THE NAVY IN THE CIVIL WAR
Published
1883, 1885
------------------------
VOLUME I
THE
BLOCKADE AND THE CRUISERS
BY
JAMES RUSSEL SOLEY
PROFESSOR, U.S. NAVY
CHAPTER
IV
THE ATLANTIC SQUADRONS
The first
step in the establishment of the Atlantic blockade was the proclamation issued
by Commodore Pendergrast, still in command of the Home Squadron at Hampton
Roads. The only effective blockade then existing was maintained by the Cumberland,
and such other vessels as had been hastily collected, in the neighborhood of
Fortress Monroe. In carrying out the plan, it was decided to put the whole
force on the Atlantic coast under one command, and Commodore Stringham was
accordingly appointed flag-officer commanding the Atlantic Blockading Squadron.
The Minnesota, which had been laid up in ordinary at Boston, was
assigned to him as flagship, and on the 13th of May he arrived at Hampton Roads,
and entered upon his command.
The
instructions sent to Stringham on May 1 will serve to show exactly the views of
the Department in its first efforts to establish the blockade. They were as
follows:
"The
President, by Proclamation of April 19, 1861, ordered a blockade of the ports
within the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi,
Louisiana, and Texas; and by a supplemental Proclamation of the 27th of April,
1861, he extends the blockade so as to include the ports of Virginia and North
Carolina. In pursuance of the laws of the United States, and of the Law of
Nations, in such cases provided, it becomes necessary that a competent force be
posted so as to prevent the entrance and exit of vessels from the ports
aforesaid.
"With
this view you will establish and enforce a blockade at each and all of the ports
in the States enumerated east of Key West, and a sufficient disposable force
will be placed under the command of yourself that you may carry these orders
into effect. On you will devolve the duty of blockading all the ports east of
Key West. You will duly notify neutrals of the declaration of blockade, and give
to it all the publicity in your power. The blockade must be strict and
absolute and only public armed vessels of foreign powers should be permitted to
enter the ports which are placed in a state of blockade. To neutral or foreign
vessels, that are already in the ports, you will allow a reasonable number of
days to leave them. The country relies upon your command, with the squadron of
the Gulf, to make this blockade effectual, so as to close all of the ports of
the States above named, protect our commerce from the depredations of
privateers, and contribute, by your activity and vigilance, to the speedy
suppression of the insurrectionary movements and the adjustment of the present
unhappy difficulties. It will not be improper to state to you that a lawful
maritime blockade requires the actual presence of an adequate force stationed at
the entrance of the port, sufficiently near to prevent communication.
“You will
permit no neutral or foreign vessel proceeding toward the entrance of a
blockaded port to be captured or detained if she shall not have previously
received from one of the blockading squadron a special notification of the
existence of the blockade.
"This
notification must be inserted in writing on the muster-roll of the neutral
vessel, by the cruiser which meets her; and it should contain the
announcement, together with statements of the day and the latitude in which it
was made.
"The
United States have at all times maintained these principles on the subject of
blockade, and you will take care not to attempt the application of penalties
for a breach of blockade except in cases where your right is justified by these
rules."
The following
additional instructions were issued May 4:
"The
Department would in every instance allow at least fifteen days for vessels to
depart with or without cargo after the blockade is set with a sufficient force.
Notice should be given, by such extended publicity as you can command, at each
and every port as soon as the blockade is established.
"Commodore
Pendergrast will inform you of the condition of affairs and orders received. He
will also assist with the Cumberland in enforcing the blockade for the
present.
"I need
not enjoin vigilance and promptness to prevent privateering and depredations.
"There
are several vessels in the waters of the Chesapeake to aid you, and others which
are being equipped will soon arrive out and report. The names, officers, crews,
and armaments of these vessels are not yet reported in full to the Department,
in consequence of the haste and activity necessary to get them afloat at the
earliest moment.
"Some of
the vessels can, it is believed, aid in blockading the Mississippi and Mobile.
But much must be committed to your judgment and discretion.
"Commodore
Mervine will shortly proceed to the Gulf with the [steamer] Mississippi, and
other vessels will be speedily dispatched to reinforce the blockading squadron,
and close Galveston and other ports."
No time was
therefore lost in making a beginning. But for the first three months it was only
a beginning; and at some points it cannot be said to have gone so far as that.
The Niagara, under Captain McKean, had
arrived at Boston, April 24, and was sent to New York for necessary repairs.
These were hurriedly completed and she proceeded to Charleston to set on foot
the blockade at that point. She arrived at her post on May 11. After lying off
the bar four days, and warning several vessels off the whole Southern coast, for
which, as already mentioned, the Government afterward paid heavy damages, she
was directed to proceed to sea to intercept certain shiploads of arms and
munitions of war, which were known to be on their way from Europe to New Orleans
or Mobile. The Niagara touched at
Havana, and later joined the Gulf blockade. The Harriet Lane was off Charleston on the 19th, and cruised for some'
days near that part of the coast; but the blockade in reality was raised, for
the port remained open until May 28, when the Minnesota arrived. On the same day the blockade of Savannah was established
by the Union, a steamer which had been chartered at Philadelphia five days after
the President's first proclamation was issued. At the beginning of July, the
Atlantic Squadron comprised twenty-two vessels, but most of them were stationed
in Hampton Roads or were cruising at a distance from the coast.
The line of
operations of the Atlantic Blockading Squadron began originally at Washington,
and extending down the Potomac River and the Chesapeake, passed out to sea
between the Capes, following the coast to Key West. The boundary was afterward
fixed at Cape Canaveral.
Upon this
line there were three principal points of blockade, Wilmington, Charleston, and
Savannah. They became centers of blockade in the beginning, because of their
commercial importance; and the first two remained so until the end, because they
offered peculiar advantages to blockaderunners, and were capable of defence
almost to the last against attacks by sea.
The different
stretches of coast that lay between and outside the blockade centers had
peculiar features of their own. Between Washington and Hampton Roads lay the
military frontier. The blockade in the Potomac River was therefore largely
devoted to the restriction of communication between the two shores, and to
keeping open the water-approaches of the capital; and the work of the Potomac
flotilla was of a kind by itself. Below the Potomac lay the mouths of the
Virginia rivers, near the upper waters of which were the great battlefields of
the war; and the naval operations carried on in this neighborhood were always
subsidiary to the movements of the army.
The Potomac
flotilla was organized in May, 1861, under the command of Commander James H.
Ward, and formed at first a part of the Atlantic Blockading Squadron. On May 31
Ward attacked the Confederate batteries at Acquia Creek, in the steamer Freeborn,
assisted by the other vessels of the flotilla, the Anacostia
and Resolute. The shore batteries were silenced, and the enemy retreated to
their works on the heights. This was the first naval engagement of the war. On
the next day, the Pawnee, under
Commander Rowan, was sent down from Washington, and the attack was renewed,
the Pawnee joining in the bombardment
with her heavy battery.
On June 27,
Ward made a landing at Matthias Point with a small party of men. He was
accompanied by Lieutenant Chaplin of the Pawnee.
His object seems to have been to clear away the woods on the point, which
afforded shelter to the enemy; but he underestimated the force opposed to him,
and he had hardly landed, when a body of troops, numbering four or five hundred,
came over the brow of the hill to attack him. Ordering the men to lie off in
their boats, Ward returned to the Freeborn,
and opened fire on the advancing column. Chaplin landed his handful of men a
second time, and threw up a breastwork; but about this time Ward was killed
while sighting his bow-gun, and the fire from the vessel ceased. In consequence
of this accident, signal was made to Chaplin to return; but the enemy had now
advanced within two hundred yards, and opened a galling fire upon the party.
Chaplin collected his men and sent them to the boats, waiting himself until the
last. When he came to the beach, only one man remained with him, and the boat
had drifted out. But Chaplin, who was a man of uncommon character, was unwilling
to bring it back under the enemy's fire; and as the man who was with him could
not swim, Chaplin took him on his shoulders, musket and all, and swam out with
him to the boat.
After Ward's
death, Commander Craven succeeded to the command of the flotilla. Occasional
brushes with the enemy took place, schooners were cut out or burned, and the
river was kept open until the end of October, when the heavy batteries thrown
up on the Virginia shore made it impassable.
Early in 1862
the Confederates withdrew from their positions along the river. The work of
the flotilla in the Potomac during the remainder of the war, under its successive
commanders, Wyman, Harwood, and Parker, was chiefly confined to the suppression
of the small attempts at illicit traffic which are always found along a frontier
of belligerent operations. In the other Virginian rivers the flotilla at the
same time took part in active operations, in connection with the movements of
the army and the protection of transports and supplies.
Outside the
Chesapeake the real blockade service began. A little to the south of the Capes
is found the double coast which extends as far as Wilmington. The peculiar
conformation of the coast consists of a long narrow belt of sand, jutting out
in three prominent headlands, Cape Hatteras, Cape Lookout, and Cape Fear. The
sand-belt is broken at intervals by shallow inlets. Within it lie the two
Sounds, extensive sheets of water, upon whose tributary rivers are a number of
more or less important towns. Below Wilmington the coast sweeps in, describing a
long curve, at the southern extremity of which, in a deep recess, lies
Georgetown. At this point the shore begins to assume the insular character which
is so well defined below Charleston. From here to Fernandina it forms a series
of low swampy islands, separated by narrow rivers and arms of the sea, making an
intricate network of water-courses. At intervals the groups of islands are
broken by large estuaries at the months of rivers. There are five of these
between Charleston and Savannah—Stono Inlet, North Edisto, South Edisto, St.
Helena, and Port Royal. Below Tybee Roads, the entrance to Savannah, the same
formation continues, with six important sounds—Wassaw, Ossabaw, St. Catherine,
Sapelo, Doboy, and Altamaha. Brunswick is the only town of importance in this
region, with an entrance at St. Simon's Sound.. From St. Sin-ion's the line of
islands and sounds continues, including St. Andrew's, Cumberland Sound at
Fernandina, St. John's, and St. Augustine. Below this point, the coast of
Florida consists of narrow reaches of sand enclosing long lagoons, only broken
by small and infrequent passes. In the whole extent of the South Atlantic
Squadron there were twenty or more of these small inlets, in each of which it
was necessary to keep a vessel, if the blockade was to be rigidly maintained.
During the
summer of 1861 great efforts were made by the Confederates to show that the
blockade was inefficient. It was commonly spoken of in their newspapers as
"the paper blockade," and steps were taken by foreign governments, and
especially by that of Great Britain, to ascertain its true character. The
Gladiator, an English cruiser, commanded by Captain Hickley, whose name is an
all-sufficient guarantee of the accuracy of his reports, made two cruises of
observation off the Atlantic coast, at the beginning and at the end of July. On
his first cruise, after a careful search, he could find nothing in the shape of
a blockader between Cape Henry and Cape Fear. The force in Hampton Roads was
composed of the Minnesota, Roanoke,
and Susquehanna, the sailing frigate Santee, the Cumberland,
and the steamers Anacostia, Dawn,
Daylight, and Quaker City.
On his second cruise, the eastern entrance of Wilmington was still open, as were
the inlets to the northward; but four vessels, the frigate Roanoke,
the small steamer Albatross, and two
sailing-vessels, the St. Lawrence and
the Savannah, were cruising off the
coast. Hickley did not round Cape Fear on his second cruise; had he done so, he
would have found one vessel off the mouth of Cape Fear River. This was the
steamer Daylight, which arrived on the
20th of July, and immediately notified the commanding officer of Fort Caswell of
the establishment of the blockade.
Notwithstanding
the very inadequate force on the station, the vessels of the squadron acted upon
the assumption of the existence of an efficient blockade. On July 16, the British
brig Herald, two days out from Beaufort, was captured by the St. Lawrence, on
the edge of the Gulf Stream, two hundred miles from land. The Department ordered
the release of the Herald, but she was detained by the court, and finally
condemned. Three days earlier, Pendergrast, then in command of a projected
"West India Squadron," was lying at Charleston, and published anew his
proclamation of April 30, announcing an efficient blockade of Virginia and North
Carolina, and repeating the warning that he had a sufficient naval force
"here" (that is, at Charleston) for the purpose of carrying out the
proclamation. Proclamations, however, even though they may be of questionable
validity, are not entirely without effect. Hickley reported that trade on the
coast of North Carolina was stagnant; and, as has been already said, regular
commerce was for the time being actually stopped by the original proclamation of
the President. In the months of June, July, and August forty-two vessels
entered and cleared at Wilmington, but nearly all were small coasters. The
arrivals at Charleston, from June 1 to December 1, numbered one hundred and
fifty vessels of the same description. Most of these entered at some of the
numerous side channels to be found in the network of inlets in the neighborhood
of the port. Indeed, vessels made the inshore passage from Charleston to
Fernandina without interruption as late as the end of July, 1861, and perhaps
later. The Wabash and Vandalia
were at this time off Charleston, and the Jamestown
and Flag off Savannah. These vessels,
though hardly fitted for the work, nevertheless made the blockade legally
efficient at the main entrances of these two ports. But the intermediate points,
on the coast of South Carolina and Georgia, and the whole inland passage, as far
south as Fernandina, were entirely without a blockade of any kind.
The increase
of the blockading-forces, and the gradual extension of the blockade, led to a
division of the duties of the station. The North Atlantic Blockading Squadron,
including the coast of Virginia and North Carolina, was assigned to
Flag-Officer Goldsborough, who assumed command on September 23. Flag-Officer
Dupont was appointed to the South Atlantic Squadron, from the northern boundary
of South Carolina to Cape Florida, and hoisted his flag in the Wabash
on October 29. Goldsborough remained in command just a year. He was relieved
September 5, 1862, by Acting Rear-Admiral Lee, who retained the squadron for two
years. The later blockade of Wilmington was brought to a remarkable state of
efficiency, through the untiring efforts and zeal of the officers of the
squadron. In the last year of the war, when the expedition against Fort Fisher
was decided on, the command of the North Atlantic Station was offered to
Farragut, and, upon his declining it, Porter was appointed. Porter entered upon
his duties October 12, 1864, and Lee was transferred to the Mississippi.
The first
step in the conversion of the blockade of the North Atlantic coast into a
military occupation was the capture of the forts at Hatteras Inlet, by Stringham,
with a small body of troops under General Butler, August 29, 1861. This was
followed, in February, 1862, by the expedition of Goldsborough and Burnside
against Roanoke Island, and the active operations conducted subsequently by
Rowan in the Sounds. The most important points in the interior waters of North
Carolina were then occupied, and the small commerce in the Sounds came to an
end. After a while Beaufort became the centre of occupation, though the headquarters
of the squadron and the station of the flagship continued for a long time to
be at Hampton Roads.
On the 20th
of July the steamer Daylight took her
station off the mouth of Cape Fear River. With this diminutive force began the
famous blockade of Wilmington—the
port which later in the war became the scene of the most brilliant successes
of the blockade-runners and the most strenuous efforts of the blockaders. The
town is situated on Cape Fear River, about twenty-eight miles from its mouth.
There are two entrances to the river, one from the eastward, called New Inlet,
the other from the southward at the river mouth. The entrances are not more than
six miles apart in a straight line; but between the two lies Smith's Island, a
long strip of sand and shoal, with the headland of Cape Fear projecting far out
at the southern extremity. Continuing the line of Cape Fear, the dangerous
Frying Pan Shoals extend out ten miles farther, making the distance by water
between the two entrances little short of forty miles.
Each of the
channels was protected by strong works, and each required a separate blockading
force. Smithville, a small town on the Cape Fear River about equidistant from
the two entrances, was the point of departure of the blockaderunners. Dropping
down from Wilmington to this place, they could here await their opportunity and
take their choice between the main channel and New Inlet, whichever seemed at
the moment most favorable. Neither presented any serious difficulties to the
navigator, though vessels entering from the south were occasionally caught on
“the Lump," a round shoal in the channel. To the north of New Inlet, on
Federal Point, was Fort Fisher. Fort Caswell overlooked, in the same way, the
mouth of the river. Each of the blockading squadrons, obliged to keep out of
range of the forts, was stationed in a semicircle, ten miles or more in length,
with its extremities near the shore. The forts kept a sharp lookout, and if a
stray blockader ventured in too far, he was quickly apprised of it by a shell,
and made to keep his distance. The blockade-runners, sighting the land toward
evening, would wait outside until it was dark, and then, making a dash at
full speed through the fleet, would be under the guns of the fort in a
twinkling, and safe from capture. Such a port, so protected, it was almost
impossible to close, and fast vessels could slip in past the most vigilant
force. Accordingly it was at Wilmington that blockade-running maintained itself
longest and most actively, after it had nearly ceased elsewhere. In 1863-64, it
was at its height; but toward the end of the latter year it began gradually to
decline. Even after the first attack on Fort Fisher, a few vessels succeeded in
passing in and out with impunity; and the practice only came to an end when the
fort succumbed.
The
improvement in the efficiency of the Wilmington blockade was partly due to the
increase in the number of vessels, and partly to a better understanding of the
exigencies of the service. In August, 1862, one of the blockade-running captains
reports that the vessels of the inshore squadron carried lights at their peaks
all night; and the same captain states a year later that a portion of the fleet
remained at anchor during the night. On the other hand, Admiral Lee,
describing the blockade of the same port in October, 1864, says that the smaller
vessels were kept as near the bar and batteries as the state of the weather, the
light, and their draft would allow. These were pressed in by a line of larger
vessels, and these again by the divisional officer, moving along the line.
Vessels of the outer line which discovered blockade-runners were allowed to
chase, but those on the inner line were required to keep their station. All the
vessels were kept under way all night. In the summer of 1864, the headquarters
of the squadron were removed from Hampton Roads to Beaufort. In the fall the
blockading force at the two entrances numbered fifty steamers, some of them
the fastest in the service. Nowhere was the work of the blockade more arduous
and difficult than at Wilmington. The squadron captured or destroyed sixty-five
steam blockade-runners during the war; and yet they continued to effect an
entrance. The result only shows that the absolute locking-up of a wellfortified
port, whose trade offers powerful inducements to commercial enterprise, is an
actual impossibility.
It was during
his service on this station, while in command of the Monticello,
that Cushing performed two of those daredevil exploits which gave him a name
and a fame apart in the history of the war. The first of these took place in
February, 1864, while the Monticello
was blockading the mouth of Cape Fear River. On the night of the 28th, Cushing
fitted out two boats, and taking with him Acting-Ensign Jones, Acting-Master's
Mate Howarth, and twenty men, he proceeded past the fort and up the river to
Smithville. His object was to land at the town, capture the commanding officer,
and board any vessels he might find in the harbor. It was an enterprise hardly
worth the risk, for the danger was great, and the capture of a dozen commanding
officers at such posts as Smithville would not compensate for the loss of one
Cushing. Still, Cushing's coolness and audacity would counterbalance almost any
risk, and he had no idea of being lost on this occasion.
The party
reached the town, and landed in front of the hotel. Concealing his men under
the bank, Cushing proceeded to capture some Negroes, from whom he obtained the
information he wanted; then, taking with him the two officers and a seaman, he
walked to General Herbert's headquarters. On the opposite side of the street
were the barracks, in which the garrison was quartered, numbering about 1,000
men. Unfortunately, the General was out, having gone to Wilmington. Cushing
entered the house with his party and captured an engineer officer. The
Adjutant-General was also in the house, but went off in haste to the woods, and
neglected to call out the garrison. Cushing returned quietly with his_ prisoner
to the boat, passing within a few yards of the sentry on the wharf. A few
minutes after he had embarked the alarm was given, and signal was made to Fort
Caswell that boats were in the harbor; but the party had passed the fort before
it could open fire.
The second
expedition was made in the following June. Cushing had received permission from
Admiral Lee to attempt the destruction of the Confederate ram Raleigh,
supposed to be lying in the river. On the night of the 23d of June, he left
his ship, the Monticello, in the first
cutter, with Jones and Howarth, the same officers that had accompanied him on
his previous expedition, and fifteen men. Pulling up the river,. the party
passed the forts and the town of Smithville. Meantime the moon had come out, and
when about fifteen miles from the mouth of the river, they were discovered by
sentries on the bank. Making a feint of going back, Cushing doubled as soon as
he reached the shadow of the opposite bank, and continued on his course. Toward
morning, when within seven miles of Wilmington, he landed and hid the boat in a
swamp. The boat's crew remained all day in concealment, watching the river. At
night, as they were preparing to move, two boats were captured, containing a
fishing party returning to Wilmington, who were pressed into service as guides.
During the
remainder of the second night, Cushing was occupied in making a thorough
examination of the obstructions three miles below the town. At daybreak he
moved up one of the creeks, until he found a road. Leaving a few of his men with
the boat, he landed, and followed the road until he came upon the main road
between Wilmington and Fort Fisher. Presently, by lying in wait, be captured a
mounted courier with the mail from the fort, which contained much valuable
information. The courier from the town came along two hours later, but, catching
sight of a bluejacket, made off with all speed. Cushing galloped after him on
the captured horse, but the second courier was better mounted than the first,
and made his escape.
Cushing had
now been away from the boat for some hours, and his men had had nothing to eat.
He therefore set about in a characteristic way to obtain provisions. After
capturing other prisoners, he learned that a store was to be found two miles
off; and mounting Howarth on the captured horse with the courier's coat and hat,
he sent him to market. Howarth, who was a man of easy manner and a fine
assurance, engaged freely in conversation with the people whom he met on the
road, and passed without suspicion. Presently he returned with a supply of
provisions. After dinner, the party amused themselves by cutting the telegraph
wires, and at dark they rejoined the boat.
The third and
last night in the river had now begun, and Cushing prepared to return. Embarking
with the prisoners, he went to examine the condition of the Raleigh.
She was found to have been destroyed, and was now a total wreck. Proceeding down
the river, Cushing set his prisoners adrift in boats, without oars or sails, so
that they might not report his presence too early. The moon had now risen, and
as he reached the mouth of the river, he was discovered by a guard-boat. Just as
he was preparing to attack her, three others came out from the shadow, and at
the same instant five more appeared from the other side. The cutter was nearly
surrounded, and. Cushing, turning in the only direction left open, found a
schooner filled with troops ahead of him. It seemed now that the game was up;
but Cushing's never-failing pluck stood by him. He made a dash in the direction
of the western bar, and the enemy endeavored to intercept him; but as the side
of his boat that was toward them was in shadow, they lost sight of him for a
time. Taking advantage of a favorable moment, Cushing turned suddenly and
headed at full speed for New Inlet. His coolness communicated itself to the men;
the strokes of the oars kept perfect time, and the boat, after a vigorous pull,
shot ahead into the breakers. Here the enemy did not venture to follow; and the
cutter was brought back after her three days' absence, without any casualty
whatever.
Only one
serious attempt was made by the Confederates to raise the blockade and put an
end to the occupation of the Sounds of North Carolina. This took place in 1864,
when the ram Albemarle made her
appearance at Plymouth. This vessel was built at Edward's Ferry, on the Roanoke
River. Attention had been called to her formidable character as early as June,
1863, by Lieutenant-Commander Flusser, commanding the naval forces at
Plymouth, an officer whose bravery and ability had won recognition both in and
out of the service. His vessels could not reach the Ferry, on account of the
shallowness of the water and the batteries that lined the bluffs; and urgent
representations had been made to the Admiral in command, to the Department, and
finally to the Secretary of War, at Flusser's instance. But no action had been
taken, and the work of construction went on without interruption.
By April,
1864, the ram was completed, and preparations were made for a combined movement
against the Federal forces at Plymouth. On the 17th and 18th, vigorous attacks
were made upon the forts by the Confederates, supported by artillery. At this
time, the force under Flusser consisted of the Miami, one of the smaller double-enders, the Southfield, and two tugs used as picket-boats. The Miami
and Southfield carried a rifled 100-pounder, and five or six IX-inch
guns each; and during the action on shore, by throwing shells at the enemy, they
helped to repel the assaults on the forts. On the evening of the second day, the
two vessels were lashed together, in expectation of the ram's approach, the Miami,
Flusser's vessel, being on the starboard side.
At midnight,
the picket-boat announced that the Albemarle
was descending the river. She came down slowly, under cover of the trees on the
river bank, and as she approached the vessels, she ran out obliquely. Passing
the Miami's bow, she made straight for
the Southfield. Her ports were closed,
she did not fire a shot; but she struck the Southfield fairly on the starboard bow, forcing her ram into the
fire-room. As the ram was drawn out, the Southfield
filled and sank.
Meantime both
vessels had opened fire on the assailant with their heavy guns. The guns had
been left loaded with shell since the afternoon firing, although the Albemarle
was expected; and as the projectiles struck the ram's iron side, they burst into
fragments which rebounded over the Miami's
deck. Three or four of the pieces struck Flusser, who was instantly killed. Half
a dozen others were wounded; but the ram received no injury. The hawsers that
lashed the vessels parted, and the crew of the sinking steamer jumped to the Miami.
The latter then retreated, and with the two tugs, dropped down to the mouth of
the river. The Albemarle followed for
a short distance, and shots were exchanged, but without effect on either side.
Next day Plymouth surrendered.
It now became
a matter of importance to reinforce the blockading vessels in the Sounds, as the
ram might at any moment come out of the river and repossess all the waters of
North Carolina. Three of the larger double-enders, the Sassacus,
Mattabesett, and Wyalusing,
were sent down, and the force was placed under the command of Captain Melancton
Smith.[1]
The squadron was posted off the mouth of the Roanoke, and careful preparations
were made for the expected attack.
On the 5th of
May the Albemarle came down,
accompanied by a steamer carrying troops, and a captured army-transport loaded
with provisions and coal, prepared for an extended cruise in the Sounds. The
squadron got under way, and met her about ten miles from the mouth of the river.
At a little before five in the afternoon she opened the engagement, by firing
two shots at the Mattabesett, the
leading vessel. The latter, followed by the Sassacus and Wyalusing,
passed up alongside the Albemarle, delivering their broadsides at a distance of
one hundred and fifty yards. Turning, they came back on the opposite side, and
the smaller vessels took their place. The ram was thus placed between two fires.
The Sassacus, which had drawn off a
little from the line, now turned, and, gathering headway, struck the enemy
fairly with her stem, just abaft the beam. Though the doubleenders were not
adapted for ramming, it had been decided to try this, as well as every other
expedient, in the hope of inflicting some injury. The ram careened a little, but
did not sink; and as the Sassacus
remained alongside, the Albemarle's
port opened, and a 100-pound Brooke rifle-shot was discharged through one of the
boilers of the double-ender. The escaping steam filled the vessel, scalding
many of the crew, and she drifted off, firing until out of range. The other
vessels continued the action until dark, but without disabling the enemy. At
night, the ram returned to the river, her armor somewhat battered, but her
machinery apparently intact. Though not destroyed, she had been severely
hammered; the store-vessel she had brought with her was captured; and her
projected conquest of the Sounds came to naught. The next time she ventured down
the river, a shell from the Whitehead
caused her to turn back; and she seemed to have no inclination for a second
conflict.
An effort was
now made to destroy the ram by placing torpedoes in the river, but without
success. One of these attempts was planned and carried out by enlisted men, and
deserves to be noticed, if only as showing the pluck and devotion of the
seamen of the navy during the war. The men who took part in the expedition were
John W. Loyd, coxswain, Allen Crawford and John Laverty, firemen, and Charles
Baldwin and Benjamin Loyd, coal-heavers. All were volunteers from the Wyalusing.
On the afternoon of the 25th of May, the party ascended the Middle River, a
small branch of the Roanoke, in a boat, taking with them two torpedoes. These
were carried on a stretcher across the swamps to the main river. Loyd, the
coxswain; and Baldwin swam the river with a line, and hauled the torpedoes to
the Plymouth side, above the town. They were then connected by a bridle, and
floated down the river, guided by Baldwin. It was his intention to place them
across the bow of the Albemarle, and Crawford, from the swamps on the opposite
side, was to explode them at a signal. All went well until the torpedoes were
within a few yards of the ram, when the line fouled a schooner. At the same
moment, Baldwin was discovered by a sentry, and shots were fired, followed by a
volley of musketry. As success was no longer possible, the line was cut, and the
five men made their escape, reaching the vessel with difficulty, some of them
after several days of wandering in the swamps.
The
Department now determined to take energetic measures to destroy the Albemarle,
and selected Cushing, whose latest performances at Wilmington had made him
famous, to carry out its design. Two steam-launches or picket-boats were fitted
out at New York under the direction of Admiral Gregory, and rigged with
spar-torpedoes designed by Chief Engineer Wood. Both the launches were to be
used in the expedition, but one of them was lost in crossing Chesapeake Bay, on
the way down from New York. Cushing was not the man to be deterred by an
accident, and he proceeded to carry out his purpose with the remaining boat.
Late in
October Cushing appeared with his launch in Albemarle Sound. The senior officer
at this time was Commander Macomb, whose vessel, the Shamrock, was lying with the rest of the division in the Sound, some
miles from the Roanoke. One or two of the small steamers were stationed as a
picket at the mouth of the river, and midway between them and the squadron lay
one of the double-enders, as an outpost. . After a day or two spent in
preparations, during which several additional officers, and men joined the launch,
she was taken up the Sound by the Otsego.
Remaining alongside until everything was ready, she started up the river, on the
night of the 26th of October; but after proceeding a short distance she
grounded, and the time lost in getting her off made it too late to carry out
the purpose of the expedition. So the party returned to the Otsego.
The Albemarle
at this time was lying at the wharf at Plymouth, on the right bank of the
river, eight miles from its month. The stream averaged two hundred yards in
width, and was lined on both sides by Confederate pickets. A mile below the town
was the wreck of the Southfield,
surrounded by schooners. It was known that the enemy kept a careful watch at
this point, and that a gun was in position to command the bend of the river.
The launch
started for the second time at midnight on the 27th. The party consisted of
Cushing; three Acting-Master's Mates, Howarth, Gay, and Woodman; Paymaster Swan;
two engineer officers, Steever and Stotesbury; and eight men. The Shamrock's
second cutter, with two officers and eleven men, was taken in tow, ready to
cast off and to board the Southfield
if the party was discovered in passing. The torpedo was placed at the end of a
spar, at the starboard bow of the launch. The bow was decked over and carried a
12pound howitzer. The engines were covered with tarpaulins, to shut off the
light and sound, and at low speed the noise of the machinery could scarcely be
heard.
The night was
dark and stormy, with now and then a heavy fall of rain. Most of the officers
stood or sat in the forward part of the launch. Cushing, Howarth, and Woodman
stood abaft the deck. Cushing was on the right, holding the torpedo lines;
Howarth, his companion in the enterprises at Wilmington, was next him; and
Woodman, who knew the river well, was on the left by the wheel. On the deck by
the howitzer stood Gay; and Swan was on the right behind Cushing. The engineers
and the firemen were at their post by the engine, and the rest were stationed on
the bow, near the wheel, and in the stern. The last were to clear the tiller
ropes, in case they should foul.
Running
cautiously under the trees on the right bank, the launch proceeded on her way up
the enemy's river. It was Cushing's intention, if he could get ashore
unobserved, to land below the ram, board her from the wharf, and bring her down
the river. To carry out this plan, it was necessary that the attack should be a
surprise; but, failing in this, he was prepared to attack with the torpedo. In
either case, he meant to give the enemy as little warning as he could. After the
first mile or two, perfect silence was maintained, and the little craft sped
noiselessly on its course. Arriving at the Southfield, it passed her within twenty yards, but the guards either
were asleep or failed to notice the two boats as they moved along in the
darkness. Rounding the bend of the river, the launch came to an open reach upon
which lay the town of Plymouth. Here a fire had been kindled on the bank, which
reflected a faint light over the water from the houses.
Creeping
along silently and stealthily, the launch approached the landing below the
wharf. Just then a dog barked, and a sentry, aroused, discovered the boat and
hailed her. Receiving no answer, he hailed again and fired. Up to this moment
not a word had been uttered. But in an instant the situation was changed. The
time for surprises was past; and Cushing, giving up without a second thought his
cherished project, at once threw off all concealment, and in a loud voice called
out, "Ahead fast!" In the same breath he ordered the cutter to cast
loose, capture the Southfield's
pickets, and go down the river. Pushing on two hundred yards further, he saw for
the first time the dim outlines of the Albemarle,
on the port bow, and close aboard. The light of the fire showed a line of logs
in the water, within which, at a distance of thirty feet, lay the vessel. The
launch was too near the logs to rise over them at the sharp angle her course was
then making, and Cushing saw that he must sheer off and turn before he could
strike them fairly and with sufficient headway.
The alarm on
board the Albemarle had now become
general; rattles were sprung, the bell was rung violently; and a shower of
rifle-bullets was poured in upon the launch. Swan received a slight wound, and
Cushing had three bullets in his clothing, but no one was disabled. Passing
close to the enemy, the launch took a wide sweep out to the middle of the river;
then turning, it headed at full speed for the ram. As he approached, Cushing,
with the rollicking bravado and audacity that marked all his doings, shouted at
the top of his voice, "Leave the ram ! We are going to blow you up!"
with more exclamations of the same kind, in which the others joined. To Cushing,
who went into action with the zest of a schoolboy at football, and the nerve and
well-balanced judgment of a veteran, the whole affair was half sport, even while
the bullets were flying around him, and while he could hear the snapping of the
primers, as the guns of the ram were brought to bear. Luckily they missed fire.
As he came near, Cushing ordered the howitzer to be trained and fired; and he
directed every movement himself, which was promptly carried out by those in the
bow. He says of this incident in his report: "The enemy's fire was very
severe, but a dose of canister, at short range, served to moderate their zeal
and disturb their aim."
In a moment
the launch struck the boom of logs, abreast of the ram's quarter port, and
pressed over them. As it approached the side of the ram, the torpedo-spar was
lowered; and going ahead slowly until the torpedo was well under the Albemarle's
bottom, Cushing detached it with a vigorous pull. Waiting until he could
feel the torpedo rising slowly and touching the vessel, he pulled the
trigger-line and exploded it. At the same second, as it seemed to those in the
boat, the Albemarle's gun was fired, while the launch was within a dozen feet
of the muzzle. To Cushing it seemed that the shot went crashing through his
boat, though in fact she was not touched. A column of water, thrown up by the
explosion of the torpedo, fell in the launch, and the latter, being entangled in
the logs, could not be extricated.
When he saw
that he could not bring the boat off, Gushing, after refusing to surrender,
ordered the crew to save themselves, and taking off his coat and shoes, jumped
into the river. Others followed his example; but all returned except three,
Woodman, and two of the crew, Higgins and Houghton. Houghton made his escape,
but the other two were drowned. Cushing swam to the middle of the stream. Half a
mile below he met Woodman in the water, completely exhausted. Cushing helped
him to go on for a little distance, but he was by this time too weak to get his
companion ashore. Reaching the bank with difficulty, he waited till daylight,
when he crawled out of the water and stole into the swamp, not far from the
fort. On his way he fell in with a Negro, whom he sent to gain information as to
the result of the night's work. As soon as he learned that the Albemarle was
sunk, he moved on until he came to a creek, where he captured a skiff, and in
this he made his way the next night to the picket-boat at the mouth of the
river.
The rest of
the party, unable either to resist or to escape, surrendered, and were taken
ashore by a boat from the Albemarle. The ram heeled over and sank at her
moorings and so remained until Plymouth was finally recaptured,
The South
Atlantic Blockading Squadron had but two commanders, Dupont and Dahlgren. The
transfer was made July 6, 1863. Dupont's command opened with the victory of Port
Royal, which gave the squadron the best and most commodious harbor on the
Atlantic coast. After the first success, the activity of Admiral Dupont,
seconded by the ability and energy of his captains—a
body of officers remark able for their high professional qualities-secured the
control of the vast network of lagoons and inlets extending on the one hand to
Charleston, and on the other to Fernandina. The blockade was made thoroughly
efficient in the sounds; and the capture of Fort Pulaski in the following
summer, in which a detachment from the fleet assisted, made the Savannah River
nearly inaccessible to the blockade-sinners. Port Royal then became the centre
of occupation, and the headquarters of the fleet.
The principal
centre of blockade in the South Atlantic was Charleston. An attempt was made
early in the war to close the entrance by placing obstructions in the channel. A
number of vessels, most of them old whalers, were bought for the purpose by the
Navy Department at a cost of $160,000. They were loaded with stone and sunk in
rows on the bar, under the direction of Captain Davis. The plan proved a
failure, not through any want of skill in carrying it out, but from the
operation of natural causes. The vessels soon buried themselves in the sand, or
were gradually moved out of position by the action of the water, and
blockade-runners passed in as. freely as if no obstructions existed. The experiment
was tried at other points with the same result, and the attempt was finally
given up.
The bar at
Charleston extends several miles out to sea, and the main ship channel, running
nearly north and south, follows the trend of Morris Island at a distance of a
mile from the shore. During the first half of the war the batteries on Morris
Island kept the fleet outside the bar, and the blockade was maintained at a
great disadvantage. Moreover, several inlets to the north and south afforded
access to Charleston for vessels of light draft. These were only closed after
Dupont had taken command. In the summer and fall of 1863 the army, supported by
the ironclads, gradually drove the Confederates out of their works on the
Island, and the monitors took their station inside, somewhat to the southward of
Cumming's Point. Blockade-runners were then driven to the use of the Beach
channel, at the northern side of the harbor. This channel skirted the shore of
Sullivan's Island, and opened into the harbor through a narrow passage close to
Fort Moultrie. Its outer end lay abreast of Breach Inlet, near which was Fort
Marshall; and from this point to Fort Beauregard, and thence to Fort Moultrie,
heavy batteries lined the beach. It became usual to send a vessel at night to
this entrance, which, weighing early, got away from the Breach Inlet batteries
before daybreak. Occasionally it happened that blockade-runners, which had
come in during the night, would be seen in the morning hard and fast aground at
the inner entrance. No attempt could be made to seize them, lying as they did
directly under the guns of Moultrie; but they could be destroyed by the fire
of the monitors, and a collection of wrecks was gradually accumulated at this
point.
Toward the
close of the war the blockade of Charleston, like that of Wilmington, increased
in stringency. Dahlgren describes it as being perfectly close, until a few very
fast steamers of trifling draft were built in England expressly for the purpose
of evading it, and these did not pass with impunity. So keen did the watch
afterward become that a vessel on the way out, whose presence was only known by
seeing her two masts cut off the light on Sumter, was captured by the
observer's signalling the cruisers outside. But even then the port could not be
absolutely closed. The “very fast steamers of trifling draft" were so
difficult to catch that up to the last moment they were occasionally going in
and out; and three or four of them were at the wharves of Charleston when the
city was taken.
The Savannah
River was easily blockaded after the capture of Fort Pulaski. Its channel,
narrow and difficult at the best, was well-nigh impassable when stripped of
buoys and lights; and the fort, lying opposite the narrowest point, prevented
access in the daytime. The principal side entrance to the city of Savannah,
through Wassaw Sound, was effectually closed when the Sounds were occupied
after the battle of Port Royal.
The
Confederates were not at any time sufficiently strong to raise the blockade on
the South Atlantic coast. The raids that were made with this object-sudden
dashes into the midst of the blockading fleet-though well organized and
conducted, failed to accomplish any more important result than disabling one or
two vessels, and increasing the watchfulness of the blockaders.
One of the
boldest of these attempts was made in the winter of 1863, off Charleston. On the
morning of January 31, before daylight, two ironclad rams, the Chicora
and the Palmetto State, came out of the harbor, crossed the bar, and, under
cover of a thick haze, approached the vessels stationed outside. It happened
that at this time two of the largest vessels of the blockading fleet, the Powhatan
and Canandaigua, had been sent to Port Royal for coal and repairs. Of
those that remained, numbering ten or more steamers, the Housatonic was the only war-vessel of considerable size. The
others were chiefly purchased vessels and gunboats. It was one of the many
disadvantages of the exposed station outside the bar that it necessitated the
distribution of the ships over a wide area, and at this time they were spread
out in a line five or six miles in length.
The Mercedita
was the first vessel attacked. It could not be said that she was off her guard,
for, only an hour before, she had slipped her cable and overhauled a troop-ship,
which was running for the channel by mistake. She had returned to her anchorage,
when one of the rams suddenly appeared out of the mist, close aboard. The ram
lay so low in the water, just under the starboard quarter, that the Mercedita's guns could not be trained upon her; and before the
steamer could move away, a rifle-shell from the ram, passing through her
condenser and steam-drum, and exploding on the port side, for a time disabled
her. Stellwagen, the commander of the Mercedita,
in response to a demand from the ram, surrendered, and sent Abbot, his first
lieutenant, on board, who gave his parole for the officers and crew.
The ram now
abandoned the Mercedita, and joined
her consort, which had already engaged Commander Leroy in the Keystone
State. Leroy had discovered his assailant in time to get under way and
exchange shots. The enemy, uninjured by his fire, succeeded in exploding a
shell in his fore-hold, and Leroy kept off until the flames were extinguished.
Returning, he attempted, under a full head of steam, to run down his antagonist;
but the latter had now been joined by her companion, and the Keystone
State was received with a fire that effectually checked her. Two shells
burst on her quarter-deck; others struck the sides, near or below the
water-line; and finally one passed through the port steam-drum and lodged in the
starboard. Her engines were now useless, her motive power was gone, the water
began to pour in through the shot-holes, and the fore-hold was again on fire.
Thereupon she lowered her colors; but as the enemy continued his fire, and did
not take possession, they were again hoisted and the engagement renewed.
By this time,
nearly the whole squadron was under way; and, at the critical moment, three of
the small steamers came up, and the rams retreated after a protracted but desultory
conflict. As they went off, shots were exchanged with the squadron, but little
damage was clone on either side, and the rams gained a safe refuge under the
guns of Fort Sumter. The attack had been judiciously planned and boldly
executed, as far as it went; though it might have been more successful if it had
been maintained persistently after the first onset. Among the vessels of the
blockading squadron there was a want of systematic co-operation. The first shot
was fired at five o'clock; and the rams had not retreated out of range until
half-past seven. During this period of two hours and a half, the brunt of the
battle was borne by the Mercedita and
the Keystone State. The other vessels
supposed that a number of blockade-runners had come in together, and no
arrangement seems to have been made for prompt communication and support. The Memphis
came in for a share of the attack, but after passing one of the rains and
discovering its strength in an exchange of shots, she steamed out of range to
the eastward. The Augusta was also
engaged, but as she did not get under way until halfpast six, her part in the
action was not important. In fact, neither of these vessels was any more fitted
than a ship of pasteboard to cope with the ironclads; and their light batteries
made no impression on the enemy. The Quaker
City was more actively engaged, but with little more effect than to divert
the attention of the rams, and prevent the Keystone
State from being blown out of the water. The Housatonic, lying at some distance from the scene of conflict, had
got under way shortly after the Augusta,
and during the last hour of the engagement, she did much firing, but little execution,
further than to knock away the pilot-house and flab staff of one of the
retreating assailants.
After the
engagement was over, a question arose as to what was the status of the Mercedita.
When Abbot went on board the ram, he gave his parole, as already mentioned, in
the name of the captain, for the officers and crew. The agreement was verbal,
and Abbot's report stated that he had given his word that the officers and crew
would not "take up arms against the Confederate States unless regularly
exchanged." It does not appear that Abbot had authority to make this
engagement, but no steps were taken by the captain to repudiate it. Possibly
there was no opportunity to take any steps. In his report, Stellwagen simply
says: "He proceeded aboard, and according to their demand, gave his parole
on behalf of himself and all the officers and crew." In regard to this
proceeding, it may be remarked that it is a well recognized principle that
prisoners cannot be forced to give their parole; and it is manifestly improper
to give a parole voluntarily, during the progress of an engagement. It enables
the assailant to neutralize portions of the force in detail, without being
diverted from his operations by the necessity of guarding prisoners; and it
precludes recapture, or rather, it takes away any advantage that may be derived
from recapture.
At six
o'clock, according to Stellwagen's account, which was one hour after the
engagement began, and an hour and a half before it was over, the injuries to the
Mercedita were partially repaired, and
she "got things in order to start, a little steam on; hove [up]
anchor." It is not clear whether she then went off, but it is at least
certain that she changed her position. After the battle she proceeded without
assistance to Port Royal. This removal of the Mercedita was afterward the foundation of a charge made by the
Confederates that the officers of the vessel had violated their parole, by
taking the Mercedita out of their
hands. The proceeding was, in fact, a questionable one, as it is merely
quibbling to draw a distinction between "taking up arms," and navigating
a ship-of-war out of reach of an enemy. It can only be excused on the
supposition that the enemy were unable to take possession owing to the presence
of a superior force; and it shows forcibly the predicament in which an officer
may place himself by giving a parole which virtually places his ship hors de
combat during the progress of an action.
In
consequence of the attack of the rams, the authorities of Charleston seized the
opportunity to declare that the blockade was raised. A proclamation was
published the same afternoon, signed by Beauregard and Ingraham, the Commanding
General and Senior Naval Officer, declaring that the naval forces attacked the
blockading squadron, and “sunk, dispersed, or drove off or out of sight, the
entire blockading fleet." The proclamation was accompanied in the
newspapers by the statement that two vessels were sunk, four burnt, and the rest
driven away; and the assertion was said to be sustained by the testimony of
several of the foreign consuls, who had gone out in the afternoon in a tug, and
had seen nothing of the blockaders. It was also asserted that the consuls had
held a meeting in the evening, and had come unanimously to the opinion that the
blockade was legally raised.
The
asseverations of the Charleston newspapers were extensively quoted abroad, and
grossly exaggerated as they were, raised a serious doubt as to the continued
efficiency of the blockade. It is an established rule that the absence of a
blockading fleet, . caused by stress of weather, if the blockade is immediately
resumed, constitutes only a temporary interruption; but the dispersion of a
squadron by a hostile attack puts a stop to the blockade in toto, and a
renewal of the operation requires a new proclamation, or rather, requires
knowledge of the re-establishment of the blockade as a ground for condemnation.
If the assertion that the blockade was raised had been true, every
blockade-runner in Nassau would have been able to make directly for Charleston,
and if captured without having received warning would have escaped condemnation
on the ground of want of knowledge. As a matter of fact, the report so
industriously spread was essentially false, though it had enough color of truth
to give it a ready acceptance, in the absence of proof to the contrary,
especially when backed by official testimony. Out of ten vessels on the
station, two had been disabled by the attack, and had proceeded to Port Royal.
Two other vessels were sent the same morning to Port Royal, the Augusta,
with dispatches for the Admiral, and the Memphis
to tow the Keystone State. Both were
sent back immediately by Dupont. In the afternoon, firing was heard in Stono
Inlet, and the Flag was sent thither.
Of the other five vessels, the Stettin, Ottawa,
and Unadilla were not engaged at
all, and neither they, nor the Housatonic
and Quaker City left the usual line of
blockade during the day. If the consuls did not see these five vessels, whose
logs show that they were in plain sight all day, and several times in
communication, it was because they did not look at them. The report, however,
had served its purpose, and it was commonly believed that the blockade of
Charleston was raised, although a written declaration of five captains of the
squadron was published, containing a complete refutation.
The attack
had a good effect in showing the necessity of strengthening the force before
Charleston, which had hitherto only been adequate to cope with blockade-runners.
The Powhatan was sent to Charleston
the same evening, and the New Ironsides and Canandaigua
joined a day or two later. The blockade was thereafter continued with redoubled
vigilance, and with a new sense of the necessity of perfect cooperation.
The
disposition of the vessels of the South Atlantic Squadron, as given by Admiral
Dupont on February 15, 1863, shows what a radical change had taken place under
his command in the character and efficiency of the blockade. The arrangement
of the squadron was as follows
At
Georgetown, the double-enders Sebago
and Conemaugh.
Off Bull's
Bay, the steamer Lodona.
Off
Charleston, the New Ironsides;
the side-wheel steamer Powhatan;
sloops-of-war Canandaigua and Housatonic; steamers Flag,
Quaker City, James Adger,
Augusta, Huron, and Memphis;
schooners G. W. Blunt and America.
In Stono
Inlet, the steamers Pawnee, Unadilla,
and Commodore McDonough.
In North
Edisto, the steamer South Carolina.
In St. Helena, the bark Kingfisher.
In Wassaw,
the monitor Passaic, and steamer Marblehead.
In Ossabaw, the monitor Montauk,
gunboats Seneca and Wissahickon,
and steamer Dawn.
Guarding St.
Catherine's, Sapelo, Doboy, and St. Simon's Sounds, the steamers Paul
Jones, Potomska,
and Madgie; barks Braziliera and
Fernandina; and mortar-schooner Norfolk
Packet.
In St.
Andrew's, the bark Midnight.
At
Fernandina, the steamer Mohawk.
In St. John's
River, the steamers Nonsuch and Uncas.
At Port
Royal, the headquarters of the station, were the frigate Wabash, the flagship, the storeship Vermont, five tugs, and two despatch-vessels; and temporarily in
port, undergoing repairs or taking in provisions, the monitors Weehawken
and Patapsco, and the steamers Keystone
State, Stettin, Wamsutta, and Ottawa.
The experience of eighteen months had wrought a change indeed in the methods of
the coast blockade, since there were on a single station more vessels than the
navy had had in commission at the outbreak of the war.
The next
attempt of the Confederates to raise the blockade on the South Atlantic station
resulted disastrously to its projectors. This was the brief cruise of the
Atlanta, formerly the Fingal, in
Wassaw Sound, in June, 1863.
The Fingal
was an iron steamer of English origin, which had run the blockade of Savannah in
November, 1861, She had been taken by the Confederate Government, re-named the Atlanta,
and altered and strengthened for service as a man-of-war. In making the
alterations, she had been cut down so as to leave the deck about two feet above
the water when loaded. From this deck rose a casemate, with a flat roof and
inclined sides. Within the casemate were four Brooke rifles, two VI-4/10-inch in
the midship ports, and two VII-inch on pivots at the bow and stern, so contrived
that they could be fired either laterally or fore-and-aft. The armor protecting
this powerful battery was four inches thick, made of English railroad iron,
rolled into two-inch plates. The deck was of enormous strength, and its edges
projected six feet from the side of the vessel, the projection being filled in
and protected with a heavy covering of wood and iron. The Atlanta's bow ended in a ram, over which projected a torpedo spar.
She was in every way one of the most powerful vessels which the Confederates had
got afloat; and great things were expected of her.
Intimations
had reached Admiral Dupont that the Atlanta
and other ironclads at Savannah were on the point of leaving Wilmington River
and entering Wassaw Sound for the purpose of raising the blockade at that
place, and in the inlets to the southward. It was to be another raid on the
blockaders, like that of the 31st of January; but the vessel to be employed
was much more powerful. Dupont, however, was careful to be well informed, and
the experience of. the previous winter had not been lost. The double-ender Cimmerone
was at this time maintaining the blockade alone, and two monitors were dispatched
to Wassaw, the Weehawken, under
Captain John Rodgers, and the Nahant,
under Commander Downes. The Weehawken
had already won an enviable fame, and was known throughout the squadron as a
vessel that was always ready for any service and always handled with masterly
skill.
Early on the
morning of the 17th of June, the ironclad was discovered coming down the river.
She was accompanied by two steamers, filled with spectators who bad come out
in the confident expectation of witnessing the speedy destruction of the Federal
fleet. It was to be a spectacle, a party of pleasure, like that which tempted
the people of Boston, just fifty years before, to sail down the harbor, on the
day when Lawrence went out to encounter the Shannon; and like that memorable excursion, it was doomed to end in
disappointment.
As soon as
the Atlanta came in sight, Rodgers beat to quarters and cleared the ship
for action. Ten minutes later he slipped his cable, and steamed slowly around
the point at the entrance of the river. The Nahant,
having no pilot, followed in his wake. Just before five o'clock, the Atlanta,
then lying across the channel and awaiting the attack, fired the first shot,
which passed astern of the Weehawken.
For twenty minutes more, the monitors advanced steadily until within three
hundred yards of the enemy. Then the Weehawken
opened.
With the
deliberateness which characterized him in the most trying moments, Rodgers
delivered the fire of his two heavy guns, the XI-inch and the XV-inch. He fired
five shots, of which four hit the Atlanta.
The first, a XV-inch cored shot, struck the inclined side of the vessel, in the
line of the ports; and though fired at an angle of fifty degrees with her keel,
penetrated the armor, and, ripping out the wooden backing, the two inner layers
of which were of brittle Georgia pine, covered the deck with splinters. From the
effects of this shot, forty or more men were prostrated, several of whom
received ugly wounds from the fragments of wood and iron. The second shot, from
the XI-inch gun, struck the edge of the overhang, and started the plating. The
third carried off the roof of the pilot-house, wounded the two pilots, and
stunned the men at the wheel. The fourth shattered a port-shutter, driving the
fragments in through the port.
Upon this the
Atlanta hauled down her colors, and
hoisted a white flag. It was just fifteen minutes after the Weehawken
had commenced firing. The Atlanta was
not disabled, nor had there been any great number of serious casualties
among the crew; but they had had enough. The possibilities of a XV-inch gun,
fired at a range of two hundred yards, were matters that they had no wish to
investigate further. As Rodgers drily remarked in commenting upon the action,
the first shot took away their disposition to fight, and the third their ability
to get away.
The battle
was so short and decisive that the Nahant
had no opportunity to take part in it. When the Weehawken ranged up to her prize, the latter was found to be
aground; but she was backed off a few hours later with little difficulty, and
steamed without assistance to Port Royal.
The
engagement of the Weehawken and the Atlanta
was one of the extraordinary events of the war, and illustrates, perhaps better
than any other, the revolution which fifty years of scientific progress had
wrought in naval warfare. The action of the Chesapeake
and Shannon, which took place in June,
1813, off Boston, had enough points of resemblance to make the two engagements
a fair subject of comparison. Both were exceptional victories, for so complete
a victory in fifteen minutes, the time covered in each of the two fights, will
probably always be exceptional. Nor does the resemblance stop here. In both
actions the victorious captain is one of the marked men of his service-bold
but prudent, attentive to details, minutely careful in preparation, skilful in
action. Each is a splendid type of his kind in the age to which he belongs. As
Broke was the model captain of his day, so Rodgers is of his. The Shannon
was always ready for any kind of service, her discipline exact, her crew
willing, her gunnery precise. The Weehawken
shows her surpassing excellence in the same qualities; for no man knew better
than Rodgers how to get good work and ready service from his men. But the
captain of 1813 is an able executive, a skilful seaman, a capable gunnery
officer; while the captain of 1863 is all this, and a man of science in
addition. On the losing side, the parallel is equally striking. There is in both
engagements the same negligence of preparation, shown in the case of the Atlanta by the extreme disorder of the vessel, and in that of the Chesapeake
by the disorganization of the crew. There is the same ineffective gun-practice,
the same speedy demoralization. Both captains are brave men; but both go into
action with the same easy confidence, in each case fully shared, perhaps largely
created, by the people around them, who go off in pleasure-boats to witness
the fight, as if it were to be merely an exhibition of fireworks.
But here the
parallel ceases. There is little in common between the stately frigates—the
Chesapeake, bearing down before the
wind under all sail, or the Shannon,
with her lofty spars, and her maintopsail against the mast, and the two rafts
whose armored citadels protect everything but the decks and the funnel. As
little do the batteries of carronades and long eighteens resemble the Brooke
rifles of the Atlanta or the huge
Dahlgren smooth-bores of the monitor. The mode of fighting corresponds to the
character of the ships and the weapons. The Chesapeake
ranges up alongside her antagonist, and the two vessels deliver their broadsides
almost in contact. An accident brings them foul: and straightway the crew of the
Shannon, their captain at the head,
rush on board the enemy with pike, cutlass, and pistol. After a bloody struggle,
a hand-to-hand pell-mell fight, the crew of the Chesapeake is overpowered and surrenders. Fifty years later, the
vessels do not approach nearer than two hundred yards, and four shots,
deliberately aimed, settle the whole affair. There is little bloodshed; no one
is touched on board the Weehawken, and
the injured among the prisoners comprise about a tenth part of the defeated
crew.
[1] Each of these vessels carried the following armament: two 100-pound Parrotts, four IX-inch guns, four 24-pounders, two 12-pound howitzers. The Sassacus had two 20-pounders in addition.
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