlie first important captures of the war.^ While in command of the Continental 32-gun frigate Ihni- cock, ^lanly, in 1777, took the 28-gun British frigate Fo.r after a severe action.- Owing to the scarcity of vessels in the regular navy, ^lanly, early in 1779, put to sea from Boston as commander of the IG-gun privateer CiniihcrlaiKl, but wluMi only a short time out he was captured by the Britisli fi'igate Ponioud — by another account the Thunderer — and carried into Barbadoes,with his men, where he was imprisoned and treated with great severity. Determined to regain his liberty. Manly ' See Maelay's IIi;rivateer had rc^ached the Isle of Rhoals, off the entrance to Portsmouth harbor, her pursuers had gained upon her so as to be within two gunshots. 194 CAPTAIN JOHN MANLY. 1779. ^Vt this moment a beaY3' squall from the Avest struck the Jason, and in spite of their utmost efforts the Americans saw their ship taken aback, thrown on her beam ends, and their three masts carried away. Ivclieved of the weight of her masts, the pri- vateer righted, b}' which time the squall had blown over, the vessels pursuing the privateer evidently having all they could attend to in standing under the scpiall, for they made Avay to sea and were not seen again. Captain ]Manly immediately went to work (dearing away the wreckage and repairing damages. When the sails were got aboard it was found that one of the crew had been caught under the fore-topsail and dr()\vn(Ml. The circumstance of Captain Manly having lost his first i)rivate armed ship, the Cuuihaiand, at the outset of her cruise, and having the misfortune to lose the masts of his second ship, the Jason, when only two daj's out, was argued by the superstitious seamen as a sign that be was an unlucky commander, whi(di, taken in connection with the drowning of the seansan in the wreckage, led the crew of the Jason to mutiny. It is here that we have a good illustra- tion of the qualities called for in the successful pri- vateersman. The difficulties confronting Captain IManly certainly were enough to discourage the ordi- nary commander. The way he faced the situation is graphically described by one of the crew, Joshua Davis, a hairdresser's apprentice, of Boston, nine- teen years old, who had left his father's shop to make his maiden voyage on the ocean. Davis writes: '"We got up jury masts and ran in between the Isle of Shoals and Portsmouth, where our ('a])taiu was determined to take our masts in. In a few days Captain ^Nlauly went on shore to see to getting the masts on boars, topgallant masts on end, sails bent, running rigging rove, boats on booms, etc., and all done in thirtv-six hours." [rivateers l/(i.:(inl, of eighteen gnns, from Liver|)ool, and the Adrviitiurr, of tlie same force, from (ilasgow. The only man of the Americans hnrt was the sailing master of the Juxoti — the one who first discovered the brigs — who Avas strn's company two casks of butter and the cook to prepare the shark for the people's dinner, lie was eleven and a half feet long." About eight days after the adventure with the shark, a sail ahead was reported. Captain Manly gave (base, and in six hours came u]) witli the stranger, whiristol, England, for Uarbadoes. ]\Ir. Thayer was put aboard to take possession, and sent bacdv her master with four men and two bags of dollars which they luid just taken from a Spanish vessel. A prize master and crew were then placed aboard the ship and carried her safely into Boston. The privateer mounted sixteen O-ponnders, and had a valuable cargo of beef, pork, (dieese, hats, etc. Continuing eastward for several days aft(^r this capture without sighting a sail, Cai>tain Manly changed his course northwest, and in a few days was on the NewfouiKlland l>anks. While cruising in this vicinity a sail was discovered bearing down on the J(is())L ^Nlanly waited for her to conn/ up, and on hail- ing learned that she was a neutral from ^fartinique, and so short of water that her master offered to give a barrel of sugar or rum for every barrel of water the privateer could spare. Manly sent over four bar- 1779. BATTLE WITH A FRIGATE. 201 rels of the indispensable liquid, and received in re- turn two barrels of sugar and two of rum. The mas- ter of the merchantman came aboard the Jasou. " He dined and supped with us and went on board his vessel about ten o'( lock." Earlv on the 30th of Sei)tember a sail was dis- covered on the starboard beam. As it was calm at the time Captain Manly could not chase, but about eiglit (>'(dock in the morning a light breeze sprang u]>, and the stranger, feeling it first, came toward the ]>rivateer rapidly. Kecognizing her to be a ship of force Captain Manly made sail from her, but after an all-day run the stranger, about eleven o'clock at niglit, managed to get under the Jason's port quarter. On hailing she was found to be the British frigate Sin-prisr,^ at that time one of the swiftest vessels in the British navy. "What ship is that?" demanded the English- man. " Tlie United States 32-gun frigate Dcaiic,"' re- sponded Captain Manly. " ITeave to or we will fire into you," came a voice from the frigate. " Fire away and be damned. We have got as many guns as you," defiantly answered ^[anly. T^pon this the ^^iirprise (hdivered her broadside. Manly reserved his fi]-e until fairly abreast of his enemy. Before the Americans o]>eiied witli their guns the British delivered anotlu^r broadside, which cut some of the ])rivateer's rigging and (Irove the men out of her to])s. When fairly alongside of tlie frigate Captain ^lanly ])oiired a l)roadside into his opponent which silenced two of the enemy's forward guns. The next broadside cut away the Englishman's main toj)sail and drove her maintop men to the deck. Both vessels now maintained a ra])id fire until one o'clock in the morning. By that time the Jaso)i\s studding ^ By aiiotlier aet-ouiit it was the Pefseus. IG 202 CAPTAIN JOHN MANLY. 1770, saiLs and booms, her canvas, riggino;, and yards, were so injured as to be nnmanageable. Battle lanterns were hung on nails along the inside of the bulwarks between the guns so as to enable the gunners to see how to load and tire, but these were eonstantly shaken down bv the concussion resulting from the recoil of the guns. It was so dark that the men could not liandle tlie cannon. At this moment the men forward broke ojxm the fore hatidies and ran below, refusing to tight against a frigat(\ Noticing that the forAvard guns were silent, Captain Manly sent the sailing master to ascertain the causi^ of it, but that officer* did not return. ^lanly then siMit the mas- ter's mate on the same errand, but lu^ also failed to return. Kealizing the lioixdcssuess of fighting a regular man-of-war and liis own mutinous men at the same time, Captain Manly seized his ti-ump(4 and called for quarter; then returning to the men who had re- mainear(l until we got into port. The doctor bad me stay with him 177i). PLAN TO RECAPTURE THE JASON. s><>?, and attend to the wounded. The next night, about hvelve o'cloek, one of the marines went into the hohl to .net some water. He overheard some of our men hillcinj;' and list the hold and ordered every man to coiiu^ for- ward or he would destroy them. They all, to the amount of thirty-two men, came forward and were jiut in irons by the feet. I was taken from the doctor and i)iit in irons with the rest. In the course of ten days we arrived at Rt. John's, Newfoundland, October 10th. We w<'r(^ all taken out of irons and or(hn'ed on deck to be searcduMl for tlu^ money we had shared amonji' us when we were taken. I tcxdc four (h)llars out of my ])0(dcet and hid them in the lininjiis of the ship, in orchn' to sav(^ them from the |)lun(h'rers. I went on deck, when they seari lied me and took the oth(M' four d(dlars from me. I went below again to get my money, but, alas! it was gone." In this action the Jason had eighteen men killed and 1^^■(dve wouiKh'd, while the English had seven killed and a number injur«Ml. Arriving at St. John's ('a])tain Manly was called befori^ Kear-Admiral Ed- wards, of the vjO-gun ship Parlhrnd, and asked Ids luime. Our privateersman re])lied, " John Manly." " Are you not the same John Manly that com- manded a ])rivateer from Hoston called the (Utlinii- hid'!"' [CimilKrhiiKl] asked the admirah " Yes," said ('a]>tain Manly. " Were you not taken by his majesty's slii]) TIudhIvvv)- [PonioiKi'!] and carried into Barl)a(b>es? " questioned Admiral Edwards. '' Yes,'' calmly reidied the American commander. " Did you not go to the jail keeper and bribe him, make your escape out of jail, take a king's tender 204 CAPTAIN JOHN MANLY. 1779-1783. by ni.iilit, ]nil the iiion in irons, and carr}^ her into Philadelphia? " thundered the admiral. To these questions Manl^^ made no answer, as he did not wish to incriminate the jail keeper. There- ui)on Admiral Edwards informed iNEaul^' that he was to be sent to England in irons and confined in Mill Prison to the end of the war. This threat was car- ried out to the letter, excepting'' that in 1782 Manly was exchan!Li(Ml. ^Nlakino' his way to France he reached Boston and was at once placed in com- mand of the 32-gun frigate JJcaiic, the same to which he had spoken while cruising in the privateer Jason. Getting to sea in this favorite ship Captain Manly made for the West Indies, and in the course of thir- teen days took a valual)le shi]) of twenty guns laden with provisions for the Pritish army in New York. Soon afterward he was driven into Martinique by a 50-gun ship and a frigate, where he was blockaded until peace was declared. rnAPTEH XYI. CLOSING YEARS OF THE WAR. Speakixc; of tbe laud operations of the Aiueri- caus, Henry Cabot Lod^e, in his Story of the Kevo- liition, describes the hist three years of the war as the most critical in onr stru*;ole for indei)endence. He says: " When Washinjuton retreated throu<»h the Jerseys in 1770 it looked as if the end had come, but at least there had been hard tiohtinj;-, and the end was to be met, if at all, in the open held, with arms in hand and all the chances that war and action and courajie conld <;iye. Now, four years later, the lieyolntion seemed to be ii,oinii' down in mere inaction throni^h the ntter helplessness of what ])assed for the central <»;oyernment. To those who looked bcMU'ath the surface the prospect was ]>i'(»f<)nndly dishearteninii'. It was a yery dark hour, jKM'liaps the darkest of tlie whole war. . . . Tn Octo- ber, 17S(), he [Washiiii^ton] wrote: ' Onr present dis- tresses are so i;reat and complicated that it is scarctdy '\^■ithin the ])(»w(M's of descri])ti<>n to «iye an atain John Paul Jones fame, were captured or destroyed. This left the United States with only six war craft: the 32-gun frigate AUiancv, the 32-gun frigate Coiifcdcnici/, the 82-gun frigate Dcnuc, the 28-gun frigate TniiiihiiU, the 20-gun ship Dnc <]c LdKzini, and the 18-gun ship S(irtain N. (Joodwin, got to sea in the same year and made sevei/al-'cap- tures. Two years later, while off the coast of Labra- le, and carried her into Beverly, Massachusetts, the home port of the Hope. Almost as successful was the 1 2-gun sloop (iV- faJidfiiHi, (''ai)tain \V. Havens — afterward com- manded by Captain E. Hart. This vessel was com- missioned from Tonnecticut in 1780, but it seems 208 CLOSING YEARS OP THE WAR. 1778-1780. that she had made a cruise in the preceding year, and while off ^^t. Kitts, May 14, 1779, she was at- tacked by a British armed cutter and a brig. The enemy made several attempts to board, but each time were repulsed with heavy loss. They finally sheered off and left the IxvtdUation to make the best of her way to an American port. About a year after this, on June 12, 1780, the 10-gun sloop (U)iiicf, Captain (\ Harris, of Pennsyl- vania, fell in with a convoy of British merchantmen off Sandy Hook, and by adroit maneuvering cap- turcMl eight of them, which were sent into Pliila- deli)hia. The Coiiicf was commissioned in 1778 and carried a complement of fifty ukmi. There seems to be no record of her having mad(^ any other prizes. On the 22(1 of October, 1780, the Kl-gun priva- teer Mpcr, Oa])taiii William AVilliams, saihMl from Boston, and early in November sightetain said he would not attack her, as she ai)]>eare(l to b(^ a 2(l-gun copp(M'ed shi]) and full of men, for fear of spoiling our cruise. She chas(Ml us all that night, and in the morning we found that she had carried away her main topmast and gave over the chase. W(^ ran on for two days, when the man at the masthead cried out, 'A sail!' whi(di we stood for, when she made a signal whi(di we knew and r(4urne(l. She came alongside of us and proved to be tlu^ PihiriDi, Captain Kobinson, who came on board of us and informed [us] that he had taken five prizes out of the Jamaica fleet. Captain Robinson being the oldest commander, ordered our 210 CLOSING YEARS OF THE WAR. 1781. (•ii[>tain 1() follow him while they cruised together off the coast of Ireland. The next day both gave chase to a ship to the leoAvard and came up with her. Hhe i)roved to be the privateer Defenf('f()is(' following us. About one o'(dock another sail was st^en on oui' larboard | ])ort | beam, to which we gave uud(M-s, from TiOndon. Wo were all sent on board of lici- and put in irons. In the meantime the /*il(ir'nii got uj) to the ship we first gave chase to, and by Ikm- signal we perceived her to be the Rtinthhr ]»rivat(M^r." Joshua, with liis unfortunate shi])- mates, was carried to Eugbnul and coufimMl there to the close of the war. Three othiM' j>rivate armed American vessels boi'e (lie name Plhjriiir. One a KJ-gun brig with ninety men, under Captain IT. Craiw, from Connecticut, which in 1TS2 captured a vessel witli a cargo of tobacco; another a brig of four guns and fourteen men, under ra])tain M. Strong, from Pennsylvania; and the third an 8-gun brig with eighteen men, under Cai>tain J. Starr, from Virginia. 1781. THE OUNGKESS-SAVAGE BATTLE. 211 In February, 1781, the 10-i>iin bri<;- //o/Ar/, Ca})- taiii Iv. Keaii, of Peimsylvania, fell in with the Brit- ish cutter Hi/pocriic, of sixteen li'uns, and after an action of fifteen minutes captured her, with a loss of three killed and one wounded, the enemy having- four killed and seven wounded. In the following year, while cruisint;- in the West Indies, the Ilolhr fouj^ht the 18-i;uii ship Expcriiiwiit. These vessels were hotly enjiaii'ed, and the result was still in doubt when another American i)riyateer appeared on the scene, whi(di induced the E.rpcf'uiiviit to sheer off. One of the most creditable actions of this war in which an American privateer was eni;atain T. Sim- mons, sailed from Salem with a cargo of salt for Bichmond, A^ir- ginia. The cargo being disposed of at that pert, the RdiKjvr loaded with Hour at Alexandria for Havana. "• I'art of the flour," says ^Ir. Higginson, ''■ being fi'om (leiieral Washing- ton's plantation, was received at Havana at the marked weight; all was sold, and the Ixuiujcr returned to Alexandria for another freight. Anchoring at the mouth of the Potomac, because of head winds, the ofticers turned in, but were aroused before midnight by the watch, with news that large boats were coming toward the ship from difi'erent directions. Simmons and Second Offi- cer Jose])h Peabody rushed to the t who were their assailants or whence; the captain lay helpless, the first (►fiicer was servini*' out animnnition, and Pea- body, still conspicnons in his white raiment, had command of the devk. Two boats were already grappled to the Ixdin/cr; he ordered cold shot to be dropped into them, and friiihtened one crew so that it cast off; then he ordered his men a.^ainst the other boat, shontin.n', ' We have sunk one, boys; now let us sink th(^ oilier I' His men (dieered, and presently both boats (lroi)i)ed astern, leavinin one of the Rditijcr's crew dead and three woumhMl. I*eabody himself was hurt in three jdaces, not counting the loss of his club of hair, worn in the fashion of those days, wlii( h had been shot (dean off, and was found on dec k the next morning. The enemy proved to be a guerrilla band of Tories, whose rendezvous was at St. George's Island, near where the Ranr/fr lay at anchor. There had been sixty men in their boats, while the crew of the Rment of ]n'ivateering during the TJevolution can be had than the manner in whi( h they made con- certed attacks upon the English toward the latter part of the war. Not content with merely captur- ing th(^ enemy''s mere hantmen — and even cruisers — our ]>rivatcers arranged expeditions against the a<;ement resulted and two of the enemy's vessels were cai>tured. In July, 1782, four Ann^rican ])rivate(M's united in the attack on the town of l.uenburi;'. They were the 9-^un schooner II (lo, Captain (t. Babcock; the (>-^un bri<>' Hope, Cai>tain H. Woodbury; the 2-oun cutter Siralloir, Captain J. Tibbets, and on(» other. The first two were from Massaidiusetts, and car- ried twenty-five and thirty-five men, respectively, while the ^tcdlloir was from New Hampshire, and Iiad a complement of only tw(mty men. Landinj;- a force of men to attack the town from the shore, the four privateers entered- the harbor and soon had the place in their possession. After holding: it some time they released the town on a payment of one thousand pounds. Another instance of concerted action amonp; American privateers was that in which the 10-oun ship (iKiniiiiH/ SdJJi/, Captain T. Dunn, of ^Fassachu- setts, took part. This privateer, in company with other private armed craft, some time in 17S2, at- tacked the foi'uiidable En;Lilish ship Blazr (Uistle, carryinji' twenty-six iiiuns. An action of two hours' duration followed, when the enemy surrendered, the loss to the Americans bein^' five killed or wounded. In this year the British made a dai'inu' and suc- cessful attem])t to cut out of (lloucester harbor the ship IliirvUi, which they manned and S(Mit to sea with the intention of runniuij,' her into Halifax. Be- fore reacdiinii' that ])ort, however, the Ihinict f
>eaiinnel got afloat, and having sustaininl no material injury made her way to i)ort. In the same montii Cai)tain S. Thompson, of ]Massachus(^tts, led a small party of men in a row- boat in an attack on a British packet ship. After skirmishing two hours the Americans were com- pelled to retire, having sustained a loss of three killed and ten wounded. Soon after this Mr. Thomp- son captured a snow laden with oats, and in the following November he took a ship with a cargo of fish. These captures were among the last made by American ])rivateers in the Bevolution. The entire number of vessels taken in this struggle from the British by our maritime forces, including the Con- tinental cruisers, was about eight hundred, of which one hundred and ninety-eight were secured by craft commissioned directly by Congress and the remain- ing six liundred were taken by private enterprise. Perhaps the most remarkable feature of the audacity of our privateers was the number of king's cruisers taken by them. Not more than twelve regular war ships were taken by the Continental cruisers, while 1793. ATALANTE-ANTELOPB FIGHT. 217 sixteen vessels of this class were captured by our privateers or by private enterprise.^ James, in his History of the British Navy, records an action between the French privateer Afahuttc and the British packet Aiifflopr, Captain Curtis. The Atdhiiifr, very lil^ely, was one of the old American privateers enj;aged in the war for American inde- pendence, and on the ch)se of that strug<>le passed into French hands. She was manned largely by American and Irish seamen, and it is probable that she was owned by Ameri<-ans, for we finr'.s' fore shrouds. Immediately ji well-directed vi hill I (' hixd fought with the red or bloody -flag at her masthead, to indicate that no quai'ter would be shown by Ikm-, and possession was forthwith taken of the ])rize. ' ''The Anfosed of I'rench, Anu^ricans, and Irish. Of these the hrst and second captains and thirty men were killed and sev(Miteen ofticc^rs and men were wound(Ml. The .l///r/o/>r now carried her prize in triumph to Aiiuotta I>ay, Jamaica, where the two v<'ss(ds arrived on the morniiig succee'/(// ci&ti.\.\\z ^-r/j'-^xt ^<^ ' f>i^\ih\x\\\\^Y?^')!a)ic^-t- (iZ^<-<(i^,/liia, defeated a number of Fren(di gunboats that came out to attack her off Algeciras. After a desultory action of some hours a lateen-rigged craft, tilled with men, made several (h'sperate attempts to carry the Ijju'isa by boai'ding, but was steadily repcdled. Toward the close of the tight the commander of the Louisa was shot through the shoulder, and while his first office^" was taking him into his cabin, to have the injury attended to, the crew, with the (^xcei)tion of the man at the wheel, deserted their stations and ran below. Ob- serving the confusion in the Louisa, iho Frenchmen rallied for a final effort, and when the first offt- cer came on declc again he found the encMuy <\\)- proacliing to board. Taking in the situation at a glance the (|ui(dc-witte(l officer ran to the hatchway and called on his men to come on deck and '^ take a last shot at the fleeing " Frenchmen. The ruse had the desired (effect. The sailors hastened to the deidv and wei-e immediately sent to quarters, and a de- structive lir(^ was o])en(Ml on the enemy, whicdi swept away the men who had gathered on her bowsprit 220 - CLOSING YEARS OP THE WAR. 1S00. and forecastle in readiness to spring' aboard. Be- lieyini;' that tlie apparent confusion in the American was a stratajnem to indncc^ them to come to (dose qnarters a<»ain, tlie Fihmk limen hastened to rejoin their discomfited consorts. Tlic Linilm then con- tinn(Ml her conrse to (Jihraltar, where she was <>reeted by the throngs wlio liad witnessed the affair from the Roidv. Another action wlii( li took ])lace in the Fren(di war was that between tlie American privateer JhraJd, Captain Nathaniid Silsbee — afterward TTnite strani>e sails were dis- covered a few leainnes to windward of us, one of wlii(di was soon recoonizcMl to be the East India Comi)any's packet shij) (UinnntJlls^ of eiohteen i!,uns, whicdi left the river at the same time with ns. At abont 8 a. m. the other shi]> stood toward the Corn- irallis, soon after which the latter bore down upon ns under full sail, commencing' at the same time a running;' fight with the other shi]), whi(di then dis- played Fren( h colors. We soon perceived that they were both plying their sweeps very briskly, that the Fr(>so of lightening their ship. The sea was perfectly smooth and the wind vei'y light, so nundi so that it was (piite midday before either of the ships were within gun- shot of us, by whiidi time we (the five American ships) were in (dose line, our de(dcs cleared of a large sto(dv of poultry — whicdi, with their coops, could be seen for a considerable dis- tance round us — and every preparation made to defend ourselves to the extent of our ability. But this dis- 1)1 ay of resistance on our part seemed to be quite dis- regarded by the pursuing ship, and she continued steering for my own ship, whicdi was in our tl(Md, until and fairly within gunshot, when my own guns were first opened upon her, whi(di were instantly fcdlowed by those of eaidi and all of the other four shii)S. '' When the mat(dies were applielying her sweeps, and, witii studressed a desire to excdiange sig- nals with us and to kiM^]) company while the l^rcMudi ship — whi(di was known by him to be La (lloirc, a privateer of twenty-two 9-])ounders and four hun- dred men — was in sight, which request was com- 11 V UW 11 Mll|i, 222 CLOSING YEARS OF THE WAR. 1800. plied with; and he liaviii^ii lost all bis boats, I weut on board his ship, whore our signals were made known t(> him, and where the (•a])tain and ofiftcers of the (Utniirdllis afdviiowledged the protection whi(di we had afforch'd them in the most grateful terms. The ConncdUis continued with us two days, in the course of whia])er under date of July 1, 1812, notes: ^' The ])eo])h» in the Eastern States are laboring almost night and i*ivat(H'rs, carrying about one thousand guns and more than ten thousand men, was no inconsiderable augmentation of our sea ])ower. It is interesting to note, howev(^r, that although the first r^nglish merchant vess(d taken on the high s(Ms by the Americans in the war — a ship from Jamaica bonnd for London — was caj)tured by a Tnited States revenue cutter, July 1st, off Cape Ilat- teras ami sent into Norfolk, the first British (Jovern- ment vessid was taken by an American jnivateer. The English schooner Wliiliinj, Lieutenant Maxcey, having on board dis]tat(dies from the British Gov- ernment for ^^'ashington, was taken in Hampton Boads, July 10, 1S12, by the ])rivateer Dash, Captain Carroway, of l>altimore. The privateer was armed with one gun and carried a complement of forty men. The Wh'ilunj carried four guns. The former had come down from the Chesapeake prepared for a cruis(^ against the enemy, when she found the WhltliKj lying at am hor in the Boads. At that mo- 1812. CAl'TLUiE OP THE WHITING AND BLOODHOUND. 2:i~ iiient Lieutenant Maxeey, beini^- ignorant of the existence of hostilities, was in a boat pnllino- toward shore, intending; to land at Hampton. Captain Carroway seized the boat and then made for the schooner. Running alon<»side he called on the offi- cer in charge to surrender, which, after several l»apers had been thrown overboard, Avas done with- out opposition. These ])apcrs '* wcn^ said to relate to Henry's affair." ^ As the seizure of the ]Miifiiilace A\here they had been taken, which ^^'as done, and Lieutenant Maxcey was then ordered to (]uit the watei's of the Lnited States with all jxissibh^ s]»eed." - About the time th<^ Wliifiiu/ was captured, Ca])- lain J. (lohl, of the S-gun ])rivateer schooner Tor^/, of lialtimoi'e, ca])tured another English dispatch boat, the liloodhoiiiul, and carricMl her into Anna]»olis. The ItloodlifHiHi] also was reh^ased by our (lovennnent ; " but she will tind some difficulty, " remarks a con- tem])orary uewspa])er, "in working her ])assage home, the greater ])ai*t of her crcnv having Ixmmi car- ried on shore as ]n'isoners, refusing their liberty, have (daimed the ])rotectiou of the soil, and ])]*e- fcMTed to I'eside among us. It is stated that the crew of the WhilliKj also have absoliit(dy refused to go on board that vessel again, and that we have no law, if we had the will, to compel them." Among ' Norfolk Lodiivr, .Tuly 10, 181'^. "" Norfolk TTcnild, Aii-ust 14, ISIQ. 228 FIRST VENTURES. 1812-1813. the crew of the Bloodlioiiiid, several gentlemen at Annapolis recognized an American who had been impressed three years before. He was restored to his country. We learn that several of the British sailors, panting for revenge, have already enlisted in the United States service, or entered on board onr privateers." Aside from her capture of the HJoodhotiiid, the career of the (Una was uneventful. SJH^ was cai>tured in Chesapeake Bay by the Brit- ish squadron in February, 1813, four of her men esca])ing in a boat to the shore. The DuhIih useful- ness also seems t<> have been limited to the capture of the Whitiiifi, no other seizures being credited to her. Many of the first privateers to get to sea were small i)ilot boats, mounting one long tom amidships, with several smaller guns, and carrying a crew of fifty to sixty men, whose chief dependence in battle was on muskets, sabers, and boarding pikes. These vessels, as a rule, Avere intended merely for short cruises in the (fulf of St. Lawrence, off Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and among the West India Islands. At that time they were sufficiently formidable to capture the average British merchantman, but as the war progressed the giH^at increase in armaments and com]>l('ments of English trading vessels made our smallei- ]»rivate(M's almost impotent. As soon as it was known that war had been mHrJ)'ird, Captain S. Stacy, the Lio)! also captured tiv(^ English brigs from Liver- ])(>(»] bound for St. John's. One brig taken by the Lion and i^iioirltird carried six gnns, but made no resistance. The Lion is crcMlited in this war with having taken in all one brig, two schooners, and three sloojts. Althongh carrying only one gnn and a crew of twcnty-tivc men, the ai*med schooner /V//r Trudcr, Ca])tain J. Morgan, ]>erfoi'nied more valuable serv- ices than any of the foregoing privateers. Getting to sea at the outbreak of hostilities Captain Mor- gan, in one crnise, t//// carried five guns and fifty-seven men, under the com- mand of Captain T. Handy, both of Salem. They got to sea early in the war. Their first success was the seizure of a valuable transport by a clever strata- gem. These two ])i'ivateers were cruising in com- pany on July 14, 1S12, when th(\v gave chase to two vessels which they to(dc to be merchantmen. Tt was not until they were neai-ly within gunshot that one of the strangers was discovereni]>tly stood for the ])iMvat(M'i-s under a ])ress of sail. The Anu^rican vessels se]»arated, tlie cniiser selecting the /'o//// and giving her a hai'd chase. While the brig of wai- was almost within gunshot it fell calm and the lOnglishnieii got out tli(M'r launch and longboat, with foi-ty men, and ])ulled toward tli(^ I'olli/. When within ninsket shot the British ci'ew gave three cheers, and opening a brisk fire of small 232 FIRST VENTURES. 1812-1814. arms, and from their 4-ponnfler, dashed toward the privateer. This was the sif>nal for the Americans to open, and for a few minutes the water in the vicinity of the hmncli was wliii>])(Ml into froth by musket balls and lauLiraiic In a short time the launch surren- dered, whih^ the other boat made a hasty retreat. Captain Handy was unabh' to take possession of the launch, h<»wpver, for the cruiser was dangerously near, so he seized this o]i])ortunity to man his sweeps and thus made his escajx'. l>ut tlie Americans had tIh^ satisfaction of notiiii; that \\\wu the launch ad- vanced to the attack she showed sixteen sweeps, while on lier retreat only tivo were seen. About this time the /*o//// captui'eil the S(diooner IJIizd, of Hali- fax, for Jamaica, anort No. 50, a tine brig of two hundred and niiH'ty tons, mounting two guns and maniuMl b}^ twelve men. She was from Halifax for St. John's, an; six <;nus aiisr//, of New York, also making for Bordeaux, was seized by a British ar(Ml for i)rivate ent(M-i)rise on the high seas. Slie nuuh^ a shorl but successful cruise ear'ly in the vvai', taking in all three shi])s, two brigs, and four schooners, all of which reaidied port in safety. Among her prizes was the schooner Nf/////, from Syd- ney, Nova Scotia, whi(di got safely into Boston, Au- gust 5, 1S12. In her second venture the Wile Jxciiard was captured, October 4, 1812, by the 38-gun frigate ShdiiiiDii, (''a])lain IMiili]) Bowes Vere Broke. Less successful than the Wile RciKird was the 6- gun sloo]» (IJcdiicr — sometinu^s called the 'Mlleaner packet"' — ("'ai)tain N. Lord. She was from Kenne- bunk, Maine, with a com]»lement of fort^' men, and was capture]ihi-i, (''a])tain Thompson. ThrcH^ days later the (U)lih)-i took the privateer (Uiflx riiic, of fourteen guns and eighty-ssg", had di'ifted alongside of the tine American priva- l<'er brig (^iirlnr, of Boston. It was not nntil the fog had lifted that Captain William. Wyer, of the 236 P'lllST VENTURES. 1812-181:5. privateci', (liscovercd \ho niidesirablc ])i'()ximity of the frigate, and being i)()litelY requested to sur- render did so witli all the grace possible under tlu' circunistances. The Ciirlcir carried sixteen guns ant u\) the reputation of Ameri- can shi]dniild(U-s by outsailing the frigate. Two days after the inhabitants of (Jloucestei*, Massatain Davis, fi-om (Jibraltar, which had been taken only a fcAV days before by the British 'JtVgun frigate liclridcni, Captain Tlichard l>yron. That frigate had just made her (^scape from Captain Kodg- ers" S(Hiadron, and falling in with the J^icJicriiKj took her. Ca]»tain I>yron, after placing a ])rize mas- t (Uoucester. The British l>risoners " spoke vei-y unfavorably of Capiain Bodg- 1812. A CLEVER RECAPTURE. 2)) 7 ers. The Bclrldcra was much shattered in her stern and k)st one topmast. Slie had one man kiUiMl and one wonnded, wlio died." ^ The singular cii'- cnmstance of the ricl^cruKj coming into port witli American and En^lisli tla^s at lialf-mast isoxi»laincd in an(>tlier acconnt, which says: " AVIkmi tlic prison- ers were landed the thiiis of the two vessels, belong- ing- to a wretch born in the United States, bnt never- theless not an American, were hoisted half-mast hii;h to show his regret that certain citizens had recovered their i)roperty from the snbjects of his king." It is claimed that the Plckcrliuj had sixty thonsand dollars on b(»ard, whieli(n'ing that ( 'aptain Stewart was the only ])risoner aboai'd, the English pi'ize master relaxed his vigilance. It seems, how- ever, that ther(^ were some fifty American passengers in the brig, and when it was seen that they mnst be captnred ('a]»tain Stewart induced tlu^ ])assengers to conceal themscdves in the h(dd, i)romising their r(dease as soon as the cruisin- was out of sight. Scarc(dy had the man-I>(Miiii<;' the liatclies, " as the bold iicodod airing.'' The suggestion was promptly ado])t(Ml, and nincdi to the surprise of tiie captors tifty men si)rang ou deek, overpowered the unsuspecting prize crew, and brought the ship into New London. The armed S( hoouer Paul Jones, of sixteen guns and one hundred and twenty men, Cai)tain J. Hazard (afterward commanded by Captain A. Tayloi'), of New York, cai)tured the English brig lli/xsc.s, from the West Indies bound for Halifax, and sent her into Norfolk. Later in the war (May 23, 1813) the r-i)ound- ers, laden with tiour, from San Salvador for Lisbon. On the 25th she recai)tured the American brig lAtile James, besides the fcdlowing valuable ])i'izes: Ht. Martin's I'lanier, of twelve guns, from Malta for London; the transi)ort Canada, of ten guns, and hav- ing on boarounds, after the troops had been disarmed. On I"\4)ruary 27th the I*an1 Jones cap- tured the sloop I'earl, of London, for St. ^FicdiaeLs, ladtm with fruit; the brig Reiurn, of London; the brig John and IsaheJla, of Berwick-on-'I'weed ; and th<' brig Ijondon Paelcf, of six guns. The Jolin and Isa- helhi was given ui> as a cartel for th(^ prisoners. On the evening of July 9, 1S12, tlu^ aruuMl schooner Fame, Captain William Webb, of Salem, entered that port after having captured an English shi]) of about three hundred tons burden, laden with ' Loir book of the P >s'r/r//rr, carrying five guns and fifty-two men, under tiie command of Captain W. Fernald, sailed from Portsmouth, New Ilani])- shire, August 12, 1S12, in company with the armed schooner lltoiiids, Cn]>tain T. Shaw, of twelve^ guns and eighty men. The Science was captured when thirte(Mi days out by the omnipresent FiuuUms. The TlioiiKis to(dv three slii]>s, one brig, and one schooner, with a total valuation of six hundred thousand dol- lars. One of these ships, the Droiuo, mounted twelve guns, ;nid two of them carried fourteen each, but had for com])lements only twenty-five and thirty men i'es]»ectively. The Dromo was from Liverpool for Halifax, and had a cargo invoiced at seventy thou- sand i)()unds sterling. She was sent into Wlscasset. Sailing again, September 2P>, 1S18, the Thomas, when 24:0 FIRST VENTURES. 1812. six dajs out, was captured off Cape North by the 32- giin frigate Nijmph, after a chase of thirty-four hours, ill which eight of the privateer's guns were thrown overboard. The ship (or schooner, by some accounts) Or- htiido, of two hundred and eighteen tons, eiglit guns, and seventy-five men, Captain J. Babson, returned to Gloucester, August 28, 1S12, after a successful cruise, in which she haended larg(dy on America for ])rovisions. High l)rices for such supplies tem^dcd many of our mer- chants not only to run the risk of capture and con- fiscation of their cargoes, but to brave the odium of their fellow-countrymen. Many cargoes were sent from the i)orts of the United States to Halifax and thence to Spain, and tliough some of them got safely to their destination, yid tlu^ vigilance of our cruisers and privateersmen causoston ostensibly from Kenn(d>unk, but on in- vestigati(»n it was shown that she came from Hali- fax. The sloop was seizture made by tlu' little 2-gun American schooner Tiazcr, manned b}' fifty 242 1812-1813. ILLEGAL SEIZURE OP " LICENSED VESSELS." 243 men. This vessel recaptured the fine, newly co])- pered American ship Mdrt/arcf, which had Ix'en taken by the British war schooner J*Jiiuipcr, ('ai)tain lii-av. The Munjarei had sailed from Liveri)ool bcd'ore it was known that war between the United States and Eiijj,- land had broken ont. She was laden with ji valu- able cargo of earthenware and ironnioninery, besides havin<»- on b<»ard thirteen thousand bushels of salt, the ship and car^o beinjn' worth fifty thousand dol- lars. On fallinji- in with the I^lHitiprr, a British prize master and twcdve men were placed in (diari;e of the }f(ir(/(inf, with orders to make for Halifax. Captain Bray seems to have followed a i)ractice whiidi was lar<»ely indul^ged in earh' in the war by British commanders on the North American station. In order to evade the embargo a number of Ameri- can vessels hastened to Lisbon with cargoes of i)ro- visions for the allied British and Si)anisli armies, whiidi were sold at i^reat profit. As these provi- sions, at that time, were very difficult to ritish licenses " to all American ves- s(ds ens;ai;ed in this trarotection. It was deemed un]»atriotic for Americans to avail themsidves of sue h licenses, but neverthidcss a number of our mer- ( hants made the venture, while others sent cargoes without the protcM-tion of licens<'S. British cruisers wei-e especially watchful for the latter class, and in some instances did not scru]»le to seiz<^ the cash in vessels returning from the P(Miiusula with a liritish license. An American ])a])er of ISlo notes that '' fif- teen or tw(Mity sciiii-.\ inrricdii vess(ds with British licenses have been coiuhunned at Bermuda. A grand double speculation of the enemy; in first selling the 244 "BRITISH LICENSES" AND REVENUE CUTTERS. 1812-181:1 licenses, aud then making good prizes of tliose tliat had them! " The commander of the PI inn per was particnlarly snccessful in this line of work. He took from eight to ten of onr merchantmen. L^roni one of them he helped himself to two thonsanlanublished in a Baltimore paper under date of April 10, ISlo: '' A 2-t6 "BRITISH LICENSES" AND REVENUE CUTTERS. 1812-1813. iiniiibcr of Britisli seamen, from thirty to fifty, have lately escaped from the [British blockadiiiii] squad- ron. One poor ftdlow had not been on shore for thirteen years, dnriiii;' which time he had never re- ceived one cent of i)ay or prize money." Some of the other prizes made by the Taizcr were the bri«>' Ann, which was sent in, and the bri<;' Peter, from New- castle for Halifax, with a full car<;'o of British mer- chandise, which arrived safely in Portland in the latter part of Au<;nst, 1812. In all the Teazer cap- tured two ships, six brigs, and six schooners, all but one reaching;' port.' On July 21), 1813, the l»resident ordered all our navy oftlcers to exercise the greatest vigilance in capturing American vessels engaged, or suspected of being engaged, in carrying provisions to the enemy. On August 5, 1813, the Secretary of War directed that " all officers of the army of the United States commanding districts, forts, or fortresses are commanded to turn back, and, in case of any attempt to evad(^ this order, to d(4ain all vessels, or river or bay craft, which may be suspected of proceeding to or communicating with, any station, vessel, squad- ron, or fleet of the enemy within the waters of the United States."- In September, 1813, the Anieri- <'ans fitted out the thn^e-masted vessel Tiuiofhj/ Pick- er'uifi at (lloucester to cruise after " licensed ves- sels'." Aii<»ther instance of the respect with which Eng- lish officers treat(Ml American vessels protected by British licenses is had in the following account pub- lished in a Boston paper August 4, 1813: " The ship Fair Aniericaii, Uaptain Weathers, which arrived here Monday from Lisbon, was boarded on the 26th of July in latitude 42°, longitude (54° from his Bri- tannic INIajesty's frigate Maidstone, Captain Burdett, ' For the subsequent remarkable career of the Teazer, see preface. * C. K. Gardner, assistant adjutant-general. 1813. CAPTAIN BURDETT'S BRUTALITY. 247 after a clia.se of seventeen hours, and the following- particulars respectini>' the infamous treatment re- ceived from Captain liurdett were noted by the pas- sen<>ers, and are published at their request: 'At nine o'clock in the morninjj;- we were brought to and hailed by Captain Burdett, who stood in the main rigging, as follows: "Where are you from?" An- swer, " From Lisbon." '' Why did you not heave to and not run me so far out of my way?'' Answer, '*! understood there was a French squadron out, and I thought you might have been one of tliem." To which Burdett replied, " You have heard no such thing, sir. You are a liar — you ai-e a damned liar, sir — and your country are a damned set of liars — ,you are a nation of liars! " and repeated tlu* same several times over, lie then continued, " I will cut ycnir cabin to pieces. Lower your topsail down, sir! Get a bag of dollars ready to pay for the shot I have hove at you — they were the king's shot, sir. You are an enemy, sir " (twice I'epeated), " for you have no license from my (lovernment, sir, or you would not have run away from me." Tie then repeated over several of the above blackguard expressions, and ordered Captain Weathers to come on board with his papers, which he (Munplied with, and while there was grossly insulted Avith the foulest language.' " " The brig DcspatcJi,"' records a contemporary ])erio(lical, " a licensed vess(d belonging to Boston, was captured on the coast by the privateer (\isti- arties in that stag<'. The privateersmen were held under recognizance by the State courts." One of thes(^ men proved to b(^ an ^' alien enemy," and was seized by a marshal and lodged in the guard ship to the end of the war. The (Ui.stif/dtor also took the Lir(f])lace, the mauazine being bxdved and the key bidnu in a drawer in the cabin. The only other ])erson of the vesscd's complement who had any business with this key, besides the captain and Lieut(Miant l*hili]»s, was the i^i'unner, and he was known to hav(» been on deck at tlu^ time of the dis- aster. No satisfactory explanation rctended to be sailing nnder Eng- lish colors, and kept \\]> the delusion so W(dl that the commandei' of the Tulip was satished that the Atlas was an l^nglish and not an Ann^'ican privateer. Acting on this belief, Ca])tain Monk said that he onght not to be (brained, as he had disitatidies from " Mr. Foster," anapers," said Captain Maffitt, "■ are quite satisfactory; and now, instead of sending yon into a IJi'itish ])ort, I will senly the British armies [in SpainJ with tlonr, etc., nnder British licenses, and we were in liopes that tlie iiii^ennity, ent(^rprise, and manaj;einent of onr i>rivateersinen wouhl discover tlu^ traitors wlio w(M-e tlius adherin.n to our enemies, givin<»- them aid and comfort. Captain Matlitt deserves and will have the thanks of his fidlow-citizens for the adroit- ness and jnd!j,inent with which he ca]»tured the Tiiiipr ('oiiliiiiiin;!; his ciaiise after his interception of the Tiilij), (^iptain .Maffitt, at half past ei,<;lit o'(do(dc on the morniini of An^nst oth — or two weeks before the first frijuate action of the war — discovered tw(^ sails to tlie west staiulinii- northeast, and he im- mediately ta(ke west. An hour later she tacked north- ward, and wIkmi satistied lu^ had merchantmen to deal with Captain Maftitt IxMt to (piarters and < leai-elay of the r"^nited States ensijiii on the Pluiitcr could t^asily have been resorted io by an I^lniiilish frij^ate as a ruse for de- coyinj.^ the privateer uiKh'r her i;uns, Captain ^faffitt kept on his course and _naine Ocra- coke luhd, North Carolina, where he found the 18- gun privateer Anurtally hurt in much the same way. He fell to the deck near where Captain Slialer was standing, and re(]ueste(l that lu^ might b(^ thrown oyerboard, so that his body would not encumber the working of the guns. F(n' half an hour the (rorcmoi- l^mipl-'uis' was sub- jected to tliis d(\structiye fire. At the end of that tiuK^ she began to draw ahead (►f llie frigate and the enemy's shot gradually fell short. At half past four, howeyer, the wind died away, but tln^ English ship still hcdding a good breez(% her shot again began to tly un])leasantly round the ears of the Americans. ('a]ttain Shaler now relieyed his s(diooner of all the lumber on her deck and threw oyerboard some two thousand pounds of shot from the after hold. He then got out his sweeps, and, set- ting all hands to work, gradually dre^y away from "one of the most quarrelsome com])anions that I ever met," as he grimly expressed it. 258 CAPTAINS MAPFITT AND SHALER. 1812-1814. IMiidiiij; that lie was steadily losing groimd, the English ship, at 5.25 i'. m., hove about and returned tuenos Ayres, and had on board two hun- dred and fifty bales of drygoods, two hundred anossession of tlic AiKicoiidd without oi>]>osition. The guns of tlial vessid wei-e now turned u])on the Attas, and ('a])tain Maflitt, seeing tlx' uselessness of I'csistance, surrenderiMl. Elaled with tlieir easy ca]»ture of these two formidable ])rivateers, the enemy advanced against the viUage of Portsmouth, seizing that ])lace, and were pre])ai-ing to attack New Berms wIkmi they leai'ued that vigorous measui'es wrizes Ca])tain Nicoll, on July l!)th, while off Cape North, fell in with the United States 44-gun frigate r)-(si(l(iit, Cai)tain John liodgers, and cruised in h<^r com]>auy some tim(\ A number of British vessels sailing to and from Archangel were secured, most of them being sent into Norwegian jxn-ts. Soon after ]»arting from the /'resident tlu^ i^eoiirfje UK't the l\(ilflesii(il-i\ and, having a number of i)rison- ers aboard, both ]>rivateers ran into Drontheim, whei-e Cai>tain Nicoll went ashore to attend to the sale of his ])rizes, while the Seoiii-f/e was refitted and went to sea, in th(^ following si)ring, under the com- mand of her tirst ofHcc^i', J. K. Perry. This was on March 10, 1S14, aiul on A])ril 1st, while off Cape ' S(H- pat^cs '2n.")-3()0. 1814. THE WELL-NAMED SCOURGE. 2H,'', Wrath, the privateer took the ^jimmcirji, a fine vessel from Liverpool, coppered, and laden with salt, crates, hardware, etc. This vessel was in company with the ship Wuichcshr and the brip; ViiUni, both of which were soon taken by the nimble i(»ods, Captain Perry burncMl the vessels and ]>lac<'d the ])risoners aboard a Swedish ship. The ScoHi-fic hovered on the English coast some time. On Ai)ril 7th she (diased a (IreiMiland whaler and fired ten broadsides into her, and undoubtedly would have ca])1ur(Ml her had not a sloo]) of war close inshore t^iven (diase. For six hours it was a hard run, but the ]trivateer finally escaped, althouoh she strained her foi'e-toi>mast. A week later, whih^ in a moderate brerizes, two of which had been destroyed, the other two being ordered into ])ort. Captain Brown at one time had been hotly ])nrsued by a P>ritish frigate, and, though effecting his escape, he had been obliged to throw overboard ten of his guns. Sub- seipK'utly he chased a vesscd whi(di he took to be a merchnutman, and did not discover she was a sloo]) of war until h(^ was close aboard, when she triced up lier ])orts and let go two broadsides at the /•'o.r. The privateer, although hit several times — one shot going through an arms (diest — managed to esca])e. The i^coiinjc sailes rtrscrcniiicc and Funic. In all, the RattleHnake took eighteen vessels. Captain Maffitt spent the winter of 1818 '14 in Enr(>p(% and early in the latter year we find him at La Kocludle, where, after wit- iH'ssing the marvelous i'Sca]K' of the Ida, as narrated in another chapter,^ he was blockaded by a British squadron. Escaping from that port, after the Ida got to sea, the Rattlrsiidlc was cajdninMl, June 3, 1814, by the British frigate Ili/prrioii. ' Soc chapter xv, Escape of tlie Ida. CHAPTER IV. PRIVATEERS OF RHODE ISLAND. ALTiiorh>()(l('(] Ydiilre, the YaiiJxrc JjOss, the Yanh'c AiiK'ricdii, and the Y at (dose quarters, the American marksmen in the tops opened an effective fire with their small arms. It was not long before the enemy's sails and rig- ging were cnt to pieces and their helmsman was shot at the wheel. This cansed some confusion in their ship, whi< h rapidly increased under the de- structive fire maintained by the Americans. About this time the Y(niJ{(r ran off a short distance and then luff(Ml across the stranger's bow, where a ter- rific raking broadside was d(divered, whicdi, followed up with a shower of musket balls, compelled the Englishman to surrender. The i>rize proved to be the British privateer Roi/al Jioinifi/, Captain Henry Gambles, a splendid vess(d of six hundred and fifty- eight tons — about four times as large as the Yankee — mounting ten guns, but manned by only twenty- five men. It was probably owing to the circumstance of her being short-handed that she yielded so soon as she did. Captain Wilson displayed true mettle in atta(d-:ing such a formidal)le-looking ship when he was necessarily ignorant of her condition. The Yanl-ec's complement consisted of one hundred and twenty officers and men. The Roi/al Bounfji was seven weeks out from Hull in ballast, bound for Prince Edward Island. In this action the Americans had three men wounded, while their sails and rigging were some- what damaged. The English craft had two men killed and seven wounded, among the latter being 1812. SECOND CRUISE OP THE YANKEE. 2H7 thoir coinniander and one or two of his officers. The hull, sails, and rigi>ing of the Roj/al Bouufj/ were cut to pieces and all her boats were shattered, more than one hundred and fifty heavy shot having struck her. With charact(U'istic kindness the American com- mander, on hearing of the casualties in his prize, sent his surgeon aboard to attend to the enemy's wounded. Transferring the prisoners to his own ship, Captain Wilson placed a pi'ize crew in the Ixoi/al Boinifj/ and ordered her to an American i>ort. Con- tinuing her cruise the Yanhr captured several other British vessels — the most valuable being the Elizd Aim, from Liverpool, with a full cargo of British goods, which was sent into Boston, August 2Gth — and tluMi returned to port. About the middle of October, 1812, the Yaiihv sailed on her second cruise, still undei' the command of Captain Wilson. This time* the privateer steered for the west coast of Africa, and was not long in making known her arrival. Her first " appi'o])ria- tion *' was the British sloop }fari/ Ami, Cai)tain Sutherland, a coppered vessel from London, carry- ing four guns and eleven men. The Englishmen did not have an op])ortunity to resist, and were taken aboard the i)rivateer as prisoners. The Mart/ Ann was found to have on board gold dust, ivory, and camwood to the value of twenty-eight thousand dol- lars, which were taken aboard the Ydiihr and then the sloop was burned. The next prize was another coppered vessel, the schooner Aider, Captain Crow- ley, from Liverpool, carrying six 9-pounders and twenty-one men. Tln^se people made a stubborn de- fens(% but on the blowing up of their quarter-deck, by which their commander and six of his crew were killed, they surrendered. The Alder had in her hohl four hundred casks ^]i(nni(>n, whi( h had been appraised by Cai)tain AMlson at only thirty-four thousand dollars, had realized sixty-seven thousand hve hundred and twenty-one dollars. But the thrifty Yniihcr could not long remain in port, and soon after settling her accounts, and after giving herself a little brushing up, she ]nit to sea again at seven o'( lotk on the evcMiing of ]May 20, 1813, this time under the command of Captain Elisha Snow. It was knoAvn to Captain Snow that an Eng- lish frigate and a 14-gun brig of war were waiting for him in the neighborlKXHl of Block Island, but under cover of night he succ(H^ded in giving the cruisers the slip, and was again in blue water. Two days after leaving port the Yd'ulrr captured the Brit- isli brig ^YiUianl and ordered her in, but unfortu- natelv the latter fell into the clutches of the friaate 270 PRIVATEERS OP RHODE ISLAND. 181:3. whicb the Ydiilrc had cliKhMl. On llio day he took the Will ia lit Captain Snow fell in with a Portn<>nese schooner, and after parolini^' the men he had taken ont of his prize he placed them aboard the l*ortu- o'uese and resumed his cruise. On May 30th the Yaiihc came across the Encjlish brio- Thames, the second vessel bearino- that name which she had met dnrinj;- her career in this war. The TJkiiiic^ carried fourteen iiuns, but was manned by only twenty men. Neyertheless the Britons made a oaHant fij;ht, and it was not until after an action of more than an hour that they could b(^ induced to sur- ren(U^r. She was sent into J*ortland, where the brig and caro'o of more than two thousand bales of cot- ton were sohl for one hundred and ten thousand dol- lars, (^n June 3d the ]n'iyateer overhauled a Portu- guese briii' from New York, and ('a])tain Snow placed in her the ofticers and men of the Tliaiiics, after they had ii'iyen their promise not to serye aj^ainst the United States ajiain in this war. By the middle of Juno ('a])tain Snow was near- inii' the coast of Ireland, and on the 22(1, when in si^lit of land, he ca]>tured the slooj) Earl Camden, of oiu' hundred and ten tons, yalued at ten thousand dollars, which was ordered to I'^rance. Eight days later, while still in sight of the Irish coast, he took the English brig Elizahetli, of one hundred and fifty- six tons, lad(Mi with cotton estimated to be worth eighty thousand dollars, Ayhilit of the coast, the Yankee on the following day seized the brij;- Mariner, laden with rum and su.ii'ar to the value of seventy thousand dollars, whi(di was ordered to France. The officers and crew of this i>riz(% after beino- paroled, were i)lac(Hl in a boat and permitted to land. The whereabouts of the mischievous Yankee were now so w
that it recpiired a hot fight of thirty- five minutes before^ she could ])revail ui)on the Paris to surrender. The prize had a valuable cargo, which was transferred to the i)rivateer. The I\iris was i\nn\ mainuMl and ordered to an American port, but soon afterward she was reca])tured. All of these vess N/r Ifinjli '/ones, from Bel- fast for (}uadeloui)e, whi( h was divested of her valu- able cargo and ordered in; th<' ship Herri/ <'tain Snow had divested the vessel of her cargo of barilla and wine; the brig Marui Wu-iikiii, from Havana for Scot- land; and the ship Sun Josr fnd'uiiKi, from Liverpool for Rio Janeiro. The last v(^ssel was of enormous value, and on being taken into Portland the gross receipts from the sale of the shi]> and cai-go was nearly six hundred thousand dollars. The owners of the Yitnlxcc received as their share of the jn'otits nearly a (piarter of a million dollai-s, while not a boy in the YanJ:c(' got less than seven hundred dol- lai's. ('ai)tain Snow r(M-(4ved for his ]>ortion fifteen thousand seven hundred and eighty-nine dollars, while the negro waiters in the cabin, Cuffee ('o(dv- roach and Jack Jibsheet, received one thousand one hundred and tweiity-oiu' dollars an\ which liad a car^o of jerked beef, was oiven up to the prisoners. The (Unniniji was taken into New Bedford, and on sale realized seventy thou- sand dollars. The (hncyuJ M'cllcsli'i/ was a splendid vess(d of six hundred tons, built in the strongest pos- sible manner of teak wood, newlv coppered, and fitted with all the imi>rovements then known. She carried an armament of sixteen onus and a crew of thirty-six Englishmen and fifty Lascars, and it was only after a runninji' fight of several hours that the Ydiilyc finally captured her. The prize was from London for Calcutta, and consequently was well stocked with misc(dlan(M)us ai'ticles, a jiart of her cargo consisting of eighteen tliousand bars of iron. As this ])rize was worth at least two humlred and fifty thousauil dollars, an unusually strong prize crew was placed aboard her under the orders of James jM. Blum, with instructions to make for Charleston, South Carolina. Unfortunatidy, while endeavoring to enter the harbor, the (iriicnil Wrllci^- Jvjj struck on the bar and became a total wreck — all of her original crew, besides two of th(^ Americans, ])erishing. From these six cruises of the Ydiilcc it will be seen that her record was an unusual one. She had laken altogether nine shii»s, tAyenty-five brigs, fiye schooners, and one sloo]), making in all forty ves- sels ca]>tured from the liritish. She had seized or destr(>yed property to the value of five million dol- lars, and had sent into Brist(d alon<^ one million dollars' worth of goods. Ecjually successful and even more remarkable than the career of the Yauhc was that of the True 1813. THE TRUE BLOODED YANKEE SAILS. 275 Blooded Yaiilre. This vessel, altlioui^li fitted out in France, is entitled to a place anions" " those ' Yan- kees ' of llhode Island," inasmuch as she was fitted out by a Mr. Preble, a Khode Islander, then living in Paris, She was a French brii;-, carryinm' sixteen guns, and had been captured by the English and taken into their navy shortly before the war with the United States broke out. Afterwarermitted to S(^arch through the })risons in the ho])e of inducing sailors to serve in the privattMM*. A number of men were thus secured, as they were glad to exchange their dreary confinement for a life full of adventure and ])ronnse of large financial rewards. Among thes(^ ])risoners was an Englishman mnned John Wiltshire, who had been in a I'reiudi dungeon three years. Hearing that an American ])rivateer was being fitted out, ht^ de- clared hims(df to be an American citizen, and ac- cording! v was released and allowed to enlist in the 27(> PRIVATEERS OF RHODE ISLAND. 1818. 'rnic liloodcd Ydiikcc. lie was oue of the iiieu detailed to act as a jvart of the prize crew of the Margaret. The M(tr(/arlit of the priva- teer when she was recaptured by the British cutter Niiiii-()(l, and her ])rize crew made prisoners. Wilt- sliire was recognized as an English subject and was promptly hanged. Continuing his cruise along the coast of Ireland, (^aptain Hailey took prizes daily, and on one occa- sion he seized an island near the enemy's mainland and held it for six days, until he had made necessary r(q)airs, when he resumed his cruise. He returned to Brest in thirty-seven days, having in that time made two hundred and seventy prisoners and secured enormously valuable cargoes. Among the goods stowed in the hold of the T)nc Blooded Yaiil-ee were eighteen bales of Turkish carpets, forty-three bales of raw silk, (\V(Mi1y boxes of gum, twenty-four packs of beaver skins, (^tc., sliowing that every (juarter of the globe had contributed to the wealth of the pri- vateersmen. Sailing from h^rance again. Captain ITailey made a rapid circuit of Ireland and Scotland. He landed several times and held small towns for a ransom, and on one occasion he burned seven ves- sels in an Irish ixn-t. In May he had the audacity to run into the harbor of Dublin, where he sank a schooner that had (duded him the day before. Again returning to h"ranc(% the True Blooded Yankee disposed of \\eY i)rizes and their cargoes at great ]>r(tfit. On September ?)0, 1S13, the following notice, copi(Ml from a Paris newspa])er, dated September 25th, was p(»sted in Lloyd's Coffee House, London: '' The True lilooded Yaithe, American privateer, has been completely refitted for sea, manned with a crew of two hundred men, and sailed from Brest the 21st inst. supposed for the i)urpose of cruising in the British Channel. Uer orders are to sink, burn, and destroy, and not t<> capture with the intention of 1812-1814. OTHER "YANKEES" OF RHODE ISLAND. 277 (•urryiiii;' into port/' These orders were faithfully carried out, an imuieuse amount of damage beiuir intlicted on British eommeree at the hands of this " Yankee " scourge. It was on this eruise that the Truv Blooded Ymil-cc was finally captured, she having* at the time only thirty-two men out of her original comi)lement of two hundred, the rest having been drawn off to form prize crews for vesstds captured from the enemy. The privateer and her people were taken to (libraltar, where they were contined until the close of the war. In all the True Jiloodcd Yaiilrc took six shii)s and twenty-one smaller craft, one of her prizes being worth four hundred thousand dollars. Of the other " Yankees of IJliode Island," of which mention has been made, there remains little to re- cord. The Ydiil-ir Lrivateers, on one (u-casion at least, felt the full force of tlK-ir broadsides. Captain Boyle began his extraordinary career in this war in the privateer CoiHcl, of lialtimore. Several of our privateers had boi'ue this name in the struggle for independence, and had met with considerable success, so it is not surjirising that we find one of the most successful jn-ivatc ai-nied craft in the second war with Great Britain bearing this lucky name. Before hostilities broke out this vesscd, a stanch schooncu*, had been engaged in the mercdiant service, and, like all mer- chantmen of her (dass in those troublous times, she had been constructed quite as much with a view to s]»eed and fighting as stowing away cargo. The (/oiiicf had been selected for the privateer service because of her s])lendid sailing qualities and her ability to carry a heavy armament. In hov first cruise, which began in July, 1812, she had a des])erate engagement with tlie British mer- chantman I/oprinU, a ship of four hundred tons, carrying fourteen guns and a crew of twenty-five nuMi. She was from Surinam bound for London, laden with seven hundi'iMl and ten hogsheads of sugar, fifty-four hogsheads of molasses, one hundred and eleven bales of cotton, and two liundred and sixty bags and casks of coffee and cocoa — a prize well worth fighting for. The vessels quickly came to close (pmrters, and the English surrendered only after one of their number had been killed and six wounded — nearly a third of the crew. The Hopeirell, with her cargo, was valued at one hundred and fifty 1813. PRECAUTIONS OF THE ADMIRALTY. <-2^l tlionsand dollars. She had been one of a squadron of five vessels that had left Snrinani, the Ilopcndl having become s(^parated from her consorts two days before her captnre. Another of the Coiiicf.^ valnable prizes was the ship Henri/, of fonr hnndred tons, co]>})ered to the bends and monnting four 12- pounders and six G-ponndei's. She was from St. Croix bonnd for London, and had on board sev(m hnndred hogsheads of sngar and thirteen ])i])es of old Madeira Avine, the vess(d and <-ar<;<> netting hov captors more than one hnndred tlionsand dollai's. The Coiiict also took the shi]> JoJiii, of fonr hnndred tons, carrying fourteen guns and a crew of thirty- live men, from Demerara for Liverpo(d. She was laih'n with cotton, sugar, rnni, ami coffee, besides a large quantity of old copper and dyewood, the en- tire cargo and vesscd being worth at least one hun- dred and fifty thousand dollars — fifty thousand dol- lars of which went into the Treasury of the United States in the form of bounty. Tn one of his prizes Captain lioyle found a copy of " Kecommendations by their Loi'dships of the Ad- miralty," whi(di shows what extraordinary measures were res(»rted to by the English to check the dread- ful ravages wrought by American cruisers and pri- valei'i's on British commerce: ''The Lords Commis- sioners of the Admiralty re^'ommend that all mas- ters of !'ier(diant vessels do supply themselves with a (piantity of false fires, to give the alarm on the a])]>roach of an enemy's cruiser in the night, or in the day io make the usual signals for an enemy being cliased by or discovering a suspicious vessel; and, in I lie event of their capture being inevitable, either by night or by day, the mastei'S do cause their gears, ti-usses, and halyai-ds to be cut and unrove, and their vess(d to be otherwise so disabled as to ])revent their being immediately capable of making sail.'' The (Uniicl returned from her first cruise in No- 21 2S2 CAPTAIN THOMAS BOYLE. 1812-1813. vember, 1812, and hasty preparations were made to refit and get her to sea again, A strong force of British war ships bhu-ked Cliesapeake Bay so com- pletely that it was some weeks before Captain Boyle ventured to rnn the gantlet. The night of Decem- ber 2;?, 1812, coming on dark and boisterous. Cap- tain Boyh^ (juietly ])assed the word round that the attem])t would be made that evening. Accordingly, soon after dark, the scdiooner slipped her moorings and sped rapidly down the bay. F(»r several hours it seemed as if the venture would be entirely suc- cessful, for no trace of a British war craft was to be found, but shortly before daylight the Comet re- ceived a broadside from a frigate which the thick weather had concealed from view. Little or no at- tention was inud to this, and the privateer slipped out to sea with only a little rigging damaged and one spar hurt. The last was soon fished, and with repaired rigging the (Umict headed south, and in two weeks was oft' Cape St. Kcxpie, and on Januai\y 1), 1813, appeared oft' Pernambuco. On that day Captain Boyle spoke a trading vessel just out of the port, and learned that in a few days some English vessels were about to sail, with valu- able cargoes. This determined him to hover in that vicinity and make a dash for ])rizes. On the 11th he s])oke llie Poi'tuguese brig Wnsa, from St. Micdiael for rernambuco, and then stood on and off shore, maintaining a careful wat(di for any indication of the vesscds leaving the harbor. At one o'clock on the af- ternoon of January 11th his vigilance was rewarded by the discov(^ry of four sails standing out of the harbor. They proved to be a ship and three brigs. Instead of making directly for them, the privateer stood away so as to give them an opportunity to get an offing where it would be easier to cut them out. I>y thr(M^ o'( lo( k the vessels were upon the wind, standing southeast about thirty-six miles from land. 1813. BATTLE WITH A PORTUGUESE CRUISER. 288 This was the time for the privateer to strike, and, bearing np, she made all sail in chase. Bj live o'clock the splendid sailing qualities of the American schooner had enabled her to draw up on the enemy very fast, and by six o'clock their lead had so de- creased that Captain Boyle was able to make them out clearly. But just about this time the fourth sail was discovered to be a large man-of-war brig. Tliis was an unexpected result of the chase; for Cap- tain Boyle had been informed, through reliable sources, that no English war craft was in port, so that when he saw four instead of three sails com- ing out he su]>posed that another nuM'chant vessel had joined the squadron, which would only make his capture the more valuable. The announcement that the fourth vessel was a heavy war brig soiiKnvhat disconcerted his plan of action, which was to close on the merchantmen under cover of night aiul take them one after another. Captain Boyle, however, was not a man to be frightened off by a few cannon, and although he was aware that the merchantmen were well armed, and were capable of giving the war brig material assistance, he called all hands, cleared the decks for action, and, loading his cannon with round and grape shot, boldly stood for the cruiser. By seven o'clo(dv the Coiuvt had gained a position close abeam the brig when the American colors were Iioisted. The brig responded witli Portuguese colors, ami her commander hailed and said that he would send a boat aboard. Anxious to discover if the stranger really were a Portuguese, and, if such, what lier obj(M-t could be in sailing as an escort to English merchantmen. Captain Boyle hove to. Soon a boat ])ut off from the side of the brig and came along- side the CoHicf, and an officer, dressed in Portuguese uniform, ste])ped aboard. He reported that the brig was a regular war shi]) of the PortugiU'se Covcru- ment, carrying a crew of one huudi-ed and sixty-five men and mounting twenty 32-pounders — doubtless 284 CAPTAIN THOMAS BOYLE. 1813. an exaggeration made to intimidate tlie privateers- men. The Comet carried fonrteen guns, and had a crew of abont one hundred and twenty men. The officer furthermore said that the three vessels in the brig's company were English, and, being under the protection of the brig, must not be molested by the privateer, ("aptain Boyle replied that his ship was an American cruiser, and as such he had a right to at- tack the English vessels, and that if the Portuguese attempted to interfere the Comet would open with her guns. In order that there should be no misunder- standing in the case. Captain Boyle insisted upon the officer seeing his papers from the American Govern- ment authorizing the Comet to capture English ves- sels. Captain Boyle then informed the officer that the ])rivateer would capture the merchantmen if she could; that tlie^^ were upon the high seas, the com- mon highway of all nations; that the Portuguese brig had no right to interfere, and that the oc(niu, of right, b(d(»nged to America as much as any other power in the world. To this tln^ Portuguese replied that he would be sorry if anything disagreeable took place; that his brig had received orders to protect the merchant vessels, and Avould do so at any hazard. Captain l>oyle saioyle rtqilied that he did not make a })ractice of sending his boat away at night, and wonld not do so in this case. lie then avowed his determination of attaidcing the English vessels at once. He said this with such distinctness as to leave no (diance for him to be misunderstood. The Coiiict a<-cordingly began to forge ahead, and in a short time came up with the ship and ordered her peo])le to back their main topsail. Having too mnch head- way Captain Boyle drew ahead of the ship, but find- ing that little or no attention was paid to his order he shonted that he wonld be alongside again in a few minntes, and if by that time his order were not obey(Ml he wonld ponr a broadside into them. Trne to his word, Captain Boyle a few minntes later, or at abont half past eight, tacked, with the Tortnguese man-of-war close after him, and ran alongside the shij*. ]>y that time one of the mer- chant brigs also was (dose to the ship, and the Coiiwt opened fire on both of them. All the vessels at the time were carrying a press of sail, bnt the ])rivateer, from her superior sailing (pialities, was obliged to ta( k frequently in order to keej) her place at (dose (piarters. About this time th(^ Portuguese man-of- war o]>ened fire with round and gra]>(^ shot, to whiidi the ('(hiicI re])lied with her long torn and broadside guns. Tlu^ bright moonlight enabled the gunners to take good aim; but in a short time smdi volumes of smoke collected around the vessels that it was diflicult to distinguish one vessel from another. This Mas a circumstance that operated greatly in favor of the Americans, for th(\v were sure of hitting an enemy no matter which vessel their shot struck, 286 CAPTAIN THOMAS BOYLE. 181:5. while the Eiii;lisli and rortnguese soon became con- fused by the smoke, and were unable to distinguisli between friend and foe. Caring nothing about the Portuguese except to keep him at a distance, Captain Boyle tenaciously held a position close to the British merchantmen and kept u]) a heavy fire on them. The English ves- sels ut as Cap- tain Boyle was ab(Hit to take ])ossession of the latter the lN»rtuguese man-of-war tired a broadside which came near sinking the boat in whi(di the boarding l)arty was ])roce(Mling to the ]>rize and compelleoyle tluMi devoted all his attention to the man-of-war, and after some heavy tiring induced her to sIkm^' ofl*, the privateer following and cai>turing the third English vessel, which, like its consorts, was badly cut uj). lint the victory of the Americans was still far from being assurepl)ortunity. I-'ully aware of his danger, Captain Boyle hastened to take ])()Ssession of his second l)rize, the merchant brig, but in doing so passed the ship and ordered hei- command^' to follow. The Englishmen then called out that their ship was in a sinking condition, having many shot holes between wind and water and with nearly all their rigging cut away. They intimated, howcnei*, that they would carry out the order with all possible dis])at(di. At half past one in the morning the Americans took 1818. BATTLE WITH A PORTUGUESE CRUISER. 287 possession (►f the iiierclumt brii;- and placed a prize crew aboard. The Portugueses however, foHowed the Comet (dosely, eiideavoriui;' to prevent her from securiuii' the other vessels. This compelhMl (''a])tain Boyle to tire an occasional broadside at the cruiser, so as to keep them at a more respectful distance. At one time they tired into the brii;' held by the Ameri- cans, but could not induce the prize crew to sur- n^nder. By two o'(do(dv the moon was down, and, as tln^ weather blew up squally, ('a])taiu Boyle became sei)arated from his prizes. Tlu^ Portu<2,uese man-of- war at that time was standinu,- southward in the direction of tlu^ prize bri*»' and ship and was soon lost to view. Captain Boyle now deemed it prudent to remain until daylii»'ht by his prize, whi(di proved to be the briii,' Jioircx. T^rom the master of this ves- sel it was learned that tlu^ other vessels of the con- voy were laden with wlieat. l*'oi' the remainder of the night the (Utiiicl kept near her j)rize, and as day began to dawn the Por- tuguese man-of-war was rom])tly hove about and stood for lun', when the war brig tacdvod an and second brig seemed to Im' in a very distressed condition, ('a])tain ]>oy]e determined not to take possession of them, but to wat(di tlijC'ii' maneuver's. P»oth of them bore u]) before the wind, making for land in com])any with the man-of-war, the last a])i)earing to be much dam- aged. The Americans followed the three crii)i)led shi])S, and could see that extraordinary exertions were being made to keep the shi]) and tlu^ brig alloat. \<'\{\\ great difticulty the tlire(> vessids gained the harbor of Pi^'nambuco; tlie shi]), whicdi ])rov(Ml to be the ^/rore/r, ('a])tain AMlson, of Liverpool, with liei- masts tottering and her cai*go destroyed so that she had to be dismantled; and the brig, the (iainhlu, 288 CAPTAIN THOMAS BOYLE. 181S. Captain i^iuitli, of Hull, in niucli the same plight. The man-of-war was seriously damaged, besides liav- inf^' lier first lieutenant and live men killed and a number wounded. Anioui:,' the latter was her com- mander, who had his thigh shattered by a cannon ball and died shortly after reaching Pernambuco. Several American gentlemen, a few months after this action, happened to be in Lisbon when this man- of-war brig was there. They visited her, and re- I)orted that she was " a very large vessel, with high bulwarks and a very formidable battery.'' Scarcely had the Portuguese gained the harbor of Pernambuco with her crippled convoy when Cap- tain Boyle, with his rich prize, was again scouring the high seas in search of British merchantmen. He soon had the good fortune to seize the Scotcdi ship Add phi, of Aberdeen, of thirty-six tons, from Liver- pool l)ound for Baliia. She was laden with salt and drygoods, and, although W(dl manned and armed with eiglit long 12-pounders, her commander made no serious resistance. The prize was manned and ordered to the United States. Subsequently the Comet was chased by the British frigate l>!iirpr}fie, whi(di was justly regarded as being one of the swift- est vess(ds on the station. By superior seauianship Captain lioyle effected his escape and c(nitinued his successful cruise in the West Indies. At daylight I'\d)ruary (>, 181:*, while some twelve miles off the island of St. John's Captain Boyle dis- covered tw(> brigs to leeward and made all sail in chase of them. The nearest ci-aft was soon made out to be armed, and Captain Boyh^ sent his men to quarters. By six o'clock this brig hoisted English colors, tir(Ml a gun, but, < deserving that she was in the ])resence of a vesscd of superior force, ])rom])t- ly haul(Ml down her flag. She was the Ah'.tis, of (h'e(Mio(k, from Demerara, laden with sugar, rum, cotton, and coffee. Placing a ^\v. Ball and six men aboard, and receiving most of the prisontM-s in the A FUTILE TRICK. 289 ai)tain Eoylo ordercnl lier to the United id made sail for the secoud brig. By eij^^ht third brig, apparently a war ship, was dis- aiiding to the southeast. From his prisou- ,,, u Boyle learned that these vessels were V (;t a convoy of nine sail that had left Deme- x\ Thomas some days before, and that most '■'■■ ,-. .,, ,>;1 got into i)ort tlie preceding night, but liiiif the U' in-of-war tlien in sight, and named the > „././f/T>-, with two brigs, had failed to mak(^ the harbor. Learning this, (''ai)tain Boyle prepared to give the brig he had been chasing a broadside as he passed her, hoping to compel Iwv to surrender before the man-of-war could aid her. At nine o'clo(dc the (Umid showed her colors, and being nearly up with the chase received the enemy's fire, which was promptly returned. The effect of this was to induce tlie Eng- lishmen to surrender, but before the Americans could \i:vi aboard the British master, in pursuance with the "recommendations" of the Admiralty, al- ready noted, caused liis topsail and jib Imlyards and other rigging to be cut away, in addition to tlie dam- age done by the American shot — whi(di was consid- erable — hoping thereby so to cri]>ple his shii) that it would be impossible for th<^ Americans to get her under suhicient sail to escape the man-of-war. Captain Boylo saw the trick, and prom])tly S(Mit IMrst Officer Cashell and several men aboai' himself, and then trnst to his skill and seamanshii) to escape. The reason for thns exposinjj,- his own vessel to cap- tnre was becanse thc^ ])rize had an nnnsnally valu- able carii'o. She was the packet Doiiiuiicd, of Liver- pool, from Demerara bound for St. Thomas, and was laden with rum, sn.i'ar, cotton, and coff'ee. Captain Boyle allowed the ^'^ir(i(/(/cirr to come within lonji;- ounshot of the (Uniict, when he put his vessel throuii'li a series of maneuvers, with a view to test the relative spcM'd of the tAvo vess(ds. Findini;- that he could easily outpoint and outsail the Euil;- lishman, he be!:;an to tantalize the Sirdf/i/crcr by sail- in.i;- under her nose, " at lon«;' balls," and temptin<2: her into the continuance of a hopeless chase, during- which time th(^ Doiniiiira was makiuii" the best of her way throuiih the passaju'e. Ca])tain Boyle kept up jliese tactics until about noon, when, seeini;' that his ]>rize was at a safe distanc<\ he headed the lUnnet northward so as to pass rounrivateer only afforded amnseinent for onr ofticers, and after coolly transferring the prisoners to his own ship and placin«>' Prize-Master Wild and six men aboard the Jaite, with instrnctions to li'o thronmh the i)assa<;e between Tortola and St. John's, Cap- tain IJovle leisnrely resnmed his conrse and soon ran his enraiied pnrsner ont of sioht. Findini;- that he was overburdened with ])rison- ers Captain l)oyle made for the United States, and on .Mar( h 17th, in spite of the vii;ilaiice of the British bhxdvading scpiadron, gained Chesapeake Ray and arrived in Baltimore. Some of the other ])rizes taken by the Coiiwf were the stdiooner Mcsscik/c); from the West Indies, laden with rnm and molasses, which was sent into Wilmington, North Carolina, and the VlijUitiit, a tender to tlu^ British admiral of the Wind- ward Island squadron, whi(di also was sent into Wil- mington. Nine of the vesstds taken by the (Unnct were divested of their most valuable articles and sunk, as tliere was too much risk in attem]>ting to send theiu into port. The (UdiivI, in 1814, had a fierce action with the 22-gun shi]) IllhcniUi, of eight liun- drcMl tons, having (»n board a large com]>lement of <»ft1cairs where she found one of her prizes. Being short of provisions her ])rize master asked foi- a su])ply. Instead of granting tlie request, the local autliorities seized her and gave hei' to the British. In all, the (Unnct is credited with tAventy- se\-en ]»rizes. So great had been the success of Captain Boyh* in tlie ('<»ii(i that soon after his return from his last 292 CAPTAIN THOMAS BOYLE. 1813-1814. ci'iiiso ho was j^laccd in coniinand of the formidable privateer (lidssciir, in whicdi craft he acdiieved his ♦greatest renown. Tins vessel ])robaVdy was one of the best eqnii)i)ed and manned i)rivateers that sailed in this war. She Avas familiarly called the Pride of lis Jdiiics and llicodorc; and the brigs Alhnilic and Amicus. The (liassciir brought into port forty-thre(^ ]n'isoners, having reh^ised on parole one huiulred and fifty. Captain Boyle's favorite cruising ground Avas in 1814. "SUPERB AUDACITY." 25)3 flic British Clianiiel and around the coasts of (Ircat ]>i'itain. lie seemed to act on the principU' which led Farraiiut to ininiovtal fame lialf a centnry later, namely: "The nearer yon i^et to yonr enemy the harder yon can strike." By thns '' bearding the lion in his den " the VJKissciir had some exceedingly nar- row escai)es, bnt always elnded the enemy by her tine sailing (jnalities and by the snperb andacity of her commander. At one time the private(n' was so near a British frigate as to exchange an effective broadside with her, and not long afterward she was conii)letely snrronnded by two frigates ami two brigs of war. In making a dash to escape, the (lias- snir received a shot from one of the frigates, whicdi wonnded three men, bnt in spite of the danger she finally elnded the enemy. The "• sn])erb andacity" of Captain Boyle has already been mentioned, not that it was peculiar to him, for it was sharef the English admirals — in the least invalidating j he blockade. To show the absurdity of these prixda- iiia lions, Ca])tain Boyle, while cruising in the Eng- lish Cliann(d, sent by a cartel to London the follow- ing i)roclamatiou, whi(di he "requested" to be l)osle// Tlioiiias Ji<)i/](\ Usi/iiirc, ('ohiiikiikIc)- of llic l*r'natc A)iii]dy ber- S(df witb a new boom, tbat tbe ca]>tain was treated vei-y jtolitely, tbat on Sunday be rts of St. Tjicia to cut out tbe trans]>ort Loid I'Jdoii, and ])r()bably A\'ould ba^'e (b)ne it but for tbe sloo]» oi' war WolrcriiK', wbi(di bove in si_iibt; tbat tbe (iHi.ssciir burned tAVO sloo]»s " in tbe face of tbe island " — pctssibly a West Indian form <»f tbe expi-ession " uiubM- tbeir noses" ; tbat sbe boisted tbe ^'ankee stri])es over tbe I>i'itisb ensiiiu "and ])layed many cui-ions pranks " ; and otlier com])laints in tbe same tenoi'. Tbe (iKissciir arrived in New Yoi'k fi-oiii licr Euro]»ean cruise in ()ct(dier, 1814. It was in bis last cruise in tbis war tbat ('a])tain Boyle gained bis greatest re])utation for (biring and success on tbe bigb seas. On Februai'v 2(1, ISIf), wben Ibe ('lidssciir was about tbirty-six miles to windward of Havana and some twelve miles from land, a scbooner was dis<'Overed, about eleven 20() CAPTAIN THOMAS BOYLE. 1815. o'clock ill llio morniiiii', to tho northeast, apparently rimnint^' before the wind. This was the English war schooner SI. Lairrciicc, Lientonant Henry Crannier (Jordoii, which, as we remember, was the American privateer Alias, Captain ])avioth vessels were scdiooners. When sighted by (''a])tain Boyle, the *S7. LairrciK-c was bearing im])ortant disjuitches and troops from lJear-Atly made sail in (diase, and soon disco\'ered the stranger to be a war craft hav- ing a convoy in com]>any, the latter being just dis- ceridble from the masthead. By noon the (^liassriir had ]> Sou jip. 3G0-2(;3. 1815. ACTION WITU THE ST. LAWRENCE. 207 licr efforts to carry a greater press of sail her fore- topmast was carried away. At the time this liap]>ene(l slie was about three mih'S ahead. Her ]>eo])le ])rom])tly ch'ared tiie wreck away and trimmed her sails sharp hy the wind. Owiiii;' to this accident the (iKissciir drew up on tlie chase very fast, and at one o'(do(dc the latter tired a stern uun and hoisted Eiiolish colors. As the stranii'er showed only tln-ee ports on the si(h' near- est to the (iKi.ssciir, ('ai)taiii Boyle mot the imju'essioii that she was a " rnnnini;' vessated serious fighting, the regular ])re])arations for battle were not ma(h'. At 1.2(» p.m. (he Clid.s.sciir was within pistol shot of tlu^ eneni}', when the latter suddenly triced n]t ten ])ort covers, showing that number of gnns and her rise, lie made the best of the situation and returned the enemy's tire with both cannon and mnsketry. Believing thai his best (diance for A'ictory was at close (piarters, Captain Boyle endeavored to board 298 CAPTAIN THOMAS BOYLE. 1815. in the smoke of liis broadside; but the Chasseur, having the greater speed at that moment, shot ahead under the stranger's lee. The latter put up his helm for the purpose of wearing across the privateer's stern, with a vieAV of pouring in a raking tire. Per- ceiving the enemy's object, Captain Boyle frustrated the maneuver by putting his helm up also. The Eng- lisliman now forged ahead and came within ten yards of the i>rivateer, the fire of both vessels at that time being exceedingly destructive. At 1.40 r. m. Cap- tain Boyle, seizing a favorable moment, put his helm to starboard and called on his men to follow him ab(nird the enemy. Just as the two vessels came to- g(4h(n' W. N. Christie, prize master, jumped aboard the stranger's deck, followed by a number of other Americans, but before they could strike a blow the English surrendin-ed. The Ht. La\n-vuv(\ according to British accounts, mounted twelve short 12-pounders and one long 9- pounder and had a complement of seventy-five men, besides a number of officers, S(ddi(n-s, and civilians as passengers, who were bound for the British s^puid- ron off New Orleans. According to the report of her commander she had six men killed and seventeen wounded, S(n'eral of them mortally. According to Ameri<-an accounts the English had fifteen killed and twenty-five wounded. The N^ Lainriicc was found to b(^ seriously injured in the hull, while scarcely a rope was left intact, such had been the nc<-uracy and rapidity of the C]iounders — ten of her (H-iginal sixteen 12-pounders having been thrown overboard when the privateer =5s 05 1815. ACTION WITH THE ST. LAWRENCE. 299 was chased by the British fri«;ate Bareosa. They were rephiced by the O-poiinders which had beeu taken from a prize. " From the number of hammocks, bedding', etc., found on board the enemy," said Captain Boyle, in his official report to one of the owners of the Chas- seur, George P. Stephenson, of Baltimore, " it led us to believe that many more were killed than were reported. The aS7. Lmrnnur lired double the weight of shot that we did. From her 12-pounders at close quarters she fired a stand of grape and two bags containing two hundred and twenty musket balls each, when from the CliasscHv\'< 9-pounders were fired G- and 4-pound shot, we having no other except some few grai>e." In closing his report. Captain Boyle speaks in the highest terms of the gallantrj^ of his first officer, John Dieter, and of the sec- ond and third officers, ]Moran and Hammond N. Stansbury. That night the masts of the »S7. Lairrence went by the board, and having no object in bringing home so many prisoners Captain Boyle made a cartel of his prize and sent the prisoners by her into Havana. After this gallant affair the (liassfur returned to the United States with her hold filled with valuable goods. She arrived in Baltimore, April 15. 1815, where it was learned that a treaty of peace had been signed. So well ])leased were t\w British officers at the treatment they rec(^ived fi'oni the Americans that TJeutenant (lordon issued the following me- morial or certificate dated: "At Sea, February 27, 1S15, on board the United States Privateer CJuis- sctif: In the event of Captain Boyle's becoming a pris()n<'r of war to any British cruiser I consider it a tribute justly due to his humane and generous treat- ment of myself, the surviving officers and crew of His ^Majesty's late S(diooner ^f. Lairrfiicc, to state that his obliging attention and watchful solicitude to preserve our effects and render us comfortable 300 CAPTAIN THOMAS BOYLE. 1815. (luring the short time we were in his possession were sueh as justly entitle him to the iudulgeuce and respect of every British subject. I also certify that his endeavors to render us comfortable and to secure our property were carefully seconded by all his officers, who did their utmost to that effect." CHAPTER VI. A DISTINGITISHEI) PRIVATEERSMAN. One of the most distinguished American priva- teersmeu in the War of 1812 was Cai»tain Joshua Barney, wliose career both in the Unit(Ml States naA\y and in the privateer service during- the Kevolution has been already noted in this work. At the close of the struggle for independence Barney, like all his brother officers in the navy, retired to private life. AMiile trading in the West Indies, as commander of the tine coppered ship l^(i)iip.soii, Barney, on July 12, 1793, f(dl in with three English privateers, two from Jamaica and one from New Providence, and was boarded. On looking over his papers the officers from the Jamaica privateers permitted him to go free, but the commander of the New Providence craft decdared that the iron (diest, containing eight- een thousand dollars in specie, was suspicious, and that " no American master ever had iron chests or dollars on board his vess(d," and that he was willing to lei the vessel g(> free if the money were given up. As Barney refused to submit to the robbery, his crew was taken aboard the privateer, with the exception of the car])enter, boatswain, and cook, and a guard of eleven men was i)laced in ])ing to the ronndhonse he picked n]> his naked sword, ]>nt it nnder his arm, seized the blnnderbnss, cock(Hl it, and, join(MT by his car])enter and boatswain, wh<> also had armed tliem- S(dves, advanc(Ml n])on the thi'ee officers seated npon the qnarter-de(dv. One of these officers immediately S])raTig n])on Barney, closing with him, and endeav- ored to wr(^st the bhinderl>nss from his hand, but in the scnffle the weajxni Avent off' and lodged its charge of bnckshot in the Englishman's right arm, who then yielded. Barney then knocdvcd down the s(M-ond officer with a blow on the head with his broadsw(trd, while the third man ran below. The seven seamen who were on the forecastle, on hearing the disreat severity, and carried, with his men and slii]), into Port Boyal, Jamaica, where he was in- dicted for "piracy" and for " shootinii' with intent to kill.'' After a trial he was adjudi^ed ''not ii'uilty." ]Meantime he had been seriously delayed in his mercantile pnrsnits. Barney was convinced that the commander ol" the rciiclopc was actuated by malignant fcMdinus ai^ainst him, and the cii*cnm- stances in the case sec^m to jnstify that belief. When Barney was first tak(Mi aboard the frijiatis as we have seen. Captain Bowley treated him in a most brutal mannei', nsin^- vnliiar and nnofticerdike lan- Unaiic B>arn(\v resented this, and very properly told Ihe lOiiiilish commaiidcr that he was a coward to take advantage of his ])osition "to insnlt a man whom he would not dare to meet upon equal terms, at sea or on sliore; that the o])i)(trtunity miiiht come for retaliation, when he should remember the ])ol- t roou who commanded the En<;lish frigate Penelope.^'' 304 A DISTINGUISHED PRIVATEERSMAN. 1794. Captaiu I\owk\y interrupted this speech by orderiug the marines to place the American between two guns witli a sentinel over him, who had orders, given in a loud voice, " to blow the rascaTs brains ont " if he spoke again or attemi)ted to leave the space allotted to him. After the v(^ssels had reacdud l*ort Iloyal Captain Rowley showed himself in the streets every day; bnt after the trial, when Barney was again free, the com- mander of the Pcitvlopc kept hims(df aboard ship. Barney believed that this was done to avoid a per- sonal meeting. One evening, abont dnsk, shortly after the trial, Barney was walking through one of the streets unattended, when he suddenly heard a voice from the opposite side calling out: "Barney, take care of yours(dr! Look behind!" The American officer whirled round, and at the same time dr<'w a ])istol from his poidcet. He was none too quick, for (lose bcdiind him was a ruffian in sailor's dress witli ujdifted (dub in his hand, Avith which, but U)V the timely warning, he would have felled Barney to the ground. On the sight of the pistol the ruffian dro]>ped his (dub and took to his heels. On iu<|uiry Barney was convinced that this man was one of the /*c//r/o/n '.s- crew, and had been emi)loyed by Bowley to murder him. This b(di(d' was str(Migthen(Ml a few days later, wdien Barney, being in a coffe(diouse, heard his name mentioiHMl in an insulting manner, coupled with the exi>ress(Ml wish of the sjx'aker to " meet the rascal." Barney walked u]) to the grou]> where the sptniker was and announced himself as the man sought. The speaker ]>roved to be an officer of the Fciirlopc, but seemed disin(dine(l to gratify his de- sire of " meeting the rascal." Thereu]ion Barney tweaked his nos(^ and kicked the cowardly braggart out of the coffe(diouse, as nuudi to the amusement of the many Americans present as to a number of British army and navy officers who had become 179G-1812. THE ROSSIE PREPARES FOR SEA. ;5()5 (lisiiiisted with their coiintryiiian's insufferable bearin<;'. In 1790 Barney entered the L^rench navy, where lie remained several years, attainini;- the rank ef coni- niodere. He retnrn(Ml to the ITnited States in 1801 and a<2,ain became a private citizen. Ilearini;' of the ('li(s(ii)('(ik(-L('()j)(n-<1 affair, in 1807, he at once tendered his services to the (lovernment, bnt as that incident was amicably adjusted his services were not needed. It was not sui']trisin,ii', tlnn-efore, that an ofticer who had s(n'ved with sn(di distinction in both the Ameri- can and F]-(Mi(di navies, and also in the privateer service, should be ea^u'erly sonj^ht at the beninninji; of hostilities with (Jreat Britain in 1812. As soon as it was known that war had been de- clared a number of Baltimore merchants fitted out the fine scdiooner Jxossic and tendered the command of her to ('a]>tain liarney. The Ixoss'tc was arnuHl with ten short 12-pounders and three loni;- j;uns, and carried a crew of one hundred and twenty ukmi. ('a])tain Barney, like the thoroughbred seaman he ^\as, had not into the habit of beiui;- very careless in money matters. I*robably few seamen of his period had earned so nun h money as he durinii a career on the ocean. ]Many thousand dollars had been <-redited to his account, but they were quickly scat- tered in a thoroui;hly careless manner almost as rnpit(Mlness amountinii' to sonn^- liiiui; like one thousand dollai's. Su(h an insi^nifi- cant affair as this <.;ave the redoubtable sailoi', who was a<-customed to make his thousands in on<' cruise, n(» more conc(M*n than a mos(|uito bite, and he was so absoi-bed in his j)re])ai'at ions of aii,ain _!j,('t t in;Li <'ii blu<' water thai he had foriiotten this trifiiui: obliiiation. 306 A DISTINGUISJIEI) PRIVATEKKSMAN. 1812. Not SO, liowovor, witli his creditor. Just as tlio dis- tiiinnislied seaman, surrounded by crowds of well- wishers, <;(»t to the wharf, and was abont to step into his boat to put ofl' to the A'o.s-.v/r, a depnty sheriff |Li(Mitly ta]>])ed him on the shonldei', and, expressin"^ ]'e<»ret at beinii' oblij^cd to detain him, said dnty com- pelled him to report that there was a " snspicion of debt" a<>ainst him io the amonnt of one thonsand dollars, which it would be necessary for him to clear n]) before i^oinji' away. Ivememberinj^- that the " sns- ])icion " was well founded, and beini*' a man of honor, I'arney (piietly ;nave himself \\\) to the officer, who contented himself very civilly with the captain's word that he wonld make his appearance wlien called for. This, of conrse, postponed the contemplated crnise — which, thonoh short, amonnted to one mil- lion and a half dollars in captures — as Barney had no means of meeting- the oblij^ation. It wonld have been very easy for him to have qnietly sli])ped aboard the Ixossir and sailed away in spite of the sheriff, and to have ])aid the indebtedness out of the profits of the crnise, or to have pnt back into some other port where the sheriff could not have interfered with him. Rnt this was not snited to the taste or nianli- m^ss of Barney. Tie sannter(Ml aimlessly abont the town, not knowinii' Avhat io do. I'inally, as he was l»assini;- throuiih South Street, he n^ached the house of his friend, Isaac ^FcKim. ]Mr. ]McKim ex])ressed much sur]>rise at seeing' Captain Barney, su]>posinij:: that by that time tlie ])rivateersman was at least half-way to tlu^ Capes. Barney exi)lained the cause of the delay, U]M)n which Mr. iNfcKim prom|>tly maart of the Americans, First Officer Long was mortally injured and six men were wounde*!. After a cruise tain Barney in this war as a privateers- man. Soon afterward he was again taken into the regular navy and performed valuable services.^ 1 See IMachiy's llisUiry of I lie Navy, vol. i, i»p. 5.S;3-r).sr). ('IIAPTEU VTI. DECATUR DOMINICA FIOHT. If anvtliiiii;' can excuse privatccriiio' it is the fact tliat so many of onr ])i'ivate armed craft attacked and cai)tni'ed British war sliii)S. It can not be de- niiracy, and in this way the former was brought into licneral disre]>ute. Privateeriuii' at tlie hands of Amei-ican seamen, however, can not be said to have been thus de|i;raded. On the contrary, the rules of war and the laws of humanity were (pnte as strictly observed by our pri- vateersmen as by their brethren in the navy. Fre- quently the sordid lovc^ of ^ain was liallantly thrust aside by thesi^ amateur man-(d'-warsmen, and th<^ enemy's war ships were attacked when it was only too wtdl known that nothing- but hard blows and empty holds would be found; or, worse y('t, in case of capture, biaital im])i'essment or si)eedy (hnith at the yardarm if the I>ritish commandei' should take it into his head that some of the cajdured Americans were ;3()8 1812-18U. OLD IRONSIDES CHASES THE DECATUR. :]{)*,) deserters from the Ro3^al Navy. Notwithstanding' all these inducements to steer clear of the regular Avar ships of the enemy, there were several instances in which Yankee privateersmen gave battle to sucli craft, and by that act alone raised the American pri- vateer to a high and respectable position in the mari- time forces of the Avorld. One of the most notable actions of this kind in the War of 1812 was tlmi between the American privateer Dec(ifin\ Cnptain Dominique Diron, of Charleston, and the English ci'uiser Doniiiiica, Lieutenant George Wilmot I'ar- rett(^. Three of the American privateers in iliis war bore the name Decatur. One was a schooner of f<»ui- guns and twenty-three men, under Captain S. N. Lane, from ^Nlaine. This craft was pierced for six- teen guns, and the fact that she mounted only four indicates that her owners w^ere unable to secure a larger number, and sent her to sea in the hope of fill- ing out her armament from prizes, as so many of our private armed craft had done. This Decatur was not very successful, and on September 3, 1814, while under the command of Captain E. Brown, she was captured by an English squadron, but subscHpiently was lost at sea. Another Drcafiir, a fine brig carrying fourteen gnus and one hundred and sixty men, under Captain Nichols, of Newburyport, was one of the most suc- cessful privateers from the Eastern ports. She got to sea at the beginning of hostilities and captured four ships, six brigs, two barks, and two schooners. One of these prizes was destroyed at sea and three Avere converted into cartels. This was the privateer that on the night of August 18, 1812, Avas chased two hours by the United States 44-gun frigate Coii- sfitulion, Captain Isaac Hull. Mistaking the frigate for the enemy. Captain Nichols threw overboard twelve of his fourteen guns; but even this extreme measure did not avail, for the Conf" al- a boat aboard discovercMl tho privateer's true cliaracter. Only the day before the Decaf iir had been eliased by the Brit- ish frif;ate (iiicrrirrc, for wliich Captain Ilnll was searchinii', but ]ia, 1S18, while off Barbadoes, she was ca]dured by the l>i-itish frigate Surprise. Before the war this Deeahir had been the mei*(diantman Alert. Soon after hostilities broke out the AJerf was cap- tured by the British frigate Testaly but Xi(diols, who commanded the Alerf, succeeded in recapturing his 1806-1813. CAPTAIN DIRON-S FINE RECORD. ;511 ship and ii'ot her into port. When seized by the ^^iir- prisr, Kichols was taken to Barbadoes, whei-e h<' was recognized by the commander of the Vcsfdl, who took this opi)ortnnity to " ""et even " with the pri- vateersman who had the ''presumption to recai>tui'e a i)i'ize of His Ilritannic Majesty's frij;ate " by con- fininij, Nicliols in a room not bu'.uer than five by seven feet, where he was cruelly treated and then sent to England. The thirounders and one long IS-pounder on a pivot amidshii»s, and on this, her most ev<'ntful cruise, she carried a complement of one hundred and three men and boys. Captain Diron, her comma ning with his men. At the outbreak of the War of 1812 he was ]»laced in command of the privateer Dccaliir. Among his first ])rizes was the ship Nelson, wliicli was described as " a monstrous three-decdced vessel of six liundred tons, with an immensely valuabh^ cargo.'' She Avas bounounder on a pivot. She was maniuMl by eighty-eiglit men and boys. On September 4, 1812, this cruiser ca])lui'<'d the 8-gun armed sclioouer /'rorideiiee, Cnjdaiu X. Hopkins, of l*rritish shi]> alongside grappling irons were in readiness to be thrown aboard. Having made all Ins arrangements for the battle, Ca]>tain Diron about 2 P. M. wore ship, with a view of passing under th(^ stern of the enemy and giving a i-akiug fire, but as the schooners neared ea(di other the iMiglishman luffed and gave his broadside, most of the shot passing over the American. This is only 23 314 DECATUR-DOMINICA FIGET. 1813. another indication of the overconfidence of the Brit- ish naval oftieer in this war. So couhdent was Lieu- tenant Barrette of taking the American that he ordered his gnnners to aim at the Yankee's rigging so as to prevent her from running. But if this was the Englishman's motive in firing so high he soon had cause to repent it, for at 2.15 p. m. the Ameri- cans began the lire of their long torn, and as it was aimed with co(dness and deliberation, within half- gunshot distance, the effect in so small a vessel was serious, disabling several of the Englishman's guns, besides injuring many men. At all events, it speed- ily changed the English commander's tactics, and the few guns that remained mounted on that side were now trained on the privateer's hull. The destructive work done by the American's long tom, however, had given Captain Diron the advantage, and, so far from evincing a disposition to run away, he soon discovered that that was the purpose of his opponent, and in order to prevent it he filled away so as to bring his bowsprit over the enemy's stern. The English endeavored to frustrate this by directing a whole broadside at the advancing Yankee, but they were too excited, or their gun- nery was so poor that the shot did little or no execu- tion. Had they taken good aim the effect of those guns at su(di a short distance would have been ter- rific. The Decaf II I- could respond to this fire only with her long tom, l)ut as that was discdiarged with the usual skill and coolness of American gunners it effected far greater damage than the English- man's broadside. It was now *> r. m., and the vessels were so near to each other that the voices of the officers aboard the British ship, urging their men to renewed energy, could be distinctly heard. Cap- tain Diron then order his boarders to leave their guns and assemble forward, arm themselves with muskets and cutlasses, and be in readiness to spring upon the enemy's decks. 181:5. STRUGGLE ON THE ENGLISHMAN'S DECK. 315 The British at tliis stage of the battle evidently realized the seriousness of the fight, for their officers could be heard warning their gunners to take better aim, and to fire into the Yankee's hull instead of his rigging, as heretofore. The result of this admo- nition was seen in the effect of the next broadside which the enemy delivered. The shots hulled the Dccafiiry killed two of her crew, and materially in- jured her sails and rigging. This broadside did more damage than all the others. It also pre- vented Captain Diron from carrying out his plan of boarding; for, some of his ropes being severed, his sails became temporarily unmanageable. Eepairs were quickly made, and, though foiled in their at- tem])t to board, the Americans renewed the action with their long tom and 12-pounder, believing that an op]>()rtunity would yet be offered them to settle the fight on the Englishman's deck. After delivering their first ett'ective fire, the Eng- lishmen filled away so as to prevent the AuKM-icans from boarding, while Captain Diron doggeut the last move made by the British schooner, in liei' endeavor to avoid boarding, gave the Jhcdtiir tlie advantage in sailing, and, persisting in following (lose in the wake of his enemy. Captain Diron finally had the satisfaction of seeing his craft gradually overhaul the p]ngiisliman. Again he called for his boarders, and at 3.30 p. :\r. the Dccdttir ran her bow- s])rit over the enemy's stern, her jib boom piercing the lOnglishman's mainsail. This was the signal for the Americans to board, and while some of them poured in a heavy fire of musketry others, led by N'incent Safitt, the prize master, and Thomas Was- 3 If; DECATUR-DOMINICA FIGHT. 1813. born, the quartermaster, clambered along the bow- sprit and sprang to the Englishman's deck. Then began a terrible scene of slaughter and bloodshed. The two crews were soon intermingled in an inex- tricable mass, which the narrow decks of the schooner kept compact as long as the struggle lasted. Nearly two hundred men and boys armed with pistols, cutlasses, and muskets were now shout- ing, yelling, and cheering, and slashing at each other in a space not more than twenty feet wide and eighty feet long. One of the tirst to fall on the side of the enemy was their gallant commander. Lieutenant Barrette, a young man not more than twenty-tive years old, who had conducted himself from the beginning of the fight with conspicuous gallantry, notwithstand- ing his contempt for the Yankee sailor. He had re- ceived a bad wound early in the action, two musket balls having passed through the left arm. But this did not prevent him from remaining at his post. He was urged several times by his surviving officers to surrender, but refused to do so, avowing his deter- mination not to survive the loss of his vessel. A few moments before he received his fatal wound he severely injured one of the American officers with a saber cut. The sailing master, Isaac Sacker, and the purser, David Brown, of the Doiniiiira, also were killed, while ^fidshipmen William Archer and Wil- liam Barry were wounded. In fact, the only English officers not killed or wounded were the surgeon and one midshipman. It was not until eighteen of the Doutiiiica')^ crew were killed and forty-two wounded that the few survivors were induced to surrender. A total of sixty killed or wounded in a crew of eighty-eight fully attests the desperate nature of the struggle and the gallantry of the men against whom the Americans fought. Even with this ap- palling percentage of killed and wounded the Eng- lishmen can not be reported as having surrendered, lbi:5. A BATTLE ROYAL. 31' for the Americans hauled down the colors with their own hands. On the part of the privateer five men were killed and fifteen wonnded, which disi)arity of casualties is to be ascribed sohdy to the superior sea- manslii]) of Captain Diron and the better marksman- ship of the Americans, both with the cannon and small arms. That this was in truth a battle royal will W seen by comparing it with the rej^ular naval actions betwcnm sloojts of Avar in the contlict: Comparative Casualties. Name op Action. Decatur. . Doiniidra JJonii'f. Peacock Frolic Arc/i'.s. . l'e]ic(i)i. EiiterpriH' Boxer . . . Peacock . Epercier Wasp . . Reindeer W(txp . A roll . Hornet. . I'enguin Guns. Crew. Killed. Wounded. 7 108 5 15 1 10 88 18 43 20 143 1 4 20 i:}0 5 33 18 138 5 5 23 110 15 47 30 135 6 17 21 IIG o 5 16 103 o 10 1 14 100 4 17 33 lOO 18 138 8 15 22 173 11 15 19 118 35 43 32 103 o 1 18 117 10 33 20 133 1 11 19 138 10 28 Total. 30 00 10 03 13 31 33 43 13 38 W'liih' llic battle between the American priva- teer and tlic liritish cruiser was ra.uiuii," the com- niandei' (d" the l*r\iu'(ss CluirJoitf did not deem it his phice to lake ])art in the tij.>ht, and for over an hour rcmaiiKMl a ]>assive s])ectator. But as soon as it was seen lliat the Amei'ican was the victor the l^iiiiccsft ('harh)llc tacked to the south, and by suns(d had dis- 318 DECATUR-DOMINICA FIGHT. 181B. appeared. She bad left St. Thomas for England, and was to be under the escort of the Doiiilnira until well clear of the American coast, when she bad intended to proceed on her voyage alone. Arriving* in Eng- land, the commander of the pacd^et reported that he had left " the Dtnitiiilvn in hot pursuit of a Yankee privateer." As soon as victory was assured Captain Dirou employed all the men he could in repairing damages; for capturing a ship and taking her saf(dy into i)ort when the coasts of the United States were swarming with l»ritish cruisers were tM'o very distinct achieve- nu'uts. Having given the dead a sailor's })nrial, and liaving attended the wounded (the English receiv- ing quite as mucdi attention as the Americans), Captain Diron licadcd for Cliarleston. The Dccdfiir and the Doiiiiiiicd made land lU'ar Georgetown, and running down the coast cross(Ml Charleston bar safely August 20) h, the Domiiiica appcai'iug under the colors she had taken from the ProvUlviicc. For several days before two English brigs of war had been hovering off the port; but, fortunatcdy, on the day Captain Dirou ap])roa(duMl the}'^ had been drawn off in chase to the south. Arriving in i)ort, Captain Diron heard that the British merchant ship Loiidon Tnulcr had arrived safely at Savannah. This ship had Ikmmi sailing in company with the Domiiiicd and the I'ruicc.s!^ Char- hific when they fell in with the bold Draiiiir. The London Tnuhr made her escape while the AnKU'ican ]>rivateer was engaged in fighting the Doin'micd, but on the following day Captain Diraid to the sick and wounded. The cimmv of the captured vessel were all finedooking young men. There were among them eight or ten boys. To see this youthful crcMV on their arrival at Charleston in their mangled con^iiap Draf/oii, Captain E. Pas- teur (also commanded by Captains O. Burns and N. ' For action between the Roger and tlie Highflyer see p. 453. 322 SOUTHERN PRIVATEERS. 1812-1814. (Jraliani), Avas far more sncccssful than either of the above, taking two barks, live briiis, ami three schooners. In Angnst and September, 1(S13, she eap- tnred the brigs (iood Iiifriit, V(tnis\ and Ilappi/, the bark /itjirisal, and tlie schooner EHzdhcfh. All of these vessids were destroyed at sea after the more valnable ]>ortions of their cargoes had been taken out, exce]»t one which was giA'en \i\) to the prisoners. The KiKtp J)i--gnn schooner Tfonicf, Captain F. Thomas; the boat Joliii, Captain J. Coates; and the l-gnn S(diooner Yichn-ji, Captain J. Degres, accom- plished little or nolhing. The 4-gnu scdiooner ^pji. Captain Iv. I>elm he, having one hnndred men aboard, took the valuable shi]) 'June, laden with mahogany, wliiidi was sent into New Orleans. The 3-gnn S(diooner Tiro Friends, Captain II. Ferlat, seized the sloop yciiiis, of Jamaica, and destroyed her at sea. V\\i' armed craft were sent ont from Savannah, of which the 3-gnn scdiooner Afiis, Ca])tain T. M. N(nv(dl; the 1-gun felm-ca /?cc. Captain P. Masabeau; the 3-giin scdioonei' FlizaJxili, Captain \l. Cleary; and the 4-gnn schooner Mdria, Captain J. P>e(Mdier, made no captures of im])ortance. The 1-gun sidiooner Xoiipevei*al of them met witli little if any success, anions" that (lass bein^- the l-ji;iin scdiooner ,W/roc(//r, Captain A. Dougle; the 2-<4un sloop lilocl'ddc, Captain J. (iraves; the schooner Fircfff/, Captain W. Clewlev; the 1-gun sloo]) Miiicrra, Captain J. Peters; and the 4-ij;nn sidiooner RerciK/c. The l'J(((/h', a schooner carrying; one gun and forty-five men, under Captain P. Lafete, captnred four schooners, one of which was armed with three gnns and was manned by twenty-fonr men. The 3-gnn schooner ffi-itish ])rivat(M'r (UiUdoji'ta, the result of which was l)ecnliarly gratifying' to the Americans. It seems that two ninianded by Cajdain Sicai'd and afterward by ('ai)tain J. P. (Miazid, took one shi}), two bris, boots, saddlerv, etc , lliree hundred packages sundries, consistint;- of iiai'dware. f^lassware, mustard iiickles. sauces, jiresei'ves. porter, ale "Madcir.-i ;ind sherry wines, white lead, ])aints. <;-un]iowdcr, linseed oil, <;lue, ochre, twines, seines, hats, etc. ; one or<;an and one pianoforte. 326 SOUTHERN PRIVATEERS. 1814. had her first officer and one man killed and the sec- ond officer, captain of arms, and seven men wounded. On board the PeJham were fonr killed and eleven wonnded; among the latter was Captain Boyd, dan- gerously, in the breast. He, with the passengers, was landed at Port-au-Prince. The Pclluun was from London bound to Port-au-Prince, and sailed from Portsmouth on the 9th of JNIarch with the same convoy, of which we have already had accounts from as having arrived at Halifax and bringing London dates to the 7th of ]March. Of course she brings nothing new. The day previous to her capture she had an engagement Avith two Carthaginian priva- teers, whi(di she succeeded in beating off, but the courage and perseverance of the officers and crew of the Hdiicji J (id- were not so easily overcome. This is another honorable si^ecimen of the bravery and good conduct of American seamen. We hardly recol- lect to have seen a finer ship than the PvJhum. She is five hundred and forty tons, coppered to the bends, mounts ten 12-pounders and G-pounders and had a compleuK^nt of from thirty-five to forty men, exclu- sive of several passengers. She is almost new, this being her second voyage, and is in every way fitted the most complete of any merchant ship that has entercMl our port for a long time. Iler cabin is hung round with a great variety of large and elegant colored naval prints in ri(di gilt frames, among which was a representati(ni of the engagement be- tween the (li(s(ip<(iJ,-c and the HJkuukhi in two views. During her skirmish with the HaucjiJacl; an 18-pound shot from the long tom found its way through the shi]>'s side and demolished on<' of its views, with sev- eral others." On the 31st of October, 1814, the Prit- ish boml) ship ]'<)]c(i)in. Lieutenant Price, and the transports (1 olden llcccc and Hdhilioo, with some two hundred and fifty English scddiers on board, fell in with this doughty privateer of Charleston. At that time the vessels were off the west end of San Do- 1814. SAUCY JACK NEARLY CAUGHT. 3t>7 niiniio. Captain ('hazel had been criiisinjii; in tliis vicinity with a little tender called the PdcJycf when he discovered the English vessels. He gave (diase, and, nns, the ]'()lc and the dohlcii Fleece, gave chase, and maintained a s])irited lire for nearly an lionr, when, finding that they were losing gronnd, they desisted. When the l>^(iiiei/ .lack was (dose to them the British soldiers ])onred in a destrnctive fire of mnsketry, killing eight and wonnding fifteen of the Americans. The i)riva- teer also was somewhat cut n]) in her linll, spars, and rigging. The enemy had three men kilh'd, in- ( Inding Lieutenant W. 1*, I'^ntzen, and tw<> nieu ^^•onn(h'd. CHAPTER IX. CAREER OF THE AMERICA. Of tlie forty privateers sent out from Salem in the War of 1812, the Aincrica, with tlie possible ex- ception of the (lidiid Turk, was the most successful. She is re])nte(l to have been the fastest sailing; craft atioat (lurin<4' that strnj;*;le, and her numerous escapes from British cruisers seem to bear out this re])utation. She was a 350-ton craft, built in 1804, and usually carried tweut,y i»uns and a complement of one hundred and fifty men. In this war she made twenty-six prizes, and the pro])erty taken from them and broui;ht safely into port realized one million one hundred thousand dollars, while the amount of prop- erty she destroyed at sea would be represented by a much laroer ti<^ure. She thus proved to be a veri- table " <>()ld mine " for her owners, the Messrs. George Crowninshield & Sons. This vessel frequently has been confused with the privateer Anivnva, which was commissioned by John Adams in 1802, and made one cruise before hostilities with France ceased. The Crowninshields to(dv a prominent part in the stru<>'^le for American independence. Captain Benjamin Crowninshield hav- ino' fought in the battle of Bunker Hill. It was always tlu* p,()od fortune of the Anuvica to l>e commanded by the ablest captain that could be had, to whi(di circumstance, doubtless, is largely due her uniform success. Jos(^i)h IJopes, one of the best-known "sea dogs" in his day, had charge of 338 1812. OFF ON ITER FIRST CRUISE. 329 this privateer on her maiden cruise, in 1812, while on her tliird and fourth ventures she was com- manded by James Chever, Jr., who also was said to liave been " as slick a skipper as ever gave slip to a British frigate." The Aiiicricn returned from her third cruise witli twelve prizes and fifty prisoners. In her essays against British commerce the Aiiicricd demonstrated what a terrible scourge a well equipped and manned commerce destroyer could be in the hands of a bold, skillful, and adroit commander. " She started on her first cruise from Salem Monday morning, September 7, 1812, at half ])ast eleven o'clock," so her log reads. By noon she rea<-hed Baker's Island, and shortly afterward she was bowling along the ocean swells in quest of prey. The inauspicious omen of an accident at the begin- ning of the cruise — so potent with most sailors — did not seem to have seriously affected the gallant tars in this well-named craft, notwithstanding the additional significance of the accident occurring on Friday. On Friday, September 11th, when the ship's com- ])any had scarcely begun to get well br(dven into their new surroundings, the main t(q)mast was carried away, and the five ukmi who were on it at the time were thrown inio the svember 18th a sail was reported to the northwest, and Captain Ropes promptly let out two reefs from the topsails, in spite of the stiff gale blowing at the time, and, setting his main top- gallant sail, gave chase. All that night the stranger 1812. A HARD STERN CHASE. 331 led the Yankee a hard stem chase, and at times dis- appeared from view altogether, but by keeping- a sharp lookout, and with the aid of night glasses, the Americans inanagtMl to keep tracd-c of her. It was not until tlie afternoon of the fcdlowiug day that the chase was overtaken and brought to. t^lie had proved to be a remarkably fast-sailing craft, and had given the America all she wanted to do in coming up with her. Captain liopes found his ])rize to be the Ixdipli NicJcci'.soit, of and for London from (Quebec, laden witli lumber and having an armament of eight guns. John Procter and elev(^n men were placed aboarr the Americans learned that she liad h'ft a fleet of forty- five merchantmen only three days before, which Avere under the convoy of the sloo])s of war liiiu/dore and ^coriiioii. As tlie Aiiicricd herself Avas a ])retty good match for a sloop of Avar singly, Captain IJopes Avas not averse to meeting one of these cruisers, al- thougli, of course, he preferred capturing llie mer- (diantmen under their escort. At all events, he made sail in the direction of the fleet, hoping to meet the enemy. Late in the afternoon of the folloAving day a sail Avas discovered to the south standing easterly. Chase Avas promptly giA^en, and Avith such success that Avithin an hour a shot from one of the America'.'^ guns induced the stranger to heave to. She was the British brig Dart, caiTAing eight guns, also one of 332 CAREER OP THE AMERICA. 1812. the great fleet of merchantmen. Her cargo, like the Hope's, consisted principally of rum and cotton. The America's boat, in returning from the brig with Mr. Sparhawk and Thomas Fuller and five prisoners, unfortunately got under the privateer's counter and foundered. The two American officers and three of the prisoners were saved, but the other prisoners were drowned. Captain Ropes kept in sight of this prize all that and the following day, but as there were no further signs of the great fleet he, at 3.30 p. M., November 2Tth, signaled the brig to bear down under his lee. This being done, Anthony D. Caulfield, with eight men, was placed aboard the Dart as the prize master and sailed for the United States, after all of the brig's people, excepting the captain, a pas- senger, and one man, had been transferred to the privat('(M'. The J)^/^ ^-«-i^t^ . ^,^ >^ o' VL o^^'^*^ i y^^^i^*^ <5^^*ci<-*'^> li/ i^^rtr cpt^ r>u:^'>\- 0^*^^ "'^'^^^ '-/ i^-^c^^-n^ c^.^^-t^^■ ^^-^-y -^^ ^^/ (?^7^ ^<^^ if^C^ n^/^ ^ /-^/f y-^ rt^i -^r^ ^ ^^^-^^ <:>S.t^ ,i:e^_^ „^^ ^i^ ;$*. S^^c.^ <^''^ ^-^ «^^#- c^S-t-1^ (V^ /^ /7w.^,o^.<^„/^^. zMr^^f nfayU^ a.-^9^^^ Fufsiinili' (n-dHrcii) of a poj/f^ in fin' AuH^riru's lof/ kept iJiniiif/ her third cnii/i 1813. HER SECO^^D CRUISE. 38;>, The next day Captain Ropes took the first and second officers, twenty-one men, and eight guns from his prize, and placing on board of her Archi- bald S. Dennis, with eleven men, as a prize master, resumed his course for the United States. The Kuphvmia in due time reached Portland, ^Maiue. Tlie A)ii(ric(i arrived in Salem harbor on the afternoon of January 7, 1813, having completed a highly success- ful cruise of one hundred and twenty-two days. Tier six prizes were valued at one hundred and fifty-eight thousand dollars. This privateer got to sea again for her second cruise in January, 1813, and returned to Bath, ]Main<\ in Jul}^ of the same year, having made ten prizes. Of these two were ordered to France, three arrived in American i)orts, two were recaptured, and three were converted into cartels so as to *^L't rid of th(^ prisoners, of whom one hundred and thirty were pa- roled and thirty were brought into port. One of these prizes was the American ship *^7. Lairrcitcr, of New York, which had on board a full cargo of British goods from Liverpool, and on her arrival in Ports- mouth, New Hampshire, both ship and goods were condemned. We g(4 some idea of the peculiar excitement at- tending the ventures of privateers on the high seas by looking over the cargoes captured by the America in her second and third cruises, in the latter ven- ture the ])i'ivateer being credited with twelve prizes. A\'e have first the 220-ton brig Murf/arcf, of ten guns, having one thousand hogsheads of salt aboard, from Cadiz bound for NeAvfouudland, which was carried into Salem; the 300-ton brig Horcrcu/ii, of aud for Liver])ool, with an assorted cargo, which was sold ill Portsmouth, New Hampshire; the brig />ro///rr.v, A\liir]i was sent into Fuenterrabia, Spain, and sold tliere by the consent of the officials; the 250-tou brig Apol'ii, (»r Poole, AA'ith one thousand hogsheads of salt, which shared the fate of the Manjartt', the 334 CAREER OP THE AMERICA. 1813-1815. schooner Hope, from St. Andrews for Barbadoes, laden with lumber, beef, and oil; and the schooner ^i/lph, of Liverpool, Nova Scotia, with fish, oil, etc. Several prizes were destro3'ed at sea, and a number were released so as to f>et rid of prisoners. In this cruise the America, commanded by James Cliever, Jr., left Bath December 3, 1813, and returned to Portsmouth April, 1811. In her last cruise in this war the America had a battle with an Enij;lish privateer. The Yankees sailed from port early in November, 1814, and made directly for European waters. On January 22, 1815, she took the schooner Arrcjic, from Catalonia for Lon- don, havini[i^ on board one hundred casks of almonds and one thousand six hundred and fifty casks of hazelnuts, the prize beiu"^ sent into Salem. About the same time the Arnerica took the valuable brig Aderjiia, with four hundred and fifty bales of broad- cloth, which also was sent into Salem. One of the A))ierica''fi prizes, the schooner Tlii.sfJe, was recap- tured I\larch 19, 1815, while off Cape Sable, by the British sloop of war CossacJ:; but on being sent into Halifax the Thistle was restored to the Americans, as her recapture had taken place after the time limit set by the tr-eaty. It was in INfnrch that the Atnerlea came across the English privateer Elhaheth, a ship carrying eight guns and thirty-one men. The advantages in weight of metal and number of guns and men were so much in favor of the Americans that in twenty minutes the Englishmen surrendered, but not without mak- ing a gallant defense, in which two of their men were kilhMl and thirteen wounded. So rapid and effective was the America'fi gunnery that, in the brief time the actual fighting lasted, the Elhahcth had seven hundred sliot holes — including grape, canister, and musket shots — in her hull, spars, and sails. After depriving her of her armament the Americans returned the prize to her surviving 1815. AGAINST A BRITISH PRIVATEER. 335 people, as, being in ballast, she was of little value to her captors. Some of the other i)i'izes taken by the Anurica in this cruise were the schooner Hirift and the brig I'Jufvr prise. The Enterprise, on her passage to Amer- ica, was overtaken b}^ a severe storm, and was com- iwiiL'il hy (icoi-o-e Crowninsliield i^ Sdiis, tlie most noted Salciu privateer. From an old piiintiiig owned by W. S. f'hevcr, son of Captain Janies \V. ChoviT, who conimandt'd the America. ]»('1](m1 to put into Fayal in distress, where she was condemned. The following vessels were destroyed at sea by the Anierieti: the scliooner Roherf, tlu^ sloop J iiliilce, th(^ cutter /tiisi/, and the schooner JiJacJ: Joke. Th(^ Aiiieriai arrived at Salem from her last ven- ture, Ai)ril 10, 1Sir>, after a cruise of one hundred and thirty-four days. In the course of the war she netted her owners six hundred thousand dollars. On the close of hostilities slie was tied U]) at Crown- iusliield's wharf, wliere slx' remained a number of years. In June, 1831, she was sold at auction and broken up. CHAPTER X. A TYPICAL ntn^lTEERSMAN. Ox October 20, 1813, tlie American privateer David Porter was lying at Providence, IMiode Island, taking in an assorted cargo for Charleston, South Carolina. As lier name implies, she was not one of the first privateers to get to sea, for Cai)tain Por- ter did not make his great name in naval history until he went on his celebrated cruise around Cape Horn and devastated British commerce in the Pa- cific, and that was in 1813-'14. The privateer which bore his name had been one (►f our famous, swift- sailing pilot boats, and on being converted into a war craft carried a long 18-pounder amidships and four (>-pounders — a somewhat light arnmuKMit, but, not- withstanding, a serviceable one, as will be seen. Her commander, Ceorge Coggeshall, was one of the ablest captains in the privateer sc^'vice. He came from go(»d New England stock, and had no superior in the art of " handling men."' It was the good for- tune of this craft to be officered largely by men who had served in the regular navy, for at that time the United States 44-gun frigate PresUJeiit, Captain John liodgers, had come to this port after a long cruise, and some thirty of her petty officers and seamen enlisted in the David Porter. Having finished loading. Captain Coggeshall dropped down the river to Newport, where he waited for a favorable opportunity to get to sea. So great had been the terror ins]»ired by American frigates 336 1813. THE DAVID PORTER GETS TO SEA. ;>;>7 ill this war that wheiievor one of them was known to be in port tlie British promptly stationed several sliips of the line and fri_iiates for the express ])nr- pose of keepiiiji' her there. Sncdi was the case with tlie President, and when Captain ( 'o^oeshall reached Ne\v])ort he fonnd that it would be extreimdy haz- ardons to run the blocdcaih^ ])etermiiieii-,i;(^shall waited for a dark, boisterous ni' in llieir bunks or hamnuxdcs, and tlial the watch on deck would be more anxiously secdcinj;' the lee side of a mast or cabin than wat(diin_n' for American frijiates, he boldly stood out to sea and passed the hostile ships unchallenged. On the run to Charleston the Darid Parfer was cliased several times by British cruisers, for our coast was swarminin- with craft of tliat ilk, but in each instance she manaj^'ed to escape. On Novenib<'r 2(»tli, however, the i)rivateer had a chase that was too close to be pleasant. At daybreak, beiuii," in ten falhoms of water off Ca])e Bomain, Ca])tain Coii'U'e- sliall discovered a I)ritisli hv'i'j; of war just out of i^uu- shol off liis weather bow which ])romj)tly uave (diase. The wind at the time was off the land, and the Brit- ish ke]>t to windward, ho]»inii' to force the ])rivateer leeward. Just out of si^lit of Charleston bar were stationed two more of the enemy's bri^s of war, and it was the ]Hir])ose of th<^ commander of the brii;' first discovei-ed to drive the chase into the open 388 A TYPICAL PRIVATEERSMAN. 18i:}. arms of his consoi'ts. Aware of the trap that was beinii' so nicely arranged for him, Captain Cogge- shall resolved to ling the wind, pnsh boldly for the channel at the bar, and defend himself from attack Ihe best he conld. Knowing that this was his only chance of escape, the American skippc^r held steadily on his conrse, the enemy making streunous efforts to get within striking distance. For fonr lionrs the vessels bowed nnder a press of canvas, the advantage being slightly with the l)riyateer, whcMi the latter gained the bar and waited for the leading brig to come within gnnshot. In a few minntes the l)riton and threw spray over his port qnartcr. The brig, being armed with short gnns, conld not retni-n the compliment withont coming to nincli closer qnarters, and this her commander has- tily decided to do; for abont that time the famons American ]n'ivateers Drvulur, Captain Diron, and .\(Jcluii\ Ca])tain \\. Craycrcdt, cann^ down Charleston harbor in gallant style, ready to join the David Por- ter in a general tight with the brigs. The enemy, ])robably overestimating the force of the Americans, l)roniptly scjnared theii- yards and ran to leeward. The Dccdiur had recently arrived in Charleston after her brilliant victory over the I^ritish war ship Do- iiiuilcd} Proceeding np the harbor while th(^ Dccdtiir an, for ]]ordeanx, France. As showing the profits and risks of ])rivateering at tliat time, it will be noted that tlic Ihirid J'tDicr had on board three hnndred and thirty-one bales of cotton at twenty-six cents a ])onnd, with five per cent. "• ]>rimag(\" The gross freight and primage on this cotton was twenty-three thonsand dollars, I 1 See i)p. :511-319. 1813. A SLIPPERY PRIZE. 339 which, considering that she was a vessel of only two hundred tons, seems like an enormous freight on sea island cotton, which article at that time could be purchased for twelve or thirteen cents a pound. But this charge for freight, when the enor- mous expense of running a privateer, with her large crew, is considered, was not exorbitant. Marine insurance had risen to fifteen and even twenty per cent., and seamen's wages were thirty dollars a month. One of the risks incurred by privateers was well illustrated when the Darul Porter was ready to sail. This was on December 18th, but adverse winds de- tained hci'. Meantime Captain Coggeshall learned that Congress was ex]»('cted at any moment to de- clare an embargo. Sliould the i)rivateer be caught in port when this new move of the Government was made it would result in the bankruptcy of the owners of the vessel and her officers. Determined to avoid detention in port. Captain Coggeshall kept his crew confined to the ship and dropped down the harbor as far as possible so as to watch for the first favorable o]i]iortunity to get to sea. This occurred December 20th, and aided by a fine breeze the David Porter made a good run off the coast. Nothing worth noting occurred until about 4 P. m. December 2Ttli, when, in a strong northwest gale, the privateer fell in with a small English vessel from Jamaica bound for Nova Scotia. As the seas were too violent to permit boarding. Captain Coggeshall ord(U'ed the prize to follow him on his course, intend- ing to examine her more closely when favored with better weather. The Englishmen reluctantly obeyed, and as night came on showed a disposition to edge away. Thereupon the Americans hailed, and in pretty shar]) language told the British master that if he continued to lag behind, or did not carry all the sail his brig could bear, he would feel the effects of the DurUJ Porter's stern guns. This admonition ;3J:0 A TYPICAL PRIVATEERSMAN. 1813-1814, had tlic (lesircnl effect, but at iiii(lnij;iit it suddenly came ou very dark and squally, so that Captain Coooeshall lost all trace of his first prize, nor did he see her a<;ain. From this time the David Porter scarcely descried a sail until she entered the Bay of Biscay. KnoAving that several Enlit, Captain Coogeshall decided not to enter the Garonne, but to run for La Teste. About a week before reaching that port she was overtaken by a terrific gale, which b(\gan earl3^ on the morning of January 19, 1814, and continued througli the following day. By eight o'clock in the moriiing of the first day it blew with the force of a hurricane, which raised a dangerous cross sea. Ca})tain Coggeshall hove to under double-reefed foresail, lowered his foreyard near the deck, and made everything as tight as i)ossib]e. About noon a tremendous Avave struck tlie Darid Porter just abaft the starboard fore shrouds, crushing in one of the stancliions, and split open tlie ]dank-sheer so that it was possible to see into the h(dd. Tlie at'S- S(d was throAvn nearly on her beam ends, avIh^m^ for some time it was uncertain Avlu'tlier she Avould right herself or continue to go OA'er. Fortuilately her foresail split ami the lee bulwark Avas torn aAvay by the water. Being relieA^ed of this pressure the A^essel gradually righted, but her people had become so alarmed for her safety that Iavo of her lee guns were throAvn oA'<'rboard, togetlun' Avith some Avater casks. After nailing tarred cauA'as anesliall brought his craft up to the wind on tlie other tack without acci- dent, and under a small i)iece of canvas she lav to, waitinjj; for tlie wind to subside. Fearino' that he might ship another sea, Captain Coggeshall pre- pared a novel device for " anchoring "' the head of his ship to th<^ wind. Taking a square sail boom, spanned at eaidi end with a four-inordeaux and La Teste, in which case the career of the Darid Porter would probably be cut shoi't. Proceeding to Bor- deaux on horseback Captain Coggeshall finally in- 3-1-2 A TYPICAL PRIVATEERSMAN. 1S14. diiced bis consignees to purchase for him one hun- dred casks of wine and fifty pipes of brandy, wbicli they were to send in a small coasting;' vessel to La Rocbelle, there to be taken aboard the Darid Porter. This port was selected as it was strongly fortified and i)i'()bably would hold out longer than Bordeaux. All the American vessels had left the latter place, and were at the mouth of the Garonne waiting for an ()])p(>rtun)ty to sail for the United States or La Kochelle. Eeturning to La Teste Captain Coggeshall made strenuous though futile efforts to secure enough su])pli<\s for his vessel, the solitary baker in the place being able to furnish only two bags of bread for a slii]) having a com])l(Mnent of thirty-five healthy men. It was here that Captain Coggeshall learned of the capture of Bordeaux by the English, and he had reason to congratulate himself on his forethought in nmking La Teste rather than Bordeaux. But even his efforts to get away from La Teste before that l)lace should be seized by the English were stub- bornly combated by the weather and an obstinate pilot. AVinds and tides frustrated all endeavors to make an ofting until March l^^>th, when the pilot de- clartMl that five o'clock in the afternoon would be the time to cross the bar. Every minute the Ameri- cans expected to see British colors hoisted over tlie town and their shi]) made a [)rize, and as the hours dragged along to the time mentioned by the pilot they anxiously scanned the ap]n"oaches to the vil- lage and harbor. At four o'cbxdc Captain Cogge- shall requested the pilot to i^i^t under' way, but it was then learned that the pilot was unwilling to go out at all, fearing that he might be carri(Ml to America, so that his wife and family would be left unpro- vided for. "Captain," he said, "if we should succeed in getting out it would be impossible to land me." In vain did Captain Coggeshall assure him that 1814. CLEVER ESCAPE FROM A FRIGATE. ;;4,;> he wonkj cruise in the viciuit}' a week if neressary ill order to land the pilot if he would only take the shij) over the bar. In vain did he show how tlie J)(ir}(] PorUr niiiiht become a prize of the British at any moment, and e(]ua]lv futile were his offers to double and treble the i)ilot"s fees. Finally, se<'in_ii; that persuasion was of no avail, the American com- mander resolved ui»on strateiiy. To his pro])osi- tion: " If you will not i;-o to sea, just get the schoom'r under way and ^o down below the fort and anchor there within the bai-," Mie i)ilot assent(Ml. But when below th(^ f(trt ('a]»tain ('oii,\i;'eshall seized a loaded pistol, held it to tlie pilot's head, and declared that he would shoot if the latter did not take the shi]) over the bar. The Amei-ican commander also de- (dared that if the Darid l^oricr took the ground the pilol would be held (Miually accountabl(\ Thorough- ly frightened the ])ilot got the shi]) over in less Ihan tifteen minutes, and a few days later he was landecl on his native shore, while the David Porter stood off to the northwest. Scarcely had the privateer turned her head on liei' new course when she had a narrow esca]>e fi'oni capture. At daylight ]Ma]-(di 15, 1814, during a heavy mist, the lookout re])orted a large ship on the weather quarter, and as the haze lifted it w;is seen to be a large frigate, without doubt an enemy. ('a])tain Coggeshall realized the dniiger of his i)osi- tion, and maneuv^M-ed some ten or fifteen ininut<'s in the hop(^ (d' drawing llie stranger down to lee- ward so he would lie able to weather the frigate on one tacdv or the other. This was the favoi-ite trii k of Yankee privateersmen in this war, for if the swift- sailing ])i1ot boats once succeeded in getting an enemy under Mieir lee they could laugh at all efforts 1o come to close (juarters. But the commander of the frigate evidently was aware of this maneuver, and instead of coming down he only kept off four or six points and steadily gained on the privateer, ;U4 A TYPICAL PRIVATEERSMAN. 1814. tlieii oiilv two li'nnsliots to leeward. Idealizing the seriousness of the sitnation. Captain Coggeshall held a eonsnltation of his officers, at which it was urged tliat th(Mr only chance was to run past the frigate, receive her fire, and fake their chances in a race to windward. (''a]>tain Coggeshall, however, had good reason to believe that the ])parently did not for a moment snp- ]iose that the jn-ivateer wonld attcunpt a rnn before the wind, and w(M-e faken somewhat by snr])rise in the S(diooner's sudden display of S(|uare sail, and tlu'r(d)y allowed hei* to gain a mile at the beginning of the (diase. As tlu' r»i*itish ski]>]H'r r(nilized the nature of flie maneuver he bent on his studding sails, and in five minutes had settled down to a de- termined (diase. With a view of increasing the s]MM'd of his vess(d, ('a]>tain Coggeshall ordered holes to be bored in all tli<' water casks except four, and the wafer ]»umi»e<] into l)U(d':ets and thrown against the sails so that the canvas would hohl the wind bet- ter. Besides this the sand ballast was thrown over- board, and, thus lightened, the DuruJ Poiicr began to dra\\' aA\ay from the <'neniy, so that by noon slu' was eiglit or ten miles in the hnid, ami by four in the aff(M-noon the frigate was a mere speck on the horizon. That evening, when the enemy had been left saf(dy out of sight, Captain Coggeshall examined the condition (d' his ship and found that he was in a ci'itical situation. Instead of leaving four casks tilled with wat(n' the car]>enter, in the confusion of the moment, had left only two, ami as the wind 1814. BARE GOOD FORTUNE. ?,45 began to freshen Captain Coggeshall fonnd that it was unsafe — his schooner being relieved of her bal- last — to haul upon the wind. The ])()sition of the privateer was indeed precarious. Wide off to sea in the Bay of Biscay, with scarcely ballast enough to stand upon her bottom, and having aboard only two casks of water and a few loaves of soft bread with which to feed thirty-five men, Captain Cogge- sliall found himself confronted by grave dangers. Undecided as to what immediate ste])s to take, and hoping for some favorable turn in (he wheel of fortune, he spent that lught in restless anxiety. The wind continued light, ani>eal to Heaven they couhl not have surprised the sorely distressarated from their convoy, a frigate and a sloop of war, only a few days before. After taking ])oss<^ssion of the brig, whi(di was laden ])rincipal]y with provisions, Ca])tain (N)gge- shall entered into an agreement with her master by which the latter was 1o assist, with his boats and UKMi, in transporting his cargo to the schooner, after whi(di he was to go free with his briii. The Enirlish- 346 A TYPICAL PRIVATEERSMAN. 1814. man reluctantly consented, and in two honrs the united crews had placed enough provisions aboard the David Porfer to keep her at sea three months. Speaking with the fervor of a starving man behold- ing the good things of life, Captain ('Oggeshall quaintly describes the occurrence as follows: " His cabin was filled with bags of hard biscuit, the staff of life, which we took first, and then got a fine supi)ly of butter, hams, cheese, potatoes, porter, etc., and last, though not least, six casks of fresh water. After this was done the captain asked ine if I would make him a present of the brig and the residue of the cargo for his own ])rivate account, to which I Avill- ingly agreed, in consideration of th(^ assistance I had received from him and his uumi. I showed him my commission from the (lovernmcnt of the United States auth<»rizing mo to take, burn, sink, or destroy our common enemy, and satisfied him that he was a lawful prize to my vessel. I then gave him a certifi- cate stating that though his brig was a lawful prize, I voluntarily gave her to him as a pi'esent. This, of course, was only a ])iece of tomfoolery, but it pleased the captain, and we ])arted good friends." AYith as litth^ delay as ]H>ssible Captain Cogge- shall then hastcMied after othei- vessels in the fieet, which wer<^ making off in many directions. The light wind prevailing at the time roaclicd Avithin five or six miles, when Ca])taiii Cogge- shall ran ncvir his i)rizes and ord(M-ed tliem all to hoist lanterns. Strange to say not one of the F.ritish masters haut this was just Avhat they did. (Quickly extinguishing all his lights, Caj)tain Coggeshall ()uietly drew away in the night, and was soon speeding off in another direction, Avhile the lum- bei'ing frigate, observing the groui> of lights, made directly for them. '' ^"ery soon after this," riunarked Ca]>tain Coggeshall, "I heard the frigate tiring at her unfortunate countrymen, Avhile we wei-e partak- ing of an excellent su])i)er at their expense." Two days later the David I'orhr was chased by a frigate and a bi-ig of ^^■ar, but had little difficulty in making her esca])e. It may here be rounder, mounted amidshij>s on a ])ivot." For this gun he 34S A TYPICAL PRIVATEERSMAN. 1814. selected ten of the largest and strongest men of his crew. Philip, the colored captain of this gun, was a huge man, over six feet high, and a general favorite. After running the frigate and the brig of war out of sight. Captain Coggeshall decided to land at rile d'Yeu, a small island about thirty miles from St. Gilles, on the west coast of France, and send his ship home in charge of his first officer, Samuel Nichols, assisted by the second officer, Charles Coggeshall. This was done on ]Marcli 24, 1814, and leaving her commander at this place the David Porter turned her head westward. Capturing several Brit- ish merchantmen on the passage over, this schooner arrived safely at Gloucester, where her ten prisoners were landed, the owners of the privateer receiving one thousand dollars from the (iovernment as bounty for them. This voyage of the Darid Porter brought her owners some twenty thousand dollars, and shortly after her arrival in Boston she was sold for ten thousand dollars. Her new owners sent her to sea, under the com- mand of Captain J. Fish, in the summer of 1814, when she took several valuabh' nu'rchantmeu. Among them were the brig Mars, from Mogador, which was divested of the most valualde ])art of h(^r cargo and ordered to America; the brig Coriiirallis, divested and converted into a cartel; the G-gun ship Vestcr, from Bio Janeiro for England, divested and ordei'ed in; and the brig Iforatlo, from and for the same places, laden with hides and tallow, which was ransomed for a bill of exchange on England amount- ing to twenty thousand dollars. In this cruise the David Porter was chased nine hundred and forty miles by a British frigate and two slo(4)s of war, but she finally eluded them and arrived safely in New York, September, 1814. On the following December 1st the David Porter again got to sea, and in a cruise of fifteen days took 1814-1815. THE DAVID PORTER'S RICH PRIZES. ?Ai) the brin' Iliraiii, of Liverpool, with a carjio valiKMl at one hiiiidi-ed tliousand dolhirs, the Ami DoroUif/, an American vessel in the possession of the enemy, and two other valuable brius. In January, 1815, this ])rivateer sailed on her last cruise, in which site ai)]>eared oif the Western Isles, Portugal, the Madeii-as, the Canaries, Brazil, Cayenne, Surinam, and throuiih the West Indies, retnrnini;- to ])(trt in ei<»hty days frcun the time of sailing. In this pro- tracted search for British mercdiantmen the i)riva- teer made only three ])rizes: the .'>-masted scliooner (/ro/v/r, which, being- of litth^ valu(% was released, the c()]»pcr(Ml brig lli/iiifi /'/s//, with a cargo worth two hun(lrl<).vei-s. At this time, April, 1814, owing to the unsettled ])()]itical condition of the empire and the near ai)i)i-oacli of the English army, tliere was scarcely an American vessel in l^^rencdi waters. The privateer schooner Kemp, Captain Jacobs, of Balti- more, was at Nantes, and the schooners Lion and y^peiieer were at V Orient, whicdi about completes the list. The JAoii, sonu^imes known as Li/oii, was a fast vessel out of Salem, mounting twenty-two guns and commanded by Cai»tain T. Cloutman, and others at rivateer, earlier in the war, whiU* nnder the command of Captain J. Ilewes, had taken fifteen prizes, ten. of whi(di had been destroyed, three were ransomcMl for sixty thousand dollars, and one, the bri_i»' Ah.niiHlcr, was cast away near l*\n*rol while the privateer was enterinjj,- that port in a gale. One of her prizes was an East Indiaman valued at two million dollars. Sixty thousand dollars in s])ecie were taken out of the Indiaman and she was sent to America in chariic of a ]»rize crew, but was reca]>tured by an Enj^lish slooj* of war before j^ain- iuii ])ort. On her first ])assa!ne to France the Leo tain Ilewes commanded the privateer liuiilt r Hill, a s(diooner of six liuns, whi(di made six ])rizes. She was ca]»tui-ed while off our coast, August 21, 1812, by the British fri«iate Bvlridvra. As this occurred shortly after the narrow escape^ of this friiiate from Captain IIodrizes and tlu'U ])roc(M'd to Charleston, South Carolina, for a cariio of cotton. At this tinu' there were a lari^e number of American officers and seamen in sev(M'al of the western ports of France su]>i)orted by our Oovernment. They were, as a rule, ex< hanged prisoners who had been de- 352 AN ESCAPE FROM GIBRALTAR. 1814. tallied ill port by the failure of tlielr ships to get to sea, and as their terms of enlistmeiit had not expired tli(\Y contimied to draw pay from the Goverumeut. From tliese Captain Coggeshall was able to select a most -. This in rongh weather was a dangerons operation, as the delicately bnilt Baltimoi'e craft in all probability wonld have her sides crnshed in shonld she come in contact with a h(nivy English merchant ship. It was this circumstance that compelhMl Captain Cogge- shall, when only a few days ont, to allow a large mer- chantman to escape him. At six o'cdock on the morn- ing of November 13th, while near the Scilly Islands, the L(<) (liscovered a brig to hMnvard, and after giv- ing her a shot indnced her to surrender. She was from l^eghorn bound u]» the (liannel. Taking her peo])le into the L(() Captain Coggeshall placed a prize crew aboard, and ordered the brig to make for America. Down to this time the Leo had been experiencing very heavy weather, whii)eared off the coast of Spain. On November ISth the L<<) was (diased by a brig of war. At eight o"( lock in the evening she ]>assed a mer- chant brig, but Captain Coggeshall did not deem it prudent to stop, as the cruiser was still in hot pur- suit of him. Ry dawn of the f«dlowing day all trace of the war brig had been lost. At 7 A. M. (diase was given to a sail off the weather bow\ Three lionrs later she was captured, and was foun gave a sudden lurch, which carried away her foi-emast about a third Ixdow its head, and a few minntes later it broke again, (dose by the boarrl sliot of him. As night was fast coming on, and the frigate still was some miles distant, ('a])tain Coggeshall en- t<'rtain(Ml gri^at hoju's of Indng able to make Lisbon before moi-ning. .Vccordingly he rigged a jury fore- mast and made good progri^ss until near daylight, when it became almost calm, at which time the Leo was in sight (d' the Rock of Lisbon. The Americans then resorted to towing until 1 v. M., when a light brecv.e carried them to the mouth of the Tagus and a Lisbon ])ilot was taken aboard, lint unfoi'tunate- ly the (d)b tide b(\gan to run, and with it a liritish fiigate caiiK^ out of the Tagus and in a few minntes had the jn-ivateer under her guns, comi)elling the American to surrendei'. She was the oS-gun frigate ('a])tain Coggeshali, his officers, and men were taker, aboard the frigate and carried to Gibraltar. The Auiei-icans wei-e received by the British with great kindness. Captain Coggeshall said: " Cai)tain Wise A\;is ;i line, gentlemanly man, and always treated nie and my (d'licers with res])ect and kind- ness. \\'e messed in the wardroom. 1 had a state- I'ooni to mys(df, und wns as comfortable and ha ])py as 1 ( ould be undei- the circumstances. T used to dine witli Ca])laiu \\'ise almost daily. ITe frequently said to UM': 'Don't feid (h'pressed by ca])tivity, but strive to forget that you are a prisoner, and imagine 35G AN ESCAPE FROM GIBRALTAR. 1814. that yon are (nily a i)assenj2,ei'.' lii the course of cou- versatiou he said to me: ' Co<;geshall, you Americans are a siu^uhir i)(M)ple as resi)ects seauiansliip and enteri)i'ise. In Ennhind we can not bnihl such ves- sels as your Baltimore clippers. We have no such mod(ds, and cneii if we had them they would be of no s(M-vice to us, for we never could sail them as you do. \\'e have now and IIkmi taken some of your s( hooners with our fast-sailiuj;- friiiates. They have sometimes caught one of them under their lee in a heavy i;ale of winthen them, put up bulk- heads, (dc., after which they lose tlieir sailing quali- ties and are of no fui-ther service as cruising vessels." He also remarked that the famous xn'ivateer True lUoodal Ydiil-cc, whi( h had done tliem so nnndi mis- (dnef, once Ixdonged to their navy; that they cap- tured hi'V from the Frencdi; that she afterward Avas retaki^n, and tiimlly got into the hands of the Ameri- cans; tliat she then outsailed everything and that none of their cruisers could touch her, anrivateers as seen fi'om the enemy's stand- l)oint, Av]n< h is as amusing as it is gratifying. ITe tohl how the 74-gun ship of the line Siipci-Jt Avas cruising off th(^ moutli (d" the (Jaronne one morning, when the fog lifted and ri^vealed one of the Ameri- can privateer s( hooners as snug as a bug in a rug under her guns. No one aboard the huge Avar ship for a mouKMit antici]>ated that the little craft, so com]»letely at their mercy, Avould attem]d to escape, and so no ]»re]>arations Averc^ made to (dear the guns. The quick eye of the Yankee skipi)er, however, noted the overcont1d(Mice of tlu^ English, and suddenl}^ mak- 1814. GIVING THE GUARD THE SLIP. 357 inevster and Henry Allen, was taken to the Admiralty ol'tice to undergo an examination ])re])aratorv to the con- demnation of the lj(i) l)y the authorities. On the tirst day, the American ofticers were landed without a guard, as they gave their ])romise not to atteui])t to esca])e. On the second day, however, tlie Amei'i- caus refused to give the promise, so that a lieutenant, a sei'geant, and four marines w(n'e detailed t(> guard them. It is needless to say that the privateersmen had made np their mint. Arriving at the Aduiiralty ohice, ('a])tain Cogge- shall t(Md< a seat iu tlie court rooiu, waiting for the examination to recouimence. Tlis attention was soou attracted by Mr. Allen, who was standing in the eared on deed-: dressed in Norwegian costume and with a large pi])e in his mouth. From this vessel ('ai»tain ('oggc^shall went aboard a smuggling craft, under cover of night, and in it made his way to Algeciras, on the west side of (Jibraltar Bay, where for three days he rc'inained concc^altMl in the home of the leader of the smugglers. L^rom this place Cap- tain Coggeshall gradually made his way to Lisbon, and thence in the Portuguese brig Trcs IIcniKiiios to Now York, arriving there ^Nlay 0, 1815. Mr. Depej^- sier and Mr. Alh^ii were not as fortunate in escap- ing.- They gave the sergc^nnt the sli]) as Captain Coggeshall had done, but on rea(diing the nude they were recaptured. CHAPTEK XII. IX BRITISH PKISOXS. As nearly all the Ainei-icaiis taken prisoners on the high seas bv the British in this war were priva- teersmen, an extended notice of their treatment will be necessary. Only a few of onr man-of-warsnien were captnred, and in most cases they were si)eedily exchanged. At ^Melyille Island, near Halifax, there \yere, in 1813, some twelye hnndred American sailors, the majority of them taken in priyateers. This island is described as being- " a little aboye the surface of the water, and from its low situation is generally yery nnhealthy. Its circumference is about one thousand six hundred feet. On this nau- seous spot is situated a buihling of two stories, one liundred and thirty feet in length by forty broad, ;iud of the upper room thirty feet is set apart for the sick. The remainder of this apartment now con- tains one hundred and (Mghty American prisoners, hi 1h(^ lower room are seyen hundred and seyenty iii(»r(% cooped up to breathe the same air and generate diseases by this narrow confine. Three Innnlrcd and tifty mor(^ are near this island in a prison shi]). Tu this situation, under the most rigorous tn^atment, our brethren remain. ... To heighten the ])oignancy of their reflections, they are told by the Kritish agent, ]\riller, ' to die and be damned, the king has one hun- dred and fifty acres of land to bury them in." " ^lany instances of the petty tyranny of the ofli- cials at tliis place are giyen. On one occasion some 359 300 IN BRITISH PRISONS. 1812. British officers were endeavoring' to persuade an Ameriean lad to enter tlieir navy. An officer of the American privateer Yorliotrii, also a prisoner, hap- pened to be standing;- by and overheard the conver- sation. He said, in an nndei-tone, "• Jo(% don't t^o."' The boy didn't <;o, but for his '' iini)ertiuence " in the matter the officer of the Yorlioini ^vas placed in the "black hole" on short allowance for ten days. No less nnfecdini; w(n-e the British i)rison officials at Jamaica and Barbadoes. At the former place an American ])risoner records, under date of December 13, 1812: '' I wi'ote you on the Stli inst. informing you of my beiuii cai>tured by the sloop of war Faini, Cap- tain Fellows, about twenty miles io northeast of Cape Tib(n*on, and carried to Jamaica, where we were all innnediately sent to prison, and we were treated more like brutes than human beings. Our allow- ance is half a pound of hors(^ meat, a pound and a half of bread that had been condemned, b(Mng more of worms than bn^ad, and , some of the ofticei-s ha he tied the tiller to his arm, so tliat if the boat wore round it wonld cause a sud- den jerk of the tiller, wliich would wake him again. He experienced no debility or sickness from the scantiness of his meals, and, with fine weather near- ly the whole way, he made a landing abont ten miles south of Cape Henry f»n Tuesday, the 3d of August, being a passage of nine days. The boat is seven tons burden, and if she could be got round here would probably sell for a hundred and fifty dollars." In a letter addressed to James Turner, the Brit- ish agent of prisoners of war at Port Royal, Jamaica, the agents for the American prisoners — William W'escott, John ^IcFate, and James Stevens- — under date of Man h :*.0, 1813, wrote: " L'Aini'tliyste Prison Sliip. "Sir: Being agents for ])risonei's of war at this ]>lace, we conceive you to be the pro])er ]i(n'son to address in stating the grievances under which we 20 3(52 IN BRITISH PRISONS. 1813. labor, relying' on yowv attention to discover and will- ingness to adopt those measures which may be best calculated to afford us relief. This mornini;' Lieu- tenant Dance, of the Fifth West India Ixegiment, ac- companied by a guard of seven soldiers with loaded muskets, came on board this ship and informed us we must go with him to Kingston to attend a court- martial. Upon our replying that we diromise, careless of our findings, and not res])ecting our (duiracter as officers — two of us having the honor to belong to the United States navy — wantonly and ignominiously marcdied us through the streets of the city like malefactors, himself going before and his soldiers following and walking on either side of us. In this disgraceful manner we were deposited in the guardhouse of the barracks. " In the guardhouse we remained from 8.'>0 a. m. till 1 P. M. without knowing whether our ])resence was nec(^ssary at the court-martial, without know- ing for >Ahat ]»urpos(^ we were sent to Kingston, Avithout having any sustenance or refreshuK'ut of any kind, and without being jx^rmitted, during our confinement, to have any person visit us. Having 1818. INHUMAN TREATMENT. 303 ronliripd us as long- as they tlioiioht proper, they con- signed us to the care of Lieutenant Grant, who marched us to the boat and brought us to the prison slii]) again. You will perceive, sir, that, having eaten nothing the night before, we were deprived of every- thing for the support of nature from three o'clock I'. M., 2()th inst., till after three o'clock on the ?>()tli (the time we were sent on board). But this is the least part of our complaint, though we leave you to reflect whether such treatment is becoming in the ofti<-ers (»f one civilized nation at war with another. We are liei-e for no crime. The fortune of war has placed us in your power. We have not degraded ourselves by any indecorous conduct since we be- canu' youi- prisoners. We preserve the same routine of duty liere as we did on board our oa\ n vessels. Why, then, this insult — this wanton abuse? Why take the advantage of defenseless prisoners for the pur])ose of venting your malignity and conlempt for the Anu'rican nation? Your Government can never ap])rove such proceedings; the American most cer- taiidy will not. Your Government, we are induced to Ixdieve, are desirous of i)reserving thos(^ sacred rules of justice and honor with regard to prisoners of war wlii( h they require of ours. You will there- fore confer a favor on us by submitting the circum- stances of our case to Yice-Admiral Stirling, who, from tlie kind regard he has ever paid to the i)eti- Tions and remonstrances of American prisoners, will, we trust, use his best endeavors toward amelio- rating our present unhappy condition." Such being the treatment of Americans in Brit- ish ])risons on this side of the Atlantic, we feel no surprise in discovering that they were subjected to even greater cruelty on the other side of the ocean. At the outbi-eak of hostiiiti<\s between the United States and Great I'ritaiu, many of the .\uun*ican seamen who had been impressed into English war 364 IN BRITISH PRISONS. 1813. ships refused to serve, and for this display of patri- otism they were severel}^ handled. When the news of the war reaehed Tonlon, where the British fleet had assembled, many of onr seamen refused to con- tinue in that service, u])on which they were thrown into prison at ^lalta. Captain Jeduthan Upton, Jr., of Salem, who was a prisoner of war in this conflict, said: " The method of ascertaininij,' whether these nn^i who refused to serve on the ground of being,- Americans was to conduct the man to prison. He Avas then severely flogged for sm'eral days successively, and if he bore it manfully he was given u}) as an American. If n(d, he was kept on duty." On December 10, 1812, the American 12-gun pri- vateer schooner Hirordfish, Ca])tain J. Evans, of (ilou- cester, got to sea with a comidement of eighty-two men and V)oys. Twelve days out she was chased by the British frigate EhplKUit. After a hard run of eleven houi-s, during which the privateer had thrown overboard ton of her guns, she was captured and sent to England. When the surgeon of the l^ironlfish was returned to the ITnit(Ml Stat(^s in a cartel, he reported that when he was in Portsmouth the 71- gun ship of the line ContiraJJ arrived there from a foreign port, having on board "■ thirty impressed American seamen; that a part of them requested to be considered as i)risoners of war, and refused to do duty; that in consequence they were put in irons and ordered to be fed on bread and water. The British officer, suspecting that they had been ad- vised to this step by the surgeon of the ^irordpsh, ordered him between decks; nor was he again per- mitted his usual liberty till he embarked in the cartel. We are also furnished with the names of one hundred and thirteen Americans who had been impressed who have been sent on board the *S7. Aiiioitln prison ship; two of them had been enslaved eighteen years in the British service, and the others 1S1'3. OFFICERS AND SEAMEN TREATED ALIKE. :5(;r, fi'oiii ;i liiilf to fifteen yeiU'S. There were about eij^lit Imiidved ])i'isoners in tlie sliij). It bad been consid- ei'cd sickly; about (liii-tv liad dieer day; two days in tlie week they liad one pound ]>iotatoes as their allow- ance. I'rom ") I'. M to (*> A. .M the prisoners were con- liiied under lial( lies." Tliei-e was no (list iiu-t ion between officers and men alloAved in the prisons whi(di they had the mis- foi-tnne to enter. Oflicers and m(Mi of ]>rivateers were isot permitted a ]»arole unless the vess(d in whi( li they were cai)tured carried fourteen i^uns at the time of ca]>ture. ri)ton was captured in tlie bri, 1S12, by the l»ritish friii- ate PJi(i!i<\ Captain .lames Ilillyar, who always had a liiiili estimation of the American seaman — esj)e- cially after his bloody encounter with Captain Por- ter in the A'.s-xc.r. P]tton had thrown OA'erboard twehc of his fourteen ^uns in the hope of esca})in_ii'. A\'heii taken ]>i'isoner he made every effort to ;j,et a ]tar(de, and, althonj^Ii the commander of the riufhc most honorably abetted these endeavors, T^jtton re- mained a common ]UMsoner. .\n American ]>risoner at (Jibraltar wrote from that place: " ( )nr fare is but scant, I can assure yon. \\'e are put on an allowance of six ounces jxm- man a day, and thai of condemned and rotten j)rovisions which IK* American would attempt to ji'ive to his doi^s. I'A'ery American master, mat(\ or seaman that is bi-ouiLiht here is stiapped of all his beddini;'. Pol- my part I was de]>rived of my last blanket, and even to the most tritlinu' things that were on board my ship. Cajdain S(dby, of the briii,- M(ir(/(ir]»e(l off his bacdv, and the last farthinu of money he had Avas also taken from him, aniount- inu' to tln-ee hundred and forty-six (b)llars, all of which was done bv order of the British commodore 36G IN BRITISH PRISONS. 181:^. residing in Gibraltar.^ Before I was contined od board the floating dungeon, if it bad not been for the fresh fish that m3^ mate and myself caught along- side (all my crew being taken out on their arrival and put under close confinement) we must certainly have perishcMl." In August, 1813, a number of exchanged prison- ers arrived in Khode Island in a cartel, and the Provi- dence Pluenix has the following note concerning them: " Many of these prisoners, we learn, had been impressed, and some of them had been detained dur- ing eight long years. On being released on board the i)rison ships, after having refused to do duty in his Majesty's floating hells, their bodies were found to be scarred with wounds and their backs lacerated by stripes, inflicted upon them for their obstinacy in refusing to fight against their native countr}-." An American prisoner in the prison ship Samson, at Chatham, England, Avriting on June 8, 1813, says: " I have been now six weeks a prisoner, during which time I have been on board eleven of their floating- hells. In this ship, besides Americans, are five hun- dred Frenchmen, some of whom have been prison- ' III strikiiiir contrast to tliis i)iratieal troatment wc have tlie following correspondence between Captain Bainbridge, of the Constitufion, and Lieutenant-General Hislop, who was captured in the Java, December, 1812. Bainbridge wrote from San Salvador, January, 1813: " It is pain- ful for me to learn that you have lost the ])latc presented by the colony of D(Mnerara. It can not be found on board here, and I candidly believe it is not here. If, howeVer, it should be on board, it will bo found, and you may I'ely on my sending it to England for you. If it came from the Java, I liave no doubt it was taken among some other baggage." On the same day Lieutenant-General Ilislop wrote: "I am happy in being able to inform you that in opening the large cases of my baggage one of them has l>t'en foitnd to contain two chests, one of which jjroves to be the one wliich could not be accounted for, which mistake arose from the silver- smith in numbering the packages. I am extremely sorry that this circum- stance should have occasioned you any trouble, and beg to assure you that I shall always remain, with esteem and respect, dear sir, " Your very obedient servant, "T. Hislop." 1813-1815. "FLOATING HELLS." 307 ers ten years. Lice, hunger, and nakedness are no strangers here. There are one thousand two hun- dred Anu^rieans and five thousand French prisoners in this liarbor. Of the Americans about seven hun- dred have been heretofore impressed, and liave been sent here from on board English men-of-war. Would to (xod 1 were at home again! " IJut it was at Dartmoor Prison that the greatest atrocities were perpetrated against American pris- oners. Dartmoor Prison, or Depot, as it was called by the English, was about fifteen miles northeast of Plymouth, in the County of Devonshire. " Its ap- l)earance and situation," wrote an American who was confined there many months, " is the most un- pleasant and disagreeable imaginable. The country around, as far as the eye extends, is uneven, barren, and dreary; not a tree, shrub, or scarce a plant is seen for many miles round. Here and there appears a miserable thatcdied cottage whose outward ap- l)earance well bespeaks the misery and poverty that dwells within. Here no cheering prosix'ct greets the prisoner's eye; bountiful Nature denies all her sweets and seems to sympathize with the unhappy pi'isoiicrs. The climate is rather unhealthy; the ])risoiu'rs are almost continually cold during nine iiioutlis of the year, owing ])robably to its height, it being ui)ward of one thousand seven humlred feet from the surface of the S(M." That the above description of the dreariness of Darliiioor is not exaggerated will be secMi by the following account taken fi'om a London ])eriodical pnblislied in ISSO, and referring to the condition of the moor in L'<4r): "Lost on the moor! . . . Scores of men had so VMiiished and been never heard of since. Natives, (»ven, accustomed to the dangers of bog, crag, and f(dl, of overA^lielming, blinding mist, of overtaking inghtfall, of the sudden, deep, obscur- ing snow, and of the btst track — natives alive to all these perils have been lost on the moor, nor an}' SOS IN BRITISH PRISONS. 1813-1815. trace of them ever found. What woikU'I', theu, that a Londoner, entirely unused to and unknowing of the trea( liery lurking in sueh a Avild, should now and again share the same fate? The thing, indeed, was too common to create nun h more than a nine- days' astonishment.'' Dartmoor I'risou, when; many American jtrisoners were conlined. A more scathing commentarv on the brutality of selecting Dartmoor as a prison for American and French prisoners could not be had. These unfortu- nate men, being strangers in the country, of course were unaware of the dangers lurking in these bogs — dang(n's whi(di even the natives, though " alive to all these perils," have not been able to pass through in safety. What was the object, then, in i)lacing several thousands of Americans in this place? (\'V- tainly they would endeavor to escape, but in this case not to liberty, but to a horrible death in the bogs and crags. Dai'tmoor Prison was divided into seven yards, with adjoining apartments for the accommodation of prisom^'S at night, each of which was expected to hold fi'om one thousand one hundi'ed to one thou- sand live hundred men, guarded by two thousand 18113-1815. DARTMOOR. ;3G9 militia and two coiiipaiiies of artillery. The prisons were strongly bnilt of stone and sniTonnded by two circnlar walls, the onter wall measuring one mile in circninference. On the inner wall were military walks for sentinels. Within this wall were iron palisades, distant about twenty feet and ten feet in height. Adjoining the outer wall were guardhouses, ]>hiced north, east, and south. There were separate yards whieh communicated witli each other through a passage about one hundr(Ml and fifty feet long ami twenty broad, guarded on each side by iron bars, over which, and fronting No. 4, was a military walk for sentinels. ()])])osite this passage was the market scpiare. The tirst yard contained three prisons, viz.: Nos. 1, 2, and 3, of which Nos. 1 and 3 only were (in 1814) occupied. No. 2 standing vacant. The next yard. No. 4, was occupie, like No. 2, standing vacant. North of No. 1, between tlie inner wall and the iron I'ailings, was the place of punishment, four Ameri- cans having been sentenced to suffer imprisonment during the war for attempting to blow up prize shi])s. This prison was calculated to contain sixty men, who were allowed a blanket and straw bedding, Ihcir daily allowance of ])rovisions being consider- ably reduced. Fronting No. 4 yard was a wall sepa- rating it from the hos])ital, and fronting No. 3 was another wall separating it from the inner barracks. The market s(]uare was nearly square, and accommo- dat(Ml five thousand jkm-sous. It was opcMicd every day, Sundays excepted, at eleven o\4ock and close*! at two o'clock. At the upper part of the market were two stone houses — one for the prisoners and the other for stores. The other buildings attached to the depot were houses for the turnkeys, clerks, one for the agent, and another for the doctor. 370 IN BRITISH PRISONS. 1812-1815. To enter either of the prison yards from without, it was necessary to pass througli five gates. Front- ing the outer gate was a reservoir of water, wliieh was briuiglit the distance of six miles by means of a canal. Tlie hospital was under the superintend- ence of a physician, wlio liad two assistants. Dr. (Jeorge M'(rrath, tlie sui)erintendent in 1S12-'15, was a man of eminence and skill, and will ever be remem- bered by Americans with esteem and respect. The sick uniformly received from him every attention. In 1815 there were live thousand six hundred Ameri- cans in this (h'pot, nearly one half of whom were seamen impressed Ixd'oi'e the war. (Jreat har(lshi])s were suffered by Americans in the winter of 18K1 '14, whii h proved to be unusually (•<»](!. Through the knavery of some British officials many of th(^ ])rison(M's had been robbed of most of thcii' «l(»thiug, and, though almost naked, they were not allowed to have any hres. It was not until April, 1S14, that these sufferers received from ^Nlr. Beasly, the agciil of llie American ( Jov<'rnm('nt for our sea- men held as ]»risoners in (Jreat Britain, a suit of clothes and the allowance of two and a half pence a day. On the capture of the ])rivateer Rdtthsimh; in 1811, her uhmi were thrown into Dartmoor Prison. In kec]iing with his reputation for needless cruelty, Major Thomas (leorge Shortland, who then com- manded the ]>rison, made no distinction between the officers and seamen of the privateer, but placed them all in one a])artm(Mit. Among the prisoners v.'as the second officer of th(^ U(tffh'snal\(\ who has concealed his idfMitity under the initials B. (1. Immediately upon his incarceration B. G. determined to make his escape, and with this object in view he secretly bought up all th(^ old ro])e-yai'n he could in the ])ris()n, and made from it a rope eighty feet long, the distance from the top window of the prison in which he was contined to the ground. Bv some inaenious 1814. A REMARKABLE ESCAPE. 371 manner lie also succeeded in making a suit of uni- form like that worn by the sentinels, wliieli lie put on under a greatcoat of the same color and pattern worn by the guards. He had noticed that at night the sentinels were accustomed to carry th<4r mus- kets with muzzles downward and under their great- coats. Not being able to procure a musket, IJ. (}. secured an umbrella, whiidi, being concealed under his coat, with just the end exposed to yiew, made a good representation of a musket. Haying secured the countersign for the night from one of the sentinels for a consideration of six guineas, II. (}. lowered himself from his window one night shortly before twelye o'clock, when the guards were changed. As the gates were thrown open for the relief guards 11. G. boldly presented himself at the place with the other sentinels. He receiyed the usual challenge: " AVho goes there?" " A friend," was the answer, and on adyancing and giving the countersign he was told to pass. At this moment, howeyer, the sentinel who had betrayed the countersign to tlie prisoner for six guineas step])(Ml forward and tohl the gateman that the pre- tended sentinel was one of the ])risouers. The gate- man at first refus(Ml to credit this, but, on the traitor insisting, II. (j. was arrested and the deception dis- coyered. Infuriated by this treacdiery, I\. (J. sprang ujxtn the fellow and attempt(Ml to kill him with the only weapon he possessed, a dagger. The guards were too quick for liim, howeyer, and, being over- ]»owered, K. G. was tlirown into the " black hole " and k(^pt there ten days on bi-ead and water. l>eiug brought before Shortland, T\. G. was asked how he succeeded in getting the countersign. He said: " If the man who gave it to me had behaved honorably, death could not have wrested the secret fi-oni nie. That is the character, sir, of the Americans — ahvavs true to their engagiMni^nts. But as the sol- IN BRITISH PRISONS. 1814. dicr evidently took my moiioy only to (Uneive me, I will turn the scale on him and expose his conduct. His name is . He gave me the countersign for six guineas, and then basely betrayed me." Assured of the sentinel's treachery, {^hortland had three hundred lashes applied to him. Again questioning ]{. (i., Shortland said: "Mr. (}., I rc^spect you. Vou are a brave man, and if you will not attenii)t to escai)e again I will give you my honoi-, as a British officer, that you shall be ex(diang«Ml and go home in the tirst carted." ]Mr. (j. declined this offer, de- claring that he would make his escape that very night. As the guards had not noticed (he rope from tlu^ window, it seemed as if the daring prisoner nnght make good his threat, in S]>ite of Sliort land's declara- tion that th(^ sentries wouhl Ix^ doubled and a special watidi kept on him. The guards were doubhMl on the following night, but that very circumstance seemed to favor the i)risoner's atteni]»t, for su(di an unusual numl)er of sentinels caused some confusion at the gates when the r(di(^f came. True to his word, li. esca]»e that night. Having ascei'tained the i)assword from another sen- tin(d for three guineas, he descended the ro])e just at midnight, and passed thr(tugh the gate with tlu^ other sentinels, having given the countersign " Wells." He was similarly challenged and examined several timers before getting (dear of the yard. On (dearing the ]>rison he made for tlx' coast, where he arrived almost famished. Finding an lS-f(M»t boat on the beach with only one oar in it, he ])ut to sea with the intention of gaining the coast of France, using his single oar as a rudder and his umbridla and great- coat as sails. When he had covered half tln^ dis- tance, a brig of war ])assed very (dose to him, but by taking in all his " sails " and lying down in the bottom of the I)oat he avoided detection. After a dangerous passage of thirty-six hours he reached the 1815. DARTMOOR MASSACRE. 8^3 coast of France, where lie was most hospitably re- ceived. The brutalities with which American prisoners in Dartmoor were treated reached a climax on April G, 1815, when, nnder tlu^ orders of the infamous Shortland, the entire i^nard of one thousand men was ril (>th. Shortland, about nine o\do(dv that nijiht, discovered a small hole that had been dui;' in one of the inner walls of the prison, and immediately jumited to the conclusion that an at- tempt to escap(^ was about to be made. The exist- ence of the herhaps imprudent demeanor of our men, who, km)wing that peace had existiMl for several months, were angry at what, to them, seemed un- necessary delay. INIost of the men, knowing Short- land's resentment, very naturally attributed this ad- ditional vexation to his personal spite for them, and lost no opportunity for showing him " what they thought of him." Shortland, in the few preceding months, had frequently expressed his intention of " fixing the damned rascals " before they got beyond his power, and the discovery of the hole referred to gave him the desired excuse for calling out the entire guard. Immediately upon the rapid ringing of the alarm bell and the ordering out of the whole guard, the mass of the prisoners, who were peaceably walking about the yards, ignorant of the caus(» of these un- usual demonstrations, movtnl toward the gate, where 374 ^N BRITISH PRISONS. 1815. alone tliej were able to discover what was goinj^: on. (Had of some excitement that would break the mo- notony of their imprisonment, the crowd of several thousand prisoners surged toward the gate, pushing and swaying in eager expectation of something new. Under the heavy pressure the gate gave way, forcing those in front into the second yard, while those behind, not knowing what had occurred, con- tinued to press on, pushing those nearest the gate- way fartluM' into the stn-ond yard. At this moment Shortland came into the inner s(]uar(» at the head of his men, while a large force of guards suddenly a]>pcarerisoners had gained the cover of their cells Shortland led a charge, sword in hand, and began a "■ valorous " (as it seemed to him in his 1815. DARTMOOR MASSACRE. 375 rum-erazed senses) assault on the few men wlio had not as yet gained the shelter of the cells. One of the prisoners afterward said, nnder oath: "Their mur- derous pursuers had now entered the 3'ard of each prison, making a general charge on man and boy, sheathing their ruthless bayonets in the bodies of the retreating prisoners, and completing the work of destruction by the discharge of another volley of musketry in the backs of the hindmost, who were forcing their passage over the wounded into their prison. Nor did they stoj) here, but patroled the yard to hnd some solitary- fugitive who had sought safety in flight. One poor, affrighted wretch had fled (dose to the wall of one of the i)ris()ns, fearing to move lest he should meet his death. Those demons of hell dis- covered him, and the bloody Shortland gave the fatal order to Are. In vain the trembling victim fell on his knees, and in that imploring attitude besought their compassion, begged them to spare a life almost ex- hausted by suffering and confinement. He pleaded to brutes; he appealed to tigers; 'Fire!' cried Shortland, and several balls w^ere disc harged into his bosom. '' One circumstance that occurred during the massacre ought not to be omitted. One of the Brit- ish soldiers belonging to the same regiment that per- formed this work was lighting a lamp at the door of prison No. 3 when the carnage commenced, and in the hurry of retreat he was forced inside among the w^ounded and exasperated prisoners. In the height of their resentment the eye of vengeance was for a moment directed to the only enemy that chance had thus thrown in their power. It was but for a moment. The dignity of the American character was not thus to be sullied. To the astonishment of this aif righted soldier, who was expecting every moment to be immolated on the altar of revenge as some atonement for the manes of our murdered country- men, he received assurances of safety and protec- ;;7(j IN BRITISH PRISONS. 1815. tiou. Accordiiiiily, when the doors were opened to discharge tlie wounded, this man was delivered up to liis astonished comrades in i)erfeet safety." Satished witli having " fixed the damned rascals " jo the extent of seven men killed and sixty wounded, Shortland withdrew his trooi)S, and, as if to cover his i^uilt, sent a dis])atch to IMymouth statin*;- his " daniicr," and on the followini;- day a strong' reen- foi'ccnicnt ai-rived. It is ncedh'ss to say that every honorable IJritish otticer wlio witnoss(Ml the butcliery and tlie sc(^n(^ of it afterward denounced, in ])rivate, Sliorthind as a cowardly cur, tliou^li in their oflicial ca])acity they were compcUcd to i;ive some colo]- to his faint-hearted ])lea of " duty." The matter was thorouuldy investigated on hotli si(h'S, and it leaves no room foi" doubt that tiu' entire disgraceful occur- rence^ was the result of tlu' lonju'-ix'nt spite of a diMinhen oftictn- wlio could not allow the objects of his cowardly enmity to esca]>e him without one chance at " satisfaction." CHAPTER XIII. THE rillNCE DE NEUCHATEL, One of the most roniarkable actions of this war ill which an American privateer was eni;a<2,(Ml was that between the Britisli 4()-j;nn frigate J-JiHli/iiiioH, Captain Henry Hope, and the armed ship Prince dv NcHchdtc], of New Yorlv. Tlie extraordinary feature of this affair lies in tlie fact that a vessel fitted out at private expense actually frustrated the utmost en- deavors of an Enj^lish fri<2,ate, of vastly superior force in jiuns and men, to capture the privateer. As the commander of the Eiidjiininu said, he lost as many men in his efforts to seize the Prince de Neticlidtcl as he would have done had his ship enoaiied a regular man-or-war of equal force, and he oenerously ac- knowleo///r. She also cap- tured and destroyed the transport A(troii, of four guns, from (iibraltar for Lisbon, anristo^, which had fifty ])assengers aboard, and Ni/iiiplt. She also cap- tured the ship Haniioiii/, of four guns, and an English privateer; but the latter was allowed to escape, as, just at th(^ moment of taking possession, a suspicious sail hove in sight whi( h proved to be a large war vessel, and the Prince de XeiicJidtel was compelled to make sail in flight. A prize crew had been placed in the JIw up his sliij), with all hands, before striking his colors. At one period of the fight, when the British had gained the deck, and were gradually driving the Americans back, Ordi'onaux seized a lighted matcli, ran to the com])anion way, directly over the magazine, and called <(iiiirn, Cap- tain James Nash, bound for Halifax, and, sending on board, with her surgeon and his servant, twenty- eight wounded officers and men, received from the Saturn, to replace the severe loss she had sustained, one lieutenant, four midshipmen, and thirty-three seamen and marines." Captain Ordronaux now found himself in posses- sion of so many prisoners that they outnumbered his own able-bodied men, there remaining only eight seamen unhurt in the privateer, while there were tliirty prisoners to take care of. As a matter of precaution. Captain Crdronaux allowed only the second lieutenant of the EtKlj/iiiioJi, three midship- men — two of them desperately wounded — and one wounded master's mate to come aboard; while the other prisi^ners, after having all their arms, oars, etc., taken from them, were kept in the launch under the stern of the Priiicr dc NciichafvJ, where there would be less danger of attem]>ting to overpower the few surviving Americans, capture the ship, and release their officers. Anxious to be rid of his dangerous prisoners 384 THE PRINCE DE NEUCHATEL. 1814. Captain Ordronaiix, on the following morning, signed an agreement with the lieutenant, midship- men, and master's mates, in behalf of themselves and the British seamen and marines, not to serve against the United States again in this war unless duly exchanged. Under this agreement the prison- ers were placed on shore at Nantucket by the priva- teer's launch, and were taken charge of by the United States marshal. ^Nlost of the American and English wounded also were sent ashore, where they could se- cure better attention. The Prince dc NciichafcJ, as soon as the wind served, got under way, and easily evading the Eiuijiin'unt, ran into Boston Harbor, October 15th. On gaining i)ort Captain Ordronaux retired from the command of this lucky i)rivateer and became a part owner. Her first officer in the fight with the Eii<]i/niioii succeeded to the command after promis- ing '' never to surrender the craft." He is described by one of the crew as " a Jew by i)ersuasion, a Frenchman by birth, an American for convenience, and so diminutive in stature as to make it appear ridiculous, in the eyes of others, even for him to enforce authority among a hardy, weather-beaten crew should they do aught against his will." Her first officer is described as " a man who never uttered an angry or harsh word, made no use of profane language, but was terrible, even in his mildness, when faults occurred through carelessness or neg- lect. He knew what each man's duty was and his capacity for fulfilling it, never putting more to the men's tasks than thi^A' were able to get through with; but (^wry jot and tittle must be performed, and that to the wry letter, without fiinching, or the task would be doubled. Whih^ maneuvering the men he would go through with the various duties with- out oaths, bluster, or even loud words, and do more in less time than all tlie other officers on board, with their harsh threatenings, ])rofane swearings, or loud bawlings through their si)eaking trumpets. The 1814. NEGLIGENCE OF AN OFFICER. 385 men honored and obeyed him, and would have fought with any odds at his bidding." The second officer was put down as a '' mere nobody.'' The third offi- cer had been a warrant officer in the Const it utiori during her engagements with the (iiicrrivrc and Java, but was discharged for " unofficer-like con- duct," and had shipi)ed in the Prince mat(^s' boastings: 'If you had seen as much of the CoiisHtiiHon as we have, you would give her a wide berth, for she throws her sliot almighty careless, fires quick, aims low, and is altogether an ugly customer.' " The thoroughly American spirit of the Prince de NciiclidtcVs crew is well brouglit out in the account of one of her men. After being taken aboard the Lvdiidcr the i>risoners were stowed away in the cable tier — a miserable hole at the bottom of the ship, wher(» the anchor cables were stored. Here the Americans were compelled to remain from 4 p. M. to 8 A. M. evinw twenty-four hours. To while away the time they resorted to singing. " One night," says one of the men, '' it was understood that some of our naval-victory songs were not widl relished by the officers on deck, which only brought out others with a louder chorus than before and an extra 'hurrah for the Yankee thunders."' At this half a dozen of the best English songsters were picked, with souH^ dozen to join in their choruses. These assembled around the hatch above us for the pur- pose of silencing us, singing us down, or to rival us in noisy melody and patriotic verse. They were al- lowed to finish their songs unmolested by us, but the moment they were through we struck up with ours, 1814. A BATTLE OP SONGS. 389 each one striving to outdo his shipmate, especially in the choruses. Knowing that the character of our country was at stake, and that it depended much upon our zeal and good management whether it should be upheld in the face of our enemies, we strove accordingly to do our best as its representa- tives. . . . The contest was kept up for some time, evidently to our advantage, not only as to the quality of the singing — for in this our opponents could not hold their own a moment — but to the number and subject of the songs, they having run out with their victories over the Yankees before our party was fairly warm with the contest. That tlK\y should not flag at the game, they took up with the First of June, the Battle of the Nile, besides many otlu^'S, and we told them, in plain English, that they were dodging the contest. This they cared far less for than they did for a home-thrust victory over them from the Yankees to each one of theirs over the r^rench. At last our fire became so warm that they were compelled to back out, (dioj^fallen, and they had the satisfaction of having their defeat an- nounced to all on board by three-timcs-three cheers from the victors, accompanied with the (daj^ping of hands and such other noises as each and all could invent in our zeal to outdo one another and uphold the honor of the country we hailed from, whose em- blem is the Stars and Stripes. "^ Word came from the deck that such noises could not be tolerated and that we must be quiet. This only aroused the prisoners to greater exertions. ... In a few minutes the officer of the deck came down with blustering threats. If the most savage Iribe of Indians had at once broken loose with a terrific war whoop it could not have been louder nor more grating to the ear than tho screamings that followed tli(^ termination of 11h^ watcdi officer's speech, who, when he could get a hearing, tried to reason as to the absurdity of the prisoners persist- 390 THE PRINCE DE NEUCHATEL. 1814-1815. ing, saying, ' The order of the ship must and shall be maintained; if by no other means, I will order the marines to fire into the hold.' This threat also was responded to by jeers, and soon afterward a line of marines drew up nt the hatchway and prepared to shoot. This menace was met Avitli louder jeers than before. "'Crack away, my Johnny! You can make killing no murder, but you can't easily mend the shot holes in your best bower cable!' 'Hurrah for Old Iron- sides!' 'Three cheers for the gallant Perry!' ' Down here, you Johnny Bull, and learn manners from your betters!' were a few of the shouts that saluted the ears of the marines. The officer, not daring to fire on the prisoners, now withdrew his marines, and was followed by the dpers, set in mo- tion by one who is sworn to drown all else by his own noisy (datter, they made a noise little less than a discharge of artillery." This proved to be too much for our gallant tars, and they gradually gave up the contest. Arriving at Fayal, Sir C.eorge transferred his prisoners to the sloop of war /'licasaiit, in which they were taken to England, while he resumed his search for the Coitst'ihilioii} ' See Maclay's History of the Navy, vol. i, pp. 622-639. CHAPTER XIV. CRUISES OF THE GRAND TURK. The escape of the United States 44-i;uii frigate Coiistilut'um, Taptain Isaac Hull, from a powerful British scinadron off Sandy II(K)k, early in the War of 1812, has justly bec^n regarded as one of most extraordinar}' feats of seamanship on record. Ci\\)- tain Hull won for himself and the service lasting- fame by his masterly handling of the (J(}iistifntif(ui(J Tiirlx, a 310-ton ship, was built for a privateer in the shipyards of Sah^n by Elias Hasket Derby toward the close of the Revolution, and made a number of prizes. " The war being ovc^'," wrote Thomas Wentworth Higginson, " she was sent by her owner on the first American voyage to the Cape of (Jood Hope in 1781, the cargo consisting largely of rum. The voyage proved profitable, and Captain Jonathan Ingersoll, her commander, bought in the West Indies on his return enough of Grenada rum to load two vessels, sent home tlie (IniiuJ Turk, and came himself in the Atlaiific. On the way he rescued the captain and mate of an English scdiooner, the Aiiiiti/, whose crew had mutinied and set them adrift in a boat. By one of those singular coincidences 391 392 CRUISES OF THE GRAND TURK. 1813. of which maritime life then seemed to yiekl so many, this very schooner was afterward recaptured in Salem harbor in this way: After their arrival the captain of the Ainiti/ was sitting with Mr. Derby in his countingroom, and presently saw through the spyglass his own vessel in the offing. Mr. Derby promptly put two pieces of ordnance on board one of his brigs, and gave the P^nglish captain the un- looked-for pleasure of recapturing the Aiiiitj/, whose mutineers had no reason to suppose that they should happen u})on the precise port into which their victims had been carried. This was not the only pioneer expedition of the (Jraud TiirJ{, which also made, in 1785-'8(>, the first voyage direct from New England to the Isle of France and China." When the War of 1812 broke out the (Iniiid Turk was refitted as a privateer, carrying eighteen guns and a comi)lement of one hundred and fifty men. At first she had as her commander lloltiMi J. Breed, but toward the (dose of the war she was commanded by Nathan (rreen. Her first venture was made early in 1813, when she ran down to tlu^ coast of Brazil, cruised some time in the West Indies, and late in May put into Portland, Maine. In this time the Grand Turk ca]»tured three large vessels carrying heavy armaments and a schooner, all of which were ordered to France. In her second cruise, whi(di was begun in July, 1813, the (Inntd Turk made directly for European waters. On her voyage across the Atlantic she cap- tured the schooner Ixchccca, from Halifax bound for Bermuda, laden with live sto(dv and provisions, which was sent into Portsmouth. Beaching the other side of tlie ocean, the Grand Turk cruised for twenty days in the (dio])s of the English Channel without meeting a British war craft of any descrip- tion. She came across many of their merchantmen, however, and took, in rapid succession, the schooner Agnes, laden with fish, which was sent into a French 1813. A LUCKY CRUISE. 393 port; the ship WiJli be dangin-ous, the (^'(iroJ'nic was released and ordered to the nearest ])ort with the prisoners. Soon afterward the ])rivateer captured the merchant- man (U)ss(icJ,\ laden with wine. This vessfd was re- captur(^d by the T4-gun ship of tln^ line Jinhntfl-, but, like the (Uitlidi-iiic, was again ca])tured by the Ameri- cans; this time by the ])rivateer Siirpfisc, of Balti- more, and was sent into Salem. After burning or siidving the schooner l*hil{\ the brig JirofJicrs, from St. John's for Li^■er])oo], ^^iill lumber aboard; the brig liohcii Sfcirdrt, also with luml)er; the schooner (U)})iiii<'n-(\ laden with tish; and r(deasing the brig Hch/radc, from Malta for l-'almouth — after taking some guns out of her — the (iraiifJ 'furl- r(4urned to Salem in November, L*^13, having made a cruise of one hundi'cd and three days, and with only forty- four men of her original com])lement of one hundred and fifty left. One of her prizes had a cargo in- 28 804 (BRUISES OF THE GRAND TURK. 1815. voiced at thirty tbonsand pounds sterling. This pri- vateer made one or two more short rnns to sea with fairly good suecess, but it was on her last cruise, when under the command of Captain Nathan Green, that she made her greatest reputation. New YorkT^^^^"°''"^^ "°''^ Jlaraiihuiu ^\^.St.Roqiie PtTuambucojT' Baliia Sfone (if tlio (jvand Turk's (i])cratiniis. Half an hour after noctn on Sunday, January 1, 1S15, Captain Green st()W(Ml his anchors away and cleared his deck preparatory for sailing from t^alem, and at 2 p. m. he passed Baker's Island. Nothing more than an occasional glimpse of a British frig- ate or a shi]> of the lin(% to which the (Irand Turk promi)tly showed a clean ])air of heels, served to break Ihe monotony of the cruise until 3.30 p.m., February 17th, when the i)rivateer was in the vicin- ity of Pernambuco. At that time a small sail was sighted, which ])roved to be a catamaran, and for 1815. WAITING FOR THE ENEMY. 395 the purpose of ^ainino- iiiformatioii as to the pro- posed iiiov(Miieiits of Jiritish luerehaiit ships Cap- tain Green boarded her. It liappened that the craft had jnst left the port, and her master informed the Americans tliat tliere Aven^ eii;iit En_i;lisli vessels in the harbor, some of tliem ready to sail. This was the news Captain Green had been long- ing foi', and he determin(Ml to li<>ver off the port until souH^ of the slii])s sailed. At six o"cloearing to the north. Graerty. Accordingly he seiz(Ml her as a ]trize and ]»laced XathaiU(d Andier and some (►f his men aboard, with ordcM-s to make for the United Slates. Scarcely had the last s]»eck of tlu- Joiiii i'rdiicisco faded fi-(»m the horizon when tlu^ ]>eo])l(' in th(^ ]»i'i- vateer were (dieered by the sight of another sail, this one to the south, standing northward. ()bs<'rving that she was coming directly ui>on the privateer, ('ai)tain (Jreen allowed her to a])]>roach, and at (>.oO r. M., I'ebruary 21st, he boarded Ihm'. She was found to be the British ship Aclirc Jane, of Liverpool, from Kio Janeiro bound for .Maranham. She had on boai'd seven bags of specie, containing fourteen thousand milled i-ees, \\iii( ji were valued at about seventeen thousand live hundred dollai-s. .V ])T'ize ci'ew was ])laced aboard, with orders to keei) near ;30(; (BRUISES OF THE GRAND TURK. 1815. the (innid 'I'lirk durinii- the iii^iiht. At daylight on tlie followiiii; inoriiiiii; Captain (Ireen made a more thorouiili search of his prize, but finding nothing- else of much valne, he transferred the specie to his vessel and scuttled the merchantman. From this time nntil March 10th the Grand Turk crnised in this vicinity, occasioning inncli damage to the (Miemy's commerce. She stayed so long, how- ever, that the English had time to collect several war ships, which were i)romptly sent out to captnre the bold jtrivateersman. Captain Green was fully aliv(^ to the growing danger of his position, and when at daylight, I'riday, ^larch lOth, the man at the masthead re])orted a sail in the eastern quarter, he ])romptly called all hands and sent them to (piarters. Thinking that the stranger might be a merchant- man, Ca])tain (Jreen cantionsly ran down to her, but soon afterwar() A. ?ii., she ])assed very mnir the second stranger. Ca]»tain (Jreoints off the lee boAV. By this time tlu^ chase was seen to be a full- rigged shi]), a fact that made Captain Cii-een more cautious in a]>])roaching, but did not ])revent him from continuing the chase. By 8 A. :m. the third strangei- was seen to be a large, full-rigged shi]> also, standing by tin' wind to the northwest. With increasing anxiety Captain Creen continued the (diase after th(^ first stranger and gradually di-ew u]» on her, but at t(^n o'chxdv, when he had reached a i»osition three (juarters of a mile to Avindward, he became satisfied that the (diase was a frigate end(^avoring to decoy the privateer 1815. A HARD CHASE. 39: under her j>uiis. Caj^tain (Jreeii was not to be canglit by such a simple trick as tliat, and in an instant the (imiul Turk taclced and niadt^ all sail to escape. With (Mpial celerity the British frigate — for sn(di she proyed to be — ta(dced also and ^yas s])readini>' eyery sail that wonld dra\y. It did not take the privatcMM* lonji' to demonstrate her sujxn-ior sailing (jnalities, and in less than an honr she had so increased her lead on the (Miemy as to relieye ('ai>tain (JreiMi of all fear of <'a]>tnre; therenpon he ran nj) the American t\n<^ and tired a shot in defiance. Bnt at this jnnctnre the wind, most nnfortnnatidy for the pi-iyateer, suddenly hauled around to the west, whi(di Ayas yery favor- able for the fri«>ate, and in a short time enabled her to approach dan<;eronsly near. At 11.30 a. m., tind- in<;- that the Enniishman Avas within j^iunslKtt and was slowly iiettini;' alon|Li,si(h', ('ajttain (Jreen i^ot out his sweeps. By uruinj^- his men to their utmost exertion h(^ made considerable pro<»ress, notwith- standin^ii' the fact that, thouy Innid sea. Obseryini;- that the American Avas slipjunii' from his «>rasp, the Enjilishman bejiian tirinii- with his chase ii;nns, and manninj:,' all his boats, sent them ahead to toAy. I'our different times tlie fri;iiate at- tem])ted to tack, but without success. In the ho])e of dama<;ing' tlu^ enemy's rijii-nin^-, (''ai)tain (h-een o})ened on the frigate Ayith his lonii' guns and again hoisted his colors. About this time a shi]i Ayas ritish Avcrc (M|ually dilig(Mit in eiideav- 398 CRUISES OF THE GRAND TURK. 1815. orinii,' to tow their sliii)S within <^inishol. Tlic weather all this time was extremely wai-m and sultry, which made it especially tryiiij^' on the Ameri- can crew. The British, having a larger complement of men, were enabled to form relief crews. At dusk, Satnrday, jNIarch 11th, the enemy made a great effort to get within range, but th<' vigilant Ameri- cans were ey five o\dock tlu^ wind had di(Ml out and the AnuM-icans again took to tluur swe(^ps. During th<' night, by ceascdess ai)idica- tion of tli(^ swee]»s, the privateer gained so nundi as to be out of sight of her ])ursuers when day broke. At two o\do( k on ^fonday afternoon, not having seen anything of the enemy for some time, Captain (Ji'eeii emi»loyed all hands in getting down the fore-top- mast, whi( h had b(MMi strained in the (diase, and replacing it with a new one. While busy at this task a sail was d(^scried to the northwest, and at four o'( loarole, in this vessel, and, discdiarging ten Spaniards, he ])laced th(un aboard the brig with the necessary su]>])ly of provisions and resumed liis course. Aft(M* this narrow escape the (Iniiid TiirJ: saw nothing more of the Britisli frigates until five days 1815. «'A SQUARE YARDARM FIGHT." 399 later, wIhmi licr intrepid ('(Hiiinaiulor, iiiirnfflcHl b}^ the dan<;('r he had escaped, persisted in remaining in these waters. At t\v<> o'clock on the afternoon of vSatni'dav, >Iai'(h ISth, Captain (Jreen overhauled and s])oke a Portugnese brig from Africa b(mnd for Kio Janeiro Avith a cargo of slaves. At this moment another sail to the northwest was reported from the masthead, and away went the privateer in ehase of it. As the American gradnally overhauled the stranger it became more and more evident that she was a shi}) of force, and at half past four o'clocdv she hoisted English colors and began tii-ing her stern guns. Xo attention was paid to this bv the Ameri- cans, who kej)t silently ane]'sistently in the wake (»f th<' chase, contidiMit in their abilitv to overtake her. I'orty minntes later the stranger took in her steering sails, gav(^ a bi'oad yaw, and tired a broad- side. r])on this invitation to a square yardarm tight the (Irdiid I'lirl: ])romptly followed the maneuver and o]>ened with her i»ort battery, and maintained such a heavy tii-e that in ten minntes the English- man struck. On taking jxtssession, the Ann^-icans found her to be the ]>ritish brig Aconi, from Liver- pool, bound for Kio Janeiro. The jtrize carried four- teen 12-])ounders, and had a cargo of drygoods. No time was lost in getting the cargo aboard the priva- teer, for ('ai)tain (JreiMi well knew that ]>ritish cruisers were swarming in this ])art of the ocean. Tn twenty minutes the first boat load of goods was brought aboai'd the drdiid Tiii-l\ All night long the crew was ke])t busy transferring the merchandise, but at daylight Sunday moi-ning the w(n*k was in- terrupted by the a]»])earanc(» of two fi'igates and a war bi'ig in full rivateer captured, in the coui-se of the war, three ships, twelve brigs, seven sidiooners, and eight sloo])s. On ^iay 80, 1S15, the (Snuid Tiirlx was sold to AVilliam Gray, of Salem, and for some time was employed as a mendiantman. CHAPTER XY. ESCAPIO OF THE IDA. Ox the last day of ^larcli, 1814, four Americau captains in tlie [)rivateei* service* met at Hotel des Ambassadeurs in the important ^seaport town of La Kochelle. They were Jeremiah Mantor, of the Bos- ton privateer Idplies, when they found themselves blockani'' enouiih to dischar;u;e her pilot, and then s(iuared away and made a bold dash down the south side of the island in plain sinht of the entire British fleet at amdior in the roads off La TJochelle. The Enjilish admiral apparently was taken some- what by surprise by the sudden change of course made l>y the Tain his anchorai^'e, were i^reat, and observing: that, as the tide was then hcdding the ])ondei'ous ships of the line at anchor, they could scarcely brino- a ji'un to bear on the course he proposed to take in his dash for liberty, he decided (m the lesaer evil of the 1814. IN THE ENEMY'S TOILS. 405 two. The very b(»l(ln(\ss of his decision was his main reliance in effeetin<>- his escape, for, as he rightly conjectured, the English weiv taken by snri)rise, and not oneof the huge ships of the line was able to give him a shot as he passed them. One of them slip}»ed her cable, however, and soon had settled down to a determined chase. Jnst as the little Ida, with the gigantic ship of the line tumbling after her, passed the south end of the island, ('ai)tain Mantor discovered a war schooner on liis stai-board sied capsizing his own vessel, for six of the hUrs eight long guns had been thrown overboard in the (diase, and she had been relieved of so murivateer they W(n*e after her, and then began anotluM' long (duise. All that moridng and aftern<^on tlu^ three vess(ds strained and bowi*<>acli(Ml it was simmi that the American had incrcvised his h^ad some fonr or five miles, bnt still he was danii'eronsly near the enemy, who by ai^ain divirces in the nij^lit stoolishmen. At this instant one (d' the frig- ates was astern (d' the ])rivate(M' and another was on her lee (piarter, and the < hances were that had they not seen the hhi's binnacde li^iit their coni-ses wonld have diverged so nnudi durim;- the ni^ht that by morninii t Ik^ Americans would have been out of sijiht. As soon as the En^lishuK^n saw the lii^ht they signaled ea( h other and < han^t^d their courses so as to surrctund the ]>rivateer. As (juiiddy as pos- sible ('a])tain Mantor haril Kith, (''a])tain Mantor saw tiie two frii;ates, hull do\\n, and in the course of the day he ran them out (d' si_ii,ht, arriving- safely at r>(»sioii after a i»assau(' of twenty-six days. Soon after the Ida made her marv(dous escai>e from the harbor of La Koc Indle the Dccafiir and the R, 1S14, by the I>i-itish s(piadi'on, and the IxhIIUsikiI-c was taken by the frii.iate Ui/pcrioH, June 3, 1814. CHAPTER XVI. PiaVATIOEKS OF SALEM. That >>al(Mii lioMs a iiiiiiiiic i)lace in American ship lore ninst be apparent even to tlie casual ob- server. Thomas Wentworth Higjiinsou, writing of the early history of that venerable seaport, sa^^s: " Long before the IJevohition a plan had been vague- ly sketched out by which Salem was to obtain some- thing of that sliare in the India trade whicdi later events brought to her. In an old letter book con- taining part of the correspondence that passed in 1()(>9 betwcHMi Lieutenant-('ol(ni(d John Iligginsou, of Salem, and his brother Nathaniel — a graduate of HarvariJ Colh^ge and (Jovcrnor of the English col- ony of Madras — the ]iom(^-kce])ing brother suggests tjiat the ex-(ioverii(»r should make the Massachu- setts colony llie scat of an Oriental comnun'ce by way of Jjonro])rices of them altin- mucji according as they wei'<^ ph^ity or scarce. In the late Avar tinu' all East India goods were ex- tremely dear. ^luslins of the best sort, plain, striped, and flowered, were sold for £10 per piece, and some more. Pepper, 3.v. per pound; nuts [nut- megs] /l0.s-.^p(M- pound; cloves, 20.s*.; mace, 30.s; but now ar<^ abiited about a (juarter part in value. Some of th(^ ( hiua wai-e, toys, and laccpier ware will sell 408 1812-1815. IMPORTANCE OF SALEM. 409 well, but no great quantity. As for ambergris, we often have it from the West Indies, and it is sold for about 3 per ounce. For musk, pearls, and dia- monds, I believe some of them may sell well, but I understand not their value.' " Thus early, it seems, was the taste for Chinese and Japanese goods — germ of future iestheticism — implanted in the American colonies; but when it comes to pearls and diamonds, the quiet Salem burgher, descendant of three generations of devout clero'vmen, ^ understands not their value.' Yet he believes that some of them will sell well, even in 1(>(>9!" During the struggle for American indei)endence Salem sent out one hundred and tifty-eight priva- teers, carrying about two thousand guns which took in all four hundred and forty-five prizes — more than half the prizes made by our (Mitire maritime forces in this war — only fifty-four of the privatet'rs b(^ing lost by ca]>tui'e or shi])wi'eck. In short, when we remember that the important seaports of Rtj>ston, Xewi»ort, New York, IMiilad(d})liia, Charleston, and Savannah were successively in the hands of the enemy during that struggle, it would b(^ difticult to undei'stand how the vast maritime operations of the rebelling colonists could have been effectively car- ried on had it not been for the open port of Salem. In the course of the War of 1S12 ^alemi sent foi'ty privat(M'rs to sea. A number of these have been noticed in otluM* clia])ters as being .W(dl worthy of extended notice, but many of the others rendered services of value, notwithstanding the fact that usually they were small vessels mounting one to five guns and mamuMl by fewer than forty men. Of this class the 1-gun schooner IhicJ:sJ:iii, Captain I. Bray, may be taken as an example. In one cruise jihe took four well-laden schooners, retook a Kehne- buidv brig, and recai)tured tin' American br'ig Tlcxpcr, whitain J. Crowninshield. This handsome ves- sel was lunivily arnnMl and manned, carryinjj^ six- teen ^nns and a comi)lenient of one hnndred and sixty men, whi(di made her one of tlie most formi- dable privateers afloat at the be^inninii of the war. After a short cruise of abont three weeks, in Jnly, 1812, the John returned to port, liavinj;- captured eleven v<^ssels, of which thi'ee were destroyed and one was I'ecaptured. Those that arrived in port were the briji,' f'r/Tx; tli<^ s Apollo, of four hundred tons and mounting' eii:,ht 18-i)ounders; and a scdiooner from Jamaica with one liumli-ed and sixty puncheons of rum. Three brijis, lad(Mi with lumber, wove cai)tured, but as they were inconvenient to handle they were released. Afterward the John ca]»tur(Ml the valuable brli:: Ihnrii, from Liverpool for Halifax, laden with crates, salt, ami coal; the ship 'fane, of Port (Jlasiiow; th<' brijjj Neptune, a iieAV, liyht briii from (libraltar bound for Halifax; the staiu lirenton. The Actirr was a schooner carry- ing- only two guns and a complement of twenty men. Two days later the S/Hiiimi also captured tlie priva- teer sloo]) .Ic/rf .v.v, ('a])tain (1. Lnmsib'u, of New Haven. The sloo]> carried four gnus and fifty-three nien. She had been in coniniission only seven days. The Alfred, ('a]»tain Williams, was a brig of about the same force as the JoJiii, mounting sixteen guns and having a coin])lement of one hundred and thii'ly men. She sailed fi-om Salem on a cruise Au- gust 1(», 1S12, and one of her tirst })rizes was the brig n'nniioiKl, of two hundred and twenty tons and twelve nuns, with a full car^o of cotton and loa- wood and two thousand five hundred dollars in gold. Another valuable prize was the brig (icort/c, of two linndred and seventy tons, laden with sugar and cotton. ]^]ach of these vesscds was from lirazil, and they were valued at one hnndi-ed and twenty thou- sand dollars. The brig l\rc'iUii and the Ciirfcir also were taken by the Alfred; the former, laden with fish, from St. John's bound for Jiermuda, was luirned at sea, and the latter, from Nova Scotia for St. Lucia, with a cargo of tish and oil, was sent into ^Marble- head. The D'hiiikhhI and the ileonje were sent into Salem. On iM'bruary 2:{, ISU, the Alfred, when three nionlhs out on her last cruise, was captured by the I^nglish sloo]) of wai' l\ju rrh r and the frigate d uinni. 'V\\{' llinislur and the TerrUde seem to have been most formidable in their names. The former, com- manded by Captain IJ. Evans, took the brig Tor Ahhei/, laden with dry fish, whi(di was siMit into Cape Ann, while the latter, scarcely more than an open boat, ca]>tni'e o-pounders, with a comi)lenieiit of thirty- eight all told. This little craft made several valu- able captures, among them being the ship Ned, of Glasgow, carrying ten D-pc Minders — sufficient, had they been fully manned ami handled, to have blown the puny JoJiii (inner into Machias she was chased July 31 (by another account June 9), 1813, by the British man-of-war Brvani, mounting ten guns. Kealizing the heljtlessness of giving battle to the cruisei*, Captain Ewing made every eft'ort to escape. The Brvani gave (diase, and for nine hours k(']»t the Wasj) in sight and gained on her. When in easy gunshot the English oi)ened a heavy hre, whiidi the Americans returned as well as they could for forty minutes, when they surrendered. The Pritish lieutenant commanding the Uraon treated his prisoners with exce])ti<»nal court(^sy. Among tlic ]>rivateers of Salem lost by shii)wreck were the (IdHiiiipjKr and the Jfdii. The former. Cap- tain T. W'ldlman, captured a schooner, whi(di was ndcascd on tlu' i)aymeut of ransom. On May 2, 1813, the (IdUiiiipjxr was (diascd ashore by the Eng- lish 2()-gun sloop of war Ndfllcr and destroycMl. The J>drl, Cai»tain William Davis, was little more than an (►i)en boat, and was cast away early in the strug- gle. She had captured the snow Friends, a vessel of two hundred and ninety tons, mounting six guns, and a brig laden with rum. The Dint also had taken the brigs Coiiconl, Hope, and Dldiid. The privateer Alr.rdiiihr, Cai)tain l>enjamin Crowninshield, was a S])lendid 18-gun ship with a c()m])lenH>nt of one hundred and twenty men. She was (diased ashore ^lay 19, 1813, by the Rattler and Bream. Previously she had taken several prizes, one of them the hv'wx Edirard, mounting eight guns, from 4U PRIVATEERS OP SALEM. 181H. lirnzil for LoikIoii, with one huiKlivd and ('i<;lit.v bales of cotton. This ])rize was sent into Salem. The Alc.idndcr also seized a brio- of sixteen gnus, laden with drjgoods and gunpowder, and a schooner, the latter being released after the valnable portions of her cargo had been taken ont. ^Mien (diased by the h'dllhr and /h-cam, the Mcntmhr was so hard pressed that only twenty of her crew were able to get ashore; most of her other men, however, had been detailed to man the seven i)rizes the privateer had taken, so that the number of prisoners was not so large as might have becMi sui)i)Osed. The Alvx- nii(hi- had over one hundred prisonc^rs, who were re- <-ai)tured. The English managed to float the priva- teer olT and carried Inn* into Halifax. The career of one of the Ah;i-(iii(]('r\s' prizes is espe- cially note^^■orthy. This was the i^rench i)rivateer Jiiriiicihlc NdpolcDii, a vessel mounting sixteen guns. She had been taken from the I'^rencdi by a British sloo]) of war. The Alcnnidci- fell in with the Jiiriiicihlc X, 1813, while lying at her anchorage in this |)lace, the TiiriiiciJiJc Xdpolcdii was r(^-recai)t(ired by the boats of the ]>ri(ish fi-igat(^s SJuniiinii and Tciicilos^ which had gallantly pulhMl into the ]M)rt, under cover (tf niglit, and attacked her. The vess(d was anchored too far from the fort to r(M-eiv(» any assistance from the garrison, so the liritisli succeedut before the English masters couhl carry this unlucky shi]» to a ])lace of safety she was caj)- tured by the AnuM-ican ])rivateer Ton in/ Tca.zcr, and arrived at Portland about June 1st. After retit- ting at this ]>lace, the / iiriiicililc Xd/iolcoii ])ut to sea for a ci'uise, under Captain 1*. Desterbecho, with sixteen guns and sixty men. On August KJ, 1S14, the misnanuMl / iiriiiciJiJc Xtiiiolroii was ca])tured for the fifth tinu' bv the British crnisei- Arini(h\ after having 1812-1815. THE NANCY AND FROLIC. 415 thrown ovtM'board ten <»f licr ^iins in the loii^- chase that pi'CMMMh'd tlio capture. The Sah'in privateer Xdiici/, Captain K. Smart, took the briji' Rcsoliilioii, laden with flonr, and sent her into l*orthind, whil(^ the Thiiotlti/ richriin/, al- tlioiij'li titted out for the avowed i>nr]M>se of seizing- vessels evadiiiii" the Non-ini])ortatioii Law, made sev- eral valuable captures. She was a three-masted V(^s- sel and w(dl ai)])ointed. She took the hJliza Aim and s(»nt hei' into East]M)rt. The liritish sloo]) of war Martin api)eared of that place soon afterward and threatened to lay the town in ashes if the hJlizti Ann were not given up. The i)eoide of the ])lace were not so easily frightened, and, retui'iiing a defiant answer, (hey awaited the promised attaidv. The Martin soon o])ened a fe(4)le, ill-diriM-tcHl tire, whi( h the Ameri- cans returned with s])irit, and after a few shots in- duced the sloop of war to withay of Chaleur; the brig Friends, of IJristol (England), for Pictou; the brig l>(tsri/; the galliot (liitttv Jloff'nniKi, of Ports- mouth (lOngland); the brig Jauf iionhni, of London, carrying eight guns and twenty men; and the S( hooner iUicoura^icnicnt, from Antigua for Nova Scotia, liaxing on board twenty hogsheads of sugar, twenty hogshead of nudasses, and five of rum. All of these vesscds were destroyed after their ofticers and ci-ews and the most valuable portions of tlieii* cargoes had been transferred to the privateer. In this way the i'rotic soon became dangerously crowded with i)risoners, and as a means of getting rid of thiMii they were placed in one of the i^rizes, 416 PRIVATEERS OP SALEM. 1812-1815. the schooner Jlioifcr, and sent to England. In the same way the prize schooners yi(/i1(int and Sit.saii were disposed of. Two of the Frolic's prizes were of such value that they were placed in charge of prize crews and sent into port. They were the ship Grotius, of London, which was sent into Portland, and the scdiooner Tnircllcr, which put into Sciuani. The latter had aboard one hundred and nineteen hogs- heads and sixty barrels of sugar, besides a quantity of coffee. Almost as lucky as the Frolic was the General ^tark, a lugger mounting only two guns and manned by twelve men. One of her first prizes was a one- hundred-and-thirty-ton schoomn*, from St. John's to the West Indies, Mdiicdi Avas sent into ^Matdiias. The GeueraJ i^turlx also took the brig (Uts.sacl-, manned by twelve men, bound for Bermuda from Martinique, and having in her hold one hundred and thirty- thre(^ hogsheads, two tierces and sixty-eight bar- rels of sugar. When the Gcitcral ^^hirJ: made this capture she had only eight men aboard, the others being abscMit in a prize. The crew of the f "o.s-.sy/cA' was kept aboai'd, while three men and a b<»y were sent to her from the Gciicrdl t>^farJ: as a prize crew, halving only four ]>ersons in the ])rivateer. In this critical condition the two vess(ds made for port, the Go.ssack arriving at (lecn-getown, South Carolina, without mishap. The vessel and her cargo were valued at four thousand dollars. The Gossack was puridiased for five thousand dollars, and was commissioned as an 8-gun privateer, under Captain J. Nash, ^fay, 1813. The GoieroJ i^tark took another i)rize, a slooj), but she was lost on Cape Cod. By the (dose of the year 1813 the recei]»ts from the sal(» of ])rizes brought into Salem amounted to $G7r),r>!ir).0:>. l^rom this time on, however, this port was rigorously blocked by the overwhelming mari- time forces of the enemy. At the beginning of the war the New England ports were peculiarly free 1813-1814. CAPTURES BY THE DIOMEDE. 417 from blockades, the English believing? that those States were opposed ((► Avar, and consequently it was oood pcdicy to befi-ienrisoners to Salem. Some of her })rizes in this and subse(iuent ventures were the schooners Mdrji v the enemy and sent int<> Halifax. The little i)rivateers AV//, ]'ipei\ >^c<)rp}oii, Leeeli, and (ieiieruJ PiifiKiiii also did good service before the war ende()i't. Tlu' I //>rr also took a schooner witli a of i-nni and siioar, which reached Newport, and ajiotlier schooner laden with dry- i»oods, which was sent into Salem. The ^^c(»-j)ioii, ('a])tain J. Osborn, seized a sloo]> nionntin^" one li'nn, which was sent into Salem, and a scdiooner, whi(di was destroyed at sea. The Lvcch, in 1814, ca])tnred a sclioon«M- and ransonuMl it, and another schooner whi(di, after beiiiii divested of its valnables, was o'iven np to the ])risoners. The career of the (iviicrdl /*iiliii-ief, bnt n(»t withont valne. She took the handsome HSd-ton ship Occhh, of and for London, with a car_i;<> of masts, thirty-tive bowsprits, and otluM- timber for the nse of the Atures was the s(dioonei* fict.scif and r/diic, from St. John's for Castine, with one hundred and uinet(MMi ])ackam'es of dryi^oods vabn^l at one hundred and tifty thousand (bdlars. Slie was sent into Thomaston. The (Uidct also took the schoonc^r Mar//, from St. John's for Castine, having;- a car_i;() of dry^'oods, with ^^'hi<■h \"ess(d she had a sinj^nlar ex- l)erience. It seems that the Man/ was bcnnji; escorte in line of battle and ])resenting a fornndable array of black muzzles toward her. Not waiting for the ]>i'ivateer to o])en the fight the Englishmen, at 2 w m., bore away for the /(cnip, and as eaidi ship passed d(div- ered a broadside. Paying no attention to this Cap- tain Jacobs reser^■ed his tii-e, tacked, and passing directly throngh tlie enemy's line (hdivered both broadsides at close (piarters. This had the effect of throwing the enemy into confusion. Tn their efforts to att;i(dv the audacious privateer the mer- (diantmen only succeeded in g(^tting in one another's way, so that only one or two of them conld bi'ing their guns to bear. Ca])tain Jacrisoners as seamen, and, bcung scat- tered about in four diff'erent vessels, there was dan- ger of their rising and recovering their ships. Deeming it prud«Mit to return to America Cap- tain Jacobs allowed the rest of the meridiantmen to escape, and now gave his attention to getting his prizes into port. Nothing was seen of the frigate that had so furiously (dmsed the* Kemp when th(^ con- voy was first discovered. H(M' commander probably fell in with the remnant of his convoy a day or so later, and learned, to his sorrow, that while thunder- ing over the ocean waves in (base of the privateer the latter was (piictly li(d])ing herself to the mer- chantmen. The total foi'ce of the eight nuM'chant ships the Kiiiip engag(Ml was forty-six gnus and one hundred and thirty-foui' nu^i, as o])])os('d to the privateer's twelve guns and one hundred and thirty men. Cap- tain Jacobs took seventy-one priscmers. The Ameri- 1814-181.-). CAPTAIN BARNES OF BALTIMORE. 423 cans had only one man, Joliii Ii'wiii, killed, and four Avonndcd. The prizes were fonnd to be laden with valnable cargoes, consisting- mostly of sugar and coffee. The RoxuhcJUi and her cargo alone were esti- mated to be woi'th three hundred thousand dollars, but unfortunately, while endeavoring to enter Charleston harbor, she grounded on the bar and became a total loss. The wreck afterward was bui'ued by a IJritisli war brig. One of tlu^ schooners engaged was the (Uissdfh, formerly the (). If. Pcrfi/. The oth(^i' ])rizes of the hCuip succeeded in rea(diing Southern ])orts. In her cai-eer in this war the Kemp is credit (^d with tifteen i)fizes. Another eminently successfiil privateer was the Surprise-, ('ai)taiii Harm's, of Baltimore. This ves- sel ari'ived at Xew])oi't July 15, 1814, after a cruise of oiH' hundred and three days in the English and Irish diannels and off the \\'est(M-n Isles, in which she had been cliased sixteen times and had taken twelve or thirteen IJritish merchantmen. Refitting in Newport, the Siii-pfisc again made for English waters, and after making a number of ]trizes she put into l>rest, and on December 24, 1S14, receivritish war ship, wlii(di tired fifty shots at her. Evading the war slii]) in the night, ('aptaiu IJarnes, about eleven o"clo( k on the morning of January 2Sth, discovered a sail on his lee quarter. As the wind A\'as light he manned his sweeps so as to draw away fi-om the sti-angei*, which had every a])pearance of being a heavy war vessel. The sti-auger seemed e(|ually anxious to come to (dose (piarters, and holding a better wind managed to ^;!;e't within gunshot by half ]>ast lw(dve o'clo(d\, at which tinu' she was tlying I'^uglish cidors. Seeing that an action ^^■as unavoidable ("aj^tain I'arnes siiowed American colors ami answered the 424 SOME TYPICAL CRUISES. 1813-1815. Englishman's first broadside with spirit. A lieavy cannonading- was kept np until a quarter past two o'clock, when Captain Barnes, by the aid of his sweeps, gained a raking jxtsition nnder the eneni3''s stern, and after jxynring in a destrnctive broadside coinpelled the ship to surrender. She proved to be the English ship Sfdf, carrying eight 12-p()nnders and a crew of twenty-six men, from Batavia for Lon- don, laden with coffee and other valnable East In- dies produce. The Star had one man killed and one wounded, while several shots had taken effect in her hull, and her sails and rigging were cut to pieces. No one in the ^^iirpri.sc was hurt, but some damage was done to her sails, and her foremast and fore- topmast were wounded by round shot. liemoving a large i)ortion of the »S7f/r'.v cargo to his own ship, Captain Barnes sent eighteen men and a prize master aV)oar(l and proceeded with her to the United States. \Miil(^ drawing near the Aineri- <-an coast, I'^ebrnary 2(», 1815, the ships, during a snowstorm, became separated, but they both arrived in New York safely. The entire cargo of the aS7(7?- was estimated to be worth three hundred thousand dollars. It consisted of one thousand one hundred and (Mghty bags of sugar, five thousand and twenty- om^ bags of coffee, forty-fiAe tubs of camphor, two hundred and ninety-seven bags of sago, twenty-two bales of nankeens, eighty-three cases of cinnamon, and forty-five cases of tortoise shell. In all, the ^^ II r prise is creditcMl with thirty-four prizes. One of the most satisfactory cruises in this war was that in which the privateer Caroliiw, Captain Almeda, of Baltimore, captured tw<> " traitor ves- sels." On November 20, 1813, this privateer fell in with the American sloo]) O.s/r/.v, Captain Driggs, from ]Martinique for St. Bartholonu^w, with a cargo of molasses. Driggs, supposing that the (Uirolliic was a I>ritisli war vessel, came aboard and showed his P»ritish license, remarking that only recently he had 1813-1814. SUCCESSES OF THE CAROLINE. 405 supplied Captain Oliver, of the English man-of-war \'(ili(nif, with potatoes and apples. Driggs further said that he had received i)ay for these sn})plies and added that there would be no doubt of his being hung if he f
esides these the (^aroliiie ca])tured ten vessels, which were depleted of the most available portions of their cargoes and burned. C;i]>tain Almeda returiUMl to Charleston only because ins vess(d could not hold any more goods. One of Ills prizes, the s(diooner JosrpJi, from Surinam, laden with cofTee, rum, and sugar, in endeavoring to run into (Jeorgetown, South Carolina, nearly became wreidvcd, but was saved by the skill of Lieutenant Monk, of the navy.^ ' Tn a subspqupnt cruise, 1814, tlio Caroline took the bri<; ElizahetJi, for KiiiLTstoii (.Tiinuiica), which was sent into Charleston: tlie scliooner Jason, of Nassau, which was destroyed at sea ; the brig Experience, from Jamaica 30 j.26 SOME TYPICAL CRUISES. 1814-1815. Quite as fortunate as the ('(iroliiic was the Miun- inoth, Captain Rowland, also of Raltiinore. Her first prize was tlie eoppered-briin- (UuncJum, from the West Indies for New Brunswick, laden with rum and mo- lasses, which was sent into port; and her second was the sloop Farmer, with a car<.>o of provisions, which vessel was sunk. She also took the brig Britannia, from St. AndrcAVs for Liverpool, laden with lumber, which was destroyed, and three other bri_i;s in bal- last, which also werc^ burned at sea. W'liile off the coast of 'Newfoundland tli<^ Mannnotli had an action with an English transport haviuii on board between three and four hundred troo]>s. After a severe ou- ga<>enient, in which the privateer ha(('\V(»rl liy feature of tlie luaritiiue war of 1812-181.") was tlic innnbcr of instances in wliicli onr pi'ivateers were ]>il ted against British vessels of the same class. When these aniatcMir cruisers of the war met it i^-enerally rc^sulted in a hard-foujiht battle, and in many cases some desperate stru,ii\nles took i)lace. One of the first actions of this kind occurred Anjiust 4, 1812, two weeks before the first fri, 1812, a sail was discovered fi'oni the mast- head of the SJiddoir, to which the Americans immerivateer, but as the dauia^e was s]»eedily re])aired it did not cause the Amei'icans to los<' ncia, and carried fonrteen ^nns and a comple- ment t u]> a brisk fire. On the return of day, having improved the in- tervening hours in repairing damages, Cai>tain Tay- lor ran close under the stern of tlu' enemy and began another severe action. It was not long before the Sliddoir received a shot in her stai'board bow whi(di shattered the wood (Muls, started the ])lank-sheer, and smashed sever;il tiiiibei-s. At half ])ast seven o'(dock she received another shot, almost in the same ])lace but on the ])ort side, whi( h knocked the car- riage of the i)ort after gun to ])ieces, killed six men and wounded three. In s]>ite of these lunivy blows the Americans continued the tight for an hour longer, when Captain Taylor was killed by a ball in his left triyateer Com. The Olohe carried a com])lemeut of about ninety men and boys. Speak- ing the slii]» }fs. The chase hoisted Englisli (•oh)rs and returned the fire with her two stern guns, J)-])oun(h'rs. As it was blowing rather fresh at tlie time Captain (Jrant was unable to bring his broadside guns to bear, and so deter- mined lo liold on his present course, notwithstand- ing the number of guns the enemy could bring into action. Foi' forty minutes the nnefpial contest was main- tained, bolli vessels crowding on canvas, but the American had a decided advantage in sailing. At last the (ilohc began to double on the enem.y's quarter, when ('a]>tain (Jrant let go his forward division of guns, and, as his vessel gradually came abeam ihe chase, he opened with his entire broad- side guns, Avhi( h had been carefully loaded with a double (diarg(» of round shot. After the first dis- (liarge Ihe American gunners loaded with langrage and round shot. The Englishman returned the fire Avith spirit, answering broadside for broadside, and, as the vess(ds gi-adnall^' (Mlgcd towai'd eacdi other, gave volley for volh\v of musketry and pistols. For an hour and a half this contest was kept up, when the stranger sui'i*endered, announcing herself to be the lioi/d, from Xew Providence foi' TJverjxxd, with a valuable cai'go of colTee, dyewoods, and cotton. The Jioi/d cai'i'ied two long !)-])ound«M'S, two short 12- ]M>unders, and six long (>-])ounders. Both vessels wei'e vei'v much cut u]) in sails, rigging, and hull; but, strange to say. no one had been hurt. Transferring the crew of the lioi/d, exce])ting an otticer and two nu'n, to the (IJohc, Captain (Jrant ]>lace(l a prize mas- ter and eight men aboard Ikm*, with orders to make the nearest American jxtrt. Seven of the English ])i*isoners entered the fHohc's crew. On the follow- ing i/rizes taken by th<' (llohe in this war wen^ the brig K'uK/stoii Packet, with a valuable cargo of rum aboard, whi(di was sent into Ocracoke Inlet, North Carolina; the shi]) Venus, car- rying fourteen guns, from Cadiz for Newfoundland, with a full cargo of salt; and the ship Heafoii. The last was captured by the privateer /*arting comi)any with the ran] Jones, ]»rov<'d uiisea- worthy, ;ind on meeting with the (llohe slu^ was burned a( the reipiest (d' her ])rize master.' Probably no American ]>rivateer in this w.w had smdi a varied ex]>erience as the ll-gun schoonei' Mdiiidd, Cai)tain II. Kant in, of Philadelphia. Slu' got to sea about duly 15, 1S12, and when a few days out ca])tured a brig from San Domiugo for London, which arrix'ed at the Mnl'iUUrs home port, August lOlh. A few days after taking this brig the Maiildn ' For action between the Globe and two packets, see i)p. 455-459. 434 PRIVATEERS AGAiNST PRIVATEERS. 18r2-18ia. fell ill Avitli the English brig Rdiu/cr, Captain John Heard, which was taken only after a stnbbornly eon- tested aetioii, in which the British conmiander was killed. The prize was sent into Philadelphia, and a newspaper of that city, under date of Angnst 23, 1812, notes: " Yesterday the remains of Captain Heard, of the British brig Ndin/vr, were interred with the res]>ect whicdi honor and valor, even in an enemy, can never fail to inspire. Captain Heard was cap- tnred, with his brig, by the privateei' Mdtihln, of this port, after a smart action, in which he received a wound of whiresented by the- English (Tovernment to the Turks, but later converted to private use. She was pierced for twenty-eight guns, and at the time she met the MdtihJd was manned by one hundred and twenty men. Ca]>taiii Baiitin did not discover the real forcc^ of this vesscd until he had boarded hei" with m^arly all his officers; and had he been ]n'om])tly followed by his seamen he wouhl hav<* captured her, for most of the British crew haart, leaving the American officcn-s unsup- ported by their men. Taking in the situation at a glance the Englishmen rallied, and, after overpower- ing the officers of the privateer, made sail for the MdtUdd and soon compelled Ik^' to surrender. In 1813. THE NED-MALVINA ACTION. 435 tills action ('ai)taiii Hani in and twenty oi- thirty of liis men were killed. The sni'vivors were carried into Baliia, from which ])lace they sailed for New York in the shi]> \\'ini(tiii, Captain Davis. The liritish immediately refitted the Maf'thht and sent her to Eni^land, bnt while in the Eiii;iish Chan- n(d she ^\■as recaplnred by the United vStates bri^- of wai- Ar(/iis, Mastei'-(\tnimandant William Henry Allen. A f(nv days aftei- taking' the Mafildd the Ar(/ti.s was captni-ed by the /'clicdii, Allen dyino- from in- jni'ies he received in the ti^ht.' The notice quoted from a rhiladeli)hia newspa]»er relative to the burial of ('a]>tain Heard, of the lidin/cr, will api)ly to the attention paid to b(»th Kantin and Allen, the Eng- lish in both cases honorinii the American command- ers in every jtossible way. 15nt the Mafihht was not yet saf(dy "out of the woods," for shortly after her reca])tnre by the Ari/ns she was recaptured by a British 74-,gnn shij) of the line. A British prize crew was placed aboard and or. 5'23-5i9. 436 PRIVATEERS AGAINST PRIVATEERS. 181^-181:!. Returniug to Ainorica the Ned endeavored to enter the Chesapeake, bnt when she came in si.ii'ht of the Capes, April IStli, she was chased by a 74-oun ship of tlie line and a frigate. :Makino her way north- ward, she tried, on the 19th, to i-nn into the Delaware, bnt here also she was chased by the English block- ading shi]>s, and when off Sandy Hook, on the 2()th, she was driven away by a siniihir force. On April 21st Ca]>tain Dawson managed to rnn the gantlet of fonr or five British war shi])S, and tonched at New London foi* a Sonnd jnlot, aftei' which he niarivateer if she came to. Captain Wooster acted on tlie advice^ and stood off. Shortly after- A^:ard he discovered a scdiooner standing down the coast, some miles to windward of La Guayra. Run- ning down to her he boarded and captured her. Di-y- goods valued at twenty thousand dollars were found in her hold. Early in the morning of the following- day there w^as a heavy fog along the coast line, but about nine o'clock it 1 if led, revealing to Captain Wooster a brig some miles seaward endeavoring to make the port. The Si(traf()rt, and in a short time all bnsiness was snspended, every- body hasteninii' to the shore lo witness the fiju'ht. After standin.ii- oiT shore some time the two ves- sels snddenly tacked landward, and when within five miles of the slioi'e the Krnv//of/a opened from her star- board bow iiiin, which was answered l)y the brig's ]>oi't (|nart<'r gnns. Tlic two vessels maintained a heavy cannonading f(tr a few minntes, when the Americans boarded and compelled the enemy to sur- render. ()n the ]>art of the Americans one man was wonnded, bnt in the RnvlicJ only the s(M-ond officer was unhurt, nearlx' all of her men having been killed or wounded. On December loth ('a]Hain Woostei' sent twenty-five i)risoners with the second officer of the RttclirJ to La (Jiiayra in the brig's longboat, to- gether with every ai-ticle belonging to them as per- sonal prop(M'ty.' About this time a small English ]M'ivateer, name not given, was taken by the privateer Rapid, of Charleston. The LUxiii/, of Baltimore, also ca])tured a British pi-ivateer. and after divesting her of guns and valuables gave her up to the prisoners. A battle also took ])lace Ix^tween the ])rivat(H^r ^fi(J(ls, ('a])tain Thom]»son, of Baltimore, and the Dasli. The M'xhis carried eight guns and thirty-five men, while her opponent mounted tive and was manned by forty men. The action took place off Tybee lighthouse, where the I)(is]i hain.ii' were serious- ly injur(Ml, while a larj^e number of his men had been killiMl or wouuih'd, besides which several shot had taken eff(M-t near the privat(Mn''s water line, which caused her to leak seriously. Seeinjn' little chance of ca])turin.u tlu^ stranger Captain Wilson sluM'red off, while the Eniilishmen, also having- had enough of the fight, made away in th<^ direction of Teneriffe. It was noticed that many of her men were slung OA^er her sides, stopping shot holes n(mr lun' water line. The Mitvdonomjh arrived at Savannah ^Farcdi Ttli, hav- ing taken nine prizes in her entire cann^r in this war. CHAPTEK XIX. NEW YOKK rUIVATEERS. XoTwn iis'rAM>iN(; the fad that the liritisli niain- taiiK'd a ri^oi-oiis blockade off Sandy Ilook and in ]j^]\iX Island Sonnd in the course of the Avar, New York niana.ii'ed to send to sea fifty-five jirivateers. The <-areers of many of these hav<' been recorded in other (dia]>ters. Of the reniaininu,- the Ihtijduihi Fniiikliii was one of tlie first to li'et to sea, h^avinj;- port about July 24, 1812, and returning;' Ans Fylcnds and Mar//, whi(di arrived safcdy in Boston, and the sloo]) Louisa A)UL The last was ca])tured in a most darinc; man- ner. The sloo]» was securely ancdiored in Trinity hai'bor, .Mart iiiirdes, with provisions enonji'h for fonr months. It is recorded that the hJiiiii " was a kin<;'s ship carrying- twelve gnns, and was provided with a ' patent defense ' snrnioniitin«^' her bulwarks, composed of sprin Frlvndslilp^ from London for Lisbon, wbicli was sailing nnder Swedish colors. Her cargo was believed to be English, however, and as it was invoiced at one hnndred thonsand ])()iini-itish frigates. No prizes have been credited to her. The I nriiicihU\ the Jeaufort in ISIT), nine days from Port-au-lM'ince, with a full cargo. The .]ftain Howard ran under the guns of the British Tl-gun line of battle shi]) XiirrcUhntt, and was comjxdled to surrender. In all this jn-iva- teer had made four ]»rizes. Several ])rizes of value were made by the Rosa- mond, Ca]»tain J. Campan, and the Shark, Captain B. d'Elville. The first took the l)rig lio(}>iirl\ with a full cargo of rum, from (Ji-enada for Jersey, wliich was sent into Norfolk. Tlie h'ochiicl- was a s]>len(lid ves- S(d, formerly bcdongiiig to the ruitcd States, but was ca]»tui'ed by the Orders in (Utii)ivil. The Ixosa- iHoiid also took the schooner Adeln, with a cargo of sugar, fi'om Martini(|uc, sailing iindci- S]»anish colors, wliich was sent into New \'ork; and the schooner Antelope, which was sent into Charleston. The S]tarJ{, in ()ctob(n', 1S14, took the schooner Marif, with three thousand pounds worth of di-ygoods, fi'om Jamaica for San Domingo, whi(di was sent into New Orleans; and five vessels off th<^ coast of Portugal, three of 181:^1814. FATE OF THE TEAZER. 445 Avhicli were released and two were onlered to i]\o United States. The YoiiiKi Edf/lc at the ontset of her career had a si)irited en<;aiiement with two heavily armed mer- chantmen, the shi]) (IrciKidd and the scdiooner ^IkkI- c/oc/r, Avhi( h were attacke(l in company. The (irciKida was a shi]) of seven hundred tons, niounte()t to s<'a eai'ly in the war, and by May 30, 1813, sln^ had mad*^ eleven |»ri/es. On July 17th of this year she was cai»lured by an I^niilish s(|ua(lron and sent into Halifax. The ]»eculiai" danii'ers to whi( h the ])rivateersman was ex]>osed are well illustrated in the career of the VVv/rr/-. of New York. This craft, under the command of (''ai>laiu V. Johnson, liol to sea early in the War of 1812, and amonii' her first i)rizes w(M'e the l()-_iiun packet .1////. whi(di was sent into Portland, and the schooner (Irci/lioinid. A ])riz(^ crew was thrown aboai'd the latter, with orders to make foi* the most 440 NEW YORK PRIVATEERS. 1812-1813. available AiiH'rii't. In carryinj;- out these iii- strnctious the ])rize master of the (ircj/lioHud was chased and overtaken by the 74-onn ship of the line La JItion, followed the Amcn'ican until clos(^ under the guns of the fort. The garrison, also su])posing that the schoomM- was a British ])rize, did not tire, and the commander of the cruiser, satisfied as to the Yoiuifi T<(iZ(r\s pretendcMl character, ])ut io sea again, and in a few hours was out of sight. Un- 1813. BLOWING UP THE YOUNG TEAZER. 447 der cover of iiii>h( the Yoiiiif/ Tvfizcr also oot to sea in safely. Not at all abashed by his narrow escape, Dobson had the audacity, two days after his clever ruse, to send into Halifax a proclamation " dcndarins;- all Halifax in a stale of bIo(dson to(d< care to keej) beyond the reach of their shot. He ran into a small bay ni^ar Halifax where tli<^ water was too shoal for Ijt Ifa(/i(v to fol- low, but (''a])tain ('ajxd manned his boats and sent one hundred and thirty men aiiainst the ])rivateer. l>y some means, not fully exjdained, I)(d)Son man- aii'ed to u'et to sea a^ain, with Lr of capture that he called his oflicers in consultation. Escape was impossible, for the enemy's shots were whistlino,- by their ears viciously, and it was oidy a (|uestion of a few minutes when broadsides would be crashino; into them. While the American othcers were in con- sultation, Johnson, who knew that, if captured and recoiLiiiiztMl, he would be ]»romptly handed at the yardarm for dishonorinu his parole, (]uietly slipped away from the iirouj), and, seizium- a live coal, disa])- ])eared in the cabin. ^ One of the seamen called Dobson's attention to the straniic action of his first officer, but before anvthin^- could b(^ done the maoa- ' !»iiv;itr letter from I'ortliuid. daleil July 24. 181.3, to agent of tlie Youiuj Teazer, in New Yt)rl<. J^48 NEW YORK PRIVATEERS. 1812-181:5. ziue ^yas ignited and the ship was blown to pieces. Thirty of her comph'ment of thirty-seven people were killed. " Had he [Johnson] blown his own brains ont,"' says a contemporary newspaper, '' or tied a <>nn aronnd his neck and flnng- himself over- board, very few wonld have monrned, and no one would have fonnd fanlt, as by all acconnts he was not the most amiable man livini;-. Indeed, he innst have been possessed of the disi>osition of the devil to i)lnnge sncli a number of his friends into eternity who had parents, wives, and children to monrn their untimely fate and to suffer for want of protection and assistance." Dobson was one of the survivors, and it was scarcely two months after the disaster to the Young Tcazcr that he was in a shi}) that still insisted on haviiifi' the word " Teazer " in her name — this time it was YoiUKj Tca.::er\s (Uiosf. The Yoinuj l^'dzcr's fihost had been the British ])rivateer Lircr/xioJ Pacl-cf. This craft had been lonj; cruisinii off the New England coast, and had occasioned much damage to our com- merce. Her presence in these waters was especially obnoxious to the people of Salem, as the English- man made it a point to station himself off that port, where he captured several inward and outward bound sliii)s. His presence was the more exasperat- ing, in view of the great number of American priva- teers that came from SahMii, which unfortunately at that time were far away and could not be called upon to chastise the insolent strangei-. Finally, th(^ indignation of the Salem folk became so great that on the morning of November 12, 1812, Captain John Upton declared that he would go out in the merchant sch(M)ner IIClcii if sixty-nine men would go with him and give battle to the Britisher. The owners of the Helen, the IMessrs. J. J. Kna])p and White, patriotically loaned the craft for the occa- sion. The sixty-nine men were rapidly secured, and, forming a procession, " ]»i'eced(Ml by the American 1813. TRAITORS. 449 tluj;', and by Jaiiics McCai'tliy witli liis di'iiiii aiiles | nn^anino- that they were owned by citizens eed, and were employed by the enemy in carry- iuii iuii)ortant dispatches, but more fre(]|uently in trans]»ortin^- speci(\ As a rule, they carrieeed, they seldom took the initiative in an acticni, and when (dias(Ml crowded on all sail to escape, at the same time using' their stern guns to injure the enemy's sails and rigging rather than their hulls. If evidence were needed to further demonstrate tln^ sup«M'iority of the Ameri- can-built craft ov(M' that of the British at this p(n-iod, it will be found in tlu^ fact that a large num- ber of these l^ritish (Jovernmeut ])a(dv(4s were cap- tured by American private armed vessids; and, if evidence is needed to show that our ])rivateersmen were as brave as they were skillful in handling their shii)S, it will be liat to sea, and abont .Inly 2(\, 1S12, f(dl in with the heavily armed British mer(diantman fh(i(iear. After a rnnninii tinlit lastinii' tifty-tive minntes the linn/diizd was surrendered and sent into Baltimore, aecom- l>anied by t he Tom. iJelit tinii' in this i)ort tlie Tom a.uain pnt to sea, the foUowinti' notice of hei* (b'])artnre ai)]»earin,ii' in Nile's Keji'ister: "The ]»ilot-boat bnilt scdiooner Tom sailed on Sunday last |An;L;nst 2, 1S12| on a cruise. Ilin* burthen is two hnndred and eighty-seven tons; she cari-ied sixteen liuns and a brave crew of one hundred and forty men, admirably })rei»ar«Ml for action. Thus she is able to compete with the smaller national ves- sels of the enemy, and, we trust, to escajx' from the larger. The canvas she s])r(^alo were hurt. Takinii; out most of the vaUiabh'S in the ])acket, Captain Wilson released (lie shij) on the payment of six thousand dol- lars. At the heis2,ht of the action, M'hen the British saw that they must surrender, they thi'ew overboard all the mail ba.iis, but as they were not properly shotted they floated, and afterward were picked U]) by the ]>rivateer schooner Boiki, ('ai)taiii J. Dann^'on, of Baltimore, and brought into ])ort. On April 27, 181o, the Tom was captured by the i>ritish cruiser Lj/ni, at which time the privateer's armament lia for, besides seizing- ;i iniinbor of the enemy's dro- jihers, or (-oastinji' vessels sailiiisi," in the West Indies, she (•a]>tnred another coniniissary and seventy-two men, wlio were sen) into Demerara under a i\-dti <>f (nice. (Jovernor Carmiehael wrote a letter to Cap- tain (Jrant highly complimentinn' the latter for his coui-tesy in thus aceommodatinii' his ])risoners. In February, ISl.'i, the /I if/Jifli/cr was (•a])tur(Ml by the 74-j4nn shij) of the line PoicHcrs, the privateer having taken in all eight British vessels. On securing the Ilif/lipi/cf the British converted her into a tender, in charge of a lientenant and seventy-two men. On the night of May 24, ISl^^), the American privateer Rof/er, ('a]»t ain K. (^)narles, of fourteen gnus and one hundred and twenty men, slipped ])ast the bbxdvading sqnad- ron at Ilam]don Roads. Several iMtish b]o(ds and getting to s(ni, so as to give warning and information to onr r<'tnrn- ing jn-iva leers. Tlie 11 'K/li/li/cr'^ people ])roinptly bnrned tlie lUlscji, and took her men aboard their S(diooner. At nine o*( locl< in the evening the Rixjcr got to sea, and soon fell in with tlie H 'K/lifli/cr. The British haih'd the ])rivateer, and on receiving no answer hailed again and thr(^atened to tire. To this the Americans res])onded with a broadsi() v. M., when the niacket ships. It occurred Novem- ber -S, ISl.'i, while the American privateer was cruis- iuii' in the vicinity of Madeira. Two days before this Cai)tain Moon discover(Ml a sail leeward, ami iminediat<'ly bore away to ascertain her character. She proved to be a lar^e man-of-war brii,^ ami after exchanuinii' a few shots Cajdain Moon hauled off. Just befoi'e she ^"ot out of reach, howevei-, the (ilohr T'ec(dve(l a !l-j)onnd shot utkUm' her (piartiM', xi^vy near the water line \\iiicli caused a danjucrous leak. Sliakinii- herself (dear of the man-of-war, the (Uohe re])aired damai^'es and a])i)eared oil' the ]»ort of Fun- (dial, wliei'e two bi'iiis were (liscoxcrcd backinu^ and tilliiiu- awav as if about to leave the Roads. J^vi- 4-,ifi PRIVATEERS VEBSl'S PACKET SHIPS. 1813. deiiTly xhvy observed the approaeh of the privateer, and were uiiwilliiiir to leave port until she withdrew. Captain ]Moon so far accoinniodated them as to make a feint at sailin, and passing across the Globe's bow gave her a terrible raking tire, which killed or wounded a number of the privateer's people, besides greatlv iniurinii- her sails and rigging. This broad- 1813. A EARD-FOUGHT ACTION. 457 side, added to the injuries the privateer already had received, for some time rendered her (iiiite imman- aj;eabh\ ('a]»tain Moon, liowever, kept his j;uiis going", and made every elTort to re])air liis rigging, lioping I0 I'enew the engagement nnoth brigs then set npon the ]u-i\aleer A\ith ]'eneA\' their advantage, and linding that the ]>rivateer was unable to cw (he horizon. The condition of the (llohc was critical in the ex- treme; for, besides the great (juantities of water she 458 TRIVATEERS VL^IiSUS PACKET SHIPS. 1813. was taking in, the greater part of her standing and rnuniug rigging were shot away, and not a sail was left that had not been fiddled with shot. A large nnniber of her ottieers and men also had been killed t>r wounded. For some hours after this battle the survivors bent all their energies to keeping their craft afloat and mending the rigging. Having done this, the schooner slowly made her way to the Grand Canary Island for i)ermanent repairs. Down t(^ this time (''ai)tain Moon was ignorant of the names, force, or (diaracter of his antagonists, excepting that during the time hc^ was chasing the largest brig he observed that her people were throw- ing various articles overboard, some of which floated, and when the (llohc came up to them they were seen to be mail bags. From this circumstance he was led to believe that they were packet vessels. This belief was confirmed when he arrived at the Canary Islands, where he learned, rid Santa Cruz, TenerilTe, that a British pacdcet brig carrying eighteen guns and another mounting fourteen had recently arrived at that place. They reported that a few days before they had a severe engagement with an American privateer and succeeded in beating her off, but only after great losses to themselves, having twenty- seven men killed or wounded, besides suffering seri- ous injuries in their hulls and rigging. The (rlohc, Ix-sides those already mentioned, had Seamen Oliver, Samuel D. Smith, and Sandy Forbes killed, making eight in all killed, and the following men wounded: Captain Moon, Prize-Blasters Noah Allen and John Frinck; Seamen Asa Hart, Ab. Kinhart, Fortune, Job F. Wheeler, P. Short, F. Statt, T. Jifford, J. Arnold, J. Reatly, John Wilson, John Mitchell, and Daniel Milton. On this cruise the Glohc carried her l(»ng torn — probably an IS- or 24-poiinder — and eight 12-i)0under carronades. Her complement of offi- cers, seamen, and marines numbered ninety. After the action Captain Moon found a double-headed shot 1814. THE HARPY AND PRIXCESS ELIZABETH. 459 sticking- in the f^ide of his ship which weighed twelve pounds.^ ^>o many British vessels of tliis class were taken by American cruisers and i)rivateers in the early part of the war, and so S(-rioiis were the losses and inconveniences resulting from these captures, that extraordinary precautions were taken to protect the packet ships. Their time of sailing was purposely made irregular, and, so far as possible, the exact date was kept secret. In some cases war ships ac- companied the packet, while, finally, ships of the line and heavy frigates were called upon to perform this service. But even these extreme measures did not prevent our enterprising privateers from continuing their mischievous work of capturing this class of craft. In September, 1S14, the privateer Ifdrpi/, Captain William Nichols, of Baltimore, fell in with the Brit- ish packet I'riiicrs.s FAlzdhdh and compelled her to surrender. The English had three men killed and several wounded, while the Americans had one man killed. The packet was armed with eight 12-pound- ers and two long brass 9-pounders and was manned by a crew of thirty-eight men. The Ilarpn carried fourteen heavy guns and about one hundred men. The prize had on board as passengers the Turkish ambassador to England, an English army officer, an aide to a British general, and the second lieuten- ant of a 74-gun ship of the line. Taking out of the pacdcet ten thousand dollars in specie, five pipes of ^ladeira wine, the two brass 9-pounders, and two of the 12-pounders, Captain Nichols threw overboard the remaining guns, and allowed the Princess Eliza- lii'th to proceed on her voyage, after paying a ransom of two thousand dollars. In the following month the Tfarpf/ sailed from Portsmouth, New IIami»shire, and returned to that ' For other services of the Globe in this war, see pp. 430-433. 460 PRIVATEERS V£Ii\SrS PACKP:T ships. 1814-181.-). place, after a criiise of only tweiil y days, with sixty prisoners, having' captured the Britisli trausports Biahjcs and Aiiiazoii, from London for Halifax, the first vessel carryiiiii' six ieces of British manufactured goods, twenty- nine bolts of canvas, a (piantity of cordage, ten pipes of sherry wine, three barrels of gnnpowder, carron- ades, mnskets, pistols, cutlasses, sails, signal flags, lamps and ]>aint oil, white and ])at(mt sheet lead, nautical instrnments, cnt and other glass, medicines, and upward of one hundred thousand pounds sterling in British treasury notes and bills of exchange.'' The following testimonial was written by one of Captain Nichols' prisoners: "•Captain William Drys- dale, late of the ship WiJlidin rivate property. And slnnild, at any future time, Cnptain Nichols or any of his otticers come to Lon- don, Captain Drysdale will be happy to see them at his house. Stepney Grc^'U, near London. Given under my hand, on board the Ilarpi/ at sea, this day, Janu- ary (i, 1815." This testimonial was supplemented as follows: ''We, the undersigned, feeling congenial sentiments with Captain Drysdale toward Captain Nichols, Lieu- tenant Place, and the officers on board the Harpi/, and desirous that smdi humanity and goodness may be made public, as w(dl in the United States as in England, de(dar(^ tliat our treatment is wortliy of every praise and encomium, and that all our private property has been held sacred to us and a cartel fitted for us as early as circumstances would permit. George Harrison, W. Newell, J. W. Hall, Andrew ^IcCarthy, late masters of vessels taken by the IUd-j)!/.'" The Winiiuii (111(1 AJfr((1 was laden with drygoods and ]»lantati()n utiMisils, and was bound for Antigua. Captain Nichols divested her of her drygoods, and, placing her in charge of a prize crew, ordered her to the T'nited States. The ship Jane, from Lomlon for Antigua, was taken by the Harp!/. She was laden with i)rovisions for the GovernnuMit. .Vfter taking out a portion of her cargo and (h^stroying tiie remainder. Captain Nichols ]daced his prisoners in her, and ordered her to a British port as a cartel. An- other prize of the Ildrpi/ was the ship (hirhind, with a full cargo of rum and sugar. She arrived safely at Salem. « CHAPTEK XXI. BATTLES WITH THE KIX(J*S SUITS. A REMARKABLE featui'e of the maritime War of 1812-1815 was tlie number of instances in which our privateers liave and received blows from the rej^n- lar war ships of the British Government. Xotable cases, sn^ men in their attacdv on the Pr'ntce dc Xeiirlidfcl, have been detailed in separate (diapters, bnt those actions are far from completing the list. On September 8, 1812, the American privateer Dilii/oit, Captain Gras- sin, of Philadelphia, fell in with the British lO-gun cruiser Ldiira, Lieutenant Charles Newton Hunter. The Laura had taken three American mendiantmen, and was in the act of seizing the fourth, when, at three o*( lock in the afternoon, she was discovered by the DWuient. The Englishman carried ten 18- pounder carronades and two short 9-pounders, and had, according to their accounts, a complement of forty-one men. The DH'Kjcitt was a s(dio()ner mount- ing ten short guns. As soon as the privatecn* was made out to be a ship of force. Lieutenant Hunter recalled his boat from the merchantman and made sail for the /)///- <)vnt. I'^rom some men captured in his third prize the British commanc^'r had learned that the DiVujcui was in the vicinity and was informed as to her force. At 8.55 r. M. the vessels had come within pistol shot, when the Laura oi)ened with her guns, to which the 463 1812-1813. BATTLE BETWEEN DILIGENT AND LAURA. 4f)3 Americans respoiKled with a broadside. Five min- utes later the two yess(ds were fairly side by side, and, while the Americans endeayored to manenyer for a better position, the British attempted to frus- trate the effort by taking the Ayiud out of their op- ponent's sails. At 4.30 r. m. the DiHoou afterward the DUif/ciif, dropping astern and catch- ing the breeze, and being the best sailer of the two, drew up on the Aveather <]uarter of the Lain-a. Down to this time, owing to the fact that the men in both vessels were engaged in maneuvering, their fire had not been very effective. The privateer now seized the opportunity to take the wind out of the Laura's sails, and running her bowsprit over the starboard taff'rail of the p]nglishman, with her. jib boom between the to]>ping lifts and through the mainsail, made fast. The Americans then used their small arms with great effect, and made attempts to board, which at 4.55 P. M. Avere successful, and soon they had comi»lete ])ossession of the vessid. The English loss was fifteen killed and severely wounded, including Lieutenant Hunter and ^lidshipman John O. Griffith. The Dil'u/nit had nine killed and ten wounded. '' (''a])tain (irassin," savs an English his- torian, " carritnl his ]>rize to Philadelphia, and be- haved to Lieutenant Hunter in the most honorable and attentive manner. Lieutenant Hunter was landed and taken to tlu^ hospital." Afterward the Laura was fitted out as a 12-gun privateer and re- named llie If(h(. In A])ril, 1813, while under the 464 BATTLES WITH THE KING'S SHIPS. 181B. coniDiand of Cai»t;iiii J. IMcarreiH', she was captured by a British S(iiianrdett; the 3(>- <;nii frij^ate Bclridcni, Captain Bi(diard Byron; the 38-iinn frigate^ Jiiiioii, Captain James Sanders; and the 3S-i;iiii friji'ate i^hilini, Captain Ilassard 8tack- p(»l(\ As so])roa(h of the enemy, Captain Sonthcomb made all sail to esca])o, for his vesscd carried only six 12-])oiiiidcr carronades and twenty- eight men. In a few hours, however, the Lottcri/ was becalmed, and about one o'cbxdc in th<^ after- no(»n the British boats came within gunshot, when the Americans o])ened smh a w(dl-dir(M-t(Ml tirc^ that tlu^ averpowereaking of Soiithcomb's heroism, an English historian says: ''This was a very gallant resistance on the part of the Loifcr//, and Cai)tain Sonthcomb, nntil he died, was treated with the greatest atten- tion by Captain Byron, on board whose frigate. he had been bronght. Captain Byron then sent the body of the Jjottvrifs late commander on shore, with 1813. CAREER OP THE DOLPHIN. 4(55 every mark of respect due to the iiKMiiory of a brave officer, and lie afterward rcM-eived a letter of thanks from Captain Charles Stewart, of the American frig- ate CoiistcllaHoii, at anchor in James Kiver lead- injn- to Norfolk, watchinj;- an o})i»ortnnity to put to sea." The Loftcri/ measured two hundred and twen- ty-hve tons, and althoni;!! <-arryini;- only six guns was pier<-ed for sixteen. She was taken into the ]>ritisli navy unritish bhxdvading squadron. Tlu^ Dolpirui, Captain W. S. Stafford, had l»ut to sea early in the war, and nia be the ship lIvJic (by some accounts the rJoliii IlmiiUlou], carrying six- teen guns and twenty-five uhmi, and the smaller ves- sel, the brig Three lifoIlK rs, with ten guns and twen- ty-five men. Caj)tain AV. A. Brigham, of th(^ JfeJx., was badly wounded early in the acti(tn by a musket shot, and soon afterward he was sevendy burned by an ex])losion of powder. The JfolpJiiii carried ten guns and a crew of sixty men, of whom only four were hurt. Ca|>tain Stafford placed ])rize crews in these ves- sels, with orders to make for the United States. The Ilehe was recaptured, but the Tliree Brothers reached 406 BATTLES WITH THE KING'S SHIPS. 1813. New York. ]><>tli vessels were lioiiieward bound from Malta, and weri^ laden Avitli valuable cargoes. rai)tain Brii;liani expressed nmcli snr]»rise at nieet- inj;- an American war craft in that i>art of the world, and said: '' I did not exi)ect to find a d d Yankee privateer in that ])lace." I'nt Stafford assnreri_iiham i)nblished the following- " card ": " W. A. Brijiham, lately captured in the British mers to make jniblic and ^ratefnlly a(dvnowle, ISl.'i." This generous wish of Captain I>righam was soon to be grant(Ml. On April .3, 1813, Sir John Warren, having his flag aboard th(^ 74-gun shi]> of the line Snns and forty men; the Racer, Captain D, Chaytor, of six o'lms and thirt^'-six men; and the Dolphin, Cap- tain W. S. Stafford, carryint;' twelve ouns and one hundred men, then starting' out for another cruise. As soon as these vessels were made out from the enemy's mastheads, the British sent seventeen boats, with a large force of men under the command of Lien- tenant James r(dkinL:,horn(% against them. Unfortn- nat(dy for the privat<'ers it was calm at the time, and as their vessels were too far apart to be within siip])orting distance of eacdi other the liritish were able to attacd-: tliem separatcdy. They selected the A fill) as being farther down stn^am and made a dash for her. This boat was not surren■, and Li/n.r were taken into the liritish service, tlie last two und(n' the names l>iJielhoiifiie and M Hs ]M)rt. On November 27, ISlo, Oai)tain Stafford, while in command of an- (dlier ]>riva1e(M', was attacked wliiU' (d'f Charleston l)y live boats from a British brig of Avar. One of the boats \\as lorn to ]>ieces by the privateer's fire, while tlie others were compelled to ridrcnit, after having sustained heavy losses. The brig gave the Ameri- cans a futile broadside and liien drew away.^ 1 There were five ot her Aiiiericiui vessels engaged in ] iri vateering bearing the name Bulphin. One of them, carrying five guns and twenty-eiglit men, under the oommand ol Captain J. Endieott, of Salem, was one of the first to get to sea, and in a. eruise ot a few weeks captured tlu'ee sliips, seven brigs, and six seliooners. One of tlie shij)s was armed with fourteen guns and anotlier with twelve. One of the jirizes was released, another recap- tured. The DuIpJthi lierself was captured by a Britisli cruiser, August 12, 1S12. Another Dolphin, Captain II. Lelar, of P]nladeli)hia, was a ship car- rying twelve guns and fifty-six men. Slie was not very successful, being taken at sea by the English Colosstis, January 5, 1813. Dolphin No. 4 was a two-gun scliooner, credited with forty-eiglit men. Her career was cut short, xVugust 13, 1812, off Cape Sa))le by the British sloop of war Colibri. Dolphin No. 5 was a one-gun schooner, carrying twenty men. 1813. AN "IMPUDENT" CAPTURE. 401) A maritime enterprise of a singularly darino- na- ture was undertaken ajuninst the kind's slii]>s off Sandy Hook, where a liritish blockadini;- s(Hiadron had long been stationed. Some of llicse vessels had become extriMuely obnoxious to coast traed the Yanks, three men dressed in fishermen's a])]»arel and wearing butf caps being the only jx'rsons visible on deck. Scarcely had the Y(nil:ir cleared Sandy TTook Avhen the officious lUnjlc espied her and immediately began a chase. Of <-ours{> tlie three innocent-look- ing hshermen obeyed the first summons to heave to, and running alongside the English officers ])erceiveing the sea months at a tinn^ on dreary blockade duty, having nothing but salt provisions to eat. The Americans wer<- fullv alive to this weakness of their under Captain A. Johnson, of jMassaclinsetts. She seems to have accom- plished little, and was caj)tnred hv a British cruiser, r)ei'einV)er 4, 1814. Dolphin No. 6 also was of Massachusetts. She was a mere boat, under the order of Captain P. Moore. 470 BATTLES WITH THE KING'S SHIPS. 1813-1812. cousins' api)etites, and bad purposely left the live stock conspicuously in view. The commander of the Edf/lc ordered the Yankee to <:>o down to the British flaj^ship, some live miles distant, thinking that the live stock wouhl be a trcnit to the senior officer of the S(piadron. Just as the order had been i;'iven, the watchword '' Lawrence ■' was i)assed, and up rose the concealed men and fired at the astounded enemy. The English W(n*e driven precij>itately below decks, and did not stop even to haul down their colors. Observinji- that the Edijle's decdcs were cleared, Sailin2-])ounder brass howitzer, which was loaded witli canister, but so complete was the surprise that the enemy did not have time to dis- (diarge it. The Ea(/Je was commanded by ^Master's ]Mate II. ]Morris, of the Poictiers, who was killed. ]\Iid- shipman W. l*rice and eleven seamen completed her complement. Mr. Brice was mortally wounded and one of the seamen was killed. On December 0, 1812, the i)rivateer brig Moiit- i/outeri/, Cajdain Upton, of Boston, made a gallant defense against the English brig of war Huriixini, in the vicinity (d' the port bearing that name. The ^"^iiriiKiiH carried eighteen 32-pounders and two long 9-]>ounders, while the Monffiomo-i/ mounted only ten 0-l»ounders and two long 12-})ound(M's. The war brig gave chase to the privateer, but in the half hour she was within gunshot the Americans manag(Ml to ])hint a solid shot in the l^iiriiKiurs foremast, which so weak- ened the spar that the English were glad to haul off and ])(M'mit the ])rivateer to escape. On the 5th of the f(dlowing ^lay the Mfjiifuoiiieri/, while returning from the English Channel, was captured by the Brit- 1814. UNDER A CRUISER'S GUNS. 471 isli frigate Xi/iupJir. In her entire career the Moiit- (jomvnj took six vessels. Another instance of an American privateer get- ting unpleasantly close to a Ih-itish man-of-war was that of the schooner Cniinpus, Captain John Mur- phy, of Baltimore. On June 18, 1814, the (h-ainpu.^, in company with the privateer Pdtap.sco, of Balti- more, and the Dash, of Boston, was chased off Boston Harbor by the Tl-gnn ship of the line La lla(/iie, Cap- tain Captd.^ The huge ship of the line promptly began a furious chase, but by clever seamanship all the privateers escaped. It is reported on good au- thority that Captain Capel Avas so chagrined over this that he snatched the epaulets from his shoul- ders and threw them to the de(dc. ^Making for the Canary Islands aftcn- this escape, Captain ^Iuri»hy cruised in that vicinity some time with little or no success, taking only the brig ^^pccii- lator, from Lanzarote for London. She proved to be an old and conii>aratively worthless craft, and Cap- tain Muri)hy returned her to her people. Not long- after this a sail was descried from the (J rant pus, to whi( h chase was given. It was soon discovered that slie was a heavily armed merchantman, or, at the most, a letter of mar(]ue — so the Americans thought. Acting on this belief Captain Murphy hastened to clos<\ and when near enough he called on the Englishmen to surrend(n'; but by way of answer the stranger triced up a long row of covers, ran out ten or eleven black muzzles and belched forth a broadside that told, ])lainly (Miough, that it was not a mer(diantnuin or h^ter of marque speaking, but a full-fledged sloop of war. This broadside killed one man and wounded several others, besides occasion- ing considerable damage to the privateer's sails and ' For Captiun Capel's connection with the forgery of Sir Philip B. V. Brooke's official report of the Chesapeali-e-Shannon fight, see Maclay's History of the United States Navy, vol. i, jip. xxv-xxvii. 4:--2 BATTLES WITH THE KIXG"S SHIPS. 1814 riii'iiiDii'. As soon as The astonisheil Americans re- eovered from Their snvprise They made every exer- Tion TO aeT away from Their quarrelsome neighbor. AMTh eohn'S sTill tiyinu' CapTain ]Mnrphy jiradnally drew away frum The shxtp of war. and Tinally niach' his escape. In This affair CapTain >Inri)hy and ono of his men were morTally wounded. The (Irainpiis made eiiiliT prizfs in This war. One of The hisT enua^uemeiiTs beTween American privaTeers and The king's ships Took phice July 12, 1S14. in The Euiilish Channel. The T-unu schooner privaTeer Sin-in, CapTain J. D. Daniels, of BalTimore. puT TO sea in The sprinn' of 1814. and made for BriT- ish waTci-s. On July 12Th she fell in wiTh The cuT- Ter Lniidr((U, LieuTenanT IJoberT Daniel LancasTer. mouuTinii' four shorT 12-pounders and manned by TweuTy men — ThirTy-Tliree according To American accouuTs. The Sunn had abouT lifTy men aboard aT This Time. As The LdmlraU had imporTanT dispaTches aboard. LieuTenanT LancasTer made all sail To avoid a baTtle. The swifT American, however, gradually overhauled him. and a running figliT. lasTing one hoiTr and Ten minuTes. resulTed. AT The end of TliaT Time The Siimi had come To (dose quarTers, and for forTy minuTes longer a d<^s]>(-raTe tigliT was made on boTli sides, when The Englishmen surremhn-ed. having seven of Their number wounded. RriTish accouuTs ])lace The casualTies in The Si/n ii aT Three killed an^(i)ii, with twenty-three thousand five hun- dred dollars in specie aboard, and carried her into Portland. Getting to sea again the Siro appeared off the Irish coast, and on January 13, 1813, was captured by the English brig of war PrJimii and sent into Plymouth. The English refitted their prize and sent her out under the name AfJaitfa. On September 21, 1814, the Athnita was taken by the United States sloop of war TTV/.v/>. The >^(ih'ute and the Bdlthiiore were two privateers 476 PRIVATEERS OP BALTIMORE. 1813. about which little is known — or, at least, few prizes are credited to them. The former, Captain J. Barnes, while on her way to France, captured and destroyed a brig from Lisbon, while the lattin', Captain E. Veasey, is credited Avith two jn'izes — the brig Point- ^harcf^, of St. John's, and the schooner Dorcas;^ which was relieved of her cargo of drygoods and released. The 5-gnn schooner Sparroir, Captain J. Burch, was captured by the enemy, and recaptured under singular circumstances. Captain Burch's first prize was the schooner Meadow, out of which he took the most available articles and then released her. His second prize was the schooner Farmer, of Nassau, which also was released, the British master highly complimenting Captain Burch for his liberal conduct, declaring that he would not even receive some poul- try without paying for it. On November 30, 1S13, the Sparrcjir, while making a run from New Orleans to New York, with a cargo of sugar and lead, was chased ashore near Long Branch by the British 74-gun ship of the line Plautaf/euet and taken possession of by one hundred men. A detachment of the United States flotilla stationed at New York, under the command of Captain Lewis, inarched against the enemy, drove them from the stranded vessel, and took possession of her in spite of a heavy fire of grape from the PJaiifawn. The first, J. Taylor, nuule three ])rizes; the second, Caittain 1*. Kider, in Septem- ber, 1S14, took the brii;- Marii (iiid JJli.zd, from Halifax, in hnuber, and ordered her to port, but she Avas cliased ashore near Barneiiat and destroyed. The D'kiiikiikI, Captain W. Davidson, in 1815 took the briu; L(H(I WcHiiHitoii, from Halifax for Havana, but she was r(deased, in d(d"erence to the wishes of some Spaniards who were aboard as pass(Mi^'ers. The lirst ])rize taken by the xebec / 7/or, rai)tain INFathews, was a brii;- called the IxoJxrt, laden with fish and lumber, from St. Jidin's for Jamaica, which was sent into Charleston. Her S(M-oiid ])rize, taken in April, 1S14, was the briii' ^iriff, carrying' four n'uns and tifteen men, from Halifax, with an assorted carji'o, which also was sent into ])ort. AVhile in Lonj;' Islaml Sound, July, 1814, the xebec (llor was at- tacked by two Enii'lish boats, but the Americans made such iiood use of their tirearms that one boat was beaten off and the tui'ed. The commander of this boat was killed, and was bui'ied in New r.ondon, wluM'e the xebe<- CJIor touched in order to dispose of her pris- 480 PRIVATEERS OF BALTIMORE. 1814-1815. oners. In the course of the war the xebec Ultor made fifteen prizes. The J*ike and the Lawrence, bearinf>' two historic names, ".^ot to sea toward the (dose of the war and were eminently successful. The former, Captain H. Bolton, in JMay, 1814, captured the schooner Hope, the S(diooner PiclrrvJ, from Dartmouth, England, for Quebec, and th(^ ship Mciiiui'uJ, besides twenty other vessels. One of her prizes, the brij;' John, of London, for Teneriffe, was taken and burned within long- shot of an English brig of war that vainly endeav- ored to come up with the audacious Americans. The Pllxe, about September, 1814, was (based ashore on the Southern coast and seized by British boats. A part of her crew escaped, but forty-three were made prisoners. In her cruise the P'llxC released on parole two hundred and fifty men. One of her prizes, the ship l^aiiiiicl C II null ill (/.s, of four hundred tons, laden with sugar and coffee, was wrecked on the Southern coast. The 0-gun schooner Lairrrncf, Captain E. Yeasey, arrived at New York, January 25, 1815, and reported having taken thirteen English vessels, eight of which had been manned and ordered to port. She had made one hundred and six prisoners, but only fifteen were brought in. One of her prizes, taken November 11, 1814, was the brig Eiif/lc, and was ordered to the United States under Prize-lMaster John Snow. On December 7th, while the E(i-i;'un schooner AiiicUd, Oaplain A. Adams, Avas ab(>ve the avera<;e in the number and value of her captures. She ar- rived in New York after her first cruise with eii;hty ])ris(»iiers, haviui;- taken one thousand four hundreut into L'Orient, where she was well received by the I'rench authorities, but while on her liouR^vard passable sli<' touched at St. Barts for water. The governor would not permit her to take in supplies, and ord<'red her to leave i)ort at once. The A)iicJin, althouiih fre(|uently chased, always escaped throu^jh her sujtcrioi' sailing- <|ualities and the fine seaman- ship of her officers. The Ildii-isoii, the Si/rcii, and th(^ 1' ///'i/ fully sus- tained the re])ulation of the American ])rivateers- inen. The first, a schooner commanded by Captain 482 PRIVATEERS OF BALTIMORE. 1814-1815. II. Perry, had a battle with a British sloop of war, whose commander was killed. The Harrison arrived safely at Savannah, Augnst, 1814. In her second venture, made in 1815, she took a brijj^ which was ransomed and a schooner which was sailing under Si)anish colors, but carrying British goods. After taking out the cargo the Ifarrisoii released the schooner. This privateer is credited with six iirizes, one of them being valued at one hundred thousand dollars. The 7-gun schooner i^i/rni, Captain J. D. Daniels, seized two shii)S on the English coast and destroyed them. She also took, in December, 1811, the brig ^ir John ^hcrhrolxC, mounting twelve guns, from Hali- fax for Alicant, with lish and oil. This vessel was manned, but she was chased ashore on Bockaway Beach by the English blockading squadron off New York, and burned by her prize crew to prevent her falling into the hands of the enemy. The l>^i/rcii her- self, while returning from a cruise, was chased off Sandy Hook by the enemy's blockading force. She tlien endeavored to make the Delaware, but on No- vcMuber 1(1, 1814, she was run ashore by the pilot. AA'hile in this position she was attacked by three barges from an English razee. For two hours the Americans held the enemy in check, when, finding that it was hopcdess to continue the struggle, they set fire to the vessel and escaped to the Jersey shore Avith their six prisoners. At the time the ^i/roi was attacked she had only twenty of her original crew. One of her prizes, the ship Emiihtthni, put into the Western Isles and was abandoned by her crew.^ The 117/ (f/, an 8-gun schooner, under Captain T. Venice, made thirteen prizes. She arrived in New York, September or October, 1814, with twenty-three ])risoners. A number of her prisoners had been sent • For action between tlie Syren ami tlie king's cutter, see page 473. 1814. PRIZES OP THE WHIG. 483 to England in the sloop E^ierprlxe, one of her j^rizes, from Guernsey for jMadeira, laden with drygoods and flour. Her prizes, the brigs Bruiisirick and Race Jforse and the schooner Briiiuuiui, were burned at sea. CHAPTEK XXIII. (iUY R. CllAMPLIX. Few American vesseLs have liad such a distin- g;iiished career as tlie privateer schooner (hntcral AniislroiH/, of New York, titted ont, in part, by tlie shi])i»ini:,' tirni of Jenkins cK: Havens. Tliis vessel, named for .T(din Armstronii', in 1813 tlie Secretary of War, was always fortunate in liaviuii' an able com- mander. She was first bronuht i)rominently before the i)ublic by an action she sustained with a heavy En<>lisli war shii) off Surinam lliver. On March 11, 1813, this vessel, then comnunuled by ('a])tain (Juy 1\. Champlin, was cruisini;- in five fathoms of water some thirty miles east of the mouth of the Surinam River. The weather was cloudy, but the wind Avas li^ht and enabled her to stand (doser in shore than usual. At seven o\dooured in his starboard broadside, and, wearing shij), rt cover after poi-t cover along lier dark sides were triced up in rai)id succession, until the Americans found themselves facing four- teen guns on her main deck, six on the quarter-deck, and four on tlie forecastle. It was too late to think of running away, for in a twinkling the black muz- zles began to belch away, carrying death and dt^- struction into the privateer. I'or ten minutes the (icHCfal Anitsfroiierior to that of the enemy, as it was shown to have been in so many instances in this war, which in some degree made up for the great 4S6 GUY R. CHAMPLIX. 1813. disparity of forces. At the first disi-liarp;e the Eng- lishmau's fore-topsail tie and mizzeii gaff halyards were shot away, which brought her colors down. Her niizzeu and bark stays also were carried away. For a moment it was thought in the dciivral Arm- stviiuij that the enemy had surrendered, but this hope was quickly dispelled by the English renewing their fire and showing their colors again. For some time after this the Englishmen seemed to have lost con- trol of their craft, but they finally got under way and ojieiied viciously from their starboard battery and maintop, evidently thoroughly exasperated at the rough treatment they had received from the audaci<»us American and determined to sink her alongside. For forty-five minutes the (Icurfdl A)iii'eriod of the battle Captain Champlin spent most of his time by the long tom, knowing that his main dependence was on this gun. So near were the ves- sels at times that he fired one of his pistols at the enemy with effect, and was about to discharge an- other when he was wounded in his left shoulder by a musket ball from the Englishman's maintop. The wound was a painful and dangerous one, but the heroic man, affecting indifference, coolly walked aft and had the hurt attended to by the surgeon. There is a limit, however, to human endurance, and, faint with loss of blood. Captain Champlin was persuaded to retire for a moment into his cabin. There, while lying on the floor, his hand still nervously clutching a loaded pist(d, he overheard some of his men talking about surrender. The words seemed to give him new life, and he exclaimed to the surgeon : '' Tell those fellows that if anv one of them dares ^ 1 ^r^ 'vt\K-^^ -a m < *^x. •»«<^ '\ -i\ 1813. A DESPERATE STRUGGLE. 487 to strike the colors I will imiiHMliatcly tiiv into the magazine and blow tbeni all to hell." The captain's cabin was directly over the maga- zine, and every man in the shi]) knew enongh of Champlin's character to believe that he meant every word of his threat and all thoughts of hanling down the colors were abandoned. When the enemy's gall' halyards were shot away and his colors down, the Americans lost an admir- able chance to dcdiver an effective blow. They let slip the oi)portnnity, sn])i)osing that the enemy had snrrendered. Had it not been for this Captain ('hanii»lin conld have raked the deck of the English- men fore and aft with his long toni, which was loaded with a double (diarge of round and grape ready for tiring, as the muzzle of the gun was within half pistol shot of the enemy's cabin windows. By this time it was seen that the p]nglislimen had suf- fered heavily from the privateer's tire, for they re- plied only at intervals and with poor aim. The Amer- icans then luffed to windward and forereaidied their antagonist, and by the use of what sails they had left, in making short tacks to windward, and by the use of sweeps, they gradually drew out of gunshot. In this spirited affair the Americans had six men killed and sixteen wounded. All the halyards and headsails had been shot away, the foremast and bows])rit were cut one quarter through, all the fore and main shrouds excepting one were carried away, both mainstays and running rigging werc^ cut to ]tieces, and a great number of shot had passed through the sails and the hull, some of them be- tween wind and water, whi(di caused her to leak s(> much that detaidiments of men were constantly re- quired at the ])um]>. As soon as possible^ Captain Cham]din got the foresheet aft and set his jib and topgallant sail. During the time the privateer was within reach the English kept up a well-directed tire from one or two guns aimed at the American's 488 GUY R. CilAMPLIN. 181:5. foremast and fore gaff, but fortunately without effect. After running tlie enemy out of sight Captain Champlin made for a liome port, arriving at Charles- ton, South Carolina, on April 4tli. At a meeting of the stockholders (»f the (tCHcriil Arni.stroiif/, held in Tammany Hall, April 14, 1813, at which Thomas Farmer presided and Thomas Jenkins was secretary, Captain Chami)lin, his officers and men, were formal- ly thanked for their gallant defense of the ship and a sword was given to Cai)tain Champlin. The (Icticral Aniistroiig was remarkable both for the value of the prizes she took and for the obstinacy of several of her engagements Avith heavily' armed vessels. At the beginning of her career she had a desperate battle with an English ship carrying twentA'-two guns and an unusually large crew. The battle took place at the mouth of the Demerara Kiver and lasted thirty-tive minutes, at the end of which time she compelled the enemy to run ashore. On another occasion she had a severe engagement with the English ship Queen, carrying sixteen guns and a complement of forty men. The Queen was from Liverpool bound for Surinam, with a cargo invoiced at about ninety thousand pounds. Iler people made a brave resistance, and did not surrender until their commander, the first officer, and nine of the crew had been killed. This, perhaps, was as valuable a prize as was made in the war. A prize crew was placed aboard, with instructions to make for the United States, but unfortunately, when nearing the coast, the Queen was Avrecked off Nantucket. An- other prize of the deneral Annsfj-oiu/ was the brig Luei/ and Alida, with a valuable cargo. She was re- captured by th(* British ])rivateer lirenton, and taken again by the })rivateer Jierenf/e, of Norfolk.^ ' other prizes taken l)y tliis famous privateer were tlie 6-crnn brie; Union, from Guernsey for Grenada, in ballast, whieh was sent into Old 1814. A CLEVER STRATAGEM. 489 On several occasions later in the war Captain Champlin showed himself to be a commander of no ordinary ability. On December 15, 1814, while in command of the privateer Warrior, cruising near Fayal, he made out an English frigate lying at anchor in the harbor just as he was about to enter. Well knowing that the English could not be de- ])ended upon to respect the rights of neutral ports, Captain Champlin promptly made sail to escape. This was about eight o'clock in the morning. The frigate's people discovered the privateer about the same time, and, slipping their cables, spread canvas in chase. The frigate proved to be a remarkably fast sailer, and in the run before the wind gained steadily on the American. After a chase of some forty or fifty miles, in a strong breeze and in sipially weather, the enemy had got within gunshot, and as there were several hours of daylight left the Americans saw no lioi)e of avoiding capture unless by resorting to some stratagem. It was not long before the English opened with their cliase guns, and the second and third shots told tlijit they were unusually good marksmen for the IJritish of that day. Captain Champlin now luffed to and showed his starl)oard battery, which maneuver, as he intended, was taken by the enemy as an indi- cation of his willingness to fight. The enemy there- u])on shortened sail and prepared to give battle in Town; the brio: Tartar, ladon with one hundred and sixty hogsheads of rum, which was ordered into Georjjetown, South Carolina, but unfortu- nately she was chased by a British war bripr and was wrecked on the bar, although her crew and cargo were saved ; a brig from the Leeward Islands for Guernsey, carrying six guns, with a full cargo of West India produce, which was scTit into Martha's Vineyard; the brig Harrief, sent into Port(j Rico (being short of water), where she was seized by tlie Spanish officials ami given up to the British; a schooner captured at sea and burned; the brig rhmhe, from Ireland for IMadeira, laden with butter and potatoes and scuttled; and the ii[oo\^ Re sohi I Ion, from Jersey for Lisbon, laden with linen, paper, etc., and converted into a cartel after the most valuable portion of her cargo had been taken out of her. 34 490 GUY R. CHAMPLIN. 1814-1815. due form. Instead of accepting the challenoe, how- ever, Captain Champlin threw overboard all his lee guns, with shot and other heavy articles. All these things were put over the port side so that the enemy could not discover what was going on, the starboard side of the Warrior being presented to the foe. As soon as his ship was relieved of these weights Cap- tain Champlin suddenly made all sail and managed to keep just beyond the reach of the frigate's bow chasers until night, when he had little difficulty in giving the enemy the slip. The Warrior was a beautiful brig of four hundred and thirty tons, built on the model of a pilot boat. She mounted twenty-one guns and carried a comple- ment of one hundred and fifty men. On another occasion she was chased by a ship of the line, from which she received several shots, but finally escaped without material injury. Before returning to port this privateer captured the brig Hope, from Glasgow for Buenos Ayres, which was relieved of a large quantity of her cargo of English goods, and sent to the United States in charge of a prize crew; the ship Frauds and Eliza, carrying ten guns and thirty-five men, from London for New South Wales, having on board one hundred and twenty-four male and female convicts, and after taking out of her sundry articles she w^as allowed to proceed on her course; the ship Ncptioic, from Liverpool for Baliia, carrying .eight guns and fifteen men; the brig Dundee, from London for Bahia, with three hundred and twenty-three bales of English goods and fifteen thousand dollars in specie, which was manned for New York. A three- masted schooner captured by the Warrior was lost on New Inlet bar. North Carolina. In her last cruise the Warrior frequently was chased by the enemy, and at one time was so closely pursued by an Eng- lish 74-gun ship that several shots came aboard. CHAPTEK XXIV. BATTLE OF FAYAL. Winox ('ai)t;iin (Miniu]»liii ^ave up the command of tlio ])i'ivateer (ivuvnil Arut.stroiKj, as narrated in the pi-cccdini'' chapti^', lie was succeeded by Captain Saunicl Chester Keid, wlio liad been in cliarge of the 275-1 on schooner Bo.nr, cari'ving six guns and thirtv- tive men. It does not appear that the lio.icr had made any prizes. Ou tlie evening of September 9, 1S14, Captain Keid, availing himself of the cover of night, got under way iu the (Uneral Annstromj and passed Sandy Hook in an effort to evade the block- ading squadron and to get to sea. About midnight tlie dark outlines of a heavy war ship loomed up i)ff the privateer's bow, and shortly afterward an- other vessel, larger than the first, was reported by the vigilant lookouts. These vessels were soon made out to be a razee and a ship of the line, and as there could be no <]uestion of their belonging to Captain John Hayes" blcxd^ading force the Americans hastily made preparations for a hard chase. The English discovered the privateer almost as soon as they were made out from the (ivnvnd Arnif^troug and instantly went about in pursuit. Captain Reid quickly got all the canvas on the brig she could carry, and soon the three vess(ds were bowling eastward over a choppy sea at a lively rate. The privateer continued to in- crease her lead on her pursuers, and by noon of the following day they gave up the hopeless chase and returned to their station off Sandy Hook. 491 492 BATTLE OF PAYAL. ISU-ISIH. Early on the following morning-, September lOtli, the lookouts reported another sail, to which chase was promptly given. The stranger, which soon was made out to be a schooner, apparently was anxious to avoid a meeting, and when the General AriiistroiKj had come within gunshot she was seen to be re- lieving herself of heavy articdes so as to increase her speed. Notwithstanding these extreme measures, the (rCHcnd AnnstroiKj, after an exciting chase of nine hours, held the schooner under her guns. On inquiry she was found to be the G-gun privateer Perri/, Cap- tain John Coleman, of Baltimore, and had sailed from Philadelphia only six days before on a general cruise. It seems that the Pcrri/ had scarcely cleared land when chase was given to her by the enemy, and the little privateer had escaped only by throwing over- board all of her guns. This mishap, however, did not end the Porifs usefulness. After her meeting with the Genera] Arinstront/ she returned to port, secured a new battery, and under the command of Captain 11. INEcDonald made a highly successful cruise, taking in all two brigs, four schooners, and sixteen sloops. Eighteen of her prizes, made in the West Indies, were relieved of the most valuable por- tions of their cargoes and were destroyed, while an other prize was given up to the prisoners. It was the good fortune of the Perry in this cruise to render material service to the navy. It will be remembered that the 44-gun frigate Consti- tution., Captain Charles Stewart, sailed from Boston, December 17, 1811, on her most eventful cruise. She made directly for the coasts of Spain and Portugal. The British squadron that had been ordered to keep the dreaded Constitution in Boston, when it heard that this frigate had again given them the slip, im- mediately began a blind chase across the Atlantic after her. On January 4, 1815, while off the Western Isles, they fell in with a brig that had been taken by the Perry, which was then in charge of a prize 1814-1815. REID'S AUDACITY. 493 master. This shrewd man quickly (liseovered the true character of the British vessels, but pretend- iuf"- to tak(» them for a part of ('a])taiii Stewart's "■ scjuadroii "- — that commander, in fact, having only the (Vjnsfihifii)ii for his '' squadron," though soon afl(M'ward he captured two English war vessels, which answered the purposes — he misled the Eng- lisliiuen to such an extent that, when they accidental- ly cauie upon Old /roiisidrs in Port I'raya, March 10th, they failed to cai)ture her.^ The day after her experience with the Pcrri/, the (IriK'nil . 1 i-msiroii;/ sighted a British brig of war. Cap- taiu Keid, in his olTicial report, briefly notes the oc- cui-rence as follows: "On the following day fell in with an enemy's gun brig; exchanged a few shots with and left him." - The audacity of the American ]H'ivateersman in thus deliberately venturing within reach of a cruiser's guns, and after exchanging a f(nv tantalizing shots leaving her, is well shown in the too modest report of Captain Eeid. Boarding a Spanish brig and schooner and a Portuguese ship l)ound for Havana, on the 24th, Captain Reid dropped anchor in I'ayal lioads on the afternoon of the 2Gth for the ])urpose of obtaining "water and fresh pro- visions. Anxious to *X(H to sea early on the following morn- ing. Captain Beid called on the American consul, John B. Dabney, shortly after anchoring, with a view of hastening the needed su])]>lies. The consul did everything in his power to assist the Americans, and at five o'clock in the afternoon went aboard the (IciicrdJ Anihslroiifi with some other gentlemen. Cap- tain Beid took tins opportunity to ask after the whereabouts of British cruisers in this quarter of the globe, and was informed that not one Brit- ' For the details of this extraordinary comedy of nautieal errors, see Maelay's History of the Xavy. vol. i, pp. 632-639. ^ Official report of Captain Reid. 494 BATTLE OF FAYAL. 1814. isb war ship had visited these islands in several weeks. Just as night was beginning to fall and the group of Americans was still on the privateer's quarter- deck discussing these matters, a war brig siiddenlj'^ hove in sight, close under the northeast head of the harbor, Avithin gunshot. Preparations were hastily be- gun to get under way, with the idea of dashing past the probable enemy and leading him a long chase to sea; but finding that there was only a little wind wliere the priva- teer was, and that the brig had the advantage of a good breeze, Captain lieid changed liis plans. Inquiring of Mr. * Dabney if the British could ^ JV^laJL) ^^' trusted to observe the neu- trality of the port, Captain Keid was told that he would not be molested while at anchor. Kelying on this assurance Captain Reid remained where he was. It was not long before a pilot was seen to board the war brig, from whom the English learned the character of the vessel in port, and they promptly hauled close in and anchored within pistol shot of her. About the same time a ship of the line and another frigate hove in sight near the headland, to whom the war brig instantly made signals, and for some time there was a rajnd interchange of the code. These vessels were the British 74-gun ship of th(^ line Phnif(i(/fiift, Ca])tain Bobert Lloyd; the 3S-gun frigate Rota, Captain Philip Romerville; and the IS-gun war brig CartKifioii, Cai^tain George Ben- tham, a part of the fleet having on boar^l the ill-fated New Orleans expedition. The result of the signal- ing between the British ships was that the Carnation c) e>vAA>oo.3-j'-— > 1814. THE BKITISH ADVANCE TO ATTACK. 495 proceeded to i;et out all her boats aud send them to the shij) of the line. Having every reason to be- lieve that the enemy intended to make a boat attack upon him that night, Captain IJeid cleared for action, got under way, and began to sweep inshore. The mot)n was nearly full at the time, and as the sky was clear every movement of the vessels could be seen with great distinctness. AVhen the Canidiion'.s people saw the move being made by the privateer they (juickly cut their cables and made sail. As tiie wind was very light, the brig maain the liritish endeavored to lea]) over the bulwarks, and as often were they repelled with j^reat slaughter by the vi<»ilant i)rivateersmen. Not content Avlth kee})in<;- the enemy off their decks, the Americans, with every repulse of the Brit- ish boarders, (dambered uj) their own bulwarks and fired inlo the crowded IxKits with deaulsed the enemy under the stern of the (Iciici-dl Aniislroin/, and feai-inii' that they were nainin;Li' a foothold (ni his forecastle, Captain lieid i-allied the whole of the after division around him, and, _inivin«i' a (dieer, rushed forward. The renewed activity of the American tire forward so discouraged the enemy at this end of the fij^lit that they retired with iireat losses after an action of foi'ty minutes. Uaviujii: com])letely defeated the British, Captain Beid had time to look round him and count his losses and those of the emMuy. Two of the 7*o/(/'.s boats, literally loaded with dead and dyini>' men, were taken ])ossession of by the Americans. Of the fortv or fiftv men in these boats onlv seventeen 498 BATTLE OF FAYAL. 1814. escaped death, and they by swimming ashore. An- other boat was found under the privateer's stern, commanded by one of the Phtntagenefs lieutenants. All of the men in it were killed save four, the lieu- tenant himself jumping overboard to save his life. Among the English killed were First Lieutenant William Matterface, of the l^ota, who commanded the expedition, and Third Lieutenant Charles Iv. Nor- man, of the Rota) while Second Lieutenant Richard I\awle, First Lieutenant Thomas Park, and Purser William Benge Basden, all of the Roiu, were wounded. From information Captain Reid received some days afterward from the British consul, officers of the fleet, and other sources, he believed that in the last attack tlie enemy had one hundred and twenty men killed and about one hundred and thirty wounded. On tlie part of the Americans only two were killed and seven wounded. The killed were Second UtMcer Williams and Burton Lloyd, a seaman, who was shot through the heart by a musket ball and died instantly. The wounded were First Officer Frederick A. Worth, in the right side; Third Officer Robert Johnson; (Quartermaster Razilla Hammond, in the left arm; John Finer, seaman, in the knee; William Castle, in the arm; Nicholas Scalsan, in the arm and leg; and John Harrison, in the arm and face, by tlie explosion of a gun. The decks of the General ADusiroiifi, however, had been thrown into great con- fusion. The long tom, the main reliance of the ship, was dismount(Ml and several of the broadside guns were disabled. By great exertions tlie long tom was mounted again, the decks (dearcd, and preparations made to renew the action should the enemy see fit to attack. But the British did not attempt it that night. An English eyewitness of this fight says: "The Americans fought with great firmness, but more like bloodthirsty savages than anything else. They 1814. CAPTAIN REID LANDS. 499 rushed into the boats sword in hand, and put every soul to death as far as came within their power. Some of the boats were left without a single man to row them, others with three or four. The most that any one returned with was about ten. Several boats lioated ashore full of dead bodies. . . . For three days after the battle we were employed in burying the dead that washed on shore in the surf." At three o'clock in the morning ('aptain lieid received a note from the American consul asking him to come ashore, as there was important informa- tion awaiting him. Captain Reid did as requested, and going ashore learned that the governor had sent a note to Captain Lloyd begging him to desist from fui'ther attack, and that the British commander not oidy had refused to do so, but had announced his determination to take the privateer at any cost, and if the governor should allow the Americans to destroy the vessel in any way he would consider that he was in an enemy's port and treat it accordingly. Satisfied that there was no hope of saving his vessel. Captain Keid immediately went aboard, ordered all the dead and wounded to be taken ashore, and the crew to save whatever of their personal effects they could. l>y the time this was done it was daylight and tlie ('annifion was discovered standing close in, and in a few minutes opened a rapid fire on the Americans. Captain Keid responded to this fire with liis foi'uiidable l)attery, and soon induced the brig to haul off, with her rigging mindi cut, her fore-top- mast wounded, and some other injuries. After re])airing these damages the Cnnuition again came down, and, dropping anchor, opened a deliberate fire on the (iciicral Ari}i.sf)-o)if/, which was intended to destroy hi^v. Captain Reid, with his men, now abandoned the ship, after scuttling her, and repaired on shore. English boats then boarded the privateer, and, setting her on fire, soon had her complet(dy destroyed. A number of houses in the 500 BATTLE OF FAYAL. 1814. town were injured by the Englishmen's fire and some of the inliabitants were w^oimded. A woman sitting in the fourth story of her home had her thigh shattered and a boy had his arm broken. For a weelv the English vessels were detained in the harbor, burying their dead and attending to their wounded. Three days after the battle they were joined b^^ the sloops of war Thais and Calypso, which were detailed by Captain Lloyd to take the wounded to England, the Cali/pso sailing on October 2d and the Thais on the 4tli. Captain Lloyd's squad- ron arrived at Jamaica on November 5th, where the English officers acknowledged a loss of sixty-three killed and one hundred and ten wounded, among the former being three lieutenants. On November 3, L*^Or), Sir Ivichard Strachan, with four sliii)s of the line and four frigatc^s, fought a French lleet many hours, capturing four shii)s of the largest rates. His loss was only one hundred and thirty-five killed or wounded, ("aptain Lloyd in this affair spent quite as much time in destroying a single American pri- vateer and lost nearly two hundred men. Such vic- tories, as this Bunker Hill of the ocean, are disas- trous to the victors. The serious nature of this action is better shown by a comparison of the losses the English sustained in their frigate actions with the TTuited States in this war. Taking the losses that the British admit having sustained in this action, we have: Convparafive English Losxpi^ in Frig at ? Actions. Name of action. Killed. Wounded. Total. British squadron vs. (ren. Armstro7ig . . . 68 15 36 60 24 5 11 35 110 63 68 101 50 10 14 43 173 78 Marpflnvian vs. United Staffs Java vs ('oiistitut inn 104 161 83 Plurtx' and C/ifirni vs. Essex Eii(h/»iio?i vs President 15 25 C'l/ane and Levant vs. Constitution .... 77 1814. PURSUIT OF THE AMERICANS ON SHORE. SQl Miidiui;- tliat his conduct in attacking the General ArmHtroiKj in a neutral port required an explanation, Captain Lloyd declared that the first boats he sent toward the privateer were ordered merely to recon- noiter the Americans, and that Ca])tain Keid took the initiative in hostilitu's by opening tire on them. The circumstances of the case, however, fully bcnir out ('a])tain Keid's belief that the boats were sent for the ])urp()se of making an attack upon him. To reconnoiter an enemy's vessel in a neutral ])ort with four boats carrying over one hundred armed men is too sus])ici()us a circumstance to be easily ex- plained away, especially as these boats persisted in drawing nearer and nearer to the privateer, in s])ite of repeated waruings to keep off. Another cir- cumstance wliich weighs heavily against Captain IJoyd is the fact that when the TJiais and Cdli/pso saih'd for England with the wounded lie strictly for- bade those vessels to carry any letters or informa- tion bearing on the action. Ca])tain Lloyd still further added to the infamy of his attack on the (iciici'dl Aiiiistnttnj by the methods lie emi)loye(l to seize some of the American seamen when on shoi-e. Lnder the pretext of searching for deserters he addressed an otiHcial letter to the gov- ernor, stating that in the crew of the privateer were two deserters from the s(}uadron he commanded while on the American station, and as they were guilty of " high treason " he demanded that the Por- tuguese authorities ])roduce these men. Kightly judging theii' man, the Americans, on gaining the shore, tied into the interior, fearful that Captain Lloyd, exas]ierated at his defeat on water, would follow u]) his attack on shore. The Portuguese governor, having no force at hand to ]irotect him- self, was compelled to obey, and sending a guard into the mountains arrested the seamen, brought them to Fayal, and compidled them to undergo an examination before British oflficers. The alleged 502 BATTLE OP FAYAL. 1814. deserters were not found and the seamen were re- leased. Captain Reid, with his surviving men, retired to an old Gothic convent in the interior, and breaking down the drawbridge prepared to defend himself against an,y further attacks the British might make. Captain Llo3'd did not see fit to resume hostilities, however, and soon afterward Captain Reid returned to the United States and was received with distinc- tion. At Richmond, Virginia, he was the guest of honor at a banquet where the governor and other high officials were present. Some of the toasts were highly characteristic of the feeling of the people toward our maritime forces at that time. Thej were: " The Navy — whose lightning has struck down the meteor flag of England: they have conquered those who had conquered the world"; "The Private Cruisers of the United States — whose intrepidity has pierced the enemy's channels and bearded the lion in his den "; " Barney, Boyle, and their Compatriots — who have plowed the seas in search of the enemy and hurled retaliation upon his head"; "Neutral Ports — whenever the tyrants of the ocean dare to invade these sanctuaries may they meet with an /^.s.scr and an Annstroug "; " The American Seamen — their achievements form an era in the naval annals of the world: may their brother soldiers emulate their deeds of everlasting renown"; "Captain Reid — his valor has shed a blaze of renown upon the character of our seamen, and won for himself a laurel of eternal bloom." ^ CHAPTER XXV. COXCLT'SIOX. PiuvATEERixc;, SO far as the United States have been enga<;e(l in it, lias been limited to onr two wars with (Jreat Britain. It is true that dnrinj^- onr ti-oiibles with the French Directory, 17il8~lSoi, let- ters (»f iiiar(ine were issued b_v the (Tovernnient ; but these were used (hietly by our UK^'chantmen as a license to defend themselves from hostile craft. Tlx' few actions that took ]»lac(^ in which shi])s arnu'd at ])rivate ex])ense were eni;ai;ed are notable as beiu}.'' exceptions. At the time the civil war broke out the commerce of the United States ranked as second in the Avorld, bein«>- exceeded only by that of Great Britain. Of our large tonnaiie at that period, less than one tenth belonrivateer, and, getting within gunshot, sank her. Aside from these few unimportant instances of Confederate ])rivateering, the South accomplished little in the line of private enterprise on the ocean. This was due princi])ally to the rigor with which the blockade was maintained and to the vigilance of our cruisers on the high seas. The would-be privateers- men of the Confederacy, therefore, directed their energies to the more profitable occupation of block- ade running, taking out Southern products and bringing in munitions of war. The better-known commerce destroyers of the Confederacy, such as the Sintifer, Florida., Alahauia, Rapjxihauiiocl-, and Sheiian- (hxih, cannot ])roperly come under the head of priva- teers, foi- they were (]uite as regularly commissioned naval vessels as were our Bnnhonnue Ixicluird, AUi- anee, TriDiitnill, Dcanc, or any of our other Continental war ships of the Eevolution.^ Tt is believed that all the actions in which Ameri- ' For an account of these Confederate commerce destroyers, see Maclav's Historv of the United States Navy, vol. ii, pages 508-528. 30 " 506 CONCLUSION. 1812. can privateers, both in the Kevolution and in the War of 1812, were engaged, as v/ell as all their im- portant captures, have been noted in this work. It is possible that some of the operations of our ama- teur cruisers have escaped the exhaustive reseafl-hes of the author. If such is the case he will gladly re- ceive any reliable infiormation on the subject, so that it may he incorporated in future editions. In sum- ming up the record of our armed craft fitted out by private enterprise it will be found ^ that in the struggle for independence one thous^md one hun- dred and lifty-one privateers were commissioned, as follows: Three hundred and seven from Massachu- setts, two hundred and eighty-three from Pennsyl- vania, one hundred and sixty-nine from Maryland, one hundred alid f ortj^-two from Connecticut, sev- ent}' - eight from New Hampshire, forty - four from Virginia, eighteen frxnn Rhode Island, fifteen from New York, nine from South Carolina, four from New Jersey, and four from North Car(dina, while seventy- eight came from ports not designated. Tlrese vessels are known to have captured three hundred and forty- three of the enemy's craft, andHt is probable that a considerable number of prizes were made of which the record is lost. In the War of 1812 five hundred and fifteen privateers were commissioned, as follows: One hun- dred and fifty from ^Massachusetts, one hundred and twelve from Maryland, one hundrcMl and two from New York, thirty-one from Pennsylvania, sixteen from New Ilampshire, fifteen from Maine, eleven from Connecticut, nine from A^irginia, seven from Louisiana, and seven from Georgia, wiiile fifty- five were from ports not designated. These vessels are known to have captured one thousand three hun- dred and forty-five craft of all kinds from the enemy, though, like their brethren of the rJevolution, our privateersmen of the later war w^ere careless in mat- tei's of record, and it is highly probable that a large 1816. AFTER THE WAR. 507 mimber of seizures were made of which little trace is left. • , - ' - After each of these wars the vessels eno-aged in the privateer service were laid up, used in commerce, or were destroyed, while their officers and men were compelled to seek emplovment in the more peaceful pursuits of life. Years after the War of 1812 it was not unusual to observe men who had once com- maiuled llie quarter-deck of an armed vessel, whose <)rd({rs meant instant obedience and whose frowns Avere more dreaded than the heaviest gales or hostile cauiiou, bending over ledgers in the counting-rooms of sliipping ports or engaged in menial service. IMndiug their calling as sea warriors gone, these men entered any trade or business offering, where lliey soon discovered that the qualifications peculiar nud needful for the successful privateersman were not only out of place, but a positive hindrance, in their new fields of activity. As a rule, these mighty uu'u of the sea rapidly reversed the scale of promo- lion, and for the rest of their lives ground out an humble existtMice as drudging clerks, longshoremen, or wage earners. Like the noble ships they once couiniandcd, tlioir occupation was gone, and they wore laid up to rust and wear out the balance of their days in an inglorious existence, waiting for leather Time, the conqueror of all, to remove them to their final haven of rest. They have, however, loft a record in the history of their country which is well worthy of preservation, and it will stand as an iiiii)erishable monument to the gallant part they played in the defense of their native land. INDEX AchiUes, 138-147. Ackcrlv. O. R., xxvii. Artifiii, 244. Actirr, 411. . I (•/(■(•(■, British brif;. 114. Artirc, British cruiser, 88. Artirc, priviiti'or, 90, 117, 133. Act ire, sloop, 137. Adams, A., 481. Adams, Charh's, 1()4. Adams. I)., 17, 210. Adams, J., 74. Aih'linc, 338. AiliHiml Dnf, 133. Adrnilurer, 197. Aili'ociitp, 323. ^Etna, 76. Africa, 72. Ak'ock, Ensisn, 37. 38. Alcratidcr, 120. Alexander, Charles, 90. Alcanider, War of 1812, 413. Alfred. 411. Allen. Heiirr, 3r)2, 3.-)7, 358. .\llen, Noah. 4.5S. All.-n, W. H., 434. AUihone, William, 179. Almeda, Captain, 424. Atnrliii. 481. America, frigate-built, 20. America, privateer, 16. America, schooner, 71. America, War of 1812, 328-335. American Revenue, 133. Amjiliian, 129. Anacunda, 254-264. .Vnderson, Major, 92. Andrew Caldirell. 86. Angus, .1.. 116, 134. Ann, schooner, 16. Ann, snow, 73. Annabflla, 67. Anna Maria, 72. Antelope, 217-219. Arab, 467, 468. Arbuthnot, Admiral, 111. 177. Ardent. 148. 149. Arao, Sr,. 102-110. Ar'ao. War of 1812, 479. Arnold, J., 458. Arrow, 24. Asia, 92, 93. Atalante, 217, 218. Ata.% 322. Atlan, 251-264. Aurora, 90. Avery, Robert, 57. Ayrcs, John, 05. Babbidge, C, 71. liabcock, G., 215. Babson, J., 240. Bainbridge, William, 3(i6. Baker, J., 136. Baker, Lieutenant, 96, 97. Balch, G. ^\., 53. Ball, Mr., 288. Baltimore, 475. Baltimore Hero, 73, 133. Barclay, Consul-General, 87. Barnes, J., 423, 424, 476. Barney, Jo.shua, in Pomona, 79-84; prisoner in Yarmouth, 148-151 ; es- cape from Old Mill Prison, 151-160 ; in South Carolina, 161-104 ; in Samp- .vo», 301-305 : in 7?o.v.s7>, 305-307. Barrette, G. W., .309-313. Barron, .Tames. 64. Barry, .lohn, 85. Bartlett, .Tolin R., 168. Basden, W. B., 498. Beatley, .7., 4.58. Ueanreejard, 504. Bearer, ])rivateer, 119. Bearer, sloop, 73. Bedford, Joseph, 183. Bee, 322. Beecher, J., 322. Belisarintt. 68. Bell, Jlrs. Elizabeth, 16. Bella, 119. Bellamy. Samuel, 38. Belle Poole. 8. Beluche, R.. 322. Benjamin Franhlin. 14. Benjamin FranL-lin, War of 1812, 439. Benninijton. 1 15. Benson, the Res'. Mr., 15. 509 510 INDEX. Benson, Thomas, 139. Beiitham, George, 494. Betsey, English privateer, 110 Betsey, sloop, 72, 73. Betsey and Polly, 73. Biddle, Nicholas, 76, 90. Biddle, Owen, 75. Blaek Jolce, 228. Blaeh Prinee, 119. Bliiek l^iKike. 77. Blair, Captain, 70. Blair, R., 456. Blaze Castle, 215. Blessinq of the Bay, 35. Bloekaile, 323. Blonde, 17, 216. Bloodhoiiud. 227, 228. Blum, J. M., 274. Bolton, II., 480. Bonnett, Steed, 33, 34. Bormer, B., 64. Boston, 199, 206. Bourmaster, John, 64. Bowen, Ephraim, 47, 50. Bowes, 285-287. Boyd, 430-432. Boyle, Thomas, 279-299. Brantz, Captain, 220. Bray, Captain, 243, 409. Breed, H. J., 392. Brenow, B., 228, 229. Brice, J., 73. Broadhoiisc, H., 215. Bromlield, Mr., 164. Brooks, George, 248, 249. Broom, 73. Broughton, Nicholas, 65. Brown, Addison, xxvi. Brown, Captain, 263. Brown, David, 316. Brown, E., 309. Brown, English captain, 26. Brown, John, 46, 47, 168. Brown, Joshua, 456. Brown, M., 134. Brudhiirst, B., 73. Baceaneer, 90. Bucklin, Joseph, 48-50. Bucklou, Captain, xiii, 78. Bitekskin, 409, 410. Buffington, Captain, 119. Bull, David, 35, 36. Bnll 1)0(1, 75. Bunker Hill, 115. Burbank, 259. Burch, J., 476. Burdett, Captain, 246, 247. Burham, F., 234. Biirke, 76. Burns, O., 321. Byron, Admiral, 148. Cabot, the Messrs., 163-165. Cabot, Richard, 139. Cadet, 418, 419. Ciesar, 147. Calypso, 500. Camden, 76, 90. Campan, J., 444. Campbell, Captain, 133. Campbell, Colonel, 67. Campbell, J., 77. Capel, T. B., 244. Carman, E., 443. Carnation, 494-502. Carnes, John, 137, 142. Caroline, brig, 73. Caroline, privateer, 424, 425. Carrowav, Captain, 226, 227. Cashell, Mr., 289. Cassiu, Stephen, 90. Castigator, 247. Castle, William, 498. Castor, 135. Cat, 133. Catherine, 234. Caultield, A. D., 332. Champlin, Guy R., 484-490. Chance, 74, 85. Chance, English brig, 108. Chance, Norfolk, 320. Chance, sloop, 207. Chaplin, S., 214. Charles and Sally. 73. Charles Stewart, 418. Charming Peggy. 71. Charming Salli/, 215. Charrteu, Mrs., 378. Chase, 119. Chase, N., 77. Chasseur, 292, 293. Chatham, 76. Chauncey, Isaac, 10. Chaytor, D., 467. Chazel, J. P., 324-327. Cherokee, 68. Chester, T., 136. Chevers, James, 333-335. Chieve, Lieutenant, 62. Child, Captain, 78. Christie, Mr., 298. Churchill, B. K., 273, 274, 277. Cicero, 163-165. Clarke, S. C, xxvi. Clearv, R., 322. Cleaveland, S., 74. Cleopatra, 220. Clewk'V. W., 323. Clinton, 40. Cloutman, T., 350. Coas, Captain, 73. Coates, J., 322. Cockburn, Admiral, 261. Coffin, Captain, 78. Coggeshall, Charles, 348. Coggcshall, George, xi, xxv, 318, 319 ; in David Porter, 336-349 ; in Leo, 350-358, 401. Cohen, B. I., xxvi. Coleman, Captain, 478, 492. Collier, Sir George, 386-390. Collins, R.. 134. Columbus, 85, 115. Comet, 88. INDEX. 511 Comet, sloop, 208. Comet, War of 1812, 280-299. Commerce, 87. Commodore Hull, 259. Concord, 66. CotKirctis, ounboat,- 70. Coii(ircss, privatc(!r, 125, 211-213. Coiiklin. E., 24, 25, 115. ComuT, J., 119. Con.stant-Wuniick, 3, 4. Convention, 76, 116. ( 'ora, 227, 228, 322, 430. Cornell. Brigadier-General, 97. Coniet, 74. Cornwitllis, 220-222. Coxxock, 416. Courter, .T., 137. Cowan, R()i)ert, 145. ( lahtree, Captain, 71. Crahtree, W., Captain, War of 181;; Craft, William, 429. Craig, Army Captain, 137. CraiK, H., Ul. Craig, K.. 115. Crarv, H., 210. Crawford, W. H., 351. Craycroft, R., 338. Crc'ighton, 20, 70. Creighton, William, xiii, 131. Croke, .Judge, 245. Cropsey, ,J., 440. Crosl)y, Captain, 11 1. Crowley, Mr., 207. Crowninshield, Arent S., xxvi. Crowninsliield, Benjamin, 139, 413. Crowninshield, Bowdeii, xxvi. Crowninshield, (Jeorge. 20, 328. Crowninshield. .John, 410, 417. Crowninshield, .John ('.. xxvi. Crowninshield, The Messrs.. l(i. Crnekshanks, Tatriek, 194, 195. Cnlhidni, 111. Ciunhvrhitid, 192, 193, 203. Cunningham, Captain, 72. Cunningham, Cai)tain, War of 454. Cnrlew, 2.35, 2.36. Cui'tis, Captain, 217. Cijrm, 60. Dahnev, J. B., 493. 491. Dalling, T., 21.5. Dance, Lieutenant, 362. Daniel. Captain. IKi. Daniels, .1. D., 472. 482. Dart, 413. Dartmoor Prison, 367, 370. /)(i.s7i, 226, 227. Dashiell, 15.. 73. Daueliy. O. B., xxvi. Ihuid Porter. 33t)-349. Davidson, W.. 479. Davis, Captain, 220, 236. Davis, .Telferson, 504. Davis, John, 257. Davis, Joshua, 194, 202, 203. 229. 328, 1812. Davis, Judge, 248. Davis, William J., 435, 436. Dawson, J., 435, 436. Day, P., 133. Dean, S., 73. Deane, 199, 204. Dcane, Captain, 118. Death, Captain, 13, 11. Decatur, 308-319, 338. Decatur, Stephen, Jr., 88. Decatur, Stephen, Sr., 88. Declaration of Paris, 503, 504. Defence, brig, 220. Defciisr, Massachusetts, 67, 68. Defense, South Carolina, 68. Defiance, 118. Degrcs, J.. 322. De Koven, H., 417. Dclairare, 76, 85. Delia, 477. Deliqhl, i)0. DeVisle, 479. D'Klville, R., 444. Dennis, A. S., 333. Depeyster, P. G., 352, 357, 358. Derl)v. Karl of, 3. Derl)v, John, 139. Derby, Mr., 392. Derick, W., 320. Denpateh, 74. DcsjHilch, packet. 140, 247. D'Kstaing, Count, 94. De.sterl)echo, P., 414. Deitx Amis, 42. Devonshire, 78. Dewley, E. W., 473. De Wolf, James, 265. Diamond. 77. Diamond, War of 1812, 479. Diana, 134. Dicken.son, Mr., 48. Dickenson, P., 477. Dickinson, 76. Dieter, John, 299. Digby, Adnnral, 156, 160, 186. Pilifience, 59, 60. nilirivatocr, 115, 135. Handy. T., 231-2.33. HniDiah, hv\ii. 00. Hannah. Enslisli i)ri valccr, lOti. Hannah, packet. 45. 4f). Hannah and Molly. 71. Hannibal. (Jl. Jfappi/ Retnr)!. sloop, ()3. 137. Haraden. .Jonathan. 138, 147. Harheek, C. T., xxvi. liiinlinsr. Seth. 07. llardv, Caittain, US, 119. Harlem. 130. Harlequin, britr. 72. Harlequin. sliip, 78. Harlequin, sloop, 77. Ilannan. .T., 77. Uarpey, 459-461. Harriet, 215. Harris, C, 208. Harris, W., 73. Harrison, 65, 60. Harrison (Xo. 2), 481. Harrison, J., 456. Harrison, Jolin, 498. Hart, Asa, 458. Hart, E., 207. Hasket, Elias, 391. Ha.'wan, 12. Havens, W., 207. Hawk, 321. Hawk, schooner, 96-100. Hawke, 136. Hawke, Admiral, 7. Hawkins, Abel, 381. Harjard. 114, 196. Hazard, iMi^lish privateer, 197. Hazard, .)., 23.S. Hazard, Tory privateer, 103, 104. Hazard, War of 1812. 323. Hazlett, C. A., xxvi. Hebe, 403. Helen, 448, 449. Helm, Lieutenant, 97. 99, 100. Henifield, Ca])tain G., 135. Henderson, Captain, 75. Henry, 78. Henr.v, Captain, 75. Henri/ Guilder, 441. Herald, 220-222. Herald, War of 1812, 441, 443. Herbert, Edward, 227, 249. Hero, 215. Hero, cutter, 233. Hero, privateer, 440. Hester, 39. Hetty, 208. Hewcs, J.. 351. Hihernia. 62, 63, 134. Hissinson, .Tames J., xxvi. Hijifiinson, .John F., xxvi. 408, ,504. Hiiisinson. T. W., xxvi, 213-215, 408. Hiqhfli/er, 262. 4.52. Hillm'm, Charles, .383. Hill. Cajitain, 103 1<;5. Hill, Lieutenant, 43. Hindman, Dr., 1.55-101. Hiram, 278. Hislop, Lieutenant-(!overnor, 36t). Hitch. J., 230. Hitchcock, Colonel, 91. Hitchcock. Riplev, xxvii. Holkar, 441, 442. " Holkcr, 134. Holker, 16 Kims, 211, 214, 215. Hook 'em l^nivcy, 186. Hooper. .Tohn, 480. Hope, brij;, 72. Hope, Henrv. .377. Hope, privateer. 168-176. Hope, ship. 65, 74. 145. Hope. 10 suns, 207. 215. Hopkins. Fsek. 91. Hoi)kins. .T(din R.. 17, 48, 90. Hopkins, X., 311, 312. )l-i Howard, J., 444. Howe, 67. Hubon, H., 449. Hitntcr, schooner, 135. Hunter, ship, 64. Huntress, 278. Hussar, 6H. Hijder Ally, 179-190. Hjiperion, 204. Hypocrite, 211. Ida, 401-407. Iinpertluinl, 136. Independence, 71, 78, 86. I)ide})endenci/, 71. Indian, 231-233. Industry, brig, 78. Industry, prize, 66. Industrij, selidoiier, 14. Ingerso'l, D., 14, 116. Inger.soll, Jonathan, 391, 439. Intrepid, 133. 134. Inrincihie, 443. Invincible Napoleon, 414, 415. Irvine, Captain, 137. Irwin, .Tolm, 422. Isaac and Picary, 74. Isabella, 78. Jaelv, ('aptain, 477. Jack's Farorite, 26, 228, 229. Jactkson, 1)., 77. Jackson, Major, 164. Jacob Greene & Co., 45. Jacobs, R., 230, 231, 350, 420-423. James, 77. Jane, 77. Jane, Captain, 231-233. Jarrett, 230. .Tason, 193-204. Jauuccv, J., 71. Jay, 137. Jeff Davis, 504. Jefferson. 230, 231. Jenkins & Havens, 484. Jenks, W. C, 273, 274. Jenny, 06. Jersei/, prison ship. 111, 129. Jetto, ishmrt, 24. Jiftbrd, T., 458. John, boat, 322. John, brig, 73. John, ship, 410. John and (leonje, 67. John and (icorqe (No. 2), 412. Jolnison, A., 469. .lohnson. Captain, 25, 26, 70, 228. Johnson, F., 445-448. Joliiison, Governor, 33, 34. Ji)linson, Robert, 497. Jones, Ichabod. 52-57. Jones, .Tacob, 10. Jones, Stephen, 54, 55. Jones, 'I'iKinias, 272, 273. Jones, William, 87. Jonquille, 443. Joseph, 71. INDEX. Josiah, J., 116. Judah, 504. Julius Csesar, 72. Junius Brutus, 215. Jupiter, 111. Kelly, Captain, 16. Kemp, 350, 420-423. Kendall, Captain, 140. Keybold, D., 106, 136. Kidd, William, 3, 30, 37. King George, 103, 104. King, Thomas, 360. Kinhart, Ab., 458. Knapp, J. J., 448. Knott, W., 73. Knox, General, 94. Lachlin, P., 324. Lady Erskine, 119. Lady Juliana, 74. Lady Madison, 323. Lady Washington, 72. Lafete, P., 323. Lamb, Captain, 78, 115. Lancaster, 77. Landrail, 472. Lane, S. N., 309. Laura, 462, 463. Laurel, 258. Laurens, Mr., 205. Lawler, M., 134. Latvnsdale, 140. Lawrence, 430, 480. Leach, J., 62, 63, 71, 137. Leander, 386-390. Le Chartrier, 323. Ledger, E., 134. Lee, 65-07, 90. Leech, 137, 418. Leeds, Captain, 133. Lelar, H., 408. Lempriere, Clement, 68. Leo, 350-358. Levant, 118, 119. Lewis, A. O., 352. Lewis, Thomas, 351. Liberty, English slof)p, 44. Liberty, privateer, 437, 476. Liberty, .schooner, 72. Lindsey, Benjamin, 45, 46. Lindsey, N., 412. Lion, 230, 350. Little, George, 89. Little Vincent, 60. Lively, frigate, 71. Lively, sloop, 17. Livefy, snow, 72, 216. Liveli/, Tory privateer, 103. Live 'Oah; 90. Liverpool, 74. Liverpool Packet 448, 449. Llovd, Burton, 498. Lloyd, Robert, 494, 499. Lodge, Henry Cabot, xxvi, 205, 206. Long, Mr., 307. Lord, N., 234. INDEX. 515 Lottery, 464-466. Louisa, 219, 320. Loveli/ Cornelia, 324. Lovely Lass, 321. Low, Nicholas. 110. LudwcU, (nfvenior, 31. Liitwidj^e, Captain, 111. [.i/nch, 04, 65. Lynx, 467, 468. Lyou, Captain, 61. ^fac((roni, 106, 136. Mucdonouqh, 438. MiH-hias Libert I/, 59, 60. ^[llllisoH, 231-233. Miidixun, R-vciuR' cuttor, 248, 249. Mullilt, David, 251-264, 401. Mante, J., 132. Maidstone, 43, 24(1, 247. .Maillaud, Major, 75. ^[llmmoth, 426. Manly, John, 65, 66; iu Cumberland and Jason, 192-204. MantU', Captain, 42. Mantor, .1., 401. .Marc-y, Secretary, 503, 504. JAnv»i(/o, 379, 380. 443. Mnrqaret. 208, 243, 266. Marmretta, 52, 57. Maria, 244. Marlboroaqh. 110. Mars, bris, 77, 137. Mars, privateer, 441. Mars, ship, 86. Marsh, Samuel, 125, 213. Martin, II., 322. Martin. .!., 118, 119. Martindalo, Captain, 68. Mary, 209. M'try and Eli~al)eth, 74. Man; and James, 72. Mar)/ Ann, 324. .Masal)eaii, P., 322. Mason, Captain, 179-182. Massaehiisetts, 71. 140. Mathews. Captain, 479. Mil Id da. 433-435. Matterfacf, William. 498. .Mawney, Dr. .lohn, 4S-,50. Max.cy. Lieutenant. 226, 227. McCarthv. James, 449. MrCary, 77. MrCieave, Captain, 77. M.Cuiloeh. .lames H., 189. McFale. .lareil. 322. Norman, C. R., 498. O'Rrieii, Dennis, 59. O'Brien, (iideoii, 59. O'Brien. .leremiab, 57, .58. 60-62. O'Brien. John, .55, 58, 01-63. O'Brien, Jo.sej)]!, 59. 0'Bri(>n. Morris, 56, 57. Olh-ien. torpedo boat. 62. O'Brien. William, ,59. Ogilby, Nicholas, 65. Oldham, Mr., 28, 29. 516 INDEX. Oiiiri- Cromwell, 137. Oliver, Seaman, 458. Olney, Simeon, H., 48, 49. Orders in Council, 444. Ordiorne, Captain, 73, 415. Ordrouaiix. J., 378-383. Orion, 245. Orlando, 240. Osborn, J., 418. Osborne, W. H., xxvi. Packwood, Captain, 44. Page, Benjamin, 48. Paine, Captain, 77. Pallas, 137. Palmer, N., 207. Park, Thomas, 498. Parker, l^aptain, 137. Parker, K., 77. Pa.sco, Mr.. 218. Pasteur, E., 321, 322. Patapsco, 477. Patterson, Captain, 411. Paul Jones, War of 1812, 12, 238. Peabody, Joseph, 213, 214. Peace Conference at The Hague, 503. Penderson, Mr., 435. Pensioning privateersmeu, 2C, 27. Peoples, W. T., xxvi. Pepys, Mr., 3. Percival, Sailing Master, 4(i9, 470. Perkins, Thomas, 139. Perry, brig of war, 505. Perry, privateer, 478, 479, 492. Perry, Amos, xxvii. Perry, H., 482. Perry, J. E., 262. Perry, O. H., 10. Perseus, 201. Perseverance, 220-222. Peters, J., 323. Pelrel, 305. Pett, Peter, 3. Pett. Phineas, 3. Philips, Lieutenant, 250. Phillips, Captain, 73. Phippen, Joseph, 400. Phn-nix, 76, 77. Picarre, J., 464. Pickering, 236. Pierce, Captain. 72. Piiiot, 96-100, 102. Pigot, Sir Robert, 94, 96. Pile, 480. Pilqrim. 209, 210. Piiier, .Fohn. 498. Pirates. 30-39. Pitt. 136. Plnntaqenef, 494. Phintc'r, 253. Pluto, 90. Polly, ()2, 63. Polhl, privateer of the Eevolution. 39. Polly, in-ivateer, War of 1812, 231-233. Polly, prize. 66. Polly, ship, 172. Polly, transport, 137. Pomona, frigate, 192. Pomona, privateer, 80-84. Pomone, brig, 145. I'omone, sloop, 40. I'oor Nu7or, 324. Porter, David, 90. Portland, frigate, 203. Portland, packet, 59. Portland, snow, 77. Portsmouth, 77. Pratt, Capttiin, 476. Preble, Edward, 60, 90, 133. Priestly, Mr., 92, 93. Prince Charles, 40, 41. Prince de Neuchdtel, 377-390. Princhett, J., 324. Prize money, 8-12. Procter, John, 331. Prosper, 68. Prosperity, 85. Protector, 133. Providence, frigate, 206. Providence, sloop, 119. I'urcell, H., 418. Pursuit, 253. Putnam, brig, 77, 78. Quarles, R., 320, 321. 453. Quebec, 179. Queen Charlotte, 210. Queen of France, 206. Racer, 467, 468. Rachel, 447. Raisonablc, 109. Rambler, 90. Rambler, privateer, 210. Randolph, 171. Ranger, 76. Ranger, cruiser, 120, 206. Ranger, privateer, 213, 214. Ranger, sloop, 116. Ranger, snow, 75. lian'tin, H., 433-435. Rantoul, R. S., xxvi. Rapid, 229, 324, 437. Rathburne, J. P.. 11. Rattlesnake, 262-264. 401-407. Raven, 64. Rawle, Richard, 498. Rebecca, 229. Redois, J., 443. Reid, Captain, 44. Reid, S. C, 491-502. Rennoaux. Captain, 14. Renown, 100-102. Ucpiihlie. 71. Resolution, 137. Retaliation. 72, 88. Retaliation, sloop, 207. Revenge, brig. 140. Revenge, privateer, 8, 85, 86. Revenge, sloop. 72. Revenge. War of 1812, 412, 473. Rhett, Colonel, 32-34. Rice, J., 76. Richards, P., 136. INDEX. 51" K Richardson. William, 155, 161. Richmond, Duke of, 152. Rider, P., 479. Jiisiiig Sun, 40, 41, 88, 90. Robinson, Isaiah. SO-84. Robinson, ,1., 135, 209, 210. Robinson, John, x.wi. U„hnst,\ 111. I\o( he. .lolm, ()5. Kodscrs, English captain, 177-191. Rodgens. .John. 90. Rodney, .-Vduiiral, 149. Ro(hiul\ iVigate, 177. Kochnck. privateer, 135. lioijer, 320, 321, 453. Roger, William, 77. R()ger.s, Woods, 33. Holla, 473. Ivoiisevelt, Theodore, dedication. Kopes, Joseph, 328-333. Jlosamond, i-il. Ruse, frigate, 76. fiO.sebml, 82. Russie. 305-307. Rotu, 494. Rouse, Captain, 39. Rover, 72, 78, 85. Rowland, Captain, 426, 441. iJowle.v, Captain, 303-305. Royal lioHulii, 266. Roijdl Ceonje, brig, 63. 71. /,'(/(/(// ^^(>,■(;(•, cutter, 145. R.onnl Hester, 41. Roi/dl Louis, 88. ■■ Running ships," 19, 20. Ku.sli, L., 434. Sabin, James, 46. Snhine, 475. N(//;/, s(diooner, 133. Siilli/. sloop, 68, 137. Saiiiiison, 301-305. Siirali Aun, 22. Sarah Ann, War of 1812. 474. Saratofia, 85, 106-108. Sarato'iia, War of 1812, 436, 437, 4.54, 45.5. Sauct/ ,Tael; 324, 327. Satindei-son, W., 324. :<,ira V^ ^''r' A^ - ^5 V, -'^ -^^ •A^^ >-*^ -r, .<>>--.. 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