OTAINS ELLIOT SEAWELL rw^r^rxTM^rw^W^ THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES GIFT OF Commodore Byron McCandless TWELVE X^;, * // ^v NAVAL CAPTAINS *" Being a Record of Certain Americans who made themselves Immortal BY MOLLY ELLIOT SEA WELL AUTHOR OF "THE SPRIGHTLY ROMANCE OF MARSAC," " THE HISTORY OF THE LADY BETTY STAIR," "CHILDREN OF DESTINY," "THROCKMORTON," "LITTLE JARVIS," BTC. WITH PORTRAITS NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1906 Copyright, 1897, BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS. CONTENTS PAOI PAUL JONES . . . f \ . . . 1 RICHARD DALE j . . . 28 THOMAS TRUXTUN ... 42 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE 53 EDWARD PREBLE 83 STEPHEN DECATUR ..,..,., 102 RICHARD SOMERS 130 ISAAC HULL 145 CHARLES STEWART 167 OLIVER HAZARD PERRY 182 THOMAS MACDONOUGH 192 JAMES LAWRENCE . , 208 LIST OF PORTRAITS JONES .... Frontispiece RICHARD DALE Facing page 28 THOMAS TRUXTUN " 42 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE " 58 EDWARD PREBLE " 83 STEPHEN DECATUR " 102 RICHARD SOMERS " 130 ISAAC HULL M 145 CHARLES STEWART " 167 OLIVER HAZARD PERRY " 182 THOMAS MACDONOUGH " 192 JAMES LAWRENCE M 208 PAUL JONES AMEEICAN history presents no more picturesque figure than Paul Jones, and the mere recital of his life and its incidents is a thrilling romance. A gardener's boy, he shipped before the mast at twelve years of age, and afterward rose to be the ranking officer in the American navy. His exploits by land and sea in various parts of the world; his intimacy with some of the greatest men of the age, and his friendships with reigning sovereigns of Europe ; his character, of deep sen- timent, united with extraordinary genius and ex- treme daring, place him among those historical personages who are always of enchanting interest to succeeding ages. Paul Jones himself foresaw and gloried in this posthumous fame, for, with all his great qualities, he had the natural vanity which so often accompanies the self-made man. He lacked the perfect self-poise of Washington, who, having done immortal things, blushed to have them spoken of, and did not deign to appeal to posterity. Paul Jones was continually appeal- ing to posterity. But his vanity was that of an 1 1 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS honest man, and he was often stung to assert- iveness by the malignities of his enemies. That these malignities were false, and that he was a man of lofty ideals and admirable character, is shown by the friends he made and kept. Dr. Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Robert Morris, and Lafayette lived upon terms of the greatest intimacy with him ; Washington esteemed him, and the good- will of such men places any man in the category of the upright. Nothing in the family and circumstances of Paul Jones indicated the distinction of his later life. His father, John Paul, was a gardener, at Arbigland,in Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland, where Paul Jones was born in 1747. He was named John Paul, for his father ; but upon his taking up his residence in Virginia, in his twenty-seventh year, he added Jones to his name, for some rea- son which is not now and never has been under- stood, and as Paul Jones he is known to history. The Pauls were very humble people, and Paul Jones's childhood was like the childhood of other poor men's sons. Boats were his favorite and only playthings, and he showed from the begin- ning that he had the spirit of command. He organized his playfellows into companies of make- believe sailors, which he drilled sternly. The tide rushes into the Solway Firth from the Ger- man ocean so tremendously that it often seems like a tidal wave, and the boy Paul Jones had 8 PAUL JONES sometimes to run for his life when he was wading out commanding his miniature ships and crews. Close by his father's cottage is the sheltered bay of the Carsethorn, where, in the old days, ships for Dumfries loaded and unloaded. Deep water is so close to the shore that as the ships worked in and out their yardarms seemed to be actually passing among the trees that cling stubbornly to the rocky shore. It was the delight of the boy Paul Jones to perch himself on the highest point of the promontory, and to screech out his orders to the incoming and outgoing vessels ; and the ship- masters soon found that this bold boy was as good as a pilot any day, and if they followed his direc- tions they would always have water enough 'inder the keel. The only school which Paul Jones ever attended was the parish school at Kirkbean, and that only until he was twelve years old. But it was char- acteristic of him, as man and boy, to learn with the greatest eagerness ; and the result is shown in his letters and language, which are far superior to the average in those days. The habit of applica- tion never left him, and he was a hard student all his life. There were many mouths to feed in the little cottage at Arbigland, and in Paul Jones's thir- teenth year he was bound apprentice to a ship- master. His first voyage was to Fredericksburg in Virginia, where he had a brother, William Paul, 3 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS living, a respected citizen. His time ashore was spent with this brother, and so well did he con- duct himself that when William Paul died some years later he left his estate to this favorite younger brother. There were, however, many years of toil before Paul Jones, and hardships and buffetings, and even injustices that sank deep into his sensitive soul. It is said that he was at one time on a slave-ship, the slave-trade being then legalized throughout the world ; but, hating the life, he quitted his ship, and the traffic too. When he was about twenty years old, he found himself without employment in Jamaica. He embarked as a passenger on the John, a fine brigantine, owned by a shipping firm in his native shire. On the voyage home both the captain and the first mate died of yellow fever. The young passenger John Paul, as he was then called took command of the brigantine, and brought her safely to her port. The owners rewarded him by making him captain and supercargo of the John. This shows that Paul Jones was not only a capa- ble seaman, worthy of command at twenty years of age, but of integrity and steady habits as well. In his twenty-fourth year occurred an event which gave him great anguish, and was probably the reason of his leaving his native land. While in command of a vessel in Tobago, he had his car- penter, Maxwell, flogged for some offence. This 4 PAUL JONES was the common mode of punishment in those days. Maxwell complained to the Vice-Admiralty Court, and the affair was investigated. The Court examined Maxwell, and dismissed his charges against Paul Jones, as frivolous. It is noted, though, that Paul Jones expressed sorrow for having had the man flogged. Maxwell shipped on another vessel, but died a week or two after- ward. This put a much more serious aspect on the matter. There was some talk of a prosecu- tion for murder ; but it was shown that Maxwell's death had nothing to do with the flogging, and it was dropped. Nevertheless, the effect upon a nature, at once arrogant and sensitive, like Paul Jones's, was exquisitely painful. It is likely that this case was the origin of the one weak point in Paul Jones's tremendous naval genius: he was never a good disciplinarian, and he seems always to have hesitated too long before administering punishments, and of course severer punishments were needed thereby. Upon his return to Scotland, he was coldly re- ceived by his friends and neighbors. To Paul Jones's mind this coolness assumed the form of a persecution. He left his native country with re- sentment in his heart against it, although he kept up affectionate relations with his family. Many years after, when he was one of the celebrities of his age, he speaks in a letter of his grief at learn- ing of his mother's death, especially as he had 6 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS found that several sums of money which he had sent her had never reached her. He came to Virginia in 17T3, and took posses- sion of the property left him by his brother, which with his own savings gave him a competence. Little is known of the particulars of his life from 1773 to 1775 ; but late researches show that his friendship with Thomas Jefferson, and with other persons of prominence in Virginia and North Carolina, then began. Although his origin was humble, his manners, tastes, and feelings led him naturally into the most distinguished society, and at a very early period in his career he is found associated with persons of note. On the first outbreak of hostilities with the mother country Paul Jones offered his services to the Continental Congress, and his name headed the list of thirteen first lieutenants in the navy appointed in December, 1775. Perhaps no man had stronger natural and personal inclinations toward the revolutionary cause than Paul Jones. In his native country he was poor, obscure, and perpetually barred out by his low estate from those high places to which his vast ambition aspired. In America, under a republican form of government, he was as good as any man, pro- vided only he were worthy ; and the fixed rank of a naval officer would give him standing in Europe among those very persons who would otherwise have regarded him with contempt. 6 PAUL JONES His commission was obtained through Mr. Joseph Hewes, a member of Congress from North Carolina, and the celebrated Robert Morris, who was then at the head of the Marine Com- mittee of Congress. The influence of Thomas Jefferson was also in his favor. At this time his true career may be said to have begun. He was then twenty-eight years old, of "a dashing and officer-like appearance," his complexion dark and weather-beaten, and his black eyes stern and melancholy in expression. He had a slight hesitation in his speech which disappeared under the influence of excitement. His manner with sailors was said to be peculiarly winning, and he was, no doubt, highly successful in dealing with those characters which can be gained by kindness and indulgence ; but with that part of mankind to whom severity is a neces- sity, he does not seem to have been so well adapted, and the evidences of a firm and consis- tent discipline are wanting. When he came to command a ship of his own, which he did very shortly, he was extremely polite to the midship- men, frequently asking them to dine with him in the cabin, but likely to blaze away at them if they were not carefully and properly dressed for the occasion. One of his officers, presuming upon Paul Jones's indulgence, ventured to be insolent, and got himself kicked down the hatchway for it. It is said that when a midshipman on the topgal- 7 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS lant yard was inattentive to his duty as a lookout., Paul Jones himself would gently let go the hal- yards, and the unlucky midshipman would come down the yard on the run. Paul Jones was extremely temperate in his habits, and was naturally fond of order and deco- rum. He had fixed religious principles, and, like Washington, lie considered a chaplain a useful and even a necessary officer. A letter of his is extant in which he says he would like a chaplain on board who should be accommodated in the cabin, and always have a seat at the cabin table, " the government thereof should be entirely under his direction." He was a tireless student by night, his days at sea being occupied, when cruising, by exercising his officers and men in their duty. His first orders, as an American naval officer, were as flag lieutenant on the Alfred, of twenty- four guns, Commodore Hopkins's flagship. On this ship Paul Jones claims to have hoisted with his own hands the original flag of the Revolu- tion the pine-tree and rattlesnake flag the first time it was ever displayed. This may well be true, as such an act is thoroughly in keeping with the romantic sentiment of Paul Jones's character ; and he says, " I think I feel the more for its honour " on account of that circumstance. Congress had assembled in the Delaware River a fleet of five small vessels, and it was with ardent hopes that Paul Jones joined this little PAUL JONES squadron. In a very short while, though, he dis- covered that Commodore Hopkins was very much disinclined to " go in harm's way," to use one of Paul Jones's favorite expressions, and his wrath and disgust flamed out without any concealment. The object of the cruise was to capture a lot of stores, left unprotected by the British at the island of New Providence. By Commodore Hop- kins's blundering the governor of the island had time to save most of the stores. The Commodore finding himself among the keys and islands of the Bahamas, seems to have been afraid to go away and afraid to stay where he was. Paul Jones, however, taking a pilot up to the foretop- mast head with him, piloted the Alfred to a safe anchorage. To crown all, the five vessels ran across a little British frigate, the Glasgow, off Newport, and after a smart cannonade the Glas- gow succeeded in slipping through Commodore Hopkins's fingers and getting back to Newport. Paul Jones's rage at this was furious, and it became impossible for him to serve in the same ship with Commodore Hopkins, who was shortly afterward censured by Congress, and within the year dismissed from the navy. In the summer of 1776 Paul Jones was given the command of a lit- tle sloop, the Providence, mounting only twelve four-pounders, but a fairly smart and weatherly vessel. He improved her sailing qualities so that she could log it faster than a great many 9 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS better ships. With this little sloop he was em- ployed in conveying military stores from New Eng- land to Washington's army on Long Island ; and as the coast and the sounds swarmed with the cruisers of Lord Howe's fleet, this was a difficult and daring undertaking. But in difficulty and daring Paul Jones always shone, and he succeeded so as to win the admiration and personal regard of Washington, as well as the approval oi Con- gress. In the autumn he made a more extended cruise, during which he captured several valuable prizes, and showed his courage and seamanship by manoeuvring boldly before the Solebay frigate and then running away from her. The Solebay thought she had bagged the Providence, when the little sloop, suddenly weathering her, ran directly under her broadside, where the guns could not be brought to bear, and went off before the wind while the heavy frigate was coming about. On another occasion he was chased by the Milford frigate. Finding the Providence was fast enough to play with the Milford, Paul Jones kept just out of reach of the heavy cannonade of the Milford ; and every time the frigate roared out her heavy guns, a marine, whom Paul Jones had stationed aft on the Providence, banged away with his musket in reply. This amused and delighted the men, and when Paul Jones was ready he ran away from the frigate, leaving her still thunder- ing away in his wake. These little events had a 10 PAUL JONES good effect on his officers and men, showing them that they had a man of dash and spirit for their captain. When his cruise was up, he received full recognition of his services by being appointed to command a splendid frigate then building in Holland for the American government. Mean- while he was ordered to take command of the Ranger, a sloop-of-war, mounting eighteen light guns, then fitting for sea at Portsmouth, New Hampshire. On the very day he was appointed to her, June 14, 1777, Congress adopted the stars and stripes as the national ensign, and Paul Jones always claimed that he was the first man to hoist the new flag over a ship of war when he raised it on the Ranger in Portsmouth harbor. The Ranger was weakly armed and poorly fitted. Her cabin furnishings were meagre enough, but there were two bookcases full of books provided by the captain. The Ranger sailed from Ports- mouth in November, 1777, and after an unevent- ful voyage, arrived safely at Nantes in France in December. Leaving his ship in charge of the first lieutenant, Simpson, Paul Jones started for Paris to confer with the three American Com- missioners, Benjamin Franklin, Silas Deane, and Arthur Lee. He bore a letter to them from the Marino Committee describing him as " an active and brave commander in our service." On reach- ing Paris, a sharp disappointment awaited him con- cerning the Holland frigate. Great Britain, which U TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS was not then at war with either France or Hol- land, although on the verge of it, had made com- plaints about the frigate, and it had been passed over to the French government to prevent its confiscation. Paul Jones had a partial compen- sation, however, in winning the affectionate re- gard of Benjamin Franklin, and the friendship that ever afterward subsisted between the im- petuous and sentimental Paul Jones and the calm and philosophic Franklin was extremely beautiful. Despairing of getting any better ship than the Ranger, Paul Jones set himself to work to im- prove her sailing qualities ; it is a striking fact that he improved every ship he commanded, be- fore he was through with her. Being ready to take the sea, he determined to secure a salute to his flag from the splendid French fleet commanded by M. de La Motte Piquet. He took the Ranger to Quiberon Bay, and at once sent a letter to the French admiral, announcing his arrival, and another to the American agent at L'Orient. Paul Jones's dealings with this agent are laughable, as many of his transactions were. He began, as usual, with the most formal polite- ness ; but as soon as there was any hesitation shown in complying with his requests, which it cannot be denied were perfectly sensible, he would blaze out, and carry his point by the bayonet, as it were. The agent did not understand the importance of 12 PAUL JONES the salute, and although he dined on board the admiral's ship the day the request was made, he failed to mention it to the admiral. This infuri- ated Paul Jones, who wrote him a letter in which he said, "I can show a commission as respect- able as any the French admiral can produce," and finally declared that unless the salute were allowed, he would leave without entering the up- per bay at all. His determined attitude had its effect. The French admiral agreed to salute the Ranger, and to make sure that it was done in broad daylight, so there could be no misunderstanding about it, Paul Jones kept his ship in the lower bay until the next day. The French admiral paid the American commander the compliment of having the guns manned when the Ranger sailed through the double line of the French fleet, and when the French guns roared out in honor of the American flag, it meant that France was from that day openly, as she had been for some time secretly, committed to an alliance with the struggling colo- nies. Seeing that nothing was to be hoped for in the way of a better ship, Paul Jones, like all truly great men, determined to do the best he could with the means at hand. So, on an April evening in 1777, he picked up his anchor and steered the lit- tle Ranger straight for the narrow seas of Great Britain, the Mistress of the Seas, and the greatest naval power on earth. The boldness of this can is TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS scarcely be overestimated. The French admirals, with fifty-five ships of the line, hung on to their anchors, not caring to risk an encounter with the fleets of England, manned by her mighty captains and heroic crews ; but Paul Jones, alone, in a weak vessel, lightly armed, took all the chances of destruction, and bearded the lion in his den. He counted on the slowness of communication in those days, and all of those other circumstances in which fortune favors the brave, and the result justified him. He cruised about for several days, burning and destroying many merchant ships. He landed at St. Mary's Isle, in order to capture the Earl of Selkirk, but the bird had flown. His men became mutinous, because, contrary to the custom of the time, they were not allowed to loot the place. Paul Jones was forced to allow them to carry off some silver plate, which he afterward redeemed out of his own pocket, and returned to Lady Selkirk. He also landed at Whitehaven, and fired the ship- ping in the port, although he did not succeed in burning the vessels. But the desire of his heart was to find a ship of war, not too strong for him, with which he might fight it out, yardarm to yard- arm. This he found in the Drake, a sloop-of-war, carrying twenty guns, and lying off Carrickfer- gus. Like the Ranger, she was a weak ship ; but she carried brave men and a fighting captain, and when, on the afternoon of the 24th of April, u PAUL JONES the Ranger appeared off Carrickfergus, the Drake promptly came out to meet her. The tide was adverse, and the Drake worked out slowly, but her adversary gallantly waited for her in mid- channel, with the American ensign at her mizzen Deak, and a jack at the fore. The Drake's hail, " What ship is that ? " was answered by the mas- ter, under Paul Jones's direction : " This is the American Continental ship Ranger. We wait for you and beg you will come on. The sun is but little more than an hour high, and it is time to begin." The Drake promptly accepted this cool in- vitation, and the action began with the great- est spirit. In an hour and four minutes the Drake struck, after a brave defence. She had lost her captain and first lieutenant, and thirty- eight men killed and wounded, and had made, as Paul Jones said, " a good and gallant de- fence." The Ranger lost two men killed and six wounded. On the 8th of May he arrived off Brest in the Ranger, with the American ensign hoisted above the union jack on the Drake. The French pilots vied with each other as to which should have the honor of piloting the two vessels through the narrow channel known as Le Goulet, and there was no question of a salute then, every French ship in sight saluted the plucky little American. This daring expedition gave Paul Jones a great 15 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS reputation in France. The French government, by this time openly at war with England, asked that Paul Jones remain in Europe to command a naval force to be furnished by France ; and he was justified in expecting a splendid command. But the maladministration of affairs in Paris left him a whole year, idle and fretting and wretched, as such bold spirits are, under hope deferred, and at last he was forced to put up with an old India- man, the Due de Duras, larger, but not stronger than the Ranger. He changed the name of this old ship to the Bon Homme Richard, out of compliment to Dr. Franklin, whose " Poor Rich- ard's Almanac" had just then appeared. She was the flagship of a motley squadron of two frigates besides the Bon Homme Richard ; the Alliance, an American frigate commanded by a French captain, Landais, who was suspected to be crazy, and acted like a madman ; the Pallas, commanded by another French captain, Cottiueau, a brave and skilful seaman ; and a cutter and a brig, neither of which was of consequence in the cruise. A number of American prisoners having been exchanged and sent to France, Paul Jones was enabled before he sailed to get about thirty Americans for the Bon Homme Richard. Every officer on the quarterdeck was a native Ameri- can except Paul Jones himself and one midship- man ; and the first lieutenant was Richard Dale, 16 PAUL JONES one of the most gallant seamen the American navy ever produced. He had lately escaped from Mill Prison in England. Paul Jones justly ap- preciated his young lieutenant, then only twenty- three years old, and the utmost confidence and attachment subsisted between them. The crew was made up of men of all nation- alities, including a number of Malays, and many of the fok'sle people did not understand the word of command. With this singular squadron and unpromising ship and crew Paul Jones set sail on the 15th of August, under orders to report at the Texel early in October. Great things were expected of him, but agonizing disappointment seemed to be in store for him. Landais, the captain of the Alliance, was mutinous, and the whole squadron seemed incapable of either acting together or acting separately. Twice Paul Jones sailed up the Firth of Forth as far as Leith, the port of Edinburgh, and the Edin- burghers made preparations to withstand this bold invader. Among the children who lay awake at night waiting for the booming of Paul Jones's guns, was a lad of ten years of age, Walter Scott, who, when he was the great Sir Walter, often spoke of it. But both times the wind blew Paul Jones out to sea again, so that nothing was done in the way of a descent on Edinburgh. Many merchant ships were taken, and the coasts of the three kingdoms were 2 17 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS alarmed, but so far no enemy in the shape of a warship had appeared. The time for the cruise to be up was fast approaching, and it seemed likely to end in a manner crushing to the hopes of Paul Jones, when, at noon on the 23d of September, 1779, the Bon Homme Richard being off Flamborough Head, a single ship was seen rounding the headland. It was the first of forty ships comprising the Baltic fleet of mer- chantmen, which Paul Jones had expected and longed to intercept. A large black frigate and a smaller vessel were convoying them; and as soon as the two warships had placed themselves between the fleet and the Bon Homme Richard, all the fighting ships backed their topsails and prepared for action. At the instant of seeing the two British ships, Paul Jones showed in his air and words the de- light his warrior's soul felt at the approaching conflict. His officers and crew displayed the ut- most willingness to engage, while on board the Serapis her company asked nothing but to be laid alongside the saucy American. The Serapis was a splendid new frigate, " the finest ship of her class I ever saw," Paul Jones afterward wrote Dr. Franklin, and carried fifty guns. It is estimated that her force, as compared to the poor old Bon Homme Richard, was as two to one. She was commanded by Captain Pearson, a brave and capable officer PAUL JONES At one o'clock the drummers beat to quarten on both ships, but it was really seven o'clock before they got near enough to begin the real business of fighting. Much of this time the British and Americans were cheering and jeer- ing at each other. The Serapis people pretended they thought the Bon Homme Richard was a mer- chant ship, which indeed she had been before she came into Paul Jones's hands, and derisively asked the Americans what she was laden with ; to which the Americans promptly shouted back, " Round, grape, and double-headed shot ! " At last, about seven o'clock in the evening, the cannonade began. At the second broadside two of the battery of eighteen-pounders on the " Bon Homme" burst, the rest cracked and could not be fired. These had been the main dependence for fighting the ship. Most of the small guns were dismounted, and in a little while Paul Jonea had only three nine-pounders to play against the heavy broadside of the Serapis. In addition to this, the shot from the Serapis had made several enormous holes in the crazy old hull of the Bon Homme Richard, and she was leaking like a sieve, while she was afire in a dozen places at once. The crews of the exploded guns had no guns to fight, but they had to combat both fire and water, either of which seemed at any moment likely to destroy the leaking and burning ship. They worked like heroes, led by the gallant Dale, 19 and encouraged by their intrepid commander, whose only comment on the desperate state of the ship was, "Never mind, my lads, we shall have a better ship to go home in." Below, more than a hundred prisoners were ready to spring up, and were only subdued by Dale's determined attitude, who forced them to work at the pumps for their lives. The Serapis pounded her adversary mercilessly, and literally tore the Bon Homme Richard to pieces between decks. Most captains in this awful situation would have hauled down the flag. Not so Paul Jones. Knowing that his only chance lay in grappling with his enemy and having it out at close quar- ters, he managed to get alongside the Serapis, and with his own hands made fast his bowsprit to the Serapis' mizzen-mast, calling out cheer- fully to his men, " Now, my brave lads, we have her ! " Stacy, his sailing-master, while helping him, bungled with the hawser, and an oath burst from him. " Don't swear, Mr. Stacy," quietly said Paul Jones, " in another moment we may be in eternity ; but let us do our duty." The Alliance lay off out of gunshot and quite inactive most of the time, but at this point she approached and sailed around the two fighting ships, firing broadsides into her consort, which did dreadful damage. After this, her captain, the crack-brained and treacherous Landais, made off to windward and was seen no more. 20 The combat deepened, and apparently the Bon Homme Richard was destined to go down fighting. At one moment the two ships got into a position in which neither could fire an effestive shot. As they lay, head and stern, fast locked in a deadly embrace, and enveloped in smoke and darkness as they repeatedly caught fire from each other, a terrible stillness fell awhile, until from the bloody decks of the Serapis a voice called out, " Have you struck ? " To this Paul Jones gave back the immortal answer, which will ever mark him among the bravest of the brave, " We have not yet begun to fight ! " Soon the conflict was renewed. The Serapis' heavy guns poured into and through the Bon Homme Richard's hull, but the topmen on the American ship kept up such a hurricane of de- struction on the Serapis' spar deck, that Cap- tain Pearson ordered every man below, while himself bravely remaining. A topman on the Bon Homme Richard, taking a bucket of hand grenades, lay out on the main yard, which was directly over the main hatch of the Serapis, and, coolly fastening his bucket to the sheet block, be- gan to throw his grenades down the hatchway. Almost the first one rolled down the hatch to the gun-deck, where it ignited a row of cartridges left exposed by the carelessness of the powder 21 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS boys. In an instant came an explosion which seemed to shake the heavens and the ocean. This was the turning-point. The men in the Bon Homine Richard's tops climbed into those of the Serapis, the yards of the two ships being in- terlocked, and swept her decks with fire and shot. Dazed by the explosion, and helpless against the American sharpshooters, the courageous men on the Serapis saw themselves conquered, and Cap- tain Pearson himself lowered the flag which had been nailed to the mast. Lieutenant Dale, swing- ing himself on board the Serapis' deck, received the captain's surrender ; and thus ended one of the greatest single ship fights on record. The slaugh- ter on both ships was fearful, and the Serapis' mainmast went by the board just as she was given up. But the poor Bon Homme Richard was past help, and next morning she was abandoned. At ten o'clock she was seen to be sinking. She gave a lurch forward and went down, the last seen of her being an American flag left flying by Paul Jones's orders at her mizzen peak, as she settled into her ocean grave. The Pallas, under Captain Cottineau, had cap- tured the Countess of Scarborough, which made a brave defence, and, in company with the Serapis, sailed for the port of the Texel, which they reached in safety. England scarcely felt the loss of one frigate and a sloop from her tremendous fleets, but the wound to the pride of a great and 22 PAUL JONES noble nation was severe. She caused the Dutch government to insist that Paul Jones should immediately leave the Texel. This he refused to do, as it was a neutral port, and he had a right to remain a reasonable time. The Dutch govern- ment then threatened to drive him out, and had thirteen double-decked frigates to enforce this threat, while twelve English ships cruised outside waiting for him. But Paul Jones kept his flag flying in the face of these twenty-five hostile ships, and firmly refused to leave until he was ready. Through some complication with the French government, he had the alternative forced upon him of hoisting a French flag on the Serapis, or taking the inferior Alliance under the American flag. Bitter as it was to give up the splendid Serapis, he nobly preferred the weaker ship, under the American flag, and in the Alliance, in the midst of a roaring gale on a black De- cember night, he escaped from the Texel, " with my best American ensign flying," as he wrote Dr. Franklin. The British government offered ten thousand guineas for him, dead or alive, and forty-two British ships of the line and frigates scoured the seas for him. Yet he escaped from them all, passed within sight of the fleets at Spithead, ran through the English Channel, and reached France in safety. He went to Paris, where he was praised, admired, petted by the court, and 23 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS especially honored by royalty. The King, Louis XVI., gave him a magnificent sword, while the Queen, the lovely and unfortunate Marie An- toinette, invited him in her box at the opera, and treated him with charming affability. The first time he went to the theatre in Paris, he found a laurel wreath suspended over his seat. He rose quietly and moved away, an act of modesty which was much applauded by all. Captain Pearson, on his return to England, received honors that caused many persons to smile, although he had undoubtedly defended his ship very determinedly. He was made a knight. When Paul Jones heard of this, he re- marked : " Well, he has deserved it ; and if I have the good fortune to fall in with him again, I will make him a lord." Compliments were plenty for Paul Jones, too ; but no ship was forthcoming for him worthy of his fame, and at last, in 1780, he was forced to return to America in the Ariel, a lightly armed vessel, carrying stores for Washington's army. His services were fully appreciated in the United States. General Washington wrote him a letter of congratulation ; Congress passed a resolution of thanks in his honor, and gave him a gold medal ; and the French king made him a Knight of the Order of Military Merit. The poverty of his country prevented him from getting a ship immediately, and the virtual end of the 24 PAUL JONES war in 1781 gave him no further opportunity of naval distinction. He was employed in serving the naval interests of the country on this side of the ocean until 1787, when he went to Europe on a mission for the government. While there, he had brilliant offers made him to enter the service of the Empress Catherine of Russia, and to take charge of naval operations against the Turks. The nature of Paul Jones was such that any enterprise of adven- turous daring was irresistibly attractive to him. At that time his firm friend Thomas Jefferson was minister to France, and he advised Paul Jones to accept the offer. This he did, relying, as he said, on Mr. Jefferson to justify him in so doing, and retaining his American citizenship. He had an adventurous journey to Russia, stop- ping for a while on public business at Copenhagen, where he was much caressed by the Kiug, Queen, and Court. He resumed his route by sea, and at one time in a small boat in the Baltic Sea he forced the sailors to proceed at the point of his pistol, when their hearts failed them and they wished to turn back. His connection with the Russian navy proved deeply unfortunate. He had to deal with per- sons of small sense of honor, who cared little for the principles of generous and civilized warfare. He was maligned and abused, and although he succeeded in clearing himself, he left Russia with 25 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS disappointment and disgust. His health had be- gun to fail, and the last two years of his life, from 1790 to 1792, were spent in Paris, where he was often ill, and more often in great distress of mind over the terrible scenes then occurring in France. He did not forget that the King and Queen had been his friends, and showed them attentions when it was extremely dangerous to do so. La- fayette, who had long been his devoted friend, soothed his last days and Gouverneur Morris, then minister to France, paid him many kind attentions. He made his will, naming Robert Morris as his executor, and then faced death with the same cool courage as upon the bloody and burning deck of the Bon Homme Richard. In the evening of the 18th of July, 1792, after calmly making his preparation, the end came. The National Assembly of France paid honor to his remains, and in the United States the news of his death was received with profound sorrow. Some years after, the Congress sent the St. Law- rence frigate to Europe, to bring back the body of Paul Jones to the United States ; but it was found that, according to the French custom, it had been destroyed by quicklime long before. Few men have been more warmly attacked and defended than Paul Jones ; but in the light of his- tory and of research it is altogether certain that he was a man of extraordinary genius and courage, 26 PAUL JONES of noble aspirations, and sincerely devoted to his adopted country ; and at all times and places he made good his proud declaration : " I have ever looked out for the honor of the American flag." The eulogy passed upon him by Benjamin Franklin was brief, but it embodied many vol- umes of praise. It was this : " For Captain Paul Jones ever loved close fighting." RICHARD DALE IP an example were needed of the superiority of character and courage over intellect, no more fitting person could be named than Commodore Richard Dale, "that truth-telling and truth- loving officer,'' as Fenimore Cooper calls him. Nothing is more beautiful than the reverence which Cooper, a man of real genius, had for Richard Dale, whose talents, though good, were not brilliant ; and in this Cooper shows to lesser minds that intellect should ever pay tribute to character. Dale had nothing more than good, sound sense, but by the courage and constancy of his nature, by his justice, gentleness, and probity, he attained a standing of which a great intellect might have been proud. He was Paul Jones's first lieutenant during two years of daring adven- ture, and, like Cooper, Paul Jones, the man of genius, loved and admired Dale, the man of ex- cellence. The affection between the two was deep, and in Dale's old age he spoke of his old com- mander, then no more, affectionately as " Paul," a strong testimony in the great captain's favor. Dale was born near Norfolk, in Virginia, in 1756, His parents were respectable persons, but H RICHARD DALE not very well off, and Dale appears to have had but few advantages of education in his boyhood. He was, by nature, a daring and reckless speller, and the ingenuity and simplicity with which he could twist the letters of the alphabet into forms never before seen, was truly comical. In a letter to Paul Jones, describing some work he was do- ing on the bowsprit, he says, " the boulsprit was something Dificoult in Gitiug out." But no doubt the bowsprit was smartly handled, and got out all right. And when "tow french voluntairs" de- serted, Dale says he "made haist" to send the " golly-boat " after them, and certainly got them, if it were possible to do so. But in spite of his spelling, he was educated in all the courtesies of life, his manners were polished, his person was handsome, and he was a daring and capable sea- man. Paul Jones said he always found Dale ready and willing to execute the most hazardous duty ; and this willingness to do his duty was the distinguishing characteristic of his whole life. When he was twelve years of age, he entered the merchant service and made a voyage with an uncle of his, a sea-captain. Then began his career of hard knocks; and few men who sail blue water ever had more. He began by falling down the hold of his ship, and breaking most of his bones except those of his back and neck ; then followed experiences of being knocked overboard and battling in the sea an hour before being 29 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS picked up ; of being struck by lightning and re- maining unconscious for hours. From the time he joined the navy of the colonies, he never was in action without being either wounded or cap- tured and sometimes both. Three times was he badly wounded, five times was he taken pris- oner; yet he managed to be in active service during a great part of the war, and at last died peacefully in his bed, at a good old age. Almost as soon as war was declared, Dale, then a fine young fellow of nineteen, enlisted in the feeble naval forces of the colonies ; and the very first time he smelled powder, in 1776, he was captured by the British and taken to Norfolk. There he was put on board a prison ship, where he found among the officers an old friend of his, a young Virginian, Bridges Gutteridge. Gut- teridge was a royalist, and, being a plausible fellow, he used his friendship with Dale to per- suade him that he was wrong in being in rebel- lion. Dale, who was young and inexperienced, was beguiled by his friend into turning royalist too, and actually enlisted upon a small British vessel. The first action in which he was engaged a fight with American pilot boats Dale met his usual fate, and was severely wounded. He was carried back to Norfolk, and in the long days of illness and convalescence he began to see his conduct in its true light, and bitterly repented of having fought against his country. He went 30 . RICHARD DALE to work upon his friend Gutteridge, and succeeded in converting him, after once having been con- verted by him, into a patriot. Dale then quietly bided his time to get back into the American navy, and, as he said, " I made up my mind if I got into the way of bullets it should never again be the bullets of my own country." It is indicative of the simple honesty of the man, that he never attempted to belittle or dis- guise this early lapse of his, and always expressed the deepest sorrow for it, alleging what a nature less fine would never have admitted, " I knew no better at the time." As soon as he was recovered, he managed to get aboard a merchant ship ; to go to sea was the first step toward returning to the continental navy, which was the desire of his heart. He was captured as usual. But this time it was just the very sort of a capture that Dale desired, his ship being taken by the Lexington, a smart little cruiser under the command of Captain Barry, a brave officer, with whom Dale's life was afterward much connected. Dale lost not a moment in enlisting as midshipman on the Lex- ington, and the first time she backed her topsails at a British vessel she was captured, and Dale was a prisoner for the third time. An officer and a prize crew were thrown on the Lexington, and her captor, the Pearl, frigate, directed the orize to follow her. In the night 31 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS the Americans rose on their captors, and retook the brig, carrying hei* into Baltimore. Soon after that, Dale was exchanged, and in January, 1777, he found himself again on the Lexington, as master's mate. In March, the brig sailed for France, under Captain Henry Johnson, and cruised boldly in European waters. One night, in September, 1777, Captain John- son found himself close under the quarter of a well-armed British cutter. The two gallant lit- tle vessels opened fire with great spirit, and the Americans were getting decidedly the better of it, when their shot gave out. Dale and the other officers collected every scrap of iron about the ship that could be found or wrenched from its place to fire in the place of shot, but the un- equal fight could not last long ; the brig was given up after several of her officers and men had been killed, and Dale was a prisoner for the fourth time before he was twenty-one years old. In most of these revolutionary encounters the ships engaged were of trifling force, but the attack and defence were gallant and spirited in the highest degree, by both the Americans and the British, and no ship was given away on either side. The Lexington's officers and men were carried to England and thrown into Mill Prison, where they underwent the agonies of famine and priva- tion. Dale always spoke of those dreadful days 32 RICHARD DALE with horror, and told of being driven by hunger to kill a stray dog, which he, with the other prisoners, cooked and ate. The story of their sufferings got abroad and excited the indignation of many persons in Eng- land, who were jealous of the honor of their country. They raised sixteen thousand pounds for American prisoners in England, and relieved all their material wants. But the Americans longed for liberty, and Dale and a few others determined to have it. They found a place under the prison walls through which a hole could be dug, and they began the almost impossible task of scooping out enough earth that they might crawl through to the other side. They could work only while exercising in the prison yard, and had to put the dirt in their pockets as they scooped it up. Nevertheless, after working for weeks at it, on a dark night in February, 1778, Captain Johnson, Dale, and several of the Lex- ington's crew crawled through, and found them- selves free at last of the prison walls. It is strange that men who could accomplish this should have been so unwise as to stay to- gether, but for a week the whole party wandered about the country at night, half starved and half clothed, in the worst of wintry weather. At last they concluded to separate, and Dale and a young midshipman cast their lots together. Their char- acter was soon suspected by people they asked for 3 33 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS food and shelter, and pursuers were put upon them. They doubled on their tracks and got to London. They were still hunted for, and the house in which they were concealed was raided. Dale and his friend escaped into a shed close by, and lay concealed under straw for hours, until the pursuing party had left. They then slipped down to the docks, and were entered as hands on a vessel for Scotland. But Dale's usual ill-fortune followed him. The British navy, wanting able seamen, sent a press gang to the Scotch vessel, and Dale and his friend, unluckily attracting notice by their stalwart appearance, were im- pressed. In a little while they were found out to be American officers, and were sent back to Mill Prison. Forty days in the black hole of the prison followed. When this was over, Dale earned another forty days in it by singing rebel songs. He continued to sing his songs, though, while in the black hole. After a whole year in prison he made his escape under circumstances which he never revealed to the day of his death, except that he had on a complete suit of British uniform. How he got it remains a mystery, and from that day until his death, forty-seven years afterward, Dale kept the dangerous secret of the person who risked so much for him. It is sup- posed that he was provided liberally with money, and even with a passport, for he go>fc out of England quickly and went to France' Here, at 34 RICHARD DALE L'Orient, he found Paul Junes, then fitting out the Bon Homme Richard, in which both the com- mander and Dale were to win immortality. Dale was then an active, handsome young fellow of twenty-three, and had seen more hard service than many officers of the highest rank. At the first glance Paul Jones saw his steadiness, coolness, and splendid qualities as a sea officer, and soon made him first lieutenant on the Bon Homme Richard. A deep attachment sprang up between these two kindred souls, and it is enough for Dale's reputation to know that he was a man after Paul Jones's own heart. In the summer of 1779 the Bon Homme Richard, old, crazy, and weakly armed, but carrying as much valor as any ship afloat, started upon her daring cruise in the narrow seas of Great Britain. Every day showed Paul Jones more and more the admirable character of his young first lieutenant, and in all the hazardous enterprises of that bold cruise Dale was the man who was always Paul Jones's right arm of strength. On the 23d of September, 1779, was fought the celebrated battle between the Bon Homme Richard and the Serapis. Dale was not only the first, but the only sea lieutenant on board, and proved himself altogether worthy to serve under the great captain who took the Serapis. He commanded the main deck, and, although his wretched and defective guns soou 95 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS became disabled, his activity did not cease for a moment. At the most critical stages of the battle, when the leaking, burning, and helpless Bon Homme Richard seemed in extremity, the master-at-arms let loose more than a hundred prisoners, who came crowding up into the magazine passage. Dale, running below, with his pistol cocked, faced the mob, and, under Paul Jones's orders, set them to work at the pumps. He then returned to the deck, and so carried away was he with the ardor of battle that when, with his invariable fortune, a shot struck him in the leg, he was quite uncon- scious of it. As soon as Captain Pearson hauled down his flag, Dale claimed his right to go aboard the Serapis and receive her surrender. The mainyard of the Serapis hung cock-a-bill over the Bon Homme Richard's poop. A line hung from the torn rigging, and Dale, seizing it, swung himself over, and landed alone on the Serapis' deck. The Serapis' officers and people did not all know the colors had been struck, and there was some fighting on the deck afterward. The Serapis' first lieutenant ran up just as Captain Pearson surrendered, and cried out, " Has she struck ? " meaning the Bon Homme Richard. Captain Pearson remained silent, and Dale re- plied, " No, sir, the Serapis has struck." The lieutenant, ignoring Dale, repeated his question to the captain, who shook hi^ bead. 36 RICHARD DALE The lieutenant after a moment asked that he might go below and stop the firing that had not altogether ceased ; but Dale, who was not taking any chances of losing the ship, politely refused, and at once passed the captain and his first lieutenant aboard the Bon Homme Richard. As soon as the Americans had possession of the Serapis, Dale sat down on the binnacle, overcome with exhaustion, after nearly ten hours of mano3uvring and fighting, two hours of the time the ships having been lashed together. He gave an order, and, rising to see it executed, measured his length on the deck. Then for the first time he knew that he was wounded. He managed to keep the deck, however, and his wound proved to be trifling. In all the accounts of the compliments show- ered upon Paul Jones and his officers at the Texel and afterward at Paris, Dale seems to have kept modestly in the background. His worth, however, was not overlooked, and his testimony that Captain Landais of the Alliance had acted treacherously toward the Bon Homme Richard during the fight with the Serapis was of weight in securing Landais' dishonorable discharge from the continental navy. While Paul Jones was enjoying the charms and splendors of Paris, Dale, who had little taste for such things, was " keeping ship " so 37 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS well that the captain's absence was not felt. Like Paul Jones, he ardently longed to put to sea in a fine ship; but both were doomed to disappointment when the Ariel was the best to be had. In her he sailed, with Paul Jones, for America, in 1781. Off the French coast they met with a storm so terrific that Dale always declared he considered they were in more dan- ger than at any time during the fight with the Serapis. In speaking of Paul Jones's coolness in such desperate straits, when every moment they seemed about to go to the bottom, Dale said : "Never saw I such coolness in such dreadful cir- cumstances as I saw in Paul Jones then." To the amazement of all, they escaped with their lives, although the Ariel was so crippled that they had to return to port, and it was many weeks before they could sail again. On reaching America, Paul Jones desired Dale to accompany him to Portsmouth, New Hamp- shire, where the government directed him to su- perintend the building of a fine frigate then on the stocks. But Dale preferred active service, and joined the Trumbull frigate, going through with his usual experience, a hot fight with a Brit- ish ship and a severe wound. This time he varied the performance by being captured for the fifth time. He was soon exchanged, however, and the war ended shortly after. The navy of the United States ceased practi- 38 RICHARD DALE cally to exist at the close of the Revolution, and Dale went into the China trade. He made a modest fortune, came ashore, and married a beau- tiful girl, the ward of his old commander Captain Barry. In 1794 the navy was reorganized, and Dale was the first captain who got afloat under the United States flag. He made several cruises, and in 1801 was made commodore of a fine squadron sent to the Mediterranean. His flag- ship was the President, and it was a sad coin- cidence that upon this very ship, in the war of 1812, his son, a gallant young midshipman, re- ceived his death wound. The fine appearance of the American ships and the smartness of their officers and crews were generally admired, and Dale himself made friends and admirers by his manly and modest bearing. He spelled no better than ever, but his seaman- ship was beyond reproach. Once, on coming out of Port Mahon, the President struck upon a rock, and was in imminent danger of pounding herself to death. Commodore Dale was below when she struck. He instantly came on deck, assumed command, and by his coolness, nerve, and judgment, saved the ship. He had her tem- porarily repaired, under his own directions, at Port Mahon, but went to Toulon to have her put in dry dock. When the water was pumped out, and her hull exposed, the French naval officers were lost in admiration at the ingenious way in 39 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS which, with crude appliances and materials, Dale had contrived to repair the damage. The great Nelson, while observing the manoeu- vring of this fine squadron under Commodore Dale, remarked : " Those American ships can, if they wish, make trouble for the British navy." Dale returned home, expecting to spend the rest of his active life in the navy. But in those days it seems to have been a common practice to treat the most distinguished and deserving officers with- out the least consideration of their rights or feel- ings. This happened to Commodore Dale. An affront being offered him by the head of the navy, he promptly resigned. He had two gallant sons who remained in the navy, however ; and one of these, his namesake, lost his life while gallantly fighting in the war of 1812. Dale retired to Philadelphia, and spent the rest of his days in honorable retirement. His old friend Captain Barry had come into possession of the splendid gold sword given Paul Jones by the King of France, and which Paul Jones's relatives had given to Robert Morris, and from him Captain Barry got it. On Captain Barry's death he left this sword, most worthily and appropriately, to Dale, the great captain's first lieutenant. Dale never lost his interest in sailors and all who live by the sea. He was a deeply religious man, and organized a mariners' church, which he urged all sailors to attend. Every Sunday after- 40 RICHARD DALE noon for thirty years he went to this humble little chapel, and, besides joining in the service, would go about among the sailors who were present, gently inquiring into their wants, and never fail- ing to do a kindness for them when possible. It is said that no man was ever heard to speak a word against him. He died peacefully, after a short illness, in 1826. The United States named for him a fine sloop of war, which, like Dale him- self, saw much service and had many vicissitudes. She is still in existence, and when, a few years ago, her timbers were examined, they were found as sound and whole, in spite of all her years of service, as they ought to be in a ship named for a man like Richard Dale. In her main gangway a memorial plate is placed, recalling Commodore Dale's services in the fight between the Bon Homme Richard and the Serapis, and quoting the never-to-be-forgotten words of Paul Jones, when he was asked, in his almost help- less ship, if he had struck, "I have not yet begun to fight." THOMAS TRUXTUN IN the old days the American sailors were great singers, and naval songs, rude in construction but vivid with patriotic fire, were immensely pop- ular. When they were trolled forth on the fok'sle, nearly every sailor could join in, and the effect was as inspiring as Dibdin's songs were to the British navy about the same time. Among the first and favorite of these songs was " Truxtun's Victory," beginning, " Come, all ye Yankee sailors, with swords arid pikes ad- vance ; 'T is time to try your courage and humble haughty France." There was a good deal of poetic license regard- ing facts as well as forms, and the poet, in describ- ing Truxtun's victory on L'Insurgente, a crack French frigate, represents ** The blood did from their scuppers run ; Their captain cried, < I am undone 1 ' " Instead of crying that he was undone, the French captain made a gallant defence ; and if his metal 41 pretmtKTJr 9 TTnJtef Sta&t to TffOifAS TRUXTUN JB SQUIRE, and a copy of itu Resolution af&ngrrtt. The lotoer cirelc if At lH-ent ride, of the Medal. Itftolvfff. $ akf .t*ta* and hsu~ e-f Refntcntaea w. aftJie rniied Itatte iifAmerira m r,,prrt* at Tnat At Pmidmt ttftie OutrJ ftatM. reifttflfd te pretax ti Captain Tluana* Tn,.rtm. .1 <:Mrr. anhlaaafual cf liu /at* aetum liftnm tilt 1'nitnl ttattf Frifalr fcnttMUH-n ,'f (/./ lite frrnrti ,V/^p f ~ar l.t Vtnarann vf fun- ur liunr. In Uttmenr or' t/u r,i,/fi tefur rtittrtiaxKI C0ntfr#t ofttu GaUantiy and oved oontkuf in tht tifuftr fytyemtnt. Aemn tn t'rYi.-tr > :YJrmtutn-t. rin.frfaJnt ofOu VmUj Suite* ,;n,f ervtirn.t <-fr/u _&Aft_-;.i'"//i. _/ fright^t MEDAL AWARDED TO THOMAS TRUXTUN THOMAS TRUXTUN had been heavier, it might have been " Barreault's Victory," instead of " Truxtun's Victory." Thomas Truxtun was born in New York in 1755, but, losing his father early, was taken to Jamaica by a relative and brought up. He had but little chance of a school education, and went to sea early. He was but twenty years old when the Revolution broke out, and was then in com- mand of a merchant vessel. Unfortunately it cannot be recounted that Truxtun entered the American navy then. Instead he chose serving in a privateer. But it must be remembered that the whole naval force of the colonies was very feeble, and so slight was the expectation that it could prevail against the mighty fleets of Eng- land that only a few small ships were officered, and there was no more room for would-be officers. Truxtun, however, did excellent service in priva- teers, usually not very honorable ships in them- selves, as they prey only on the commerce of an enemy ; yet in the Revolution many privateers boldly engaged with armed ships. Naturally the naval men held privateers in contempt, and a let- ter of the great Paul Jones is extant which shows that he and young Captain Truxtun had a sharp quarrel over the rights of privateers. Congress had passed an act forbidding a privateer to hoist a pennant in the presence of a naval ship, with- out first getting the consent of the naval ship's Commander. Truxtun, an impetuous young man 43 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS of twenty-five, in command of the ship Inde- pendence from Philadelphia, arrived at L' Orient in France in 1780. At the same time the Ariel, under command of Paul Jones, was lying in the port. What followed Paul Jones himself describes in a letter addressed to " Mr. Thomas Truxtun, master of the ship Independence." " You passed, some time ago, with the merchant ship called the Independence belonging to Philadel- phia, close under the stern of the continental ship Ariel, under my command in the Road of Groix; and you then showed no mark of respect to the Con- tinental flag of commission, but went on with a long Pendant flying, and without lowering any sail or colour, or crew showing any mark of politeness. In the port of L'Orient you were not satisfied with a long Pendant, but you hoisted a kind of Broad one ; and until yesterday you have worn it at your moor- ings in presence of the Continental ship Ariel. This was flying in the Face of a positive resolution of Congress. When your vessel was yesterday under sail, she was steered in my presence very near the Ariel in passing down to Port Louis. I then sent a Boat with an officer to request yourself or your representative to take down the Pendant. The officer returned and reported to me that my boat's crew had been menaced by your people, and that your mate said he had Orders to treat me with Contempt, and disobey any order or request to haul down the Pendant. When I found this, I sent Lieut. Dale back with two Boats armed, and with 44 THOMAS TRUXTUN another polite message, and such orders as I will answer for having given. The Pendant was then hauled Down as he approached. I cannot answer your letter of this date more particularly, as there are in it several words that I do not understand and cannot find in the dictionary. I shall receive no more letters from you on the subject. It is not me you have offended. You have offended the United States of America. I am, sir, your most humble servant, J. PAUL JONES." By this letter it will be seen that Captain Truxtun, like Richard Dale, was better at fight- ing than writing ; and it will also be noted that when Paul Jones's blood was up, he sent Dale to call Captain Truxtun to account, and as soon as Dale took the matter in hand, " the Pendant was then hauled down." Truxtun had an adventurous time of it during the Revolution, and made a name for himself as a man of enterprise and a fine seaman. His after achievements make it a source of keen regret that such a man should have been engaged in such a calling as privateering, when, like Paul Jones and Richard Dale, he might have assisted his country much better on a regular ship of war. He remained in the merchant service after the war was over ; but when the United States began to create a navy in 1784, Truxtun was given a 45 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS captain's commission. Trouble had been brewing with France for some time, and in 1797 the gov- ernment determined to build several frigates in case of war, and this year saw the launching of the two noble ships, the Constitution and the Constellation, which were both destined to win immortal fame. Truxtun was appointed to com- mand the Constellation, and also to superintend the building. She was laid down at Baltimore in the summer of 1797, and few ships ever took the water more quickly than the glorious Constella- tion. She had a very remarkable launch on the 7th of September, 1797. Nearly all her guns and stores were on board, and seven days after she kissed the water she was ready to sail. She had been coppered in ten hours. The Constella- tion was a beautiful frigate, very fast and weath- erly, and carrying thirty-eight guns. She was finely officered and manned, and Captain Truxtun sailed on his first cruise with every advantage in his favor, a ship that could both fight and run, and a company worthy of the ship. He cruised for some time without meeting with any extraor- dinary adventures ; but the next year four other smaller vessels were put under his command, and the squadron went to the West Indies. This was directly in harm's way, as the West India islands were full of French ships of war, and France and the United States were on the eve of a quasi- war, so that Captain Truxtun sailed with the hope of 46 THOMAS TRUXTUN getting a whack at a Frenchman, and this came about in February, 1799. As the old song has it, " 'T was in the month of February, off Montserrat we lay, When there we spied the Insurgente " This was considered to be the fastest frigate in the world, and was commanded by a crack French captain, Barreault. She carried forty twelve- pounders in her batteries, and the Constellation carried thirty-eight twenty-four pounders, making the Constellation much the stronger ship ; yet Captain Truxtun showed, in the fight which fol- lowed, that he could have whipped a heavier ship than L'lnsurgente, which made a very smart fight too. Captain Barreault knew that the Constella- tion was the heavier, but he did not on that account refuse the battle, but showed a manly willingness to fight. The Constellation sighted L'lnsurgente in the forenoon of February 9, 1799, and immediately made for her. As soon as she got near enough, the French ship hoisted American colors, in or- der to draw her on and give the French ship time to find out something about the stranger. Captain Truxtun then showed the private signal, which Captain Barreault was unable to answer. L'lnsurgente then threw off every disguise, and, setting the French ensign, ran off and fired a gun to windward, which meant, in sailor language, that he was ready for a yardarm to yardarm 47 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS fight. Captain Truxtun set an American ensign at every masthead and came on, the Frenchman waiting on an easy bowline, for his enemy. The Americans, both officers and men, showed the most cheerful ardor to engage, and the two ships went at it with equal spirit. When within hailing distance the Frenchman hailed; but dis- regarding this, Captain Truxtun came on until he was abeam of his adversary. Then he let fly his broadside, and the Frenchman answered him promptly. Captain Truxtun discovered that he had no fool to play with in Captain Barreault, and for an hour the Frenchman gave the Con. stellation all she could do. But by that time the superior metal of the Constellation began to tell. The Frenchman aimed at the spars and rigging, and the foretopmast of the Constel- lation was badly wounded. The officer in the foretop was Midshipman David Porter, afterward the celebrated captain, and, seeing that the fore- topmast was likely to fall, with all the men in the hamper, he hailed the deck to report the damage. So furious was the cannonade, though, that his voice could not be heard. He therefore gave orders on his own account to cut away the stoppers and lower the topsail yard, and by his promptness the spar as well as the men in the top were saved. The Americans aimed at the hull, and in an hour L'Insurgente was riddled like a sieve. The Constellation then shot ahead, and, 48 THOMAS TRUXTUN luffing across the Frenchman's bows, was ready with every gun to rake him, when Captain Bar- reault, seeing his hopeless condition, struck his colors. The captured frigate was sent into St. Kitts with only two midshipmen, Porter and Rodgers, and eleven men, to keep one hundred and seventy three Frenchmen below the hatches. This they did, besides managing the ship in a hard gale, and took her in triumph to St. Kitts within four days. The next year Captain Truxtun had a chance to show what he could do against a stronger ship than his own, and on the 1st of February, 1800, being off Guadeloupe, he sighted La Vengeance, one of the great French frigates, mounting fifty- two guns. The Constellation immediately set her ensign and gave chase, but La Vengeance, having on board a large number of officers of rank and soldiers which she was carrying to France, would rather not have fought, and so took to her heels. The chase continued from the morning of the 1st of February until late in the afternoon of the 2d, and it was eight o'clock at night before they finally came to close quarters. When La Vengeance found the Constellation was bent on a fight, she entered into it with all the bravery of the French character. The officers and soldiers she was carrying as passengers went to quarters with the regular crew, and she came 4 49 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS on in grand style, giving her first broadside as soon as the Constellation was within range. Captain Truxtun, without firing a gun, drew within pistol shot of his enemy, both crews cheer- ing as the two gallant enemies neared each other. When within pistol shot, the Constellation barked out every gun in broadside, and the fight be- gan in good earnest. Both ships were running free, and during the whole fight, which lasted five hours, the cannonade continued. The crowded condition of the Frenchman's decks made the slaughter dreadful, but she did not take her pun- ishment without giving it back with spirit. The moon had risen in tropic splendor, and a good breeze was blowing, so that both ships could manoeuvre, and the bright light enabled them to see what they were doing. Toward midnight, though, it was plain that the French ship was getting the worst of it. However, she showed no signs of surrender, and her guns that could still be worked pounded the mainmast of the Con- stellation until it was soon seen that it must fall. At this point occurred what is probably the noblest act of young courage in all naval history. The officer of the maintop was a little midship- man, James Jarvis, who was only thirteen years old. When it was seen that nothing could save the mainmast, the topmen leaped and clam- bered down, and an old sailor begged the little midshipman to save himself. To this young 50 THOMAS TRUXTUN Jarvis answered calmly, " As an officer I cannot leave my station, and if the mast goes, I must go with it." In a few moments the great mast fell with a fearful crash, and this dauntless boy came down with it. He was the only officer on the Constellation killed. This accident rendered the Constellation help- less for a time, and La Vengeance, having still spars enough left to get away, made off, with- out firing another gun, and was soon lost in the darkness that followed the setting of the moon. Her loss of men was frightful, while that of the Constellation was comparatively small. When Captain Truxtun reached home after this brilliant engagement, he was received with acclamations, Congress gave him a gold medal and its thanks, and passed a solemn resolution in honor of young Jarvis, " who gloriously preferred certain death to the abandonment of his post." This is, perhaps, an unprecedented honor for a boy of thirteen, but it cannot be denied that the little midshipman, who deliberately gave his life rather than desert his post, well earned it. The London merchants of Lloyd's coffee-house sent Captain Truxtun a splendid service of plate worth six hundred guineas, and some years after- ward the United States named a smart sloop of war after him, the Truxtun. Captain Truxtun served but a short while in the navy after this. In 1802 he was ordered, as Commodore, to corn- s' TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS mand a squadron, and, finding he was to have no captain on his flag-ship, declined the honor. His letter was misunderstood by the authorities of the Navy Department to mean a resignation from the navy, and was, as such, accepted. Commodore Truxtun, too proud to withdraw it, chose rather to withdraw from the navy, a course which must ever be regretted. He chose Philadelphia as his home, and became a promi- nent and important citizen. He was for some time Sheriff of the city. In 1823 his death occurred, and he left behind him an honorable name as a man, and a brilliant reputation as a seaman. WILLIAM BAINBIUDGE WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE COMMODORE BAINBRIDGE was born at Princeton, New Jersey, in 1774. His family were of good standing, and willing as well as able to give the boy a liberal education; but an inborn love of adventure possessed him, and he begged to be allowed to go to sea. At that time, 1789-90, the navy of the Revolution had ceased to exist, while the navy of a later date was not created, and the only way to gratify the boy was to send him to sea in a merchant vessel. He first shipped in his sixteenth year, and his good habits and natural genius for the sea gave him the place of first officer of a ship when he was eighteen. During a voyage to Holland a mutiny 9ccurred on board his vessel, which was quelled chiefly by the vigor and determination of young Bainbridge. The owners rewarded his services by giving him the command of the ship when he was barely nineteen. At this time he was a singularly hand- some young man. He was six feet high, his figure elegant, and his countenance as frank and open as it was comely. His manners were cordial, and his disposition impetuous ; but although he some- times fell into hasty and passionate language, no 53 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS man was more ready to make amends. Like Paul Jones, he stammered slightly, but, also like him, he spoke smoothly enough when there was oc- casion for it, and no one ever heard him halt in his speech when an order aboard ship was to be given. Bainbridge remained in command of merchant ships until the reorganization of the navy in 1798. During those years a singular and unsatisfactory state of affairs existed for American ships on the ocean. Without a single ship of war to protect them, they were liable to be overhauled by British warships, which claimed the right to search, by French warships, which practically fought and captured them, while a large trade with the North of Europe and the East was harassed by the cor- sairs of the Barbary coast. With regard to these last, a truly disgraceful condition prevailed. The Dey of Algiers actually demanded and received tribute from the United States government for not molesting its trading-vessels ! It is true that other nations of Europe submitted to the same sort of blackmail ; but their reasons, although not sufficient, were better than those of the Americans. New in the art of forming a great republic, and unduly fearful of the dangers of a fixed naval force as well as of a standing army, the govern- ment of the United States tried to do without a navy ; but it paid for its mistake many times over, both in national honor and in money. The 54 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE European nations also paid money to the Barbary pirates, and allowed their ships to be used in various ways, at the request of these haughty despots ; but it was with a desire to secure their political alliances in the universal wars that scourged Europe at that day, and not from in- ability to protect their own carrying ships. It may be imagined how galling this was to American captains, and that they resisted when- ever there was a chance of success. Young Bainbridge was the last man to submit to co- ercion when he could help himself, and on two occasions, while in command of merchant vessels, showed the spirit that was in him. Once, when commanding the Hope, a little vessel carrying only eleven men before the mast and four nine- pounders, he fell in with a British privateer, carrying thirty men and eight guns. A sharp action ensued ; for privateers are not wont to heed any vessel's rights when the privateer is the stronger party, and Paul Jones's characterization of them as " licensed robbers " is not far wrong. The Hope, however, made a good defence, and forced the privateer to call for quarter. Under the existing law, Bainbridge could not claim her as lawful prize, but was forced to let her go, shouting out to her commander as they parted, " Tell your employers if they have occasion for the Hope, they must send some other man than you to get her ! " 56 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS Another time, the Indefatigable, frigate, under Sir Edward Pellew, afterward Lord Exmouth and the conqueror of Algiers, sent a squad of seamen on board the Hope, and took out of her a man alleged to be a British subject. Bainbridge could not resist, but he sent word to Sir Edward that the first British vessel of a force the Hope could cope with, a man should be taken out of her, as sure as he was alive and commanded the Hope. This he did within a week, and carried the man back to the United States with him. Things reached such a pass in 1798 that the necessity for a navy became pressing, and steps were promptly taken to organize and equip a naval force. Bainbridge, then twenty-four years old, was among the first to apply for a commis- sion, and he was given that of lieutenant com- mandant. He soon got the command of a little cruiser of fourteen guns, captured from the French, and renamed the Eetaliation. The ship was ordered to the West Indies, to cruise in company with the Montezurna, sloop of war, and the Norfolk, brig. On a November day in 1798, while cruising off Gaudeloupe, Bainbridge found himself too near two French frigates, Le Vo- lontier, forty-four guns, and L'Insurgente, forty guns. 1 L'Insurgente was a tremendously fast frigate, and soon overhauled Bainbridge and com- 1 See the biography of Commodore Truxtun, who captured L'Insurgente. 56 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE pelled him to strike his colors. He was at once taken on board Le Volontier, while L'Insurgente proceeded in chase of the Montezuma and the Norfolk. Captain St. Laurent, of Le Volontier, seeing L'Insurgente about to engage two adver- saries, and knowing her captain, Barreault, to be a man brave to rashness, was disturbed at the prospect. He asked Bainbridge, who was on the quarterdeck, what the force of the American ships was. Bainbridge promptly replied that the Montezuma carried twenty-eight long guns, and the Norfolk twenty. This was about double their real force. Captain St. Laurent at once signalled L'Insurgente to return. Her captain, Barreault, was deeply chagrined, and when he went on board Le Volontier, told Captain St. Laurent that the American vessels were of trifling force, and he could easily have taken them both. Then Bain- bridge's clever ruse was discovered; but the French officers, realizing that he had done his duty in trying to save his country's ships, showed no ill-will toward him. The Retaliation was the first and only ship of war captured by the French during the years that war existed between the United States and France, although it never was declared. But Bainbridge's reputation did not suffer by this, as his whole conduct was that of a man of spirit and capacity. He rose to the rank of captain just as he reached his twenty-sixth birthday ; and 6,1 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS in 1800 he was appointed to the command of the George Washington, of twenty-eight guns. His first duty was to carry tribute to the Dey of Algiers. No more hp.teful service could have been devised for him, and great blame rests upon the men in the government who subjected the United States to such humiliation. In September, 1800, Bainb ridge reached Al- giers, and anchored within the mole. Scarcely had he landed the tribute, consisting of about half a million in money, enough to have built a ship that could have knocked the Dey's forts about his ears, when he was asked to carry the Dey's ambassador to Constantinople, along with a present to the Sultan, of slaves, wild beasts, and a large sum of money. Bainbridge was furious at the demand ; but the Dey insolently told him that he must go, or the ship, which was completely in the Dey's power, would be taken, her officers and crew sold into slavery, and war made on American trade. Bainbridge was re- minded that British, French, and Spanish ships had performed the same duty ; but no doubt Bain- bridge realized that in all those cases it was done from political motives, while in his case it was done simply because he could not help himself. With a very bad grace, he agreed, and the pres- ents and passengers were put in the ship and he sailed for Constantinople in October. It was a cruise the officers of the George Washington 58 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE never liked to speak of; but there is no doubt that, although it was a time of the utmost vexa- tion and mortification, innumerable amusing inci- dents occurred. The Mohammedans had great difficulty in keeping their faces toward Mecca during the frequent evolutions of the ship, and a man had to be stationed at the compass to let them know when it was time for them to " go about." This was a standing cause of laughter and gibes from the sailors, which naturally gave great offence to the Mohammedans ; and these disagreements, together with a ship full of wild beasts, made it a cruise never to be forgotten. Bainbridge was very doubtful whether his vessel would be allowed to pass the Dardanelles, as the American flag had never been seen in those seas before; so he concluded to get through by his wits. He approached with a strong wind, and clewed up his light sails as if about to anchor, saluting meanwhile. The salute was returned, and under cover of the smoke sail was quickly made and the ship slipped past, out of range of shot from the castles. When she reached Con- stantinople, a boat was sent ashore to report her arrival. The Turkish officials sent back word that they knew no such nation as the United States. They were soon convinced that there was such a nation, and were well received. The Sultan's brother-in-law, Capudan Pasha, became much attached to Bainbridge, and mentioned that 59 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS the Dey of Algiers was not in favour with the Sublime Porte. Bainbridge, knowing he would re- turn to Algiers, got a letter from Capudan Pasha, in which the Dey was commanded to treat the American commander with the highest respect. Bainbridge returned to Algiers in January, and was immediately met with another demand, that he take the Algerine ambassador back to Constantinople. This he firmly refused, at an interview in which the Dey stormed, raged, and threatened. In the midst of this, Bainbridge calmly produced Capudan Pasha's letter. The Dey paused, grew pale, and trembled, and then burst into profuse offers of assistance, which Bainbridge coolly declined, and left the palace. The next day, in obedience to orders from Constantinople, the Dey declared war against France, and notified all of the French in Algiers fifty-six men, women, and children that unless they left within forty-eight hours, they would be sold into slavery. France was then at war with the United States, but this did not prevent Bain- bridge from offering these unfortunates an asylum on the George Washington at great inconvenience to himself, and carrying them all to Spain. For this humane act he received the personal thanks of Napoleon Bonaparte, then First Consul. Bainbridge returned to the United States with the George Washington, and soon after got the Essex, a thirty-two-gun frigate attached to the on WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE squadron which was sent to the Mediterranean in 1801, under the command of Commodore Richard Dale. Among the lieutenants of the Essex was Stephen Decatur, afterward the cele- brated Commodore. The ship arrived at Barcelona in August, and took a berth in the harbor, close to the Spanish guardship. The neatness of the Essex and the seamanlike appearance and conduct of her officers and men were so much remarked upon that it gave great offence to the officers of the guardship. The stay of the American frigate at Barcelona was a long scene of turmoil, owing to collisions between her junior officers and the Spanish mid- shipmen. In one of these Decatur figured promi- nently. Bainbridge acted with spirit and also with judgment, but was glad to get away from such uncomfortable quarters. By that time Congress was beginning to wake up to the necessity for a more vigorous policy with regard to the Barbary powers, and the squadron was directed to protect American shipping by force. The corsairs interpreted this to mean war, and their aggressions reached such a pitch, after the return of Dale's squadron in 1802, that in 1803 Commodore Preble was sent out with the Constitution, the Philadelphia, and five smaller vessels, to reduce these piratical powers. Bain- bridge was promoted from the command of the Essex to the Philadelphia, a fine thirty -eight-gun 61 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS frigate, carrying a few more than three hundred men. Her first lieutenant was David Porter, who, as a young midshipman, had distinguished him- self in the Constellation under Captain Truxtun, and who was destined to a highly honorable and active career during the whole time of his service in the navy. The Philadelphia arrived at Gibraltar in Au- gust, 1803, and the next day began to cruise up and down the straits in search of corsairs. In a day or two she fell in with a Moorish vessel, the Meshboha, in company with an American brig which had been captured, and her company taken aboard the Meshboha. The Philadelphia stood by, and forced the Moorish captain, Luba- rez, to send all his prisoners to the Philadelphia, and to come aboard himself. Bainbridge invited him into the cabin, and feeling sure that he had orders to capture American ships, directed him to produce these orders. Lubarez stoutly denied he had any such orders. "Yery well," coolly responded Bainbridge, taking out his watch. " I am now going on deck for half an hour. When I return, if you cannot show your orders, I will immediately hang you at the yardarm for a pirate." At the end of half an hour Bainbridge re- turned. Lubarez then sullenly admitted he had orders, but they were inside his waistcoat. 62 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE " Take off your waistcoat," said Bainbridge. Lubarez began slowly to remove his waistcoat ; but another appeared under it. He finally peeled off five waistcoats, and underneath the last one were the orders. Bainbridge immediately took possession of the Meshboha and her prize, and carried them both into Gibraltar. In a few days Commodore Preble reached Gib- raltar, and Bainbridge was sent to Tripoli, with orders to intercept and capture every Tripolitan vessel possible. He arrived before Tripoli, in the autumn of 1803, and immediately began a vigor- ous blockade. On the 31st of October he gave chase to a xebec trying to get into the harbor. He was rapidly overhauling her, when, at the mouth of the harbor, the water suddenly shoaled, and the Philadelphia ran upon a tremendous reef, known to the Tripolitans, but not down on any chart. At once every effort was made to get the ship off, but she held fast, and soon heeled over so far to starboard that her guns on that side became useless. The Tripolitans at once saw her desper- ate plight, and gunboats came out in swarms to attack her. The Americans fought the gun- boats off as best they could, meanwhile working with amazing energy to save the ship. All the water in her was pumped out, the anchors were cut from the bows, most of her guns thrown over- board, and at last the foremast was cut away. 63 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS Still the ship stuck fast. Bainbridge, who had shown great coolness and determination in the dreadful circumstances in which he found himself, presently saw that he must give up the ship. He called a council of his officers, and they agreed that all had been done that men could do. The carpenters were ordered to scuttle the ship ; and just as the autumn night was closing in, the Philadelphia's colors were hauled down, and the Tripolitans swarmed over the decks, in the ports, and everywhere a foot could be set. Then looting began ; the officers being robbed of every- thing, even their swords and epaulets. Bain- bridge gave up his watch and money in dignified silence ; but when his wife's picture was about to be torn from around his neck, he swore no man should have it, and fought the Tripolitan off who would have taken it. The officers and men were then carried into the town, where the officers were received by the Bashaw in great state, surrounded by his minis- ters. It is said that Bainbridge never looked handsomer or more imposing than when he ap- peared at the head of his officers before the barbaric prince. The Bashaw treated them with Eastern courtesy, gave them a handsome supper, for they were half dead with hunger and fatigue, and then sent them to a temporary prison. They were in charge of Sidi Mohammed D'Ghies, one of the great officers of state, who proved to be a 64 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE man of good heart, and whose ideas of military honor were Western rather than Eastern. Then began a captivity which lasted for nine- teen months. The men were reduced to a posi- tion of slavery, and made to work for their Tripolitan masters. The officers were closely confined, and after several attempts at escape had been made by the younger ones, they were removed to the dungeons of the Bashaw's castle. The situation of Bainbridge was sad in the extreme. He felt himself to be foredoomed to misfortune. He had lost his first ship, the Re- taliation, in the French war. His cruise in the George Washington had been painful and hu- miliating in many respects; and now he had lost one of the two frigates that the country depended upon to punish the corsairs. A very affecting letter of his to his wife exists, in which he seems plunged into despair ; and in it he says he sometimes thinks " it would have been a mer- ciful dispensation of Providence if my head had been shot off while our vessel lay rolling upon the rocks." But from this sharp affliction his gallant spirit rallied after a time. His officers and men felt undiminished confidence in and affection for him, and did all in their power to comfort him. The very day after their capture they sent him a letter saying, " We, late officers of the United States frigate Philadelphia, wishing to express 6 65 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS our full approbation of your conduct concerning the unfortunate event of yesterday, do conceive that the charts and soundings justified as near an approach to the shore as we made, and that after she struck every expedient was used to get her off and to defend her which courage and abilities could dictate. "We wish to add that in this instance as in every other, since we have had the honor of being under your command, the officers and seamen have always appreciated your distinguished con- duct. Believe us, sir, that our misfortunes and sorrows are entirely absorbed in our sympathy for you. We are, sir, with sentiments of the highest and most sincere respect, your friends and fellow sufferers." Here follow the signatures of every officer under Bainbridge. He soon received letters from Commodore Preble ; and the brotherly kindness expressed in them reflects the greatest honor upon a supe- rior officer who could feel so generously in an affair which crippled and embarrassed him so cruelly as the loss of the Philadelphia. Preble wrote : " May God bless and preserve you ! Rec- ollect that destiny, not want of courage, has de- prived you of liberty, but not of honor." And he adds, " The first consul of France, the celebrated Bonaparte, has interested himself deeply in. jour situation." 66 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE To the chagrin of the Americans, they found that the Philadelphia had not been thoroughly scuttled, and she was hauled off the rocks by the Tripolitans, the holes in her bottom stopped, her foremast refitted, her guns and anchors fished up, and she was towed within the harbor. From the one window of their underground prison, the un- fortunate officers of the Philadelphia could see the ship riding at anchor, and disgraced by the pirate flag of Tripoli. The captives were allowed to communicate at intervals with Commodore Preble, who gave them assurance that they were not forgotten, and that the Bashaw would have to surrender them and pay dearly for having imprisoned them. Besides these official communications, means were found by which letters written in lemon juice were exchanged, and in one of these Bainbridge sug- gested the possibility of destroying the Philadel- phia at her moorings, which was afterward carried out with splendid dash by Decatur. In spite of those alleviations, there were long months of weariness and dreariness in a pecu- liarly trying captivity. The time was not wholly wasted. The midshipmen, whose untamed spirits frequently got them into difficulties, were set to work by the older officers, and all, men as well as officers, bore their imprisonment with fortitude. The seamen were made to labor on the fortifica- tions ; and as they were often unruly, the slave- TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS drivers had no hesitation in ordering them to be bastinadoed on every occasion. The man who ad- ministered the punishment was not so hard-hearted as his masters, and although he regularly laid on the required number of blows upon the soles of the sailors' feet, he winked at the fact that they had wrapped folds of matting around their feet, and the blows hurt not at all. The sailors were clever enough to shriek and scream during this mock bastinadoing, and the slave-drivers were completely deceived by Jack's ruse. At last, on the night of the 15th of February, 1804, the captives were awakened by the firing of heavy guns. By the light of a brilliant moon and the blazing hull and spars of the Philadelphia out in the harbor, they saw the destruction of the ship by Decatur 1 and his gallant band. While they watched her burn to the water's edge, her shotted guns burst with heat and flame, her magazine blew up, and when the sun rose next morning, not a vestige remained of the lovely frigate. She had been destroyed by the Americans under De- catur, without the loss of a single man. This gave heart to the prisoners, and they felt their deliverance was at hand ; but it was not until the spring had passed and the summer dragged along into August that one day they were roused by a heavy cannonade. They were then confined underground in the Bashaw's 1 See the biography of Decatur. 68 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE castle, and there was only one window by which they could see the offing. They eagerly clam- bered up, and the thrill of joy they felt may be imagined when they saw a smart flotilla of small vessels, led with the greatest dash and impetuosity by Decatur and Somers, burning, sinking, or driv- ing back the Tripolitan gunboats. And farther out in the offing, they saw the glorious Constitu- tion coming into action in grand style, choosing her range with majestic deliberation, and then her batteries roaring out destruction to her ene- mies, while the Tripolitan shot fell short, or dropped harmlessly against her stout sides. For six weeks the attack was kept up furiously, and in that time five tremendous assaults were made by Commodore Preble's squadron.' In one of these destructive cannonades a round shot from the Constitution tore in at the one win- dow from which a part of the harbor could be seen, and, narrowly missing Bainbridge, knocked him down and almost covered him with the mass of stone and mortar it dislodged. But Bain- bridge was not the man to mind a trifle like this, and every time the Constitution came within range, she was welcome to the tired eyes, and the thunder of her well-served batteries was music to the ears of the imprisoned Americans. They hoped from day to day for release, and although the season for active operations closed before the Bashaw had actually been reduced to submission, 69 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS yet it was plain that the town could not with- stand another such cannonade. When the Constitution was forced to depart, she left behind her a menacing promise to the Bashaw that she would come back the next sea- son, and finish the work ; and the last of May, 1805, saw her again off the town. This time the Bashaw was anxious to make peace. Sidi Mohammed D'Ghies urged him to send Bain- bridge aboard the Constitution on his parole, to see what the Americans demanded. The Bashaw asked if Sidi really thought that Bainbridge would return if once his foot touched the Con- stitution's deck. " Certainly," replied Sidi ; " the American captain will keep his word, and I will leave my eldest son as a hostage that he will return." The Bashaw, only half believing, allowed Bain- bridge to go, and on the 1st of June, 1805, nine- teen months exactly after his capture, Bainbridge again trod the deck of an American man-of-war. Commodore Rodgers, commanding the Consti- tution, and all the officers of the squadron re- ceived him affectionately. They had brought out a treaty of peace for the Bashaw to sign, and the first stipulation was that every American prisoner should be given up immediately and without conditions. This, Bainbridge said, he did not believe the Bashaw would ever agree to, as it was a fixed principle with the Barbary 70 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE powers never to give up a prisoner without ran- som. Bainbridge returned to the shore at night- fall, and, with Sidi, went to the castle, where the Bashaw expressed great surprise at seeing him again. The Bashaw, however, was far less in- clined to keep up the fight than Bainbridge ima- gined. After a day or two of hesitation, a council of war was held at which Bainbridge was invited to be present, an honor never before bestowed upon a prisoner of the Barbary States. When Bainbridge entered the council chamber at the castle, he found the Bashaw surrounded by all of his great officers of state, with the treaty brought by Commodore Rodgers spread out before them. To sign it meant peace, and the immediate release of every American prisoner ; to refuse it meant that the Constitution and her consorts lying out within gunshot of the town, would be thun- dering at their forts and ships within an hour. The question of peace or war was debated with grave eloquence. The council was evenly divided. At last the decision had to be made. The Bashaw, after a solemn pause, took his signet ring from his bosom, and, affixing it to the treaty, said with dignity, " It is peace." Bainbridge is said to have thought, after the event happened, that the Bashaw had no real intention of withstanding another bombardment, and his hesitation and final yielding to the 71 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS advocates of peace was a preconcerted arrange- ment. As soon as the treaty was signed, the forts and castle saluted the American flag, and the squadron returned the salute. Next day the American prisoners were released. A Neapolitan who had been held in slavery for years by the Tripolitans had been very kind to the sailors and marines, and they asked Bainbridge if he would authorize the purser to advance them seven hundred dollars out of their pay to buy the Neapolitan's freedom. This was done, and the man was restored to his country by these grateful men. The squadron sailed for Syracuse, where a court of inquiry into the loss of the Philadelphia was held, and Bainbridge was honorably acquitted. On his return to the United States he was re- ceived with much kindness by his companions in arms, by the government, and the people, all of whom regarded him as a brave and capable offi- cer who had lost his ship by one of those fateful accidents against which neither courage nor ca- pacity can prevail. It seems singular that on the heels of the splen- did successes of the navy before Tripoli and with the rest of the Barbary powers, the government' and the people showed very little understanding of the value of the naval service. As soon as hostilities were over with the corsairs, a reduc- tion of the navy took place, although at that very 72 WILLIAM BALNBRIDGE time aggressions of Great Britain upon Americau merchant ships were continuing at a rate which was bound to provoke war in the end. Bain- bridge, like many others, found himself without a ship, and on half-pay ; and he asked and ob- tained leave, during the intervals when he was without a naval command, to make voyages in the merchant service. He was absent on one of these voyages for profit in the autumn of 1811, when at St. Petersburg he heard of the probability of a declaration of war with Great Britain. He started instantly on his return to the United States, and reached Washington in February, 1812. He found there one of Commo- dore Treble's captains, Charles Stewart, 1 and to his rage and mortification was told that the gov- ernment thought it vain and foolhardy to give battle on the sea to the mightiest naval power on earth, which had then vanquished the navies of Europe and kept them skulking in their own harbors. Such over-prudence ill suited the ardent and determined natures of Bainbridge and Stewart. They heard that the government had concluded to lay up such ships as it had, and to prosecute the fight entirely on land. They went together to President Madison, and besought him to change this cowardly and unwise policy, and succeeded in persuading him to do it. For this one act the country is forever indebted to Bainbridge and 1 See the biography of Stewart. 73 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS Stewart. While nothing could eventually stop the progress of the United States toward being a great and powerful nation, yet, had it not been for the victories gained at sea during the War of 1812-15, the dignity and prestige of the United States would have suffered an eclipse for fifty years. The success of the Americans in the ship duels on the ocean during the war of 1812 did more to make the United States respected abroad than any event of our history after the Revolution. The great question of the right of search in neu- tral vessels was settled by the achievements of a few smart vessels with great and daring captains, belonging to a young and hitherto feeble power in America, a right which had been vainly con- tested by all the powers of Europe. The British navy had been for more than a hundred years practically invincible, and there can be no doubt that many of its earlier losses in 1812-15 came from absolute rashness, fostered by a long and glorious career of conquest. What was of more value to the United States than the respect of continental Europe was the respect earned from the English themselves. The United States of 1812 was chiefly populated by those only a few generations from an English ancestry, and the people of the two countries were alike in their willingness to make a square, stand-up fight, and then to shake hands afterward. From the hour that the first British frigate struck to an Ameri- 74 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE can ship, the British navy highly esteemed the American navy, and the British government real- ized that at last there was a sea power equal in skill, daring, and resource to Great Britain. The ships lost by the British were scarcely missed from their huge fleets ; but Great Britain, like America, promptly recognized the new and tre- mendous force which the taking of those few ships implied. It was one of the most fortunate hours that ever dawned for the United States when the advice of Bainbridge and Stewart was taken, and within six months they were amply justified. Bainbridge by his rank was entitled to a choice of the few frigates the country then owned, and he would undoubtedly have chosen the glorious " Old Ironsides " upon which to hoist his flag. But Hull 1 had got her already, and, apprehend- ing that orders might come detaching him, lie put to sea in a hurry, and before he returned, had captured the Guerriere frigate. Bainbridge got the Constellation, the fine frigate in which Com- modore Truxtun had fought two French frigates. He was not able, however, to get to sea in her; and when Hull returned from his victorious cruise, in August, 1812, he gave up the Constitution to Bainbridge, who hoisted a broad pennant on her. The Essex, thirty-two guns, commanded by Cap- tain Porter, who afterward made his celebrated 1 See the biography of Commodore Hull. 75 cruise in her to the Pacific, and the Hornet, of eighteen guns, under the gallant Lawrence, 1 with the Constitution, were ordered to join Bainbridge. Porter was Bainbridge's old lieutenant in the Philadelphia, and had shared his captivity at Tripoli. Events, however, so fell out that the Essex did not join the other two ships, and Bain- bridge sailed in October, 1812, for the South Atlantic accompanied only by the Hornet. The Constitution was in need of repairs, and not sail- ing in her usual great form, but could still sail fairly well on a wind. She had some of the offi- cers and all of the crew in her that had got her out of the clutches of Admiral Broke's squadron in June, and had taken the Gucrrio;re in August. Therefore it was with great confidence that Com- modore Bainbridge on the morning of the 29th of December, 1812, made for a British frigate which showed an equal inclination to close with him. This vessel, the Java, which carried forty-nine guns, was undoubtedly a lighter ship than the Constitution. Yet the British were in the habit of engaging such odds successfully with the war- ships of other nations, and Captain Lambert of the Java showed a stern determination to stand by his colors, and was as far from declining the fight when he saw his adversary's power as whep she was still hull down in the distance. The Java was fitted out to carry Lieutenant- 1 See the biographies of Porter and Lawrence. WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE General Hislop and a large staff to Bombay, besides a number of naval officers and seamen for ships on the East India stations. She had about four hundred and twenty-five men on board. About two o'clock in the day, after manreuvring for an hour or two in order to get together, the first broadsides were exchanged. There was a light wind blowing, and Bainbridge, wishing to get the advantage of it as far as possible, did not strip his ship of much of her canvas, but went into action with most of his light sails set and his royal yards across. The Java, which was finely officered and extra manned, was very actively handled ; and so many evolutions were made, in order to get a good position for raking, that the battle ended many miles to leeward of where it began. The cannonade was brisk from the start, and soon after the first broadside Commodore Bainbridge was struck on the hip by a musket ball, and in less than five minutes, while he was standing near the wheel, a shot shivered it, and a small bolt was driven into bis thigh. Bainbridge did not leave the deck a moment for this, but remained walking about as if he had not been wounded. The loss of the Constitution's wheel was very serious, especially with so expert an antagonist as Captain Lambert to deal with, and Bainbridge endeavored to close. This was only partially successful, but nevertheless so effective was the Constitution's fire that it was soon appar- 77 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS ent that she had the Java at her mercy. The gallant frigate, however, did not strike her colors until every spar was shot out of her, her cap- tain mortally hurt, her first lieutenant painfully wounded, and she had lost forty-eight killed and one hundred and two wounded. Then only she hauled down the union jack which had been fly- ing at the stump of the mizzen-mast. The Con- stitution had lost nine men killed and twenty-five wounded, and came out of the action with all her royal yards across, and every spar in place. The Java had been so much cut up that it was impossible to refit her, and Bainbridge was forced to burn her, after taking out her wheel to replace the Constitution's. This was a remark- ably clumsy wheel, and in no way matched the handsome fittings of the ship ; but it was retained, from motives of sentiment, ever afterward. Captain Lambert lived several days after the fight, and was put ashore, with the rest of the officers of the Java, at San Salvador. Com- modore Bainbridge's wounds were dangerous, as he had remained on deck from the time he was shot, at half past two in the day, until eleven o'clock that night. When Captain Lambert was about to be taken ashore, Bainbridge had himself carried on deck by two of his officers, to where Captain Lambert lay in his cot. Bainbridge, who was then dangerously ill and in great pain, re- turned the dying officer his sword, and Captain 78 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE Lambert, still conscious, feebly thanked him. The interview brought tears to the eyes of all who witnessed it, and the two captains parted, never to meet again in this world, with feelings of kindness such as brave enemies should enter- tain for each other. Bainbridge treated all of his prisoners with great generosity, and they showed a very grate- ful appreciation of it. On the 4th of January, on being informed by Lieutenant Chads, next in command, of Captain Lambert's death, Bain- bridge wrote a very beautiful letter, in which he said : " Commodore Bainbridge takes this occa- sion to observe, in justice to Lieutenant Chads, who fought the Java after Captain Lambert was wounded, that he had done everything which a brave and skilful officer could do, and further resistance would have been a wanton effusion of human blood." This was valuable testimony to Lieutenant Chads on his future court martial. Bainbridge had known what it was to lose his ship, and he could feel for an officer under a similar misfor- tune. So thoughtful was his kindness to his pris- oners, that General Hislop in gratitude gave him a splendid gold-hilted sword, and the two remained friends and correspondents during the rest of their lives. The conduct of Bainbridge and his officers was duly reported in England, and the Prince Re- gent, afterward George the Fourth, who could say 79 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS graceful things, remarked that he would like to shake hands with Bainbridge, for his magna- nimity to the British prisoners. The loss of the Java, following upon that of the Guerrie're and the Macedonian, produced a shock of pain and grief throughout Great Britain. The venerable Admiral Jarvis, the day after the news reached London, said he had passed a sleepless night, not from the destruction of a single British frigate, but because of the seamanlike manner in which it had been captured, which gave him as an Englishman much uneasiness and apprehension of the future naval greatness of the United States. Bainbridge returned to the United States within five months of leaving home, and was welcomed as victorious captains always are. He landed at Boston, where he was given a splendid public dinner ; resolutions of thanks from the city and State governments were passed in his honor, and he and the brave fellows under him became the heroes of the hour. Amid all this popular adoration, Bainbridge did not forget the claims of the seamen, and imme- diately began efforts to get them prize money. He wrote, with much justice, that the captain usually got all the honor when a ship was cap- tured, while the officers and men, who did quite as much toward success, got nothing, except from the generosity of the government; and he was deeply gratified when Congress, after awarding him the customary gold medal, and the officers 80 WILLIAM BAINBRIDGE silver medals, gave the crew a substantial sum in prize money. He gave up the Constitution to Captain Stewart, who, like Hull and himself, was destined to do great things in her. Bainbridge did not get to sea again during the war, but soon after tht peace he went to the Mediterranean in command of a splendid squad- ron destined to punish the Dey of Algiers for certain treacherous acts toward American ves- sels. Bainbridge hoisted his flag on the Inde- pendence, seventy-four guns, the first line-of- battle ship over which the American flag ever floated. Decatur, who had sailed in advance of the commander-in-chief, had already brought the Dey to terms before Bainbridge arrived, but it was thought well to show the squadron for some time in European waters. It consisted of the largest naval force that had, up to that time, ever been collected under an American flag officer. It consisted of one ship of the line, three splendid frigates, and fourteen smaller vessels, all well officered and manned, and fine ships of their class. At Gibraltar, where it lay some time, it was extremely admired, and the American officers received much attention from the officers of the British fleet and garrison. In 1820 Bainbridge again took a noble fleet to the Mediterranean. On reaching Gibraltar, he found a very bad state of affairs between the officers of the American squadron, which rendez- 6 8. TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS voused there, and the British officers of the gar- rison and fleet. Misunderstandings, quarrels, and duels were so frequent that the Governor had taken upon himself to forbid the American officers from visiting the town or garrison. He expressed to Commodore Bainbridge, however, a desire for an amicable arrangement. Bainbridge at once re- quired that this prohibition be removed, and refused to treat until it was withdrawn, which was done. As the British officers had very great personal regard for Bainbridge, he was the man for smoothing down differences while maintaining the dignity of an American officer. From that day, American officers have been well treated at Gibraltar. This was Bainbridge's last cruise, and afterward his service was in command of differ- ent navy yards. It is said that in the course of his naval career he moved his family twenty-six times. His health began to fail after his fifty- fifth year, but he survived his sixtieth year. He died at Philadelphia in July, 1833, honored and admired to an extraordinary degree. His last words were, as he raised himself from his bed of death, " Give me my sword ! And call all hands to board the enemy 1 " EDWARD PREBLE THE story of Commodore Preble is, in itself, not only exciting but amusing; and the gravest histories of him have not been able to keep the vagaries of the commodore's celebrated bad temper in abeyance. Preble was, unquestionably, one of the very greatest sea officers this country ever produced ; and however ridiculous the outbursts of his fiery temper might make him, they never made him contemptible. " The old man has the best heart, if he has the worst temper, in the world," was always said of him by the junior officers who were the victims of his wrath. Preble seems to have come naturally by his im- petuosity. His father before him, General Preble, brigadier in the provincial army, was one of the same sort, and it was commonly said by their neighbors and friends that " Ned has a good deal of the brigadier in him." The father and son were deeply attached to each other, although they often came in conflict. The last time was when Edward was about sixteen years old, in 1777. Men were so scarce, owing to most of them hav- ing enlisted in the continental army, that the old brigadier set his boys to hoeing potatoes on his 83 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS farm near Portland, Maine. Edward had not worked very long when, throwing away his hoe, he declared he had no taste for such work, and walked himself off to the seacoast, where he en- tered the first vessel that would take him. The brigadier did not seem to regard this as wholly unjustifiable, and, seeing the boy was bent on the sea, got him a midshipman's commission in the infant navy of the colonies. In almost his first engagement Edward was taken prisoner, but was given his parole at New York. There is in exist- ence a letter written to him at that time by his father the brigadier, which shows great affection for the boy, and the strongest possible desire that he should conduct himself honorably. The old man, then over seventy, reminds his son " not to stain his honor by attempting to escape." And another recommendation is followed by the utter- ance of a great truth which it would be well if every human being acted upon. It is this : " Be kind and obliging to all ; for no man ever does a designed injury to another without doing a greater to himself." Before this, an event had occurred which Preble occasionally alluded to in after life, and which, marvellous as it seems, must be accepted as true, for Preble was too close an observer to have been deceived, and too sensible a man to have assumed that he saw a thing which he did not really see. In the summer of 1779 young Preble was 84 attached to the Protector, a smart little conti- nental cruiser, under the command of Captain Williams, a brave and enterprising commander. The Protector was lying in one of the bays on the Maine coast, near the mouth of the Penobscot, when on a clear, still day a large serpent was seen lying motionless on the water close to the vessel. Captain Williams examined it through his spy- glass, as did every officer on the vessel. Young Preble was ordered to attack it in a twelve-oared boat, armed with a swivel. The boat was low- ered, the men armed with cutlasses and boarding- pikes, and quickly pulled toward the serpent. The creature raised its head about ten feet above the surface, and then began to make off to sea. The boat followed as rapidly as the men could force it through the water, and the swivel was fired at the serpent. This had no apparent effect, except to make the creature get out of the way the faster. Preble, however, had had a complete view of it for some time, and said, in his opinion, it was from one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet long, and was about as big around as a barrel. This account must be accepted as exactly true in every particular, coming from a man like Edward Preble ; and when he says he saw a sea-serpent from one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet long and as big around as a barrel and got close enough to fire at it, it must be absolutely true in every particular. It must be remembered that 85 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS Preble died long before sea-serpent stories became common. 1 Preble saw much service in the Revolution, and was the hero of a very daring achievement not long after his onslaught on the sea-serpent. He was then serving as first lieutenant on the Winthrop, a small cruiser. Captain Little, of the Winthrop, heard there was an armed brig lying at anchor under the guns of the British breastworks on the Penobscot. He gave per- mission to Preble to cut the brig out, if possible. It was determined to steal in upon her at night, and carry her by boarding. On a dark night, therefore, Preble, with forty men, ran in un- perceived, and the Winthrop got alongside her enemy. They all wore their white shirts over their jackets, so that they could tell friends from foes when once on the British vessel. The officer of the deck of the British ship mistook the little Winthrop for a tender of their own, and called out, " Run aboard ! " "I am coming aboard," answered Captain Little, as his vessel shot along- side. Preble, with only fourteen men, leaped on the brig's deck, when the Winthrop caught a puff of wind and drifted off. As they passed ahead, Captain Little called out, " Shall I send you some more men ? " "No," coolly answered Preble; "I have too many already." 1 See Cooper's Naval Biography for this incident 86 EDWARD PREBLE He had then secured the few men on deck, and soon had possession of the brig. The British batteries on shore opened fire on him, but Preble managed to take the vessel out without serious damage and without losing a man. At the end of the Revolution the navy practi- cally ceased to exist, and Preble went into the merchant service* as so many of the officers were forced to do. But in 1798, when the quasi war with France took place, he re-entered the navy, which had been created anew. He was commis- sioned lieutenant in 1798, and was lucky enough the very next year to get the Essex, frigate of thirty-two guns. In her he started on what was then the longest cruise ever made by an American man-of-war. He went to the Indian Seas, to give convoy to a valuable fleet of merchant vessels engaged in the China and India trade, and which were liable to be attacked by French cruisers. He had no opportunity to distinguish himself especially in this duty, although he took care of the ships and got them all safely to New York. Soon afterward, the United States and France having come to terms, Preble went ashore and remained for two years. His health was bad in the beginning, but being much improved, in 1803 he reported for duty, and was assigned to the Constitution, forty-four guns, then preparing for a Mediterranean cruise. At that time the relations of the United States 87 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS with the piratical powers of the Barbary coast were most unsatisfactory. After years of sub- mission to their exactions, a submission which seems almost incredible now, the United States government determined to do in the end what it should have done in the beginning. This was to send a powerful squadron to attack these pirates of the land as well as the sea, and to force them to respect the persons and liberties of Americans. Preble was given the command of this squadron, with orders to punish Algiers, Morocco, Tunis, and especially Tripoli, so that it would not soon be forgotten. He hoisted the broad pennant of a commodore on the Constitution, and had under him the Philadelphia, a heavy frigate of thirty- eight guns, and five small vessels, the Enter- prise, Argus, Nautilus, Vixen, and Siren. It was a remarkable squadron in many ways. The Con- stitution was probably the heaviest frigate afloat, and able to withstand a cannonade as well as any line-of-battle ship. In Preble she had a com- mander worthy of her. Preble was then about forty years of age, and his temper had not been sweetened by dyspepsia, of which he had been a victim for a long time. The Constitution was destined, under his com- mand, to win for herself the famous name of " Old Ironsides " from the way in which her stout timbers resisted the tremendous cannonade of the forts and fleets at Tripoli. It was in this splendid 88 EDWARD PREBLE cruise, too, that she gained her well-maintained reputation for being a lucky ship. In all her great battles she never lost her commanding offi- cer, nor did any great slaughter ever take place on her decks, nor was she ever dismasted or seriously injured by war or weather, nor did she ever take the ground. Up to this time the Con- stellation had been the favorite frigate of the navy, but, beginning with Treble's great cruise, the Constitution became, once and for all, the darling ship, not only of the navy but of the nation. The only other heavy frigate in the squadron was the Philadelphia, thirty-eight guns, commanded by Captain William Bainbridge. Her tragic fate and the glorious manner in which it was avenged is one of the immortal incidents of the American navy. 1 The five small vessels were commanded by five young men, lieutenants commandant, accord- ing to the rank of the day, of which three Hull, Decatur, and Stewart reached the great- est distinction. Somers, the fourth, had a short but glorious career. The fifth, Captain Smith, was a brave and capable officer, but his name has been overshadowed by the four young captains, who made a truly extraordinary constellation of genius. Among the midshipmen in the squadron were two, Thomas MacDonough and James Law- rence, who achieved reputations equal to the three great captains. 1 See the biography of Bainbridge. 89 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS In the summer of 1803 the squadron sailed, as each ship was ready, for Gibraltar, which was the rendezvous. On the way out, the young officers on the Constitution had a taste of the commodore's temper, which was far from pleas- ing to them ; but they also found out that he had an excellent heart, and even a strict sense of justice, as soon as his explosions of wrath were over. And before very long they discovered the qualities of promptness, courage, and capacity which made Commodore Preble a really great commander. While off Gibraltar, on a dark night, the Constitution found herself quite close to a large ship. Preble immediately sent the men to quarters, for fear the stranger might be an enemy, and hailing began. The stranger seemed more anxious to ask questions than to answer them. This angered the fiery commodore, and he directed his first lieutenant to say if the ship did not give her name he would give her a shot. The stranger called back : " If you give me a shot, I '11 give you a broadside." Preble, at this, seized the trumpet himself, and, spring- ing into the mizzen rigging, bawled out : " This is the United States ship Constitution, forty- four guns, Commodore Edward Preble. I am about to hail you for the last time. If you do not answer, I will give you a broadside. What ship is that ? Blow your matches, boys ! " The answer then came : " This is his Britan- 90 EDWARD PREBLE nic Majesty's ship Donegal, razee, of eighty guns." " I don't believe you," answered Preble, " and I shall stick by you till morning to make sure of your character." In a few minutes a boat came alongside, with an officer, who explained that the stranger was the Maidstone, frigate, of thirty- eight guns, and the delay in answering the hails and the false name given were because the Con- stitution had got close so unexpectedly that they wanted time to get the people to quarters in case she should prove an enemy. This one incident is said to have worked a complete revolution in the feelings of the officers and men toward Preble ; and although he was as stern and strict as ever, they could not but admire his firmness and cool courage in an emergency. Arrived at Gibraltar, Preble met for the first time his five young captains. Not one was twenty- five years of age, and none was married. At the first council of war held aboard the Consti- tution there was a universal shyness on their part when asked their views by the commodore. The fame of the " old man's " temper and severity had preceded him, and his boy captains felt no disposition whatever to either advise him or to disagree with him. When the council was over, Preble remained in the cabin, leaning his head on his hand, and quite overcome with dejection and depression. To Colonel Lear, an American con- 91 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS sul, then on board, Preble bitterly remarked : " 1 have been indiscreet in accepting this command. Had I known how I was to be supported, I certainly should have declined it. Government has sent me here a parcel of schoolboys, to com- mand all my light craft ! " A year afterward, when the " parcel of school- boys " had covered themselves with glory, Colonel Lear asked the commodore if he remembered this speech. " Perfectly," answered the commodore. " But they turned out to be good schoolboys." After collecting his squadron at Gibraltar, Preble, with three vessels, stood for Tangier. The Emperor of Morocco pretended to be very friendly with the Americans, and sent them pres- ents of bullocks, sheep, and vegetables ; but Preble, while treating him with respect, yet kept his ships cleared for action and the men at quar- ters day and night, lest the Moors should show treachery. On going ashore with some of his officers to pay a visit of ceremony to the Em- peror, he gave a characteristic order to the com- manding officer of the ship : " If I do not return, enter into no treaty or negotiation for me, but open fire at once." On reaching the palace he was told that the party must leave their side- arms outside before entering the Emperor's pres- ence. Preble replied firmly that it was not the custom of the American navy, and that they 92 EDWARD PREBLE should enter as they were, which they did. The Emperor soon found what sort of a man he had to deal with, and Preble had no further trouble with him. A few weeks after the arrival of the squadron, Preble heard the news of the loss of the Philadelphia. Nothing better shows the steadfast and generous nature of the man than the manner in which he accepted this misfortune. No regrets were heard from him; no railing accusations against Bainbridge; but a prompt and deter- mined grappling with the terrible complication of having a great part of his force turned against him; and the most tender consideration for the feelings as well as the rights of Bainbridge and his men. Preble was enabled to provide himself with bomb-vessels and gunboats by the aid of the King of Naples, who, like all the other European sovereigns, wished to see the nest of pirates ex- terminated. The first one of the "schoolboys" to distinguish himself was Decatur, 1 who, in Feb- ruary, 1804, crept by night into the harbor of Tripoli, and earned immortality by destroying the Philadelphia as she swung to her anchors, in the face of one hundred and nineteen great guns and nineteen vessels which surrounded her. The destruction of the Philadelphia not only wiped away the stain of losing her, in the first instance, but was of the greatest advantage to Commodore 1 See the biography of Decatur. 93 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS Preble in the bombardment of Tripoli, as the frigate would have been a formidable addition to the defence of the town. In the summer of 1804, his preparations being made, Commodore Preble sailed for Tripoli, where he arrived on the 25th of July. He had one frigate, the Constitution, three brigs, three schooners, two bomb-vessels, and six gunboats. With these he had to reduce an enemy fighting one hundred and nineteen great guns behind a circle of forts, with a fleet of a gun-brig, two schooners, two large galleys, and nineteen gun- boats, all of which could be manoeuvred both in- side the rocky harbor and in the offing. On the morning of the 3d of August the four hundred officers and men of the Philadelphia, confined in the dungeons of the Bashaw's castle, were gladdened by the sight of the American flag in the offing, and soon the music of the American guns showed them that their comrades were bat- tling for them. On that day began a series of desperate assaults on the forts and war ships of Tripoli that for splendor and effect have never been excelled. Preble could fire only thirty heavy guns at once, while the Tripolitans could train one hundred and nineteen on the Ameri- cans. During all these bombardments, while the gunboats, in two divisions, were engaging the Tripolitan gunboats, running aboard of them, with hand-to-hand fighting, sinking and burning 94 EDWARD PREBLE them, the mighty Constitution would come into position with the same steadiness as if she were working into a friendly roadstead, and, thunder- ing out her whole broadside at once, would deal destruction on the forts and vessels. In vain the Tripolitans would concentrate their fire on her. Throwing her topsail back, she would move slowly when they expected her to move fast, and would carry sail when they expected her to stand still, and her fire never slackened for an instant. It was after this first day's bombardment that the sailors nicknamed her " Old Ironsides." She and her company seemed to be invulnerable. Es- capes from calamity were many, but accidents were few. One of the closest shaves was when, in the midst of the hottest part of the action, a round shot entered a stern port directly in line of Preble, and within a few feet of him. It struck full on a quarterdeck gun, which it smashed to splinters, that flew about among a crowd of officers and men, wounding only one, and that slightly. Had it gone a little farther, it would have cut Preble in two. After one of the fiercest of the boat attacks a collision occurred between Preble and the scarcely less fiery Decatur, which is one of the most re- markable that ever occurred in a man-of-war. At the close of the attack Decatur came on board the flagship to report. Preble had been watching him, and fully expected that all of the Tripolitaii 95 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS gunboats would be captured. But, after taking three of them, Decatur found it impossible to do more. As he stepped on the Constitution's deck, still wearing the round jacket in which he fought, his face grimed with powder, and stained with blood from a slight wound, he said quietly to Preble : " Well, Commodore, I have brought you out .three of the boats." Preble, suddenly catching him by the collar with both hands, shook him violently, and shrieked at him : " Aye, sir, why did you not bring me more ? " The officers were paralyzed with astonishment at the scene, and Decatur, who was scarcely less fiery than Preble, laid his hand upon his dirk. Suddenly the commodore turned abruptly on his heel and went below. Decatur immediately ordered his boat, and declared he would leave the ship at the instant ; but the officers crowded around him and begged him to wait until the commodore had cooled down. Just then the orderly appeared, with a request that he should wait on the com- modore in the cabin. Decatur at first declared he would not go, but at last was reluctantly per- suaded not to disobey his superior by refusing to answer a request, which was really an order. At last he went, sullen and rebellious. He stayed below a long time, and the officers began to be afraid that the two had quarrelled worse than ever. After a while one of them, whose rank en- titled him to jeek the commodore, went belo* II EDWARD PREBLE and tapped softly at the cabin door. He received no answer, when he quietly opened the door a little. There sat the young captain and the commodore close together, and both in tears. From that day there never were two men who re- spected each other more than Preble and Decatur. For more than a month these terrific assaults kept up. The Bashaw, who had demanded a ransom of a thousand dollars each for the Phil- adelphia's men, and tribute besides, fell in his demands ; but Preble sent him word that every American in Tripolitan prisons must and should be released without the payment of a dollar. The Tripolitans had little rest, and never knew the day that the invincible frigate might not be pounding their forts and ships, while the enter- prising flotilla of gunboats would play havoc with their own smaller vessels. The Tripolitans had been considered as unequalled hand-to-hand fighters ; but the work of the Americans on the night of the destruction of the Philadelphia, and the irresistible dash with which they grappled with and boarded the Tripolitan gunboats, dis- concerted, while it did not dismay, their fierce antagonists. Sometimes the squadron was blown off, and sometimes it had to claw off the land, but it always returned. The loss .of the Americans was small ; that of the Tripolitans great. One of the American gunboats exploded, and a terrible 97 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS misfortune happened in the loss of the ketch In- trepid l and her gallant crew. Reinforcements were promised from the United States, which did not come in time, and Preble met with all the dangers and delays that follow the making of war four thousand miles from home ; but he was the same indomitable commander, feared alike by his enemies and his friends. On the 10th of September the President, forty-four guns, and the Constellation, thirty-eight guns, arrived ; the John Adams had come in some days before. By one of those strange accidents, so common in the early days of the navy, Commodore Barren had been sent out in the President to relieve Com- modore Preble by the government at Washington, which, in those days of slow communication, knew nothing of Preble's actions, except that he was supposed to be bombarding Tripoli The season of active operations was over, however, and nothing could be done until the following summer. Meanwhile the Bashaw had a very just apprehen- sion of the return of such determined enemies as the Americans another year, and gave unmistak- able signs of a willingness to treat. To that he had been brought by Commodore Preble and his gallant officers and crews. Knowing the work to be completed, Preble willingly handed over his command to Commodore Barron. He had the pleasure of giving Decatur, then a post captain, 1 See the biography of Somers. u EDWARD PREBLE the temporary command of the Constitution. Be- fore leaving the squadron, he received every testi- monial of respect, and even affection, from the very men who had so bitterly complained of his severe discipline and fiery temper. It was said at the time, that when the squadron first knew him he had not a friend in it, and when he left it he had not an enemy. At that day duelling was common among the privileged classes all over the western world, especially with army and navy officers; but so well did Commodore Preble have his young officers in hand that not a single duel took place in the squadron as long as he commanded it. The younger officers were supplied with an end- less fund of stories about " the old man's " out- bursts, and delighted in telling of one especial instance which convulsed every officer and man on the Constitution. A surgeon's mate was needed on the ship, and a little Sicilian doctor applied for the place and got it. He asked the commodore if he must wear uniform. To which the commodore replied, " Certainly." Some days afterward the commodore happened to be in the cabin, wearing his dressing-gown and shaving. Suddenly a gentleman in uniform was announced. Now, in those days flag officers wore two epau- lets, the others but one, and the commodore him- self was the only man in the squadron who was entitled to wear two. But the stranger had on 99 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS two epaulets ; besides, a sword, a cocked hat, and an enormous amount of gold lace. The commodore surveyed this apparition si- lently, puzzled to make out who this imposing personage was, until, with a smirk, the bedizened Sicilian announced himself as the new surgeon's mate. Furious at his presumption in appearing in such a rig, Preble uttered a howl of rage, which scared the little doctor so that he fled up on deck, closely followed by the commodore, his face covered with lather, and the open razor still In his hand. The little doctor ran along the deck, still pursued by the commodore with the razor, until, reaching the forward end of the ship, the poor Sicilian sprang overboard and struck out swimming for the shore, and was never seen on the ship again. Preble transferred his flag to the John Adams, and visited Gibraltar, where he was received with distinction by the British officers. He had many friends among them, especially Sir Alex- ander Ball, one of Nelson's captains ; and the great Nelson himself knew and admired the ser- vices of the Americans before Tripoli. The Spaniards and Neapolitans, who had suffered much from the corsairs, rejoiced at the drubbing Preble had given them, and at the prospect that the Americans imprisoned in the Bashaw's castle would soon be released. The Pope, Pius the Seventh, said : " This American commodore has 100 EDWARD PREBLE done more to humble the piratical powers of the Barbary coast than all the Christian powers of Europe put together." Preble sailed for home in December, 1804, and reached Washington the 4th of March, 1805, the day of President Jefferson's first inauguration. The news of his success and the early release of the Philadelphia's officers and men had pre- ceded him. Congress passed a vote of thanks to him and the officers and men under him. President Jefferson, although of the opposite party in poli- tics from Preble, offered him the head of the Navy Department, but it was declined. Preble's health had steadily grown worse, and soon after his return to the United States it was seen that his days were few. He lingered until the sum- mer of 1807, when at Portland, Maine, near his birthplace, he passed away, calmly and resignedly. He left a widow and one child. Preble was in his forty-seventh year when he died. He was tall and slight, of gentlemanly appearance and polished manners. He left be- hind him a reputation for great abilities, used with an eye single to his country's good, and a character for probity and courage seldom equalled and never surpassed. 101 STEPHEN DECATUR AMONG the most brilliant and picturesque figures in American naval history stands Stephen Decatur. His achievements were of that dashing and splen- did quality which leaves a blaze upon the page of history ; and the greatest of them, the destruc- tion of the Philadelphia frigate in the harbor of Tripoli, earned from Lord Nelson the praise of being "the most bold and daring act of the age." Decatur came justly by his genius for the sea. His father was a captain in the navy of the United States, and his grandfather had been a French naval officer. His was no rude struggle with adversity. The child of gentle people, he entered the navy in 1797, with every advantage of education and training. He was then eighteen years of age, old for a midshipman, when boys entered at thirteen and were often acting lieuten- ants at sixteen. Decatur was a handsome man, tall and well made. Although of a disposition the most generous, he was always of an impetuous and even domi- neering nature. Strict habits of self-control modified this impetuosity, but to the day of his 102 STEPHEN DECATUR STEPHEN DECATUR death he was subject to gusts of temper whenever he came across any instance of cruelty or mean- ness or oppression. A famous example of this was shown shortly before his untimely death. He was then at the summit of his fame, one of the ranking officers of the navy, a navy commissioner, and living in grand style for the times in the city of Washing- ton. He had a favorite dog, and one day, when the dog was lying quietly asleep on the doorstep of Decatur's house, a policeman came along and wantonly shot the poor creature. Decatur hap- pened to see the whole affair, and, rushing out, he gave the policeman then and there a terrific walloping. The policeman, smarting from the injury to his dignity as well as the pounding of his bones, swore out a warrant, and Decatur was commanded to appear before the Mayor of Wash- ington. Furious at the turn of affairs, Decatur flatly refused to obey the constable's summons. In vain the officer pleaded with him to go quietly. Decatur would not budge a step. At last the man brought a posse and proceeded to take him by force. Decatur would not be guilty of the crime of resisting the law, but he proposed to let them get him before the magistrate the best way they could. He not only would not walk a step, but lay down on the floor, and, as he was a large and heavy man, it was a job to lift him up and put him in a carriage ; but at last it was accomplished. 103 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS By the time they reached the Mayor's court, Decatur's temper, never mild, was red hot. He proceeded to harangue and even to browbeat the Mayor, who was a very insignificant person com- pared with Commodore Decatur. At the first blast, though, the Mayor proved that he had a spirit of his own. " Look here, Commodore," said he, " when you are on the quarterdeck of your ship you com- mand. I '11 have you understand that this court- room is my quarterdeck, and I command here, and if I hear another disrespectful word from you I '11 send you to jail for as long as I please." Decatur, paralyzed with astonishment, looked at the Mayor for a long time ; then, suddenly bursting into a shout of laughter, apologized for his behavior and submitted to be fined for thrashing the policeman. Such was the man through life, daring, gen- erous, overbearing sometimes, but always respond- ing to what was just and courageous in others. Decatur's first cruise was made in the United States, frigate, forty-four guns, wearing the broad pennant of Commodore Barry. Charles Stewart, afterward the celebrated commodore, was one of the junior lieutenants of the ship, and the heroic and unfortunate Richard Somers was one of the midshipmen. Decatur and Somers had been schoolmates in Philadelphia, and the association formed there was cemented into a devoted friendship in the steerage of the United States. No two natures 104 STEPHEN DECATUR were ever more dissimilar than that of the impet- uous Decatur and the gentle and retiring but indomitable Somers. From the beginning they were actuated by a noble professional rivalry ; yet their close and affectionate friendship was that of brothers, and their devotion to each other has become a tradition in the navy. The United States was a splendid frigate, fast and weatherly, and, from the regularity with which she made time on her cruises, was known as " Old Wagoner." Commodore Barry was an old officer who had done good service in the Revolution, and when he took command of the squadron of which " Old Wagoner " was the flag- ship, he sailed at once for the West Indies, to retaliate on the French ships which had preyed upon American commerce. It was not the good fortune of the United States to meet a frigate of equal force, so that her men and their mettle could be tried, but she did good service in clear- ing out the French privateers which infested those seas. Decatur saw much active cruising, and gave indications of that dashing courage, masterly seamanship, and fertile resource which he developed the instant he got command of a ship. He made several cruises, reached his lieu- tenancy, and was attached to the Essex when she went under Captain Bainbridge to the Mediter- ranean, in 1802. During the troubles the officers of the Essex had, at Barcelona, with the officers of 105 TWELVE NAVAL CAPTAINS the Spanish guardship, Decatur was conspicuous. Having been annoyed and insulted by the Spanish officers, on his way to and from his ship, he went aboard the Spaniard, and asked for her command- ing officer. He was absent, and Decatur left this message, which he shouted out in his tremendous voice, on the Spanish quarterdeck :