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s 1 
 
THE OLD EAST 
 INDIAMEN 
 
 BY 
 
 E. KEBLE 
 
 LieutemrfiTftN.V.R. 
 
 Author of '" Sailing Ships and their Story, 
 
 " Do~Mn Channel in the ' Vtvette,' " 
 " Through Holland in the ' Vivettc? " 
 " Ships and Ways of Other Days" etc. 
 
 ILLUSTRATED 
 
 LONDON 
 T. WERNER LAURIE LTD. 
 
 8 ESSEX STREET, STRAND 
 
CONTENTS 
 
 CHAPTER PAGB 
 
 I. INTRODUCTION ..... i 
 II. THE MAGNETIC EAST . . . .10 
 
 III. THE LURE OF NATIONS . . . .18 
 
 IV. THE ROUTE TO THE EAST . . .31 
 V. THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY . . 46 
 
 VI. CAPTAIN LANCASTER DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF . 64 
 
 VII. THE BUILDING OF THE COMPANY'S SHIPS . 77 
 
 VIII. PERILS AND ADVENTURES . . .91 
 
 IX. SHIPS AND TRADE .... 106 
 
 X. FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN . .124 
 
 XI. EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY . 138 
 
 XII. THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE COMPANY'S SERVICE 152 
 
 XIII. THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES . . 166 
 
 XIV. SHIPS AND MEN ..... 180 
 XV. AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN . .198 
 
 XVI. CONDITIONS OF SERVICE .... 226 
 
 XVII. WAYS AND MEANS .... 248 
 
 XVIII. LIFE ON BOARD ..... 265 
 
 XIX. THE COMPANY'S NAVAL SERVICE 281 
 
vi CONTENTS 
 
 CHAPTER PAGE 
 
 XX. OFFENCE AND DEFENCE . . . .291 
 
 XXI. THE " WARREN HASTINGS " AND THE 
 
 " Pl^MONTAISE " .... 305 
 
 XXII. PIRATES AND FRENCH FRIGATES . . 316 
 
 XXIII. THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN . 329 
 
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
 
 The East Indiaman Thomas Coutts . . . Frontispiece 
 
 FACING PAGE 
 
 The East India House .... . .4 
 
 The Hon. East India Co.'s Ship General Goddard with H.M.S. 
 Sceptre and Swallow capturing Dutch East Indiamen 
 off St Helena ...... 12 
 
 The Essex East Indiaman at anchor in Bombay Harbour . 24 
 The East Indiaman Kent ...... 42 
 
 Dutch East Indiamen ...... 54 
 
 The launch of the Hon. East India Co.'s Ship Edinburgh . 78 
 India House, the Sale Room ..... 88 
 
 The Hon. East India Co.'s Ship Bridgewater entering Madras 
 
 Roads ....... 96 
 
 The Halsewell East Indiaman . . . . .104 
 
 The Seringapatam East Indiaman . . . .120 
 
 A Barque Free-trader in the London Docks . . .130 
 
 The Press-Gang at Work . . . . . .140 
 
 The East Indiaman Swallow . . . . .182 
 
 Commodore Sir Nathaniel Dance .... 190 
 
 Repulse of Admiral Linois by the China Fleet under Com- 
 modore Sir Nathaniel Dance . . . .196 
 
 A view of the East India Docks in the early igth Century . 210 
 The Thames East Indiaman ..... 218 
 
 The Windham East Indiaman sailing from St Helena . . 224 
 
 The // and Eliza Jane in Table Bay, 1829 . . . 236 
 
 The Alfred East Indiaman ..... 242 
 
 The East Indiaman Cruiser Panther in Suez Harbour . . 250 
 
 The East Indiaman Triton, rough sketch of stern . . 256 
 
 The East Indiaman Earl Balcarres .... 262 
 
 Deck scene of the East Indiaman Triton . . . 266 
 
 The West Indiaman Thetis ..... 272 
 
 The Kent East Indiaman on fire in the Bay of Biscay . . 276 
 
 The Cambria brig receiving the last boat-load from the Kent . 282 
 The Vernon East Indiaman ..... 294 
 
 The Sibella East Indiaman ..... 306 
 
 The East Indiaman Queen . . . . .318 
 
 The East Indiaman Malabar, built of wood in 1860 . . 330 
 
 The Blenheim East Indiaman ..... 340 
 
 vii 
 
PREFACE 
 
 THE author desires to acknowledge the courtesy of 
 Messrs T. H. Parker Brothers of Whitcomb Street, 
 W.C., for allowing him to reproduce the illus- 
 trations mentioned on many of the pages of this 
 book ; as also the P. & O. Steam Navigation 
 Company for permission to reproduce the old 
 painting of the Swallow. 
 
 Owing to the fact that the author is now away 
 at sea serving under the White Ensign, it is hoped 
 that this may be deemed a sufficient apology for 
 any errata which may have been allowed to creep 
 into the text. 
 
 Vlll 
 
THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 CHAPTER I 
 
 INTRODUCTION 
 
 IN this volume I have to invite the reader to con- 
 sider a special epoch of the world's progress, in 
 which the sailing ship not only revolutionised British 
 trade but laid the foundations of, and almost com- 
 pleted, that imposing structure which is to-day 
 represented by the Indian Empire. It is a period 
 brimful of romance, of adventures, travel and the 
 exciting pursuit after wealth. It is a theme which, 
 for all its deeply human aspect, is one for ever 
 dominated by a grandeur and irresistible destiny. 
 
 With all its failings, the East India Company still 
 remains in history as the most amazingly powerful 
 trading concern which the world has ever seen. Like 
 many other big propositions it began in a small way : 
 but it acquired for us that vast continent which is 
 the envy of all the great powers of the world to-day. 
 And it is important and necessary to remember 
 always that we owe this in the first place to the con- 
 summate courage, patience, skill and long-suffering 
 of that race of beings, the intrepid seamen, who have 
 never yet received their due from the landsmen 
 whom they have made rich and comfortable. 
 
 Among the Harleian MSS. there is a delightful 
 
2 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 phrase written by a seventeenth-century writer, in 
 which, treating of matters that are not immediately 
 concerned with the present subject, he remarks very 
 quaintly that " the first article of an Englishman's 
 Politicall Creed must be that he believeth in ye Sea 
 etc. Without that there needeth no general Council 
 to pronounce him uncapable of Salvation." This 
 somewhat sweeping statement none the less aptly 
 sums up the whole matter of our colonisation and 
 overseas development. The entire glamour of the 
 Elizabethan period, marked as it unfortunately is 
 with many deplorable errors, is derived from the sea. 
 With the appreciation of what could be attained by 
 a combination of stout ships, sturdy seamen, naviga- 
 tion, seamanship, gunnery and high hopes that 
 refused persistently to be daunted, the most far- 
 sighted began to see that success was for them. 
 Honours, wealth, the founding of families that 
 should treasure their names in future generations, 
 the acquisition of fine estates and the building of 
 large houses with luxuries that exceeded the Tudor 
 pattern these were the pictures which were con- 
 jured up in the imaginations of those who vested 
 their fortunes and often their lives in these ocean 
 voyages. The call of the sea had in England fallen 
 mostly on deaf ears until the late sixteenth century. 
 It is only because there were some who listened to 
 it, obeyed, and presently led others to do as they 
 had done, that the British Empire has been built 
 up at all. 
 
 Our task, however, is to treat of one particular 
 way in which that call has influenced the minds and 
 activities of men. We are to see how that, if it 
 summoned some across the Atlantic to the Spanish 
 
INTRODUCTION 3 
 
 Main, it sent others out to the Orient, yet always 
 with the same object of acquiring wealth, establish- 
 ing trade with strange peoples, and incidentally 
 affording a fine opportunity for those of an adven- 
 turous spirit who were unable any longer to endure 
 the cramped and confined limitations of the neigh- 
 bourhood in which they had been born and bred. 
 And though, as we proceed with our story, we shall 
 be compelled to watch the gradual growth and the 
 vicissitudes of the East Indian companies, yet our 
 object is to obtain a clear knowledge not so much 
 of the latter as of the ships which they employed, 
 the manner in which they were built, sailed, navi- 
 gated and fought. When we speak of the " Old 
 East Indiamen " we mean of course the ships which 
 used to carry the trade between India and Europe. 
 And inasmuch as this trade was, till well on into the 
 nineteenth century, the valuable and exclusive mono- 
 poly of the East India Company, carefully guarded 
 against any interlopers, our consideration is prac- 
 tically that of the Company's ships. After the 
 Company lost their monopoly to India, their ships 
 still possessed the monopoly of trading with China 
 until the year 1833. After that date the Company 
 sold the last of their fleet which had made them 
 famous as a great commercial and political concern. 
 In their place a number of new private firms sprang 
 up, who bought the old ships from the East India 
 Company, and even built new ones for the trade. 
 These were very fine craft and acted as links between 
 England and the East for a few years longer, reach- 
 ing their greatest success between the years 1850 and 
 1870. But the opening of the Suez Canal and the 
 enterprise of steamships sealed their fate, so that 
 
4 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 instead of the wealth which was obtained during 
 those few years by carrying cargoes of rich merchan- 
 dise between the East and the West, and transport- 
 ing army officers, troops and private passengers, 
 there was little or no money to be made by going 
 round the Cape. Thus the last of the Indiamen 
 sailing ships passed away became coal-hulks, were 
 broken up ; or, changing their name and nationality, 
 sailed under a Scandinavian flag. 
 
 The East India Company rose from being a 
 private venture of a few enterprising merchants to 
 become a gigantic corporation of immense political 
 power, with its own governors, its own cavalry, 
 artillery and infantry, its own navy, and yet with its 
 trade-monopoly and its unsurpassed " regular ser- 
 vice " of merchantmen. The latter were the largest, 
 the best built, and the most powerfully armed vessels 
 in the world, with the exception only of some war- 
 ships. They were, so to speak, the crack liners of 
 the day, but they were a great deal more besides. 
 Their officers were the finest navigators afloat, their 
 seamen were at times as able as any of the crews 
 in the Royal Navy, and in time of war the Govern- 
 ment showed how much it coveted them by impress- 
 ing them into its service, to the great chagrin and 
 inconvenience of the East India Company, as we 
 shall see later on in our story. 
 
 From being at first a small trading concern with a 
 handful of factors and an occasional factory planted 
 in the East in solitary places, the Company pro- 
 gressed till it had its own civil service with its train- 
 ing college in England for the cadets aspiring to 
 be sent out to the East. It is due to the Company 
 not only that India is now under the British flag, 
 

INTRODUCTION 5 
 
 but that the wealth of our country has been largely 
 increased and a new outlet was found for our manu- 
 factures. The factors who went out in the first 
 Indiamen sailing ships sowed the seed which to-day 
 we now reap. The commanders of these vessels 
 made their " plots " (charts) and obtained by bitter 
 experience the details which provided the first sail- 
 ing directions. They were at once explorers, traders, 
 fighters, surveyors. The conditions under which 
 they voyaged were hard enough, as we shall see : 
 and the loss of human life was a high price at which 
 all this material trade-success was obtained. Not- 
 withstanding all the quarrels, the jealousies, the 
 murders, the deceits, the misrule and corruption, the 
 bribery and extortion which stain the activities of 
 the East India Company, yet during its existence it 
 raised the condition of the natives from the lowest 
 disorder and degradation : and if the Company 
 found it not easy to separate its commercial from 
 its political aspirations, yet the British Government 
 in turn found it very convenient on occasions when 
 this corporation's funds could be squeezed, its men 
 impressed; or even its ships employed for guarding 
 the coasts of England or transporting troops out to 
 India. 
 
 It is difficult to realise all that the East India 
 Company stood for. It comprised under its head a 
 large shipping line with many of the essential attri- 
 butes of a ruling nation, and its merchant ships not 
 only opened up to our traders India, but Japan and 
 China as well. And bear in mind that the old East 
 Indiamen set forth on their voyages not with the 
 same light hearts that their modern successors, the 
 steamships of the P. & O. line, begin their journey. 
 
6 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Before the East India Company's ships got to their 
 destination, they had to sail right away round the 
 Cape of Good Hope and then across the Indian 
 Ocean, having no telegraphic communication with 
 the world, and with none of the comforts of a modern 
 liner no preserved foods, no iced drinks or any- 
 thing of that sort. Any moment they were liable 
 to be plunged into an engagement : if not with the 
 French or Dutch men-of-war, then with roving 
 privateers or well-armed pirate ships manned by 
 some of the most redoubtable rascals of the time, 
 who stopped at no slaughter or brutality. There 
 were the perils, too, of storms, and of other forms of 
 shipwreck, and the almost monotonous safety of the 
 modern liner was a thing that did not exist. Later 
 on we shall see in what difficulties some of these 
 ships became involved. It was because they were 
 ever expectant of a fight that they were run prac- 
 tically naval fashion. They were heavily armed 
 with guns, they had their special code of signals 
 for day and night, they carried their gunners, who 
 were well drilled and always prepared to fight : and 
 we shall see more than one instance where these 
 merchant ships were far too much for a French 
 admiral and his squadron. 
 
 These East Indiamen sailing ships were really 
 wonderful for what they did, the millions of miles 
 over which they sailed, the millions of pounds' worth 
 of goods which they carried out and home : and 
 this not merely for one generation, but for two and 
 a half centuries. It is really surprising that such P 
 unique monopoly should have been enjoyed for all 
 this time, and that other ships should have been 
 (with the exceptions we shall presently note) kept out 
 
INTRODUCTION 7 
 
 of this benefit. The result was that an East Indiaman 
 was spoken of with just as much respect as a man-of- 
 war. She was built regardless of cost and kept in 
 the best of conditions; and all the other merchant- 
 men in the seven seas could not rival her for strength, 
 beauty and equipment. It was a golden age, a 
 glorious age : an epoch in which British seamanhood, 
 British shipbuilding in wood, were capable of being 
 improved upon only by the clipper ships that fol- 
 lowed for a brief interval. They earned handsome 
 dividends for the Company, they were always full 
 of passengers, troops and valuable freight; and, 
 although they were not as fine-lined as the clipper 
 ships, yet they made some astounding passages. 
 They carried crews that in number and quality would 
 make the heart of a modern Scandinavian skipper 
 break with envy. The result was that they were 
 excellently handled and could carry on in a breeze 
 till the last minute, when sail could be taken in 
 smartly with the minimum of warning. 
 
 The country fully appreciated how invaluable was 
 this East India service, and certainly no merchant- 
 men were ever so regulated and controlled by Acts 
 of Parliament. To-day you never hear of any 
 merchant skipper buying or selling his command, 
 nor retiring after a very few voyages with a nice 
 little fortune for the rest of his life. But these things 
 occurred in the old East Indiamen, when com- 
 manders received even knighthoods and a good 
 income settled on them, for life, as a reward of their 
 gallantry. Those were indeed the palmy days of 
 the merchant service, and many an ill-paid mercan- 
 tile officer to-day, wearied of receiving owners' 
 complaints and no thanks, must regret that his lot 
 
8 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 was not to be serving with the East India 
 Company. 
 
 When we consider the two important centuries and 
 and a half, during which the East Indiamen ships 
 were making history and trade for our country, help- 
 ing in the most important manner to build up our 
 Indian Empire, fighting the Portuguese, the Dutch 
 and the French, privateers and pirates, and generally 
 opening up the countries of the East, it is to me 
 perfectly extraordinary that the history of these ships 
 has never yet been written. I have searched in vain 
 in our great national libraries in the British 
 Museum, the India Office, the Admiralty and else- 
 where but I have not been able to find one volume 
 dealing exclusively with these craft. In an age that 
 sees no end to the making of books there is therefore 
 need for a volume that should long since have been 
 written. Many of the story-books of our boyhood 
 begin with the hero leaving England in an East 
 Indiaman : but they say little or nothing as to how 
 she was rigged, how she was manned, and what 
 uniforms her officers wore. 
 
 I feel, then, that I may with confidence ask the 
 reader who loves ships for themselves, or is fasci- 
 nated by history, or is specially interested in the rise 
 of our Indian Empire, to follow me in the following 
 pages while the story of these old East Indiamen is 
 narrated. In a little while we shall have passed entirely 
 from the last of all surviving ocean-going sailing 
 ships, but during the whole of their period none have 
 left their mark so significantly on past and present 
 affairs as the old East Indiamen. I can guarantee 
 that while pursuing this story the reader will find 
 much that will interest and even surprise him : but 
 
INTRODUCTION 9 
 
 above all will be seen triumphant the true grit and 
 pluck which have ever been the attributes of our 
 national sailormen the determination to carry out, 
 in spite of all costs and hardships, the serious task 
 imposed on them of getting the ship safely to port 
 with all her valuable lives, and her rich cargoes, 
 regardless of weather, pirates, privateers and the 
 enemies of the nation whose flag they flew. And 
 this fine spirit will be found to be confined to no 
 special century nor to any particular ship : but rather 
 to pervade the whole of the East India Company's 
 merchant service. The days of such a monopoly 
 as this corporation's trade and shipping are much 
 more distant even than they seem in actual years : 
 but happily it is our proud boast, as year after year 
 demonstrates, that those qualities, which composed 
 the magnificent seamanhood of the crews of these 
 vessels, are no less existent and flourishing to-day in 
 the other ships under the British flag that venture 
 north, south, east and west. The only main differ- 
 ence is this : Yesterday the sailor had a hundred 
 chances, for every one opportunity which is afforded 
 to-day to the sons of the sea, of showing that the 
 grand, undying desire to do the right thing in the 
 time of crisis is one of the greatest assets of our 
 nation. 
 
CHAPTER II 
 
 THE MAGNETIC EAST 
 
 WITHIN human experience it is a safe maxim, that if 
 you keep on continuously thinking and longing for 
 a certain object you are almost sure, eventually, to 
 obtain that which you desire. 
 
 There is scarcely any better instance of this on 
 a large scale than the longing to find a route to 
 India by sea, and the attainment of this only after 
 long years and years. As a study of perseverance 
 it is remarkable : but the inspiration of the whole 
 project was to get at the world's great treasure-house, 
 to find the way thereto and then unlock its doors. 
 For centuries there had been trade routes between 
 Europe and India overland. But the establishment 
 of the Ottoman Empire in the fifteenth century 
 placed a barrier across these routes. This suggested 
 that there might possibly be there was most prob- 
 ably a route via the sea, and this would have the 
 advantage of an easier method of transportation. It 
 is very curious how throughout the ages a vague 
 tradition survives and lingers on from century to 
 century, finally to decide men's minds on some 
 momentous matter. It is not quite a literal inspira- 
 tion, for often enough these ancient traditions had a 
 modicum of truth therein contained. 
 
 10 
 
THE MAGNETIC EAST 11 
 
 In my last book, " Ships and Ways of Other 
 Days," I gave an instance of this which was remark- 
 able enough to bear repeating. A reproduction was 
 given of a fourteenth-century portolano, or chart, in 
 which the shape of Southern Africa was seen to be 
 extraordinarily accurate : and this, notwithstanding 
 that it was sketched one hundred and thirty-five 
 years before the Cape of Good Hope had been 
 doubled. Some might suppose this knowledge to 
 have been the result of second-sight, but my sugges- 
 tion is that it was the result of an ancient tradition 
 that the lower part of the African continent was 
 shaped as depicted. For there is a well-founded 
 belief that about the beginning of the sixth century 
 B.C. the Phoenicians were sent by Neco, an Egyptian 
 king, down the Red Sea; and that after circum- 
 navigating the African continent they entered the 
 Mediterranean from the westward. 
 
 The dim recollection of this voyage over a portion 
 of the Indian Ocean, coupled with other knowledge 
 derived from the Arabian seamen, doubtless left 
 little hesitation in the minds of the seafaring peoples 
 of the Mediterranean that the sea route to India 
 existed if indeed it could be found. The various 
 fruitless attempts, beginning with Vivaldi's voyage 
 from Genoa in 1281, are all evidence that this belief 
 never died. For years nothing more successful was 
 obtained than to get to Madeira or a little lower 
 down the west coast of Africa, yet almost every effort 
 was pushing on nearer the goal ; even though that 
 goal was still a very long way distant. The East 
 was exercising a magnetic influence on the minds of 
 men : India was bound to be discovered sooner or 
 later, if they did not weary of the attempt. 
 
12 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Then comes on to the scene the famous Prince 
 Henry the Navigator, who built the first observatory 
 of Portugal, established a naval, arsenal, gathered 
 together at his Sagres headquarters the greatest 
 pilots and navigators which could be collected, 
 founded a school of navigation and chart-making, 
 and then sent his trained, picked men forth to sail 
 the seas, explore the unknown south with the hope 
 ultimately of reaching the rich land of India. I have 
 discussed this matter with such detail in the volume 
 already alluded to that it will be enough if I here 
 remark briefly that though Prince Henry died in the 
 year 1460 without any of his ships or men attaining 
 India, yet less than forty years were to elapse ere 
 this was attained, and his was the influence which 
 really brought this about. We must never forget 
 that on the historical road to India through the long 
 ages from the earliest times down to the fifteenth 
 century the name of Prince Henry the Navigator 
 represents one of the most important milestones. 
 
 You know so well how that thereafter, in the year 
 1486, the King of Portugal sent forth two expedi- 
 tions with the desire to find an eastern route to India, 
 and that one of these proceeded through Egypt, then 
 down the Red Sea, across the Arabian Sea, and 
 finally after some harHships reached Calicut, in the 
 south-west of India. The other expedition consisted 
 of a little squadron under Bartholomew Diaz, and 
 although it 'did not get as far as India, yet it passed 
 the Cape of Torments without knowing it far out 
 to sea and even sighted Algoa Bay. The Cape of 
 Torments he had called that promontory on his way 
 back, remembering the bad weather which he here 
 found : but the Cape of Good Hope his master, 
 
ccoi, a 
 
 '. ' ii PH 
 
 
 sli 
 
THE MAGNETIC EAST 13 
 
 King John II., renamed it when Diaz reached home 
 in safety. And then, finally, the last of these efforts 
 was fraught with success when Vasco da Gama, in 
 the year 1497, not only doubled the Cape of Good 
 Hope, but discovered Mozambique, Melinda (a little 
 north of Mombasa), and thence with the help of an 
 Indian pilot crossed the ocean and reached Calicut 
 by sea in twenty-three days an absolutely unprece- 
 dented achievement for one who had sailed all the 
 way from the Tagus. 
 
 This was the beginning of an entirely new era in 
 the progress of the world, and till the crack of doom 
 it will remain a memorable voyage, not merely for 
 the fact that da Gama was able to succeed where so 
 many others had failed, but because it unlocked the 
 door of the East, first to the Portuguese, and subse- 
 quently to other nations of Europe. The twin arts 
 of seamanship and navigation had made this pos- 
 sible, and it was only because the Portuguese, most 
 especially Prince Henry, had believed " in ye sea " 
 that the key had been found. As Columbus, by 
 believing in the sea, was enabled in looking for 
 India to open up the Western world, so was da Gama 
 privileged to unlock the East. And since the sea 
 connotes the ship we arrive at the standpoint that 
 it is this long-suffering creature, fashioned by the 
 hand of man, which has done more for the civilisation 
 of the world than any other of those wonderful 
 creations which the human mind has evolved from 
 the things of the earth. 
 
 The first cargo which da Gama brought home was, 
 so to speak, merely a small sample of those goods 
 which were to be obtained by the ships that came 
 after for generation after generation till the present 
 
14 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 day. It showed how great and priceless were the 
 riches of the East spices and perfumes, pearls and 
 rubies, diamonds and cinnamon. The safe arrival 
 of these, when da Gama got back home, made a 
 profound impression. But it was no mere senti- 
 mental wonder, for the receipt of all these goods 
 repaid the cost of the entire expedition sixty-fold. 
 From this time forth the Portuguese were busily 
 engaged in extracting wealth as men get it out from 
 a gold mine. Their ships went backwards and for- 
 wards in their long voyages, sometimes narrowly 
 escaping the attentions of the Moslem pirates 
 anxious to relieve them of their valuable cargoes. 
 Some Portuguese settled in India, and gradually 
 there came into existence a fringe of Portuguese 
 nationality extending from the Malabar coast right 
 away to the Persian Gulf. Even as far as Japan 
 was the East explored, and the vast fortunes which 
 were brought back ever astonished the merchants of 
 Europe. The first Portuguese factory was estab- 
 lished at Calicut in the year 1500. For about a 
 hundred years they were able to benefit, unrivalled, 
 by their newly found treasure-house and to use their 
 best endeavours, unfettered, to empty it. 
 
 In 1503 they erected their first fortress and 
 strengthened their position. In their hands was the 
 monopoly : theirs were the great and invaluable 
 secrets of this amazing trade. And considering 
 everything the enterprise and training of Prince 
 Henry, the far-sighted prudence in believing in the 
 sea, the years and years of distressful voyages, the 
 final attainment of the treasure-land only after many 
 vicissitudes and the loss of ships and men we can- 
 not marvel that the Portuguese preserved these 
 
THE MAGNETIC EAST 15 
 
 secrets, and held on to their monopoly, to the annoy- 
 ance of the rest of civilised Europe. The fact was 
 that Portugal was then the sovereign of the seas : 
 she was far too strong afloat for any other country 
 to think of wresting from her by force what she had 
 obtained only by much study, skill and persever- 
 ance. What she had obtained she was going to hold. 
 Those who wanted these Eastern goods must come 
 to Lisbon, where the mart was held : and come they 
 did, but they went back home envious that Portugal 
 should enjoy this secret monopoly, and wondering all 
 the time how India could be reached by a new route. 
 
 Curiosity and envy combined have been the means 
 of the unravelling of many a secret. It was so now. 
 Let us not fail to realise how greatly these human 
 feelings influenced many of the voyages during the 
 next hundred years. We justly admire the great 
 daring of the Elizabethan seamen, but though the 
 spirit of adventure and the hatred of Spain had a 
 great deal to do with the cause of their setting forth 
 to cross the ocean, yet there was another reason : and 
 this explains much that is not otherwise quite clear. 
 It is always fair to assume that men do not act except 
 at the instigation of some clear motive. They do not 
 persuade merchants to expend the whole of their 
 small wealth in buying or building ships, victualling 
 them and providing all the necessary inventories, 
 without some rational cause. In the Elizabethan 
 times, when wealth was much rarer than it is to-day, 
 the prime motive of these expeditions was the pursuit 
 of greater wealth. 
 
 But as England was not yet as expert at sea as 
 the Portuguese, she could not hope to obtain the 
 treasures of distant lands. Before she was ready 
 
16 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 there was, however, still Spain : and the latter was 
 determined to do her best to obtain on her own what 
 Portugal was enjoying. In a word, then, many of the 
 sixteenth-century voyages which we have attributed, 
 rashly, solely to a hope for adventurous exploration 
 were in fact animated by the desire to find some new 
 route to India. To this inspiration must be attri- 
 buted many of those long sea journeys to the north, 
 the north-east and the north-west. Men did not 
 endeavour to find north-east or north-west passages 
 merely for fun, but in order to discover a road to 
 India. No one knew that it was impossible : if the 
 Portuguese had been able to go one way, why should 
 not they themselves go by another route ? Remem- 
 bering this, you must think of Spain sending 
 Magellan to the west; of England sending Davis to 
 the north-west ; and of Holland sending Barentsz to 
 the north-east to find a passage to the treasure-land 
 of India or China. 
 
 The Spaniards discovered a way to India through 
 the straits which are called after Magellan, and 
 henceforth did their utmost to keep the ships of 
 other countries out of their newly found waters, until 
 the increase of English sea-power and the daring of 
 our more experienced seamen showed that this 
 Spanish sovereignty on sea could not be maintained 
 by force. But still the English seamen had not yet 
 reached India. We must turn for a moment to the 
 Dutch, who were destined to become a great naval 
 power. In the year 1580 the Spanish and Portuguese 
 dominions had become united under the Spanish 
 crown, and the Dutch were excluded from trading 
 with Lisbon, their ships confiscated and their owners 
 thrown into prison. Now, one of these captains 
 
THE MAGNETIC EAST 17 
 
 while undergoing his imprisonment obtained from 
 some Portuguese sailors a good deal of information 
 concerning the Indian Seas, so that when he reached 
 the Netherlands again he told the most wonderful 
 accounts to his countrymen. The latter were so 
 impressed by what was related that they decided to 
 send an expedition to find the Indies themselves. 
 
 Presently, then, we shall see the Dutch not merely 
 casting longing eyes towards India, but actually 
 getting a footing therein, building up a very lucrative 
 trade and employing great, well-built craft : but 
 before we come to that stage we must note the 
 gradual and persistent way in which the countries 
 outside the Iberian Peninsula felt their way to this 
 land of spices and precious stones, and after groping 
 some time in the dark found that which they had 
 been searching for during generations. 
 
CHAPTER III 
 
 THE LURE OF NATIONS 
 
 WHEN once it was realised how wonderful was 
 Portugal's good fortune in the East, the nations of 
 Europe one and all desired to enjoy some of these 
 riches for themselves. 
 
 Even during the time of Henry VIII. one Master 
 Robert Thorne, a London merchant, who had lived 
 for a long time in Seville and had observed with 
 envy the enterprise of the Portuguese, declared to his 
 English sovereign a secret " which hitherto, as I 
 suppose, hath beene hid " viz. that " with a small 
 number of ships there may bee discovered divers 
 New lands and kingdomes ... to which places there 
 is left one way to discover, which is into the North. 
 . . . For out of Spaine they have discovered all the 
 Indies and Seas Occidentall, and out of Portingall 
 all the Indies and Seas Orientall." His idea, then, 
 was to seek a way to India via the north. The same 
 Robert Thorne, writing in the year 1527 to Dr Ley, 
 " Lord ambassadour for king Henry the eight," con- 
 cerning " the new trade of spicery " of the East, 
 pointed out the wealth of the Moluccas (Malay 
 Archipelago) abounding " with golde, Rubies, Dia- 
 mondes, Balasses, Granates, Jacincts, and other 
 stones and pearles, as all other lands, that are under 
 
 18 
 
THE LURE OF NATIONS 19 
 
 and neere the Equinoctiall "; for just as " our 
 mettalls be Lead, Tinne, and iron, so theirs be gold, 
 silver and copper." 
 
 Now Master Thorne was a very shrewd investor. 
 
 In a fleete of three shippes and a caravel," he says, 
 : ' that went from this citie armed by the mar chants of 
 it, which departed in Aprill last past, I and my 
 partener have one thousand foure hundred duckets 
 that we employed in the sayd fleete, principally for 
 that two English men, friends of mine, which are 
 somewhat learned in Cosmographie, should go in 
 the same shippes, to bring me certaine relation of 
 the situation of the countrey, and to be expert in the 
 navigation of those seas, and there to have informa- 
 tions of many other things, and advise that I desire 
 to know especially." His idea was that our seamen 
 should obtain some of the Portuguese " cardes " 
 (i.e. charts) " by which they saile," " learne how they 
 understand them," and thus, in plain language, crib 
 some of the Portuguese secrets. 
 
 Thorne shows that he was no mean student of 
 geography himself. Already he possessed " a little 
 Mappe or Carde of the world " and pointed out that 
 from Cape Verde " the coast goeth Southward to a 
 Cape called Capo de buona speransa " (the Portu- 
 guese name for the Cape of Good Hope). " And by 
 this Cape go the Portingals to their Spicerie. For 
 from this Cape toward the Orient, is the land of 
 Calicut." ' The coastes of the Sea throughout all 
 the world I have coloured with yellow, for that it 
 may appeare that all is within the line coloured 
 yellow is to be imagined to be maine land or islands : 
 and all without the line so coloured to bee Sea : 
 whereby it is easie and light to know it." Now 
 
20 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Thorne had obtained this " carde " somehow by 
 stealth : by rights he should not have possessed it, 
 for the Portuguese, as already mentioned, were most 
 anxious that their Indian secrets should not be 
 divulged. He therefore begs his friend not to show 
 anyone this chart else " it may be a cause of paine 
 to the maker : as well for that none may make these 
 cardes, but certaine appointed and allowed for 
 masters, as for that peradventure it would not sound 
 well to them, that a stranger should know or dis- 
 cover their secretes : and would appeare worst of all, 
 if they understand that I write touching the short way 
 to the spicerie by our Seas." 
 
 We see, then, the determined desire to obtain the 
 required information about a route to India obtained 
 from the study of the very charts which the Portu- 
 guese made after some of their voyages, and by 
 sending Englishmen out in their ships sufficiently 
 expert in cosmography to learn all that could be 
 known. It must not be forgotten, at the same time, 
 that there were also land-travellers who journeyed to 
 India and brought back alluring accounts of India. 
 Caesar Frederick, for instance, a Venetian merchant, 
 set forth in the year 1563 with some merchandise 
 bound for the East. From Venice he sailed in a 
 vessel as far as Cyprus : from there he took passage 
 in a smaller craft and landed in Syria, and then 
 journeying to Aleppo got in touch with some 
 Armenian and Moorish merchants whom he accom- 
 panied to Ormuz (on the Persian Gulf), where he 
 found that the Portuguese had already established 
 a factory and strengthened it, as the English East 
 India Company's servants were afterwards wont, 
 with a fort. From Ormuz he went on to Goa and 
 
THE LURE OF NATIONS 21 
 
 other places in India. Already, he pointed out, the 
 Portuguese had a fleet or " Armada " of warships to 
 guard their merchant craft in these parts from attack 
 by pirates. Proceeding thence to Cochin, at the 
 south-west of India, he found that the natives called 
 all Christians coming from the West Portuguese, 
 whether they were Italians, Frenchmen or whatever 
 else : so powerful a hold had the first settlers from 
 the Iberian Peninsula gained on the Indians. We 
 need not follow this traveller on his way to Sumatra, 
 to the Ganges and elsewhere, but it is enough to state 
 that the accounts which he gave to his fellow- 
 Europeans naturally whetted still more the appetites 
 of the merchant traders anxious to get in touch with 
 India by sea. He told them how rich the East was 
 in pepper and ginger, nutmegs and sandalwood, aloes, 
 pearls, rubies, sapphires, diamonds. It was a mag- 
 nificent opportunity for an honest merchant to find 
 wealth. " Now to finish that which I have begunne 
 to write, I say that those parts of the Indies are very 
 good, because that a man that hath little shall make a 
 very great deale thereof : alwayes they must governe 
 themselves that they be taken for honest men." 
 
 When Magellan set forth from Seville to find a 
 new route to India he had gone via the straits which 
 now bear his name, and then striking north-west 
 across the wide Pacific had arrived at the Philippine 
 Islands, where he was killed. But his ships pro- 
 ceeded thence to the Moluccas, and one of his little 
 squadron of five actually arrived back at Seville, 
 having thus encircled the globe. Englishmen, how- 
 ever, were so determined that there was a nearer 
 route than this that, in the year 1582, the Indian 
 frenzy which enthralled our countrymen culminated 
 
22 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 in the voyage of Edward Fenton that set forth bound 
 for Asia. This expedition consisted of four ships. 
 It was customary in those days to speak of the 
 Commodore or Admiral of the expedition as the 
 " Generall," thus indicating, by the way, that not 
 yet had the English navy got away from the influence 
 of the land army. The flagship was spoken of as the 
 " Admirall." These four ships, then, consisted, 
 firstly, of the Leicester, the " Admirall " of the 
 squadron. She was a vessel of 400 tons, her 
 " generall " being Captain Edward Fenton, with 
 William Hawkins (the younger) as ' ;< Lieutenant 
 General," or second in command of the expedition, 
 the master of the ship being Christopher Hall. The 
 second ship was the Edward Bonaventure, a well- 
 known sixteenth-century craft of 300 tons, which was 
 commanded by Captain Luke Ward, and the master 
 was Thomas Perrie. The third ship was the Francis, 
 a little craft of only 40 tons, whose captain was 
 John Drake and her master was William Markham. 
 The fourth was the Elizabeth, of 50 tons; captain, 
 Thomas Skevington, and master, Ralph Crane. 
 
 Before we proceed any further it may be as well 
 to explain a point that might otherwise cause con- 
 fusion. In the ships of that time the captain was in 
 supreme command, but he was not necessarily a sea- 
 man or navigator. He was the leader of the ship or 
 expedition, but he was not a specialist in the arts of 
 the sea. As we know from Monson, Elizabethan 
 captains " were gentlemen of worth and means, 
 maintaining there diet at their own charge." " The 
 Captaines charge," says the famous Elizabethan 
 Captain John Smith, the first president of Virginia, 
 "is to commaund all, and tell the Maister to what port 
 
THE LURE OF NATIONS 23 
 
 he will go, or to what height " (i.e. latitude). In a 
 fight he is " to giue direction for the managing there- 
 of, and the Maister is to see to the cunning [of] the 
 ship, and trimming the sailes." The master is also, 
 with his mate, " to direct the course, commaund all 
 the saylors, for steering, trimming, and sayling the 
 ship " : and the pilot is he who, " when they make 
 land, doth take the charge of the ship till he bring 
 her to harbour." And, finally, not to weary the reader 
 too much, there is just one other word which is often 
 used in these expeditions that we may explain. The 
 " cape-merchant " was the man who had shipped on 
 board to look after the cargo of merchandise carried 
 in the hold. 
 
 On the ist of April 1582 the Edward Bonaventure 
 started from Blackwall in the Thames, and on the 
 nineteenth of the same month arrived off Netley, in 
 Southampton Water, where the Leicester was found 
 waiting. On ist May the four weighed anchor, but 
 did not get clear of the land till the end of the 
 month, " partly of businesse, and partly of contrary 
 windes." The complement of these ships numbered 
 a couple of hundred, including the gentlemen adven- 
 turers with their servants, the factors (who were to 
 open up trade), and the chaplains. In selecting 
 crews, as many seamen as possible were obtained, 
 but by this time these were not at all numerous in 
 England : and even then great care had to be taken 
 to avoid shipping " any disordered or mutinous 
 person." 
 
 The instructions given to Captain Fenton are so 
 illustrative of these rules then so essential for the 
 good government of overseas expeditions that it 
 will not be out of place to notice them with some 
 
24 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 detail. As for the " Generall," " if it should please 
 God to take him away," a number of names were 
 " secretly set down to succeede in his place one after 
 the other." These names were inscribed on parch- 
 ment and then sealed up in balls of wax with the 
 Queen's signet. They were then placed in two 
 coffers, which were locked with three separate locks, 
 one key being kept in the custody of the captain of 
 the Edward Bonaventure, the second in the care of 
 the Leicester's captain, and the third in the keeping 
 of Master Maddox, the chaplain. If the general 
 were to die, these coffers were to be opened and the 
 party named therein to succeed him. 
 
 Fenton's instructions were to use all possible dili- 
 gence to leave Southampton with his ships before the 
 end of April, and then make for the Cape of Good 
 Hope and so to the Moluccas. After leaving the 
 English coast the general was to have special regard 
 " so to order your course, as that your ships and 
 vessels lose not one another, but keep companie 
 together." But lest by tempest or other cause the 
 squadron should get separated, the captains and 
 masters were to be advised previously of rendezvous, 
 " wherein you will stay certaine dayes." And every 
 ship which reached her rendezvous and then passed 
 on without knowing what had become of the other 
 ships, was to " leave upon every promontorie or cape 
 a token to stand in sight, with a writing lapped in 
 leade to declare the day of their passage." They 
 were not to take anything from the Queen's friends 
 or allies, or any Christians, without paying therefor : 
 an'd in all transactions they were to deal like good 
 and honest merchants, " ware for ware." 
 
 With a view to inaugurating a future trade they 
 
THE LURE OF NATIONS 25 
 
 were if possible to bring home one or two of the 
 natives, leaving behind some Englishmen as pledges, 
 and in order to learn the language of the country. 
 No person was to keep for his private use any 
 precious stone or metal : otherwise he was to lose 
 " all the recompense he is to have for his service in 
 this voyage by share or otherwise." A just account 
 was to be kept of the merchandise taken out from 
 England and what was brought home subsequently. 
 And there is a strict order given which shows how 
 slavishly the Portuguese example of secrecy was 
 being copied. ' You shall give straight order to 
 restraine, that none shall make any charts or descrip- 
 tions of the sayd voyage, but such as shall bee deputed 
 by you the Generall, which sayd charts and descrip- 
 tions, wee thinke meete that you the Generall shall 
 take into your hands at your returne to this our coast 
 of England, leaving with them no copie, and to 
 present them unto us at your returne : the like to be 
 done if they finde any charts or maps in those 
 countreys." 
 
 At the conclusion of the expedition the ships were 
 to make for the Thames, and no one was to land any 
 goods until the Lords of the Council had been in- 
 formed of the ships' arrival. As to the routine on 
 board, Fenton was instructed to set down in writing 
 the rules to be kept by the crew, so that in no case 
 could ignorance be pleaded as excuse for delin- 
 quency. " And to the end God may blesse this 
 voyage with happie and prosperous successe, you 
 shall have an especiall care to see that reverence and 
 respect bee had to the Ministers appointed to accom- 
 panie you in this voyage, as appertaineth to their 
 place and calling, and to see such good order as by 
 
26 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 them shall be set downe for reformation of life and 
 maners, duely obeyed and perfourmed, by causing 
 the transgressours and contemners of the same to be 
 severely punished, and the Ministers to remoove 
 sometime from one vessell to another." 
 
 But notwithstanding all these precautions this voy- 
 age was not the success which had been hoped for. 
 After reaching the west coast of Africa and then 
 stretching across to Brazil, where they watered ships, 
 did some caulking, " scraped off the wormes " from 
 the hulls, and learnt that the Spanish fleet were in 
 the neighbourhood of the Magellan Straits, they 
 determined to return to England. This they accord- 
 ingly did. Before leaving England they had been 
 instructed not to pass by these straits either going or 
 returning, " except upon great occasion incident " 
 with the consent of at least four of Fenton's assist- 
 ants. But a conference had decided that it were best 
 to make for Brazil. And then the news which they 
 received there of the Spanish fleet convinced, them 
 that it were futile to attempt to get to India that way. 
 
 But as the Italian whom we mentioned just now 
 got to India by the overland route, so an English- 
 man named Ralph Fitch, a London merchant, being 
 desirous to see the Orient, reached Goa in India via 
 Syria and Ormuz. He set sail from Gravesend on 
 i3th February 1582, left Falmouth on nth March, 
 and then never put in anywhere till the ship landed 
 him at Tripoli in Syria on the following 3Oth April. 
 After being absent from home nine years, Fitch came 
 back in an English ship to London in April 1591. 
 The reports which he brought were similar to the 
 Italian's verdict. India was rich in pepper, ginger, 
 cloves, nutmegs, sandalwood, camphor, amber, sap- 
 
THE LURE OF NATIONS 27 
 
 phires, rubies, diamonds, pearls, and so on. .There 
 was not the slightest doubt that it was the country to 
 trade with. But, as yet, no English ship had found 
 the way thither. 
 
 During the years 1585-1587 John Davis tried to 
 find a way thither by the North-West Passage. Davis 
 had a fine reputation as " a man very well grounded 
 in the principles of the Arte of Navigation," but none 
 the less his efforts were unavailing. In 1588 the 
 coming of the expected Armada turned the energies 
 of the English seamen into another channel. But 
 already, in the year 1586, Thomas Candish had set 
 out from Plymouth with the Desire, 120 tons, the 
 Content of 60 tons and the Hugh Gallant of 40 tons, 
 victualled for two years and well found at his own 
 expense. Journeying via Sierra Leone, Brazil and the 
 Magellan Straits, he reached the Pacifice and China, 
 and after touching at the Philippine Islands passed 
 through the Straits of Java. From Java he crossed 
 the ocean to the Cape of Good Hope, was able to 
 correct the errors in the Portuguese sea " carts," and 
 in September 1588 reached Plymouth once more, 
 having learnt from a Flemish craft bound from 
 Lisbon that the Spanish Armada had been defeated, 
 " to the singular rejoycing and comfort of us all." * 
 
 The value of this voyage round the world was, 
 from a navigator's point of view, of inestimable ad- 
 vantage. For the benefit of those English navigators 
 who were, a few years later, to begin the ceaseless 
 voyages backwards and forwards round the Cape of 
 
 * Drake of course had previously encircled the globe in a 
 voyage of twenty-six months, having set forth from Plymouth in 
 1577, though his was even more of a buccaneering expedition 
 than that of Candish. 
 
28 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Good Hope, between England and India, Candish 
 made the most elaborate notes and sailing directions, 
 giving the latitudes (or, as the Elizabethans called 
 them, " the heights ") of most of the places passed 
 or visited. Very elaborate soundings were taken and 
 recorded, giving the depth in fathoms and the nature 
 of the sea-bed, wherever they went round the world, 
 if the depth was not too great. In addition, he 
 gave the courses from place to place, the distances, 
 where to anchor, what dangers to avoid, providing 
 warning of any difficult straits or channels, the varia- 
 tion of the compass at different places, the direction 
 of the wind from certain dates to certain dates, and 
 so on. But this, valuable as it undoubtedly was in 
 many ways, did not exhaust the utility of the voyage. 
 From China, whither the ships of the East India 
 Company some years later were to trade, " I have 
 brought such intelligence," he wrote on his return to 
 the Lord Chamberlain, " as hath not bene heard of 
 in these parts. The stateliness and riches of which 
 countrey I feare to make report of, least J should not 
 be credited : for if I had not knowen sufficiently the 
 incomparable wealth of that countrey, I should have 
 bene as incredulous thereof, as others will be that 
 have not had the like experience." 
 
 And he showed in still further detail the fine 
 opportunity which existed in the East and awaited 
 only the coming of the English merchant. :< I sailed 
 along the Hands of the Malucos, where among some 
 of the heathen people I was well intreated, where 
 our countrey men may have trade as freely as the 
 Portugals if they will themselves." 
 
 It is not therefore surprising that in the following 
 year the English merchants began to stir themselves 
 
THE LURE OF NATIONS 29 
 
 afresh. The East was calling loudly : and with the 
 information brought back by Candish and some 
 other knowledge, gained in a totally different 
 manner, the time was now ripe for an expedition to 
 succeed. For in the year 1587 Drake had left Ply- 
 mouth, sailed across the Bay of Biscay, arrived at 
 Cadiz Roads, where he did considerable harm to 
 Spanish shipping, spoiled Philip's plans for invad- 
 ing England that year, and then set a course for the 
 Azores. It was not long before he sighted a big, tall 
 ship, which was none other than the great carack, 
 San Felipe, belonging to the King of Spain himself, 
 whose name in fact she bore. This vessel was now 
 homeward-bound from the East Indies and full of a 
 rich cargo. Drake made it his duty to capture her in 
 spite of her size, and very soon she was his and on 
 her way to Plymouth. 
 
 Now the most wonderful feature of this incident 
 was, historically, not the daring of Drake nor the 
 value of the ship and cargo. The latter combined 
 were found to be worth ,114,000 in Elizabethan 
 money, or in modern coinage about a million pounds 
 sterling. But the most valuable of all were the 
 ship's papers found aboard, which disclosed the 
 long-kept secrets of the East Indian trade. There- 
 fore, this fact, taken in conjunction with the arrival 
 of Candish the year following, and the wonderful 
 incentive to English sea-daring given by the victory 
 over the Spanish Armada the fleet of the very 
 nation whose ships had kept the English out of 
 India will prepare the reader for the memorial 
 which the English merchants made to Queen Eliza- 
 beth, setting forth the great benefits which would 
 arise through a direct trade with India. They there- 
 
30 
 
 fore prayed for a royal licence to send three ships 
 thither. But Elizabeth was a procrastinating, uncer- 
 tain woman. She had in that expedition of Drake 
 in 1587 first given her permission and then had sent 
 a messenger post haste all the way to Plymouth 
 countermanding these orders. Luckily for the 
 country, Drake had already got so far out to sea 
 that it was impossible to deliver the message : and it 
 was a good thing there was no such thing as wireless 
 telegraphy in Elizabeth's time. 
 
 So, in regard to these petitioning merchants, first 
 she would and then she wouldn't, and she kept the 
 matter hanging indecisively until a few months 
 before April 1591. By that time the necessary 
 capital had been raised and the final preparations 
 made, so that on the tenth of that month " three tall 
 ships," named respectively the Penelope (which was 
 the " Admirall "), the Marchant Royall (which was 
 the " Vice-Admirall ") and the Edward Bonaventure 
 (" Rear-Admirall ") were able to let loose their 
 canvas and sailed out of Plymouth Sound. 
 
CHAPTER IV 
 
 THE ROUTE TO THE EAST 
 
 I WANT in this chapter to call your attention to a very 
 gallant English captain named James Lancaster, 
 whose grit and endurance in the time of hard things, 
 whose self-effacing loyalty to duty, show that there 
 were giants afloat in those days in the ships which 
 were to voyage to the East. 
 
 The account of the first of these voyages I have 
 taken from Hakluyt, who in turn had obtained it by 
 word of mouth from a man named Edmund Barker, 
 of Ipswich. Hakluyt was known for his love of 
 associating with seamen and obtaining from them 
 first-hand accounts of their experiences afloat. And 
 inasmuch as Barker is described as Lancaster's 
 lieutenant on the voyage, and the account was wit- 
 nessed by James Lancaster's signature, we may rely 
 on the facts being true. Hakluyt was of course very 
 closely connected with the subject of our inquiry. 
 When the East India Company was started he was 
 appointed its first historiographer, a post for which 
 he was eminently fitted. He lectured on the subject 
 of voyaging to the Orient, he made the maps and 
 journals which came back in these ships useful to 
 subsequent navigators and of the greatest interest to 
 merchants and others. And when he died his work 
 
32 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 was in part carried on by Samuel Purchas of Pil- 
 grim es fame. The second of these voyages, in 
 which Lancaster again triumphs over what many 
 would call sheer bad luck, has been taken from a 
 letter which was sent to the East India Company by 
 one of its servants, and is preserved in the archives 
 of the India Office and will be dealt with in the 
 following chapter. But for the present we will con- 
 fine our attention to the voyage of those three ships 
 mentioned at the end of the last chapter, 
 
 After leaving Devonshire the Penelope, Marchant 
 Royall and Edward Bonaventure arrived at the 
 Canary Isles in a fortnight, having the advantage of 
 a fair north-east wind. Before reaching the Equator 
 they were able to capture a Portuguese caravel 
 bound from Lisbon for Brazil with a cargo 
 of Portuguese merchandise consisting of 60 tuns 
 of wine, 1200 jars of oil, about 100 jars of 
 olives and other produce. This came as a verit- 
 able good fortune to the English ships, for the 
 latter's crews had already begun to be afflicted with 
 bad health. " We had two men died before wee 
 passed the line, and divers sicke, which tooke their 
 sicknesse in those hote climates : for they be wonder- 
 ful unholesome from 8 degrees of Northerly latitude 
 unto the line, at that time of the yeere : for we had 
 nothing but Ternados, with such thunder, lightning, 
 and raine, that we could not keep our men drie 3 
 houres together, which was an occasion of the infec- 
 tion among them, and their eating of salt victuals, 
 with lacke of clothes to shift them." After crossing 
 the Equator they had for a long time an east-south- 
 east wind, which carried them to within a hundred 
 leagues of the coast of Brazil, and then getting a 
 
THE ROUTE TO THE EAST 33 
 
 northerly wind they were able to make for the Cape 
 of Good Hope, which they sighted on 28th July. 
 For three days they stood off and on with a contrary 
 wind, unable to weather it. They had had a long 
 voyage, and the health of the crew in those leaky, 
 stinking ships had become bad. They therefore 
 made for Table Bay, or, as it was then called, 
 Saldanha, where they anchored on ist August. 
 
 The men were able to go ashore and obtain exer- 
 cise after being cramped for so many weeks afloat, 
 and found the land inhabited by black savages, 
 " very brutish/' They obtained fresh food by shoot- 
 ing fowl, though " there was no fish but muskles and 
 other shel-fish, which we gathered on the rockes." 
 Later on a number of seals and penguins were killed 
 and taken on board, and eventually, thanks to negro 
 assistance, cattle and sheep were obtained by barter- 
 ing. But when the time came to start off for the rest 
 of the voyage it was very clear that the squadron, 
 owing to the loss by sickness, was deficient in able- 
 bodied men. It was therefore " thought good rather 
 to proceed with two ships wel manned, then with 
 three evill manned : for here wee had of sound and 
 whole men but 198." It was deemed best to send 
 home the Marchant Royall with fifty men, many of 
 whom were pretty well recovered from the devastat- 
 ing disease of scurvy. The extraordinary feature of 
 the voyage was that the sailors suffered from this 
 disease more than the soldiers. " Our souldiers 
 which have not bene used to the Sea, have best held 
 out, but our mariners dropt away, which (in my 
 judgement) proceedeth of their evill diet at home." 
 
 So the other two ships proceeded on their way 
 towards India : but not long after rounding the Cape 
 
34 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 of Good Hope they encountered " a mighty storme 
 and extreeme gusts of wind " off Cape Corrientes, 
 during which the Edward Bonaventure lost sight of 
 the Penelope. The latter, in fact, was never seen 
 again, and there is no doubt that she foundered with 
 all hands. The Edward, however, pluckily kept on, 
 though four days later " we had a terrible clap of 
 thunder, which slew foure of our men outright, their 
 necks being wrung in sonder without speaking any 
 word, and of 94 men there was not one untouched, 
 whereof some were stricken blind, others were 
 bruised in their legs and armes, and others in their 
 brests, so that they voided blood two days after, 
 others were drawn out at length as though they had 
 bene racked. But (God be thanked) they all re- 
 covered saving onely the foure which were slaine out 
 right." The same electric storm had wrecked the 
 mainmast " from the head to the decke " and " some 
 of the spikes that were ten inches into the timber 
 were melted with the extreme heate thereof." Truly 
 Lancaster's command was a very trying one. What 
 with a scurvy crew, an unhandy ship, now partially 
 disabled, and both hurricanes and electric storms, 
 there was all the trouble to break the spirit of many 
 a man. Still, he held 'determinedly on his way 
 whither he was bound. 
 
 But his troubles were now very nearly ended in 
 one big disaster. After having proceeded along the 
 south-east coast of Africa, and steering in a north- 
 easterly direction, the ship was wallowing along her 
 course over the sea when a dramatic incident 
 occurred. It was night, and while some were below 
 sleeping, one of the men on deck, peering through 
 the moonlight, saw ahead what he took for breakers. 
 
THE ROUTE TO THE EAST 35 
 
 He called the attention of his companions and in- 
 quired what it was, and they readily answered that 
 it was the sea breaking on the shoals. It was the 
 ; ' Hand of S. Laurence." " Whereupon in very good 
 time we cast about to avoyd the danger which we 
 were like to have incurred." But it had been a close 
 shave, and though Lancaster was to endure many 
 other grievous hardships before his days were ended, 
 yet but for the light of the kindly moon his ship, his 
 crew and his own life would almost certainly have 
 been lost that night. 
 
 But this was presently to be succeeded by the 
 luck of falling in with three or four Arab craft, which 
 were taken, their cargo of ducks and hens being very- 
 acceptable. They watered the ship at the Comoro 
 Islands; a Portuguese boy, whom they had taken 
 when the Arab craft were captured, being a useful 
 acquisition as interpreter. But the master of the 
 Edward Bonaventure, having gone ashore with thirty 
 of his men to obtain a still further amount of fresh 
 water, was treacherously taken and sixteen of his 
 company slain. It was just one further source of 
 discomfort for Lancaster now to have lost his ship's 
 master and more of his crew. So thence, " with 
 heavie hearts," the Edward sailed for Zanzibar, 
 where they learnt that the Portuguese had already 
 warned the natives of the character of Englishmen, 
 in making out that the latter were " cruell people and 
 men-eaters, and willed them if they loved safetie in 
 no case to come neere us. Which they did onely to 
 cut us off from all knowledge of the state and 
 traffique of the countrey." 
 
 The jealousy of the Portuguese was certainly very 
 great : they were annoyed, and only naturally, that 
 
86 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 another nation should presume to burst into the seas 
 which they had been the first of Europeans to open. 
 Off this coast, from Melinda to Mozambique, a 
 Portuguese admiral was cruising in a small " fri- 
 gate " that is to say, a big galley-type of craft pro- 
 pelled by sails and oars. And had this " frigate " 
 been strong enough she would certainly have assailed 
 Lancaster's ship, for she came into Zanzibar to 
 " view and to betray our boat if he could have taken 
 at any time advantage." 
 
 It was whilst riding at anchor here that another 
 electric storm sprung the Edward's foremast, which 
 had to be repaired " fished," as sailors call it -with 
 timber from the shore. And, to add still more to 
 Lancaster's bad luck, the ship's surgeon, whilst 
 ashore with the newly appointed master of the ship, 
 looking for oxen, got a sunstroke and died. But the 
 sojourn in that anchorage came to an end on I5th 
 February. The progress of this voyage had been 
 slow, but it had been sure. Relying on what charts 
 he possessed, and then, after rounding the Cape of 
 Good Hope, practically coasting up the African 
 shore until reaching Zanzibar, he had wisely re- 
 mained here some time. For this was the port 
 whence the dhows traded backwards and forwards 
 across the Indian Ocean and the East, and it must 
 be remembered that the Arabs were skilled navi- 
 gators and very fine seamen, who had been making 
 these ocean voyages for centuries, whilst English- 
 men were doing little more than coasting passages. 
 Zanzibar was clearly the place where Lancaster 
 could pick up a good deal of valuable knowledge 
 regarding the voyage to India, and, incidentally, he 
 took away from here a certain negro who had come 
 
THE ROUTE TO THE EAST 87 
 
 from the East Indies and was possessed of know- 
 ledge of the country. 
 
 From Goa to Zanzibar the Arabian ships were 
 wont to bring cargoes of pepper, and it was now 
 Lancaster's intention to cut straight across the Indian 
 Ocean and make Cape Comorin the southernmost 
 point of the Indian peninsula as his land-fall. He 
 then meant to hang about this promontory, because 
 it was to the traffic of the East what such places as 
 Ushant and Dungeness to-day are to the shipping of 
 the West. He knew that there was plenty of ship- 
 ping bound from Bengal, the Malay Straits, from 
 China and from Japan which would come round this 
 cape well laden with all sorts of Eastern riches. He 
 would therefore lie in wait off this headland and, 
 attacking a suitable craft, would relieve her of her 
 wealth. But the intention did not have the oppor- 
 tunity of being fulfilled as he had wished it. ;< In 
 our course," says Lancaster, " we were very much 
 deceived by the currents that set into the Gulfe of 
 the Red Sea along the coast of Melinde " that is 
 to say, from Zanzibar along the coast known to-day 
 as British East Africa and Somaliland. " And the 
 windes shortening upon us to the North-east an'd 
 Easterly, kept us that we could not get off, and so 
 with the putting in of the currents from the West- 
 ward, set us in further unto the Northward within 
 fourescore leagues of " Socotra, which was " farre 
 from our determined course and expectation." 
 
 Therefore, as they had been brought so far to 
 the northward of their course, Lancaster decided 
 that it were best to run into Socotra or some port in 
 the Red Sea for fresh supplies ; but, luckily for him, 
 the wind then came north-west, which was of course 
 
38 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 a fair wind from his present position to the south- 
 west coast of India. Being a wise leader he of course 
 now availed himself of this good fortune and sped 
 over the Indian Ocean towards Cape Comorin, when 
 the wind came southerly : but presently the wind 
 came again more westerly, and so in the month of 
 May 1592 the Cape was doubled, but without having 
 sighted it, and then a course was laid for the Nicobar 
 Islands in the Bay of Bengal. But though they ran 
 on for six days with a fair wind, and plenty of it, 
 " these Hands were missed through our masters 
 default for want of due observation of the South 
 starre." It would be easy enough to criticise the 
 lack of skill in the Elizabethan navigators, but it 
 is much fairer to wonder rather that they were able 
 to find their way as well as they did over strange 
 seas, considering that until comparatively recently it 
 was to them practically a new art. Excellent seamen 
 they certainly had been for centuries : but it was not 
 till long after Prince Henry the Navigator had 
 taught his own countrymen, that this new sea- 
 learning of navigation had reached England and 
 " pilots-major " instructed our seamen in the higher 
 branch of their profession. They were keen, they 
 were adventurous, and they knew no fear : but these 
 mariners were rude, unscientific men, who could not 
 always be relied upon to make observations accur- 
 ately. They did the best they could with their astro- 
 labes and cross-staffs, but they lacked the perfection 
 of the modern sextant. The most they could hope 
 for was to make a land-fall not too distant from 
 where they wanted to get, and then, having picked 
 up the land, keep it aboard as far as possible. Thus 
 they would approach their destined port, off which, 
 
THE ROUTE TO THE EAST 39 
 
 by means of parleying with one of the native craft, 
 they might persuade one of the crew to come aboard 
 and so pilot them in. 
 
 As the Edward Bonaventure had missed the 
 Nicobar Islands, it was decided to push on to the 
 southward, which would bring them into the neigh- 
 bourhood of Sumatra. There they lay two or three 
 days, hoping for a pilot from Sumatra, which was 
 only about six miles off. And subsequently, as the 
 winter was approaching, they made for the Islands 
 of Pulo Pinaou, which they reached in June, and 
 there remained till the end of August. Many of the 
 crew had again fallen sick, and though they put 
 them ashore at this place, twenty-six more of them 
 died. Nor were there many sources of supplies, but 
 only oysters, shell-fish and the fish " which we tooke 
 with our hookes." But there was plenty of timber, 
 and this came in very useful for repairing masts. 
 When the winter passed and again they put to sea, 
 the crew was now reduced to thirty-three men and 
 one boy, but not more than twenty-two were fit for 
 service, and of these not more than one-third were 
 seamen : so the Edward was scarcely efficient. 
 
 But those which remained must have been of a 
 resolute character, for in a little while they en- 
 countered a 6o-ton ship, which they attacked and 
 captured, and, shortly after, a second was also taken. 
 Needless to say, the cargoes of pepper were jdis- 
 charged into the Edward, and even the sick men 
 were soon reported as " being somewhat refreshed 
 and lustie." Lancaster had not by any means for- 
 gotten the fact that richly laden ships from China 
 and Japan would pass through the Malacca Straits, 
 and having arrived here he lay-to and waited. At 
 
40 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the end of five days a Portuguese sail was descried, 
 laden with rice, " and that night we tooke her being 
 of 250 tunnes." This was a big ship for those days, 
 and so Lancaster determined to keep her as well as 
 her cargo. He therefore put on board a prize crew 
 of seven, under the command of Edmund Barker. 
 The latter then came to anchor and hung out a 
 riding-light so that the Edward could see her 
 position. But the English ship was now so depleted 
 of men that there were hardly enough men on board 
 to handle her, and the prize had to send some of the 
 men back to help her to make up the leeway. It was 
 then decided to take out of the prize all that was 
 worth having, and afterward, with the exception of 
 the Portuguese pilot and four other men, she and 
 her crew were allowed to go. 
 
 But it was not long before the Edward fell in with 
 a much bigger ship, this time of 700 tons, which was 
 on her way from India. She had left Goa with a 
 most valuable cargo, and a smart engagement ended 
 in her main-yard being shot through, whereupon she 
 came to anchor and yielded, her people escaping 
 ashore in the boats. Lancaster's men found aboard 
 her some brass guns, three hundred butts of wine, 
 " as also all kind of Haberdasher wares, as hats, red 
 caps knit of Spanish wooll, worsted stockings knit, 
 shooes, velvets, taffataes, chamlets, and silkes, 
 abundance of suckets, rice, Venice glasses," playing- 
 cards and much else. But trouble was brewing in 
 the Edward, and a mutinous spirit was afoot. Lan- 
 caster's men refused to obey his orders and bring 
 the " excellent wines " into the Edward, so, after 
 taking out of her all that he fancied, he then let the 
 prize drift out to sea. 
 
THE ROUTE TO THE EAST 41 
 
 From there the Edward sailed to the Nicobar 
 Islands, and afterwards proceeded to Punta del 
 Galle (Point de Galle, Ceylon), where she anchored. 
 Lancaster's intention was again to lie in wait for 
 shipping. He knew that more than one fleet of 
 richly laden merchantmen would soon be due to 
 pass that way. First of all he was expecting a fleet 
 of seven or eight Bengal ships, and then two or three 
 more from Pegu (to the north-west of Siam); and 
 also there ought to be some Portuguese ships from 
 Siam. These, he had learned, would pass that way 
 in about a fortnight, bringing the produce of the 
 country to Cochin (in the south-west of India), where 
 the Portuguese caracks, or big merchantmen, would 
 receive the goods and carry them home to Lisbon. 
 It was a regular, yearly trade, the caracks being due 
 to leave Cochin in the middle of January. A fine 
 haul was certain, for these various fleets were bring- 
 ing all sorts of commodities that were well worth 
 having cloth, rice, rubies, diamonds, wines and so 
 on. 
 
 But Lancaster was again bound to bow to ill-luck. 
 First of all, he had brought up where the bottom was 
 foul, so he lost his anchor. He had on board two 
 spare anchors, but they were unstocked and in the 
 hold. This meant that a good deal of time was 
 wasted, and meanwhile the ship was drifting about 
 the whole night. In addition, to make matters worse, 
 Lancaster himself fell ill. The current was carrying 
 the ship to the southward, away from her required 
 position, so in the morning the foresail was hoisted 
 and preparations were being made to let loose the 
 other sails, when the men mutinied and said they 
 were determined they would remain there no longer 
 
42 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 but would take the ship to England direct. Lan- 
 caster, finding that persuasion was useless and that 
 he could do nothing with them, had no other alterna- 
 tive but to give way to their demands : so on 8th 
 December 1592 the Edward set sail for the Cape of 
 Good Hope. On the way Lancaster recovered his 
 health, and even amused himself fishing for bonitos. 
 By February they had crossed the Indian Ocean and 
 made the land by Algoa Bay, South Africa, where 
 they had to remain a month owing to contrary winds. 
 But in March they doubled the Cape of Good Hope 
 once more, and on 3rd April reached St Helena. 
 And here an extraordinary thing happened. When 
 Edmund Barker went ashore he found an English- 
 man named Segar, like himself of Suffolk. He had 
 been left here eighteen months before by the 
 Marchant Roy all, which you will remember had been 
 sent home from Table Bay on the way out. On the 
 way home he had fallen ill and would have died if 
 he had remained on board, so it had been decided to 
 put him ashore. When, however, the Ed-ward's men 
 saw him this time, he was " as fresh in colour and in 
 as good plight of body to our seeming as might be, 
 but crazed in minde and halfe out of his wits, as 
 afterward wee perceived : for whether he were put in 
 fright of us, not knowing at first what we were, 
 whether friends or foes, or of sudden joy when he 
 understood we were his olde consorts and countrey- 
 men, hee became idel-headed, and for eight dayes 
 space neither night nor day tooke any naturall rest, 
 and so at length died for lacke of sleepe." 
 
 On 1 2th April 1593 the Edward left St Helena, 
 and the mutinous spirit was not yet dead on board. 
 Lancaster's intention was to cross the Atlantic to 
 
THE ROUTE TO THE EAST 43 
 
 Pernambuco, Brazil, but the sailors were infuriated 
 and wished to go straight home. So, the next day, 
 whilst they were being told by the captain to finish 
 a foresail which they had in hand, some of them 
 asserted determinedly that, unless the ship were taken 
 straight home, they would do nothing : and to this 
 Lancaster was compelled to agree. But when they 
 were about eight degrees north of the Equator the 
 ship made little progress for six weeks owing to 
 calms and flukey winds. Meanwhile the men's 
 victuals were running short, and the mutinous spirit 
 reasserted itself strongly. They knew that the 
 officers of the ship had their own provisions locked 
 away in private chests this had been done as a 
 measure of precaution and the men now threatened 
 to break open these chests. Lancaster therefore 
 determined, on the advice of one of the ship's com- 
 pany, to make for the Island of Trinidad in the 
 West Indies, where he would be able to obtain 
 supplies. But, being ignorant of the currents of the 
 Gulf of Paria, he was carried out of his course and 
 eventually anchored off the Isle of Mona after a few 
 days more. 
 
 After refreshing the stores and stopping a big 
 leak, the Edward next put to sea bound for New- 
 foundland, but a heavy gale sent them back to Porto 
 Rico, the wind being so fierce that even the furled 
 sails of the ship were carried away, and the ship was 
 leaking badly, with six feet of water in the hold. 
 The victuals had run out, so that they were com- 
 pelled to eat hides. Small provisions were obtained 
 at Porto Rico, and then five of the crew deserted. 
 From there the ship went to Mona again, and whilst 
 a party of nineteen were on shore, including Lan- 
 
44 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 caster and Barker, to gather food, a gale of wind 
 sprang up, which made such a heavy sea that the 
 boat could not have taken them back to the Ed-ward. 
 It was therefore deemed wiser to wait till the next 
 day : but during the night, about midnight, the car- 
 penter cut the Edward's cable, so that she drifted 
 away to sea with only five men and a boy on board. 
 At the end of twenty-nine days a French ship, after- 
 wards found to be from Dieppe, was espied. In 
 answer to a fire made on shore she dowsed her top- 
 sails, approached the land, hoisted out her ensign 
 and came to anchor. Some of the Edwards crew, 
 including Barker and Lancaster, went aboard, but 
 the rest of the party to the number of seven could not 
 be found. Six more were taken on board another 
 Dieppe ship and so reached San Domingo, where 
 they traded with the people for hides. Here news 
 reached them of their companions left in Mona. It 
 was learnt that, of the seven men there left, two had 
 broken their necks while chasing fowls on the cliffs, 
 three were slain by Spaniards upon information 
 given by the men who went away in the Edward, but 
 the remaining two now joined Lancaster by a ship 
 from another port. 
 
 Eventually Lancaster and his companions took 
 passage aboard another Dieppe vessel, and arrived 
 at the latter port after a voyage of forty-two days. 
 They then crossed in a smaller craft to Rye, where 
 they landed on 24th May 1594. 
 
 What good, then, had this expedition done? In 
 spite of losing two out of the three ships, in spite of 
 the losses of many men and the whole of the rich 
 cargoes which had been obtained by capture, Lan- 
 caster and his companions had returned to England 
 
THE ROUTE TO THE EAST 45 
 
 with something worth having. How had English 
 trade with India been benefited? The answer is 
 simple. If nothing tangible had been obtained, this 
 expedition had been a great lesson. If it had 
 brought back no spices or diamonds, it had brought 
 much valuable information. Once again it showed 
 to the English merchants that there was a fortune 
 for all of them waiting in the Orient, and it showed 
 by bitter experience the mistakes that must be 
 avoided. The voyage had been begun at the wrong 
 season of the year; it would have to be better thought 
 out, and better provision would have to be taken 
 to guard against scurvy. The route to India was 
 now well understood, and it was no longer any Portu- 
 guese secret. England was just on the eve of sharing 
 with the Portuguese their fortunate discovery, which 
 eventually the latter were to lose utterly to the 
 former. 
 
CHAPTER V 
 
 THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 
 
 ALTHOUGH the expedition of those three tall ships 
 related in the previous chapter had been commer- 
 cially such a dismal failure, it had shown that James 
 Lancaster was the kind of man to whom there should 
 be entrusted the leadership, not only of a single ship, 
 but of an entire expedition. With the greatest diffi- 
 culty he had prevented his unruly crew from ex- 
 cesses, he had taken his ship most of the way round 
 the world, he had shown that he could put up a good 
 fight when needs be, and that he possessed a capacity 
 for finding out information a most valuable ability 
 in these the first days of Indian voyaging. He had 
 obtained information about winds, tides, currents, 
 places, peoples and trade. He had got to know 
 where the Portuguese ships were usually to be found, 
 where they started from and at what times of the 
 year. Clearly he was just the man for the big ex- 
 pedition which was shortly to start from England, 
 after but a few years' interval. 
 
 We mentioned on an earlier page the travels of 
 Ralph Fitch to India, though even prior to his setting 
 forth another Englishman named Thomas Stevens 
 had been to the East. This was in the year 1579, 
 and although he was the first of our countrymen to 
 
 46 
 
THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 47 
 
 reach India, yet he went out in a Portuguese ship, 
 and is therefore entirely indebted to the Portuguese 
 for having reached there at all. He had first pro- 
 ceeded from England to Italy, and then made his 
 way from that country to Portugal. Having arrived 
 in Lisbon, he went aboard and started eight days 
 later when the Portuguese East Indian fleet sailed 
 out. This was towards the beginning of April, which 
 was very late for their sailing, but important business 
 had detained them. Five ships proceeded together, 
 bound for Goa, with many mariners, soldiers, women 
 and children, the starting off being a solemn and 
 impressive occasion, accompanied by the blowing of 
 trumpets and the booming of artillery. Proceeding 
 on their way via the Canaries and Cape Verde, they 
 rounded the Cape of Good Hope, and afterwards 
 steered to the north-east. And then occurred just 
 that very incident which afterwards we have seen 
 was to happen to Lancaster. Not knowing the set 
 of the currents they got much too far to the north- 
 ward and found themselves close to Socotra (at the 
 entrance to the Gulf of Aden), whereas they 
 imagined they were near to India. But eventually, 
 having sailed many miles, and noticed birds in the 
 sky which they knew came from their desired 
 country, and then having seen floating branches of 
 palm-trees they realised that they were now not far 
 from their destination, and so on 24th October they 
 arrived at Goa. 
 
 Stevens had watched the Portuguese navigators 
 closely, and he had marvelled that these ships could 
 find their way over the trackless ocean. " You 
 know," he wrote to his father in England, telling him 
 all about the voyage, " you know that it is hard to 
 
48 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 saile from East to West, or contrary, because there 
 is no fixed point in all the skie, whereby they may 
 direct their course, wherefore I shall tell you what 
 helps God provide for these men. There is not a 
 f owle that appereth or signe in the aire, or in the sea, 
 which they have not written, which have made the 
 voyages heretofore. Wherefore, partly by their 
 owne experience, and pondering withall what space 
 the ship was able to make with such a winde, and 
 such direction, and partly by the experience of 
 others, whose books and navigations they have, they 
 gesse whereabouts they be, touching degrees of 
 longitude, for of latitude they be alwayes sure." 
 
 It was a real difficulty in those early Indian ships 
 to ascertain their longitude with any correctness. 
 Longitude was reckoned from the meridian of 
 St Michael, one of the Azores, on the grounds that 
 there was no variation of the compass there. It was 
 not, in fact, till the chronometer was invented in the 
 latter half of the eighteenth century that the difficulty 
 could be overcome. But these early East Indiamen 
 were by no means devoid of the instruments of navi- 
 gation, which included an astrolabe and cross-staff, 
 as already mentioned, a celestial globe, a terrestrial 
 globe, a calendar, a universal horologe for finding the 
 hour of the day in every latitude, a nocturne labe for 
 telling the hour of the night, one or more compasses, 
 a navigation chart corrected according to the last 
 voyagers who had used it : and, a little later on, 
 printed charts, as well as a general map. 
 
 But whilst Lancaster had been away from Eng- 
 land on his voyage to the East, Englishmen at sea 
 had fallen in with two of the Portuguese East Indian 
 caracks the Santa Cruz and the Madre de Dies 
 
THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 49 
 
 homeward-bound from Goa. The former had been 
 burnt and the latter taken into Dartmouth. When 
 she arrived in that port her immense size and wealth 
 made a great sensation. Even in Elizabethan money 
 the value was assessed at ,15,000. She was of no 
 less than 1600 tons and chock-full of Oriental trea- 
 sures, with about six or seven hundred souls aboard, 
 and armed with thirty-two brass guns. This wonder- 
 ful East Indiaman had, besides a number of precious 
 stones, a cargo consisting of spices, drugs, silks, 
 calicoes, quilts, carpets, canopies, pearls, ivory, 
 Chinese ware and hides. In fact when all this cargo 
 was taken out of her in Dartmouth and sent by sea to 
 London, it freighted ten coasters. As you can well 
 imagine, these west-country seamen were careful to 
 note all her details when once they had her in port. 
 She was completely surveyed, and found to be 165 
 feet long, and 46 feet 10 inches wide, and drew 26 
 feet, though when she left India she was drawing 
 3 1 feet. She had seven decks at the stern, the length 
 of the keel being 100 feet, the height of the mast 
 121 feet, and the length of the main-yard 106 feet. 
 
 The consternation caused by the sight of the won- 
 derful goods which eventually arrived at Leadenhall, 
 London, fired the imaginations of the London 
 merchants afresh. When, in September 1592, they 
 observed the vast quantities of pepper, nutmeg, 
 cloves, cinnamon, ginger, incense, damasks, golden 
 silks, and saw with their own eyes the very goods 
 which had come all the way from that Eastern land of 
 wealth, they marvelled greatly. One of the results 
 of all this was that the Levant Company, which had 
 been founded in 1581 to trade with Turkey and the 
 eastern ports of the Mediterranean, now became 
 
50 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 expanded into a more ambitious venture. Realising 
 full well the amazing riches of the East Indies, it 
 succeeded in obtaining from Elizabeth, in 1593, a 
 charter to trade now with India, but via the overlan^. 
 route. 
 
 In passing we may just say a word about the 
 English trading companies, some of which were of 
 great antiquity. The oldest was the Hamburg Com- 
 pany, which consisted of English merchants trading 
 to Calais, Holland, Zealand, the Low Countries, the 
 Baltic and the inhabitants of modern Prussia. It 
 had been first incorporated by Edward I. in 1296, 
 and enjoyed special privileges during successive 
 reigns. There was also the Russian Company, which 
 had been inaugurated at the end of the reign of 
 Edward VI. and the beginning of the reign of Philip 
 and Mary, though its charter was received from 
 Queen Elizabeth. This company had arisen from 
 the enterprise of a number of English merchants, 
 who had sent three ships to find, if possible, a north- 
 east passage into Asia and the East. So, also, the 
 Turkey or Levant Company, mentioned just now, 
 had been founded in 1581 with a view of trading to 
 the part of the world designated. All these various 
 companies were just so many societies of merchant- 
 adventurers who were bound together with one com- 
 mon interest by the royal charter. But the greatest 
 of all was to be the celebrated East India Company, 
 founded in 1600, about which we shall speak pres- 
 ently, though we may sufficiently anticipate matters 
 by asserting that it grew out of the Levant Company. 
 
 But England was by no means to have the whole 
 field to herself. If the Portuguese power was in the 
 descendant : if her precious secrets of this East 
 
THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 51 
 
 Indian trade had been ruthlessly revealed : if her 
 ships and her rich cargoes had been repeatedly taken 
 with the same determination that the Armada had 
 been defeated ; yet she was still active in India, and 
 the only European nation there established. How- 
 ever, not merely England, but Holland, too, had 
 been growing strong in maritime ability. The Dutch 
 people had always been by nature seamen for cen- 
 turies, and were able to rival any English ability in 
 the maritime arts. They were intrepid mariners, 
 they were excellent shipbuilders, and they were care- 
 ful students of all the sea-knowledge which had 
 come forth from Portugal. The influence of Prince 
 Henry's cartographical school had spread north- 
 wards from Sagres, and Flemish printers had done 
 much for map-making and thus made known this 
 knowledge of the world far and wide. This was the 
 final blow to the closely guarded Portuguese secrets 
 of India. The first atlas ever printed was published 
 by the Dutch at Leyden in the year 1585. The man 
 to whom belongs the credit of this was named 
 Wagenaer, and, according to the crude knowledge 
 and the still more elementary buoyage, the Narrow 
 Seas were well shown. The charts which Holland 
 published were also brought out in English, together 
 with little sketches of the various headlands, their 
 latitude, distances, and so on, including sailing direc- 
 tions for entering various harbours. So also at Ant- 
 werp and at Bruges excellent schools of cartography 
 grew up just as they had in Portugal and Spain : 
 and fired with the amazing stories of the East, Hol- 
 land was not merely anxious but well prepared for 
 asserting herself in India and coming back with a 
 series of rich cargoes for those prepared to venture. 
 
52 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Briefly, this was brought about as follows. We 
 mentioned on an earlier page that though the Portu- 
 guese jealously guarded the secret of the India route, 
 they were quite willing to dispose of these Indian 
 goods. One of these marts, to which merchants came 
 from other countries in orjier to purchase, was Lis- 
 bon. The second was Antwerp, which was con- 
 venient for the merchants of Northern Europe. 
 England, by the way, had done a good deal of 
 overseas trade between London and Antwerp for 
 centuries, so this additional East Indian trade made 
 the visits of our merchantmen even more important, 
 and thus many first realised what India meant com- 
 mercially, and could mean to them. And similarly 
 the people of the Low Countries became equally 
 impressed with what they learned. Thus very 
 naturally we see in 1593 the actual year in which 
 the Levant Company had obtained their extended 
 charter the first of a series of efforts made by 
 Dutchmen to reach Asia by a north-east passage. 
 And we must not omit to mention the very great 
 influence which Jan Huygen von Linschoten, a 
 native of Haarlem, had. The latter was a great 
 student of geography, at a time when all knowledge 
 of this kind was rare. For a while he was resident 
 in Lisbon, where he amassed a large amount of in- 
 valuable data concerning the East its harbours, 
 configuration, trade-winds, and so on. Lisbon, in 
 fact, was just the place in which all the East Indian 
 information naturally collected itself. Later on 
 Linschoten himself proceeded to India and dwelt at 
 Goa, in the train of the Portuguese Archbishop, but 
 in the year 1592 he returned to Europe, and the tales 
 which this traveller told concerning India astonished 
 
THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 58 
 
 the slow-reasoning minds of his fellow-countrymen. 
 In the year 1596 he published a most valuable book 
 dealing with the East, affording charts and maps and 
 no end of information which would be priceless to 
 any who might venture on a voyage to India. An 
 English translation appeared two years later, and it 
 certainly had a great influence on the founding of our 
 first East India Company. So important was the 
 book, indeed, that it was also translated and pub- 
 lished in French, in Latin and German. 
 
 As for Holland, the tangible result was that four 
 ships were fitted out, and under Cornelis Houtman 
 were sent in 1595 to the countries situate the other 
 side of the Cape of Good Hope, beyond the Indian 
 Ocean. Houtman's voyage had been a success, for 
 in the year 1597 he returned, bringing with him a 
 treaty made with the King of Bantam, which was the 
 means of opening up to Holland the Indian Archi- 
 pelago. This voyage convinced even the most scep- 
 tical, and a new era had begun, in which Holland was 
 to grow rich and powerful, a great commercial 
 country and of considerable strength at sea. The 
 handsome seventeenth-century buildings which you 
 still find standing in Holland to-day, and the bril- 
 liant seventeenth-century Dutch painters of portraits 
 and shipping scenes, are surviving evidences of a 
 wonderful prosperity derived for the most part from 
 the East India trade of that time. 
 
 It came about, then, that England was to find a 
 keen rival for the possessions of the East. There 
 was going to be a very hard struggle as to which 
 would win the race. One voyage succeeded another, 
 so that actually the Dutch were wanting in big craft 
 and had to come over to England to buy up some of 
 
54 THE OLD EAST TNDIAMEN 
 
 our shipping. But this was the final straw which 
 broke the back of Englishmen's patience. They had 
 looked on for some time with restraint at the pro- 
 gressive enterprise of the Dutch, and hacl become 
 very jealous of their commercial prosperity. It was 
 a condition to which the present Anglo-German 
 rivalry is very similar in kind. But it was clear some- 
 thing must be done now. The London merchants 
 who were interested in the Levant Company had 
 found that their charter of extension granted in 1593 
 for overland trading with India availed them but 
 little. Therefore, arising out of this company it 
 happened that a number of merchants met together 
 in London in the year 1599 and agreed to petition 
 Elizabeth for permission to send a number of well- 
 found ships to the East Indies, for which they 
 prayed a monopoly, subscribing the sum of .30,133 
 for an East Indian voyage. It was certainly high 
 time to be moving, for the Dutch were gaining all 
 the foreign freight they were nicknamed the 
 " waggoners of the sea " whilst English ships were 
 rotting away in port, or doing little more than mere 
 coasting. 
 
 This petition was not approved by the Privy 
 Council, but in the year 1609, an'd on the last day in 
 that year, it received the Queen's assent. More 
 capital had been obtained, the exclusive privilege of 
 this Indian trade had been granted for fifteen years, 
 so there was nothing to do but obtain the necessary 
 ships and men and hurry on the fitting-out. The 
 Company was managed by twenty-four directors, 
 under the governorship of Alderman James Smith, who 
 was subsequently knighted, but altogether there were 
 two hundred and eighteen of these merchants, alder- 
 
THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 55 
 
 men, knights and esquires, who were made up by the 
 title of " The Governors and Company of the Mer- 
 chants trading unto the East Indies." The coun- 
 tries prescribed by this charter showed a rather 
 extended area, embracing all ports, islands and 
 places in Asia, Africa, America, between the Cape 
 of Good Hope and the Straits of Magellan. The 
 Company were promised that neither the Queen nor 
 her heirs would grant trading-licences within these 
 limits to any person without the consent of the Com- 
 pany : and the Company was furthermore granted 
 the privilege of making the first four voyages with- 
 out export duty, and the permission was further 
 granted to export annually the sum of ,30,000 in 
 bullion or coin. 
 
 This " privilege for fifteen yeeres " " to certaine 
 Adventurers for the discoverie of the Trade for the 
 East-Indies " was to be a spirited reply to the action 
 of the Dutch, and marks the beginning of that series 
 of English East India companies which were in 
 effect the means of acquiring India for the British 
 crown after the Indian Mutiny in the nineteenth 
 century. From now onwards the East Indiamen 
 ships have a standing and importance which were 
 not previously possessed, and we shall find this cul- 
 minating in the amazingly dignified manner of the 
 Indian merchantmen in the early part of the nine- 
 teenth century. 
 
 Among those who had agreed together for this 
 expedition " at their owne adventures, costs and 
 charges as well for the honour of this Our Realme 
 of England, as for the increase of Our Navigation, 
 and advancement of trade," was the Earl of Cumber- 
 land. He was one of those Elizabethan gentlemen 
 
56 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 who were wont to fit out a small squadron of ships 
 for roving the seas and attacking the well-laden ships 
 of the Spanish and Portuguese. It was a fine, ad- 
 venturous game and there was a good chance of 
 coming home with a fortune. Of those ships which 
 the noble earl owned for this purpose one was a craft 
 named the Red Dragon, and as she was built for 
 fighting and ocean cruising she was just the ship for 
 the first voyage of the East India Company, being 
 of 600 tons. She was therefore purchased from her 
 owner by this Company for the sum of ^3700. Her 
 name at one time had been the Mare Scourge (per- 
 haps to suggest the terror of the sea which was thus 
 exhibited), but at any rate in the year 1586 she was 
 known as the Red Dragon. 
 
 Under their charter the Company were allowed to 
 send " sixe good ships and sixe good pynnaces " and 
 " five hundred Mariners, English-men, to guide and 
 sayle." But not more than four ships were sent 
 actually, for it was a costly venture. These London 
 merchants had "joyned together and made a stocke 
 of seventie two thousand pounds, to bee employed 
 in ships and merchandizes " ; but the purchase of 
 four ships, the expense of fitting them out, furnish- 
 ing them with men, victuals and munitions for a 
 period of twenty months had eaten up the sum of 
 ; 45,000. This left ,27,000, which amount was 
 taken out in the ships, partly in merchandise (with 
 which to trade in Asia) and partly in Spanish money, 
 with which the natives would be familiar. Advance 
 wages were paid to the crew before setting forth. 
 
 The " Generall of the Fleet " was that same 
 James Lancaster whom we considered just now, and 
 his flagship was to be the Red Dragon. There was 
 
57 
 
 no better leader for the job, and the reader will 
 shortly see how well he conducted himself in condi- 
 tions that were not less trying than in his previous 
 voyage to the East. To him Elizabeth entrusted 
 letters of commendation addressed to " divers 
 Princes of India," the vice-admiral being John 
 Middleton; and the celebrated John Davis, of Arctic 
 fame, was to go as pilot-major, or navigating expert 
 another excellent man for the undertaking. After 
 a busy winter the four ships were ready and fitted 
 out, so that on i3th February 1601 they were able 
 to leave Woolwich, their crews amounting to 480. 
 In addition to the Red Dragon there were the 
 Hector, of 300 tons and 108 men; the Ascension, 
 260 tons and 82 men; the Susan (which had been 
 bought from a London alderman for ^1600), 240 
 tons and 88 men; and in addition they took a 
 victualling ship called variously the Guift or Guest. 
 The latter was a ship of 130 tons, but had cost only 
 ,300. 
 
 In their holds these ships carried such English 
 products as were likely to be appreciated in the East. 
 Such commodities were taken as iron, lead, tin, 
 cloth; while the presents to be given to the Indian 
 princes comprised a girdle, a case of pistols, plumes, 
 looking-glasses, platters, spoons, glass toys, spec- 
 tacles, drinking-glasses and a plain silver ewer. But 
 the progress of this squadron was distinctly slow. 
 From the Thames they had 'dropped down to the 
 mouth and anchored in the Downs. Here they 
 waited so long for a fair wind that already it was 
 Easter Day before they reached Dartmouth, where 
 they " spent five or sixe dayes in taking in their 
 bread and certaine other provisions," as one of the 
 
58 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 letters received by the East India Company has it. 
 Leaving Dartmouth they " hoysed their anchors " 
 and sped across the Bay of Biscay, and continued to 
 the south. Off the coast of Guinea they fell in with 
 a Portuguese vessel, which they captured, and from 
 her they took much wine, oil and meal for the good 
 of the squadron. 
 
 During the month of June they crossed the 
 Equator, and in the following month discharged the 
 Guest victualler that is to say, they took out of her 
 the masts, sails and yards and whatever else was 
 worth keeping, and then broke down her " higher 
 buildings for firewood, and so left her floting in the 
 sea." And now scurvy attacked many of the squad- 
 ron's crew, so that there were hardly men enough to 
 handle the sails. Even the " merchants tooke their 
 turnes at the Helme : and went into the top to take 
 in the top-sayles, as the common Mariners did." 
 However, on the gth of September 1601 they arrived 
 at Saldanha (Table Bay), where they anchored and 
 " hoysed out their boats." (There were of course no 
 such things as boat davits in those days, the boats 
 being lifted out from the waist of the ship by blocks 
 and ropes.) But so weak were the crews of three of 
 the ships that Lancaster's crew had to go aboard the 
 other craft and do the work of getting these boats 
 into the sea. 
 
 How was it, then, that the flagship's crew had kept 
 so free from scurvy and were in better health than 
 the other men? The answer is that Lancaster had 
 learnt a lesson from the terrible death-roll which this 
 disease had caused in his previous voyage already 
 noted. " The reason," runs the document, " why 
 the Generals men stood better in health then the men 
 
THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 59 
 
 of other Ships was this : he brought to sea with him 
 certaine Bottles of the Juice of Limons, which hee 
 gave to each one, as long as it would last, three 
 spoonfuls every morning fasting : not suffering them 
 to eate any thing after it till noone. This Juice 
 worketH much better, if the partie keepe a short 
 Dyet, and wholly refrains salt meate, which salt 
 meate, and long being at the sea is the only cause of 
 the breeding of this Disease. By this meanes the 
 Generall cured many of his men, and preserved the 
 rest." Considering this practical proof of the value 
 of lime juice as an anti-scorbutic, it is surprising that 
 it was not till many years later lime juice was, as it 
 is to-day, always carried in English ships and given 
 out to the men, especially in wind-jammers. 
 
 After allowing the men shore leave and laying in 
 very necessary provisions, the squadron got under 
 way and left again on 2gth October, doubling the 
 Cape of Good Hope on the ist of November, 
 " having the wind West North-west a great gale." 
 Madagascar was reached on I7th December, and they 
 remained there until 6th March. Actually they did 
 not even sight India, but held on across the Indian 
 Ocean until they reached those Nicobar Islands 
 visited in the previous voyage. A short stay was 
 made and then they pushed on to the southward till 
 they came to Acheen, which is at the north-west 
 extremity of Sumatra, arriving there on the 5th of 
 June 1602. Here Lancaster was entertained hospit- 
 ably by some of the Dutch factors who had already 
 established themselves, and also obtained a con- 
 cession from the King of Acheen granting freedom 
 of trade and immunity from paying customs. Thus 
 a beginning was made, if not actually with India, 
 
60 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 at any rate with a part of the East Indies. Trade 
 between England and the Orient was established, 
 only to be developed in the years that were to follow. 
 
 In order to proceed with their trade, Lancaster put 
 ashore two of the factors who had come out with 
 him from England, these employing their time now in 
 getting together a cargo of pepper against the date 
 of Lancaster's return. Meanwhile the squadron 
 sailed from Acheen on nth September 1602, and 
 then engaged in that favourite occupation of roving 
 about till some well-filled merchantman fell into his 
 hands, relieving her then of her valuable cargo. 
 Strictly speaking, as the reader is aware, this ex- 
 pedition to the East Indies had been fitted out for 
 the purpose of opening up trade. But no Eliza- 
 bethan sailor could content himself with such lawful 
 limits. Privateering was in his blood : he was always 
 spoiling for a fight at sea, especially against any 
 Spanish or Portuguese ship. It was a much quicker 
 way of winning wealth and, incidentally, of paying 
 back old scores to the people who had tried to keep 
 Englishmen out of the strange seas of the world. 
 And Lancaster was a sufficiently good strategist to 
 know that if he selected some pivot of a busy trade- 
 route, such as some narrow straits, all that he had 
 to do was to hang about there long enough and it 
 was only a question of time as to whether a big haul 
 would be made. He could rely implicitly on his 
 own men and their gunnery, even against superior 
 strength. It only wanted the opportunity, and that, 
 again, demanded merely a little patience. 
 
 So whilst his factors were busy at Acheen buying a 
 cargo, he betook himself to the Straits of Malacca, 
 the gateway for the shipping which voyaged between 
 
THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 61 
 
 the Pacific and the Indian Ocean; and before long 
 he had descried a fine Portuguese craft of 900 tons 
 called the St Thome,, It was a little unfortunate 
 that the day was nearly spent, as that meant that the 
 enemy might possibly escape under cover of dark- 
 ness. " And being toward night," wrote one who 
 was there at the time, " a present direction was given 
 that we should all spread our selves a mile and a 
 halfe one from another, that she might not passe 
 us in the night." So the four English ships did as 
 the admiral wished them. The Hector shot two or 
 three " peeces of ordnance," and this warned the 
 other three ships, who now closed in and surrounded 
 the Portuguese carack on all sides. Then the Red 
 Dragon began to fire at her from the bow guns, with 
 the satisfactory result that the carack's main-yard 
 came tumbling down. 
 
 That was deemed enough for the present : it 
 would be better to wait till the night had passed, 
 thought Lancaster, for he feared " least some un- 
 fortunate shot might light betweene wind and water, 
 and so sinke her," which would mean that her valu- 
 able cargo would be for ever lost. He therefore 
 stayed his hand for a little while : but next morning 
 at daybreak he again attacked and this time took the 
 prize. Only four of Lancaster's men were placed on 
 board, " for feare of rifling and pillaging the good 
 things that were within her . . . and their charge was, 
 if any thing should be missing, to answer the same 
 out of their wages and shares." For he knew full 
 well that when once a band of these rough seamen 
 were aboard they would stop at nothing, and no 
 threats could prevent them from helping themselves 
 to the rare cargo in the holds. 
 
62 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 So full was this St Thome of Eastern goods that 
 it took six days to unload her of her 950 packs of 
 calicoes, etc. And then, as a storm came up, she 
 had to be left behind, so Lancaster returned to 
 Acheen, and took in his cargo of pepper, cinnamon 
 and spices, together with a letter and presents from 
 the King of Acheen to Elizabeth. He then set sail 
 for Bantam, in the Island of Java, on the Qth of 
 November, and soon after sent home to England the 
 Ascension and the Susan, which had completed their 
 cargoes. In the meantime Lancaster continued his 
 cruise with the Dragon and Hector, and arrived at 
 Bantam, " in the island of Java major," which he 
 reached on the i6th of December. Here, as was the 
 routine of the venture, he put his merchants ashore 
 with their goods and began trade with the natives. 
 And although the English reckoned the Javanese 
 " among the greatest pickers and theeves of the 
 world," yet our merchants were able to do some very 
 good business; and so again the ships were laden 
 with cargoes of pepper, and a regular factory was 
 here established for further trade between England 
 and the East. Lancaster had as fine an ability for 
 trading enterprise as he had for capturing a Portu- 
 guese ship, and he obtained a 4O-ton pinnace laden 
 with merchandise, which was sent to the Moluccas 
 to trade and establish a factory there, in charge of 
 Master William Starkey. When the next English 
 ships should come out they would thus find immedi- 
 ate opportunity for getting rid of their lead, iron, tin, 
 cloth, and another cargo waiting to be taken on 
 board. 
 
 Such, then, was the completion of the business in 
 the Orient. The first voyage under the East India 
 
THE FIRST EAST INDIA COMPANY 63 
 
 Company had done its work in the East Indies. It 
 had got there in safety, it had established factories, 
 it had disposed of its freights and obtained very 
 valuable goods to take home. It had certainly been 
 fortunate, the only real calamity being the sickness 
 and death of Captain John Middleton of the Hector. 
 It was a long period since they had set out from the 
 Thames, and the time had now arrived when they 
 must weigh their anchors and start back to England : 
 so early in the new year they took on board stores 
 and made their final preparations for the long voy- 
 age back over lonely seas. 
 
CHAPTER VI 
 
 CAPTAIN LANCASTER DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF 
 
 ON the 2oth of February the two ships were ready 
 for sea. " We went all aboord our ships, shot off our 
 ordnance, and set sayle to the sea toward England, 
 with thankes to God, and glad hearts, for his bless- 
 ings towards us." On the i3th of March they crossed 
 the Tropic of Capricorn, steering south-west " with 
 a stiff gale of wind at south-east," and this was 
 sending them over the Indian Ocean towards the 
 African coast in fine style. But " the eight and 
 twentieth day we had a very great and a furious 
 storme, so that we were forced to take in all our 
 sayles. This storme continued a day and a night, 
 with an exceeding great and raging sea, so that in 
 the reason of man no shippe was able to live in 
 them : but God (in his mercie) ceased the violence 
 thereof, and gave us time to breath : and to repaire 
 all the distresses and harmes we had received, but 
 our ships were so shaken, that they were leakie all 
 the voyage after." 
 
 This was, in fact, to be a return full of excitement 
 and those serious incidents which bring out all the 
 seamanship and resource of the real sons of the sea. 
 If it be true that a man's real character is exhibited 
 only in big crises, then we see Lancaster standing 
 
 64 
 
CAPT. LANCASTER DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF 65 
 
 out magnificently as a cool, resourceful, self- 
 sacrificing leader of men, for whom we cannot help 
 having the highest admiration. These Elizabethans 
 were very far from perfect. They were guilty of 
 some abominable and atrocious acts of sacrilege on 
 occasions : their hatred of the Portuguese and 
 Spaniards knew few bounds. They imagined that 
 might on the sea was right, and honesty was deemed 
 not always the best policy. But among their virtues 
 they were the very opposite of cowards. They knew 
 how to bear all kinds of pain with a courage and 
 resignation that are to be extolled. And if things 
 went against them they knew how to die as bravely 
 as they had fought and striven. There was no panic, 
 no kicking against the inevitable : they did their best, 
 and according to their own rough morality left the 
 rest to God. 
 
 Another " very sore storme " overcame them on 
 the 3rd of May, " and the seas did so beate upon the 
 ships quarter, that it shooke all the iron worke of her 
 rother [i.e. rudder] : and the next day in the morn- 
 ing, our rother brake cleane from the sterne of our 
 shippe [i.e. the Red Dragon], and presently sunke 
 into the sea." Here was a terrible predicament, for 
 of all the casualties which can befall a ship at sea 
 not one is more awkward than this. And to-day only 
 the steamship with more than one propeller can con- 
 tinue on her way without worrying much about such 
 an occurrence. If, however, the vessel is a sailing 
 ship, or has only one propeller, the only recourse is 
 to tow a spar or sea-anchor (cone foremost) with a 
 rope from each quarter. Then, if an equal strain is 
 kept on both ropes, the spar will be thus in line with 
 the ship's keel, but as soon as one rope is slacked up 
 
66 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 and another tightened, the vessel's quarter will be 
 pulled to one side and her head pay off to the 
 opposite. 
 
 Let us now see what they attempted in the Dragon. 
 You will of course understand that the rudder was 
 attached to the stern-post by means of irons on 
 either side of the former, these working on their 
 respective pins attached to the stern-post. Conse- 
 quently, if these irons carried away, either through 
 rust or the violence of the waves, there was nothing 
 to hold the rudder in place and the ship was not 
 under command. This is exactly what had happened 
 in the present instance, and the means of steering 
 was vanished. Naturally, therefore, the Dragon 
 " drave up and downe in the sea like a wracke," but 
 all the while the Hector stood by, though unable to 
 do anything. At length the commander of the 
 Dragon decided to do exactly what the master of a 
 modern sailing vessel would set about. Her mizen- 
 mast was unstepped, and they then " put it forth at 
 the sterne port to prove if wee could steere our 
 shippe into some place where we might make another 
 rother to hang it, to serve our turnes home." The 
 spar was placed over the side and lashed to the 
 stern, but it was found to put such a heavy strain on 
 the latter that the mast had to be brought on board 
 again. 
 
 Lancaster then ordered the ship's carpenter to 
 make the mast into a rudder, for in those days the 
 shape of the latter was very long and narrow : but 
 when they wanted to fix it in position it was noticed 
 that the rudder irons " wherewith to fasten the 
 rother " had also gone. However they were not to 
 be dismayed by this very inconvenient discovery, 
 
CAPT. LANCASTER DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF 67 
 
 and were determined to do what they could. One of 
 the crew accordingly went overboard to make an 
 examination, and found that two of the rudder irons 
 were still remaining and that there was one other 
 broken. This was a slice of luck, so, when the 
 weather eased down a little later, the new rudder 
 was able to be fixed into position and once more the 
 Dragon got on to her course. However, this good 
 fortune was but short-lived, and after three or four 
 hours "the sea tooke it off againe, and wee had much 
 adoe to save it. Wee lost another of our irons, so 
 that now we had but two to hang it by." 
 
 Matters began to look pretty desperate by now, 
 the men wanted to abandon the ship and be picked 
 up by the Hector, and the position of Lancaster was 
 no easy one. On the one hand, he knew that they 
 could not continue like this, making no headway and 
 with provisions running out and a dissatisfied crew 
 against him. On the other hand, he was responsible 
 to the East India Company for the safety of the ship 
 and all that valuable cargo that was in her hold. It 
 was sheer hard luck that for the second time in his 
 life he should be returning from the Orient well 
 laden with riches, only to be brought up short by an 
 unexpected event that boded ill. Still, he was not 
 the type of man to give way in such a critical time, 
 and he for his part was going to stand by his ship, 
 whatever else might happen. He appreciated quite 
 fully the seriousness of the case, and yet for all that 
 he was prepared to go through with it. There must 
 be no sort of flinching. 
 
 He went below into the privacy of his cabin, and 
 unknown to the crew sat down and wrote the follow- 
 ing letter, having resolved to give it to the captain 
 
68 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 of the Hector, sending her home at once, and on her 
 arriving back to have this letter handed over to the 
 directors of the Company. This epistle read thus : 
 
 " RIGHT WORSHIPFULL, What hath passed in 
 this voyage, and what trades I have settled 
 for this companie, and what other events have 
 befallen us, you shall understand by the 
 bearers hereof, to whom (as occasion hath 
 fallen) I must referre you. I will strive with all 
 diligence to save my ship, and her goods, as you 
 may perceive by the course I take in venturing mine 
 own life, and those that are with mee. I cannot tell 
 where you should looke for mee, if you send out any 
 pinnace to seeke mee : because I live at the devotion 
 of the wind and seas. And thus fare you well, desir- 
 ing God to send us a merrie meeting in this world, 
 if it be his good will and pleasure. 
 
 ' The passage to the East India lieth in 62^ 
 degrees, by the North West on the America side. 
 Your very loving friend, 
 
 " JAMES LANCASTER." 
 
 Such was the brief, matter-of-fact, intensely prac- 
 tical letter which he indited the very letter which 
 we should have expected from a leader of this type. 
 He succeeded presently in getting it put aboard the 
 Hector, with the order to her captain to proceed. 
 Night came on and when the morning broke Lan- 
 
 o o 
 
 caster little expected to find his " chummy ship " 
 still by his side. But he had forgotten that the 
 Hector's commander was a man like himself, and 
 being a real good fellow he declined to leave a 
 friend in distress, even though it was disobeying the 
 
CAPT. LANCASTER DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF 69 
 
 orders of his admiral. So with excellent seamanship 
 the Hector was kept at a reasonable distance from 
 the Dragon, determined to stand by. Meanwhile the 
 Dragon's carpenter had got to work again and 
 the rudder had been repaired. As if to encourage 
 them, the weather after two or three days began to 
 get better, and the sea to go down. The admiral 
 therefore made a signal ordering the Hector to come 
 nearer. This she did, and then her master, Sander 
 Cole by name, was able to come aboard the flagship, 
 bringing with him the best swimmer in the ship, and 
 the best divers. These men were of the greatest 
 assistance, and did their work round the stern of the 
 ship to such good effect that the rudder was event- 
 ually hung again on the two remaining hooks. It 
 was a triumph of patience, persistence and pluck, 
 that the Dragon was able once again to go ahead and 
 let her sheets draw. 
 
 But all this time things on board had been very try- 
 ing. The ship had been buffeted about ceaselessly by 
 many storms for week after week. Men had fallen 
 sick and the ship could not be worked as she ought. 
 However, the Cape of Good Hope was roundeH, and 
 then there had to be endured the weary, agonising 
 experience of being becalmed. Still they knew " by 
 the height wee were in to the Northward " that they 
 had long since passed the dreaded Cape of storms. 
 Just one more casualty convinced them that they 
 were not yet out of danger, and this occurred when 
 the main-yard fell down and knocked a man into 
 the sea, drowning him. 
 
 But on the 5th of June they passed the Tropic of 
 Capricorn, and on the sixteenth of that month 
 sighted St Helena, where they let go in twelve 
 
70 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 fathoms. Here they took on board fresh water, shot 
 some wild goats and hogs, refitted the ships and 
 inspected the Dragoris rudder, " which wee hoped 
 would last us home." During the sojourn here all 
 the sick recovered their health, and on the 5th of 
 July they set out again to the north-west. Five days 
 more they were becalmed, but before that they had 
 succeeded in passing Ascension, on nth July, and 
 then fell in with a favourable south-east wind. Thus 
 they proceeded until the ;th of September, when 
 they imagined themselves near to home. " Wee 
 tooke sounding, judging the Lands end of England 
 to be fortie leagues from us. The eleventh day we 
 came to the Downes, well and safe to an anchor : 
 for the which, thanked be almightie God, who hath 
 delivered us from the infinite perils and dangers, in 
 this long and tedious Navigation." Thus the voyage 
 which had been begun on i3th February 1601 was 
 now brought to a finish on nth September 1603. It 
 had been a most successful voyage, and 1,030,000 
 Ib. of pepper had been brought to England by these 
 four ships. But, important as that was to the mer- 
 chants, still more admirable was the achievement of 
 Lancaster in getting his ship home at all. However, 
 he was not to go without his reward. He had had 
 the responsibility of bringing this first voyage of the 
 English East India Company to a conclusion that 
 was as happy as financially it was successful, and he 
 was granted a knighthood by James I. Those who 
 had invested their money in this concern could 
 scarcely regret their decision, for they eventually 
 received 95 per cent, on their capital, and it was now 
 established beyond doubt that henceforth the East 
 Indian trade was the thing for enterprising London 
 
CAPT. LANCASTER DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF 71 
 
 merchants. For a hundred years the Portuguese 
 had kept the secret to themselves and succeeded in 
 preventing other countries from coming as inter- 
 lopers. But that was now all past and done with. 
 The future rested not with the Portuguese, whose 
 Indian colonial system proved to be an utter failure, 
 but with the English or the Dutch, between whom 
 the contest would soon become keen. For already 
 the latter had formed so many associations for trade 
 that by the year 1602 they were amalgamated by 
 the States-General into one corporation entitled the 
 Dutch East India Company. 
 
 As this first voyage had been so fortunate, it was 
 not long before a second was inaugurated by the 
 English East India Company. During that winter 
 preparations went ahead, and on the following Lady 
 Day 1604 another expedition left Gravesend, this 
 time under the leadership of Henry Middleton, a 
 kinsman of the Middleton who had died during 
 Lancaster's voyage. This project consisted of the 
 same ships as before, and these duly arrived at 
 Bantam on the 2oth of December. From here two 
 of the ships were sent home namely, the Hector 
 and the Susan, eight months ahead of the other 
 couple, which proceeded first to the Moluccas before 
 leaving Bantam finally for England. Middleton 
 found that trading was not quite as easy as it might 
 be, for the Dutch gave him a great deal of opposition 
 in the East. However, you will realise that this 
 second voyage was far from being a failure when it 
 is stated that the profits were just under 100 per cent, 
 to those who had raised the capital. And this in spite 
 of the fact that the Susan was lost on her way home. 
 It is a singular coincidence that when this ship had 
 
72 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 been purchased, as already noted in the preceding 
 chapter, from a London alderman at the price of 
 ;i6oo, the condition was that he should buy her 
 back from the Company at the end of the voyage, 
 for half the purchase price. Middleton had reached 
 the Downs on 6th May 1606, and it was not long 
 before preparations began to be made for next year's 
 voyage. The second expedition had necessitated a 
 capital of 60,000, of which only ^1142 had been 
 spent in goods, so you will understand to what 
 extent privateering was responsible for swelling the 
 profits. 
 
 On 1 2th March 1607 an expedition was off again, 
 for the third voyage. This time the sum of ,53,000 
 had been subscribed, ,7280 being expended in 
 merchandise to take out. There were only three 
 ships on the present occasion, consisting of those two 
 veterans, Red Dragon and Hector, and a vessel 
 named the Consent, of 105 tons. The " Generall " 
 in this case was Captain Keeling. The latter left 
 England on I2th March, alone, and reached the 
 Moluccas. Although he was unable to obtain a 
 cargo from there, yet he purchased from a Java junk 
 a cargo of cloves for ,2948, 155., which on their 
 arrival in England fetched the considerable sum of 
 ,36,287. The reason why spices of the East were 
 so readily bought up by the West is explained at 
 once by the fact that a great demand existed 
 throughout civilised Europe at that time for their 
 employment in cookery and in certain expensive 
 drinks. 
 
 The Dragon and Hector had left the Downs on 
 the ist of April, and, like those previous voyages 
 which we have noted, they again went round the 
 
CAPT. LANCASTER DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF 73 
 
 Cape of Good Hope and then as far north-east as 
 Socotra, where the two ships separated, the Dragon 
 proceeding to Sumatra and Bantam, while the 
 Hector went on to Surat, just north of Bombay. 
 Thus, at last and for the first time, one of the Com- 
 pany's ships had brought up in a port of the Indian 
 continent, as distinct from those East Indian islands 
 which had been previously visited. The captain of 
 the Hector was Hawkins, whilst the Dragon was 
 under the command of Captain Keeling. Some 
 historians assert that Captain Keeling himself went 
 to Surat, where he landed a Mr Finch to form a 
 factory, and then sent Captain Hawkins to persuade 
 the Great Mogul at Agra to order his officers to deal 
 justly with the English : but at any rate Hawkins 
 remained ashore, as there was a fine opportunity for 
 inaugurating a big business, and sent the Hector on 
 to Bantam to join Captain Keeling. Hawkins had 
 come out from England with a letter from King 
 James I. to the Great Mogul, and the latter promised 
 to grant the Company all the privileges asked for. 
 This Indian potentate further suggested that Haw- 
 kins should remain at his Court as English repre- 
 sentative at a commencing salary of ,3200 a year. 
 This offer Hawkins accepted, but not unnaturally 
 the appointment aroused a good deal of jealousy 
 both among the Portuguese and the officials of the 
 Court. In a little time the Great Mogul had re- 
 gretted his decisions both as to Hawkins and the 
 East India Company. The Englishman therefore 
 was compelled to leave Agra (minus his promised 
 salary), and then went down to the coast again at 
 Surat. As to the privileges which had been promised 
 to the Company, these also vanished. Trouble was 
 
74 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 obviously brewing. But this third voyage, yielding 
 a profit of 234 per cent., had not by any means been 
 a failure, but a great financial success. The Dragon 
 had been sent home with a good cargo, and then 
 Captain Keeling (this time in the Hector] had visited 
 the Moluccas and Bantam, where the factory had 
 been more firmly established, subsequently reaching 
 England on 9th May 1610. 
 
 It will be remembered that the original charter 
 granted to the Company by Elizabeth was for a 
 period of fifteen years. But in the year 1609 the 
 Company were compelled to petition James I. for a 
 renewal, or rather for much greater powers, notwith- 
 standing that the original charter had still six years 
 to run. The reason for this application is not hard 
 to appreciate. The Portuguese now began to realise 
 that the Englishmen were very serious rivals, and 
 they must be met by force. The East India Com- 
 pany, on the other hand, were equally determined 
 that they would not give up such a valuable trade 
 that had paid them so handsomely during these few 
 years. Therefore opposition must be met by other 
 force : in other words, a greater number of ships 
 would be required. King James also recognised 
 this, so the application was granted, the number of 
 merchant-adventurers was increased from 218 to 
 276, the Crown to have the power of repealing the 
 Company's charter after three years' notice. 
 
 So three new ships were fitted out for the sixth 
 voyage. (There had in the meanwhile been two 
 " separate " voyages, about which we shall speak 
 presently.) The cost of these three new ships, 
 together with the merchandise which they carried 
 out, was 82,000, this large sum being rendered 
 
CAPT. LANCASTER DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF 75 
 
 possible only by the increased members of the 
 Company. The leader of this voyage was that 
 same Henry Middleton whom we saw taking out the 
 second voyage : but since that time he had received 
 a knighthood. This time his flagship was to be the 
 Trade's Increase. And as this was one of the most 
 famous of all the seventeenth-century ships, and 
 certainly the largest East Indiaman built up till then, 
 we must say something about her. 
 
 At the time of her launch she was the biggest 
 merchantman of any kind that had been built in 
 England. She created, in fact, to the Jacobeans 
 something of the sensation which the launch of the 
 Mauretania in our own time created. James I. 
 attended the ceremony, together with other members 
 of the royal family, and attended by his nobles. 
 This was on the i$th of December 1609, her first 
 voyage being due to commence on the following ist 
 of April. In consequence of the high position which 
 the East India Company had now begun to occupy, 
 and not less owing to the phenomenal size of this ship, 
 the incident was made the most of. After the ship was 
 afloat in the water, the King and his retinue were 
 entertained on board with a magnificent dinner pro- 
 vided at the Company's expense and served on some 
 of those dishes and plates of China ware which had 
 been brought home from the East by the Company's 
 ships and were then looked upon as something rare 
 and wonderful, nothing of the kind having yet been 
 seen in the country. But the Trade's Increase, with 
 her uoo tons, was a clumsy, unwieldy ship and 
 somewhat top-heavy. She was anything but a lucky 
 craft, and we shall see presently that her end was 
 to be tragic. For English shipbuilding was in a 
 
76 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 transition stage, which lasted about another two 
 hundred years or more. It was trying hard to get 
 away from the unscientific, rule-of-thumb method 
 which had come down from the Middle Ages and 
 had not yet come under the influence of science and 
 the principles of true naval architecture. 
 
CHAPTER VII 
 
 THE BUILDING OF THE COMPANY'S SHIPS 
 
 Now, before we proceed with the further voyages 
 and trading of these Indiamen, we shall find it very 
 interesting if we attempt to -paint the picture of the 
 building of these ships. Happily the data handed 
 down are of such a nature that we can learn prac- 
 tically all that we should like to know on the subject. 
 The reader will remember that the ships which 
 went on the first and second voyages had been 
 obtained by purchase. But, then, since it was 
 obvious that more ships would be required as the 
 trade increased and losses occurred by wrecks, the 
 Company had to look out for additions to their small 
 fleet. It was then that they were confronted with a 
 big problem. First of all, England was still a com- 
 paratively new-comer into the position of an ocean- 
 going shipowner, as distinct from Portugal, Spain, 
 Venice and Genoa. Practically all her shipping 
 consisted either of fishing or coasting craft. There- 
 fore she possessed only a very small supply of what 
 could be called in those days large vessels. This 
 supply had been still further depleted by the pur- 
 chases which the Dutch East India companies had 
 made from English owners at the beginning of the 
 East Indian boom. The result was that those very 
 
 77 
 
78 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 few big ships which remained in England were at 
 a premium. To voyage round the Cape of Good 
 Hope and across the Indian Ocean, able to fight 
 stalwart Portuguese craft and to carry well a heavy 
 cargo, in addition to provisions for many months, 
 demanded a big-bellied ship of exceptional strength ; 
 and that was why the Mare Scourge (which had been 
 built for privateering) was just the thing. 
 
 But now the owners of the small amount of big 
 shipping that still survived, in consequence of the 
 big financial success which the East India Company 
 had made from their first two voyages, were deter- 
 mined not to let them have any more ships except 
 at very high prices. The rates which these sellers 
 now asked were preposterous as much as ,45 a 
 ton being demanded. The East India Company, 
 being therefore in the position of needing ships and 
 yet unable to purchase such at a reasonable figure, 
 were compelled to decide on building for themselves. 
 This dates from the year 1607, and a yard was 
 leased at Deptford, the first two craft thus built 
 being the Trade's Increase, mentioned in the last 
 chapter, and the Peppercorn, both of which went out 
 under Sir Henry Middleton in the spring of 1610. 
 From the first this change of policy was found to be 
 justified, for the Company was able to build their 
 ships at 10 a ton instead of ^45, which meant 
 the very handsome saving of ,38,500 in the case of 
 a ship the size of the Trade's Increase or two ships 
 equal to her tonnage. 
 
 In this yard before very long the Company were 
 employing no fewer than five hundred ships' car- 
 penters, caulkers, joiners and other workmen. The 
 result was that by the year 1615 the Company had 
 

 
 P3 p- 
 
THE BUILDING OF THE COMPANY'S SHIPS 79 
 
 built more ships in those short eight years than any 
 other trade had done. Altogether they had owned 
 during that period twenty-one able ships, and by the 
 year 1621 the Company owned not less than 10,000 
 tons of shipping, employing as many as 2500 sea- 
 men. When we consider that even as late as the 
 year 1690 the whole population of England was less 
 than 5,500,000, and that of this number the seafaring 
 people were a very small figure, it is obvious 
 what this great East India Company meant to the 
 country, with its wealth, enabling large sums of 
 money to be spent in wages to seamen, workmen and 
 factors. After the Company had been trading only 
 twenty years there were about 120 of these factors 
 alone. But, in addition, the Company was paying 
 out large sums of money for the relief of seamen's 
 widows and their children. I will not burden the 
 reader with statistics, but I may be allowed to state 
 that up to November 1621 the Company had ex- 
 ported woollen goods, lead, iron, tin and other com- 
 modities from England to the value of ,319,211. 
 From the East these ships had brought back cargoes 
 which had been purchased in the East for the sum 
 of .375,288. But you will appreciate the profit 
 when it is stated further that these cargoes were sold 
 in England for ,2,044,600. As against this there 
 was always the possibility of losing the ships and the 
 cargoes in their holds either outward or homeward 
 bound. There was the cost of building and upkeep 
 of ships and dockyard. There was the heavy ex- 
 pense, too, of victualling the ships for many months, 
 the purchasing of English merchandise, the various 
 stores, the wages of captains, officers and crews, and 
 factors, as well as the payment of customs. And 
 
80 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 though it is perfectly true that the average profit 
 made by the first twelve voyages was not less than 
 138 per cent., yet we must remember that the voyages 
 were never made in less than twenty months and 
 often extended to three and four years. 
 
 So also we must remember that after the arrival 
 in this country of the goods from India they were 
 sold at long credits even as much as eighteen 
 months and two years. Owing to the irregularity of 
 the factors in keeping and transmitting their 
 accounts, the concerns of the voyage could not be 
 finally adjusted under six or eight years. ' Taking 
 the duration of the concern at a medium of seven 
 years," says Macpherson in his " History of Euro- 
 pean Commerce with India," " the profit appears to 
 be somewhat under twenty per cent, per annum." 
 The current rate of interest in those days was about 
 8 per cent., so that 20 per cent, could not be 
 deemed for that time a very abnormal rate of re- 
 muneration when we consider the amount of enter- 
 prise required at the outset, and the vast risks which 
 necessarily had to be run. Included in these profits 
 were also the results of privateering and bartering. 
 Between the years 1601 and 1612 the profits ranged 
 from 95 to 234 per cent., with the exception of the 
 year 1608, when both ships were wrecked. 
 
 Nowhere was the Company's system of thorough- 
 ness better shown than in the completeness and 
 organisation of her shipyard. The East India Com- 
 pany took itself very seriously and arrogated to 
 itself all the dignity and self-importance which its 
 unique prerogatives permitted. The Court was pre- 
 sided over by the Governor and it had its own rules 
 of procedure. " Every man," for instance, " speak- 
 
THE BUILDING OF THE COMPANY'S SHIPS 81 
 
 ing in the Court shall stand up and be bareheaded, 
 and shall addresse his speach to the Gouernour or 
 Deputy in his absence." So runs one of the Com- 
 pany's rules. Now the connecting link, so to speak, 
 between the Company and its ships was the man who 
 was known as the ship's husband, one of its salaried 
 servants. When the Court were met to discuss the 
 plans for the yearly voyages to India, the husband 
 had to attend in order to learn what shipping would 
 be required. He then had to draw out a table of the 
 proportion of victuals and other necessaries for each 
 ship and to see that such were provided. After being 
 got together these stores were then placed in the 
 Company's warehouses. In addition to being the 
 victualler of the ships he was responsible also for 
 providing the amount of iron likely to be required 
 ' yron both English and Spanish " and had to 
 deliver it to the smiths at Deptford yard for the 
 rudder irons and other purposes, and also to the 
 coopers for making the hoops of the casks. The 
 husband was also responsible for the supervision of 
 the clerks and for keeping the account-books, the 
 stores in the London warehouses being under the 
 care of a " Clerke of the Stores." 
 
 In the Deptford yard large stocks of " timber, 
 planckes, sheathing-boards, and treenayles " had to 
 be maintained by officials called " purveyers," or, as 
 we should name them nowadays, " buyers." These 
 men had to see to the purchasing of all kinds of wood 
 used. It was kept in the Company's private timber- 
 yards at Reading, whence it was put into barges ami 
 so brought down the Thames to Deptford. The 
 trenails were the old-fashioned means of fastening a 
 ship's timbers and planking and had existed from the 
 
82 
 
 times even of the Romans and th'e Vikings. They 
 were small wooden pegs " tree-nails " driven in 
 something after the appearance of the modern rivet, 
 but minus the head. The sheathing-boards were a 
 very necessary protection for the ship's hull in hot 
 climates against the insidious attacks of the worm. 
 (In another chapter will be found an instance of 
 this.) There was also employed a " measurer of 
 timber and plancke," whose job was to go down to 
 the waterside and mark the timber . 
 
 But it was the " Clarke of the Yard " who had the 
 supervision of the shipwrights, the " cawlkers," car- 
 penters and labourers, and one portion of his duties 
 was to see that the men " doe not loyter in the 
 Taphouse." For the Company certainly allowed 
 such a tap-house in their yard, which was " lycensed 
 by the Companie from yeare to yeare " to certain 
 persons on condition that they retailed the beer at 
 not more than six shillings the barrel and not less 
 than " three full pynts of Ale measure for a penny." 
 The tap-house also sold to the workmen of the yard 
 such victuals as bread, " pease," milk, porridge, 
 eggs, butter, cheese, but they were not allowed to 
 sell anything else, nor were they allowed to sell to 
 any person other than one of the Company's work- 
 men in the yard. 
 
 The whole of the work at the yard was subdivided 
 under so many responsible heads of departments, 
 just as it is to-day in any shipyard. The Master 
 Shipwright's duties were to build and repair the 
 Company's ships and to design the " plots and 
 models compleat, of all the new ships." And he 
 was forbidden to build ships for anyone else except 
 this Company. It is significant of our modern system 
 
THE BUILDING OF THE COMPANY'S SHIPS 83 
 
 of extreme division of labour that the duties of ship- 
 designer and ship-builder have become quite 
 separate and distinct. 
 
 Then there was another important official attached 
 to the Company, known as the " Master-pilot." " The 
 Mr Pylot his office is to commaund and order the 
 workes which concerne the setting up and taking 
 downe of Masts, Yards, Rigging, unrigging and pro- 
 portioning the quantities, sorts and sizes of Cordage 
 to the Companies ships . . . and to use care and 
 diligence . . . that the Company may not be 
 ouercharged with idle, unskilfull, or a needlesse 
 number of workmen, or in the rate of their 
 wages." This same master-pilot had to survey 
 the Company's ships at Deptford and Blackwall 
 and to see that, after being launched, they were 
 safely moored. He had also to see that the canvas 
 given out was duly made into sails, and was further 
 responsible that the Company's ships set forth up to 
 time from Deptford, Blackwall and Erith. In addi- 
 tion he took charge of them whilst in the Thames 
 to " pylot downe the Companies ships to Eirth and 
 Grauesend, attending them there untill they shall be 
 dispatched into the Downes." So also when they 
 came back from India he would pilot them up from 
 Gravesend " untill they be safely moored at an 
 Anchor, or indocked a* Blackwall." This official 
 was assisted in the supervision of cordage by a man 
 called the " Boatswaine Generall." 
 
 The treasurers looked after the Company's 
 
 accounts, and once a week they handed to the 
 
 ' Purcer-Generall " the sums of money for paying 
 
 the wages of the sailors and labourers : also the 
 
 " harbour wages " to " officers and Maryners, who 
 
84 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 goe the Voyage." Every ship of course also carried 
 its own " purcer," who with their mates had to look 
 after the lading, the ship's accounts and the condi- 
 tions of the victuals on board, etc. 
 
 After the end of the day's work the Clerk of the 
 Works would go round the yard to see that there 
 was no risk of fire breaking out owing to negligence 
 in respect of the pitch cauldrons or other instances. 
 The yard boasted of a " porter of the lodge," and as 
 soon as the workmen had done for the day watch- 
 men came on duty in the yard, where they remained 
 until the bell rang next morning summoning the 
 labourers back to their work. The Company in- 
 sisted on these watchmen doing their supervision 
 thoroughly, " often calling one to another to prevent 
 sleepe, and euery houre when the clocke strikes " 
 they were bidden to " walke round " and ring a bell 
 in the yard. 
 
 The " Clarke of the Cordage " looked after the 
 ropes, marlin, " twyne," ordnance, " great shot," 
 pulleys, blocks and the like. The " Clarke of the 
 Iron Works " was similarly responsible for all the 
 anchors, nails, bolts, chain-plates, and so on, and had 
 to look to these when the ships came home from the 
 East. He was further responsible for the lead and 
 copper. If an anchor or anything had to be made 
 or repaired in this metal it was done by the Com- 
 pany's smith on the yard. 
 
 The " Chirurgion Generall " and his deputy had 
 their lodgings in the yard, and one or the other was 
 bound to be in attendance daily from morning till night 
 " to cure any person or persons who may be hurt in 
 the Service of this Company, and the like in all their 
 ships riding at an anchor at Deptford and Blackwall, 
 
THE BUILDING OF THE COMPANY'S SHIPS 85 
 
 and at Erith, where hee shall also keepe a Deputy 
 with his Chest furnished, to remaine there contin- 
 ually, until all the said ships be sayled downe from 
 thence to Grauesend." And it is amusing to read 
 that the duties of the " chirurgion " included that 
 of cutting the " hayre of the carpenters, saylors, 
 caulkers, labourers " and other workmen once every 
 forty days " in a seemely manner, performing their 
 works at Breakfast and Dinner times, or in raynie 
 weather, and in an open place where no man may 
 loyter or lye hidden, under pretence to attend his 
 turne of trimming." In addition this same surgeon 
 had to report all persons who seemed to be decrepit 
 or unfit : and every carpenter, sailor, labourer or 
 workman in the yards or ships had to pay twopence 
 every month out of his wages to the said " Chirurgion 
 Generall " ; so you may take it as certain that he was 
 not the most popular of beings. He was also com- 
 pelled to find " skilfull and honest chirurgions and 
 their Mates " for the ships. The Company took 
 special precautions to see that these vessels set out 
 with all the medical comforts and supplies of those 
 days, having regard to the changing climates and the 
 heavy losses of life through scurvy and dysentery (or 
 flux). Thus these medicine-chests had to be brought 
 into the Company's house fourteen days before the 
 ships sailed, so that the 'doctors and apothecaries and 
 other people appointed by the Committee dealing 
 with this subject might make a full inspection. 
 
 In addition to the officials on the Thames there 
 was also a " Keeper of Anchors and Stores in the 
 Downes," at Deal, who looked after the cables, 
 hawsers, anchors and ships' boats sent to the Downs, 
 so that whenever any of the Company's ships arrived 
 
86 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 there lacking any of these articles they could always 
 be supplied. At Deptford yard there was every 
 single trade represented that was employed in the 
 construction and fitting out of a seventeenth-century 
 ship. There were coopers and boatmakers and the 
 carvers who 'deftly gave those fantastic decorations 
 to the ships' hulls. There were smiths and painters 
 and riggers, but in addition to the large staff which 
 were concerned with the ships themselves, there was 
 another staff who had to look after the providing of 
 the salt meat for the voyages. For the Company 
 was determined to keep the profit of victuals to itself. 
 This department was under the management of the 
 " Clerk of the Slaughter-house," his duties being to 
 look after the killing, salting, pickling and packing 
 of the " beefes and hogges." This salt beef and 
 pork comprised the main food of these sailormen to 
 the Far East and back. They had no vegetables 
 except 'dried peas and beans, no bread other than 
 mouldy ship's biscuit, and no fruit. 
 
 The Company included a " Committee for Enter- 
 taining of Marriners," and they were on the look-out 
 for " able men, unmarryed and approved saylors." 
 Many of these fellows were of the reckless, dare- 
 devil type, coarse of morals and frequently drunk 
 when ashore : yet heroic in a crisis, imprudent, con- 
 temptuous of danger, brutal and unruly. Many a 
 young man sailor and factor alike was sent in 
 these ships in order that he might be got out of 
 the way after disgracing his family : and numbers of 
 them never again set foot in England. If the sea- 
 men who were shipped happened to be married, the 
 " Clarke of the Imprest " paid the wages allowed to 
 their wives whilst the men were at sea. This official 
 
THE BUILDING OF THE COMPANY'S SHIPS 87 
 
 was also bound to pay the wages to the " marriners 
 which shall returne home in the Companies ships, or 
 to their Assignes." 
 
 After the masters and their mates of the respective 
 ships had been hired for a voyage, their names were 
 entered under the list of harbour-wages, and they 
 took their oaths openly in the Court of the Com- 
 mittees of the Company. After this they sought able 
 and good mariners " whom they shall preferre for 
 entertainment unto the Committees appointed to 
 that businesse." These masters were bound to sleep 
 on board the ships to which they had just been 
 appointed, every night, and there keep good order. 
 They were also to appoint quartermasters and boat- 
 swains, who were to see that the victuals, provisions, 
 stores and merchandise were properly stowed. The 
 boatswain, gunner, cook, steward, carpenter and 
 other officers were each responsible for their own 
 special stores. 
 
 Within ten days after the arrival of their ship in 
 the Thames from India the master was bound to 
 deliver to the Governor of the Company four copies 
 of his journal and other " worthy observations " of 
 his voyage. When the ship was bound out the 
 master was always to be on board and to assist the 
 master-pilot. When the ship returned home, a 
 Committee of the Company for the Discharge of the 
 Ships was always present on board in order to see 
 the hold opened. This was to prevent theft. The 
 goods were then placed in lighters and one of the 
 Company's " trusty servants " then went in the latter 
 to watch that no embezzlement occurred. The goods 
 were then taken to Leadenhall, where they were sold. 
 " The custome hath been used heretofore [i.e. prior 
 
88 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 to 1621] in selling the wares of this Company at 
 a Generall Court, and the Remnants of small value 
 in the Warehouses by the light of a candle/' and 
 this custom was continued. Selling by the " light of 
 a candle " was as follows : The article was put up 
 for auction, a small piece of candle burning the 
 while. So long as that piece of candle was there 
 the bids could go on, but as soon as it burned out the 
 last bid was completed and no more could be made 
 for that commodity. 
 
 Before the crew put to sea, two months' wages 
 were allowed ahead, and " gratifications " were also 
 paid " unto worthy and well deserving persons." In 
 these ships there went out also the merchants, factors 
 and supercargoes. Some, as we have already seen, 
 founded factories where they landed and circum- 
 stances permitted : but later on there were factors 
 resident in every port, just as each steamship com- 
 pany to-day has its own agents wherever the ships 
 touch. 
 
 The Deptford yard, which the Company leased 
 from the year 1607 and used for the next twenty 
 years, was of the greatest assistance to the Company. 
 The best merchant ships in the country there came 
 into being, were fitted out, repaired on their return, 
 resheathed and then sent to sea in excellent condi- 
 tion. It was true that the saving in building for 
 themselves was to the Company's great benefit ; but, 
 on the other hand, the yard with all this staff and 
 detail was found in the long run to be so costly that 
 it swallowed up too much of the capital, which could 
 more profitably have been employed in hiring ships. 
 It was seen also that even with the carefulness ex- 
 pended in the construction of the Company's ships, 
 
THE BUILDING OF THE COMPANY'S SHIPS 89 
 
 the latter became worn out after four voyages : so 
 at the end of twenty years it was decided to give up 
 this expensive yard and to revert to the original 
 custom of hiring vessels as required. Later on we 
 shall see that this system developed in a curious 
 manner, but for the present we must go back to see 
 the progress which the voyages of these early East 
 Indiamen brought about in the Eastern trade. It 
 took four months to fit out these ships for sailing 
 again to the East, and the refit was very thorough. 
 A large magazine of warlike stores to the value of 
 ,30,000 was kept always ready, and this was really 
 a very useful asset in the country, since in the time 
 of necessity the material could be used by the 
 English navy. Even in the year 1626, within a 
 few months of the closing down of the shipyard, the 
 Company were so enterprising as to erect mills and 
 houses for the manufacture of their own gunpowder, 
 obtaining the saltpetre from the East, which of 
 course came home in their own ships. If ever mono- 
 poly was allowed to have its own way, surely it never 
 had such good opportunity as was vouchsafed to the 
 East India Company, with its own shipyards, 
 victualling, and its own particular trade with full 
 cargoes each way and a high percentage almost 
 assured. We are accustomed in this twentieth cen- 
 tury to bewail the existence of " corners " and 
 trusts : yet these are as nothing compared with the 
 privileges which the East India Company enjoyed 
 and so jealously guarded through generation after 
 generation, through two centuries and well into a 
 third. And that meant more than was really 
 apparent. The whole world had not been developed 
 and opened out as it is to-day. Rather this exclusive 
 
90 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 privilege meant the granting of about half the world 
 to a select few, and the democratic spirit of the 
 twentieth century would instantly revolt against any 
 such condition of affairs. It must not be thought 
 that there were not those who protested even in the 
 seventeenth century. Some did certainly protest 
 in a very forcible manner by cutting in as inter- 
 lopers. But it was a short-lived victory and had no 
 lasting effect. 
 
CHAPTER VIII 
 
 PERILS AND ADVENTURES 
 
 IT is only by examining the official correspondence 
 which passed between the Company's servants and 
 themselves that we are able to get a correct insight 
 into the lesser, though usually more human, details 
 connected with these ships. In the last chapter but 
 one we saw that the third voyage had been financially 
 satisfactory. But there are a few sidelights which 
 show that these voyages were not mere pleasure 
 cruises. If this particular one earned 234 per cent, 
 it was by sheer hard work on the part of the men 
 and of the ships. Captain Keeling writes that he 
 had, whilst in the East, to buy " of the Dutch a 
 maine top-sayle (whereof we had extreame want) and 
 delivered them a note to the Company, to receive 
 twelve pounds twelve shillings for the same." So 
 also it was with men as with sails. Anthony Marlowe 
 writes home to the Governor of the Company, under 
 date of 22nd June 1608, from on board the Hector, 
 that during the voyage " there hath died in our ship 
 two foremast men Wallis and Palline : and two lost 
 overboard, Goodman and Jones : also there hath 
 died Dryhurst, steward's mate, John Newcome, John 
 Asshenhurst, purser's mate, Mr Quaytmore, purser, 
 and Mr Clarke, merchant." 
 
92 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 If there was ill-feeling ashore between the Eng- 
 lish and the Portuguese, and the English and Dutch, 
 so all was not ever as happy as wedding bells in the 
 English ships. One June day in 1608, during this 
 third voyage, a violent enmity had broken out be- 
 tween Anthony Hippon, master of the Dragon, and 
 his mate, William Tavernour. Someone endeav- 
 oured to get them to make up their quarrel, but 
 Hippon was obdurate, and " was heartened forward 
 in his malice against the said Tavernour by Matthew 
 Mullynex the master of the Hector" 
 
 And there is a further letter, dated 4th December 
 1608, which was sent by another of the Company's 
 servants named James Hearne, which again calls 
 attention to the Dragon's want of sails, the ship then 
 being at Bantam. There was no canvas procurable 
 out there, " therefore," he suggests, " one hundred 
 pound more or less, would not be lost in laying it out 
 in spare canvas in such a voyage as this." And then 
 he concludes his letter with a postscript, which shows 
 that the life of a factor in the Company's service 
 ashore out in the East was not a lucrative occupa- 
 tion. " That it may please your worships," he 
 petitions, " to consider me somewhat in my wages, 
 for I have served 2 years already at 4. a month, 
 and in this place I am in, my charge will be greater 
 than otherwise." 
 
 We have already alluded to the setting forth of 
 the sixth expedition under Sir Henry Middleton in 
 1607. Middleton was instructed to proceed to the 
 west coast of India with the intention of obtaining 
 from Surat Indian calicoes which would find a ready 
 sale at Bantam and the Moluccas. Having set forth 
 from England in the year 1610, he arrived at Aden, 
 
PERILS AND ADVENTURES 93 
 
 where he left the Peppercorn, and then with his flag 
 in the Trade's Increase sailed for Mocha, which is 
 at the southern end of the Red Sea. No English 
 vessel had yet thrust her bows into this sea, though 
 the Portuguese had been there even during the pre- 
 vious century. And here the Trade's Increase, which 
 had received such an ovation when she was first 
 launched at the Deptford yard, was to begin the 
 first of her serious mishaps. Like many another ship 
 that came after her, famous for unprecedented size, 
 she was destined to be unlucky. 
 
 She was making for Mocha with the assistance of 
 native pilots when she had the misfortune to get 
 badly aground. She was a clumsy, unhandy ship, 
 and it was natural enough that the natives who had 
 been accustomed only to their smaller craft might get 
 her into trouble. The incident occurred in Novem- 
 ber 1610, and the following account sent home by 
 one who was on board her at the time may be taken 
 as representative of the facts. " About five a 
 clocke," runs the account, " in luffing in beeing much 
 wind, we split our maine toppe sayle, and putting 
 abroad our mizen, it split likewise : our Pilots 
 brought our shippe a ground upon a banke of sand, 
 the wind blowing hard, and the Sea somewhat high, 
 which made us all doubt her coming off ... we did 
 what we could to lighten our ship, sending some 
 goods a-land and some aboard the Darling ... we 
 land as well our Wheat-meale, Vinegar, Sea-coles, 
 Pitch and Tarre, with our unbuilt Pinnasse, and 
 other provisions which came next hand, or in the 
 way, as well as Tinne, Lead, Iron, and other mer- 
 chandise to be sould, and staved neare all our water." 
 The reference to the " unbuilt pinnasse " is ex- 
 
94 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 plained by the fact that it was the custom of the 
 Elizabethan and later voyagers to take out from 
 home the necessary timber and planks and to build 
 the little craft on board as they proceeded. This 
 kept the men occupied and was a saving in wages, 
 besides not involving the risk of losing such a craft 
 before the end of the voyage was being approached. 
 Such a top-heavy, cumbrous vessel as the Trade's 
 Increase would need very careful " nursing " in a 
 squall to prevent her from capsizing, and it is per- 
 fectly clear that the sudden luffing up into the wind 
 to ease her was too much for the canvas that had 
 already been considerably worn and chafed during 
 the voyage across the Equator and round the Cape 
 of Good Hope up to the Gulf of Aden. 
 
 After some anxious hours the ship was eventually 
 got afloat again, but Middleton was taken prisoner 
 by the Arabs. For a long while he was compelled 
 to endure his captivity, but was eventually released 
 and sailed for Surat, where he arrived with his ships 
 on 26th September 1611, a great deal of valuable 
 time having been lost. Here again he was unlucky, 
 for a Portuguese squadron of seven ships was wait- 
 ing outside. The Portuguese were now so indignant 
 and jealous of the English interlopers that they were 
 resolved to resist them to the utmost : otherwise it 
 was obvious that the hard-won wealth of the East 
 would before long slip right away. All the inspira- 
 tion and enthusiasm of Prince Henry the Navigator, 
 all the heroic voyages of the first Portuguese navi- 
 gators to the East, all the capital which had been 
 expended in building and fitting out their expensive 
 caracks would assuredly be thrown into the sea un- 
 less the aggressive Englishmen, who had penetrated 
 
PERILS AND ADVENTURES 95 
 
 their secrets, were to be thwarted now with deter- 
 mination. The Portuguese were expecting Middle- 
 ton's arrival, for they had already heard of his being 
 in the Red Sea, and now they were in sufficient and 
 overwhelming strength to oppose him : for besides 
 the big ships outside, there were nearly twice as 
 many smaller craft waiting inside the bar. The 
 Portuguese contention was that they alone had the 
 right to trade with Surat : the English were not 
 wanted and had no justification to be there at all. 
 
 Middleton's position was that he had come out 
 from the King of England bearing a letter and 
 presents to the Great Mogul to put on a firm footing 
 that trade which Englishmen had already inaugu- 
 rated, and that India was open to all nations who 
 wished to trade with her. But, of course, Middleton 
 did not know at the time the incident which has 
 already been mentioned in connection with Hawkins 
 and the Great Mogul. When, however, the news 
 presently reached him, it was to modify his plans 
 entirely : there could be no good object attained in 
 endeavouring to establish trade against the opposi- 
 tion of the Mogul and the Portuguese. The natives 
 were clearly under the thumb of the Portuguese, and, 
 however willing they might have been, no trade with 
 them was possible. 
 
 So, after taking Hawkins on board, together with 
 the Englishmen who had been left at Surat, a council 
 was held and ultimately it was decided to return to 
 the Red Sea so that he could there trade with the 
 ships from India, since to deal with them in their 
 own country was not practicable. This decision was 
 carried out, and whether the traders liked it or not 
 they were compelled to barter the goods which 
 
96 
 
 Middleton required to take farther eastwards to the 
 Indian Archipelago as previously indicated. But 
 meanwhile there had set out from England another 
 expedition, consisting of the three ships Clove, 
 Thomas and Hector, under the command of Captain 
 Saris, bound for the Red Sea, having previously 
 obtained a firman, or decree, from Constantinople 
 which would grant him and his merchants kindly 
 treatment in the neighbourhood of Mocha and Aden. 
 But on arriving at Socotra, Saris found a letter from 
 Middleton giving warning of the treacherous treat- 
 ment to expect. In spite of this, however, Saris 
 found that the firman was respected, but eventually 
 deemed it prudent to make for the Straits of Bab-el- 
 Mandeb, where he met Middleton and agreed with 
 him to engage in privateering the ships of India. 
 If you had questioned these English seamen they 
 would have replied unhesitatingly that they were 
 merely engaged in trade by barter, and that as they 
 had been prevented by circumstances from carrying 
 on this direct with the Indian continent they had no 
 other opportunity than to 'do it at sea. They had 
 been sent out by the English Company to get the 
 cloths and calicoes to exchange farther east and they 
 were merely fulfilling their instructions. But in 
 plain language there was little difference between 
 this and robbery, or, at the best, compulsory sale at 
 the buyer's own price. 
 
 But when all this " trading " was finished and the 
 Trade's Increase went to Malay Archipelago, she 
 was to bring to a tragic end her short and adven- 
 turous career. Middleton had gone ahead in the 
 Peppercorn, and the Trade ' s Increase had been 
 ordered to follow after. Unfortunately she needed 
 
PERILS AND ADVENTURES 97 
 
 some repairs to her hull. It was customary before 
 an East Indiaman left the East on her homeward 
 voyage for the sheathing outside to be attended to, in 
 order that she might make as fast a passage home as 
 possible. But there were no dry docks out there, and 
 very few anywhere, even in England or Holland. The 
 practice, which lasted well into the nineteenth cen- 
 tury, was to careen a ship if she required any atten- 
 tion below the water-line her seams caulked, or her 
 bottom tarred. This was done in the case of the 
 Trade's Increase whilst she was at Bantam, where 
 her sheathing was being seen to. But she fell over 
 on to her side and became a total loss. One con- 
 temporary account states that whilst the repairs were 
 being done " all her men died in the careening of 
 her," and that then some Javanese were hired to do 
 the job, but five hundred of these " died in the worke 
 before they could sheath one side : so that they 
 could hire no more men, and therefore weje in- 
 forced to leave her imperfect, where shee was sunke 
 in the Sea, and after set on fire by the Javans." This 
 was towards the end of the year 1613. Another con- 
 temporary account states that she was laid up in the 
 ooze, and was set on fire from stem to stern, having 
 been previously fired twice, at the supposed instiga- 
 tion of a renegade Spaniard, " which is turned 
 Moor." She blazed away during the whole of one 
 night, and her wreck was eventually sold for 1050 
 reales. When Sir Henry Middleton heard the news 
 of the loss of his famous flagship, the pride of all 
 the seas, he was so heart-broken that he died. Thus 
 both admiral and flagship had perished : it had been 
 a calamitous voyage. 
 
 As for Captain Saris, he had sailed to Japan in 
 
98 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 order to establish a factory. Notwithstanding the 
 opposition of the Dutch, who were as jealous of his 
 arrival in the Far East as the Portuguese had been 
 in India, the Emperor received him favourably and 
 the seeds were sown for future trade with England 
 which, to change the metaphor, were to prepare the 
 way for the adoption of Western ideas by the Japan- 
 ese during the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries. 
 Strictly speaking, Japan and China have nothing to 
 <io with India. But historically, so far as our present 
 subject is concerned, they are to an extent bound 
 together. Not merely did these first captains of the 
 English East India Company sail thither, but, as 
 the reader will see further on in this volume, a great 
 deal of trade was done with those parts by the 
 Company's servants : and at least one interesting 
 engagement took place on sea near by, in which the 
 Company's merchant ships distinguished themselves. 
 
 Notwithstanding the sad loss of the costly Trade's 
 Increase, Middleton's voyage had yielded to the 
 Company a profit of 121 per cent. Captain Saris's 
 voyage had done even better still, earning 218 per 
 cent. ; but, as we have shown, this was not all earned 
 by legitimate trade. 
 
 The journal of Captain Nicholas Downton of the 
 homeward voyage of the Peppercorn (which you will 
 remember had been built at the Deptford yard and 
 went out in company with the Trade's Increase] 
 shows the kind of hardships which our sailors had 
 to endure whilst earning such handsome profits for 
 their owners. With thankful hearts this craft started 
 back from Bantam, though it was to be no pleasant 
 toyage. On getting under way Downton saluted 
 the admiral by way of farewell. " I gave him 5 
 
PERILS AND ADVENTURES 99 
 
 shot/' he writes, " having no more pieces out nor 
 ports imcaulked " that is to say, he had pre- 
 pared his ship for sea, having run inboard most of 
 his guns and caulked up the ports. The ship had 
 previously had her sheathing attended to, and all the 
 stores were aboard. The meat was kept in casks, 
 while the bread and corn were kept in a " tight 
 room " in order to avoid the ravages of the cacara 
 " a most devouring worm," as Downton quaintly 
 calls it, " with which this ship doth abound to our 
 great disturbance." The drinking-water to the ex- 
 tent of twenty-six tons had also been brought aboard, 
 where it was kept in casks. But as these were 
 decayed, weak, rotten and leaky the crew were bound 
 to suffer before they reached home. He did his best 
 to make her what he calls " a pridie ship " that is, 
 a trim ship but though this was her first homeward 
 voyage she leaked like a basket through the trenail 
 holes in the stern, owing to the negligence of the 
 wicked Deptford carpenters, who had scamped their 
 work. The result was that there were soon twenty 
 inches of water " on our lower orlop." Certainly the 
 Company's yard had not earned much real credit for 
 the way they had designed and built the Peppercorn 
 and the Trade's Increase. 
 
 And so this leaky, crank, badly built ship came 
 fighting her way along over the trackless ocean, a 
 continuous source of anxiety to her commander. 
 Troubles often enough come not singly, and the 
 Peppercorn was another unlucky ship. By sheer 
 carelessness she and all hands barely escaped ending 
 all things by fire at sea. - " At noon," says Downton, 
 " our ship came afire by the cook his negligence, 
 o'erguzzled with drink, digged a hole through the 
 
100 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 brick back of the furnace and gave the fire passage 
 to the ship's side, which led to much trouble besides 
 spoil to our ship." The punctuation of this sentence 
 needs no modification to show the short, sharp im- 
 pressions jotted down by a choleric captain. The 
 name of this " o'erguzzled " cook was Richard Han- 
 cock, and no doubt he had so undermined his health 
 with drink, or had been so severely punished by his 
 commander that he could not long survive, for he 
 died shortly after one day at noon and was buried at 
 sea. 
 
 But he was not the only careless member of the 
 ship's company. At least one of the watch-keeping 
 officers was just as bad in his own sphere. " The 
 2;th at 2 after noon we were suddenly taken short 
 with a gust from the SE, which by neglect of the 
 principal of the watch not setting in time, not only 
 put us to much present trouble but also split us two 
 topsails at once, and blew a third clean away." The 
 following month on the eleventh the Peppercorn was 
 at midnight overwhelmed by heavy squalls which 
 " split our main bonnet and fore course, whereby 
 we were forced to lie a try with mainsail, the sea 
 very violent, we mending our sail." 
 
 The meaning of this may not be quite apparent to 
 those unfamiliar with the ships of those days. The 
 " bonnet " was an additional piece of canvas laced 
 on to the foot of these square-sails. It had been 
 long in use by the ships of the Vikings and the 
 English craft of the Middle Ages, and continued to 
 be used during the Tudor period and the seventeenth 
 century. Even in the twentieth century it is not 
 quite obsolete, and is still used on the Norfolk 
 wherries and on some of the North Sea fishing 
 
PERILS AND ADVENTURES 101 
 
 vessels. It was such a canvas as certainly ought to 
 have been taken in quickly if the Peppercorn was 
 likely to be struck by a heavy squall, being essen- 
 tially a fine-weather addition. And whenever it was 
 unlaced the equivalent was obtained of putting a 
 reef in the sail. To " lie a try " was a well-known 
 expression used by the Elizabethan seamen and their 
 successors : it meant simply what we mean to-day 
 when we speak of heaving-to. The ship would just 
 forge ahead very slowly under her mainsail only, 
 being under command but making good weather of 
 the violent sea of which Downton speaks, and allow- 
 ing most of the hands to get busy with the sails, 
 which had to be sent down and repaired. 
 
 They had barely begun to resume their voyage 
 when, on the thirteenth of the month, the Pepper- 
 corn broke her main truss that is to say, the rope 
 which kept the yard of the mainsail at its centre to 
 the mast. The main halyards also carried away and 
 again the main bonnet was split, but this time the 
 mainsail as well. The " main course," says Down- 
 ton, " rent out of the bolt rope " that is to say, 
 blew right away from the rope to which it is sewn 
 and so they were, owing to " want of fit sail to carry, 
 forced to lie a hull," which means that they had to 
 heave-to again. Meanwhile the Peppercorn was still 
 leaking away merrily. ' This day again," reads an 
 entry in the journal a little later on, " by the labour- 
 ing of the ship and beating of her bows in a head 
 sea, whereby we found in the powder room in the fore 
 part on the lower orlop, 20 or 24 inches water, which 
 have so spoiled, wet and stained divers barrels, so 
 that of 20 barrels of powder I do not now expect to 
 find serviceable 2 barrels, besides all our match and 
 
102 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 divers other things." It would therefore have gone 
 ill with the Peppercorn if she had fallen in with a 
 big, powerful Spanish ship on the high seas ready to 
 blaze away at her. 
 
 It took thirty-six hours to get these sails repaired 
 and new ropes spliced. This mending became in 
 fact the rule rather than the exception. " Our daily 
 employment either mending of our poor old sails 
 'daily broken, or making new with such poor stuff 
 as we have." There can be no doubt whatever that 
 these ships were sent to sea with all too few stores 
 to allow of accident. We have already seen that 
 additional canvas could not be obtained in the East, 
 except with the indulgence of some Dutch captain, 
 who would naturally charge the English the full 
 value of a new sail, and a bit more. One wonders, 
 indeed, how often those London merchants realised 
 how dearly these big percentages had been bought 
 how only the dogged determination of the captains 
 and masters, the sufferings of the crews in the leaky, 
 ill-found ships could provide fortunes and luxuries 
 for those who stayed at home in ease. However, 
 little though they knew it at the time, it was these 
 ill-faring mariners who were really building up the 
 foundations of England's Eastern wealth and her 
 Eastern Empire. Human lives in those harsh days 
 were rated low enough, and a poor, common sailor 
 was not slobbered over. He was merely one of the 
 meshes of the big net cast into the sea to bring in 
 large spoil to the financiers of that time. But it has 
 always been thus, and the more long-suffering the 
 seaman has shown himself, the more courageous and 
 patient he has been, the more he has been treated 
 with contumely by those very persons who have 
 
PERILS AND ADVENTURES 103 
 
 obtained, all that they possess through his achieve- 
 ments. 
 
 It cannot be supposed that these seventeenth- 
 century Indiamen were on the whole happy ships. 
 The captains feared mutiny all the time, and the 
 men were compelled to live and work under trying 
 conditions which were enough to break the spirit of 
 any landsman. Downton's journal shows this all too 
 well. Take the following entries, which are suffi- 
 ciently expressive : 
 
 ' July 2. Mr Abraham Lawes conceives he is 
 poisoned for that his stomach falls away, and he hath 
 often inclination to vomit, for he saith he was so at 
 Venice, when he was formerly poisoned." 
 
 Three days later Thomas Browning died, and on 
 27th July comes this entry : 
 
 " This day Mr Lawes died and is opened by the 
 surgeon who took good note of his inward parts 
 which was set down by the surgeon and divers wit- 
 nesses to that note." Similarly on 2ist August: 
 " Men daily fall down into great weakness "; and, 
 again, four days later : "Edw. Watts, carpenter, died 
 at midnight." Under the twenty-ninth of the same 
 month we find the following entry : " Stormy 
 weather, dry, the night past Thomas Dickorie died. 
 Most of my people in a weak estate." The last day 
 of the month we read that " John Ashbe died by an 
 imposthume at 7 o'clock after noon," and other mem- 
 bers of the ship's company continued to die almost 
 daily. An " imposthume," by the way, is an abscess. 
 
 But the Peppercorn^ though she had long since 
 crossed the line, and was even now beyond the Bay of 
 Biscay, was destined to suffer ill luck right to the 
 end of her voyage. She ought, of course, to have 
 
104 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 rounded Ushant and then squared away up the 
 English Channel. But as a fact Downton got right 
 out of his reckoning. He rather imagined that his 
 reckoning was wrong and suspected " all the instru- 
 ments by which we observed the variation by." The 
 result was that he got farther to the north than he 
 expected. He therefore ran right across the western 
 mouth of the English Channel without sighting any- 
 thing, so that eventually he found himself between 
 Wales and Ireland miles and miles out of his 
 course. All too late he realised the mistake, so 
 determined to put in to the nearest port. He thought 
 of Milford, but as the Peppercorn would not fetch 
 thither, he decided to run for Waterford in Ireland. 
 He ran down to the coast, but when off the entrance a 
 thick fog enshrouded the land, so he had to put out 
 to sea once more, being able eventually to run into 
 Waterford river when a more favourable oppor- 
 tunity presented itself. He had got his ship safe 
 back into the Narrow Seas, but he had arrived a long 
 way short of the River Thames and the port of Lon- 
 don, and it would mean the wasting of further delay 
 before the Peppercorn's rich cargo could be sold in 
 the metropolis. But with what success this voyage 
 concluded to the stock-holders we have already seen. 
 Apropos of this voyage there is still preserved a 
 letter written by Downton " aboard the Peppercorn 
 to the Right Worshipful the Indian Company in 
 Philpot Lane, September 15, 1613," in which this 
 captain asks for " 3 cables and other cordage of 
 divers sizes, a set of sails, sail needles and twine, 
 and some Hamburrough lines for sounding lines." 
 With regard to the bad land-fall which Downton 
 made coming: home, there can be no doubt that he 
 
 O * 
 
 had reason to suspect those crude, inaccurate 
 
b w 
 fc S 
 
 X - 
 
 < rrJ 
 
PERILS AND ADVENTURES 105 
 
 navigation instruments to which we have already 
 called attention. In addition, of course, the early 
 seventeenth-century charts bristled with errors. As 
 for Eastern waters, the English skippers were much 
 indebted to the charts which the Dutchmen had made 
 for themselves, the Dutch at this time being the best 
 cartographers in the world. There is at least one 
 instance of a navigator of one of the English East 
 India Company's ships " rinding it to be truely laid 
 down in Plat or Draught made by Jan Janson Mole, 
 a Hollander, which he gave to Master Hippon, and 
 he to the Companie." To this knowledge received 
 by the Company were added the " plots " (i.e. 
 charts) which their own masters of ships brought 
 home at the end of every voyage, amended and 
 added to as their experience dictated. We have 
 already seen that it was compulsory for the master 
 of every East Indiaman to deliver to the Governor 
 of the English East India Company four copies of 
 his journal and other " worthy " observations of his 
 voyage within ten days of his arrival back in the 
 Thames. The information thus derived was sys- 
 tematised, and as time went on and the voyages 
 became more numerous still there was thus accumu- 
 lated a number of invaluable sailing directions which 
 were to be condensed into " Rules for our East 
 India Navigations " by the famous John Davis of 
 Limehouse, who had himself made no less than five 
 voyages. The East India Company thus not only 
 built its own ships at its own dockyard, victualled 
 them from its own stores, but conducted its own 
 hydrography department. It was therefore positively 
 unique in its monopolies and self-dependence. Eng- 
 land has never had any corporation like it : and it 
 is pretty certain it never will. 
 
CHAPTER IX 
 
 SHIPS AND TRADE 
 
 WE alluded on an earlier page to what were known 
 as " separate " voyages. In the year 1612 the 
 owners of the different stocks joined together and 
 made one common capital of ; 740,000. Until that 
 year the custom had been for a number of men to 
 subscribe together for one particular voyage out and 
 home. This was found by no means satisfactory, 
 for it meant there was too much rivalry and no 
 co-operation. Before one voyage was completed 
 another would be sent out, and it happened that out 
 in the East several agents in their zeal to obtain 
 cargoes for their ships would be found bidding 
 against each other, to the great advantage of the 
 natives and the loss of the English stock-holders. 
 Then, again, it would also happen that the ship of 
 one particular voyage might be lying empty at some 
 Indian port waiting till her factor had obtained the 
 spices and other goods destined for England. 
 Meanwhile the factor of a second voyage had his 
 goods ready but no ship in which to send them home. 
 Each " voyage " was thus a separate and distinct 
 concern, declining to have anything to do with any 
 other " voyage," or group of adventurers. When, 
 therefore, this practice came to an end, the union 
 
 106 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 107 
 
 made for strength and did away with the ill feeling 
 and waste of energy till then so noticeable. The 
 first joint stock began in the year 1613 and ended in 
 1617. 
 
 During this period twenty-nine ships of the Company 
 were employed, and by the end of the year 1617 eight 
 had returned with cargoes, four had been either lost 
 or broken up, two had fallen into the hands of the 
 Dutch, and fifteen were still in the East Indies. 
 When the new stock was undertaken, most of these 
 ships still in India were taken over at valuation. 
 The biggest East Indiaman craft at this time were 
 the Royal James, of 1000 tons; the Anne Royal, of 
 900 tons ; and The New Year's Gift, of 800 tons. 
 
 The Master Hippon, of whom we made mention 
 in the last chapter, had command of the Globe, 
 which set forth from England alone and made direct 
 for the Coromandel coast (the south-east portion of 
 India). He called neither at the Red Sea, the Nico- 
 bars, nor the East Indian Archipelago. His mission 
 was to inaugurate a new sphere o'f trade, and in so 
 doing he was laying the foundations of those rich 
 commercial centres of Madras and Calcutta. His 
 work was not easy, for the Dutch would not allow 
 him to operate in their neighbourhood, but he left a 
 little band of men near Masulipatam to found a 
 factory, and then went on to establish other factories 
 in the Malay Peninsula and Siam. In the year 1612 
 Captain Best had obtained from the Court of Delhi 
 considerable privileges, including that of establish- 
 ing a factory at Surat. This was to become the chief 
 English station in India until the acquisition of 
 Bombay. In establishing these factories, the Eng- 
 lish were but copying the example of the Portuguese 
 
108 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 and DutcH. They were essential as depots for the 
 goods brought from home and the commodities 
 which had been obtained from the natives, and were 
 awaiting the arrival of the Company's ships. In 
 charge of these factories were the Company's agents 
 and their clerks. But it is well to bear in mind that 
 these factories and factors were destined to undergo 
 development. As a measure of precaution the 
 former were in the course of time strengthened, and 
 at a still later stage they became even forts, so that 
 the agents and clerks developed into a garrison. 
 And from a strictly defensive policy a more aggres- 
 sive influence occurred which resulted in acquisition 
 of territory as well as trading rights. 
 
 Captain Best had sailed from Gravesend on ist 
 February 1612, with the Red Dragon and the Hose- 
 ander, and arrived in the Swally, the roadstead for 
 Surat, on 5th September. Here also were the Portu- 
 guese fleet a few weeks later ready to thwart the 
 English, but Best was ready for them, and event- 
 ually hostilities were inevitable. But Best had the 
 true English spirit in him, and besides being an 
 excellent leader of a trading expedition, he was also 
 no mean tactician, taking advantage of tide and the 
 proximity of sandy shoals. The result was that the 
 English were victorious and the Portuguese admiral 
 defeated. But this meant something more than was 
 immediately apparent. In a word it was to have a 
 considerable influence on the future Anglo-Indian 
 trade, and so give a still greater demand for the 
 Indian merchant ships. In order properly to realise 
 the position, you have to think of a weak man over- 
 awed by a giant. Another giant comes along an'd 
 asks the weak man for certain favours. The latter 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 109 
 
 replies that he would be willing to make the con- 
 cessions if the second giant could conquer the first, 
 for whom the weak man has no real love. In the 
 present instance the first giant is represented by the 
 Portuguese, the weak man is the Great Mogul, and 
 the second giant the English. The latter had been 
 thwarted from trading with Surat by the Portuguese. 
 What the Mogul had said amounted to this : 
 :< Defeat the Portuguese and I will give you and 
 yours every opportunity to trade in my dominions : 
 your merchants shall not be molested, the customs 
 imposed shall be as light as possible, and if there 
 is any delinquency by which my people shall in any 
 way injure your men, I will see that the matter is 
 soon set right and redress given. Your country 
 shall be allowed to send its ambassador and reside 
 at my Court but you must first exhibit your strength 
 by conquering the hated Portuguese." 
 
 So Best's victory succeeded as only success can. 
 The mighty power of the Portuguese was now 
 broken like a reed. They had been defeated on 
 sea who prided themselves on sea-power. They had 
 lost their prestige with the natives, who had had the 
 first Europeans in awe. The whole of the Portu- 
 guese Indian system, which had amounted to piracy, 
 oppression and native ruin, had been, in the words 
 of India's great modern historian, Sir Wm. Wilson 
 Hunter, " rotten to the core." It was now to receive 
 its death-blow, and a new order of things was to 
 follow. Instead of the previous opposition, the Eng- 
 lish were now allowed to open their trade and to 
 start factories both at Surat and elsewhere, and the 
 English East India Company obtained a most firm 
 footing not as interlopers doing the best they could 
 
110 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 against Portuguese vigilance, but recognised by the 
 Great Mogul as an important and powerful trading 
 corporation. It was after these concessions had been 
 made and various factories set up that the latter 
 needed obvious protection both from the Portuguese 
 and the pirates who were greatly harassing the trad- 
 ing ships. Thus on land the nucleus was formed of 
 an Indian army : thus afloat the nucleus also was 
 formed of the Bombay Marine, afterwards to be 
 known as the Indian navy. 
 
 For the latter the Company's Surat agent was 
 compelled to do the best with local material, collect- 
 ing native craft called grabs and gallivats and com- 
 manded by officers who volunteered from the 
 Company's merchant ships. As these craft, like all 
 other local craft, were the most suitable for the 
 conditions of the place, the Company was well able 
 to patrol the Gulf of Cambay and protect the vessels 
 loaded with merchandise. This Indian marine had 
 come into being during the year 1613, and two years 
 later consisted of ten local craft. In the same year 
 arrived from England four of the Company's ships, 
 under Captain Keeling, with Sir Thomas Roe, who 
 had been sent by James I. as ambassador to the 
 Great Mogul, and the treaty with the latter was 
 ratified. 
 
 So the voyages continued to be made between 
 England and the East. There was still opposition 
 on the part of the Dutch, who would occasionally 
 seize the Company's ships, and in the year 1623 this 
 opposition reached its crisis in the notorious Mas- 
 sacre of Amboyna, when the English Company's 
 agent and nine more Englishmen were executed on 
 a trivial charge. Nor were the Portuguese ships 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 111 
 
 swept from the Eastern seas. The sea-power was 
 broken, but it still existed in its weakly condition, 
 and nothing gave the English seamen greater plea- 
 sure than to meet any of their big caracks in the 
 Indian Ocean or elsewhere and attack them. But 
 the factors who had been installed at Surat were in 
 no way deficient in enterprise. They were doing an 
 excellent trade, not merely between England and 
 India, but between India and Bantam. This was not 
 enough : they were determined to open up commerce 
 with the Persian Gulf. 
 
 Now this meant that trouble was inevitable. If 
 the Portuguese had lost their hold on India, they 
 were certainly just as strong as formerly at Ormuz 
 and other parts of the Persian Gulf. To traffic, or 
 to attempt to traffic, with this part of the Orient was 
 certain to mean further conflict with the nation which 
 had received so much injury from Captain Best. For 
 most of a hundred years the Portuguese had been 
 enjoying their monopoly up the Gulf. However, 
 neither this nor the certainty of conflict could turn 
 aside the ambition of the English East India Com- 
 pany. Their ships were sent from Surat with Indian 
 goods, the Portuguese vessels opposed them, the 
 victory went to the English, and thus once more, as 
 it had been in the territory of the Great Mogul, so 
 the result was to be in regard to the Persian trade. 
 The natives realised that the English were worth 
 listening to, and their prestige was raised to the 
 height from which the Portuguese simultaneously 
 dropped. Henceforth the English factors could 
 bring from Surat their calicoes and take back silks. 
 A little later Ormuz was destroyed Ormuz which 
 had been the seat of Portuguese supremacy in the 
 
112 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Persian Gulf and the centre of its wealthy trade in 
 that region and thus once more the nation which 
 had been the first of European countries to unlock 
 the secrets of the East was told to quit. By the 
 year 1622 a short enough period since the inaugura- 
 tion of the East India Company in London the 
 Portuguese had thus been driven out from those very 
 places in the East which had been so dear to them 
 and the means of so much wealth. By the year 1654 
 they had been compelled to agree that the English 
 should have the right to reside and trade in all these 
 Eastern possessions. It was a terrible blow to 
 Portuguese pride, a grievous disappointment to a 
 nation which had done so much for the discovery of 
 the world, and enough to make Prince Henry the 
 Navigator turn in his grave. But it was inevitable, 
 for the reason that as the Portuguese had declined 
 in sea-power, so the English had been rising ever 
 since the mid-sixteenth century, though more especi- 
 ally during the latter half of Elizabeth's reign. The 
 call of the sea to English ears was being listened to 
 more attentively than ever, and when that call sum- 
 moned men to such profitable trade it continued to 
 be heard through the centuries. Each success added 
 zest and gave an increased enthusiasm. Men who 
 wanted to see the world, or to increase their meagre 
 incomes, or to get away from the narrow confines of 
 their own town or village were eager to take their 
 oath- to the Company and go .East, where a more 
 adventurous life awaited them. But with the Portu- 
 guese it was not so. Most of their Latin enthusiasm 
 had run out : they had begun well, but they had been 
 unable to sustain. And the series of blows the 
 capture of their finest caracks, the revelation of their 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 113 
 
 East Indian secrets, the colossal defeat of the 
 Armada, the persistent and successful impertinence 
 of English interlopers in India, the glaring proof 
 that English seamanship, navigation, naval strategy, 
 tactics and gunnery were as good as their own this 
 succession of hard facts tended to break their spirit, 
 made them compelled to bow to the inevitable. Sic 
 transit gloria mundi. 
 
 Between the years 1617 an'd 1629 the English 
 East India Company had sent out no fewer than 57 
 ships, containing 26,690 tons of merchandise. In 
 addition they employed eighteen pinnaces which 
 spent their time trading from port to port in the 
 East Indies. We have already alluded to the incep- 
 tion of the Indian navy by the Surat factory. As 
 time went on this flotilla of local craft was 
 strengthened by big ships sent out from England. 
 But as this volume is not a history of either the East 
 India Company or of the development of the Indian 
 navy, we must confine our attention to the story of 
 the Company's merchant ships during the many 
 years in which they existed with such marvellous and 
 unprecedented benefit to India and the English 
 nation. Those who are interested merely in the rise 
 of the Indian navy will find the account in Captain 
 Low's volumes. 
 
 Now covetousness is a sin which is peculiar not 
 merely to individuals, but to corporations and even 
 nations. You may be sure that all this success on 
 the part of the East India Company's ships and of 
 their trading ashore led to no small amount of 
 jealousy and longing at home. It is true that the 
 State had assisted and encourage'd the Company in 
 every way : for it was obvious that it was for the 
 
 H 
 
114 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 nation's welfare generally, and in particular a fine 
 support for the navy in respect of ships, men and 
 stores. But the time arrived when the Company 
 began to be pinched and squeezed by the power that 
 hitherto had given only assistance. Covetousness 
 was at the bottom of it all, but the actual opportunity 
 had arisen over the capture of Ormuz, from which, 
 it had been reported, a large amount of spoil had 
 been taken. It was easy enough to invent some 
 excuse, and this came in the year 1624 when the 
 Company, understanding that the Portuguese were 
 preparing a fleet against them in Indian waters, 
 began to get ready a squadron of seven ships to 
 leave England. When these ships were ready to 
 sail, the Lord High Admiral of England, who hap- 
 pened to be the Duke of Buckingham, obtained from 
 Parliament an order to lay an embargo on these ships, 
 lying at Tilbury. A claim was made for a portion 
 of the spoil supposed to have been taken at Ormuz 
 and elsewhere. And in spite of protests the sum of 
 10,000 had to be paid before the ships were re- 
 leased. About this time, also, the Company were 
 attacked in Parliament on three grounds : (i) For 
 exporting the treasure of the kingdom, it being 
 alleged that 80,000 had been sent out yearly in 
 money : (2) For destroying the invaluable timber of 
 the country by building exceedingly great ships, the 
 timber being wanted for the navy : (3) For causing 
 the supply of mariners to become injured by these 
 voyages. The last item was certainly unreasonable : 
 for, as a fact, about one-third, or sometimes one-half, 
 of every ship's complement consisted of landsmen, 
 who went on board " green " to sea life. But as 
 happens over and over again, even in our luxurious 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 115 
 
 times, many a green-horn discovers after a while 
 that the life of a seaman is just what really suits 
 him : and it was so with these landsmen to a large 
 extent. The service opened up a new career for 
 them, and these fellows were to add to rather than 
 diminish the country's supply of sailors. 
 
 The ships were getting slightly more habitable 
 and better built, though no very great change was 
 taking place. How unseaworthy were some of the 
 Company's best vessels may be seen from a letter 
 sent on loth June 1614 by Robert Larkin, who 
 murmurs bitterly of his craft, the Darling. ' The 
 Darling" he writes, " complaineth sore, but I hope 
 to God she will carry us well to Puttam, and further 
 tediousness I omit. But I wish to God I were well 
 rid of my captainship, or the Darling a sounder 
 vessel to carry me in/' So also that big East India- 
 man, the Royal James, during the year 1617 sprang 
 a serious leak, and the way in which this was stopped 
 makes most interesting reading to all lovers of ships. 
 Her commander at that time, Captain Martin Pring, 
 wrote to the Company on the i2th of November of 
 the year mentioned that about a fortnight before 
 the Royal James had reached Swally the port of 
 Surat " we had a great leak broke upon us in the 
 James, which in four hours increased six foot water 
 in hold, and after we had freed it and made the 
 pumps suck, it would rise thirteen inches in half-an- 
 hour. It was a great blessing of God that it fell out 
 in such weather, by which means we had the help 
 of all the fleet, otherwise all our company had been 
 tired in a very short time. The Qth, we made many 
 trials with a bonnet stitched with oakum under the 
 bulge of the ship, but it did no good. The i ith, we 
 
116 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 basted our spritsail with oakum and let it down 
 before the stem of the ship and so brought it aft 
 by degrees : in which action it pleased God so to 
 direct us that we brought the sail right under the 
 place where the oakum was presently sucked into the 
 leak : which stopped it in such sort that the ship 
 made less water the day following than she had 
 done any day before from the time of our departure 
 out of England." 
 
 The device here employed was well known to the 
 old-fashioned sailor, and designated " fothering." 
 Briefly the idea was as follows. In order to stop the 
 leak a sail was fastened at the four corners and then 
 let down under the ship's bottom, a quantity of 
 chopped rope-yarns, oakum, cotton, wool anything 
 in the least serviceable for the job being also put 
 in. If you were lucky you would find that after the 
 first few attempts the leak would have sucked up 
 some of the oakum or whatever was put into the sail, 
 and so the water would not pour in as badly. This 
 device certainly saved Captain Cook during one of 
 his voyages after his ship had struck a rock and the 
 sea poured in so quickly that the pumps were unable 
 to cope with it. In the description given above by 
 Captain Pring you will notice that he used his sprit- 
 sail for this purpose. This was a quadrilateral sail 
 set at the end of the bowsprit, but was abolished 
 from East Indiamen and other ships in the early 
 part of the nineteenth century. At first, you will 
 observe, the bonnet doubtless the bonnet of the 
 mainsail the use of which we 'described on an 
 earlier page, was tried and lowered under the 
 " bulge " (or, as we now say, the " bilge ") of the 
 ship. " Stitched with oakum " means that the little 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 117 
 
 tufts of oakum were lightly stitched to the canvas 
 just to keep them in position until the suction of 
 the leak drew them up the hole away from the 
 canvas. When he says he " basted " the spritsail 
 with oakum he means again that the latter was sewn 
 with light stitches. This spritsail was lowered down 
 at the bows till it got below the ship's forefoot and 
 then brought gradually aft till the position of the 
 leak was reached, and then the oakum was sucked 
 up with the happy result noted. This all reads 
 much simpler than it was in actuality : and you can 
 imagine that it was no easy matter getting this sail 
 into its exact position while the ship was plunging 
 and rolling in a seaway. 
 
 Eventually the Royal lames got over the bar at 
 Swally, and a consultation was then held aboard her 
 by Captain Pring and a number of other captains as 
 to what had now best be done. One opinion was to 
 careen her so as to get at the leak and caulk it. 
 Another opinion was to " bring her aground for the 
 speedy stopping of her dangerous leak." But these 
 captains had before their minds the recollection that 
 the Trade's Increase had been lost whilst being 
 careened, and another ship named the Hector like- 
 wise : so they unanimously agreed that the best thing 
 would be to put the Royal James ashore, first taking 
 out of her the merchandise. They were more than a 
 little nervous as to how this big ship would take the 
 ground, so " for a trial " they brought ashore the 
 Francis, an interloping vessel which they had cap- 
 tured. When it was seen that the Francis seemed to 
 take the ground all right and that she lay there three 
 tides without apparent injury " and never com- 
 plained in any part," they put the Royal James 
 
118 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 ashore also. Unluckily this was not with the same 
 amount of success, " for she strained very much 
 about the midship and made her bends to droop : 
 which caused us to haul her off again so soon that 
 we had not time to find the leak. Yet (God be 
 praised) since we came afloat her bends are much 
 righted and she hath remained very tight : God grant 
 she may so long continue." 
 
 When Sir Thomas Roe went out from England in 
 the year 1615 to Surat as English Ambassador to 
 the Great Mogul, he was accompanied by Edward 
 Terry, his chaplain. The latter has left behind an 
 account of his voyage to India, and though we 
 cannot do much more than call attention thereto, 
 we may in passing note that this setting forth shows 
 how much valuable time was wasted in those days 
 waiting for a fair wind. For these seventeenth- 
 century ships had neither the fine lines nor the 
 superiority of rig which was afterwards to make the 
 East Indiamen famous throughout the world. The 
 Company's seventeenth-century ships were clumsy 
 as to their proportions, they were built according to 
 rule-of-thumb, the stern was unnecessarily high, the 
 bows unnecessarily low. Triangular headsails had 
 not yet been adopted, except by comparatively small 
 fore-and-aft-rigged craft, such as yachts and coasters. 
 The mizen was still of the lateen shape, but all the 
 other sails were quadrilateral, even to the spritsail, 
 which was suspended at the outer end of the bowsprit 
 and below that spar. Above the latter on a small 
 mast was hoisted another small squaresail, and then 
 at the after end of the bowsprit (which was very long 
 and practically a mast) came the foremast, stepped 
 as far forward as it could go. 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 119 
 
 With this unhandy rig, the bluff -bowed hulls with 
 their clumsy design and heavy tophamper could 
 make little or no progress in a head wind. They 
 were all right for running before the wind, or with 
 the wind on the quarter : but not only could they not 
 point close to the wind, but even when they tried they 
 made a terrible lot of leeway. It was therefore hope- 
 less to try and beat down the English Channel. 
 Most seamen are aware that the prevailing winds 
 over the British Isles are from the south-west, but 
 that often between about February and the end of 
 June, more especially in the earlier part of the year, 
 one can expect north-east or easterly spells. The old 
 East Indiamen therefore availed themselves of this. 
 For a fair wind down Channel was a thing much 
 to be desired, and a long time would be spent in 
 waiting for it. As these awkward ships had to work 
 their tides down the River Thames, then drop anchor 
 for a tide, and take the next ebb down, their progress 
 till they got round the North Foreland was anything 
 but fast. 
 
 Of all this Edward Terry's account gives ample 
 illustration. He was a cleric and no seaman, but 
 he had the sense of observation and recorded what 
 he observed. It was on the 3rd of February 1615 
 that the squadron, including the flagship Charles a 
 " New-built goodly ship of a thousand Tuns (in 
 which I sayled) . . . fell down from Graves-send into 
 Tilbury Hope/' Here they remained until 8th 
 February, when they weighed anchor, and not till 
 1 2th February had they weathered the North Fore- 
 land and brought up in the Downs, where they 
 remained for weeks waiting till a fair wind should 
 oblige them. On the 9th of March the longed-for 
 
120 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 north-easter came, when they immediately got under 
 way and two days later passed the meridian of the 
 Lizard during the night. With the wind in such a 
 quarter these Indiamen would bowl along just as 
 fast as their ill-designed hulls could be forced 
 through the water, making a lot of fuss and beating 
 the waves instead of cutting through them as in the 
 case of the last of the East Indiamen which ever 
 sailed. 
 
 By the igth of May they had passed the Tropic 
 of Capricorn and Terry marvelled at the sight of 
 whales, which were " of an exceeding greatnesse " 
 and " appear like unto great Rocks." Sharks were 
 seen, and even in those days the inherent delight of 
 the seaman for capturing and killing his deadly 
 enemy was very much in existence. As these cruel 
 fish swam about the Charles the sailors would cast 
 overboard " an iron hook . . . fastened to a roap 
 strong like it, bayted with a piece of beefe of five 
 pounds weight." 
 
 The squadron duly arrived in Swally Roads on 
 the 1 8th of September. Sir Thomas Roe performed 
 his mission to the Great Mogul, and eventually 
 reached England again. So also Edward Terry, 
 after having been for some time in the East India 
 Company's service, was made rector of Great Green- 
 ford, Middlesex, and in the year 1649 we find him 
 one day in September preaching a " sermon of 
 thanksgiving" in the Church of St Andrew's, Under- 
 shaft, before the Committee of these East India 
 Company merchants. The occasion was the return 
 of seven of the Company's ships which had arrived 
 from the Orient together " a great and an unex- 
 pected mercy " after a " long, and tedious, and 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 121 
 
 hazardous voyage." Terry's discourse is typical 
 of the pompous, obsequious period. We can almost 
 see these worthy East India merchants strolling 
 into the church and taking their places by no means 
 unconscious of their self-importance, yet not 
 ashamed to do their duty and give thanks for the 
 safe arrival of ships and their rich cargoes. Many 
 of them, if not all, had never been out of England. 
 Terry had been to India and back : he was therefore 
 no ordinary rector, and he rose to the occasion. He 
 hurls tags of Latin quotations at his hearers and 
 then, after referring to the great riches which they 
 were obtaining from the East, reminds these mer- 
 chants that there are richer places to be found than 
 both the East Indies and the West, better ports than 
 Surat or even Bantam, and so went on to speak of 
 the land where " nor rust, nor moth, nor fire, nor 
 time can consume," where the pavement is gold and 
 the walls are of precious stones. And then, after 
 this simple, direct homily, the Committee came out 
 from their pews and went back to their daily pursuits. 
 If these seventeenth-century men were crude and 
 had lost some of the religious zeal of the pre- 
 Reformation sailors, they still retained as a relic of 
 the Puritan influence a narrow but sincere personal 
 piety. And this comes out in the following prayer 
 which was wont to be used aboard the East India- 
 man ships of the late seventeenth century. It is 
 called " A prayer for the Honourable English Com- 
 pany trading to the East Indies, to be used on board 
 their ships," and bears the imprimatur of the Arch- 
 bishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London, 
 who append their signatures to the statement that 
 " we do conceive that this prayer may be very proper 
 
122 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 to be used, for the purpose express'd in the tittle 
 of it." It has none of the beautiful English of the 
 Middle Ages, for liturgical ability, like stained-glass 
 window painting, was at this time a lost art. But for 
 its simple sincerity, its suggestive deep realisation of 
 the terrors of the sea, its true pathos and its plain 
 religious confidence, it is characteristic of the period 
 and the minds of the men who joined in this 
 prayer : 
 
 " O Almighty and most Merciful Lord God, 
 Thou art the Soveraign Protector of all that Trust 
 in Thee, and the Author of all Spiritual and Tem- 
 poral Blessings. Let Thy Grace, we most humbly 
 beseech thee, be always Present with thy Servants 
 the English Company Trading to the East Indies. 
 Compass them with thy Favour as with a shield. 
 Prosper them in all their Publick Undertakings, 
 and make them Successful in all their Affairs both 
 by Sea and Land. Grant that they may prove a 
 common Blessing, by the Increase of Honour, 
 Wealth and Power ... by promoting the Holy 
 Religion of our Lord Jesus Christ. Be more espe- 
 cially at this time favourable to us, who are separated 
 from all the world, and have our sole dependance 
 upon thee here in the great waters. Thou shewest 
 they wonders in the Deep, by commanding the 
 Winds and the Seas as thou pleasest, and thou alone 
 canst bring us into the Haven where we would be. 
 To they Power and Mercy therefore we humbly fly 
 for Refuge and Protection from all Dangers of this 
 long and Perilous voyage. Guard us continually 
 with thy good Providence in every place. Preserve 
 our Relations and Friends whom we have left, and 
 at length bring us home to them again in safety and 
 
SHIPS AND TRADE 123 
 
 with the desired Success. Grant that every one of 
 us, being always mindful of thy Fatherly Goodness, 
 and Tender Compassion towards us, may glorifie 
 thy Name by a constant Profession of the Christian 
 Faith, and by a Sober, Just and Pious Conversation 
 through the remaining part of our Lives. All this 
 we beg for the sake of our Saviour Jesus Christ, to 
 whom with thee and the Blessed Spirit be ascrib'd 
 all Honour, Praise and Dominion both now and for 
 evermore. Amen." 
 
CHAPTER X 
 
 FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 THE joint stock arrangement, as distinct from the 
 separate voyages, which had been instituted in 1613 
 worked very well : and after the Restoration the 
 practice of buying and selling shares became com- 
 mon, the system approximating to that of modern 
 times. The Company's ships were continuing to 
 bring back much wealth to the shareholders, but 
 again covetous desires had to be appeased. In the 
 year 1649 tne Commissioners of the Navy con- 
 strained the East India Company to lend them 
 ,4000. It was in the year 1654 that Cromwell, by 
 means of his treaty with the Portuguese, obtained 
 the right of English ships to trade with any Portu- 
 guese possessions in the East Indies. Now this 
 meant a very handsome additional benefit to the 
 East India Company's ships. Cromwell was shrewd 
 enough to know what he was about, and accordingly 
 in the following year got his quid -pro quo when he 
 succeeded in borrowing 50,000 from the Company, 
 seeing that the latter had gained so much from 
 national successes; and a little later on in the same 
 year obtained from the same source another 10,000 
 to pay Blake's seamen, whose wages were in arrears. 
 And this was not the last instance of the Company 
 being fleeced by the State. 
 
 124 
 
FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN 125 
 
 In the year 1640 permission had been obtained 
 from the native authorities to build the first of the 
 Company's forts in India. This became known as 
 Fort St George (Madras), and in the year 1658 the 
 Madras settlement was raised to a presidency. In 
 1645 tne Company had begun to establish factories 
 in Bengal, so the ports for the East Indiamen were 
 now becoming more numerous, and the area from 
 which the cargoes could be obtained was being widely 
 extended. The Portuguese, as we have seen, were 
 now out of the running as regards the East. And 
 as for the repeated collisions which the English had 
 with the Dutch, the three Anglo-Dutch wars which 
 had been long foreseen, as they were destined long 
 to last, had given quite a new complexion to affairs 
 in India, leaving the English East India Company 
 in a position stronger than ever. One of the stipula- 
 tions had been that the Dutch should indemnify the 
 English merchants and factors in India with regard 
 to the massacre at Amboyna, and the guilty parties 
 therein concerned were to be punished. In 1664 the 
 French East India Company had been formed, and 
 ten years later the foundation of their settlement at 
 Pondicherry was laid. 
 
 In the year 1681 the Company had developed 
 their fleet to such an extent that they now owned 
 about thirty-five ships, ranging in size from 775 to 
 100 tons. In customs alone the Company were pay- 
 ing ; 60,000 a year, and they were carrying out to 
 India ; 60,000 or ,70,000 worth of lead, tin, cloth 
 and stuffs every year, bringing back raw silk, pepper 
 and other goods of the East. By the year 1683 so 
 profitable were the annual results of the Company's 
 trading that a ,100 share would sell for ,500. 
 
126 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Before long the size of the ships just mentioned was 
 to increase to 900 and even to 1300 tons, such was 
 the demand for Indian products; and between the 
 years 1682 and 1689 no fewer than sixteen East 
 Indiamen varying in size from 900 to 1300 tons 
 were constructed. All the East Indiamen were well 
 armed, for even in the year 1677, w T hen the Company 
 owned from thirty to thirty-five ships of from 300 to 
 600 tons apiece, these vessels each mounted from 
 forty to seventy guns. 
 
 It will be recollected that Bantam had been the 
 first headquarters or chief factory whither the Com- 
 pany's ships went for their trade. This continued 
 until 1638, when Surat had developed so much, 
 thanks to the concessions by the Great Mogul, that 
 it replaced Bantam in pre-eminence. The last- 
 mentioned factory, together with Fort St George in 
 Madras, Hooghly in Bengal, and those establish- 
 ments in Persia were all made subservient to Surat. 
 A far-sighted person could have foreseen that all 
 these scattered strongholds of trade might not 
 improbably develop eventually into something very 
 much more important politically. But it was Sir 
 Josiah Child, the principal manager of the Com- 
 pany's affairs at home, who was one of the first to 
 project the forming of a territorial Empire in India. 
 
 We had reason to mention just now a ship which 
 we described as being an interloper. The reader is 
 well aware that in the first instance the charter 
 granted to the English East India Company by 
 Queen Elizabeth conveyed to them the exclusive 
 privilege of trading to the East. This charter was 
 renewed in the years 1609, 1657, 1661 and subse- 
 quently in other years. But such was the jealousy, 
 such the covetousness which were aroused by the 
 
FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN 127 
 
 Company's successful voyages that a number of 
 interlopers, quite contrary to the terms of the charter, 
 fitted out expeditions of their own. These were 
 evidently successful, too, especially during the latter 
 part of the reign of Charles II., for the number of 
 these private adventurers increased considerably. 
 The result, of course, was that the Company became 
 exceedingly indignant and had to exert themselves 
 to put an end to the trouble. But this, again, 
 opened up the whole of the question as to whether 
 the Company should continue to enjoy such a fine 
 monopoly. There was a good deal of resentment 
 against India being restricted to a favoured few. 
 However the Government favoured the Company, 
 for it had been found more than useful to the country 
 in times of crisis, so again in the year 1693 ^ received 
 its fresh charter. 
 
 But between the years 1694 and 1698 this Eastern 
 trade practically was thrown open. And then the 
 State happened to require a loan of ,2,000,000. 
 This was found by a newly formed company of 
 associated merchants who had been very vigorous 
 in opposing the East India Company's privilege. 
 And since this new company wanted only eight per 
 cent, (not a high rate for those days) for their loan, 
 they also received a charter. The result was that 
 there were two companies trading to India and each 
 with its own charter. The title of this fresh associa- 
 tion was the New East India Company, and pres- 
 ently a kind of third company arose as an offshoot 
 from this second one. All this competition had a 
 most disastrous effect and brought both the old and 
 new companies almost to ruin. Each company hated 
 the other, while the public detested both most 
 heartily. There were only two possibilities open. 
 
128 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Either both companies must be wrecked or they must 
 amalgamate. It was wisely decided to choose the 
 latter. They therefore adjusted their differences, 
 and in the year 1708 were amalgamated into one 
 corporation, calling themselves " The United Com- 
 pany of Merchants of England Trading to the East 
 Indies." The capital was increased to 3, 200,000. 
 They were the means of aiding the Government by 
 advancing to the latter ,1,200,000 without interest, 
 and the Government in turn agreed to extend the 
 Company's charter till the year 1726, with three 
 years' notice of termination. And it was subse- 
 quently extended till 1766. 
 
 During the last decade of the seventeenth century 
 when hostilities existed between England and 
 France the East India Company laid before the 
 House of Lords an account of the great losses which 
 the former had incurred at sea, owing to the lack of 
 English cruisers. Those were no easy times for the 
 ships bound either to or from the Orient, for, besides 
 possible attacks from French men-of-war, the Eng- 
 lish Channel and approaches thereto were alive with 
 privateers, to the great detriment of the Anglo-Indian 
 trade. Some idea of the size and strength of the 
 East India Company's ships about this time may be 
 gathered from the following list of craft which the 
 French captured from them during the year 1694 
 alone : 
 
 Name of Ship Tonnage Men Guns 
 
 Princess of Denmark . . 670 133 40 
 Seymour .... 500 
 
 Success '-i : . . . 400 80 32 
 
 Defence . . . . 750 150 50 
 
 Resolution .... 650 130 40 
 
FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN 129 
 
 In later years one of the most valuable com- 
 modities which India was to produce and send to 
 England in these ships was tea. The first importa- 
 tion by us was in the year 1667. Only a small 
 amount, consisting of 100 lb., was sent, but it was 
 not long before this was greatly exceeded. How- 
 ever, the early years of the eighteenth century were 
 marked by a disappointment in the trade which the 
 Company was doing. Although the latter's ships 
 were now trading also with China, yet the value of 
 our exports to the East were less than ; 160,000 a 
 year : and this, let it be remembered, included also 
 military stores for the Company's settlements in the 
 East and at St Helena. The reason for this slump 
 is easily explained. Every authority will admit that 
 the finest tonic for trade is competition. Monopoly 
 is death to enterprise, while a spirit of rivalry en- 
 courages progress. The East India Company was 
 suffering from the decaying, deadening influence of 
 its exclusive privilege and this went on till about the 
 middle of the eighteenth century. The first half of 
 that century is decadent, not merely with regard to 
 India, but most things English. Art was at its 
 lowest, manners were never less sincere, morals were 
 corrupt, politics were little better. It almost seems 
 as if England had lost the fair wind which had 
 carried her through the Tudor times and then 
 become gradually becalmed in the Stuart era till 
 she rolled about with no progress, making only stern- 
 way. And then, after a period of profitless existence, 
 she seems to have picked up another breeze which 
 has sent her along through the successful industrial 
 age, the great wars, the Victorian and Edwardian 
 years of prosperity up till to-day. The end of the 
 eighteenth century is a period quite different from its 
 
130 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 first portion. And if it was so generally it could 
 scarcely be different in regard to a corporation 
 directed and managed by men of this period. 
 
 Just for a moment let us go back to that time when 
 the East India Company decided it were best to 
 close the Deptford yard and obtain their ships ready 
 built. Now as time went on the hiring of ships to 
 the Company for this Eastern trade led to great 
 abuses. Officially the Company did no longer build 
 their ships. But the Company's directors used to 
 build them privately and then hire them out to the 
 Company, to the great personal gain of the directors. 
 There were few other ships big enough or strong 
 enough. The directors would know how many to 
 build and to what extent prices could be demanded 
 from the Company : and altogether they feathered 
 their nests very nicely. This went on till the year 
 1708, when the old and new East India companies 
 had become amalgamated. After this year the 
 directors were prohibited by Act of Parliament from 
 supplying ships to the Company. 
 
 Instead of the former corrupt arrangement, ships 
 for the East India Company were to be hired in the 
 future by open tender from the commander and two 
 owners. But here again was a difficulty. Inasmuch 
 as a special type of stalwart ship was required for 
 this trade, the supply was small and in the hands of 
 a ring called the Marine Interest. Therefore the 
 Company was just about as badly off as before. 
 And throughout the eighteenth century there was one 
 continued contest between the East India Company 
 and the shipbuilders, who did their level best to 
 fleece the former as it had been fleeced by the State 
 at different dates. 
 
FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN 131 
 
 For the East India Company did not literally own 
 their ships, even though they were called East India- 
 men, flew the Company's flag and made their regular 
 voyages. A shipping company to- r day buys and 
 owns its own ships, but the East India Company had 
 quite a different method. Up to the time when the 
 old and new companies were amalgamated, in the 
 year 1708, the owners and the Company were un- 
 fettered by any legislative provision. They could 
 settle and adjust the points between themselves, and 
 since the directors were part owners you may be sure 
 there was little cause for dispute ! But the by-law 
 which came into force after the union of the two 
 companies, prohibiting directors from being con- 
 cerned in hiring ships to the Company, brought 
 about a rather curious order of things. They were 
 hired for so many voyages at so much a ton, the 
 Company binding itself to freight a stipulated num- 
 ber of tons. These, by the way, were generally less 
 than the official measurement. About the year 1700 
 the largest East Indiamen were under 500 tons, 
 though their burthen was one-third greater. 
 
 Under the new arrangement the ships were to be 
 taken up by the Company and their respective voy- 
 ages agreed to in a Court of Directors by ballot. 
 No tenders were to be accepted except such as had 
 been made by the commander and two owners of 
 each ship. Furthermore, the sale of the post as 
 captain or any other office was forbidden in the Com- 
 pany's ships. This latter was an important modifica- 
 tion. The actual owner of the ship from whom the 
 vessel was hired was termed the ship's husband, and 
 the practice had been for him to sell the command 
 of the ship to a captain whom he would select. The 
 
132 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 expression in this case was to " sell the ship," and a 
 captain would sometimes pay as much as ,8000 or 
 ; 1 0,000 for the privilege of the appointment, be- 
 cause this position afforded him unique opportunities 
 of making some handsome profits by the goods he 
 brought home from the East in his ship as his own 
 perquisites. To such an extent did this practice 
 become established that the sale of a command be- 
 came transferable property of the captain who had 
 bought it. Whenever he died or resigned his heirs 
 or he himself had the undoubted right to dispose of 
 the billet to the highest bidder. 
 
 The reason for the abolition of this custom was 
 that it was largely responsible for the high rates of 
 freight which the Company was forced to pay. A 
 compensation was paid to the captains in the service 
 at the time of the abolition, but henceforth money 
 could not buy the command of a ship for a man that 
 was not adequately qualified for the post. Previously 
 commands of ships had been held in some cases by 
 men who possessed no right to such responsible 
 tasks. Captain Eastwick, a master mariner of the 
 eighteenth century, who has happily left behind his 
 autobiography, relates among a number of interest- 
 ing personal reminiscences that he married the niece 
 of a man who was sole owner of one East Indiaman 
 and part owner of two more of these ships. It was 
 therefore suggested that Eastwick should enter the 
 Honourable Company's service, and a command was 
 promised as soon as he was qualified. ' This was a 
 very tempting offer," writes the old sailor, " as there 
 was no service equal to it, or more difficult to get 
 into, requiring great interest." 
 
 " It was the practice of the Company in those 
 
FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN 183 
 
 days to charter ships from their owners ; these vessels 
 were especially built for the service, and were 
 generally run for about four voyages, when they were 
 held to be worn out, and their places taken by others 
 built for the purpose. About thirty ships were re- 
 quired for the Company every year," he states, and 
 then goes on to say that " there was never any 
 written engagement on the part of either the owners 
 or the Company as to the continuance of these 
 charters, but the custom of contract was so well 
 established that both parties mutually relied upon it, 
 and considered themselves bound by ties of honour 
 to observe their implied customary engagements. 
 When, therefore, a ship's turn arrived to be em- 
 ployed, the owner, as a matter of form, submitted a 
 tender in writing to be engaged, and proposed a 
 particular person as captain, and this tender and 
 proposal were always accepted. Thus the owners of 
 these East Indiamen had everything in their own 
 hands, and the favour of one of them was a fine thing 
 to obtain, leading to appointments of great emolu- 
 
 ment." 
 
 Some idea of the value of the East Indiaman 
 captain's appointment may be gathered from what 
 Eastwick remarks under this head. ' The captain 
 of an East Indiaman, in addition to his pay and 
 allowances, had the right of free outward freight to 
 the extent of fifty tons, being only debarred from 
 exporting certain articles, such as woollens, metals, 
 and warlike stores. On the homeward voyage he 
 was allotted twenty tons of free freight, each of 
 thirty-two feet; but this tonnage was bound to con- 
 sist of certain scheduled goods, and duties were pay- 
 able thereon to the Company. As the rate of freight 
 
184 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 in those days was about ^25 a ton, this privilege 
 was a very valuable one. Of course much depended 
 upon the skill and good management of the in- 
 dividual commander, the risk of the market, his 
 knowledge of its requirements, and his own con- 
 nections and interest to procure him a good profit. 
 In addition to the free tonnage, he further enjoyed 
 certain advantages in the carrying of passengers, for 
 although the allowance of passage money outward 
 and homeward was arbitrarily fixed by the Com- 
 pany, there being a certain number of passengers 
 assigned to each vessel, and their fares duly deter- 
 mined, ranging from ^95 for a subaltern and 
 assistant-surgeon to ^235 for a general officer, with 
 from one and a half to three and a half tons of free 
 baggage, exclusive of bedding and furniture for 
 their cabins, yet it was possible for captains, by 
 giving up their own apartments and accommodation, 
 to make very considerable sums for themselves. In 
 short, the gains to a prudent commander averaged 
 from 4000 to ^5000 a voyage, sometimes perhaps 
 falling as low as 2000, but at others rising to 
 10,000 and 12,000. The time occupied from 
 the period of a ship commencing receipt of her out- 
 ward cargo to her being finally cleared of her home- 
 ward one was generally from fourteen to eighteen 
 months, and three or four voyages assured any man 
 a very handsome fortune." 
 
 But though these commands were very expensive 
 to purchase and highly remunerative when obtained, 
 yet like the professional man to-day this high re- 
 muneration was preceded by years of bad pay. 
 Before a man could obtain the command of an East 
 Indiaman he must necessarily have made a voyage 
 
FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN 135 
 
 as fifth or sixth mate, then another voyage as third 
 or fourth mate, and finally a third voyage as first or 
 second mate. Now these junior officers in the Com- 
 pany's service were quite unable to live on their pay 
 " and it required a private capital of at least five 
 hundred pounds to enable a man to arrive at the 
 position of second mate, which was the lowest station 
 wherein the pay an$ allowances afforded a main- 
 tenance." 
 
 Whenever an Indiaman became worn out, or con- 
 demned, another ship was hired to replace her, and 
 was said to be " built upon the bottom " of the first. 
 The member or members of the Marine Interest who 
 had built the first ship claimed the right of building 
 the second, and so it went on. The result was that 
 there arose what were known as " hereditary 
 bottoms." This went on till the year 1796, when 
 some of the more public-spirited of the directors and 
 shareholders of the East India Company put their 
 heads together and determined to have this system 
 entirely altered. It is indeed most extraordinary 
 that the principle of monopoly seemed to pervade 
 every feature of the Company's transactions, from 
 the broad, important principle of exclusive trade 
 with the East down to the building of ships and the 
 exclusive privileges of their commanders. In any 
 other line of commerce the rate of freight found its 
 own level, but in the East India Company there was 
 but one bidder, and that also a monopoly. As the 
 voyage was long and difficult and full of dangers, 
 it was natural enough that good commanders should 
 be desired. If an owner had a good captain, the 
 Company were only too pleased to have him. 
 
 The passing of a by-law in the year 1773 pre- 
 
136 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 vented a ship from being engaged for the Com- 
 pany's service for more than four voyages at a 
 certain freight, this being calculated on an estimate 
 of the building and the cost of fitting out a vessel 
 with provisions and stores for a certain number of 
 months. In the years 1780 and 1781 differences of 
 opinion arose between the owners of the ships and 
 the Court of Directors of the East India Company 
 as to the rate of freight demanded. Owing to the 
 hostilities with the Dutch, the rates of insurance and 
 fitting out were stated to have caused an additional 
 charge of 10, 145. a ton. The contest between 
 these two opposing sets of monopolists was always 
 amusing to an outsider. The Company wanted the 
 ships badly, for their very existence depended on 
 their ability to carry cargoes between England and 
 India. On the other hand the owners had built these 
 ships especially for the Company's service. They 
 represented a great outlay of capital, and they were 
 so big and efficient that there was practically no 
 other trade in which they could be profitably em- 
 ployed. So, after a certain amount of mutual indig- 
 nation had cooled off, and the usual haggling had 
 proceeded, both parties were wont to come to a com- 
 promise and matters went on as before till the next 
 dispute occurred. 
 
 Thus, for instance, in the year 1783 the Court of 
 the East India Company's directors fixed the rate 
 of freight at ,32 per ton for a ship of 750 tons. 
 To this the owners replied that it was quite impossible 
 to provide the ships under ^35 a ton. The Court 
 then showed their independence. They were re- 
 solved not to surfer the intolerable humiliation of 
 being dictated to by these owners, so the Company 
 
FREIGHTING THE EAST INDIAMEN 137 
 
 advertised for tenders. Eventually twenty-eight 
 ships were offered the Company by various private 
 owners in respect of this advertisement. But after 
 the Company's inspecting officer had carefully ex- 
 amined these vessels he had to report that they were 
 either foreign-built, or weak of structure, or else 
 almost worn out : in any case quite unfitted for the 
 long voyage to India and back. This placed the 
 Company in rather a dilemma, and gave something 
 of a shock to their independent spirit. Meanwhile 
 the owners who had hitherto provided the Company 
 with ships had taken alarm at thus throwing open 
 the tender for competition. They were in serious 
 danger of losing their own monopoly : so they began 
 to climb down and offered the Company the rate 
 f 33 a ton. And inasmuch as the latter required 
 as much as 10,000 tons the two parties agreed on 
 this last-mentioned price, more especially as the 
 ships were known to be sound in every respect, 
 having actually been built under the direction of the 
 Company's officials. 
 
CHAPTER XI 
 
 EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY 
 
 THE East India Company's progress was anything 
 but a straight, easy path. We must never forget that 
 if it made big profits and when examined these 
 figures, taken on an average, are not so colossal as 
 they seem at first sight the risks and responsibilities 
 were very far from insignificant. Quite apart from 
 the difficulties out in India, and the absence of the 
 invention of telegraphy thus making it difficult to 
 keep a complete control over the factors and trade ; 
 quite apart, too, from the pressure which was harass- 
 ing the Company from all sides public opinion 
 which grudged this monopoly : shipowners who 
 wanted to raise the cost of hire : and Parliament 
 which kept controlling the Company by legislation 
 there were two other sources of worry which existed. 
 The first of these was the continued insults by the 
 press-gangs, and the consequent inconvenience to 
 the East India Company and the great danger to 
 their ships and cargoes. The second worry was the 
 ever-present possibility during the long-drawn-out 
 wars of losing also ships and goods by attack from 
 the enemy's men-of-war. In both respects the posi- 
 tion was not easy of solution. On the one hand, it 
 was ofrvious that the Company's trade was likely to 
 
 138 
 
EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY 139 
 
 be crippled ; but, on the other, the Government must 
 come first in both matters. The navy was in dire 
 need of men. All that it had were not enough. 
 Men who had been convicted and sentenced for 
 smuggling some of the finest sailors in the country 
 were shipped on board to fight for the land that 
 gave them birth. All sorts of rough characters were 
 rounded up ashore and sent afloat by the press- 
 gangs, but even then the warships needed more. 
 
 Now the crews of these eighteenth-century East 
 Indiamen were such skilled seamen, so hardened to 
 the work of a full-rigged ship, so accustomed to 
 fighting pirates, privateers and even the enemy's 
 men-of-war, that it was no wonder the Admiralty in 
 their dilemma overstepped the bounds and shipped 
 them whenever they could be got. A favourite 
 custom was to lie in wait for the homeward-bound 
 East Indiamen, and when these fine ships had 
 dropped anchor off Portsmouth, in the Downs, or 
 even on their way up the Thames, they would be 
 boarded and relieved of some of their crew : to such 
 an extent, sometimes, that the ship could not be 
 properly worked. I have carefully examined a large 
 number of original manuscripts which passed be- 
 tween the Admiralty and the East India Company 
 of the eighteenth century, and there runs through 
 the period a continuous vein of complaint from the 
 latter to the former, but there was very little remedy 
 and the Company had to put up with the nuisance. 
 
 On the 2ist of December 1710, for instance, 
 the Company's secretary, Thomas Woolley, sends 
 a letter from the directors complaining to the 
 Admiralty of the press-gang actually invading East 
 India House, Leadenhall Street, one day during the 
 
140 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 same month, " on a pretence of searching for sea- 
 men." As a matter of fact the press-gang had come 
 to carry off the most capable of the Company's crews, 
 who happened to be present at that time. Very 
 strongly the Company wrote complaints to the 
 Admiralty that the press-gangs would board the East 
 Indiamen lying off Spithead (bound for London) and 
 take out all the able-bodied seamen they could lay 
 their hands on. These men had to go whether they 
 liked it or not, and the Company's officers were 
 indignant but powerless. But it added injury to 
 insult that the press-gangs replaced the picked men 
 taken out by " such as have been either unskilful 
 in their duty or careless and refractory in the per- 
 formance of it," as one of the letters remarks. The 
 Company therefore begged that no man might be 
 taken out until the East Indiamen should arrive at 
 their moorings, or at least till they came into the 
 London river : for, they pointed out, the ships had 
 very valuable cargoes on board, and this seizing of 
 men exposed them to very great danger, it being 
 often impossible to replace the men taken out. 
 
 When the Company's ships at length reached the 
 Thames, the directors would often send down hoys 
 to meet them and to bring the goods up to London, 
 where they could be placed on view in the ware- 
 houses to show the buyers before the sale opened. 
 But the naval authorities had given the crews of 
 these hoys such a fright that they refused to go even 
 down towards the mouth of the river, fearing that 
 the press-warrants, which were out, would be put into 
 execution and they themselves would be sent to serve 
 in the warships. These hoys were fore-and-aft- 
 rigged vessels of about 40 or 50 tons, the crew con- 
 
EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY 141 
 
 sisting of a skipper and two men. Such craft were 
 sloops that is to say, practically cutters, the only 
 difference being purely technical and legal and 
 were built for the purpose of carrying passengers 
 and goods from one place to another along the coast 
 or up estuaries, where ordinary lighters were not 
 able to be taken with convenience or safety. The 
 Margate hoy, for instance, was very well known to 
 Londoners at this time. 
 
 But the needier naval seamen was so urgent, con- 
 sequent on the wars, that the Admiralty had to go 
 to even further extremities. They actually sent to 
 sea a press smack with a naval officer on board, and 
 this craft would cruise up and down the English 
 Channel. On one occasion Captain Mawson of the 
 Company's ship Cardonell, homeward bound, was 
 followed all the way from Portsmouth to the Downs 
 by such a smack. And when the bigger ship brought 
 up off Deal, Lieutenant Hutchinson, R.N., came 
 aboard and used his best endeavours to take away 
 every one of the CardonelVs crew, with the exception 
 only of the ship's officers. The skipper of the mer- 
 chantman naturally resented this very strongly, but 
 offered to let Mr Hutchinson have most of his men 
 provided the naval officer would supply him with 
 others to take their place so that the ship might be 
 safely brought to her moorings in the Thames. But 
 it was no good. Hutchinson absolutely declined to 
 make a compromise, and according to Mawson's 
 account behaved very rudely and, not content with 
 the able seamen, carried off also the CardonelVs 
 second mate. 
 
 The only way in which this annoyance and danger 
 could be overcome was for the Admiralty to issue 
 
142 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 what were known as " protections." The holder of 
 a protection was thus made immune from arrest by a 
 press-gang. It was a document which gave the name 
 of the man, his age, stature, stated whether he wore 
 a wig or his own hair, and other particulars of iden- 
 tification. No man with this authorisation could be 
 forced into his Majesty's service, but it was valid 
 only for three months or the period written thereon. 
 There is preserved an original protection certificate 
 in the archives of the Public Record Office, and it 
 is a quaint document which must have been very 
 keenly appreciated by its eighteenth-century owner. 
 On the other hand, when the East India Company 
 had lost some of their seamen by desertion, they 
 would petition the Admiralty to allow naval men to 
 be lent. 
 
 Every student of history is aware of the unfor- 
 tunate friction which existed at this time between 
 the officers of the Royal Navy and the officers of the 
 Mercantile Marine. Happily in the present century 
 this slow-dying spirit is almost extinct. In my 
 volume, " King's Cutters and Smugglers/' I showed 
 what altercations used to arise, what petty jealousies 
 existed between the officers of the Revenue cutters 
 and those of his Majesty's navy. The captains and 
 officers of the East India Company were often in- 
 debted to the protection and assistance of naval 
 officers, but the latter were often overbearing in the 
 exercise of their duties, and despised any seaman 
 who was not in the King's navy. On the other hand, 
 the East Indiamen's officers most heartily disliked 
 these gentlemen, and the insults from the press- 
 gangs were too poignant to be forgotten easily. 
 
 As an instance, let us refer to the i4th of August 
 
EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY 143 
 
 1734, when the East India Company complained to 
 the Admiralty of what seems certainly a very high- 
 handed action. It appears that the Company's ship, 
 the Duke of Lorrain> had arrived in the Downs on 
 the previous Sunday, and her master, Captain Chris- 
 topher Wilson, sent in a very indignant report to 
 the Court of Directors to the effect that " the men 
 of war at the Nore treated him more like an enemy 
 than a Merchant Ship coming into Port in such 
 weather as he had, it being very bad, they firing near 
 Twenty Shott at his Ship, some of which came 
 among the Rigging, might have been of dangerous 
 consequence to the Ship, and to the Company who 
 had a Cargo on board to the Value of Two hundred 
 thousand Pounds, This action being what the Com- 
 pany did not expect from any of the Men of War, 
 as the Captain of the Duke of Lorrain has assured 
 the Court that he lowered his sails, and did what 
 was safe to be done, they have commanded me to 
 signify the same to you," continued the Company's 
 letter to the Admiralty, " that so the Right Honour- 
 able the Lords of the Admiralty may be inform'd 
 thereof." 
 
 But if the East India Company thought it neces- 
 sary sometimes to complain of the treatment at the 
 hands of the Admiralty the former were none the less 
 glad to have the assistance and protection of the 
 navy in the time of war. There is a voluminous 
 correspondence still preserved in which the Com- 
 pany write to the Admiralty asking for convoys of 
 the East Indiamen both outward and inward bound. 
 The French were very much on the qui vive, but 
 unless the regular income of the East India Com- 
 pany were for the present to be stopped, and the 
 
144 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 entire Anglo-Indian trade suspended, the Company's 
 ships must go on their way. This could be done 
 only with the assistance of his Majesty's ships. In 
 order to deal with this matter there was a special 
 department of the Company designated the Secret 
 Committee, which communicated with the Admiralty 
 as to where the East Indian merchant fleet were to 
 rendezvous and the convoy join them, the confiden- 
 tial signals to be employed, and so on. The follow- 
 ing letter sent by the Company to the Admiralty on 
 1 2th December 1740 is typical : 
 
 " Secrett Committee of the United East India 
 Company do humbly represent to your Lordships 
 That they do expect a considerable fleet of ships 
 richly laden will return from the East Indies the next 
 summer and do therefore earnestly beseech your 
 Lordships That three or four of His Majesty's ships 
 of good force may be appointed to look out for and 
 convoy them safe to England." 
 
 These convoys took the East Indiamen sometimes 
 even from the Thames down Channel as far as Spit- 
 head. Sometimes they picked the latter up only at 
 the Downs, escorting them for several hundred miles 
 away from the English coast out into the Atlantic. 
 These merchantmen were similarly met at St Helena 
 and escorted home, the men-of-war being victualled 
 for a period of two months. Even if an East India- 
 man were able to arrive singly and run into the 
 Hamoaze (Plymouth Sound) on her way home, hav- 
 ing successfully eluded hostile ships roving off the 
 mouth of the English Channel, it was deemed ad- 
 visable for her to wait at Plymouth until she could 
 be escorted by the next man-of-war bound eastward 
 
EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY 145 
 
 to the Thames. There were plenty of French priva- 
 teersmen lurking about the Channel, and, at any 
 rate about the year 1716, there were also Swedish 
 privateers on the prowl in the same sea ready to 
 fall upon any East Indiaman going in or out of 
 the Downs. 
 
 One notorious Swede of this occupation was La 
 Providence, of 26 guns. She was commanded by 
 Captain North Cross. The latter was an English- 
 man who had been tried and sentenced to death for 
 some crime, but he had succeeded in making his 
 escape from Newgate, and had fled the country. 
 He had crossed the North Sea and had obtained 
 from Sweden letters of marque to rove about as a 
 privateer. His crew were a rough crowd of desper- 
 ate fellows of many nations, and this ship was very 
 fond of lying in Calais roads ready to get under 
 way and slip across the English Channel so soon 
 as an outward-bound East Indiaman was known to 
 be in the Downs. Now, in the month of November 
 1717, the skipper of La Providence was lying in his 
 usual roadstead, and tidings came to him concerning 
 one of the Company's ships then in the Downs. 
 
 The privateer was kept fully informed by means 
 of those fine seamen, but doubtful characters, who 
 lived at Deal. They were some of the toughest and 
 most determined men, who stopped at nothing. For 
 generations the men of Deal had been the most 
 notorious smugglers of the south-east corner of 
 England : and that was saying a great (deal. They 
 were a brave, fearless class of men, but brutal of 
 nature and always ready to get to windward of the 
 law, if ever a chance presented itself. They handled 
 their open luggers with a wonderful dexterity, for 
 which their successors are even yet famous. But 
 K 
 
146 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 they were lawless to their finger-tips. So on the 
 present occasion when the East Indiaman was in the 
 Downs, one of these Deal men sailed his little craft 
 across the strong tides of Dover Straits and brought 
 the information to the privateer. The messenger 
 asserted that the East Indiaman had nearly ,60,000 
 on board in cash, so Cross got under way, averring 
 that he would get this amount or " Loose his Life in 
 the Attempt." Whether he succeeded in his attempt 
 I regret I am unable to say. As far as was practic- 
 able these East Indiamen were wont, in those stren- 
 uous times, to wait for a convoy, but there were times 
 when they could not afford to wait till one of his 
 Majesty's ships was at liberty. On those occasions 
 the ships would wait till they numbered a small 
 squadron, and then voyaging together would resolve 
 to run all risks. There is on record the case of a 
 French squadron consisting of a " 64 " and two 
 frigates arriving off the island of St Helena, where 
 the East Indiamen were wont to call. The French- 
 men had come here in order to fall upon the 
 homeward-bound fleet who would soon be seen. But 
 the longboat* of one of these merchantmen was fitted 
 out, and under the command of a midshipman suc- 
 ceeded in getting to windward of the Frenchmen 
 unperceived and was able to give the approaching 
 English ships warning of the danger that awaited 
 them. Six of the Company's fleet fell in with the 
 enemy and kept up a running fight for several jdays, 
 until they anchored in All Saints' Bay. Here the 
 French blockaded them, but it was to no purpose, 
 for these merchantmen succeeded in escaping and 
 reaching England in safety. 
 
 * The longboat carried by these East Indiamen measured from 
 twenty-seven to twenty-nine feet in length. 
 
EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY 147 
 
 The Royal Navy assisted the Company's ships in 
 quite another manner as well. Often enough after 
 enduring heavy weather in the Bay of Biscay or 
 English Channel these East Indiamen would put 
 into Plymouth and obtain permission from the 
 Admiralty to obtain from the latter's stores a new 
 bowsprit, a new mast, or other spar, the Company of 
 course paying for the expense. The royal dockyard 
 also on the Medway was similarly found of great 
 service, as, for instance, early in the eighteenth 
 century, when the Company's ship Hannover had 
 the misfortune to run on to a sandbank whilst going 
 down the Thames to the Downs. The ship thus 
 suffered damage and was not in a fit condition to 
 proceed to the East. Permission was asked and 
 obtained for her to be taken into Sheerness, where 
 the naval authorities could admit her into dry dock, 
 warehouse her cargo, supply materials and repair the 
 injuries that had been made. 
 
 So also on another occasion, in September 1720, 
 the East Indiaman Goodfellow was lying at Graves- 
 end outward bound. It was discovered at the last 
 moment that unfortunately all the beer on board was 
 spoilt, and since there was no time " to detain her till 
 more can be brew'd," the Company's directors had 
 to request the Admiralty victualling office to furnish 
 the ship with 12 tons of beer at the Company's 
 expense. But the naval officials were not always so 
 obliging as this. Towards the end of the year 1721 
 the East Indiaman Ctzsar, outward bound for Mocha, 
 had the misfortune to damage by friction one of her 
 cables * owing to the latter getting foul of the 
 wreck of the Carlisle. Those were the days when 
 
 * The East Indiamen of about the middle of the eighteenth 
 century rode to fifteen-inch cables. 
 
148 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 cables were still made of hemp, and were always 
 liable, except when special steps were taken, to 
 injury when rubbing along foul ground. As she lay 
 in the Downs, the C&sar's master, Captain Mabbott, 
 asked the naval storekeeper at Deal if he would 
 spare him a new cable in case another storm should 
 spring up. Mabbott was by no means pleased when 
 the storekeeper replied very properly that inasmuch 
 as he had received no orders to oblige merchant ships 
 in that manner, he was not able to comply with the 
 request. However matters were eventually set right 
 by the Company obtaining the Admiralty's permis- 
 sion. 
 
 A voyage in an East Indiaman of those days was 
 often full of adventure. After proceeding from the 
 Downs the ship cleared the western mouth of the 
 English Channel and then steered " W and to 
 WSW." It took three months to reach the Cape of 
 Good Hope, and even then it was not too far south 
 to fall in with French men-of-war. After calling at 
 Spithead outward bound they were wont to sail 
 through the Needles passage. The seamen were 
 probably better situated in these East Indiamen than 
 in any other merchant ship, but they were not 
 allowed a soft time. They were kept at it with 
 setting and stowing of canvas, spreading stuns'ls in 
 fair weather or taking in upper canvas in heavy gales. 
 There were plenty of guns on board to be served, so 
 drill formed no small part of their duties. A seaman 
 went on board with his sea-chest and his bedding, 
 and in those rough, hard-swearing days, long before 
 ever the sailor had his trade union, he was treated 
 with no light hand. There is an instance of the way 
 slackness was wont to be punished on board the East 
 
EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY 149 
 
 Indiaman Greenwich. This particular occurrence 
 belongs to the year 1719 and happened when the 
 watch had been called. As some of the men did not 
 turn out as smartly as they ought, the boatswain took 
 out his knife and cut down their hammocks, to their 
 great discomfort and indignation. So infuriated in 
 fact were the crew that they declined to go on the 
 next voyage until the boatswain had been discharged. 
 Some idea of the kind of vessels which the Com- 
 pany were hiring for their service about the year 
 1730 may be gathered from the following list, which 
 has been taken direct from the original official docu- 
 ments : 
 
 Name of Ship 
 Devonshire 
 Prince Augustus 
 Lyell 
 
 Princess of Wales 
 Middlesex 
 Mary 
 Derby 
 London . 
 Dawsonne 
 Craggs . 
 Bridgwater 
 Prince' William. 
 Lethieullier 
 Hartford . 
 Macclesfield 
 Caesar 
 Harrison . 
 Walpole . 
 Frances . 
 
 Duke of Cumberland 
 George 
 Aislabie . 
 Stretham . 
 Ockham . 
 
 Commander Tons 
 
 Lawrence Prince . 470 
 
 Francis Gostlin . 495 
 
 Charles Small . . 470 
 
 Thomas Gilbert . 460 
 
 John Pelly . . 430 
 
 Thomas Holden . 490 
 
 William Fitzhugh . 480 
 
 Robert Bootle . 490 
 
 Francis Steward . 480 
 
 Caleb Grantham . 380 
 
 Edward Williamson 400 
 
 William Beresford . 480 
 
 John Shepheard . 470 
 
 Francis Nelly . . 460 
 
 Robert Hudson . 450 
 
 William Mabbott . 440 
 
 Samuel Martin . 460 
 
 Charles Boddam . 495 
 
 John Lawson . 420 
 
 Benjamin Braund . 480 
 
 George Pitt . . 480 
 
 William Birch . 400 
 
 George Westcott . 470 
 
 William Jobson . 480 
 
 Men 
 
 Guns 
 
 94 
 
 30 
 
 99 
 
 36 
 
 94 
 
 30 
 
 92 
 
 30 
 
 86 
 
 30 
 
 98 
 
 34 
 
 96 
 
 32 
 
 98 
 
 34 
 
 96 
 
 32 
 
 76 
 
 26 
 
 So 
 
 28 
 
 96 
 
 30 
 
 94 
 
 30 
 
 92 
 
 30 
 
 90 
 
 30 
 
 88 
 
 30 
 
 92 
 
 30 
 
 99 
 
 32 
 
 84 
 
 30 
 
 96 
 
 30 
 
 96 
 
 30 
 
 80 
 
 26 
 
 94 
 
 3 
 
 96 
 
 30 
 
150 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 It will b'e noticed that not one of these is really 
 a big ship and that while the average is somewhere 
 between 400 and 500 tons, yet not one exceeds 495 
 tons. The directors settled the size of ship required 
 and the owners saw that it was supplied. The size of 
 the crews will be seen to be very large, but this is 
 explained not only because wages were low in those 
 days and safety was a dominating factor allowing 
 plenty of men in each watch for handling sail but 
 because each ship carried about thirty guns, and 
 though both broadsides would not be fired at once, 
 yet even half those guns would necessitate a good 
 number of the crew. At various dates during the 
 eighteenth century, when the country needed ships, 
 the Admiralty commissioned a number of these East 
 Indiamen and also gave commissions in the Royal 
 Navy to their commanders. 
 
 Those were the days, too, when merchantmen fre- 
 quently obtained letters of marque for acting against 
 the ships of a nation with which our country was at 
 war. During the year 1739 Britain declared war 
 against Spain, and so one comes across a document 
 of that year in which the directors of " The United 
 Company of Merchants of England Trading to the 
 East Indies " for this was the official style of the 
 East India Company at that time petition for 
 " Letters of Marque or General Reprizals against 
 Spain." The request is made on behalf of their 
 ship, Royal Guardian, 490 tons, 98 men and 30 guns ; 
 and for other vessels of their fleet. These were 
 luly granted, and such stout, well-armed craft were 
 able to render an excellent account of themselves 
 against the foe. They were necessarily built of 
 great strength, they carried so many guns, their 
 
EAST INDIAMEN AND THE ROYAL NAVY 151 
 
 crews were such seasoned men, and their com- 
 manders such determined fellows, that they formed 
 really a most valuable reserve to the Royal Navy. 
 They were not individually a match for the biggest 
 of the enemy's battleships, but none the less they 
 were equal to any frigate and of far greater utility 
 to the King's service than any merchant liner would 
 proportionately be to-day in the time of war. 
 
CHAPTER XII 
 
 THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE COMPANY'S SERVICE 
 
 IN order that the East Indiamen might be able to 
 make themselves known on the high seas to the 
 British men-of-war, a special code of signals was 
 accustomed to be arranged by the Admiralty for the 
 former. This was for use during war-time, so that 
 the Company's vessels on meeting with other craft 
 might know at a distance whether these were the 
 friends who would convoy them or the enemy who 
 would assail them. Some time during the autumn, 
 during these eighteenth-century wars when England 
 always seemed to be engaged in hostilities, the 
 custom was for the Admiralty to appoint a fresh 
 code so that the naval and the Company's ships 
 might know each other. This code was then sent 
 sealed to the Secret Committee of the East India 
 Company, and handed over to the latter's command- 
 ing officers. Similarly special signals were arranged 
 so that when calling at St Helena the Governor of 
 that island might be able to recognise the homeward- 
 bound East Indiamen. 
 
 The following document, dated 5th November 
 1733, from the Admiralty will give some idea of the 
 nature of these signals : 
 
 " Signals to be observed by the East India Com- 
 
THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE SERVICE 158 
 
 pany s ships in their next homeward-bound passage 
 upon their meeting with any ships near the Channell 
 or else where which they may supose to be the King's 
 Ships, the better to know. 
 
 ' The Company's ships whether to Windward or 
 to Leeward, shall make a Signal by hailing up their 
 Foresail, and lowering down the Main Top Sail, and 
 spreading an English Ensign, the Cross down-ward, 
 from the main Top Mast head down the Shrouds; 
 and They shall be answered by the King's ships by 
 lowering down their Fore top sail, and spreading an 
 Ensign, in the same manner, from their Fore top- 
 mast head downward, hailing up their Main Sail, 
 and hoysting their Mizen top sail, with the Clue lines 
 hall'd up. 
 
 ' In the case of Blowing weather that the Top 
 Sails are in, the other Signals will be sufficient. 
 
 " Signals by Night. 
 
 " The Company's Ships shall make a Signal by 
 hoysting three Lights one over another on the 
 Ensign Staff, and One at the Bolt sprit end. 
 
 ' The King's ships will answer by shewing three 
 Lights of equal height, One of 'em in the Fore, One 
 in the Main, and One in the Mizen shrouds." 
 
 And in order to know any of his Majesty's ships 
 when encountered in the East Indian waters the 
 signal was to be as follows : The ship to windward 
 was to hoist an English Jack at the fore t'gallant 
 masthead, and the ship to leeward was to answer by 
 furling the mizen topsail and hoisting a French Jack 
 at the mizen topmasthead. 
 
 The Company had their own agent at Deal, and 
 considering the number of days that were spent by 
 
154 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the East Indiamen in the Downs, both outward and 
 homeward bound, his presence was very necessary. 
 The ships were taken down the Thames by the Com- 
 pany's own pilots, and this corporation owned its 
 own pilot-cutter, which was a 6o-ton craft with a 
 master and six men, her cruising ground being be- 
 tween Gravesend and the Downs. However, even 
 then, the Company's ships were by no means immune 
 from getting ashore, although it ought to be men- 
 tioned that by the middle of the eighteenth century 
 a really good chart of the Thames estuary did not 
 exist, and the exact nature of some of the numerous 
 shoals was unknown. It is not surprising, therefore, 
 to find casualties occurring as these big ships went 
 up and down the London river. For instance, in 
 March 1734 the East Indiaman Derby, outward 
 bound in charge of a " Pylot," ran aground " on the 
 Mouse Sand below the Nore." (This shoal is a few 
 miles to the' east of Southend pier.) She sustaine'd. 
 so much damage that she had to put into Sheerness 
 for dry-docking and repairs. 
 
 So also, a few days before Christmas in the year 
 1736, the East Indiaman Lyell " by the Unskilful- 
 ness of the Pilote has been Onshore on the Spaniard 
 Sand,* in going down for the Downs." So she also 
 had to use Sheerness dock for repairs. Captain 
 John Acton, the commander of the Lyell, in his 
 report stated that the " Pylots " pretended not to 
 have seen the " Buoy of the Spill," and " borrowing 
 too near on the Kentish Shore, he run us aground on 
 the Spaniard at High Water, the wind blowing fresh 
 N.W." The " Spill," or, as it is now called, the 
 
 * The Spaniard is a treacherous patch off the north-east corner 
 of the Isle of Sheppey. 
 
THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE SERVICE 155 
 
 !< Spile " buoy, marks the western end of the Spile 
 Sand. The pilots had clearly got out of their course, 
 for these East Indiamen, drawing as they did 20 feet 
 of water, would never have taken the inner passage 
 along the Kentish shore known as the Four Fathoms 
 Channel. They should have left the Spile buoy to 
 starboard and not to port, as clearly was the case in 
 the present instance among the shoals. The north- 
 west was a fair wind from the Thames to the Downs 
 all the way, so that no one except by accident would 
 have chosen to take such a ship so far out of the 
 main, deep-water channel. 
 
 The ship was hard and fast on the Spaniard, and 
 the conditions could scarcely have been worse a 
 fresh onshore wind, and the accident occurring at 
 top of high water. All night the ship lay on the 
 shoal bumping and injuring herself so that there 
 were soon seven feet of water in the hold, and the 
 pumps could not cope with it. But on the morning 
 of Christmas Eve by a great piece of luck the ship 
 was got off, for the wind veered to the north and 
 sent in a bigger tide, as of course it would, and a 
 local fisherman doubtless from Whitstable or the 
 East Swale came and assisted with his local know- 
 ledge so that " thank God the ship floated and we 
 got her off here." Making a fair wind of it the 
 Lyell then ran into the East Swale and anchored 
 off Faversham. And a very handsome sight she 
 must have looked lying to her hempen cable in that 
 winding river. 
 
 One bleak day in January 1737 the East India- 
 man Nassau had the misfortune to run on the south 
 end of the Galloper in a " hard gale at SW," as her 
 captain reported. The Galloper is a treacherous 
 
156 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 bank in the North Sea off Harwich, and many a ship 
 use'd to get picked up here in the olden days. The 
 Nassau was now in a critical position, and every 
 moment those on board expected her to go to pieces : 
 : ' but," wrote her skipper, " by the Providence of 
 the Almighty in about an Hours time we forc'd her 
 off again with her head sails, but had the misfortune 
 at the same time of losing our Rudder, Main and 
 Mizen Top Mast which obliged us soon after to 
 come to an anchor." But here again, just as had 
 been the case with the Lyell, local assistance came 
 to them. For after a time the Harwich packet passed 
 them bound for Holland, and her captain, seeing the 
 Nassau, hailed her skipper and advised her to stand 
 in for Orfordness, and even sent on board his mate, 
 as he knew every inch of that coast. However, the 
 wind now veered to the north-north-west, which 
 made it fair for running down the North Sea, so 
 the Nassau sailed down towards the North Foreland 
 and anchored in Margate Roads, whence her captain 
 was able to send information to the East India 
 Company, where also he would wait for orders. 
 
 Another peril which these East Indiamen had to 
 remember was the presence of pirates. These con- 
 sisted not merely of local Eastern craft, but of such 
 people as Captains Avery and Kidd, two of the most 
 notorious men in the whole history of piracy. In the 
 early part of the eighteenth century the latter were 
 found in many parts of the Indian Ocean. Mada- 
 gascar was a favourite base for these rovers, but 
 they would be found off Mauritius, or at the mouth 
 of the Red Sea awaiting the East Indiamen return- 
 ing from Mocha and Jeddah. Not content with this, 
 these European pirates would hang about off the 
 
THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE SERVICE 157 
 
 Malabar coast, and the East India Company's ships 
 suffered considerably, and feared a repetition of 
 these attacks. And yet, when we consider the matter 
 dispassionately, were Avery, Kidd and his fellow- 
 pirates very much worse than some of those captains 
 who first took the English ships out to the Orient, 
 who thought it no wrong but a mere matter of busi- 
 ness to stop a Portuguese ship and relieve her of her 
 cargo just as these eighteenth-century pirates would 
 assail the ships of the present monopolists of the 
 Eastern trade? The only difference that seems 
 obvious is that Lancaster and those other early 
 captains were acting on behalf of a powerful cor- 
 poration having a charter from the sovereign : 
 whereas Avery, Kidd and the like were acting on 
 their own and were outlaws. And even this cannot 
 be pushed too far, seeing that at one time of his 
 career Kidd received a commission from William 
 III. to go forth and, as " a private man-of-war," 
 capture other notorious " pirates, free-booters and 
 sea-rovers," on the old principle of setting a thief to 
 catch a thief. 
 
 Sometimes these East Indiamen were taken for 
 the enemy even by English men-of-war. You will 
 remember the famous voyage of Lord Anson round 
 the world in the years 1740-1744. One day whilst 
 they were in the South Atlantic they saw a sail to 
 the north-west, and the squadron began to exchange 
 signals with each other and to give chase " and half 
 an hour after we let out our reefs and chased with 
 the squadron . . . but at seven in the evening, finding 
 we did not near the chace ... we shortened sail, 
 and made a signal for the cruisers to join the squad- 
 ron. The next day but one we again discovered a 
 
158 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 sail, which on nearer approach we judged to be the 
 same vessel. We chased her the whole day, and 
 though we rather gained upon her, yet night came 
 on before we could overtake her, which obliged us 
 to give over the chace, to collect our scattered squad- 
 ron. We were much chagrined at the escape of this 
 vessel, as we then apprehended her to be an advice- 
 boat sent from Old Spain to Buenos Ayres with 
 notice of our expedition. But we have since learnt 
 that we were deceived in this conjecture, and that it 
 was our East India Company's packet bound to 
 St Helena." This is certainly a fair proof of the 
 sailing qualities of the Company's ships, seeing that 
 not even the English cruisers could overhaul the 
 merchant ship. 
 
 At this time the chief cargoes which these East 
 Indiamen took out to the East still included those 
 woollen goods which had been sent ever since the 
 foundation of the first Company, and they continued 
 to bring back saltpetre, but now tea was becoming a 
 much more important cargo. But in addition to that 
 tea which came home in the Company's ships and 
 paid custom duty, there was a vast amount brought 
 in by smugglers. And one argument used to be that 
 this had to be, because the East Indiamen brought 
 back chiefly the better, higher priced kind, compel- 
 ling the dealers to send to Holland for the cheaper 
 variety. 
 
 The East Indiamen's captains were not above 
 engaging in the smuggling industry, at any rate as 
 aiders and abettors. One of the methods was to 
 wait until the ship arrived in the Downs. Men would 
 come out from the Deal beach in their luggers and 
 then take ashore quantities of tea secreteH about their 
 
THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE SERVICE 159 
 
 person. This was the reason why the Revenue 
 cruisers were told to keep an especial watch on the 
 Company's ships when homeward bound, because of 
 " the illicit practices that are continually attempted 
 to be committed by them." So notorious indeed and 
 so ingenious were the methods to land goods without' 
 previously paying duty, that the Revenue cutters 
 were ordered to follow these bigger ships all the way 
 up Channel, keeping as close to them as possible as 
 long as they were under sail, and when the East 
 Indiaman came to anchor, the cutter was to bring 
 up as near as possible to her. This was to prevent 
 goods (such as silk and tea) being dropped through 
 the ship's ports into a friendly boat that had come 
 out from the beach, a practice that was by no means 
 unknown on board these merchant craft home from 
 the Orient. 
 
 Just as there was serious friction sometimes be- 
 tween the Revenue cutters and the ships of his 
 Majesty's navy concerning the wearing of pendants, 
 so these incidents were not unknown to happen to the 
 ships of the Honourable East India Company. As 
 an instance, Captain Balchen, R.N., during the year 
 1726 wrote to the latter complaining that one of their 
 ships had hoisted a broad red pendant at the main 
 topmast head. There was certainly no possible 
 defence, and the Company were compelled to reply 
 that they were " entire strangers " to the complaint, 
 and would give directions to prevent this occurring 
 again. But otherwise these East Indiamen were 
 treated with far more respect than any other mer- 
 chant ships. No finer ships other than men-of-war 
 sailed the seas. On arriving at their port in India 
 they were always saluted, and their captains ranked 
 
160 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 as Members of Council, being saluted with thirteen 
 guns when they landed, and the guard turning out 
 when they entered or left the fort. No one, in fact, 
 other than officers of the Royal Navy received such 
 respect. Under the captain were from four to eight 
 officers in the bigger ships, who all wore uniforms, 
 the duties on board being carried on with just the 
 same discipline as in a man-of-war. 
 
 Some of the Company's servants were making 
 handsome profits even when the Company itself was 
 doing badly. Eastwick mentions the name of a 
 purser who had such nice little perquisites out of 
 his office that he left the service and became owner 
 of a ship which traded between London and Cal- 
 cutta. She was a ship of no mean size, for she 
 carried thirty cabin passengers and 300 lascars, 
 together with a large mixed cargo of the value of 
 ; 13,000. And you may judge of the profits from 
 the passenger source alone when it is stated that one 
 of these cabins cost four hundred guineas for the 
 voyage. The affairs of the Company had for some 
 years been in a rather bad way. Instead of being 
 able to pay to the Government the stipulated sum of 
 ,400,000 a year, the directors were actually com- 
 pelled to ask the Government for a loan of 
 ; 1,000,000. This was in the year 1772. The 
 affairs of the Company were brought before Parlia- 
 ment, and a Committee exposed a series of intrigues 
 and crime. It was to remedy this rotten condition 
 of things that in June of 1773 two Bills were intro- 
 duced, of which one authorised the loan just men- 
 tioned, and the other, celebrated as the India Act, 
 effected most important changes in the Company's 
 constitution and its relations to India. A Governor- 
 
THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE SERVICE 161 
 
 General was appointed to reside in Bengal, to which 
 the other presidencies were to be made subordinate. 
 A supreme court of judicature was inaugurated at 
 Calcutta. The salary of the Governor was to be 
 2 5,000 a year, and that of the Council members at 
 ,10,000 each, the chief judge receiving ^8000 a 
 year. From this time forth the Company's affairs 
 were brought under the control of the Crown, all 
 the departments were reorganised, and all the terri- 
 torial correspondence had to be laid before the 
 British Ministry. 
 
 It was certainly high time that the Company's 
 affairs were taken in hand. Our present inquiry is 
 concerned only with its merchant shipping, so we 
 may confine ourselves strictly thereto. Had it not 
 been for the wonderfully popular taste which the 
 United Kingdom had now shown for tea, the Com- 
 pany's ships would have been compelled to cease 
 trading with the East. When, in 1773, the Com- 
 pany's charter was once more renewed, a grant was 
 made of a monopoly also to China. From about the 
 middle of the eighteenth century, however, the Com- 
 pany had become more of a military than a trading 
 concern, yet the latter was anything but insignificant. 
 Enormous tracts of land had been obtained in India. 
 The governments of the native princes were corrupt, 
 and the East India Company was strong. The 
 British Government was some thousands of miles 
 across the sea, so gradually but surely, without much 
 interference, the Company had obtained a strong grip 
 on the natives. From that followed extortion, and 
 when the Company's servants returned home they 
 came with fortunes, even though the Company itself 
 was doing badly. 
 
162 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 In the year 1772 the East India Company were 
 employing fifty-five ships abroad, aggregating 
 39,836 tons. At home they owned, and there were 
 being built for its service thirty ships of an aggregate 
 of 22,000 tons. In 1784 the number of its ships at 
 home and abroad was sixty-six. The chief object of 
 the inquiry into the Company's trade with the East 
 by the Committee just alluded to was apparently to 
 see if the ships could be built and run more cheaply 
 than under the present method of chartering. It was 
 seen from the evidence of Sir Richard Hotham that 
 the existing method of freighting the Company's 
 ships could be improved upon to effect greater 
 economy, for whereas the Company were paying in 
 the year 1772 as much as ,32 a ton for the carriage 
 of fine goods, this expert witness expressed himself 
 as willing to bring goods from any part of the East 
 at 21 a ton. 
 
 The result of this inquiry was that important 
 changes had to be made. The Company began to 
 put its shipping business into proper condition. The 
 Company decided to build for its own use a number 
 of bigger ships than they had been wont to use, and 
 thus those wonderful East Indiamen, for which the 
 eighteenth century will ever be famous, came into 
 being. They were of 1200 to 1400 nominal tons, 
 though their real measurement was greater than this. 
 Such ships began to be built about the year 1781, 
 though in earlier days, as the reader is aware, the 
 ships had recently averaged between 400 and 500 
 tons, not exceeding the latter figure. The new type, 
 of course, did not entirely drive the smaller ones 
 straight off the sea, but the two classes existed side 
 by side. We alluded just now to the terrible national 
 
THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE SERVICE 163 
 
 evil of smuggling. This vice had reached amazing 
 limits during the eighteenth century, and the country 
 was in such a state of alarm, and honest traders com- 
 plained so bitterly of the disastrous effects on their 
 prosperity, that in the year 1745 a beginning was 
 made of an inquiry by a Parliamentary Committee 
 into the causes of smuggling and the most effectual 
 methods to stop it. We have seen that tea, because 
 of its recent popularity, was especially an article 
 beloved by these smugglers. We need not enter 
 further into this inquiry, but evidence showed that 
 one of the best means of ending this illicit trade 
 would be to reduce the duties, thus not making it 
 worth while for the illicit trader to carry on his work. 
 Now when Pitt did reduce the duties on various 
 Indian productions, but especially on tea, it was 
 found that a complete change was made in the 
 demand for this commodity. Many thousand more 
 pounds' weight were now required, the sales were 
 trebled, and thus there was a much greater shipping 
 business. The export trade to China now began to 
 be most important also, and the Company was 
 prospering. 
 
 But before we proceed any further we must just 
 see the conditions which were in existence up to 1773 
 in regard to the method of chartering ships by the 
 Company from the owners. It was agreed that these 
 hired ships were to be surveyed by the Company 
 whenever the latter desired, and it is typical of the 
 times that the proviso had to be inserted that the 
 Company's surveyors " are to be civilly treated." 
 In order that the ship might be efficiently armed, the 
 commander and owners were liable to a fine of ,40 
 for each gun that was wanting. If any of the guns 
 
164 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 were sold, the owners and commander were to be 
 fined 100 for each gun, and the commander to be 
 dismissed the Company's service. The commander 
 was also to obey the Company's orders during the 
 voyage, as well as their agents and factors. In order 
 to encourage the seamen, the Company agreed to 
 reward them when the ship returned to the Thames 
 from the East Indies at the end of the voyage that 
 is to say, if they had been able to prevent any wilful 
 damage to the Company's property, or save them 
 from being lost, a reward suitable for the benefit was 
 to be made. If a seaman were to lose his life in 
 defending the ship, his next of kin was to receive 
 ,30. If he lost a limb, he himself was to have the 
 same sum. If he received minor wounds he was to 
 be given some smaller monetary reward and to be 
 " cured of his wounds " at the Company's expense. 
 
 The Company expressly forbade these hired ships 
 from calling at places other than those which it 
 ordered, or to take any foreign coin or bullion, goods 
 or provisions at any place short of her consigned 
 port. The cargo was to be disposed in the best 
 manner to prevent damage, and so that the working 
 of the ship and her efficient defence would not be 
 interfered with. Pepper was not to be shot loose 
 between decks or the freight would not be paid for. 
 If the ship should touch at St Helena or the island 
 of Ascension she was not to sail without the per- 
 mission of the Governor and Council. Nor was she 
 to touch at Barbadoes, or any American port, or any 
 of the western islands, or even Plymouth, without 
 orders or some unavoidable danger of the sea, under 
 a penalty of ^"500. The commander, chief and 
 second mates were to keep journals of the ship's 
 
THE WAY THEY HAD IN THE SERVICE 165 
 
 daily proceedings, from the time when she first took 
 in cargo in the River Thames to the time of her 
 return and discharge of her cargo in England. 
 Wind, weather, and all the remarkable transactions, 
 accidents and occurrences during the voyage were 
 to be noted in these journals, as also of everything 
 received into the ship. These journals were to be 
 delivered up to the Company afterwards, on oath, if 
 required. 
 
 No unlicensed goo'ds were to be carried in the 
 ship nor any passengers to be taken without per- 
 mission. The ship was to have her full complement 
 of men during the voyage, and none of these crews 
 was to be furnished by the master or officers with 
 money, liquor, or provisions beyond the value of 
 one-third of what the wages of such seamen should 
 amount to at that particular time. The paymaster 
 (who was appointed by the Company and owners 
 jointly) was to pay the seamen's wives one month's 
 wages in six. The commander was to have the use 
 of the ship's great cabin, unless it were required for 
 the Company's servants voyaging out or home. It 
 was the duty of the part-owners or the master to 
 send in the ship always the sum of ,500 in foreign 
 coins or bullion for use in the case of extraordinary 
 expenses during the voyage. The commander was 
 also to be supplied with 200 a month for paying 
 wages and provisions while in India or China. Ami 
 whenever lascars were hired, the Company were to 
 pay for their hire. We shall refer to the subject 
 of these lascars again presently, but we may now 
 go on to witness the development of the Company's 
 shipping after the inauguration of those reforms at 
 which we hinted just now. 
 
CHAPTER XIII 
 
 THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES 
 
 THE East India Company had recovered from their 
 period of desolation. They had set their house in 
 order, had been granted a further extension of their 
 monopoly, were opening up a good trade with China, 
 and had received fresh capital for their operations 
 in wider spheres. The trade of the East was prac- 
 tically now in the hands of England, the Dutch East 
 India Company having suffered very heavily, and 
 the French East India Company after languishing 
 had come to an end in 1790. Although there had 
 been formed the first Danish East India Company 
 as far back as 1612, and a Spanish Royal Company 
 for trading with the Philippines incorporated in 1733 
 and an Ostend East India Company incorporated 
 by the Emperor of Austria in 1723; yet the last- 
 mentioned had become bankrupt in 1784, and now 
 the English East India Company, after many vicissi- 
 tudes, was left practically the sole surviving trading 
 power in the Orient. 
 
 Under Pitt's Act the directors of the English 
 Company were allowed to superintend their shipping 
 and matters of commerce as before, yet the Board of 
 Control exercised its influence both in England and 
 India. Each year the Company settled the number 
 
 1 66 
 
THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES 167 
 
 of ships to be built and their sizes. For instance, in 
 1784, as they saw that at least four more ships would 
 be required, they ordered six to be built. The keels 
 were to be laid down within six months, and the ships 
 were to be launched within twelve months of the 
 laying of the keel. The following year they decided 
 to have three sets of shipping with about thirty ships 
 in each class, so leave was given for eight ships to 
 be built. Tenders were therefore advertised for in 
 January 1786, much to the indignation of the owners, 
 who complained that this advertisement was directed 
 against their interests. They denied that hitherto 
 their rates for freight had been exorbitant, and pro- 
 tested that they had embarked on immense ship- 
 building programmes expressly for the Company's 
 benefit. The Company therefore replied, inviting 
 them to send in tenders, which was done, the same 
 rate being offered as in the preceding season viz. 
 26 a ton to China direct, ,27 for coast and China, 
 Bombay ^28, coast and bay ^29. On gth June of 
 that year a tender was offered the Company to build 
 a looo-ton ship at 22 a ton for the first two 
 voyages, and 20 for the third and fourth voyages. 
 
 Up till the year 1789 the size of the Company's 
 recent big ships had been from 750 to 800 tons. But 
 in this year it was decided to build five ships of from 
 noo to 1 200 tons. The following May the Court 
 resolved that from past experience ships could quite 
 well make three voyages without stripping off their 
 sheathing. And, further, those ships which had been 
 accustomed to make the fourth trip their repairing 
 voyage might with perfect safety perform even six 
 voyages. A by-law of 1773 had restricted the em- 
 ployment of ships for more than four voyages, but 
 
168 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 this was now modified, and instead of four voyages 
 agreements were entered into with the owners for the 
 ships to run six. 
 
 It was decided also by the Company in the year 
 1789 to allow the commanders and officers of their 
 ships to fill, freight free, all such outward tonnage 
 as might be unoccupied by the Company, and to 
 allow the Company's servants and merchants resid- 
 ing under the Company's protection in India to fill 
 up such homeward tonnage as might be unoccupied 
 by the Company, at a reasonable freight. When we 
 come to the year 1793 we have to deal with an 
 important Act of the reign of George III., which 
 had far-reaching effects. The Company's charter 
 was extended until 1814, but provision was made for 
 opening up the Indian trade to private individuals, 
 and thus the long-lived monopoly of the Company 
 was doomed. At length the agitations of the Liver- 
 pool and Bristol shipowners to be allowed to partici- 
 pate in the East India trade were to have some sort 
 of effect, though it was far from what was desired. 
 However, one of the conditions of the renewal of the 
 Company's exclusive privilege under this Act was 
 that any of the Company's civil servants in India, 
 and the free merchants living in India under the 
 Company's protection, might be permitted to send to 
 Europe on their own account and risk in the Com- 
 pany's ships all kinds of Indian goods with the 
 exception of calicoes, dimities, muslins and other 
 piece-goods. And " for insuring to private mer- 
 chants and manufacturers the certain and ample 
 means of exporting their merchandize to the East 
 Indies, and importing the returns for the same, and 
 the other goods, wares and merchandize, allowed by 
 
THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES 169 
 
 this Act, at reasonable rates of freight," the Com- 
 pany was ordered to set apart at least 3000 tons of 
 shipping every year. The charge was to be ^5 a 
 ton on the outward voyage in times of peace, and. 
 ,15 homeward. But in the time of war the rates 
 should be increased if the Board of Control ap- 
 proved. It was further stipulated that his Majesty's 
 subjects might be allowed to export from England 
 to India any produce or manufactured goods except 
 military stores, ammunition, masts, spars, cordage, 
 pitch, tar and copper. But in all cases of exports and 
 imports in this Anglo-Indian trade the goods must 
 travel in the Company's ships. These vessels, pro- 
 vided under the Act, thus became known as " extra 
 East Indiamen," and sometimes in reading books of 
 voyages and travel of this period you will find the 
 narrator informing the reader that he travelled to the 
 East on board the " extra " East Indiaman so-and- 
 so. It may be stated at once that though the Act was 
 obeyed, it produced little result, for considering that 
 the Company still had such a powerful monopoly of 
 trade in the East, it was quite impossible for home 
 merchants to compete with such a corporation. Most 
 manufacturers and merchants declined to avail 
 themselves of this privilege, full well realising 
 beforehand how useless it would be. However, 
 the Company fulfilled their obligation to pro- 
 vide this additional tonnage, though it entailed 
 a heavy expenditure without much benefit to 
 the public. The people who benefited most were 
 the servants of the Company, who, being homeward 
 bound, were able to bring back to England Indian 
 produce that would find a ready market here. 
 In the year 1793 the Company had only thirty- 
 
170 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 six vessels of 1200 tons each and forty of 800 tons 
 each. This of course represented the whole of the 
 British shipping trading to the East. Some idea of 
 the shipbuilding programmes of the next few years 
 may be gathered from the following facts, bearing 
 in mind that the Company were trading to China as 
 well as to India, and that both big and moderate- 
 sized ships were deemed necessary. Thus in Octo- 
 ber of 1793 the Court decided that sixteen ships of 
 from 700 to 800 tons were necessary, and one of 
 1 200 tons for the annual imports from India in their 
 regular commerce; and that fifteen large ships of 
 1 200 tons would be required for imports from China. 
 When a ship became worn out by age, accident or 
 inability, an advertisement was published, describ- 
 ing the size of the ship required, inviting tenders 
 and specifying the rate of freight to be paid for six 
 voyages, the ship to be commanded by the captain 
 of the ship whose bottom was worn out. In Decem- 
 ber of the following year it was resolved that ships 
 of 1400 tons were the most suitable for the Com- 
 pany's trade to China, but that these ships should be 
 tendered at 1200 tons only. So also the regular 
 ships (as distinct from the extra East Indiamen) 
 which brought home their rich cargoes from Bengal 
 and Madras were not to exceed 820 tons and to be 
 chartered at 799 tons. It was further settled that 
 ships of from 480 to 520 tons were the most suitable 
 craft for bringing home what were known as " gruff " 
 goods that is, cargoes of Indian goods consisting 
 of such raw materials as cotton, rice, sugar, pepper, 
 hemp and saltpetre. The silks, muslins, tea and fine 
 goods were carried in the Company's larger ships, 
 which carried also the passengers. From the latter 
 
THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES 171 
 
 quite a large revenue was obtained, as soon as the 
 Company's rule in India became fully established. 
 
 The public were still very jealous of the Com- 
 pany's private monopoly, and the country was 
 deluged by pamphleteers and tractarians giving vent 
 to this indignation. However, some benefit had been 
 obtained by a reduction in the freights, and it was 
 brought about in the following manner. The sug- 
 gestion was made that great advantages would result 
 if India-built ships were employed by the Company 
 for the spare freight which was lying ready for ship- 
 ment to Europe. English oak was getting scarcer, 
 and therefore dearer, and could ill be spared so long 
 as the Royal Navy continued to be wooden walls : 
 whereas out in India the Company owned inex- 
 haustible forests. So from the year 1795 India-built 
 ships were for the first time allowed to take exports 
 and imports. They were commonly known as 
 " country-built " ships, and in the year mentioned, 
 twenty-seven of these craft were despatched from 
 India with cargoes of rice. The cost of engaging 
 these ships was at 16 a ton for rice and other dead- 
 weight goods and -20 a ton for light goods, the 
 ships to arrive and discharge in the Thames. As a 
 result a saving in one season alone was made of 
 ,183,316 in respect of freights. But there occurred 
 some keen disappointment to the owners of these 
 India-built ships. The arrangement had been that, 
 having delivered the goods mentioned in the 
 Thames, they should be allowed to take back to 
 India whatever merchandise they cared to put 
 aboard. Many of these ships had been built as a 
 speculation, their owners believing that they would 
 be taken into the Company's regular service and so 
 
172 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 be employed permanently. Notwithstanding that 
 they had been warned against any such supposition, 
 it came as a bitter grief to them when they realised 
 that after the Company's immediate requirements 
 were completed the services of these ships were no 
 longer required; but for all that the day was now 
 not far distant when trade to India was to be thrown 
 open altogether. It is the last straw which breaks 
 the camel's back, and the load which had been 
 accumulating ever since the year 1600 was soon to 
 reach the point when something would have to give 
 way. 
 
 It should be explained that this was one of- the 
 most critical periods in the whole of England's naval 
 chronicle and therefore of her very existence. The 
 Battle of the Glorious First of June had been fought 
 in 1794, and in this same year Martinique had been 
 captured from the French. The year 1795 was to 
 be even still more replete with naval doings. Ships 
 and men were required as they had never been 
 wanted before, and it was just in this respect that 
 the existence of the East India Company was of the 
 greatest direct benefit to the country and the navy. 
 It must always be to its honour that the Company 
 which had for so long enjoyed the privilege of the 
 Indian monopoly was on this especial occasion to 
 have the privilege of assisting the nation in a most 
 valuable manner. At the opening of the year France 
 possessed advantages which she had never pre- 
 viously enjoyed. She had made peace with Prussia, 
 she had reduced Holland to submission and made a 
 treaty with the latter, the result of which was that 
 the Dutch fleet of about 120 ships was placed at 
 France's disposal. These were well-built craft, 
 
THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES 173 
 
 manned by excellent crews who were seamen to their 
 finger-tips. As against this, England was in a con- 
 dition of isolation and there was a tremendous 
 amount of work to be done and too few ships at 
 hand. For Brest had to be watched, and the Medi- 
 terranean fleet had to look after the French based 
 on Toulon. Admiral Duncan had to be sent across 
 the North Sea to prevent any Dutch ships from 
 emerging out of the Texel, but in the southern part 
 of the world something much more historic was 
 destined to occur, for the Cape of Good Hope was 
 captured from the Dutch, and just at the time when 
 our success hung in the balance a strong squadron 
 of East Indiamen arrived with a reinforcement of 
 British troops. The result was that against this 
 force the Dutch could no longer stand. The Dutch 
 settlement (and incidentally a brig belonging to the 
 Dutch East India Company) now became British. 
 
 Never had the East India Company been more 
 useful to the navy than in this year. Ships and sea- 
 men cannot be got by the mere signing of documents 
 unless they already exist, and it was lucky for the 
 nation that such fine, stout craft, accustomed to long 
 voyages and fighting, manned with such able crews, 
 should already be at hand under the East India 
 Company. At the time of which we speak no fewer 
 than six of their finest vessels were taken into the 
 nation's service straight away. Eight others which 
 had not quite finished building were also assigned 
 to the Government. In addition to these fourteen 
 handsome craft, the Court of Directors also decided 
 on the 1 3th of March to raise 3000 men at their own 
 cost for the Royal Navy. This meant a loss of 
 ,57,000, but the nation needed it and the Company 
 
174 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 did their duty. During the ensuing July the Company 
 further decided that fourteen East Indiamen should 
 be placed at the disposal of the Government in 
 September ready to carry troops across the ocean 
 a work for which they were extremely well fitted 
 and we have just seen to what advantage this was 
 done. England at this time was distressed by the 
 scarcity of corn, but in order to relieve this distress 
 in some measure large quantities of rice were brought 
 home by twenty-seven ships which the Company 
 purposely added to their fleet for the emergency, and 
 these were the India-built ships of which we spoke 
 just now. Thus in more ways than one, but cer- 
 tainly to the utmost of their ability, the East India 
 Company had come to Britain's aid when she was 
 passing through a time of great crisis. 
 
 During this year the seas which wash the Indian 
 coast were really unsafe to merchantmen by reason 
 of the presence of both French and Dutch cruisers 
 and privateers. The British naval strength in those 
 waters was very inadequate, and we had suffered 
 some naval disasters which were neither a credit to 
 our seamanship nor likely to maintain our prestige 
 as gallant sea-fighters. The whole of the Bay of 
 Bengal was being scoured by French men-of-war 
 ready to fall upon any merchant craft that dared 
 show herself. The privateers were both numerous, 
 well manned, well armed, well commanded and very 
 fast sailers. The consequence was that the East 
 Indiamen never completed their voyages without 
 having some excitement. Nor were pirates exter- 
 minated ; especially along the Malabar coast, where 
 they had many fastnesses, their strongholds being 
 protected by forts. These men feared nothing, and 
 
THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES 175 
 
 had actually come out and defeated English, French 
 and Dutch men-of-war that had been especially sent 
 out to punish them, in some cases even captur- 
 ing their enemy's ships. A French 4o-gun frigate 
 had been compelled to haul down her colours to 
 these robbers of the sea : one of the East India 
 Company's ships, armed with twenty guns, had also 
 been taken after a fair fight, and three Dutch men- 
 of-war. For some years they were crushed by the 
 wholesome effect of a regular expedition which the 
 English had sent against them, but after a few years 
 they broke out again in their piracy and by the year 
 1798 they were freely capturing European ships. 
 
 On at least one occasion, however, they made a 
 serious mistake, which might have been even still 
 more grievous for them but for a piece of luck. It 
 happened that H.M.S. Centurion, a 5o-gun frigate, 
 was cruising in the neighbourhood, and her the 
 pirates mistook for a merchantman, for the East 
 Indiamen were very similar in appearance to the 
 frigates of the Royal Navy. One of the favourite 
 devices of these rovers was to creep up under cover 
 of darkness and wedge the rudder of the ship they 
 intended to attack, their victim being thus rendered 
 unable to manoeuvre. In the present instance they 
 had succeeded in carrying out this tactic to the 
 Centurion, and then surrounded the ship and began 
 their attack. The frigate was certainly surprised, 
 but she soon had her guns loaded and brought them 
 to bear on the pirates, and so punished them with a 
 hot fire, which had not been expected, that they were 
 glad to take to flight. It was only the fact of the 
 wedged rudder which prevented the Centurion from 
 being steered in pursuit and capturing their craft. 
 
176 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 However, it was a lesson to them in the future, and 
 they attacked only when they were certain of their 
 victim. 
 
 Of the privateers which hung about in Indian 
 waters, one of the most notorious was the Malartic, 
 which had captured two of the East Indiamen, 
 Raymond and Woodcot, of 793 and 802 tons 
 respectively. Whenever it was known that this ship 
 was in the offing, no merchantman dared put to sea. 
 She eventually captured the Princess Royal, an 805 
 tonner, and other East Indiamen, but was herself 
 finally taken by the Company's ship Phoenix. So 
 great was the relief occasioned by this deliverance 
 that Captain Moffat, the Phoenix's commander, was 
 afterwards publicly presented with a sword of 
 honour. But an even more dangerous privateer was 
 the Confiance. This was a very beautiful ship, and 
 the envy of every captain who set eyes on her. 
 Captain Eastwick, who knew her well, and to whose 
 account I am indebted, described her as follows : 
 " She sat very low upon the water, and had black 
 sides with yellow moulding posts, and a French stern 
 all black. She carried a red vane at her maintop- 
 gallant masthead, very square yards and jaunt masts, 
 upright and without the smallest rake either forward 
 or aft. Her sails were all cut French fashion, and 
 remarkable, having a great roach and steering sail, 
 very square. There was not a ship in those seas 
 that she could not overtake or sail away from. It 
 was the custom of her commander, Captain Sour- 
 couff, to ply his crew with liquor, and they always 
 fought with the madness of drink in them." 
 
 It was this ship which attacked the East Indiaman 
 Kent, and after a heavy engagement killed or 
 
THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES 177 
 
 wounded no fewer than sixty of the merchantman's 
 crew, with the result that the latter was forced to 
 haul down her flag. When the news of this occur- 
 rence reached Calcutta, two of the Company's fri- 
 gates were sent in pursuit of the privateer, and both 
 coming up with her began to attack with such deter- 
 mination that it was certain the Confiance would 
 have to yield. This, however, she refused to do, 
 and though she had only twenty-two guns, her 
 captain fought his ship with great gallantry, and 
 even though his losses were necessarily great, he 
 was able at the end to escape by the speed of his 
 ship. The Kent, however, was retaken from the 
 clutches of the Confiance and brought into Calcutta, 
 and a few years later the Confiance herself was also 
 captured. And you may imagine with what joy the 
 news of her capture was received when it was 
 reckoned that within one single twelvemonth not less 
 than ,2,000,000 worth of British shipping had been 
 captured or sunk by the French privateers or men 
 of-war. 
 
 And there was the curious incident of the Lord 
 Eldon being nearly captured right on the doorstep, 
 so to speak, of her home. This ship was an East 
 Indiaman outward bound to India. At the moment 
 of which we are speaking she had backed her sails 
 and was lying off the Needier liove-to, as she awaited 
 some passengers who had been delayed in joining 
 her. But whilst she was thus hove-to a sea fog 
 suddenly came down. Not far off was a French 
 privateer hovering about, and this was the chance of 
 a century. Under cover of this fog he approached 
 the East Indiaman unobserved, so that he came right 
 alongside. When the men on board the Lord Eldon 
 
 M 
 
178 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 discovered this big ship close up to them in the haze 
 they were alarmed, but not for the reason that you 
 might suppose. It did not occur to them that she 
 was a privateer, but they assumed she was one of the 
 King's ships and was now about to impress the East 
 Indiaman's crew into the navy in the manner that we 
 saw in an earlier chapter. As the crew had no desire 
 to come under impressment, they at once hid, with 
 the result that the privateer's men had no difficulty 
 in coming on board the Lord Eldon. The captain 
 was below at the time, and hearing a noise and 
 clamour came on deck to see what it was all about : 
 and then to his amazement found that his ship was 
 in the hands of the enemy. However, he was not 
 one easily to be daunted, even by such a surprise as 
 this. His life was made up of things unexpected, 
 and knowing that his men were well drilled he called 
 to them to repel boarders. They at once responded 
 to the command and came out from their hiding- 
 places, and after a sharp fight drove the invaders 
 overboard. One Frenchman had even got possession 
 of the Lord Eldoris wheel, but the East Indiaman's 
 captain killed him with his own hand, cutting off his 
 head with one stroke of the sword. In a very short 
 time the privateer, who was now more surprised than 
 the crew of the merchant ship, hurriedly made sail 
 and disappeared into he fog. The incident well 
 shows the fighting efficiency of the commanders and 
 men of the Company's vessels at this period. 
 
 During the early part of the eighteenth century 
 about a dozen or fifteen of the Company's ships 
 would sail to the East Indies from London, but this 
 average gradually rose till, about the year 1779, there 
 were about twenty vessels going out each year. But 
 
THE EAST INDIAMEN'S ENEMIES 179 
 
 thereafter the numbers increased to such an extent 
 that in some years there were as many as thirty or 
 forty : and in the year 1795 as many as seventy-six 
 did the voyage. After that date the numbers became 
 again normal, so that up to about the end of 1810 
 the average was more like forty or fifty. But even 
 this meant a great deal of trade from which the 
 country and Company were to benefit largely. 
 
CHAPTER XIV 
 
 SHIPS AND MEN 
 
 BOMBAY had been first so called by the Dutch, 
 meaning Good Bay. Owing to its spaciousness, 
 excellent depth of water and other facilities it was 
 well designated. By the end of the eighteenth 
 century it had its dry and wet docks and every 
 facility for careening and repairing ships, being of 
 great utility to the Company's merchant ships and its 
 navy as well. Its dockyard was furnished with all 
 kinds of necessary stores. Here there was always on 
 hand plenty of timber and planking, here anchors 
 could be forged, here new cables and ropes were 
 made of all kinds. The cables were of hemp, but 
 for the smaller ropes the external fibres of the cocoa- 
 nut, so abundant in India, were made up into that 
 inferior type of rope known as kyah or coir. 
 
 We called attention on another page to the intro- 
 duction of India-built vessels into the Company's 
 service. India of course is famous for its teak, and 
 every shipman knows what excellent material this 
 wood is for building craft, owing to its hardness and 
 durability. The vessels which Bombay built were 
 fine, stout ships and excellently finished, and Indian 
 shipbuilders even constructed some battleships and 
 frigates for the British navy which were in every way 
 
 180 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 181 
 
 splendid vessels. One vessel named the Swallow, 
 which was built out here and launched in April 1777, 
 was actually in use till she was lost on a shoal in 
 the Hooghly in June 1823. But during this lengthy 
 period of usefulness she had served in many seas 
 and in various capacities. She was first employed as 
 one of the Company's packets between India and 
 England. After that she was in the Bombay Marine, 
 or the East India Company's navy. After that she 
 again resumed service as one of the Company's 
 merchantmen, where she remained for many years. 
 About the beginning of the nineteenth century she 
 was sold to the Danes, and from Copenhagen pro- 
 ceeded to the West Indies, where she was arrested 
 as a prize by a British man-of-war. She was then 
 employed in the King's service and became a sloop- 
 of-war, and afterwards sold out of the service to 
 some merchants. In this capacity she again made 
 several voyages between London and Bombay, and 
 eventually brought her fine career to an end as stated. 
 Before the close of the eighteenth century the 
 Battle of the Nile had been fought and won, The 
 importance of this to India was tremendous. For 
 had the result been otherwise Napoleon would have 
 possessed himself of all that the English East India 
 Company had done there. Our Anglo-Indian trade 
 would have come to an end, and the ships which are 
 the subject of our present study would have been no 
 longer required, or else compelled to sail under the 
 French flag. Nelson, in fact, had despatched a 
 messenger overland to the Governor of Bombay, 
 informing the latter of the arrival of the French in 
 Egypt, for he knew well that Bombay was the objec- 
 tive of the enemy if they could get there. However, 
 
182 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Nelson's victory at the Nile quite altered all this, 
 and when the East India Company afterwards voted 
 the gallant admiral the sum of ; 10,000, it was to 
 show how deeply indebted was this corporation for 
 the welcome relief from catastrophe. 
 
 Before we leave the eighteenth century we have to 
 consider some of the more important changes and 
 developments which were taking place. We have 
 seen that the size of these East Indiamen had 
 gradually increased during the century. About the 
 year 1700 the biggest vessels were under 500 tons. 
 Some were even much smaller, as, for instance, the 
 Juno, of 1 80 tons, and the Success and the Borneo 
 of similar size, but there was also the Arabella, of 
 only 140 tons, and the Benjamin, of 160 tons. Be- 
 tween the years 1748 and 1772 all the Company's 
 merchant ships are of one size 499 tons. There 
 are very few exceptions indeed to this, and in those 
 few instances you get an occasional ship of 1 80, 300, 
 350, 370 or 380 tons. Otherwise there is nothing 
 but this stereotyped 499-ton ship year after year, 
 season after season. This curious fact has puzzleU 
 many people, including those who in later days 
 served in the Company's service. Why was it? 
 
 The answer is quite simple, and I give it on the 
 authority of an old skipper contemporary with these 
 ships, named Hutchinson, who at one time of his 
 life had been a privateer. The reader will remem- 
 ber that in an earlier chapter I drew attention to the 
 slackness of morals and general spirit of irreligion 
 which were notorious of the mid-eighteenth century, 
 at any rate so far as English people were concerned. 
 Naturally enough this spirit spread to the ships of 
 the East India Company, so that the corruption 
 
_= _S J -:; 
 
 g M | I 
 St 0:^1 H 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 183 
 
 ashore had its counterpart afloat. Now these craft, 
 when they were of 500 tons and over, were compelled 
 to carry a chaplain. And it was just in order to be 
 able to dispense with the latter, and so save expense, 
 that the owners used to cause these ships to be rated 
 at 499 tons, and so keep within the letter of the law. 
 These 499-ton ships carried a captain, four mates, 
 a surgeon and a purser. They would sail from the 
 Downs about January or March of one year, proceed 
 to India or China, and then be back again in the 
 London river by June or July of the following year, 
 though sometimes they were away for much longer 
 periods. When homeward bound they had called 
 at Portsmouth where the more wealthy passengers 
 went ashore and proceeded home by road and the 
 Downs, they eventually made fast to moorings at one 
 of three places Blackwall, Deptford and North- 
 fleet. 
 
 We spoke, also, some time back of what were 
 known as " hereditary bottoms," by which it was 
 meant that an owner who had been accustomed to 
 charter one of his ships to the Company had a pro- 
 prietary right to supply other ships when this one 
 had been worn out. Thus one finds, for instance, 
 a ship called the Brunswick built on the bottom of 
 the Atlas, the Hindostan built on the bottom of the 
 Grosvenor, and so on. This went on for year after 
 year, so that you could make out a kind of genea- 
 logical tree of East India ships. It was a very clear 
 instance of eighteenth-century monopoly which 
 would be hard to beat. But this principle of per- 
 petuity came to an end on 6th February 1796, when 
 open competition was introduced. There can be no 
 question that this decision, together with that of 
 
184 
 
 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 abolishing the sale of commands, was all for the 
 good of the service. The Company themselves 
 recognised that it was the only way in which they 
 could have an efficient fleet, always ready and con- 
 sisting of vessels built on the best principles, in- 
 spected during construction by the Company's own 
 surveyors, and commanded by officers " of acknow- 
 ledged character, talents and experience," and 
 various by-laws were passed to this effect. The 
 following list will afford the reader some idea of 
 the size and dimensions of these East Indiamen 
 ships at the close of the eighteenth century. The 
 difference between the burthen tonnage and the 
 chartered tonnage is noticeable : 
 
 Name of Ship 
 
 Ganges . 
 
 Hope 
 
 Neptune . 
 
 Hindostan . s . 
 
 Walmer Castle 
 
 Warley . 
 
 Earl of Abergavenny 
 
 Royal Charlotte 
 
 Coutts 
 
 Cirencester 
 
 Arniston . 
 
 Glatton . 
 
 Thames . 
 
 Ceres 
 
 Cuffnells . 
 
 Earl Talbot . 
 
 Nottingham 
 
 Dorsetshire 
 
 Alfred . . *'." 
 
 David Scott . ..; 
 
 Alnwick Castle 
 
 Beam 
 
 Burthen Chartered 
 Tonnage Tonnage 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 
 
 185 
 
 Name of Ship 
 
 Exeter 
 Carnatic . 
 Boddam . 
 Albion . 
 Royal Admiral 
 Belvidere 
 Earl Howe 
 Sulivan . 
 Middlesex 
 Princess Charlotte 
 Earl of Wycombe 
 Princess Mary . 
 
 Length 
 
 Beam 
 
 ft. 
 
 in. 
 
 ft. 
 
 in. 
 
 132 
 
 
 
 41 
 
 O 
 
 132 
 
 O 
 
 40 
 
 6 
 
 128 
 
 
 
 38 
 
 6 
 
 125 
 
 
 
 38 
 
 O 
 
 120 
 
 2 
 
 37 
 
 IO 
 
 123 
 
 O 
 
 38 
 
 8 
 
 117 
 
 IO 
 
 37 
 
 41 
 
 116 
 
 O 
 
 35 
 
 o 
 
 116 
 
 O 
 
 35 
 
 O 
 
 IO2 
 
 
 
 33 
 
 6f 
 
 101 
 
 I Of 
 
 34 
 
 5f 
 
 93 
 
 II 
 
 34 
 
 5f 
 
 Burthen Chartered 
 
 Tonnage Tonnage 
 
 1265 I20O 
 
 1169 1169 
 
 IO2I IO2I 
 
 961 961 
 
 914 914 
 
 986 987 
 
 876 876 
 
 876 876 
 
 852 852 
 
 610 610 
 
 643 655 
 
 643 462 
 
 The science and art of shipbuilding in England 
 during the eighteenth century were very defective 
 compared with France. But during the last decade 
 of this, and the early part of the nineteenth century, 
 improvements were taking place. Papers were being 
 read before the Royal Society, treatises were being 
 published, a number of valuable experiments were 
 being made and the best lessons of the French were 
 being studied. To all this must be attributed the 
 better type of East Indiaman which was to follow. 
 The continued demand for tea made it necessary to 
 have fine, big ships which could get the cargoes of 
 this perishable commodity to London as soon as 
 possible. It was always reckoned that an 8oo-ton 
 ship would be able to bring home about 750,000 Ib. 
 of tea, and a I2oo-ton ship nearly 1,500,000 Ib. 
 Some idea of the increased popularity of this com- 
 modity in England will be ascertained when it is 
 stated that during the year 1765 five million Ibs. were 
 brought home and sold by the Company. By 1784 
 the average was about six million Ib., the following 
 
186 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 year this figure was more than doubled, and by the 
 end of the century it was nearly twenty-four million 
 Ib. There was, therefore, every need for fine, big 
 ships of good lines. And by an Act of 1799 the 
 Company were restricted from employing in their 
 service any ships but those contracted for six voy- 
 ages to India or China and back. Whenever they 
 wished to have more ships built, they were to give 
 public notice of this by advertisement four weeks 
 ahead, inviting tenders for building and freighting. 
 
 But in the year 1803 the Company were em- 
 powered to engage ships for two additional voyages, 
 making eight in all. Two reasons were given for this 
 innovation. First, it was found that the ships now 
 being built were of such a character that they could 
 be repaired and refitted to perform these two addi- 
 tional voyages with great advantage. And secondly, 
 it was contended that if fewer ships were built, this 
 would " be the means of lessening the consumption 
 of ship-timber." It will be recollected that in the 
 year 1803 Napoleon had openly and intentionally 
 insulted the British Ambassador, and that in the 
 month of May war was again declared, and both 
 nations made elaborate preparations for the resump- 
 tion of hostilities, the British taking time by the 
 forelock and sending squadrons to watch Brest and 
 Toulon. All this warlike activity on sea made it 
 not any easier for the East Indiamen to go about 
 their lawful business. In effect it meant that they 
 must be fitted out with even greater care and that 
 they must be armed as strongly as ever they could 
 be. An'd this, in turn, meant that the cost to the 
 owners of the ships was much increased. ' War 
 extraordinaries," as they were called, were always a 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 187 
 
 source of keen dispute during those anxious years, 
 between the Company and the shipowners, and in 
 this present case the Company were authorised to 
 pay higher rates owing to the increased expense to 
 the owners. 
 
 But such was the improvement in the class of 
 vessel now built that in the year 1810 they were 
 allowed by Act of Parliament to engage ships even 
 beyond the allotted eight voyages, provided that 
 after being repaired they were found fit for service. 
 The Company were also allowed to take up by 
 private contract certain other ships in order to bring 
 home the cargoes from China and India. Under 
 this class were chartered vessels which had taken out 
 to New South Wales convicts and stores. The East 
 India Company had already come to the country's 
 aid again during that year, 1803. Ten thousand 
 tons of shipping did they lend to the State for six 
 months free of charge, though this meant a loss to 
 the Company of ,67,000. These ships were em- 
 ployed in guarding the British coast against the 
 threatened invasion by the French; and in other 
 ways they were found very useful to the Admiralty. 
 
 In peace time they would go out to India with 
 troops and stores, calling at St Helena on the way, 
 and then return home with cargoes from China and 
 India. In the last-mentioned territorial waters they 
 were almost as likely to be annoyed by the attentions 
 of the press-gangs as they were in English waters, 
 for his Majesty's ships out there were sadly in need 
 of men. Repeated complaints were made by the 
 Company in regard to this, even as they had pre- 
 viously complained of what used to take place at 
 home. But repeated and indignant representations 
 
188 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 proved ineffectual. Captains of the Royal Navy 
 must have men for their ships, and the distance 
 between England and India was too great for much 
 interference under this category, so things went on 
 pretty much as before. 
 
 It will have been noticed from the list of the East 
 India Company's ships given on an earlier page in 
 this chapter that the size had immensely increased. 
 Big ships always necessitate big accommodation 
 when they reach port. These particular craft were 
 far and away the biggest merchant ships in the world, 
 for no other trade either required or could afford 
 such vessels. This being so, the East Indiamen 
 when they now arrived in the Thames were com- 
 pelled to lie many miles 'down the river, since there 
 was no accommodation for them higher up. But 
 this was to subject them to a grave risk. They came 
 home with most valuable cargoes which meant not 
 only very much to the Company, but were actually 
 of some national importance. As they lay out in the 
 river a good deal of pilfering went on, and the loss 
 was very serious, not merely to the Company and the 
 shipowners, but to the State, which lost a good 
 deal of customs duty thereby, since the goods thus 
 pilfered were then smuggled ashore. It was there- 
 fore realised that the only remedy was to have a 
 sufficient area of wet docks in which the ships could 
 be loaded and unloaded. A number of gentlemen 
 therefore decided to form a joint-stock company with 
 a capital of ,200,000 in order to provide wet docks 
 to be enclosed by proper walls and ditches, and 
 communicating with the Thames. These docks were 
 to be appropriated solely for the ships in the India 
 trade, who should pay a duty of 145. a ton in the 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 189 
 
 case of a registered English ship, and 123. a ton for 
 every India-built ship navigated by lascars. It was 
 ordered that the hatches of every ship arriving from 
 India or China should be locked down before the 
 ship reached Gravesend, and the captain, and one of 
 the two officers next to him in command, must remain 
 on board until such time as the ship was moored in 
 the docks, and the keys of the hatches handed over 
 to an officer of the East India Company. Of the 
 thirteen directors of these docks, four must be 
 directors of the East India Company. 
 
 The result of this was that the East India Docks, 
 so well known to all who take any interest in the port 
 of London, were brought into being. During the 
 early part of the year 1914, whilst alterations were 
 being made in connection with the elaborate scheme 
 for the improvement of London's shipping facilities, 
 the original foundation-stone of the undertaking was 
 discovered. This had been laid as far back as 4th 
 March 1804. It had been submerged in the import 
 dock, but was revealed at the base of one of the old 
 quay walls, from which it slightly projected. On its 
 top were found recorded the names of Mr Joseph 
 Cotton, who was then Chairman of the East India 
 Dock Company, and of Mr John Woolmore, the 
 deputy chairman. The inscription stated that the 
 stone had been laid by Mr Joseph Huddart, F.R.S., 
 and the names of the engineers, Mr John Rennie and 
 Mr Ralph Walker, were added. After the dock was 
 opened there were for many years seen therein the 
 pick of the world's shipping. But now, with the 
 overwhelming conquest of the steamship the whole 
 aspect has been quite changed. Gone are those fine 
 old wind-jammers, gone is the romance of these 
 
190 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 ships from the Orient, gone is the stately, naval 
 system under which these vessels were run, gone are 
 the handsome opportunities for making fortunes 
 which were then open to the captains and officers of 
 the mercantile marine. 
 
 In some years these ships were very unfortunate. 
 The years 1808 and 1809 were particularly unhappy 
 for the Company's craft. Ten homeward-bound 
 East Indiamen were lost, and with them vanished 
 over a million sterling. The months of November 
 1808 and March 1809 were notoriously stormy. 
 Even such big craft as the Britannia (1200 tons) and 
 the True Briton (1198 tons) were lost during this 
 period. The former went down off the South Fore- 
 land on 25th January 1809. The latter had parted 
 company from the Bombay ships on I3th October 
 in that year, whilst sailing in the China seas, and 
 was never heard of again. The Admiral Gardner 
 had set forth from the Downs on 24th January 1809, 
 and also foundered off the South Foreland on the 
 same day as the Britannia. The Calcutta parted 
 company with the other East Indiamen off Mauritius 
 on 1 4th March 1809, and was never seen again. 
 Other ships were captured by the enemy, some were 
 blown up, others ended their days by fire, some ran 
 ashore, but as a rule these old East Indiamen 
 managed to get their freights into the London river 
 with safety. 
 
 About the year 1809 the rates of insurance between 
 Bengal and England were 7, js. for the regular 
 East Indiaman, and 7 on her cargo. In the case 
 of " extra " ships the premium was ^9, 95. on the 
 ship and ^9 on the cargo. India-built ships were 
 not insured at all, but the cargo was insured at 
 
COMMODORE SIR NATHANIEL DANCE. 
 (By courtesy of Messrs. T. H. Parker Brothers) 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 191 
 
 ^15, 155. If the Company's ships were convoyed 
 home, then the " extra " craft were charged only 
 i from Bengal to St Helena, and another i from 
 St Helena to England. If there were more than one 
 ship then only 195. was charged in both cases, but 
 India-built ships in these instances were charged 
 2, los. 
 
 The number of ships employed for the India and 
 China trade during the years 1803 to 1808 will be 
 found indicative of the Company's activities. These 
 varied from forty-four to fifty-three, and their 
 burden from 36,671 to 45,342 tons. They ran great 
 risks sometimes, but in spite of occasional casualties 
 they were often more than able to look after them- 
 selves, when no naval force could be spared to 
 convoy them. One of the most famous instances on 
 record is that in which the exploits of a certain 
 Captain Nathaniel Dance figured prominently. This 
 gallant commander was in charge of the Company's 
 ship Earl Camden. This vessel was of 1200 tons 
 charter, and had sailed from England in the season 
 of 1802-1803. She had put into Torbay, and left 
 there on 4th January 1803, and proceeded to Bom- 
 bay and China. On the last day of January in the 
 following year she had filled up her holds and began 
 her return voyage from China. With her sailed also 
 fifteen other East Indiamen, named respectively the 
 Warley, Alfred, Royal George, Coutts, Wexford, 
 Ganges, Exeter, Earl of Abergavenny, Henry 
 'Addington, Bombay Castle, Cumberland, Hope, 
 Dorsetshire, Warren Hastings and Ocean. And 
 inasmuch as Captain Dance was the senior com- 
 mander he acted as commodore for this China fleet. 
 In addition to these sixteen vessels a number of 
 
192 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 other vessels were put under his charge to convoy 
 them as far as their courses were the same. These 
 vessels included a dozen " country " ships. 
 
 The " country " trade, by the way, was the trade 
 between India and the East as far as China and 
 Manila. It was largely carried on by civil servants 
 of the East India Company and the free merchants 
 living under the Company's protection. In effect 
 the Company resigned this trade to these people, the 
 scope of this commerce to the westward extending as 
 far as the Red Sea, the principal commodities being 
 indigo, pepper and cotton. Of the East India Com- 
 pany's ships the Ganges was a fast-sailing brig, 
 which was to be employed by Dance in any way that 
 might tend to the safety and convenience of the fleet 
 until it had passed through the Straits of Malacca, 
 when he was to send her on to Bengal. 
 
 On the 1 4th of February at daybreak the Royal 
 George made a signal to the commodore that she 
 had sighted four strange sail to the south-west. 
 Thereupon Dance signalled that the Alfred, Royal 
 George, Bombay Castle and the Hope should run 
 down and examine them. It happened that among 
 the passengers aboard Dance's ship was Lieutenant 
 Fowler, R.N., and the latter, who had recently been 
 commander of the Porpoise, offered to go in the 
 Ganges brig and, getting quite close up to the 
 strange craft, examine them carefully. To this the 
 commodore assented, and away she went too. After 
 a while Dance learned by signal that the four strange 
 vessels were none other than a squadron of the 
 enemy, consisting of a line-of-battle ship, two 
 frigates and a brig. At one P.M. Dance signalled 
 to his scouts to return, and formed the line of battle 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 193 
 
 in close order. Now this merchant captain was a 
 decidedly able tactician, and it is most interesting 
 to note the way he disposed his forces for battle. 
 
 When the enemy saw that they could " fetch " in 
 the wake of the East Indiamen, they went about, but' 
 the commodore held on his course, keeping under 
 easy sail. About sunset the enemy were close up 
 to the rear of the English fleet, and as Dance 
 momentarily expected his rear ships would be 
 attacked, he stood by to succour them. But as the 
 day ended no attack came, and the enemy hauled 
 off to windward. Meanwhile the commodore sent 
 Lieutenant Fowler in the Ganges to station the 
 twelve country ships to leeward of the line of East 
 Indiamen, so that the latter were between the enemy 
 and the country ships. This was duly carried out 
 and Mr Fowler returned, bringing with him some 
 volunteers from the latter to help work the East 
 Indiamen in the fight. All night long the ships lay 
 in their line of battle, and at daybreak the enemy 
 were descried about three miles to windward hove-to. 
 The English ships now hoisted their colours and 
 offered battle. The enemy's four ships hoisted 
 French colours. These ships consisted of the 
 Marengo, an 84-gun ship with 1200 men; the Belle 
 Poule, 44 guns and 490 men; the Semilante, 36 guns 
 and 400 men; and the Berceau, 32 guns and 350 
 men. The Marengo was seen to be flying the flag 
 of a rear-admiral. In addition there was an i8-gun 
 brig under Dutch colours. 
 
 At nine A.M., as the enemy showed no signs of 
 engaging, the commodore formed the order of sailing 
 and resumed his course, still under easy sail. But 
 the enemy now filled his sails and edged towards 
 
 N 
 
194 
 
 the China fleet. At i P.M. it was obvious that the 
 rear-admiral's intention was to cut off the English 
 rear, so Dance made the signal to tack and bear 
 down on him and engage him in succession, the 
 Royal George being the leading ship, the Ganges 
 second, and the Earl Camden (flagship) next. This 
 was done and then under a press of sail the British 
 ships ran towards the enemy a very magnificent 
 sight for those privileged to behold it. The enemy 
 then formed in a very close line, and opened fire 
 on the first ships, but this was not returned until the 
 distance was much reduced. The Royal George had 
 to bear the brunt of the engagement, being in the 
 van, and in consequence suffered, but she got as 
 close as she could to the enemy. As soon as their 
 guns could have effect, the Ganges and Earl Camden 
 opened fire, and the rest of the ships were ready to 
 go into action as soon as their guns could bear. But 
 before this was possible the French rear-admiral had 
 taken alarm, the enemy hauled their wind and made 
 away to the eastward, with every stitch of sail they 
 could set. They had been beaten and by mer- 
 chantmen. 
 
 Dance then made the signal for a general chase. 
 This was at 2 P.M., and the retreating enemy were 
 pursued for two hours, but as the commodore feared 
 that further pursuit would take his fleet too far from 
 the Straits, and that his first duty was to preserve 
 his ships rather than give the enemy any further 
 oeating, he made the signal to tack, and at 8 P.M. 
 anchored for the night, so as to be able to make for 
 the entrance of the Straits in the morning. The 
 casualties were confined to the Royal George, which 
 had lost one man killed and one more wounded. 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 195 
 
 Her sails and hull had received many shot, but both 
 the Ganges and the Earl Camden were practically 
 untouched. The enemy's gunnery was distinctly 
 bad, the shot falling either short or over. 
 
 Every man who took part in this extraordinary 
 engagement had done his duty handsomely. Captain 
 Timins of the Royal George had taken his ship into 
 action most gallantly, but every ship in the English 
 line had been cleared and prepared for action, 
 anxious to have the opportunity of showing their 
 worth. As the enemy had now long since disap- 
 peared there was nothing for Dance to do but con- 
 tinue on his homeward voyage. From Malacca he 
 despatched Fowler in the Ganges brig to Pulo 
 Penang, asking the captain of any of his Majesty's 
 ships to convoy this exceedingly valuable fleet 
 the value of the sixteen ships together with their 
 cargoes and private property amounting to nearly 
 eight million pounds sterling. It was learned at 
 Malacca that the squadron which had just been 
 encountered was that of Admiral Linois, comprising 
 a battleship, two heavy frigates, a corvette and the 
 brig. 
 
 On the 28th of February, whilst in the Straits of 
 Malacca, Dance's fleet fell in with two of his 
 Majesty's ships, Albion andSceptre, and the Albion's 
 captain was prevailed upon to take charge now of the 
 fleet, considering its national importance, and on the 
 9th of June these treasure ships reached St Helena, 
 still under the convoy of the two British men-of-war. 
 There the latter parted company from the merchant- 
 men, and instead H.M.S. Planta genet convoyed 
 them to England, where they arrived early in the 
 month of August. The news of this successful 
 
196 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 engagement, the circumstance that an enemy's fleet 
 had been put to flight and chased by a fleet of East 
 Indiamen caused the greatest acclamation in Lon- 
 don. The Patriotic Fund Committee presented 
 Commodore Dance with a sword of the value of 
 ;ioo, and a silver vase of the same worth; to 
 Captain Timins a sword of the value of $o, and 
 each of the other captains, as well as to Lieutenant 
 Fowler. 
 
 As for the directors of the East India Company, 
 they showed their appreciation of the gallantry and 
 the preservation of their property in the most hand- 
 some manner. Setting aside about 50,000 they 
 rewarded Commodore Dance with the sum of 2000 
 guineas, and a piece of plate valued at 200 guineas. 
 To Captain Timins 1000 guineas and a piece of 
 plate valued at 100 guineas. To Captain Moffat 
 500 guineas and a piece of plate valued at 100 
 guineas. The other thirteen captains were each 
 awarded 500 guineas and a piece of plate valued 
 at 50 guineas. The chief officers received each 150 
 guineas, the second officers 125 guineas, and so on 
 down to the boatswains, who got 50 guineas, and the 
 seamen and servants 6 guineas each. The Company 
 also presented Lieutenant Fowler with 300 guineas 
 and a piece of plate, as well as 500 guineas to the 
 captain of the Plantagenet, who had convoyed them 
 home from St Helena. 
 
 Commodore Sir Nathaniel Dance was offered a 
 baronetcy, which he refused, but accepted a knight- 
 hood : and thus ended the last chapter in an incident 
 that was the pride and subject of yarning among the 
 men of the East India Company's service for many 
 a long day. It certainly shows the British merchant 
 
SHIPS AND MEN 197 
 
 sailor at his best ready for a fight, going into the 
 engagement gallantly, and yet all the while remem- 
 bering that his first duty is to his owners and to get 
 ships and cargoes safely to port without unneces- 
 sarily wasting valuable time. 
 
CHAPTER XV 
 
 AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 THE first decade of the nineteenth century had been 
 very unfortunate for the East India Company. 
 There had been the losses of those ships already 
 mentioned, owing to disasters at sea. This meant 
 not only the loss to the Company of the rich cargoes, 
 but of the advances to the owners amounting to 
 thousands of pounds. The French war had also 
 not merely interfered with the coming and going of 
 the merchant ships, but it had thrown the whole of 
 Europe into such a state of bewilderment that com- 
 merce generally was paralysed, and therefore the 
 trade in Indian goods to the different parts of the 
 Continent was exceedingly curtailed. Notwithstand- 
 ing all that had been done by the Act of 1796, and 
 the superintendence which was exercised over the 
 Company, the latter was anything but prosperous. It 
 had been engaged in hostilities with the Mahrattas 
 and other Eastern powers. The result had been the 
 acquisition of vast territory which was shortly to be 
 for the good of the British Empire. But the im- 
 mediate result of all this was that the Company's 
 finances were in a crippled condition. Later on we 
 shall see what a wholesale effect the abolition of the 
 monopoly had on the Eastern trade, dating from the 
 
 198 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 199 
 
 year 1813 : but before we come to that I desire to 
 give the reader a fair account of the conditions of 
 life in the East Indiamen of the first part of the 
 nineteenth century. We shall presently proceed to 
 examine these in greater detail, but it will greatly 
 assist the imagination if we look into contemporary 
 accounts left behind by officers who put to sea in 
 these craft. 
 
 And first of all let us take the account of that 
 Captain Eastwick whom we introduced to the reader 
 on an earlier page. This time he was proceeding to 
 India, not in his capacity of mercantile officer, but 
 as a passenger. Nevertheless his ripe knowledge 
 and experience were of the greatest value to these 
 East Indiamen, as will be seen. It was a tedious 
 business in those days to get down to Portsmouth, 
 where the wealthier passengers used to join the East 
 Indiamen. Eastwick was taking out to India his 
 sister-in-law on a visit to her brother-in-law, Colonel 
 Gordon. The journey was made to Portsmouth by 
 road, of course, and those who have motored along 
 this Portsmouth road scarcely realise how tedious 
 and risky the journey was in those days. In the 
 month of January 1809 Eastwick and his sister-in- 
 law set out on their journey with a goo'd deal of 
 luggage and jewellery, as well as a hundred pounds 
 in money. They had to cross Hounslow Heath, 
 which was then infested with robbers, and there was 
 every probability of the post-boys being held up, the 
 horses shot and the passengers relieved of their 
 possessions. However, in the present case the 
 journey to Portsmouth was made without adventure, 
 where it was learnt that the Neptune East Indiaman 
 would not sail for another ten days. 
 
200 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 This was a vessel of 1200 charter tons, and one 
 of the largest of the East India Company's fleet, 
 being employed for the voyage to Bombay and 
 China, this being her sixth trip thereto. She was 
 owned by Sir William Eraser, Bart., and commanded 
 by Captain William Donaldson, under whom were a 
 chief officer and three mates, a surgeon and a purser. 
 After the Neptune and her fellow-ships of the Com- 
 pany's fleet had at last got under way a storm came 
 up the reader will remember that this year, 1809, 
 was notorious for its virulent weather and as a 
 result the Henry Addingion, another East Indiaman 
 of about the same size, got driven to the eastward 
 round Selsey Bill and struck the Bognor Rocks to 
 the north-eastward of the Bill, and it was only with 
 difficulty that she got off and reached Portsmouth 
 again. This storm had dispersed the whole of the 
 Company's fleet outward-bound, and the Neptune 
 had found herself in the vicinity of the Channel 
 Islands, where she was in extreme danger. Captain 
 Donaldson ordered the second mate to go aloft and 
 help to take in the foretopsail, but this the officer 
 refused to do, and he was instantly " broke." 
 
 Eastwick thereupon volunteered to fill his place, 
 and this offer was gladly accepted temporarily, the 
 Neptune eventually sailing across the English 
 Channel once more and let go anchor on the Mother 
 Bank (to the west of Ryde, Isle of Wight). Here 
 the ship was refitted for a second attempt, and the 
 second mate had his place now taken by a Mr 
 Richard Alsager, who had lately been M.P. for 
 Surrey. At length the Neptune was ready for sea 
 once more, the heavy weather had given way to 
 beautiful summer, and the wind was fair for making 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 201 
 
 a quick passage down the English Channel : so on 
 2ist June the East India fleet weighed anchor and 
 proceeded, consisting of the Neptune, Henry 
 Addington, Scale by Castle and the True Briton. 
 These ships were all pretty much of the same size, 
 though the True Briton was of 1198 charter tons. 
 So fine did the weather continue that when the fleet 
 was two days out from England the captain of the 
 Ne-ptune gave a dance on board to the passengers of 
 all the ships, and the following evening another 
 dance was given by the captain of the Henry 
 Addington. Fortunately the passengers were safely 
 rowed across the ocean to the entertaining vessel, 
 and back. But most people will agree with East- 
 wick's criticism of this foolish procee'ding. " I did 
 not consider it prudent at such a season of the year 
 to do these things at sea." 
 
 So the voyage continued as far as Table Bay with 
 everything in their favour. After rounding the Cape, 
 the N eftune, the Scaleby Castle and the True Briton 
 shaped a course for Bombay, but the Henry Adding- 
 ton was compelled to stay behind in order to repair 
 a bad leak that had broken out afresh. This was 
 doubtless a relic of the incident on Bognor Rocks. 
 Whilst approaching Madagascar Captain Donaldson 
 invited the other two captains to come on boar'd and 
 dine with him, and during the conversation the sub- 
 ject came up of the disagreeable weather met with 
 during the south-west monsoon on going into Bom- 
 bay. Eastwick offered that if no pilot were available 
 he would take the squadron in, and this the three 
 captains accepted. The next day they encountered 
 just that experience which the reader will remember 
 occurred to some of the first English sailors when 
 
202 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 bound to India. For a heavy clap of thunder " so 
 loud it sounded as though a hundred great guns were 
 going off " broke over the Neptune and an extra- 
 ordinary flash of lightning took place, and so close 
 that Eastwick declares he saw many electric balls 
 darting into the water. The chief officer was on 
 watch at the time, and came running aft. He 
 announced that the ship had been struck in the fore- 
 mast and that the lightning had knocked down four 
 of the men. It took the crew afterwards sixteen 
 hours to repair the damage, get up the new foretop- 
 mast, foretopgallant mast and yard, for the original 
 ones had been rendered useless. 
 
 As the squadron approached Bombay they got into 
 the south-west monsoon, with very thick, dirty 
 weather and a tremendous sea running. It was when 
 they were just a day's sail off Bombay that the 
 captain of the True Briton, who was acting as com- 
 modore of the squadron, made the signal : " Will 
 Eastwick stand by his promise? " This was im- 
 mediately answered by the affirmative signal, and 
 then the commodore ran up another : " Neptune, go 
 ahead, and lead the way." So, although a passenger, 
 Eastwick had the honour of taking the squadron into 
 Bombay harbour and never picked up a pilot until 
 ready to let go anchor. 
 
 But even more illuminating than Eastwick is a 
 man named Thomas Addison, who was born on i8th 
 December 1785, and made a dozen voyages in the 
 old East Indiamen, entering the service as a midship- 
 man of the Marquis W 'e lies ley in February 1802, and 
 eventually rising to fifth mate, and so to first mate 
 by May 1817. There are of course plenty of log- 
 books and journals still existing, but one has to 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 203 
 
 wade through many pages before one finds anything 
 of real interest. In the case of Addison, however, 
 there is so much in his journals that reveals to us 
 the life and the incidents on board these old ships 
 of the Company's service that we cannot feel other 
 than grateful that the MS. still exists. After his 
 death these journals eventually passed into the hands 
 of a Norfolk rector, who was good enough to place 
 them in the hands of the Navy Records Society, and 
 a few years ago they were edited by Sir John 
 Laughton and published under the auspices of that 
 Society. It is to this source that I am indebted 
 for the information which is afforded by Addison, 
 though space will not allow of more than a brief 
 outline of his experiences. 
 
 He was able to obtain a berth in the Honourable 
 Company's " Maritime Service " (as it was called, 
 in contradistinction to the Company's Marine) owing 
 to the influence of a Mr Edmund Antrobus, a teaman 
 and banker in the Strand. The latter took the 
 sixteen-year-old youth and introduced him to a 
 Mr Matthew White, who was the managing owner 
 of the ship Marquis of Welle sley, by whom the 
 midshipman's appointment had been granted. She 
 was a vessel of 818 charter tons and was now about 
 to start on her second voyage to India, her com- 
 mander being Captain Bruce Mitchell. Mr White 
 gave Addison a letter of introduction to the chief 
 officer, named Le Blanc, and after the boy had com- 
 pleted his sea-going kit he was taken down to the 
 ship at Gravesend by Mr Antrobus. Addison was 
 now handed over to his future messmates, and then 
 began his initiation. As so many of these old-time 
 ceremonies have long since passed away, it may not 
 
204 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 be out of place to say Addison was sent up into the 
 mizen top, outside the futtocks, where according to 
 custom he should have been seized up to the rigging: 
 
 JT O O O 
 
 by a couple of seamen, had he not received the tip 
 to promise them beforehand a gallon of beer. " In 
 lieu of which, by the by, five gallons was afterwards 
 demanded of me by my messmates, stating that the 
 mizen top was their sole prerogative. This is a very 
 old usage practised on board all ships, considered a 
 fair claim from all strangers on first going aloft." 
 
 In addition to the captain, there were the chief 
 officer, three mates and a large crew. In all there 
 were thirty officers and petty officers, the whole com- 
 plement amounting to 151, which nowadays would 
 be thought enormous for a ship of her size. The 
 men received two months' wages in advance before 
 sailing, and in February 1802 made sail down the 
 Thames from Gravesend under the charge of one of 
 the Company's pilots, who brought her safely into 
 the Downs, where the wind was blowing hard from 
 the south-west, sending in a high sea. Addison was 
 destined at once to have excitement, for about sun- 
 down, whilst his Majesty's frigate Egyptienne was 
 coming to anchor in the Downs, she had shortened 
 sail and left herself too little way to shoot ahead of 
 the Indiaman, with the result that she fell broadside 
 on to the Marquis Wellesley's bows, tearing away the 
 latter's cutwater and bowsprit, bringing down the 
 foretopmast also, making in fact a clean sweep of 
 the ship forward. The merchantman was lying to 
 a single anchor at the time, but although it blew most 
 of a gale during the night the ship rode it out all 
 right, and next morning, the weather having 
 moderated, the frigate's commander sent some hands 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 205 
 
 on board to give the ship a temporary refit. After 
 this the Indiaman proceeded to Portsmouth, where 
 she was fully repaired alongside a man-of-war hulk. 
 On the 4th of March she went out of harbour and 
 anchored at Spithead, where she took on board a 
 number of his Majesty's dragoons, as well as forty- 
 nine of the East India Company's troops and their 
 wives for India. The next day, having received the 
 Company's packet from the India House and the 
 despatches for Bengal and Madras, she weighed 
 anchor in the afternoon and proceeded down 
 Channel. 
 
 The last of old England was sighted the following 
 day, and then anchors were unbent and all harbour 
 gear stowed away for the long voyage. Madeira was 
 sighted on the i4th of that month not a bad 
 passage for a sailing ship and on the 4th of April 
 the Equator was passed, where the usual ceremonies 
 of crossing the line were undergone. :< It being my 
 own and Newton's [a young messmate's] first trip 
 into Neptune's dominions, we underwent the accus- 
 tomed and awful ordeal of shaving by the hands of 
 his Majesty's barber, thereby rendering us free 
 mariners of the ocean." On 24th April they were 
 off the Cape of Good Hope, and on 2ist June sighted 
 Ceylon, and three days later arriving at Madras, 
 '' Found Admiral Rainier's squadron riding here, 
 consisting of eight sail. Shortly afterwards a sham 
 fight took place with the fleet and shore, followed by 
 a grand illumination displayed from ships as well as 
 the shore, likewise fireworks and rockets, in com- 
 memoration of the Peace of Amiens." 
 
 The Marquis Wellesley left Madras again in 
 February 1803, after visiting ports on the coast, and 
 
206 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 in July fell in with an American bound from Gib- 
 raltar to Boston, and learned from her that war had 
 been declared between England and France, so 
 cartridges were filled and every preparation made on 
 board the East Indiaman for defending herself. On 
 the nineteenth of that month a strange sail appeared. 
 The Indiaman made her private signal, but the 
 stranger did not answer and sailed away. But at 
 midnight she returned and was coming up fast, so 
 the Indiaman at once prepared for action, Addison 
 acting as powder-monkey. But presently she was 
 found to be H.M. frigate Endymion, and sent a boat 
 to the Indiaman in charge of a lieutenant and pressed 
 eight of the merchant ship's men, for the frigate had 
 captured so many prizes that he had more prisoners 
 on board than all his ship's company. But before 
 the mouth of the English Channel was reached the 
 Marquis W ellesley was to have further exciting ex- 
 periences. A few days after the previously men- 
 tioned incident, two ships were descried one morning 
 while the people were at breakfast. At first Captain 
 Mitchell bore up to assist one which was flying 
 English colours, but one of the passengers (appar- 
 ently of the sea-lawyer type which still survives) 
 protested " against the legal propriety of such pro- 
 ceeding on the part of an Indiaman volunteering her 
 services in such an affair," so Mitchell put his ship 
 again on her course, much to the indignation of a 
 choleric colonel, for the ship with the English 
 colours was subsequently captured. 
 
 Later on a large ship hove in sight on the weather 
 bow and stood down towards the Marquis W ellesley. 
 It was now night and the latter at once cleared for 
 action and showed two tiers of lights. The stranger 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 207 
 
 was hailed seven times before it could be ascertained 
 that she was H.M.S. Plantagenet with a sloop-of-war 
 as tender in company. Her captain came on board 
 and complimented Captain Mitchell on the good 
 arrangements made for the defence of the ship, and 
 as he walked round the decks the men remained at 
 quarters. He was good enough also to compliment 
 Mitchell on the clever manner in which he had 
 manoeuvred his ship to prevent a raking broadside, 
 but before leaving he " impressed a few hands from 
 us." 
 
 On the ist of August the Indiaman anchored in 
 the Downs, and one of the Company's pilots came 
 aboard and took charge of her, bringing with him a 
 number of " ticket-men " to work the ship up the 
 Thames. These were men who were sent from a 
 man-of-war in place of such as had been impressed. 
 On the third of the month the ship had reached her 
 moorings off the Gun Wharf, Deptford, and four 
 days later discharged the ship's company and hired 
 gangs to deliver the cargo. And then came the final, 
 dramatic touch to this voyage : " Shortly afterwards 
 found that Mr White, managing owner of the 
 Marquis Wellesley, had become bankrupt and was 
 unable to pay the ship's company." 
 
 Addison's first voyage had thus begun and ended 
 with adventures. He had got back in the summer 
 of 1803 and soon began to prepare for a second 
 voyage. Through the good offices of his friend 
 Mr Antrobus he once more obtained a berth as mid- 
 shipman, this time in the Brunswick. The latter was 
 a ship of 1 200 charter tons, and was about to make 
 her sixth voyage out to Ceylon and China. On 
 being introduced to Captain James Ludovic Grant, 
 
208 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the latter made him senior midshipman and his cox- 
 swain, as none of the other youngsters had yet been 
 to sea. The midshipmen were allowed a cabin, ser- 
 vant and every comfort, and though Captain Grant 
 was regarded as a martinet and disciplinarian, yet 
 he was by no means unpopular among Addison's 
 messmates, " supporting his mids as officers and 
 gentlemen." * There were five of us; two were 
 stationed as signal midshipmen, as he was commo- 
 dore; the other three in three watches, one in each. 
 I was in the latter; never allowed to quit the lee side 
 of the quarter-deck, except on jduty or on general 
 occasions of reefing or furling. Two of us dined 
 with him every day, and nothing could exceed his 
 politeness and kindness at table." 
 
 Captain Grant had served as midshipman in the 
 Royal Navy in the Prince George with the Duke of 
 Clarence, who at the time we are speaking of was 
 now George III. Grant had reached the rank of 
 lieutenant in the navy, and was serving aboard a 
 frigate in the West Indies in the year 1786. The 
 captain died and then it was decided to continue 
 the cruise, Grant as first lieutenant, and a brother 
 officer named Hugh Lindsay as captain. However, 
 when at length they reached England their conduct 
 was so badly criticised that they had to resign their 
 commissions. Both officers therefore did the next 
 best thing and joined the East India Company's 
 service, Grant being now commander of the Bruns- 
 wick, whilst Lindsay had the Lady Jane Dundas, a 
 vessel of 820 tons. 
 
 During the month of February, then, the Bruns- 
 wick, having taken on board her cargo and stores, 
 dropped down the Thames to the Lower Hope, 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 209 
 
 where she received on board passengers and the 
 remainder of her crew, who received their usual 
 advance. Colonel Hatton and staff of the King's 
 66th Regiment came on board, together with about 
 350 privates : and a little later the ship sailed to 
 Portsmouth. Here she remained till the 2Oth of 
 March, when she came out of harbour and ran across 
 to the Motherbank, where she anchored. Here the 
 whole fleet of East Indiamen, together with their 
 naval convoy, were assembled. This consisted of 
 nine ships his Majesty's frigate Lapwing, and the 
 Company's ships Brunswick, Marquis of Ely, Addi- 
 son's former ship the Marquis of Wellesley, the 
 Lady Jane Dundas (Captain Hon. Hugh Lindsay, 
 Grant's old shipmate), the Marchioness of Exeter, 
 the Lord Nelson, the Princess Charlotte and the 
 Canton. The captain of the Marquis Wellesley was 
 now Charles Le Blanc, who had been " chief " when 
 Addison first went to sea. 
 
 It must have been a magnificent sight to have 
 witnessed this fine fleet getting under way and set- 
 ting their canvas that afternoon at a signal from the 
 frigate. 'Under close-reefed topsails they ran down 
 the Solent and past the Needles with a fresh breeze 
 from north by east. Four and a half hours after 
 leaving the Motherbank they had dropped their 
 pilot in the English Channel, and by eleven that 
 night they were nine miles off the Portland lights, 
 with a gale working up and thick, hazy weather. 
 This caused the fleet to be scattered and topsails 
 were taken in, but towards morning the weather 
 moderated. Getting into the north-east trade-wind 
 the Brunswick soon reeled off the miles, though the 
 units of the fleet were still much 'dispersed, thus 
 
210 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 making it much easier for the enemy to inflict injury 
 if met with. 
 
 On the 7th of April Addison has this entry in his 
 journal : 
 
 ' Trimmed ship by the head with 200 pigs of lead. 
 The missing ships rejoined the convoy with two 
 whalers. On a Saturday (weather permitting) con- 
 stantly exercised great guns, and small arms fre- 
 quently, with powder blank cartridges. My station 
 at quarters was aide-de-camp to the captain." 
 
 And then there are several instances of the way 
 discipline was maintained on board in those days of 
 flogging : 
 
 " gth. John McDonald, seaman, was punished 
 with a dozen for insolence to the boatswain. . . . 
 
 "i2th. Punished T. Botler, seaman, with a dozen 
 for neglect, etc." 
 
 On the following day the frigate parted company 
 with the fleet to return to England, so the Bnmswick 
 became commodore ship. On the 23rd of June the 
 squadron was in the Mozambique Passage, and at 
 daylight espied a strange brig to the south-east. 
 Sail was therefore made, the Lord Nelson having 
 been signalled to chase with the Brunswick, and the 
 Dundas to lead the fleet on a north-east-by-north 
 course. At 7 A.M. the brig tacked, and half-an-hour 
 later the Brunswick also tacked. At eight o'clock 
 Grant ordered his squadron to heave-to, and at noon 
 was coming up fast with the brig. Half-an-hour 
 later he had reached her and found her to be the 
 French La Charlotte of four guns and twenty-nine 
 men. She had left the Isle de France twenty-eight 
 days previously and was bound for the Mozambique. 
 She was now a prisoner, and Commodore Grant 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 211 
 
 accordingly sent on board the Brunswick's second 
 officer, Mr Benjamin Bunn, Addison, five seamen 
 and twenty soldiers in the cutter to take possession 
 of her. Her captain, a lieutenant, a midshipman 
 and ten seamen were brought off to the Brunswick, 
 and at three in the afternoon the brig was taken 
 in tow, but two hours later she was cast off. Event- 
 ually, after the captains of the other English ships 
 had come aboard and joined in a consultation, Grant 
 decided that the prize was not worth keeping. So 
 all her cargo of muskets were thrown into the sea, 
 and afterwards she was handed over again to her 
 French captain, who went aboard her with his men, 
 very thankful to be allowed to take possession once 
 more. 
 
 About the middle of June the East Indiamen 
 reached Trincomalee and saluted H.M.S. Centurion 
 with eleven guns, which respect was returned. But 
 it is typical of the time that the following day a 
 lieutenant came off from the Centurion and pressed 
 ten of the Indiamen's men, and a little later three 
 more seamen deserted and joined H.M.S. Sheerness.. 
 Having disembarked the troops and baggage, 
 assisted by the boats of his Majesty's ships, the 
 Brunswick once more put to sea, and two days later 
 brought up in Madras Roads, where she saluted the 
 fort with nine guns, and received a similar salute 
 in return. Here also a lieutenant from H.M.S. 
 Wilhelmina came aboard and pressed four more 
 men. Here the Brunswick remained some weeks, 
 landing the Company's cargo, taking on board cotton 
 and other goods for Captain Grant's own account 
 on a later page the reader will learn how much cargo 
 a captain was allowed to ship for himself and after 
 
212 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the vessel's rigging had been refitted, and her hull 
 painted, she prepared for sea. 
 
 Meanwhile the Company's ships which had come 
 out with her bound for Bengal had sailed to the 
 north, but on the I3th of August H.M. frigate Caro- 
 line, which was now to convoy the East Indiamen 
 bound for China, made the signal for the fleet to 
 unmoor, and then proceeded on the voyage. The 
 fleet went through the Singapore Straits, the convoy 
 being kept in close order of sailing as Admiral 
 Linois was known to be cruising in the China Sea. 
 It was now September, and the reader will recollect 
 that in February of that year his squadron had been 
 put to flight by Commodore Dance. The East India 
 squadron now consisted of the Company's ships 
 Brunswick^ Glatton, Cirencester, Walmer Castle, 
 Marquis of Ely, Thames, Canton, Winchelsea, ten 
 country ships, and convoyed by five of his Majesty's 
 ships the Caroline, Grampus, La Dedaigneuse, 
 Russell and Dasher, the first-mentioned being the 
 commodore's ship. 
 
 Arrived at the mouth of the Tiger, permission was 
 obtained from two mandarins to pass, as was the 
 custom in those days when China was still so little 
 open to the European. And the way the fleet was 
 able to navigate the river by night at the last quarter 
 of the flood is most interesting. Two Chinese pilots 
 had been taken on board the Brunswick, and in 
 order to denote the channel across the bar by night 
 a row of fifty boats with lights was placed on one 
 side, and another fifty on the other, the ship of 
 course to sail between. When the Brunswick was 
 about in mid-channel one of the pilots sang out 
 " port littee," while the other contradicted him by 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 213 
 
 shouting " starboard littee." Captain Grant was not 
 the man to be humbugged in this manner, so he 
 kicked one of these men overboard, and the other 
 immediately jumped after. The lights were at once 
 put out and the Brunswick grounded on the bar. 
 The tide soon began to fall, and in spite of carrying 
 out a kedge she refused to budge. So the top- 
 gallant yards and masts were sent down, the guns 
 were put into the launches which were sent by the 
 other ships of the fleet, and eventually next day the 
 Brunswick was floated at high water, but at once 
 swung round and took the ground again, and the 
 tide ebbed out. 
 
 In order to lighten her forward, the bower anchors 
 were made fast between boats, and the stream anchor 
 was taken out in the launch ready for the next flood, 
 and with the last quarter of that tide she came off; 
 the hawsers were slipped, and while the anchors were 
 being recovered Captain Grant backed and filled 
 across the channel and finally came to anchor again. 
 
 Addison tells us of an interesting custom in the 
 Company's service at that time. For each season the 
 senior captain was allowed ^"500 " table money," 
 as we should call it, for public dinners and various 
 expenses, the second captain in seniority being 
 allowed ,300 for the same purposes. The ships 
 took their turn to act as guarHship, naval fashion, 
 and whichever ship's turn it was so to act on a 
 Sunday, the captain was to attend on board together 
 with his surgeon. And during the whole day, up till 
 eight o'clock in the evening, one of his sworn officers 
 was to row guard up and down the fleet, after which 
 he was to make his report to the senior ship. But 
 when the viceroy and the leading Chinese authorities 
 
214 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 made their visits to these English ships in state they 
 were received with great ceremony, which is curi- 
 ously absent from the modern merchant ship. 
 
 Many hundred local craft would put off to the 
 East Indiamen. The English captains were on 
 boarH to receive them, the yards were manned and 
 every possible display was made. An officer was 
 first sent in full uniform to compliment the great 
 man John Tuck, as the English sailor nicknamed 
 him, owing to the fact that in the fore end of his boat 
 he kept gallows to tuck up any unfortunate who dis- 
 pleased him. Having come alongside the East 
 Indiaman, the great man always refused to trust his 
 valuable life to the ropes and accommodations sup- 
 plied for entering the ship, but used his own long 
 ladders. Business was duly contracted, and then he 
 would make a present to the ship's company of 
 bullocks, flour, fruit and a vile, maddening spirit of 
 a most intoxicating nature, which the men were made 
 to exchange for something better. After this the 
 captains all dined together on board a large chop 
 boat. 
 
 The fleet remained here from October till the first 
 day of 1805, and then got under way with fine 
 cargoes of teas for England. But the Brunswick 
 never reached England. Doubtless owing to the 
 damage sustained when she got aground on the bar 
 she developed a serious leak, and made for Ceylon 
 and Bombay, where she was docked and repaired, 
 her tea being sent to England in another ship. The 
 Brunswick was now sent back to China again with a 
 cargo of cotton, which would have been a very lucra- 
 tive affair. But there was a good deal of trouble with 
 the crew, many of the men deserting to the warships, 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 215 
 
 until at last Captain Grant sent every man he had in 
 the launch on board a British frigate. The latter's 
 captain selected from these all that were worth hav- 
 ing and then sent the rest back to the Brunswick. 
 
 When the latter set sail from Bombay for China 
 on ist July 1805 she was very ill-manned, conse- 
 quent on nearly the whole of the ship's company 
 having been pressed by the navy. There were not 
 twenty European seamen on board to work this big 
 ship. The guns had to be manned by Chinamen, 
 with only one European seaman at each. For the 
 rest lascars had to be relied upon. In such a weak 
 condition she put to sea, together with a couple of 
 country ships, keeping as near each other as possible. 
 But a few days later at break of day two strange sail 
 were discovered to the eastward. The Sarah made 
 a signal that the strangers looked suspicious. Later 
 on the Brunswick perceived that one was a line-of- 
 battle ship and the other a frigate. But the Sarah 
 signalled that she thought they were friends. How- 
 ever, the Brunswick was much less credulous and 
 had already cleared for action, hoisting her private 
 signal (which was not answered) and hoisting her 
 British colours. The stranger presently answered by 
 showing St George's colours. The line-of-battle 
 ship then tacked in order to get into such a position 
 as to rake the Brunswick from aft. The frigate 
 passed to leeward and exchanged St George's 
 colours for the French national colours, giving the 
 Brunswick a broadside as she passed. This was 
 immediately returned, but as the ship was heeling 
 over at a great angle, the lee guns could not be 
 elevated sufficiently to do any damage to the enemy. 
 
 But the Brunswick was clearlv to be out- 
 
216 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 manoeuvred. The frigate went about just astern of 
 the Indiaman, and as she was then observed to be 
 coming on fast, Captain Grant kept his ship as full 
 as possible, hoping to be able to run her ashore. 
 The frigate, however, approached at such a pace, 
 and the line-of-battle ship was also so close that the 
 Brunswick would assuredly have been sunk by the 
 line-of-battle ship's broadside before taking the 
 ground. After consultation with his officers Grant 
 was reluctantly compelled to strike his colours and 
 surrender to the enemy off the coast of Ceylon. A 
 boat came off and then, well the line-of-battle ship 
 was none other than Admiral Linois' Marengo, and 
 the big frigate was the Belle Poule, which had fought 
 and run away the previous year from Commodore 
 Dance. Linois was stationed in those Eastern waters 
 for the express purpose of harassing and cutting up 
 our trade, avoiding the British ships-of-war. Any 
 modern strategist would tell you that whilst this kind 
 of hostility is very annoying to the power attacked, 
 it cannot afford any lasting good. The same kind of 
 folly was attempted, you will remember, by the Rus- 
 sians interfering with Japanese merchantmen in the 
 East during the late war, and the practical value of 
 this measure was nil. 
 
 However, Linois may have remembered that he who 
 fights and runs away will live to fight another day. 
 He had been compelled to fly before Dance, but this 
 time he got his revenge. You may ask what Eng- 
 land was doing to leave those seas unpoliced. The 
 answer is that as a matter of fact Indiamen had to 
 rely on naval convoys when they could be got, and 
 Rear-Admiral Sir Thomas Troubridge, who had 
 been one of Nelson's captains at the Battle of the 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 217 
 
 Nile, was actually escorting, in H.M.S. Blenheim, 
 eleven more Indiamen. The two courses were con- 
 verging and presently we shall see them meet. 
 
 Needless to say, it was with great grief that 
 Captain Grant, all his officers and midshipmen 
 (excepting the chief officer and surgeon) were put on 
 board the Marengo, whilst the frigate went in pursuit 
 of the Sarah. The latter, however, ran herself ashore 
 with all sail set, but the crew were saved. Admiral 
 Linois received Captain Grant with every courtesy, 
 and the Brunswick was ordered to a rendezvous 
 nearer the Cape of Good Hope. Before the month 
 was out, when a fog which had settled down lifted 
 for a while, the Marengo suddenly found herself 
 close to a large convoy of Indiamen. The former 
 instantly cleared for action and firing began. It 
 was Troubridge with his convoy ! But nothing much 
 came of this, and the contending forces separated 
 during the night. To cut the story short, Addison 
 and his shipmates were landed in South Africa, 
 whence they were taken to St Helena by an 
 American brig. From there they reached England 
 in a British frigate, landing at Spithead, and so 
 making their way to London. As for the poor old 
 Brunswick, she drove ashore on the South African 
 coast, and so ended her days. 
 
 If Addison had been unfortunate in the ending of 
 his first voyage, so in this he was again unlucky. 
 " According to the Company's law," he writes in his 
 journal, " having been captured by an enemy, or the 
 ship in any way wrecked or destroyed, the captain, 
 officers and crew forfeit their pay and wages, con- 
 sequently we have no claim upon the owners of the 
 late Brunswick for at least twenty months' hard duty 
 
218 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 on board of her." However, he was now wedded to 
 the sea, and the next time he went in his first ship, 
 the Marquis Wellesley, as fifth mate, with Charles 
 Le Blanc as captain, and in her he served during 
 the following years till he went as second mate in 
 another of the Company's ships. I make no apology 
 to the reader for giving so much detail in this con- 
 nection, for Addison's and Eastwick's accounts tell 
 us just those intimate details which show the risks 
 of many sorts which had to be encountered in the old 
 days when the sailing ship was still far from per- 
 fect, and those handsome, fast China tea-clippers 
 had not yet come into being to startle the world with 
 their record runs. No doubt the captains of these 
 East Indiamen of which we are speaking were often 
 hated by their men for their severity : but those 
 were no kid-glove days, and a voyage was not a thing 
 of certainty as with the modern liner, which main- 
 tains a punctuality almost equal to that of a pas- 
 senger train. If a captain retired after a few voyages 
 with a nice little fortune, he certainly deserved it. 
 For he was a long time before he reached a com- 
 mand, and there was scarcely a day during the whole 
 of those long voyages when he was not plunged into 
 some sort of anxiety. Anything might happen; 
 from having his sails blown out of his ship and 
 carrying away his best spars to losing the ship her- 
 self, her cargo, her men. Every force seemed to be 
 up against him gales of wind, uncharted seas, 
 coasts and rivers, privateers, warships of the enemy : 
 even the warships of his own country snatched out 
 of his vessel his best men. And then, to add 
 insult to injury, he came home to find either 
 his managing owners gone bankrupt or a by-law 
 
2 1 
 
 '> 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 219 
 
 which prevented him from receiving his hard-earned 
 pay. 
 
 Yes, taking it by and large, he deserved his good 
 luck when it came his way; but when it was absent, 
 he did his best and more for the British capitalist 
 and merchant princes than the latter ever care'd to 
 acknowledge. In the history of Eastern develop- 
 ment and civilisation the shipmaster of these old 
 Indiamen ought to occupy a high place of respect 
 and admiration. He has left behind a magnificent 
 example for his successors to follow. 
 
 When a passenger in the olden days joined an 
 East Indiaman as she lay in the Downs he had to 
 be rowed off by one of the Deal boatmen. These 
 " sharks " often made a fine thing out of such 
 passengers, for the latter were completely at the 
 mercy of the former. In calm weather the boatman 
 was willing to row the passenger aboard for the sum 
 of five shillings (or more if he could get it). But in 
 the case of dirty weather and the nasty lop which 
 gets up here with onshore winds the passenger had 
 to pay as much as three guineas and sometimes even 
 five : it was all a question of bargaining between 
 himself and the boatman. Inasmuch as the pas- 
 senger had to get aboard the big ship at all costs, 
 and since the only method possible was to employ 
 one of these Deal boatmen, the competition was 
 solely between the boatmen themselves. But these 
 fellows were so closely bound together, owing to 
 the ties of relationship and their co-operation in 
 extensive smuggling, that the passenger could 
 scarcely help being fleeced. 
 
 Having at last arrived on board, weary of his 
 coach drive from London, drenched with the sea- 
 
220 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 spray scooped up by the Deal galley, the passenger 
 bound for India in those days set forth with not the 
 light heart and eagerness with which the modern 
 traveller embarks on an East-bound liner. If con- 
 temporary accounts are to be trusted, the mere antici- 
 pation was a kind of terrible nightmare. The pas- 
 senger often enough would retire at once to his cot, 
 and remain there for days prostrate with sea-sickness. 
 The cuddy would not see him at meals until the Bay 
 of Biscay had been passed and finer, warmer weather 
 encountered. Some of the Company's cadets bound 
 out to enter this corporation's Indian army were 
 utter scamps, and the only way to get them out of 
 their cots was to cut the lanyards which kept the 
 latter up. Before they had reached the Equator 
 they had begun to find their sea-legs, and they were 
 compelled to take part in the usual ceremonies of 
 crossing the line. In the accompanying illustration 
 will be found one of these young gentlemen under- 
 going this initiation in one of the East Indiamen 
 ships. 
 
 These ships, because of their bad lines and clumsy 
 proportions, could scarcely rely on keeping up an 
 average of more than three or four knots an hour, 
 and their performances when compared with the 
 voyages of the celebrated clippers in the mid- 
 nineteenth century show the essential difference in 
 the capabilities of the old and the new types respec- 
 tively. Let the following table show how slow the 
 old-time craft were. The reference is to an East 
 Indiaman which left the Thames in 1746, and after 
 voyaging to the East arrived off Scotland in 1748 : 
 
 Left England, September 20, 1746. 
 
 Arrived at St Helena, December 25, 1746. 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 221 
 
 Left St Helena, January 14, 1747. 
 
 Arrived at Batavia, April 19, 1747. 
 Left Batavia, June 9, 1747. 
 
 Arrived in China, July 8, 1747. 
 Left China, January 12, 1748. 
 
 Arrived at St Helena, April 4, 1748. 
 Left St Helena, April 25, 1748. 
 
 Arrived off Scotland, July 9, 1748. 
 
 Even one of the Company's own ships the 
 Thames which was not as fast as the China clippers 
 presently to be started by private firms, performed 
 the voyage between Canton and England in 115 
 days a little time before the East India Company 
 lost their China monopoly. This vessel left Canton 
 on 1 8th November 1831, arrived at St Helena on 
 28th January 1832, and was in the English Channel 
 on the following i3th March. 
 
 An anonymous writer who flourished about the 
 middle of the eighteenth century, on whose authority 
 the details of the length of voyages have been given 
 above, has left us a detailed account of a voyage to 
 the East Indies about this time. I need not try the 
 patience of the reader by following the entire journey, 
 but it will suffice if we, so to speak, voyage with this 
 traveller from England as far as St Helena. The 
 account, which is written with great restraint, leaves 
 the reader every opportunity to imagine the dis- 
 comforts and trepidations which were the essential 
 conditions of the long journey to the Orient in those 
 days. 
 
 " On Thursday the 3oth of July 1746, I set out 
 from London for Gravesend, where I was agreeably 
 entertained to see a great number of people on board 
 the vessel, in which I was appointed to go to the 
 East Indies, and the vast preparations, and quan- 
 
222 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 tities of provisions, on board, to supply the neces- 
 sities of so long a voyage. 
 
 : ' Next day several young people came on board, 
 inlisted to go in the service of the East India Com- 
 pany, where they were to remain for the space of five 
 years at least. . . . 
 
 " On the 2d of August we weighed anchor, passed 
 the Nore, saluted the Royal Sovereign with nine 
 guns, and came to an anchor in the Downs on the 
 3d. As the wind was variable, we were obliged to 
 come to an anchor every now and then. On the 5th, 
 at night, we passed Dungeness lighthouse, and, on 
 the 8th, anchored in St Helen's road [Isle of 
 Wight]. 
 
 " On the loth we received on board our treasure 
 from Portsmouth, and, among the rest, a fine large 
 stone-horse, designed as a present from the Com- 
 pany to the Sultan of Benjar, an Indian Prince on 
 the island of Borneo. After taking in more fresh 
 provisions, we weighed anchor, and made the best 
 of our way towards Plymouth. On the 2gth we 
 came to an anchor in Cawson [Cawsand] Bay, 
 where, not caring to break upon our store, we sent 
 our long-boat ashore for fresh water. Here we were 
 to wait for a convoy. We were supplied at this place 
 with plenty of bread, fish, etc., in small boats, rowed 
 by a parcel of the stoutest and most masculine 
 women I ever saw. 
 
 " On the 5th of September we had very thick 
 weather, with hard gales of wind from S.W. so 
 that we were obliged to lower our fore and main 
 yards, and give great scope of cable, and even to 
 strike our topmasts. 
 
 " On the 6th in the morning the weather abated; 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 223 
 
 but, in the evening of that day, it blowed very hard. 
 We heard the Norfolk fire several guns as signals 
 of distress. She had parted her cable, and had run 
 adrift before it was discovered : and she was obliged 
 to anchor within the beacon, on the east side of the 
 Sound, in foul and rocky ground. But, by the 
 assistance of some of the men of war, she was again 
 brought to an anchor in Cawson Bay. 
 
 :< From the 7th to the i6th we were employed in 
 putting everything in order aboard, and, on the I7th, 
 the Mermaid man of war was appointed our convoy, 
 and gave a signal for unmooring the same night. 
 
 " On Sunday the 2Oth of September we got under 
 sail, the wind at NNE. When at sea, we cleared 
 our ship fore and aft, and exercised our great guns 
 and small arms. . . . 
 
 " On the 27th we parted with our convoy, and 
 made the best of our way for the island of St Helena, 
 for which we had several stores on board." 
 
 And so they proceeded on their journey to the 
 south. On gth October, when in lat. 37 32' N., and 
 long. 22 16', " we were now beginning to feel the 
 hot climate, so that the allowance of water, with the 
 greatest economy, was little enough to quench thirst. 
 We put an awning on the quarter-deck, to keep off 
 the scorching heat of the sun." 
 
 As to the kind of shipmates this traveller had, the 
 following statement is sufficiently illustrative : 
 
 " We could hardly put a stop to the frequent 
 thefts that were committed by the soldiers, though 
 every day one or two of them were tied to the 
 shrouds, and severely whipt. It is indeed the less to 
 be wondered at, as these wretches, who go as soldiers 
 in the company's service, are for the most part the 
 
224 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 scum of the three kingdoms, and generally go to 
 India to screen themselves from justice at home. 
 By their laziness and inactivity, they were over-run 
 with vermine, and began to complain of swellings 
 in their legs, soreness in their bones, and other 
 symptoms of the scurvy. To prevent their infecting 
 the ship's company, they were brought up on deck, 
 put into a large vessel of hot water, brushed with 
 scrubbing brushes, and all their clothes and bedding 
 thrown over-board. . . . 
 
 " On the 2d of December, we had a large swelling 
 sea, with easterly winds. At five in the morning we 
 were surprised with a large waterspout, within three 
 ships-length of our starboard-side. It had no sooner 
 passed our ship, than a sudden puff of wind laid us 
 gunwale to, which was over before we could lower 
 our sails. We had frequent dewfalls in the night, 
 which are very dangerous, and often mortal, if they 
 happen to rest on the naked breast or body of a man, 
 while asleep on the deck. A great deal of our salted 
 pork was so rotten, that we threw several casks of it 
 over-board. 
 
 " On the i ;th, had cloudy weather, employed our 
 cooper to set up all the water-casks, which we had 
 knocked down as soon as they were empty, for the 
 sake of room. 
 
 " The 22d, we kept a good look-out for St Helena, 
 and found ourselves to be in Lat. 16 6', and, on the 
 23d, we observed several pigeons flying about the 
 ship, a sure indication that we were near land." 
 This island they eventually sighted the following 
 morning, and arriving off the fort saluted the 
 Governor with nine guns, everyone in the ship being 
 heartily relieved to see land once more. It should be 
 
^ CM .id 
 
 t- O 
 be o 
 
AT SEA IN THE EAST INDIAMEN 225 
 
 recollected of course that St Helena had long been 
 in the possession of the East India Company, and 
 its geographical position was of great convenience to 
 the ships bound to or from the Orient, giving oppor- 
 tunities for obtaining fresh supplies and drinking 
 water. The illustration which is here reproduced 
 shows the appearance of St Helena at the time of 
 which we are speaking, together with a contemporary 
 East Indiaman lying at anchor. 
 
 Such, then, is the kind of life which had to be 
 endured on board these vessels, depicted as we have 
 shown by men of entirely different interests and 
 tastes the captain, the midshipman and the pas 
 senger. But if these voyages were unpleasant ancj 
 even risky, it is to them and the determination of 
 those on board that the wealth of the East India 
 Company was due, and the fortunes of so many 
 private individuals as well. Ocean travel in those days 
 was not pleasure, but a long-drawn-out martyrdom, 
 except for a very few and in exceptional weather. 
 To-day, even the worst-appointed liner would seem 
 luxurious to the voyager of the eighteenth century, 
 although more comfortable deep-sea ships were not 
 to be found than those which flew the naval pennant 
 of the Honourable East India Company. 
 
CHAPTER XVI 
 
 CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 
 
 WE have seen something of the lives of the officers 
 and men in the Company's ships at sea : we desire 
 now to learn more of their conditions of employment 
 what was their uniform, what were their rates of 
 pay, privileges, pensions according to their different 
 ranks, the kind of accommodation for the passengers, 
 the nature of their cargoes, and so on. In other 
 words, we are to endeavour to fill in those details 
 of the picture already roughly sketched. 
 
 Dating back from the time of the first East India 
 Company, the commanders were always sworn into 
 the service. So likewise were the first four officers. 
 Before being allowed to proceed to his duty on 
 board, an officer had to sign a contract for perform- 
 ing the voyage, and a petition for his " private 
 trade " outwards. As the latter was so very lucrative 
 to him, it may be well to give details. Particulars 
 had to be sent in this petition to the Committee of 
 Shipping of the East India Company, giving the 
 'dead-weight of the articles they proposed to take 
 out to the East. These consisted of almost anything, 
 from wines to carriages. This " private " trade 
 allowed to the commanders and officers of the East 
 India ships, allowing them to participate in the Com- 
 pany's exclusive monopoly, did not permit woollen 
 
 226 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 227 
 
 goods and warlike stores, but otherwise the ship's 
 officers could reap a fine income by taking out Eng- 
 lish goods and bringing back Eastern products which 
 would be sure of a market at home. 
 
 There was a proper schedule, and the following 
 were the officers and petty officers enabled to avail 
 themselves of this privilege : Commander, chief 
 mate, second mate, third mate, purser, surgeon, sur- 
 geon's mate, fourth mate, fifth mate, sixth mate, 
 boatswain, gunner, carpenter, four midshipmen, one 
 midshipman (who was also the commander's cox- 
 swain), six quartermasters, commander's steward, 
 ship's steward, commander's cook, carpenter's first 
 mate, caulker, cooper, armourer and sailmaker. 
 Reckoned for a ship let for 755 tons and upwards, 
 the commander was allowed as much as 56 tons, or 
 20 feet of space, for all articles (excepting liquors) 
 which weighed more than they measurejd were 
 reckoned according to their weight. The chief mate 
 was allowed eight tons, the second mate six tons, 
 and so on down the list, even a midshipman being 
 allowed a ton, the purser three tons, the surgeon 
 six, and each quartermaster as much as a midship- 
 man. In the case of the China ships only, if it was 
 not practicable to invest in goods to the following 
 amounts respectively, the Company allowed them to 
 carry out bullion to make up the amount : Com- 
 mander, ,3000, chief mate, ,300, and so on down 
 to carpenter, $o. 
 
 Homeward-bound East Indiamen were similarly 
 allowed privileges to their officers. Ships lading 
 from India might not bring back tea, china-ware, raw 
 silk, or nankeen cloth : and ships lading from China 
 might not bring back China raw silk, musk, camphor, 
 
228 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 arrack, arsenic or other poisonous drugs. But other- 
 wise the commanders of China ships were allowed 
 homeward 38 tons, the chief mate 8 tons, the second 
 mate 6 tons, and so on down to the carpenter i ton. 
 But the other homeward ships allowed the commander 
 30 tons or thirty-two feet, the chief mate 6 tons or six- 
 teen feet, and so on down to the carpenter, who was 
 allowed thirty-two feet. These importers, of course, 
 had to pay the customs and also three per cent, to 
 the Company for warehouse room on the gross 
 amount at the sale of the goods in the case of Indian 
 products, and a bigger percentage in the case of 
 goods from China. But the wily old commanders 
 were not always content with these privileges. The 
 reader is doubtless familiar with the word dunnage. 
 This consists o'f faggots, boughs, canes or other 
 similar articles, which are laid on the bottom of a 
 ship's hold and used for stowing the cargo effec- 
 tively. Now when it was found that there was a 
 good demand in London for Eastern bamboos, 
 ratans, and canes a commander would see that his 
 dunnage consisted of a very ample amount of these 
 realisable articles, and far beyond what was neces- 
 sary for the protection of the cargo. The result was 
 that the Company had to step in and make very 
 strict regulations to stop this abuse, so that if the 
 dunnage did not seem absolutely necessary and bona 
 fide it was charged against the amount of tonnage 
 allowed to the commander and officers. 
 
 Tea was allowed to be brought home from China 
 and Bencoolen according to a schedule, the captain 
 being allowed as much as 9336 lb., down to the 
 carpenter, 246 lb., but a big percentage was charged 
 on its sale value. Piece-goods were allowed to be 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 229 
 
 brought home on paying the customs and ^3 per 
 cent, for warehouse room. These articles were dis- 
 posed of at the Company's sales, which took place 
 in March and September. Although the importation 
 of china-ware was reserved to the Company, yet 
 " as the Company do not at present import any 
 China-ware on their own account " they allowed 
 their officers to do so, " during the Court's pleasure," 
 provided it was brought as a flooring to the teas 
 and did not exceed thirteen inches in height. This 
 made, therefore, another source of revenue to the 
 officers, for as much as 40 tons of this ware could be 
 permitted in the i4OO-ton ships and 30 tons in a 
 I2oo-tonner. The commander could also bring home 
 two pipes of Madeira wine in addition to the above 
 allowances. 
 
 When outward bound the chief, second, third, 
 fourth and fifth mates, the surgeon and his mate, 
 the pursers, boatswains, gunners and carpenters 
 were allowed as indulgence a liberal amount of 
 stores, consisting of wine, butter, cheese, groceries, 
 pickles, beer and also spirits for the respective 
 messes. In the case of " extra " ships the com- 
 manders and officers were usually allowed 5 per cent, 
 of the chartered tonnage, but the chief mate was 
 always allowed three tons, the second mate two, the 
 third mate one ton, and the surgeon two. The 
 fourth officers and pursers in these ships were not 
 acknowledged in this respect. As regards indul- 
 gence in stores, the chief mate, second mate and 
 surgeon were allowed the same amounts as in the 
 regular ships just mentioned, but the third mate was 
 allowed not quite so much. 
 
 On the whole, it will be seen that every officer and 
 
230 
 
 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 petty officer of an East Indiaman, whether trading 
 to India or China, had the opportunity of putting 
 by very handsome perquisites, and so you can now 
 easily believe Eastwick's statement that a purser 
 friend of his had retired an'd bought a ship for him- 
 self. But, of course, in addition to all these " privi- 
 leges," everyone received his salary or wages. The 
 following is a list of the monthly pay to the com- 
 mander, officers, petty officers, " tradesmen " (i.e. 
 coopers and the like), and the able-bodied seamen, 
 called foremast men. It will be found that this 
 makes up a complement of 102 men, such as were 
 employed in one of the big regular East Indiamen. 
 The pay in the case of " extra " ships will be given 
 after this list : 
 
 MONTHLY PAY ON BOARD A REGULAR EAST INDIAMAN 
 
 Carpenter's 1st Mate ^3 5 
 
 Carpenter's 2nd Mate 2 10 
 
 Caulker's Mate . 2 15 
 
 Cooper's Mate . 2 10 
 
 Quartermasters, 
 each . . . 2 10 
 Sailmaker . . 2 10 
 Armourer . . 2 10 
 Butcher . .-' . 25 
 Baker , . 25 
 Poulterer . . 25 
 Commander's Ser- 
 vants, each . . 15 
 Chief Mate's Ser- 
 vant ... i o 
 i Second Mate's Ser- 
 vant . . . o 18 
 i Surgeon's Servant o 15 
 Boatswain's Ser- 
 vant . . . o 15 
 I Gunner's Servant . o 15 
 
 Commander . . ;io o C 
 
 Chief Mate . 
 
 5 o 
 
 C; 
 
 Second Mate . 
 
 4 o 
 
 C 
 
 Third Mate . 
 
 3 10 
 
 C 
 
 Fourth Mate . 
 
 2 10 
 
 6 
 
 Fifth Mate . , 
 
 2 5 
 
 
 Sixth Mate 
 
 2 5 
 
 82 
 
 Surgeon . 
 
 5 o 
 
 A 
 
 Purser - . 
 
 2 
 
 B 
 
 Boatswain 
 
 3 10 
 
 B 
 
 Gunner . 
 
 3 10 
 
 P 
 
 Master-at-Arms 
 
 3 o 
 
 2 
 
 Carpenter 
 
 4 10 
 
 
 Midshipman and 
 
 
 I 
 
 Coxswain 
 
 2 5 
 
 
 4 Midshipmen, each 
 
 2 5 
 
 I 
 
 Surgeon's Mate 
 
 3 10 
 
 
 Caulker . 
 
 3 i5 
 
 I 
 
 Cooper . 
 
 3 o 
 
 I 
 
 Captain's Cook 
 
 3 5 
 
 
 Ship's Cook . 
 
 2 10 
 
 I 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 231 
 
 MONTHLY PAY, ETC. continued 
 
 Captain's Steward . 2 o I Carpenter's Ser- 
 
 Ship's Steward . 2 10 vant . . . o 15 
 
 2 Boatswain's Mates, 50 Foremast Men, 
 
 each . . . 2 10 each ... 2 5 
 2 Gunner's Mates, each 2 10 
 
 In the case of an "extra " ship the commander 
 received 10 a month, the chief mate $, the 
 second mate 4, the third mate $, IDS., the sur- 
 geon ^5, the boatswain ^3, ios., the gunner 
 $, ios., the carpenter 4, ios., the two midship- 
 men were paid 2, 55. each, the cooper and steward 
 g ot $> the captain's cook $, 55., the ship's 
 cook 2, ios., the boatswain's mate and the 
 gunner's mate were each paid 2, ios., the 
 carpenter's mate and caulker 3, 153., the two 
 quartermasters received each 2, ios., the 
 two commander's servants i, 55. each, and the 
 thirty foremast men 2, 55. each. As to the last- 
 mentioned, a vessel of from 400 to 500 tons carried 
 twenty foremast hands. A ship of 500 to 550 had 
 thirty hands, and the next size, from 550 to 600 tons, 
 carried thirty-five. A 600 to 650 tonner had forty 
 men, and a 650 to 700 tonner forty-five men. But 
 a 700 to 800 ton ship had fifty-five men, and an 
 800 to 900 tonner sixty-five of these hands. The 
 Company's rule was that regular vessels of 750 to 
 800 tons were to carry a total complement of 101 
 officers and men. A goo-ton ship was to carry no 
 men, a looo-ton ship 120 men, a noo-ton ship 125 
 men, and a i2oo-tonner 130 men. 
 
 Five supernumeraries were allowed to be carried, 
 of whom two were to be allowed to walk the quarter- 
 deck. No commander was allowed to increase the 
 
232 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 number of midshipmen under pain of being sus- 
 pended for three years. This was to prevent him 
 from taking a raw young officer out of consideration 
 for a monetary reward. In order to act as a safe- 
 guard, if any person borne on the ship's books as 
 part of her complement were discharged in India, 
 China or St Helena without permission of the Com- 
 pany, or if the commander were to act in collusion 
 and allow him to quit his vessel, the commander was 
 liable to a fine of ^"300. Nor could he bring home 
 or carry out any passenger or person without the 
 directors' leave. 
 
 Owing to the fact that the men out of these East 
 Indiamen were so frequently pressed into the British 
 men-of-war whilst in the East, it was often enough 
 necessary to ship a lot of lascars in order to get the 
 vessel home at all. But these feeble-bodied men were 
 accustomed only to voyages of short duration, and 
 that in the fine weather season. They could not bear 
 the cold, neither were they dependable when the 
 East Indiaman had to defend herself against a 
 privateer, pirate or enemy's warship. Ignorant of 
 the English language, they were not easy to handle. 
 It was always reckoned that eighty or ninety of them 
 were not quite the equal of fifty British seamen, and 
 for every hundred of them employed four British 
 seamen must be also. It was the India-built ships 
 which were manned almost exclusively by these 
 lascars, and a new problem arose, for these fellows 
 used to remain behind in England, where their con- 
 dition became piteous. There was an obligation that 
 these lascars were always to be sent back to India, 
 but in practice many of them " are turned off in 
 London, where they beg ami perish." So wrote 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 233 
 
 Macpherson in 1812. " The appearance of these 
 miserable creatures," he remarked, " in the streets 
 of London frequently excites the indignation of 
 passengers against the Company, who, they suppose, 
 bring them to this country and leave them destitute," 
 whereas, in reality, these Easterns actually preferred 
 to sink into degradation in our land rather than 
 return to their own. Many of them never reached 
 England, or, if they did, died on the return voyage : 
 for the bad weather off the Cape of Good Hope and 
 the rigours of the English climate caused consider- 
 able sickness and death. 
 
 English gentlemen who had been for some years 
 under the Company in India, either in a civil or 
 military capacity, were often wont to bring black 
 servants home with them, and after these servants 
 had been some time in England they were dis- 
 charged. The result was that, under the terms of 
 their obligation, the Company were put to great 
 expense in sending them back to their native country. 
 It was with a view to protecting themselves from 
 this possibility that the Company used to cause the 
 master of such a servant to take a bond in India as 
 security for the cost of returning these coloured 
 people, these bonds being sent to the commander 
 of the ship in which the master and his servant was 
 travelling to England. Otherwise, the commander 
 was ordered by the Company to refuse to have the 
 black man on board. 
 
 Before an officer coulcT become commander of one 
 of the Company's ships it was necessary that he 
 should be twenty-five years old and have performed 
 a voyage to and from India or China in the Com- 
 pany's regular service as chief or second mate, or 
 
234 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 else have commanded a ship in the extra service. 
 A chief mate ha'd to be twenty-three years old, have 
 voyaged to India or China in the Company's ser- 
 vice as second or third mate. A second mate had to 
 be twenty-two years old and have made a similar 
 voyage as third mate. To become a third mate he 
 had to be aged twenty-one and been two voyages 
 in the Company's service to and from India or 
 China. A fourth mate had to be twenty years old 
 and been one voyage of not less than twenty months 
 to India or China and back in the Company's service, 
 and one year in actual service in any other employ, 
 and of the latter he had to produce satisfactory 
 certificates. 
 
 In the case of the extra ships the commander had 
 to be twenty-three years old at least, have made 
 three voyages to India or China and back in the 
 Company's service, one of which must have been as 
 chief or second mate in a regular ship, or as chief 
 mate in an extra ship. The chief mate must be at 
 least twenty-two, and have made two of these voy- 
 ages as officer in the Company's regular service. 
 The second mate had to be at least twenty-one and 
 have performed two voyages as officer in the Com- 
 pany's service to India or China and back. The 
 third mate must be twenty years and been one voyage 
 in the Company's service, or two voyages as mid- 
 shipman in the' extra service. 
 
 It would not be untrue to say that officers of the 
 early part of the nineteenth century in this service 
 were excellent seamen and fair navigators, but many 
 of them would not be sufficiently expert in naviga- 
 tion nowadays to have entrusted to them the work 
 and responsibilities commensurate with those with 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 235 
 
 which they were charged. It was in the year 1804 
 that the Company issued the following regulation : 
 
 " That such of the officers as have not been already 
 instructed in the method of finding the longitude of 
 a ship at sea, by lunar observations, do immediately 
 perfect themselves under Mr Lawrence Gwynne, at 
 Christ's Hospital, previous to their attending the 
 Committee to be examined for their respective 
 stations ; and that they do produce to the Committee 
 a certificate from that gentleman of their being quali- 
 fied in the method." 
 
 And within six weeks after each ship had arrived 
 home, the commander and officers had to attend a 
 Committee of the Company which dealt with the 
 reasons for any deviation which the ship might have 
 made during the voyage. 
 
 As touching the accommodation in these ships, the 
 officers had canvas berths only, laced down to battens 
 on the deck, with upright stanchions, a cross-piece, 
 and a small door, with canvas panels, the canvas 
 being capable of being rolled up. On the gun-deck 
 the chief mate's berth was on the starboard side from 
 the fore part of the aftermost port, to the fore part 
 of the second port from aft, the space being eight 
 feet broad. The second mate was located on the 
 opposite side to correspond, but his space was six 
 inches narrower. Between the second and third ports 
 two similar berths, each six feet long and seven feet 
 broad, were fitted up for the third and fourth mates : 
 and two more for the purser and surgeon between the 
 third and fourth ports. Two others, slightly smaller 
 still, were located between the ports on this deck for 
 the boatswain and carpenter. And no alteration 
 from this was allowed to be made during the voyage. 
 
286 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 The captain's " great cabin " was in the steerage, 
 and he was forbidden to partition it off in any way 
 without special orders from the Company. When a 
 ship went into action, those canvas berths or cabins 
 of the officers just alluded to were taken down. The 
 reader will recollect the capture some pages back 
 of the Brunswick by the Marengo. Addison in his 
 journal mentions that when he and his fellow-officers 
 were taken on board the latter they were marched 
 below to the ward-room. He then adds that, " being 
 cleared for action, the cabins were all 'down, and the 
 whole deck clear fore and aft, open to the seamen." 
 
 The full uniform for the commander of one of the 
 Company's ships was as follows : Fine blue coat, 
 black Genoa velvet round the cuffs, four holes by 
 two's, three outside, one inside. Black velvet lapels, 
 with ten holes by two's. Black velvet panteen cape, 
 with one hole on each side, straight flaps, with four 
 holes by two's. The fore parts were lined with buff 
 silk serge, black slit and turns faced with the same. 
 One button on each hip, and one at the bottom. The 
 buttonholes were gold embroidered throughout and 
 gilt buttons with the Company's crest. The chief 
 mate wore a blue coat with black velvet lapels, cuffs 
 and collar, with one small button to each cuff. The 
 buttons gilt, with the Company's crest. The second, 
 thir'd and fourth mates' uniforms were similar to that 
 of the chief mate, except that the second had two 
 small buttons on each cuff, the third had three, and 
 the fourth had four. 
 
 In the extra ships the commander wore a blue 
 coat with black velvet lapels, cuffs and collar, with 
 only one embroidered buttonhole on each cuff, and 
 on each side of the collar. His buttons were gilt 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 237 
 
 with the Company's crest. The chief mate's uniform 
 in these extra ships consisted of a blue coat, single- 
 breasted, with a black velvet collar and cuffs, and 
 one small buttonhole on each cuff, with gilt buttons 
 as before. The second and third mates' were like 
 this with the difference of two or three small buttons 
 on each cuff as mentioned. And it was strictly 
 ordered that officers were always to appear in this 
 uniform whenever they attended on the Court of 
 Directors, their Committees, any of the Presidents 
 and Councils in India, or at St Helena, or the Select 
 Committee of Supra-Cargoes in China. 
 
 Some of the officers when they came up to be 
 sworn in before the Court of Directors did not 
 always appear in the prescribed uniform, and the 
 Company sent out a warning against coming into 
 their presence in boots, black breeches and stockings, 
 except in the case of deep mourning. When appear- 
 ing before the Court of Directors the officers were 
 compelled to wear full uniform, but when attending 
 the Committee they were to wear undress. 
 
 Whenever the ship dropped down from Deptford 
 or Blackwall to Gravesend the captain was to be 
 on board. There were two sets of pilots. One took 
 the ship from Deptford or Blackwall to Gravesend, 
 and another took her from Gravesend to the Isle of 
 Wight. Whilst the ship lay at Gravesend the com- 
 mander was ordered to go aboard her once a week in 
 order to report her condition to the Committee. 
 Before sailing, the ship took on board a sufficient 
 amount of lime-juice to last the crew through the 
 whole voyage. And the commander had strict in- 
 structions to see that his new hands " recruits " 
 the Company called them wore the clothes which 
 
238 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the Company provided, and that the men did not 
 sell them for liquor; also that these men did not 
 desert. For this reason no boats were allowed to 
 remain alongside the ship without having been made 
 fast by a chain and lock thus preventing any pos- 
 sibility of the men escaping to the shore. No boat 
 was allowed to put off from the ship until every 
 person in her had been examined, lest one of the 
 crew might be in her. And a quarter watch was to 
 be kept night and day to prevent the loss of recruits. 
 If any did desert, then the commander would most 
 probably have to pay the cost which this involved. 
 
 During the course of every watch the ship was to 
 be pumped out, and entries made in the log. And 
 as regards divine worship, the slackness of the pre- 
 vious period mentioned in an earlier chapter was no 
 longer tolerated. ' You are strictly required to keep 
 up the worship of Almighty God on board your ship 
 every Sunday, when circumstances will admit, and 
 that the log-book contain the reasons for the omis- 
 sion when it so happens; that you promote good 
 order and sobriety, by being yourself the example, 
 and enforcing it in others; and that you be humane 
 and attentive to the welfare of those under your 
 command, the Court have resolved to mulct you in 
 the sum of two guineas for every omission of men- 
 tioning the performance of divine service, or assign- 
 ing satisfactory reasons for the non-performance 
 thereof every Sunday, in the Company's log-book." 
 
 From the Company's India House in Leadenhall 
 Street the commander was supplied with charts. 
 These had to be returned at the end of the voyage, 
 together with the commander's journals and track 
 charts. What were known as free mariners must have 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 239 
 
 performed two voyages to India or China and back in 
 the Company's ships, or else have used the sea and 
 been in actual service for at least three years. The 
 reader is aware that many a time the Company's 
 ships were endangered by the naval authorities 
 impressing so many men from them. At last, after 
 many protests, the Admiralty instituted a new regula- 
 tion, so that, although it was still not possible to 
 abolish this impressment, yet the evil so far as the 
 East Indiamen were concerned was mitigated and 
 controlled. A letter was sent to the Rear-Admiral 
 of the Red on the East Indies station instructing 
 him to order his captains and commanders to con- 
 form to this new regulation. A proper scheme was 
 drawn up, showing what officers and men in East 
 Indiamen ships of varying tonnages were to be 
 exempt from impress, though this protection applied 
 only until the ship should reach Europe. However, 
 even if the whole exemption could not be obtained, 
 a portion thereof was better than nothing at all, 
 especially as the Company attributed so many of the 
 losses of their ships to having been deprived of their 
 best men. 
 
 In addition to their wages, the men became 
 entitled to a pension from what was known as the 
 Poplar Fund. Any commander, officer or seaman, 
 or anyone else who had served aboard any of these 
 East Indiamen for eight years and regularly con- 
 tributed to this fund was entitled to a pension. But 
 if a man had been wounded or maimed so as to be 
 rendered incapable of further service at sea, he 
 could still be admitted to a pension even under 
 eight years. The size of the pension was based on 
 the amount of capital which the officer possessed. 
 
240 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Thus, if a commander stated that he was not worth 
 ,2500, or ^125 a year, he received a pension of 
 100. Similarly, if a chief mate had not been able 
 to amass ^"1300, or had ^65 coming in every year, 
 he was granted a pension of ;6o. And so the scale 
 descended down to the rank of midshipman, who 
 was granted a 12 pension if he was not worth 
 ,400, or 20 a year. Allowances were also made 
 for the widows and orphans of those who had served 
 the Company for seven years. 
 
 Before a candidate could be appointed as ship's 
 surgeon, those who had already made one voyage 
 in the Company's service, or acted twelve months 
 in that capacity in his Majesty's service in a hot 
 climate were given priority. After a qualified sur- 
 geon had served in one of the extra ships for one 
 voyage to India and back he was eligible for the 
 regular service. Both surgeon and a surgeon's mate 
 had to produce a certificate from the examiners of 
 the Royal College of Surgeons and also from the 
 Company's own physician. The surgeons were 
 allowed, in addition to their salary and their privi- 
 lege of private trade, fifteen shillings per man on the 
 voyage for medicine and attendance on the military 
 and invalids. But they were no longer required, as 
 part of their duties, to cut the hair of the Company's 
 servants ! The assistant-surgeon had to be at least 
 twenty years old, and possess a diploma from the 
 College of Surgeons of London, Edinburgh or 
 Dublin, and a certificate from the Company's own 
 physician. 
 
 The gunner and his mate were examined as to 
 their efficiency by the Company's master-attendant, 
 who after approval gave them a certificate. Volun- 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 241 
 
 teers for the Company's Indian Navy, otherwise 
 known as the Bombay Marine, had to be between 
 the ages of fourteen and eighteen; for their cavalry 
 and infantry, between sixteen and twenty-two. 
 
 To many passengers this voyage to the East was 
 one of terror. Eastwick tells a yarn about an 
 assistant-surgeon in one of these ships. For five 
 days on the way out a great storm had been raging. 
 This had evidently so impressed this surgeon that 
 the night after the storm abated he dreamt that there 
 was a great hole in the ship's side. Jumping out of 
 his cot with alacrity, he knocked over the water-jug, 
 and feeling the cold water about his toes he ran 
 headlong up on deck, clamouring that the ship was 
 sinking. For some time he was believed. The 
 carpenter and some of the officers hurried to his 
 cabin, and meanwhile the passengers had become 
 alarmed and left their cabins, congregating by the 
 boats. The story, however, does not give the re- 
 marks of the carpenter and officers when they found 
 the assistant-surgeon had been romancing. 
 
 The passengers in these ships were made as com- 
 fortable as possible, though they had to pay fairly 
 heavily for the same. We have seen that they were 
 entertained with dances whenever possible. They 
 brought with them on board their servants, their 
 furniture and their wines. But the conduct of some 
 of these passengers became so highly improper at 
 times that the Company found it necessary to frame 
 regulations for the preservation of good order on 
 board, and these had to be enforced strictly by the 
 commander. In the words of the Court of Directors, 
 they bewailed the fact that " the good order and 
 wholesome practices, formerly observed in the Com- 
 
242 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 pany's ships, have been laid aside, and late hours 
 and the consequent mischiefs introduced, by which 
 the ship has been endangered and the decorum and 
 propriety, which should be maintained, destroyed." 
 
 One of the great terrors on board these vessels 
 was the possibility of fire at sea. We shall have the 
 account presently of the loss of the Kent East 
 Indiaman in the Bay of Biscay, through that species 
 of disaster, in the year 1825, and there were other 
 instances. It was in order to guard against this pos- 
 sibility that no fire was allowed to be kept in after 
 eight at night except for the use of the sick, and 
 then only in a stove. Candles had to be extin- 
 guished between decks by nine o'clock, and in the 
 cabins by ten at the latest. This was before the 
 days when ships were compelled by Act of Parlia- 
 ment to carry sidelights. In fact, just as in 
 mediaeval days not even the boatswain was allowed 
 to use his whistle, nor a bell to be sounded, nor 
 any unnecessary noise made after dark, lest the 
 ship's presence should be betrayed to any pirate in 
 the vicinity, so in the case of these East Indiamen, 
 not only were there no sidelights, but the commander 
 was enjoined that the utmost precautions be used 
 to prevent any lights 'tween decks or from the cabins 
 being visible " to any vessel passing in the night." 
 
 The passengers used to dine not later than 2 P.M. 
 And such was the authority of the captain that when 
 he retired from the table after either dinner or 
 supper, the passengers and officers must also retire. 
 The captain was to pay due attention to the comfort- 
 able accommodation and liberal treatment of the 
 passengers, " at the same time setting them an 
 example of sobriety and decorum, as he values the 
 

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 QD 
 
 K 
 
 2 -e 
 
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 CC 7 
 
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 W "' 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 243 
 
 pleasure of the Court." Any improper conduct of 
 the ship's officers towards the passengers or to each 
 other was to be reported quietly to the captain, and 
 the decision left with the latter. But if anyone 
 thought himself aggrieved thereby, he could appeal 
 to the Governor and Council of the first of the Com- 
 pany's settlements at which the ship should arrive, 
 or, if homeward bound, to the Court of Directors. 
 
 And the following brief, common-sense paragraph 
 summed up the whole situation : 
 
 ' The diversity of characters and dispositions 
 which must meet on ship-board makes some restraint 
 upon all necessary; and any one offending against 
 good manners, or known usages and customs, will, 
 on representation to the Court, be severely noticed." 
 
 We can well believe that those military officers or 
 civil servants of the Company who came on board 
 homeward bound, after spending years in India 
 without benefit to their livers and tempers, if to their 
 pecuniary advantage, and were as ill-accustomed to 
 the conditions of ship life as they were bereft of an 
 adaptable spirit, needed all the tact and patience of 
 the commander and ship's officers to prevent matters 
 being even more uncomfortable than they were. 
 Those who had spent their lives wielding authority 
 in India, and both honestly and otherwise making 
 fortunes, were not the kind of mortals most easy to 
 live with in the confined area of a ship not much 
 over 1 200 tons. However, every passenger who 
 came on board was given a printed copy of the 
 regulations, which had been formed for the good 
 of all, and they were told very pertinently to observe 
 them strictly, and the captains had to see that they 
 did as they were told. 
 
244 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Certainly up to the second decade of the nine- 
 teenth century, the ships themselves also were in 
 great need of supervision, as to their construction, 
 though there were not many capable critics then in 
 existence. All the Company's ships were of course 
 built of wood, but iron was already being extensively 
 used for the knees. The idea was excellent, but 
 in practice inferior material was actually employed 
 and not the best British iron. And the same defect 
 was noticeable with regard to anchors and mooring 
 chains. Of those various losses which occurred to 
 the East Indiaman ships about the year 1809, it was 
 thought by some that the cause was traceable to these 
 weak iron knees which had been put into the vessels. 
 A certain Mr J. Braithwaite wrote a letter to the East 
 India Company in December of 1809, in which he 
 stated that he had been employed to recover the 
 property of the Abergavenny, which had been lost 
 off Weymouth; and he found, on breaking up the 
 wreck, that many of the iron knees were broken, 
 owing to having been made of such poor, inferior 
 material. This, he noticed, snapped quite easily, 
 and he was convinced that ships fitted with such 
 knees would, on encountering gales of wind, be lost 
 owing to the knees giving way. The East Indiaman 
 Asia was thought to have perished owing to that 
 reason. 
 
 But there was also another reason why the ships 
 of this period were unsatisfactory. They were built 
 not under cover but outside, exposed to all the 
 weather. But, in addition, there was a bad practice 
 at that time which unquestionably caused a great 
 deal of serious injury to the ship. When the ship 
 was approaching completion, and before the sheath- 
 
245 
 
 ing had been put on, the sides and floor were deluged 
 with water, the intention being to see if there were 
 any shake in the plank, or butt or trenail holes, or 
 if any of the seams had been left uncaulked. If 
 the water poured through anywhere this would indi- 
 cate that there was need for caulking before the 
 ship was set afloat. 
 
 This was all very well in theory, but in practice 
 it was very bad indeed, for the water thus admitted 
 settled down into the innermost recesses, and the 
 result was that the cargoes were a-lways more or less 
 affected injuriously by the damp. Similarly, it 
 injured the ship herself, and dry-rot eventually 
 shortened the vessel's life. Damp, badly ventilated, 
 these old East Indiamen were frequently the source 
 of much anxiety to their managing owners or " ships' 
 husbands," as they were usually called. Then there 
 was another defect. The influence of the Middle 
 Ages was not yet departed from shipbuilding : con- 
 sequently trenails were still used. This meant that 
 the ship was riddled with holes for the insertion of 
 these wooden pegs. Speaking of an East Indiaman 
 of this time, a contemporary says that thus " she 
 appears like a cullender," and " there is hardly a 
 space of six inches in small ships that is not bored 
 through " by a trenail of one and a half inches in 
 diameter, being only six inches apart from the next 
 trenail. Thus, of course, the timbers were weakened, 
 and at a later date when the ship needed to be 
 re-bored with holes for more trenails on the renewal 
 of decayed planking, there were so many holes in 
 the timbers that the ship was very considerably 
 weakened thereby. 
 
 The method of the French in building ships had 
 
246 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 formerly been to use iron fastenings, but the plank 
 grew nail sick, and the iron having corroded became 
 very weak. Indian-built ships, however, were con- 
 structed in such a way tKat there were no numerous 
 series of holes bored, and thus the hulls remained 
 strong and stout. The planking was secured to the 
 timbers by spikes and bolts of iron, yet owing to 
 the oleaginous sap of the teak from which they were 
 built the iron did not corrode as it 'did in the case 
 of oak-built ships. So about the year 1810 the 
 introduction of metal nails and bolts was advocated 
 in connection with the building of ships. 
 
 After the Company had lost their China monopoly 
 the class of ship that was built by the Greens, for 
 instance, was composed of oak, greenheart and teak, 
 and excellently constructed. Mr F. T. Bullen has 
 written of such a ship, the Lion, which was launched 
 in 1842 from the famous Blackwall yard. He tells 
 us that this was the finest of all the great fleet that 
 had been brought into being at that yard up to this 
 date : how, decked with flags from stem to stern, with 
 the sun glinting brightly on the rampant crimson 
 lion that towered proudly on high from her stem, she 
 glided down the way amid the thunder of cannon 
 and the cheers of the spectators. She was after- 
 wards given ten i8-pounders, with many muskets 
 and boarding-pikes stowed away in a small armoury 
 in the waist. This famous vessel, so characteristic 
 of the best type of East Indiaman which succeeded 
 the Company's ships, was, in spite of her great size 
 as she was then regarded far handier than any of 
 those " billy-boys " which used to be such a feature 
 of the Thames. " There was as much intriguing/' 
 says Mr Bullen, " to secure a berth in the Lion for 
 
CONDITIONS OF SERVICE 247 
 
 the outward or homeward passage as there was in 
 those days for positions in the golden land she 
 traded to. Men whose work in India was done spoke 
 of her in their peaceful retirement on leafy English 
 country-sides, and recalled with cronies ' our first 
 passage out in the grand old Lion? A new type of 
 ship, a new method of propulsion, was springing up 
 all round her. But whenever any of the most modern 
 fliers forgathered with her upon the ocean highway, 
 their crews felt their spirits rise in passionate ad- 
 miration for the stately and beautiful old craft whose 
 graceful curves and perfect ease seemed to be of 
 the sea SMI generis, moulded and caressed by the 
 noble element into something of its own mobility 
 and tenacious power." 
 
 Like many other of the later-day East Indiamen, 
 she was eventually taken off the route to India and 
 ran to Australia with emigrants. With her quarter- 
 galleries, her far-reaching head, her great, many- 
 windowed stern, she would seem a curious kind of 
 ship among twentieth-century craft. But she held 
 her own even with the new steel clippers, and made 
 the round voyage from Melbourne to London and 
 back in five months and twenty days, including the 
 time taken up in handling the two cargoes, finally 
 being sold into the hands of the Norwegians, like 
 many another fine British ship both before and since 
 her time. The last act of her eventful life came 
 when she crashed into a mountainous iceberg and 
 smashed herself to pieces. It was a sad end to a 
 ship that had begun so gloriously. 
 
CHAPTER XVII 
 
 WAYS AND MEANS 
 
 THERE was a fixed rate of passage-money, and it 
 was thought necessary to forbid the captains to 
 charge passengers any sum above that specified for 
 their rank. These were the respective rates, includ- 
 ing the passage and accommodation at the captain's 
 table. 
 
 General officers in the Company's service were 
 charged for the passage from England ^250, 
 colonels or Gentlemen of Council ^200, while 
 lieutenant-colonels, majors, senior merchants, junior 
 merchants and factors had to pay ,150. Captains 
 were charged ^125. Writers in the Company's 
 service paid ^no, subalterns the same, assistant- 
 surgeons and cadets ^95. If any of the two last 
 mentioned proceeded to India in the third mate's 
 mess, the latter was not to demand more than ^55 
 for the passenger's accommodation. The money 
 was paid direct to the paymaster of seamen's wages 
 at his pay office in London, who handed these respec- 
 tive sums over to the commander or third mate. In 
 the case of military officers who were in his Majesty's 
 service and not in the East India Company's army, 
 the charges were slightly different. Thus general 
 officers were charged ^235, colonels ^185, 
 lieutenant-colonels and majors ^135, captains and 
 
 248 
 
WAYS AND MEANS 249 
 
 surgeons 110, subalterns and assistant-surgeons 
 "^"95, for the voyage out. 
 
 For the homeward voyage the commanders of 
 these East Indiamen were allowed to charge 2500 
 rupees from Bombay for lieutenant-colonels or 
 majors, 2000 rupees for captains, and 1500 rupees 
 for subalterns when returning to Europe, either on 
 sick certificate or military duty, whether in his 
 Majesty's or the Company's service. Regular East 
 Indiamen were bound, if asked, to receive on board 
 at least two of the above officers, and in this case 
 the larboard third part of the captain's great cabin, 
 with the passage to the quarter-gallery, was to be 
 apportioned off for their accommodation. In the 
 case of an extra ship one such officer was bounH to 
 be carried if the commander were requested, and he 
 was to be accommodated with a cabin on the star- 
 board side, abaft the chief mate's cabin, and abreast 
 of the spirit-room. His cabin was to be not less 
 than seven feet long and six feet wide. If the whole 
 of one of his Majesty's regiments were returning to 
 England, the entire accommodation in the ship 
 might be allotted as the Government in India 
 deemed advisable, the sums for the officers being 
 paid to the commander as just mentioned. Factors 
 and writers homeward bound from Bombay were 
 charged 2000 and 1 500 rupees respectively. 
 
 Under no circumstance was a commander allowed 
 to receive any gratuity above these sums, and to give 
 effect to this he had to enter into a bond for ,1000 
 before being sworn in. Similarly the third mate was 
 equally forbidden to exact more than the sums men- 
 tioned under his category. 
 
 Some idea of the victuals which were carried on 
 
250 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 board a i2oo-ton East Indiaman may be gathered 
 from the following. Recollect that, of course, there 
 was no such thing as preserved foods or refrigerating 
 machinery in those days, but during these long voy- 
 ages the passengers and crew were not pampered 
 with the luxuries of a modern liner. The accom- 
 modation was lighted with candles and oil-lamps, 
 the food was plain, the cooking very English. Be- 
 side the amounts which an Atlantic liner takes on 
 board for her short voyage these figures seem in- 
 significant : and there were none of those manifold 
 articles for serving up the food in an appetising 
 manner. For the strong, the healthy and vigorous, 
 this plain, substantial living was all right : but for 
 invalids, for delicate women, and for children 
 naturally terrified of the sea and unable to settle 
 down to life on board, the voyage was certainly not 
 one long, delightful experience. 
 
 For the use of the commander's table 1 1 tons of 
 ale, beer, wine or other liquors were carried in casks 
 or bottles, allowing 252 gallons or 36 dozen quart 
 bottles to the ton. There were also 40 tons of beef, 
 pork, bacon, suet and tongues, 28 tons of beer (addi- 
 tional to the above), 350 cwt. of bread, 30 firkins of 
 butter, 500 gallons of spirit for the commander's 
 table, 1040 gallons of spirit for the ship's company, 
 20 cauldrons of coals, 50 dozen candles, 50 cwt. of 
 cheese, 6$ worth of " chirugery and drugs," 6 
 cases of confectionery, 134 cwt. of flour, 21 cwt. 
 of fish, 80 cwt. of groceries, 130 gallons of lime- 
 juice, 50 bushels of oatmeal, 300 gallons of sweet and 
 lamp oil, 500 bushels of oats, 15 tons of potatoes, 
 5 barrels of herrings and salmon, 2 chests of "slops" 
 for the seamen to obtain new clothes, 1 1 hogsheads 
 
i * 
 
 
 w tJ ffi 
 . O s 
 
WAYS AND MEANS 251 
 
 of vinegar, 6 chests of oranges and lemons and 70 
 tons of drinking water. In addition, 63 barrels of 
 gunpowder, 6 tons of iron shot, 6 tons of iron for the 
 store, 5 cwt. of lead shot, 20 barrels of pitch, 6 cwt. 
 of rosin, 7 tons of spare cordage, 2\ tons of sheet 
 lead, 30 cwt. of tobacco, 20 barrels of tar, 3 barrels 
 of turpentine and quantities of wood were also 
 carried for the boatswain's, gunner's and carpenter's 
 stores. 
 
 As to the passengers' baggage, Gentlemen in 
 Council were allowed to bring three tons or twenty 
 feet of baggage, two chests of wine being included 
 as part of this baggage if returning to India. Their 
 ladies were allowed to take one ton of baggage if 
 proceeding with their husbands : but if proceeding 
 to their husbands two tons. General officers were 
 allowed the same as Gentlemen in Council, colonels 
 were allowed three tons, but only one chest of wine, 
 and so on down the scale. When a first-class pas- 
 senger to-day goes aboard a liner he finds that his 
 state-room contains everything that is required in 
 the way of furniture : but had he lived in the days 
 of the East Indiamen he would have to have taken 
 on board a table, a sofa (or two chairs), and a wash- 
 hand stand. This much he would have to acquire, 
 and this much he was allowed. But in addition to 
 bedding, sofa, table and two chairs, members of the 
 Select Committee could take three tons of baggage, 
 supra-cargoes two and a half tons and writers pro- 
 ceeding to China one and a half tons. 
 
 If there was no duty payable on the baggage it 
 could be shipped at Gravesend : but if otherwise it 
 went aboard at Portsmouth. No other articles than 
 wearing apparel and such things as were really 
 
252 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 intended for the use of the respective passengers 
 on the voyage, including " musical instruments for 
 ladies " and books, were allowed to be taken as 
 baggage. 
 
 The East India Dock Company, which we have 
 seen was a subsidiary company of the East India 
 Company, was governed by twelve directors, and the 
 three dock-masters lived at the docks. Before the 
 vessels were allowed to enter the dock they had to 
 be dismantled to their lower masts, take out their 
 guns, ammunition, anchors and stores while they lay 
 at moorings. Before being permitted to enter, a 
 report had to be made by the captain to the dock- 
 master of the amount of water the ship was leaking 
 every twelve hours for the previous three days. 
 Whatever stores remained in her after coming into 
 the basin had to be discharged before she was 
 allowed to go into the inner dock. But all ships 
 from the East Indies or China unloaded their 
 cargoes within the docks, except in the case of the 
 biggest ships, which had to unload some of their 
 goods in Long Reach, so as to lessen the draught of 
 water. Outward-bound East Indiamen used to load 
 either in the dock or in the river below Limehouse 
 Creek. Gunpowder was always unloaded before 
 entering dock, anB the Company's servants would 
 superintend the unloading of the cargoes when 
 finally moored alongside the wharf. The goods were 
 then taken away by the Company's " caravans," the 
 tea being conveyed to the Company's warehouses 
 without being weighed at the docks. 
 
 Tea, of course, was not the only, though the prin- 
 cipal cargo which these ships were bringing home. 
 To give a complete list of the commodities would 
 
WAYS AND MEANS 253 
 
 take up too much space, but we may be allowed to 
 mention the following as being among those com- 
 monly found in the hold of a homeward-bound East 
 Indiaman : Aloes, drugs, buffalo hides, bark, coffee, 
 camphor, cotton, cowries, silk, cochineal, coral, ele- 
 phants' teeth, ebony, green ginger, gum arabic, hemp. 
 Japan copper, china-ware, shells, myrrh, nutmegs, 
 nux vomica, opium, pepper, rice, redwood, spikenard, 
 shellac, sugar, saltpetre, sago, sandalwood, as well 
 as both black and green tea. 
 
 The Company had their warehouses in Fenchurch 
 Street, Haydon Square, Cooper's Row, Jewry Street, 
 Crutched Friars, New Street, Leadenhall Street, 
 and elsewhere in London. As to the private trade 
 allowed to the commanders and officers by the Com- 
 pany, we have already shown what spaces were 
 granted in these ships, but it may not be out of place 
 to mention that the goods under this category used to 
 include such articles as the following, which were 
 much in demand in the East : Carriages, ale and 
 beer, earthenware, hosiery, anchors, books, charts, 
 bar iron, looking-glasses, ironmongery, Manchester 
 goods, cutlery, millinery, hats, clocks, chronometers 
 and watches, boots and shoes, jewellery, saddlery, 
 lead, port wine, stationery, window glass, wines, and 
 so on. 
 
 Smuggling still went on even well into the nine- 
 teenth century from these homeward-bound ships, 
 and commanders, officers and men were just as bad 
 as each other. The Company and the Board of 
 Customs did their best to stop it by regulations and 
 threats, but there was a certain amount of satisfac- 
 tion in cheating the State, and good prices were 
 always offered and received for these goods from the 
 
254 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 East. The officers were always reminded when 
 being sworn in that if they took any part in this illicit 
 trade they would be dismissed the service, but it was 
 most difficult to put an end to the offence, the chief 
 goods illegally thus imported being tea, muslins, 
 china-w r are and diamonds : and the professional 
 smuggler was always glad to give what help he could 
 in running his small craft alongside the East India - 
 man as she came up the English Channel and 
 anchored in the Downs. It was for this reason that 
 the Company took every care that their ships did 
 not loiter off the British coasts when returning. But 
 very often it happened that, after the officers of these 
 ships had been detected smuggling by the Board 
 of Customs officials, the Company never learned 
 anything of the matter, for although suits were 
 brought against the offending parties the latter used 
 to compound and the matter ended, though not with- 
 out loss to the Company itself. 
 
 The biggest East Indiaman in existence about the 
 year 1813 was the Royal Charlotte of 1518 registered 
 tons. She measured 194 feet long, 43 feet 6 inches 
 wide, and had been built as far back as the year 1785. 
 About the same size were the Arniston (1498 tons), 
 Hope (1498 tons), Cirencester (1504 tons), Coutts 
 (1504 tons), Glatton (1507 tons), Cuffnells (1497 
 tons), Neptune (1478 tons), Thames (1487 tons) and 
 W aimer Castle (1518 tons). There were about 116 
 ships in the Company's service at the time we are 
 speaking, and these had been built either on the 
 bottoms of other ships, or by open competition (in 
 pursuance of the late eighteenth-century Act which 
 had made this compulsory), or they were those much 
 smaller " extra " ships. Some again had been built 
 
WAYS AND MEANS 255 
 
 as a speculation, and had been taken up by the 
 Company, whilst at least one the Thomas Gren- 
 ville had been built at Bombay for the Company in 
 the year 1809. And there were in process of con- 
 struction in this year four vessels in India, and one 
 in England for the season 1813-1814. The India - 
 built ships were being constructed in Bombay, 
 Bengal and Calcutta, and all these ships were of 
 1 200 tons. The following, which is an example of a 
 tender made under the new system of free and open 
 competition, and accepted by the Company, indi- 
 cates the prices per ton which were paid for engaging 
 these East Indiamen in September 1796 : 
 
 ' To China, and the several parts of India. 
 " Ganges, 1200 tons, William Moffat, Esq., 
 
 for six voyages . . . ^17 10 
 
 Surplus tonnage, peace and war . ^815 
 For difference of outfit, difference of In- 
 surance beyond eight guineas per cent., 
 maintaining seamen, returning lascars, 
 and every other contingency and ex- 
 pence . . . iS 10." 
 
 The Company had its own hydrographer, who 
 inspected the journals of the commanders and 
 officers on the arrival home of the ships. Happily 
 some of these are still in existence, and from them 
 we are able to gather a good many details of the 
 work which went on in the ships. Let us take, for 
 example, the journal of Griffin Hawkins, who was a 
 midshipman in the Triton during the years 1792- 
 1794. This was one of the more moderate-sized 
 East Indiamen of 800 tons. We have not space to 
 go through the whole of this journal, which occupied 
 
256 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 a good many large and closely written pages, but it 
 is merely to illustrate the Company's standing orders 
 which we have already chronicled, and to show the 
 preparations which were made in getting these East 
 Indiamen ready for sea, that the following brief 
 extracts are made. You must think of her as lying 
 off Deptford, and in order that you may be able to 
 picture her the more easily, the accompanying sketch 
 of her at anchor by young Hawkins himself is here 
 reproduced. The time of which we are now to speak 
 is the autumn of 1792, when the ship was in hand for 
 the 1792-1793 season. 
 
 " Tuesday Oct. 3Oth . . . at 1 1 A.M. came on board 
 Mr Upham, Inspector, with Mr Bale, Surveyor, over- 
 hauld the limbers &c. Left Mr Bale on board. 
 Employed taking in empty butts, and stowing them,' 
 also the ship's coals. Chief and fourth officers on 
 board. . . . 
 
 " Wednesday 3ist. . . . Received on board the 
 best and smallest bower cables, and sundry stores, 
 filled 43 butts with water. Do. officers. 
 
 " Thursday Nov. ist. . . . Employed taking in tin 
 and iron, on account of Honble. Company, also the 
 ship's shott and sundry old stores, filling water etc. 
 Do. officers. 
 
 " Friday 2nd. . . . Clapt a mooring service on the 
 small bower cable, set up the rigging for and aft, 
 filling water etc. Do. and 6th officers on board. 
 
 " Saturday 3rd. . . . Employed taking in shot on 
 account of the Honble. Compy. and 45 tons of kent- 
 ledge for the ship, and also some small stores, filling 
 water etc. Clapt a mooring service on the best 
 bower. 2nd, 4th and 6th officers on board." 
 
 On the following Monday the ship took in a 
 
C PC 
 
 3 i 
 
WAYS AND MEANS 257 
 
 quantity of copper as well as sundry stores. On the 
 Tuesday she shipped three new cables, her pitch, 
 tar and chandlery stores. On the Wednesday she 
 saw to her anchors and bent on her cables. On the 
 Thursday her pilot came aboard and took her down 
 the river as far as Gravesend. And finally to skip 
 over the ensuing weeks after leaving the Thames 
 and the Isle of Wight, she had to put in to Torbay, 
 quitting the latter not till I3th January 1793. The 
 setting forth of ships was thus a very leisurely, slow 
 business as compared with the dispatch that attends 
 the modern liner. 
 
 The tea which came in these ships was disposed of 
 at the quarterly sales, the duty being paid thirty- 
 days later. Some idea of the length of time these 
 vessels were away from home may be gathered from 
 one or two voyages at the beginning of the nine- 
 teenth century. Thus, the 1 2OO-ton Glatton left the 
 Downs for China on 2gth March 1802, proceeded to 
 China, disposed of her cargo, took on board a fresh 
 one, and was back at her moorings in the Thames by 
 24th April of the following year. Another ship, the 
 Marquis of Ely (whose managing owner was Mr 
 Robert Wigram, a name that became famous during 
 the clipper period), also of 1200 tons, left Ports- 
 mouth on 2oth March 1804, proceeded to Ceylon 
 and China, transacted her business, and was back at 
 her moorings in the Thames on i2th September 
 of the following year. Some of the smaller vessels 
 made good voyages too, when we consider that these 
 ships were not well designed nor built with the kind 
 of hull that makes for speed. Their first object was 
 to carry safely a large amount of cargo, rather than 
 to get a small cargo home in the quickest time. Thus, 
 
258 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the 6oo-ton ship Devaynes left Portsmouth on 
 September 1808 for Bombay, loaded and unloaded 
 and was back at moorings on 6th July 1810. The 
 General Stuart, of the same tonnage, left Portsmouth 
 on the same day and was back in the Thames on 
 1 6th April 1810. These passages may be con- 
 veniently compared with the hustling days of sixty 
 or seventy years later, when the famous China clipper 
 Ariel made her record passage out to China. Leav- 
 ing Gravesend on I4th October 1866, she arrived 
 in Hong Kong the following 6th of January and 
 was back again in the Thames on 2jrd September. 
 
 The East India Company had their agents in 
 different ports, both at home and abroad, and it is 
 worth mentioning in passing that the Company's 
 agent at Halifax a few years later on in the century 
 that is to say, about the year 1830 was that 
 Samuel Cunard who was afterwards to found the 
 great line of Atlantic steamships which still bear 
 his name. 
 
 It was in the year 1814 that a most momentous 
 development occurred. Ever since the time of 
 Elizabeth the East India Company had possessed 
 this wonderful monopoly of trading to the East. In 
 spite of the march of time, in spite of all the improve- 
 ments in commerce and the development of the 
 world, in spite of the spread of industrialism and 
 the growing demands of democracy, in spite of all the 
 vast sums of money which had been on the aggre- 
 gate extracted from the East, in spite, finally, of the 
 many abuses of which the East India Company or its 
 servants had been guilty, this exclusive privilege of 
 trade had been withheld for over two centuries from 
 the other persons or corporations of the kingdom. 
 
 But now all this was banished. For a long time 
 
WAYS AND MEANS 259 
 
 merchant enterprise had realised that Eastern trade 
 would be extended, and that considerably, if it were 
 thrown open and competition were allowed to have 
 its way. So in the year mentioned the monopoly 
 was done away with as regards India. The British 
 public were henceforth allowed to trade with that 
 country unconditionally, except that it must be done 
 in vessels of not less than 350 tons. But China was 
 reserved as the exclusive trading preserve of the 
 East India Company, and the Company still re- 
 tained the control of the supply of tea, which had 
 become now a common article of consumption, and 
 therefore the importing of this commodity was of 
 great value to this ancient corporation. 
 
 It was not without a great effort that the Indian 
 monopoly was done away with. This was a time 
 when the interests of private individuals in high 
 power were considered even more than they would 
 be to-day. The character of social life has changed a 
 great deal since then, so that it is not immediately 
 easy to appreciate the revolutionary nature of this 
 change from a close preserve, strictly guarded for 
 many a generation, to become an open area common 
 to all and sundry of the British nation. The 
 merchants of Manchester, Bristol and Glasgow had 
 been agitating for years : now at last the desired 
 object had been attained. All sorts of arguments 
 were spoken and printed concerning the reasons on 
 behalf of the monopoly. Some of these were 
 utterly ridiculous, and obviously not sufficiently dis- 
 interested to appear sincere. The argument of the 
 monopolists was largely of the kind which says 
 practically : " You may not like it, but allow us to 
 tell you that it is really all for your good that we 
 
260 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 want the monopoly ourselves." Merchants outside 
 the Company were too wide-awake to see it in that 
 light. And when this monopoly was removed in 
 1814, what was the result ? 
 
 The result was this. As soon as the barrier was 
 thrown down, private shipowners entered, and a 
 number of excellent ships were built for the voyages 
 to India and back. Commerce received a great 
 impetus, and eventually (as had been foreseen) the 
 private traders gained ascendancy over the East 
 India Company, and the trade with India became 
 trebled. The effect of this new element of com- 
 petition was to cause a reduction in the average rate 
 of freights per ton. The East India Company had 
 been paying ,40 a ton for their ships, while better 
 ships could be built and equipped for 2$ a ton. 
 By the year 1830 the cost of freights from India to 
 England had dropped to 10 a ton. There can be 
 no doubt that the Company had been managing their 
 affairs with too little regard to economy. Their ships 
 were fitted up with too much expense for the pas- 
 sengers. They were paying ^40 a ton as against 
 2$ paid by other traders. The East India Com- 
 pany's ships carried much larger crews than other 
 ships. The former used to have one man to every 
 ten or twelve tons, though the ships engaged in the 
 West Indian trade carried one man to every twenty- 
 five tons. And whilst we are making comparisons 
 let us show how much beamier these East Indiamen 
 were. Four beams to the length was their rule, as 
 compared with five or six beams to the length in the 
 case of the famous Clyde and American clippers 
 which were to come after. To-day in the twentieth 
 century the biggest Atlantic liners have between nine 
 
WAYS AND MEANS 261 
 
 and ten beams to their length. It should be men- 
 tioned at the same time that these East Indiamen 
 had necessarily to carry large numbers of men be- 
 cause they must needs be well armed to fight their 
 enemies on an equal footing. But the long years of 
 warfare were now giving way to peace, and instead 
 there was to come a century of industrial progress, 
 invention and commercial development. Privateers, 
 hostile ships, pirates these were to be withdrawn, 
 and simultaneously the need for arming merchant- 
 men disappeared. It is only quite recently, with the 
 Anglo-German tension, that our merchant ships have 
 begun to be armed again on any extensive scale. 
 
 The abolition of the monopoly gave a new impetus 
 to British shipbuilding, and the firm of Scotts, of 
 Greenock, turned out some fine vessels for the East, 
 such as the Christian, launched in 1818, the Bell field 
 of 478 register tons the latter being built in 1820. 
 Both these ships were for the London-Calcutta trade. 
 The Company were of course still trading to India 
 and China, and among the ships which they owned 
 or hired about the last-mentioned date may be men- 
 tioned the following. Their biggest ship, then, was 
 the Lowther Castle, of 1507 tons. She was built in 
 the year 181 1, carried 26 guns and 130 men. Another 
 fine ship was the Earl of Balcarres, built at Bombay 
 in 1815. She had the same number of men and 
 guns as the Lowther Castle, though of 1417 tons 
 register. Such a vessel was ship-rigged with three 
 masts, triangular headsails and stuns'ls. Still un- 
 able to get away from the mediaeval influence, the 
 jibboom was " steeved " very high. With her rows 
 of square ports, her figurehead, her enormous 
 anchors, which were stowed over the side by the fore 
 
262 
 
 rigging, she was very similar to a British man-of-war 
 of that period. Boat-davits had now come into use, 
 and a boat was thus hung on each quarter. 
 
 Contemporary manuscript records of the late 
 eighteenth-century Company's ships show them 
 wearing a long pennant at one mast and a square 
 flag at another. Each of the East Indiamen ships 
 in a convoy would have its own distinguishing pen- 
 nant. Sometimes this was flown at the main with a 
 square flag at the fore, at other times you find a ship 
 with the square flag at the mizen and the pennant at 
 the fore. And a most elaborate code of signals both 
 for day and night was provided for use between the 
 flagship and the respective units. 
 
 Promotion in the Company's own ships was by 
 seniority, though in the case of the ships which the 
 Company hired from private owners for a certain 
 number of voyages, promotion depended rather on 
 ability and influence. The East India Company 
 were wont to appoint commanders to their ships 
 before the latter were completed, in order that they 
 might be fitted out under the captain's personal 
 supervision. Midshipmen had to be between thir- 
 teen and eighteen years of age. Pursers were 
 appointed by the commander, subject to the 
 approval of the Committee of Shipping. We have 
 shown that if the pay in these ships was not great, 
 yet the privileges were so lucrative that a commander 
 could afford to retire after four or five voyages with 
 a fortune that would render him independent for the 
 rest of his life. What with being allowed to engage 
 extensively in the Eastern trade, plus the amount of 
 free space allowed them for this purpose on board,, 
 and the receipt of passage-money from the various 
 
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WAYS AND MEANS 263 
 
 officials who voyaged between England and India, 
 a commander was remarkably unlucky if he had not 
 made about ,20,000 in his five voyages in that rank. 
 In some cases his revenue amounted to about ,6000 
 a voyage and even more. This is the figure for what 
 he obtained by honest means. To this must be 
 added in many cases that which he obtained by illicit 
 trade, better known as smuggling. Lindsay mentions 
 the instance of one commander within his own know- 
 ledge who in one voyage from London to India, 
 thence to China and so back to London, realised no 
 less than ,30,000, this captain having a large inter- 
 est in the freight of cotton and other produce con- 
 veyed from India to China. And, having examined 
 the records of the custom-house, I can assure the 
 reader that whatever a captain made legally he also 
 made additional sums by stealth, to the loss of the 
 nation's customs. 
 
 These ships would go out of their voyage to call 
 at foreign, English, Irish and Scottish ports, or to 
 meet with smuggling craft at sea in order to unload 
 some of their goods stealthily, and that was why the 
 Company were so particular in inquiring into the 
 deviations made during the passage. It speaks very 
 little for the honour of some of these captains that, 
 in spite of such handsome remuneration from one 
 source and another, they were always ready to go 
 out of their way to earn a little more by dishonest 
 methods that would bring themselves, their ship and 
 the Company into disgrace. But it is never fair to 
 judge men except when taking into consideration the 
 moral standard of the time : and the less said about 
 the eighteenth and early nineteenth century in this 
 respect perhaps the better. Might was right, and 
 
264 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 honesty in commerce was a rare virtue. Of course, 
 the mere existence of this trade monopoly was in 
 itself an unhealthy influence, breeding jealousy, cor- 
 ruption, greed and avarice. And this seems to have 
 permeated the Company's service generally, not 
 merely afloat, but ashore. But a better type of man 
 of good family and high character entered the Com- 
 pany's service in the nineteenth century. This, and 
 the rigorous determination of the Company and of 
 the Board of Customs, made smuggling practically 
 non-existent in these East Indiamen. 
 
 Let us pass now to a more pleasant subject and 
 see how these ships were worked at sea. 
 
CHAPTER XVIII 
 
 LIFE ON BOARD 
 
 AT 6.30 A.M. in these East Indiamen the crew began 
 to wash down decks, and an hour later the hammocks 
 were piped up and stowed in the nettings round the 
 waist by the quartermasters. At eight o'clock was 
 breakfast, and then began the duties of the day.* 
 The midshipmen slept in hammocks also, but the 
 chief mate and the commander were the only officers 
 in the ship to have a cabin of their own. 
 
 In no other ships outside the navy, excepting 
 perhaps some privateers, was discipline so strict. 
 The seamen were divided into two watches, the 
 officers into three. The crew had four hours on duty 
 and four hours off. There was always plenty of 
 work to be done. After saying good-bye to the 
 English coast cables had to be put away and anchors 
 stowed for bad weather. Sails were being set, men 
 were sent aloft to take in sail, and sheets and braces 
 required trimming. The East Indiamen from the 
 latter part of the eighteenth century had all been 
 steered by wheels, and the accompanying illustration 
 shows the wheel on board the East Indiaman Triton. 
 
 * For some details in this connection I am indebted to 
 Lindsay's " History of Merchant Shipping," as well as to an 
 article in The Mariner's Mirror, vol. i., No. i. 
 265 
 
266 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 The rigging also had to be set up occasionally, and 
 among the confidential signals to be used by these 
 ships when proceeding in a convoy, you will find one 
 which asks permission of the commodore to be 
 allowed to heave-to and set up rigging. In addition, 
 ballast sometimes required shifting, sails had to be 
 repaired, leaks stopped, masts greased, new splices 
 made and so on. This was in normal voyages : but 
 in the case of bad weather there was much more 
 besides. 
 
 On Wednesdays and Saturdays the 'tween decks 
 were cleaned and holystoned. The origin of the 
 word " holystoned " has been variously derived. 
 To " holystone " is to rub the decks with sand- 
 stone or " prayer-books." When ships, both of the 
 East India Company, his Majesty's navy and other 
 craft, used to anchor in St Helen's Roads (off Bern- 
 bridge, Isle of Wight, facing Portsmouth) the place 
 was found convenient for two reasons. There was 
 a convenient dip-well close to the shore, which still 
 exists to-day : and this water kept in wooden butts 
 used to keep so well, and unlike much other water 
 did not turn putrid when the ships had been at sea 
 some time, that East Indiamen were actually known 
 to have brought back some of it home quite fresh 
 after being out to the East and remaining in the ship 
 about a twelvemonth. But besides the excellent 
 water, the men used to be sent ashore here to obtain 
 sand for scrubbing the decks. One day it was dis- 
 covered that there was nothing so good as a piece 
 of the stone of the old St Helen's Church, which 
 had recently been abandoned, the relic of which 
 survives to-day only as a sea-mark. In those sacri- 
 legious days there was little respect for hallowed 
 
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LIFE ON BOARD 267 
 
 things, such as churches or graves, and before long 
 every ship that came to these roads would send men 
 ashore as a matter of course to fetch bits of the 
 church and even gravestones in small blocks. The 
 suggestion is that thus when the decks were rubbed 
 with them the work was known as " holystoning," 
 and the blocks themselves called " Bibles " or 
 " Prayer-books." * 
 
 The men in these East Indiamen were divided 
 into messes, of eight men, their allotted space being 
 between the guns, where the mess-traps were 
 arranged. The 'tween decks had to be kept 
 scrupulously clean, and were inspected by the com- 
 mander and surgeon. No work was allowed to be 
 performed on Sunday except what was necessary, 
 though manuscript journals rather show that this 
 regulation was not much respected. The crew were 
 mustered in their best clothes, and then everyone 
 that could be spared was present at prayers. Dinner 
 was served at noon, and the passengers were given 
 three courses and dessert, but without fish. There 
 was plenty of wine and beer, and there was also 
 grog at 1 1 A.M. and 9 P.M. Champagne was drunk 
 twice a week. There was a cow carried, and later on 
 the caff, which was always brought on board with its 
 mother, became veal when the ship had crossed the 
 line and was nearer India. In addition there were 
 also ducks and fowls, sheep and pigs, so that the 
 ship's boats and decks were often mildly suggestive 
 of a farmyard. The crew had grog served out to 
 them at dinner-time and on Saturday nights, when 
 the time-honoured custom of " sweethearts and 
 
 * Mentioned in Captain E. du Boulay's " Bembridge, Past and 
 Present." 
 
268 THE OLD EAST INDTAMEN 
 
 wives " had not begun to die out. As we have seen 
 from Addison's journals the ceremonies of crossing 
 the line were kept up, and Eastwick has instanced 
 dances : and in addition theatricals were also given 
 on board to relieve the monotony of the long voyage. 
 The men often employed their dog-watches to 
 " make and mend," or going through their sea- 
 chests, games or amusements. On Saturday nights 
 there would be songs and dancing. When they 
 reached their Eastern port, the men would unload 
 the ship themselves without the assistance of natives. 
 And a ship in those days was far more independent 
 of the shore than even a sailing ship is to-day. There 
 were no better riggers in the world, and steel rope 
 had not taken the place of hemp. We have seen 
 from Addison that in China the crews of the Com- 
 pany's ships rowed guard on Sundays among the 
 ships in the harbour. The number of guns which 
 these ships carried has been mentioned at various 
 dates throughout these pages, and the men were drilled 
 with about as much persistency as in the Royal Navy 
 of that time. The mediaeval boarding-pike was still 
 in use, and they were drilled also in musket, cutlass 
 and other small-arms. Also quite naval fashion was 
 the custom of holding courts martial on board, the 
 members being composed of the captain and the 
 four senior officers, the latter having always been 
 sworn when the captain took his oath prior to the 
 ship's sailing from London. Discipline was strict 
 even to harshness and cruelty, and punishments were 
 sometimes inflicted for the merest trivialities. At 
 the same time these crews were not as mild as a 
 porcelain shepherdess, and they were a tough, virile, 
 desperate class as a whole. The reader will recollect 
 
LIFE ON BOARD 269 
 
 Addison's entry in his journal that such and such a 
 seaman was punished " with a dozen " for insolence 
 or neglect. This punishment was inflicted over the 
 bare back and shoulders by the brawny boatswain's 
 mate armed with a cat-o'-nine-tails, the victim being 
 triced up by the thumbs. And when it was all over 
 a bucket of salt water washed the blood away. Yes, 
 these men were reckless, they were a coarse lot of 
 dare-devils, they were ever ready to break all the 
 laws and regulations which concerned them. They 
 would desert or cheat his Majesty's customs, knock 
 a man down, drink far more than was good for them, 
 yet for all that they were true seamen to their finger- 
 tips, who could be relied upon to go aloft in all 
 weathers, and the very fellows on whom you could 
 rely when it was a question of nerve and pluck. In 
 battle, stripped to the waist, they would fight with 
 the utmost courage : and when punishment was 
 whacked out to them they bore it like true sons of 
 Britain. 
 
 They were kept fairly busy on board, yet as there 
 were so many hands no one could justly complain 
 of being overworked as in the case of the modern 
 man-of-war. They had always plenty of food and 
 grog, and they knew that if they were killed in the 
 Company's service their wives and dependents 
 would be looked after. 
 
 As for the ships themselves, they were of course 
 all built of wood. From roughly 1775 to well on 
 into the nineteenth century they were not only 
 rigged, fitted out, manned and handled like the con- 
 temporary frigates of the Royal Navy, but they 
 were, in the first place, built after their model, with 
 one exception. The East Indiamen were a fuller- 
 
270 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 bodied type, but the naval frigates, inasmuch as 
 they were built for speed and not for cargo, could 
 afford to have finer lines. A great deal of valuable 
 room had to be wasted in the excessive amount of 
 pig-iron ballast which these ships had to carry. To 
 call them fast would not be truthful, but then there 
 was no competition before the year 1814, and so 
 there was little need to hurry, and they certainly were 
 not driven. At the approach of night they snugged 
 down, for there was no premium awaiting them, how- 
 ever fast they made the voyage. If, however, they 
 endangered the ship or damaged the cargo they 
 would not only incur the East India Company's 
 displeasure, but detract from their own privileges. 
 
 Therefore before darkness overtook them these 
 ships would always take in their royals and fine- 
 weather sails, and the royal yards would be sent 
 down on deck. If bad weather threatened them 
 t'gallantsails and mainsail would also be stowed, 
 and a precautionary reef tucked in the topsails. 
 Thus these vessels never made record-breaking runs, 
 and were never given the opportunity of showing 
 their fullest speed. Caution was the dominating 
 factor, and not speed. In other words, the policy 
 was the exact opposite of the clipper ships which 
 were to follow : but then the clippers were built for 
 speed, and not for fighting. There was in essentials 
 very little difference between the hulls of the time 
 of James I. and of the early nineteenth century, if 
 we omit the somewhat elaborate external decoration 
 which was peculiar to the Stuart times, and give the 
 ships their later triangular headsails, staysails and 
 a spanker instead of the old lateen mizen. The 
 cumbrous hull was really but little modified. Built 
 
LIFE ON BOARD 271 
 
 of English oak, elm, and Indian teak, copper- 
 fastened throughout, the later ships of the Company 
 were strong and well-found, with good spars, stout 
 rigging and canvas. Sometimes they were built by 
 the very men and on the very yard that had witnessed 
 the building of the King's ships. 
 
 One of the finest ships ever built for the Company 
 was the famous East Indiaman Thames. Happily 
 that great marine artist of the early nineteenth 
 century, E. W. Cooke, sketched her in all her 
 beauty, and the accompanying illustration shows how 
 she appeared in the year 1829. This was a vessel 
 of 1424 tons, with her general, massive appearance, 
 the strength of her gear, the gun-ports, the decora- 
 tive stern with its windows the East Indiaman with 
 all her striking characteristics of picturesque power. 
 A boat hangs in davits on either quarter, the topsails 
 are still single and very deep, with plenty of reef- 
 points, but the hull is certainly unnecessarily cum- 
 brous and clumsy impressive rather than beautiful, 
 strong rather than fine. But in any case she would 
 have been a pretty tough proposition for a contem- 
 porary hostile ship to tackle, especially with such 
 crews as she carried. Compared with her contem- 
 porary, the West Indiaman Thetis (which is here 
 shown in the act of getting under way off the 
 Needles), the Thames is a more powerful fighting 
 ship. But the West Indiamen were essentially more 
 suited for trade, and their capacity for cargo was 
 very great. They were mercantile craft pure and 
 simple. 
 
 One of the greatest disasters which ever befell 
 any of these East Indiamen was the loss of the 
 Kent. This was a fine new ship which had left the 
 
272 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Downs on the igth of February 1825. She was of 
 1350 tons, so very similar to the Thames. She was 
 bound out to China, calling first at Bengal, and in 
 her were travelling officers, troops, women and 
 children of the 3ist Regiment, as well as twenty 
 private passengers and a crew of 148 officers and 
 men. 
 
 Favoured with a fine north-east wind the Kent 
 made, for her class of vessel, a quick passage down 
 the English Channel, and on the 23rd was out in the 
 Atlantic pitching to the swell. Interrupted occa- 
 sionally with bad weather the stately ship pursued 
 her way across the Bay of Biscay for another five 
 days, when a heavy gale from the south-west sprang 
 up, and the following morning the weather got 
 worse : the fair wind which had brought them down 
 Channel now headed them and tormented. The 
 bigger sails were taken in, and others were close 
 reefed. Topgallant-yards had to be struck, and so 
 violent was the gale that by the morning of the ist 
 of March the vessel had to be hove-to under a triple- 
 reefed main-topsail only. In other words, there was 
 only the merest patch of canvas allowed on her. 
 
 She was rolling very badly, and life-lines were 
 run along the deck for the whole watch of soldiers 
 to hang on by. For the women and children below, 
 matters were alarming and unpleasant in those 
 cooped-up quarters. So heavily did the Kent roll 
 that at every lurch her main chains were well below the 
 water. Things were bad enough on deck, but below 
 the furniture and other articles had broken away 
 from their cleats and were being violently dashed 
 about both in the cabins and the cuddy. In order 
 to see whether everything was all right below in the 
 

 1 1 
 
LIFE ON BOARD 273 
 
 hold, one of the ship's officers went down with a 
 couple of seamen, in case anything might have 
 broken adrift and be endangering the hull. He took 
 with him a patent safety lantern, but as the lamp was 
 burning dimly he handed it up to the orlop deck to 
 be trimmed. He then discovered that one of the 
 spirit casks had got adrift, and sent the two men to 
 get some wood to wedge it up. Soon afterwards 
 the ship gave a heavy lurch, so that the officer most 
 unfortunately dropped the lantern. In his eagerness 
 to recover it he let go his hold of the cask, and there 
 was a smash. Instantly the spirits reached the lamp 
 and the whole of the afterhold was in a blaze. 
 
 Here was a terrible position : a raging storm out- 
 side and a raging fire within. Clouds of smoke 
 came up the hatchway and were blown violently to 
 leeward as the wind fanned the flames. The captain 
 of the ship gave his orders, and both the seamen and 
 the troops worked their very hardest with buckets, 
 pumps, wet sails, hammocks anything in fact that 
 could be employed to put the fire out. But far from 
 decreasing the conflagration was spreading, and 
 smoke came up in volumes from all four hatchways. 
 The captain now ordered the lower decks to be 
 scuttled, the combings of the hatches to be cut, and 
 the ports to be opened, so that all the sea possible 
 might have a free entry. Meanwhile some of the 
 sick soldiers, a woman and several children, unable 
 to gain the upper deck, had perished. 
 
 As some of the passengers went below they met 
 one of the mates staggering up the hatchway, ex- 
 hausted and almost senseless. He reported that he 
 had just stumbled over some dead bodies, who must 
 have perished in the suffocating smoke. With diffi- 
 
274 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 culty the lower ports could be opened owing to the 
 atmosphere, but when the passengers at last suc- 
 ceeded the sea came pouring in, carrying chests and 
 bulkheads before it. Happily the tons of water 
 which made their way into the hold checked the fury 
 of the flames and decreased the possibility of ex- 
 plosion, which had been the greatest fear. But now 
 the ship was fairly water-logged, and death from 
 explosion was apparently to give way to death by 
 drowning. Efforts were therefore made to close the 
 ports again, and batten down the hatches and stifle 
 the fire. The occasion was terrifying in the extreme, 
 for it was merely a question as to how long the grave 
 position could be tolerated. Six or seven hundred 
 human beings in the agony of suspense often more 
 trying than physical pain itself were on the upper 
 deck. Some had been suffering the pangs of sea- 
 sickness for days, many had rushed up from below 
 with no time to slip on warm clothes, others were 
 seeking out husbands, wives or children. Some were 
 standing resigned to their fate, while others, as is 
 always the case on such occasions, were indulging 
 in despair and frenzy. Some were saying their 
 prayers, while some of the toughest of the soldiers 
 and seamen took up their positions immediately over 
 the magazine in the hope that when the explosion 
 came at any moment they might be blown into 
 eternity without delay. Every man, woman and 
 child was, to use a fitting expression, " bump up 
 against the inevitable," and everyone acted accord- 
 ing to his or her character in this time of crisis. 
 
 Meanwhile the seas were making game of the ship, 
 and suddenly the Kent's binnacle broke away and 
 was dashed to pieces on the deck. This was taken as 
 
LIFE ON BOARD 275 
 
 a particularly bad omen by some, and the end was 
 being awaited as certain. But just then the fourth 
 mate decided to send a man up to the foretop in 
 case and it was not even a slender hope that a 
 distant ship might be descried. With dramatic 
 suddenness the man, after scanning the horizon, 
 began waving his hat and shouting. 
 
 " A sail on the lee bow ! " he exclaimed, and the 
 announcement was received with three cheers. Flags 
 of distress were at once hoisted, minute guns began 
 to be fired, and setting the three topsails and foresail 
 the Kent ran down to the direction of the stranger. 
 This was found to be the brig Cambria, of 200 tons 
 burthen, on her way from Falmouth to Vera Cruz 
 with a number of Cornish miners on board. After 
 the Kent's signals had been hoisted there followed 
 a further period of suspense. Had the brig seen the 
 signals ? Had the sound of the guns reached her in 
 the violence of the gale ? But presently the stranger 
 was seen to hoist British colours and to crowd on 
 all sail, in spite of the gale. Her captain was 
 evidently determined to assist if he could. 
 
 There are those who say that the age of miracles 
 has ended, but the good fortune of falling in with 
 the Cambria was really far more extraordinary than 
 may seem to the modern reader. To-day the con- 
 tinuous stream of traffic across the Bay of Biscay 
 liners, men-of-war, tramp steamers and a few sailing 
 ships is something very considerably greater than 
 at the time of which we are speaking. To-day, if 
 such an occurrence took place in a ship bound for 
 India, there would always be shipping in the vicinity 
 and wireless would summon assistance before very 
 long. But at this time there were no lines of steam- 
 
276 THE OLD^EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 ships ploughing their regular furrow across the Bay. 
 There were few ocean-going vessels of any sort, and 
 you might cross the ocean time after time without 
 sighting another craft. It was therefore one of those 
 rare instances that the Cambria should have chanced 
 to be anywhere in the neighbourhood. 
 
 As the ships were lessening the intervening dis- 
 tance, the Kent's boats were being got ready. The 
 ship's commander consulted with the colonel and 
 major of the regiment, and provision was made to 
 prevent that dreaded incident in such a case as this, 
 which has sometimes marred the whole picture of 
 self-sacrifice and resignation. Some of the soldiers 
 and seamen in the Kent seemed to give evidence of 
 being the ones to rush the boats at the first oppor- 
 tunity. To thwart this, some of the military officers 
 stood over them with drawn swords, and this had a 
 wholesome effect. 
 
 The starboard boat was filled with women and 
 children so far as its capacity allowed, these people 
 getting into her through the cuddy-port on that side. 
 The boat was then lowered away into a sea that was 
 so awful that it seemed impossible for the little 
 craft to live many minutes. Even as it touched the 
 water the usual difficulty occurred and it must have 
 been much worse in those days when there were no 
 patent davits or disengaging gear. The tackle was 
 unhooked only with difficulty, and the boat narrowly 
 escaped being dashed to fragments against the great, 
 heavy hull of the Kent. Over the sea the people in 
 the Kent watched the load of human lives, now on 
 the summit of a wave crest, now disappearing in the 
 trough. But at length, after this further suspense, 
 strong British arms pulled her alongside the Cam- 
 
- f- 
 
 * 
 
LIFE ON BOARD 277 
 
 bria, and the first human being to be lifted into the 
 Cambria was an infant of only a few weeks old. 
 
 The passage had taken twenty minutes between 
 the sinking and rescuing ships, and after this load 
 had been received on board, the other boat came off. 
 One of the passengers in the Cambria who watched 
 the incident afterwards stated that the seas were so 
 big that when the two ships happened to be in a 
 trough of sea at the same time, the Kent, great as 
 she was, could not be seen for the intervening moun- 
 tain wave. The Cambria had wisely taken up her 
 position some distance from the Kent, fearing that 
 if there were an explosion she might be badly 
 injured. But evidently the Kent's boats on their 
 return journey had to row to windward, and this was 
 not easy. Owing to the seas now running these boats 
 could not come alongside the Kent again : so the 
 women and children had to be tied together in 
 twos and then lowered from the stern, the boat doing 
 its best to be immediately underneath at the right 
 time. Everyone who has had experience of the sea 
 knows how difficult this must have been, and it 
 happened that many of these poor women were un- 
 willingly ducked several times in the sea before 
 being received half-drowned and half-dead with 
 terror into the boats. Still, not one of this sex was 
 lost thereby, though some of the children perished 
 with exhaustion and shock. 
 
 Some of the soldiers behaved with great gallantry, 
 and worked hard to save the women and children, 
 to their own danger. The Kent had six boats, but 
 three had been swamped or stove in during the trips 
 between the two vessels. All this time the flames 
 were spreading worse than ever, and as the daylight 
 was drawing to a close it became a race against time, 
 
278 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 for there were still many passengers on board, 
 although many had been taken off to the Cambria. 
 The Kent's captain had a rope made fast to the outer 
 end of the spanker-boom, and after walking out to 
 the end of this spar the men had to slip down by the 
 rope into the remaining boats below. Many lands- 
 men, however, dreaded this means of escape so much 
 that they preferred to throw themselves out of the 
 stern windows. Rafts were constructed out of spars, 
 hen-coops and other materials, and acted as a means 
 of reaching the boats. But now night had fallen 
 over the wreck. Some of the baser passengers who 
 remained still on board had drunk themselves 
 speechless : others were prowling about for spoil, 
 whilst the ship's poultry and pigs were turning the 
 ship into a mad farmyard. 
 
 As the darkness came down the work of rescue 
 was the more difficult. The Kent was now sunk ten 
 feet below her marks, and squalls of wind and rain 
 together with the big seas made her hours of exist- 
 ence fewer. The guns had burst their tackle owing 
 to the action of the flames, and as they fell into the 
 hold exploded. There were still a few people left in 
 the ship, including the captain, but the latter, having 
 in vain tried to persuade the others to leave, left 
 them too terror-stricken and dumbfounded to move. 
 Crawling out along the spanker-boom and steadying 
 himself by the topping lift, he diveU into the sea 
 and was picked up by one of the boats. As the last 
 boat left the side of the Kent, flames burst through 
 the cabin windows. Some of those who had feared 
 to leave the ship had also a miraculous escape. 
 Driven by the flames, they sheltered as best they 
 could on the chains (where the rigging joins the 
 ship's hull) and stood there till the masts went by 
 
LIFE ON BOARD 279 
 
 the board. They then clung to one of these masts 
 until a ship named the Caroline, bound from Egypt 
 to Liverpool, saw the explosion when three miles 
 away and made all sail in its direction, and so picked 
 up fourteen survivors. The captain of the Caroline 
 stood by till daylight, but was unable to find any 
 more people. 
 
 The magazine (which in East Indiamen ships was 
 placed under the forecastle) had exploded about 
 1.30 A.M., and portions of the old East Indiaman 
 that had set forth so well with a fair wind now rose 
 into the air like rockets. As for the survivors in the 
 Cambria, they had been hauled on board with diffi- 
 culty by the Cornish miners standing in the chains 
 as the heave of the sea lifted the boats up to that 
 level. The women, surviving children and men were 
 made as comfortable as possible, in spite of the fact 
 that 600 people in a brig of only 200 tons put a some- 
 what heavy strain on the accommodation at their 
 disposal, with a heavy Atlantic gale blowing too. In 
 a few days all the food and water on board would 
 give out, so, at the risk of carrying away his masts, 
 the captain of the brig drove her for all she was 
 worth before the gale, so that by the afternoon of 
 3rd March the Scillies were sighted, and soon after 
 midnight the ship had cast anchor in Falmouth har- 
 bour. It was another miracle that the Cambria 
 arrived in Falmouth when she did, for an hour after 
 she had dropped anchor the wind flew right round to 
 north-east and remained there for several days. 
 This would have meant a head-wind for the brig, 
 and meanwhile in this delay for those bluff old 
 craft were very slow beating and could not sail very 
 close many of her passengers must have died of 
 starvation. 
 
280 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 At Falmouth the survivors disembarked, being 
 met on the beach by huge crowds, and were hospit- 
 ably received in the houses of the inhabitants, who 
 also got up a subscription for the relief of the 
 sufferers. A service of thanksgiving was held, and 
 a few days later the passengers and sailors were sent 
 to their homes, the troops embarking for Chatham, 
 while the sick and injured remained in hospital. 
 Notwithstanding that about six hundred had been 
 saved, yet eighty-two had perished in this disaster. 
 Some of the seamen belonging to the Kent had 
 certainly behaved in a cowardly manner by refusing 
 to go back and fetch the remainder of their ship- 
 mates until they were compelled by the captain of 
 the Cambria. It is such instances as these which 
 make one wonder whether those rough characters 
 were always as brave as we have preferred to hope 
 they were. 
 
 The captain of the Cambria for his fine seaman- 
 ship and the excellent manner in which he directed 
 the rescue was awarded the sum of ^150 from the 
 War Office, with smaller sums to the mate, crew and 
 miners. The East India Company, in compensation 
 for the losses and expenses caused by this rescue, 
 sent the sum of ^287, us. to the captain of the 
 Cambria for payment of the bill of provisions, 
 ,287, IQS. on account of the owners for the food of 
 the passengers, and ,300 for demurrage. In addi- 
 tion, they presented the Cambria's captain with the 
 sum of ,600, the first mate 100, and varying sums 
 to the crew and miners. Other presents were also 
 made by Lloyd's, the Royal Humane Society, the 
 Royal Exchange Assurance, and the Liverpool 
 underwriters. 
 
CHAPTER XIX 
 
 THE COMPANY'S NAVAL SERVICE 
 
 PRIMARILY, of course, the East Indiamen were built 
 fitted out and manned for the purpose of trade : but 
 owing to circumstances they were compelled to 
 engage in hostilities both offensive and defensive. 
 The result was that these ships figured in more fights 
 than any essentially mercantile ships (as distinct 
 from pirates, privateers and other sea-rovers) that 
 have ever been built. 
 
 It is necessary at the outset to distinguish care- 
 fully between what became known subsequently as 
 the Indian Navy and the Company's merchant ships. 
 The former existed to protect the latter, by suppress- 
 ing both local and nomadic pirates of all kinds, 
 by convoying East Indiamen and even carrying 
 troops when necessary, and by performing other 
 duties, such as surveying, in addition to existing as 
 a defence against any aggressive projects of rival 
 nations. The Indian Navy evolved from the Bom- 
 bay Marine. It is not necessary to recapitulate the 
 history of the East India Company and the rise of 
 its mercantile fleet : it is sufficient to state that with 
 the establishment of factories on shore and the pass- 
 ing and repassing of valuable freights over seas 
 frequented by hostile ships some sort of local force 
 281 
 
282 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 was essential. The Portuguese had their Indian 
 Navy, consisting of large, ocean-going vessels and 
 small-draught craft for operating in shallow local 
 waters, the crews being composed of Portuguese, 
 slaves and Hindoos. It was therefore natural 
 enough that the English should soon find it neces- 
 sary to fit out ships capable of meeting the enemy 
 on a fairly even basis. Furthermore, the Bombay 
 trade had been so much interfered with by the attacks 
 from Malabar pirates that it became essential to 
 build small armed vessels to protect merchant craft. 
 The result was that Warwick Pett, of that famous 
 shipbuilding family which had been building vessels 
 in England from the early Tudor times, was sent 
 out in the seventeenth century to Bombay to 
 construct suitable ships. Local craft were also 
 employed, and very useful they were found in 
 negotiating shallow waters.* 
 
 Throughout most of the seventeenth and eigh- 
 teenth centuries the East India Company's cruisers 
 were kept actively employed in suppressing the 
 native pirates who roamed the Indian Ocean and 
 attacked with great daring and ingenuity. They 
 hung about off the entrance to the Red Sea, found 
 a snug base near the Straits of Bab-el-Mandeb, 
 strengthened it with fortifications for the protection 
 of themselves and their shipping, and eventually 
 moved to Madagascar, which was to be a famous 
 base for those notorious eighteenth-century pirates 
 of European and North American origin, whose 
 names are familiar to most schoolboys. 
 
 The year 1697 was marked by attacks on the 
 
 * I wish to acknowledge my indebtedness in this chapter to 
 Captain Rathbone Low's " History of the Indian Navy." 
 
THE COMPANY'S NAVAL SERVICE 283 
 
 Company's ships, not merely by pirates, but by the 
 French. Three of these East Indiamen were 
 attacked, plundered and burned by pirate craft fly- 
 ing English colours. Two more of the Company's 
 ships were captured by the French, so things were 
 serious enough. The matter was reported to Eng- 
 land, and a squadron of four well-armed ships was 
 accordingly sent out to extirpate these robbers of 
 the sea. In fact, the pirate problem became so 
 great that by a mutual agreement the English, 
 French and Dutch eventually agreed to an arrange- 
 ment for policing the Eastern seas for the purpose 
 of destroying their common foe. Thus the English 
 looked after the southern Indian Ocean, the Dutch 
 were responsible for the Red Sea, and the French 
 for the Persian Gulf. 
 
 The English Indian Marine had sometimes to be 
 strengthened by seamen from the Company's mer- 
 chant ships, and very gallant fighters they proved 
 themselves to be. Arabian pirates roamed about 
 over the whole of the Indian seas, and having 
 become emboldened with success actually built more 
 ships and formed what was in fact a navy of their 
 own. Their ships were well armed and their men 
 were excellent both as seamen and fighters, and as 
 soon as ever the English men-of-war moved off, 
 these pirates, swooping down on coast or ship, would 
 act as they liked. 
 
 After the occupation by the English of Bombay 
 and that island becoming a presidency, the naval 
 force there developed under the name of the Bombay 
 Marine, under the command of an admiral, drafts 
 of officers and men being obtained from ships 
 arriving from Europe. For years this service had 
 
284 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 indeed fought against privateers, pirates, Portuguese, 
 Dutch and French, to defend both ships and fac- 
 tories of the Company. In a smaller, but still an 
 important, degree they had been called upon also to 
 keep out those interloping English ships which had 
 no lawful right to trade with India. Looking back 
 through the first century of the Company's existence, 
 its ships had captured the Island of St Helena in 
 1601. Eight years later the Solomon had defeated 
 several Portuguese ships. In 1612 the Company's 
 fleet had again defeated the Portuguese fleet in 
 India, and the year after this incident had been 
 repeated. In 1616 a valuable Portuguese frigate 
 had been taken and the Dutch severely defeated 
 at Batavia. Four of the Company's ships in 1619 
 and 1620 defeated yet another Portuguese fleet. 
 The capture of Ormuz in 1622 had been made by 
 the Company's fleet acting with the King of Persia's 
 forces. In 1635 Bombay had been recaptured by 
 the Company's fleet, but it was not till 1662 that 
 England sent out men-of-war to India for the pro- 
 tection of the Company's interests. Therefore, 
 during its first sixty years the Company had to act 
 both as merchants and a naval power without any 
 external aid, such as trade had a right to demand. 
 
 If the Bombay Marine was distinctly a small 
 service as regards numbers, it was certainly very 
 gallant, and many a fine incident bright with bravery 
 and daring belongs to its history. During the war 
 with France a number of ships belonging to the 
 Bombay Marine were attached to the Royal Navy 
 on service in the waters that wash the coasts of India, 
 and rendered good service in this capacity. For 
 although the real theatre of war between England 
 
THE COMPANY'S NAVAL SERVICE 285 
 
 and France was not in the Orient, yet some severe, 
 if indecisive, engagements were here fought, and the 
 Company's ships, if smaller in size, were a valuable 
 form of assistance. About the middle of the eigh- 
 teenth century the Marine consisted of about twenty 
 ships, and these were essential for protecting the 
 progress of the mercantile East Indiamen, for with- 
 out such convoys it was impossible for those rich 
 freights ever to have traversed the Indian Ocean. 
 It was the Bombay Marine, also, who made surveys 
 of part of the Arabian, Persian, the west coast of 
 Media and other coasts, and all this was to be for 
 the benefit of navigation and trade generally. 
 
 By the beginning of the nineteenth century the 
 Bombay Marine consisted of a couple of frigates, 
 three sloops-of-war, fourteen brigs, in addition to 
 prizes and vessels specially purchased for the ser- 
 vice, and a few years before that, when Napoleon 
 was contemplating his big scheme in connection with 
 Egypt, which was to be the stepping-stone to India, 
 a naval force was sent from England to cruise in the 
 Red Sea. But, as everyone now knows, the Battle 
 of the Nile prevented these vessels from having any 
 serious work to perform. And when eventually 
 hostilities were resumed, the Bombay Marine had to 
 protect the trade in the Bay of Bengal. This they 
 did with such thoroughness that British merchant 
 ships were singularly free from capture. In spite of 
 the opposition in some quarters, and the prejudice 
 against India-built ships, some of the biggest vessels 
 of the Bombay Marine were built in India, and 
 excellent craft they proved themselves to be. 
 
 One of the most interesting incidents connected 
 with the Bombay Marine during the early part of 
 
286 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the nineteenth century was that in which the Morn- 
 ington sloop-of-war figures conspicuously. The 
 French privateers, especially La Confiance (of 
 which we spoke on an earlier page) and U Eugenie, 
 were most harassing to any craft navigating the 
 vicinity of the East Indian coast. The commander 
 of the Mornington was Captain Frost, and he was 
 determined to bring U Eugenie to book. For a time 
 the latter evaded him, and he then hit upon a smart 
 idea. He succeeded in altering the Morningtoris 
 appearance so that even her own builder would 
 scarcely have recognised her. In order to prevent 
 any suspicion of her seeming a warship, Captain 
 Frost added to his ship a false poop, so that she 
 looked just like a country ship. He changed also 
 the painting of the hull and added patches of dirty 
 old canvas to the sails, and after a while she seemed 
 to be anything but the smart sloop-of-war which she 
 really was. 
 
 When this transformation had been completed, the 
 Mornington took up her position to cruise about the 
 track where the French ship was likely to be hover- 
 ing, and before long the look-out aloft espied the 
 privateer. The Mornington the,n continued her 
 game of bluff and altered her course as if she was 
 anxious to get away from the Frenchman. The 
 latter, unsuspecting, began to work up towards the 
 English ship, and by sunset was getting quite near. 
 After darkness had fallen the Mornington ran under 
 easy sail, and presently the Frenchman hailed, ask- 
 ing the ship's name, ordering them to heave-to. Too 
 late the privateer discovered that he had been en- 
 snared and fired into the Mornington, mortally 
 wounding a seaman and injuring the running gear. 
 
THE COMPANY'S NAVAL SERVICE 287 
 
 Captain Frost now determined to injure the enemy's 
 rigging and sails aloft, and thus cripple him to such an 
 extent that LJ Eugenie would not be able to get the 
 windward berth. So chasing him he blazed away at 
 the Frenchman. It was an exciting chase and lasted 
 for three hours. So anxious was the privateer to 
 escape that she threw overboard guns and boats and 
 spars as she went : but at the end of this time the 
 Mornington had come up alongside and the French- 
 man's captain hailed and begged the Englishman to 
 cease firing as they had surrendered. Very shortly 
 the privateer became an English prize, though she 
 was found to be so crippled that she could not beat 
 to windward. But it was a great relief when the 
 news reached India that this mosquito craft had 
 been taken away from any further possibility of 
 preying on the peaceful merchant ships ; and by the 
 irony of events she who had formerly spent her 
 time in attacking these trading craft was now to 
 become their protector, for the Government added 
 her to the service and the command was given to the 
 senior lieutenant of the Mornington. 
 
 The Bombay dockyard by the end of the second 
 decade of the nineteenth century was building such 
 big warships as a '74 and '84 gun line-of-battle 
 ship, the latter being of 2289 tons. Other big 
 warships were also being constructed, and even those 
 most conservative of sailormen who had always 
 believed exclusively in oak were able after trial to 
 concede that better ships than these Indian teak 
 craft could not be desired. And the men and officers 
 were like their ships. Continuously they seemed to 
 be subject to service, and always they came through 
 it well. French and Dutch, pirates of the Indian 
 
288 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Ocean or the Persian Gulf, privateers of France, 
 England or America, it was much the same; the 
 Bombay Marine had to do its work, being hurried 
 here and there to fight and conquer. And when the 
 short intervals of respite occurred these hard-worked 
 people took up again their surveying duties between 
 those distant regions of the Cape of Good Hope 
 and the Sea of Japan and northwards to the Red 
 Sea and the Persian Gulf. At the close of the 
 Burmese War the officers and men of the Bombay 
 Marine received the thanks of both Houses of 
 Parliament, for no fewer than five of the Company's 
 cruisers had served throughout the campaign. 
 
 But the time was at hand for a series of changes 
 in the Bombay Marine. First of all we must call 
 attention to the law passed in the year 1826 by which 
 it was decreed that henceforth any naval force that 
 was sent out from England by his Majesty to the 
 East Indies on the representation of the East India 
 Company's Court of Directors, for the purpose of 
 hostilities against native powers, was to be paid for 
 by the Company. The Marine Board which con- 
 trolled this Company's naval force consisted of the 
 Superintendent, the Master- Attendant, the Com- 
 modore of the Harbour and the senior captain. To 
 be Commodore at Surat or in the Persian Gulf, or 
 Master- Attendant at Calcutta was also to enjoy one 
 of the plums of the service reserved for those who 
 had served long years. But after twenty-two years' 
 service an officer could retire with the following 
 pay:- 
 
 Master-Attendant and Commodore ,450 a year 
 
 Captain of the First Class . . 360 
 
 Captain of the Second Class . . 270 ,, 
 
 First Lieutenant . . 180 ,, 
 
THE COMPANY'S NAVAL SERVICE 289 
 
 If an officer were to retire after ten years' service, 
 owing to ill-health, he was granted one-half of the 
 above allowance. But except from the cause of 
 ill-health no officer was allowed to come home on 
 furlough under ten years. 
 
 During the year 1827 the whole condition of the 
 Bombay Marine was inquired into, and as a result 
 the service was changed from a Marine established 
 purely for war purposes into something of a curious 
 character. The officers were embodied into a regi- 
 ment called the Marine Corps, and a regular packet 
 service was established. The larger warships of the 
 service were made more efficient, new ships were 
 added, and a uniform approximating more to that 
 of the Royal Navy was sanctioned. Finally, from 
 the ist of May 1830 the Bombay Marine was 
 changed to the Indian Navy, and this in turn came 
 to an end in the year 1863. Beginning as an adjunct 
 of the East India Company it rendered a varied 
 and important series of services during a period 
 extending over two and a half centuries. It had 
 combated the hostility of the Portuguese and Dutch 
 in those early days when the English Company was 
 struggling to get a secure foothold in India. It had 
 made history along the Persian Gulf, it had inflicted 
 punishment on privateers and pirates, it had pro- 
 tected the mercantile East Indiamen, it had assisted 
 the British navy wrestling with the French foe in 
 the Orient. The Company's cruisers were, in fact, 
 excellent fighting ships for their size, commanded by 
 gallant officers and well manned by able crews. And 
 when at last this service was abolished, many were 
 the indignant outcries against such a step. How- 
 ever, it had long survived the existence of the Com- 
 
290 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 pany's maritime service, both as regards India and 
 China, and a new order of things in India had 
 already begun to be inaugurated. The story of the 
 East India Company's navy, as distinct from its 
 maritime or mercantile service, is that of a compara- 
 tively small force doing wonders for two and a half 
 centuries, showing great gallantry, enterprise, and 
 enduring much hardship. Its last years were con- 
 spicuously marked by red tape, yet the time had 
 clearly come for a change, and the last link was 
 snapped that had connected the old East Indiamen 
 of historic memory with the period of steamships 
 and the modern men-of-war. Sentiment is an 
 excellent thing in its way, and one of the undoubted 
 forces of the world, yet when it comes into collision 
 with efficiency it is not the latter which must give 
 way. To-day the Royal Indian Marine contains 
 just as gallant and able a personnel as in the past, 
 and the name of Lieutenant Bowers of this service, 
 who died in Captain Scott's expedition to the South 
 Pole, will at once be remembered. 
 
CHAPTER XX 
 
 OFFENCE AND DEFENCE 
 
 WE have made reference during the course of our 
 story to the grave risks which were run by the mer- 
 cantile East Indiamen in regard to pirates and priva- 
 teers. It will now be our duty to give some instances 
 of these and to show that if the captains and officers 
 of the Company's ships received big rewards for 
 their few voyages, they were certainly entitled to a 
 high rate of remuneration considering the dangers 
 which had to be encountered as regards ships, 
 cargoes and human lives. The very essential basis 
 of overseas trade is that trade-carriers shall be able 
 to go about their lawful business with some certainty 
 of not being attacked on the way. To-day, if a war 
 broke out between our own and some other country 
 possessing a navy, the merchant ships would be so 
 endangered that they would either have to remain in 
 port or else wait till our cruisers could convoy them. 
 
 To a certain extent this happened in the time 
 when the East Indiamen flourished. But some say 
 that to-day privateering could not be revived, and 
 in any case piracy, if not quite dead in the East (and 
 for that matter off the north coast of Africa), has 
 been so heavily crushed, thanks to the good work 
 of the Royal Navy, that it would not avail much 
 291 
 
292 
 
 against our big modern liners and freight-carriers. 
 But in the days with which this present volume is 
 concerned, piracy was a very real, flourishing con- 
 cern : and quite apart from all the long-drawn-out 
 hostilities between our country and other powers this 
 remained an eternal source of anxiety to an East 
 Indiaman captain. If he could not meet the pirate 
 on an equal footing the end would come quickly and 
 decisively, for the pirate captains were often enough 
 of British origin and just as fine seamen and fighters 
 as any in the employ of the East India Company. 
 
 Take the case of Captain John Bowen, who about 
 the year 1700 used to cruise over the Indian Ocean 
 between the Malabar coast and Madagascar, making 
 piracy his serious trade. One day he fell in with 
 an English East Indiaman homeward bound from 
 Bengal under the command of a Captain Conway. 
 In a very short space of time she had been over- 
 come, made a prize of, taken into port, and both her 
 hull and her cargo put up for sale to the highest 
 bidders, which consisted of three merchants glad to 
 obtain the spoil at their own price. A little later on 
 the East Indiaman Pembroke, having put into May- 
 otta for water, and being promptly boarded by the 
 boats of the pirates, whose men killed the chief mate 
 and one seaman, the ship was taken. Some idea of 
 the experiences which beset the East Indiamen may 
 be gathered from a letter date'd from Bombay on 
 1 6th November 1720 by a certain Captain Mackra, 
 who was in command of one of the Company's ships. 
 
 " We arrived on the 25th of July last," he writes, 
 " in company with the Greenwich, at Juanna, an 
 island not far from Madagascar. Putting in there 
 to refresh our men we found fourteen pirates who 
 
OFFENCE AND DEFENCE 293 
 
 came in their canoes from the Mayotta, where the 
 pirate ship to which they belonged, viz, the Indian 
 Queen, two hundred and fifty tons, twenty-eight 
 guns, and ninety men, commanded by Captain 
 Oliver de la Bouche bound from the Guinea Coast 
 to the East Indies had been bulged [i.e. "bilged"], 
 had been lost. They said they left the captain and 
 forty of their men building a new vessel to proceed 
 on their wicked designs. Captain Kirby and I con- 
 cluding that it might be of great service to the East 
 Indian Company to destroy such a nest of rogues, 
 were ready to sail for that purpose on the i7th of 
 August, about eight o'clock in the morning, when 
 we discovered two pirates standing into the bay of 
 Juanna, one of thirty-four, and the other of thirty- 
 six guns. I immediately went on board the Green- 
 wich, where they seemed very diligent in preparation 
 for an engagement, and I left Captain Kirby with 
 mutual promises of standing by each other. I then 
 unmoored, got under sail, and brought two boats 
 ahead to row me close to the Greenwich : but he 
 being open to a valley and a breeze, made the best 
 of his way from me : which an Ostender * in our 
 company, of twenty-two guns, seeing, did the same, 
 though the captain had promised heartily to engage 
 with us, and I believe would have been as good as 
 his word, if Captain Kirby had kept his. About 
 half-an-hour after twelve, I called several times to 
 the Greenwich to bear down to our assistance, and 
 fired a shot at him, but to no purpose : for though 
 we did not doubt but he would join us because, when 
 he got about a league from us he brought his ship 
 
 * That is to say a ship belonging to the Ostend East India 
 Company. 
 
294 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 to and looked on, yet both he and the Ostender 
 basely deserted us, and left us engaged with bar- 
 barous and inhuman enemies, with their black and 
 bloody flags hanging over us, without the least 
 appearance of ever escaping, but to be cut to pieces. 
 But God, in his good providence, determined other- 
 wise : for notwithstanding their superiority, we en- 
 gaged them both about three hours : during which 
 time the biggest of them received some shot betwixt 
 wind and water, which made her keep off a little to 
 stop her leaks. The other endeavoured all she could 
 to board us, by rowing with her oars, being within 
 half a ship's length of us above an hour : but by 
 good fortune we shot all her oars to pieces, which 
 prevented them, and by consequence saved our 
 lives. 
 
 " About four o'clock most of the officers and men 
 posted on the quarter-deck being killed and 
 wounded, the largest ship making up to us with 
 diligence, being still within a cable's length of us, 
 often giving us a broadside, there being now no 
 hopes of Capt. Kirby coming to our assistance, we 
 endeavoured to run ashore : and though we drew 
 four feet more of water than the pirate, it pleased 
 God that he struck on a higher ground than happily 
 we fell in with : so was disappointed a second time 
 from boarding us. Here we had a more violent 
 engagement than before : all my officers and most of 
 my men behaved with unexpected courage : and, as 
 we had a considerable advantage by having a broad- 
 side to his bow, we did him great damage : so, that 
 had Captain Kirby come in then, I believe we 
 should have taken both the vessels, for we had one 
 of them sure : but the other pirate (who was still 
 

 & 
 
OFFENCE AND DEFENCE 295 
 
 firing at us) seeing the Greenwich did not offer to 
 assist us, supplied his consort with three boats full 
 of fresh men. About five in the evening the Green- 
 wich stood clear away to sea, leaving us struggling 
 hard for life, in the very jaws of death : which the 
 other pirate that was afloat seeing, got a warp out, 
 and was hauling under our stern. 
 
 ' By this time many of my men being killed and 
 wounded, and no hopes left us of escaping being 
 all murdered by enraged barbarous conquerors, I 
 ordered all that could to get into the long-boat, under 
 the cover of the smoke of our guns : so that, with 
 what some did in boats, and others by swimming, 
 most of us that were able got ashore by seven o'clock. 
 When the pirates came aboard, they cut three of our 
 wounded men to pieces. I with some of my people 
 made what haste I could to King's town, twenty-five 
 miles from us, where I arrived next day, almost dead 
 with the fatigue and loss of blood, having been 
 sorely wounded in the head by a musket-ball. 
 
 " At this town I heard that the pirates had offered 
 ten thousand dollars to the country people to bring 
 me in, which many of them would have accepted, 
 only they knew the king and all his chief people were 
 in my interest. Meantime I caused a report to be 
 circulated that I was dead of my wounds, which 
 much abated their fury. About ten days after, being 
 pretty well recovered, and hoping the malice of our 
 enemy was near over, I began to consider the dismal 
 condition we were reduced to : being in a place where 
 we had no hopes of getting a passage home, all of 
 us in a manner naked, not having had time to bring 
 with us either a shirt or a pair of shoes, except what 
 we had on. Having obtained leave to go on board 
 
296 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the pirates with a promise of safety, several of the 
 chief of them knew me, and some of them had sailed 
 with me, which I found to be of great advantage; 
 because, notwithstanding their promise, some of 
 them would have cut me to pieces, and all that would 
 not enter with them, had it not been for their chief 
 captain, Edward England, and some others whom I 
 knew. They talked of burning one of their ships, 
 which we had so entirely disabled as to be no farther 
 useful to them, and to fit the Cassandra in her room. 
 But in the end I managed the affair so well, that they 
 made me a present of the said shattered ship, which 
 was Dutch built, and called the Fancy : her burden 
 was about three hundred tons. I procured also a 
 hundred and twenty-nine bales of the Company's 
 cloth, though they would not give me a rag of my 
 own clothes. 
 
 " They sailed on the 3rd of September : and I, 
 with the jury masts, and such old sails as they left 
 me, made a shift to do the like on the 8th, together 
 with forty-three of my ship's crew, including two 
 passengers and twelve soldiers : having no more 
 than five tuns of water aboard. After a passage of 
 forty-eight days, I arrived here on the 26th of 
 October, almost naked and starved, having been 
 reduced to a pint of water a day, and almost in 
 despair of ever seeing land, by reason of the calms 
 we met with between the coast of Arabia and 
 Malabar. 
 
 " We had in all thirteen men killed and twenty- 
 four wounded : and we were told that we destroyed 
 about ninety or a hundred of the pirates. When they 
 left us, there were about three hundred whites and 
 eight blacks in both ships. I am persuaded had our 
 
OFFENCE AND DEFENCE 297 
 
 consort of the Greenwich done his duty, we had 
 destroyed both of them, and got two hundred 
 thousand pounds for our owners and selves : where- 
 as the loss of the Cassandra may justly be imputed 
 to his deserting us. I have delivered all the bales 
 that were given me into the company's warehouse, 
 for which the governor and council have ordered me 
 a reward. Our governor, Mr Boon, who is extremely 
 kind and civil to me, had ordered me home with the 
 packet : but Captain Harvey who had a prior 
 promise, being come in with the fleet, goes in my 
 room. The governor had promised me a country 
 voyage to help to make up my losses, and would 
 have me stay and accompany him to England next 
 year." 
 
 This Captain England was a notorious sea-pirate 
 and had made many a capture of an innocent mer- 
 chant ship, and now commanded the Victory, which 
 as the Peterborough he had previously captured. 
 He used Madagascar as his base for attacking East 
 Indiamen, though he had sailed into most of the seas 
 of the world on the look-out for his victims. It was 
 only after remaining a short time at Madagascar that 
 they had proceed to Juanna and fallen in with the 
 two English East Indiamen and one Ostender. 
 Captain Mackra was certainly lucky to have got off 
 with his life and also with even a crippled ship to 
 reach India. But England, villain that he was, 
 respected Mackra as a brave seaman, and with diffi- 
 culty succeeded in restraining the pirate crew from 
 exhausting their fury upon the East Indiaman 
 captain. In fact this generosity towards Mackra 
 was eventually the undoing of England, for the crew 
 considered the treatment had not been in accordance 
 
298 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 with the severe traditions of pirates, and England 
 was deprived of his command. 
 
 Captains of the East Indiamen had to be masters 
 of resource no less than able tacticians and ship- 
 masters. In the month of January 1797 the French 
 R ear-Admiral Sercey was splendidly outwitted by 
 the captain of one of the East India Company's 
 merchant ships. It happened on this wise. Admiral 
 Sercey was commanding a squadron of six frigates 
 and was returning to the Isle of France. When he 
 was off the east end of Java he descried what 
 appeared to be a considerable force, and before the 
 day had ended counted himself very fortunate to 
 have escaped them. That, indeed, was how it 
 appeared to him. But looked at from the opposite 
 point of view we have to consider half-a-dozen 
 homeward-bound East Indiamen all richly laden, and 
 not one of them a warship. The commodore of this 
 merchant squadron was Captain Charles Lennox, 
 whose ship was the Woodford, On the morning of 
 the day mentioned he was alarmed to see Admiral 
 Sercey's frigate squadron and feared for the safety 
 of the Indiamen under his own charge. Here was 
 a dilemma indeed. These six merchantmen were 
 not the equal of the six frigates in a fight : therefore 
 an engagement must be avoided. But, on the other 
 hand, if the merchantmen attempted to crowd on all 
 sail and run away this would be an admission of 
 inferior strength and the Frenchman would be bound 
 to attack at once, 
 
 So with much ingenuity Lennox devised a piece 
 of bluff. In order to deceive Sercey, the English 
 commodore hoisted the blue flag of the French Rear- 
 Admiral Rainier at the mizen, and made all the 
 
OFFENCE AND DEFENCE 299 
 
 other five ships to hoist pennants and ensigns to 
 correspond, for it must be remembered that in 
 appearance a French frigate and one of the Com- 
 pany's East Indiamen were very similar at a distance. 
 In addition he had the audacity to detach two of his 
 ships and send them on to reconnoitre the French 
 squadron. These approached the French recon- 
 noitring frigate Cybele, and the latter's captain, 
 having had a good look at the enemy, made the 
 signal at her mast-head, " The enemy is superior in 
 force to the French," and crowding on sail rejoined 
 Sercey's squadron. The French admiral therefore 
 caused his ships to make sail and escape, though 
 when one of his vessels the Forte had the mis- 
 fortune to carry away her maintopmast he was more 
 than surprised to notice that the English did not 
 continue their chase. But inasmuch as the captain 
 of the CybHe had assured him that the enemy's 
 force consisted of two line-of-battle ships and four 
 frigates he felt that he was justified in retreating and 
 declining fight. So it came about that the six East 
 Indiamen were able to congratulate themselves on 
 escaping, and the French rear-admiral was no less 
 pleased to have avoided an engagement. But you 
 may judge of the latter's anger and chagrin four 
 weeks later when, on arriving at the Isle of France, 
 he learned that Admiral Rainier had not been near 
 the straits (where the East Indiamen were sighted), 
 and that therefore six rich merchant ships which 
 ought to have been captured had been allowed 
 literally to slip through his fingers. 
 
 From time immemorial the Indian Ocean and the 
 Gulf of Persia had been the happy hunting-ground 
 of pirates, and the mouth of the Red Sea, from its 
 
300 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 strategical position, was another favourite resort. 
 There is on record an incident belonging to the year 
 1696, when the pirates attacked a Bombay ship com- 
 manded by an Englishman named Sawbridge, whose 
 cargo consisted of Arab horses for Surat. The 
 pirates were able to seize the ship, whereupon Saw- 
 bridge began to expostulate with them as to their 
 manner of life. On this they ordered him to be 
 silent, but as he continued to speak they took a sail- 
 needle and twine and sewed his lips together, keep- 
 ing him like this for several hours with his hands tied 
 behind him. They then at length unloosed both his 
 hands and his lips and took him on board their own 
 ship, and having successfully plundered Sawbridge's 
 vessel they set it on fire, burning both her and the 
 horses. Sawbridge was set ashore at Aden, together 
 with his people, but it is not surprising to learn that 
 he soon died. 
 
 Now the pirate in this case was not an Oriental, 
 but that notorious blackguard Captain Avery, who 
 certainly knew better. The pirates, however, of 
 whom we are now to speak as enemies of the East 
 Indiamen ships were those Easterns who dwelt on 
 the Arabian side of the Persian Gulf and were 
 known by the name of Joassamees. They were sea- 
 men by nature and occupation, trading with their 
 vessels to Bussorah, Bushire, Muscat and India. 
 Finding that to plunder the big merchant ships which 
 now came to the Persian Gulf was a profitable con- 
 cern, they applied themselves with great assiduity to 
 that task, and became even more ambitious. About 
 the year 1797 one of the East India Company's war- 
 ships was lying at anchor in the inner roads of 
 Bushire (on the Persian side of the Gulf). Her 
 
OFFENCE AND DEFENCE 301 
 
 name was the Viper and she carried ten guns. 
 Anchored in the harbour were some Joassamee 
 dhows, but as they had always respected or feared 
 the British flag no hostile measures had been taken 
 against them by British ships. The commanders of 
 these dhows had applied to the Persian agent of the 
 East India Company for a supply of gunpowder and 
 cannon shot, and as the agent had no suspicion of 
 their intentions he furnished them with an order to 
 the commanding officer on board for the quantity 
 required. 
 
 The captain of the Viper was ashore at the time in 
 the agent's house, but as the order was produced to 
 the officer on board the powder and shot were 
 delivered and the dhows subsequently made sail. 
 At this moment the crew of the Viper were below at 
 breakfast, when suddenly they were alarmed by a 
 cannonade from two of the dhows directed at the 
 Viper. The Joassamees attempted to board, but the 
 English officers leaping on deck sent the crew to 
 quarters, cut the Viper's cable and got sail upon her 
 so that she might have the advantage of manoeuvr- 
 ing. A regular engagement now followed between 
 the Viper and four dhows, all being armed with guns 
 and full of men. The commanding officer of the 
 Viper was wounded, but after tying round a hand- 
 kerchief still kept the deck, till he fell with a ball 
 entering his forehead. The command then devolved 
 on a midshipman, who continued the fight with great 
 bravery, and the result was that the dhows were 
 beaten off and chased out to sea. 
 
 Reverting now to the Company's purely mercan- 
 tile ships it is well to see how they were armed to 
 withstand the attacks of their enemies. On another 
 
302 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 page the reader will find the lines of one of the finest 
 East Indiamen of the early nineteenth century. This 
 was one of the Company's ships which carried 
 freight and passengers between England and India 
 and was not one of their cruisers belonging to the 
 Bombay Marine. We may take this vessel as typical 
 of the biggest and most formidable type of their 
 ships at the time of which we are speaking. She 
 measured 165 feet 6J inches long. Her length of 
 keel (measured for tonnage) was 134 feet. Her 
 extreme breadth was 42 feet, and the depth of her 
 hold 17 feet, her burthen working out at 1257 tons. 
 Such a ship was armed with twenty-six i8-pounders 
 on her middle deck and ten i8-pounders on her 
 upper deck, with two more guns in the after ports as 
 stern-chasers. One of the greatest authorities on 
 shipbuilding and naval architecture of that time, who 
 himself was a Fellow of the Royal Society, went so 
 far as to state that the biggest East Indiamen were 
 not safe owing to their bad design below water, 
 adding that whenever these vessels got ashore in 
 bad weather they usually broke their floors and then 
 filled with water so weakly constructed were they 
 below. 
 
 With respect to the armament of these ships, 
 James, the famous naval historian, in commenting 
 on that incident in which Commodore Dance beat 
 off the French Admiral Linois (already related in 
 another chapter), says that each of the Indiamen 
 under Dance carried from thirty to thirty-six guns 
 apiece, but the strongest of them was not a match 
 for the smallest 36-gun French frigate, and some of 
 these East Indiamen would have found it difficult 
 to avoid yielding to the 2 2 -gun corvette. Speaking 
 
OFFENCE AND DEFENCE 303 
 
 of these East Indiamen, he says : " Some of the 
 ships carried upon the main deck 26 medium 
 i8-pounders, or ' carronades,' weighing about 28 
 cwt. and of very little use : guns of this description, 
 indeed, have long since been exploded. Ten 
 i8-pounder carronades on the quarter-deck made up 
 the 36 guns. Others of the ships, and those among 
 the largest, mounted long 12 and 6 pounders. No 
 one of the crews, we believe, exceeded 140 men, and 
 that number included Chinese, Lascars, etc. More- 
 over in fitting the ships, so much more attention had 
 been paid to stowage than to the means of attack 
 and defence, that one and sometimes two butts of 
 water were lashed beween the guns, and the decks 
 in general greatly lumbered." 
 
 The fact was that the old East Indiamen had to 
 go about their work under very trying conditions. 
 They could not be built of more than a certain ton- 
 nage for the reason that shipbuilders were not equal 
 to the task. Within their limited size of about 140 
 feet on the keel a very great deal had to be got in. 
 First and most important of all, the ship must be able 
 to carry a large amount of cargo. Without this she 
 would not be of service to the East India Company. 
 Secondly, she carried passengers and a large crew. 
 This meant that the designer's ingenuity was further 
 taxed to find accommodation for all. Then, although 
 she had to be strong enough to carry all her arma- 
 ment, yet she had to make as fast a passage as she 
 could with safety and caution. In short, like all 
 other ships she was a compromise, but the real diffi- 
 culty was to combine space, speed and fighting 
 strength without one item ousting the other. To-day 
 the designer of our merchant ships has a difficult 
 
304 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 problem ; but he has not to consider so much how his 
 ship would fare in an engagement, but how he can 
 get out of her the greatest speed combined with the 
 maximum amount of room for passengers and 
 cargo. He has to work on all sorts of data obtained 
 from actual experience of years and experiments 
 made in tanks with wax models. But the designers 
 and builders of the old East Indiamen were tied 
 down to the frigate type and bound by convention. 
 There was very little science in shipbuilding, and 
 practically all that they could do was to modify very 
 slightly the models which had been in vogue for so 
 many generations. If they had been in possession of 
 greater theoretical knowledge, if they could have 
 been allowed to eliminate all thought of the ship 
 being a fighting unit, we should have seen, no doubt, 
 the clipper era appearing some years before it 
 actually did. It is easy enough to find fault with the 
 old East Indiamen for their clumsiness, but it is 
 much more just to remember the conditions which 
 were handicapping the designers and builders of 
 those times. 
 
CHAPTER XXI 
 
 THE " WARREN HASTINGS " AND THE " PIEMONTAISE " 
 
 ONE of the most gallant duels which was ever fought 
 between a merchant ship and a man-of-war is that 
 which occurred in the year 1805 : and though event- 
 ually the former was at last captured, yet the engage- 
 ment none the less remains to her credit, since the 
 fight lasted for four hours and the enemy was com- 
 pelled to haul off several times during the action. 
 The incident, in fact, affords an excellent example 
 of the readiness for hostilities which was so marked 
 a feature of the old East Indiamen. James has 
 happily preserved to posterity a full account of this, 
 although in some instances he has not always done 
 full credit to the gallantry and determination of 
 these merchant ships. And I shall make no apology 
 for availing myself of his detailed story. 
 
 The Warren Hastings was a vessel of 1200 tons, 
 was armed with 44 guns, and her crew consisted of 
 196 men and boys. She was therefore in size, in 
 armament and crew a distinctly formidable ship, her 
 commander being Captain Thomas Larkins. On 
 the 1 7th of February 1805 she left Portsmouth 
 bound for China. This was one of the most historic 
 years in the whole history of the sea, and a few 
 months later the Battle of Trafalgar brought matters 
 
 u 305 
 
306 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 to a crisis. It was obvious that in consequence of 
 the eventful times no ship, not even an East India- 
 man, could dare to begin a voyage unless special 
 precautions had been taken to render her as fully 
 equipped against a French frigate as both money 
 and the ship's own limitations would permit. 
 
 In the case of so valuable a ship as the Warren 
 Hastings extraordinary precautions had been taken 
 to make her as powerful as possible. Her forty-four 
 guns were composed as follows. She carried on her 
 main or lower deck twenty-six medium i8-pounders, 
 fourteen carronades (i8-pounders) on her upper 
 deck, and four carronades (i2-pounders) on her 
 poop. The medium gun was six feet in length, and 
 weighed about 26| cwt. It will be seen that this was 
 a smaller weapon than that used in the Royal Navy, 
 for the common i8-pounder of the latter measured 
 nine feet long, and weighed 42 cwt. The East India- 
 man's medium i8-pounder when run out did not 
 reach out more than a foot from the ship's side. The 
 i8-pounder carronade was five feet long, and 
 weighed about 15 \ cwt. The 12 -pounder was 3! 
 feet long and weighed about 8| cwt. The Warren 
 Hastings' carronades were mounted, says James, 
 " upon a carriage resembling Cover's in every par- 
 ticular but the only essential one, the having of 
 rollers adapted to a groove in the slide. The con- 
 sequence of this silly evasion of an ingenious man's 
 patent was, that the whole of the ship's quarter-deck 
 and poop guns became utterly useless, after only a 
 few rounds had been fired from them. The first 
 discovery of any imperfection in the new carriage 
 occurred at exercise : but a plentiful supply of black- 
 lead upon the upper surface of the slide lessened the 
 
X ''- 
 
 3 i 
 
WARREN HASTINGS AND PI&MONTAISE 307 
 
 friction, and, with the aid of an additional hand, 
 enabled the gun to be run out. On account, how- 
 ever, of the rain, and the salt water in washing the 
 deck, the application of blacklead was obliged to 
 be repeated every time of exercise." 
 
 The Warren Hastings, after leaving Portsmouth 
 on the day mentioned, made a safe and uneventful 
 passage to China and duly began her return journey. 
 But this time she was armed not quite so strongly. 
 Four of her main-deck ports had been caulked up 
 so as to afford additional space for a storeroom, and 
 the four guns had been put away in the hold. Nor 
 had she so good a crew, for forty Chinamen had 
 decided to remain at Canton, and there was the usual 
 impressment from the British navy, a warship reliev- 
 ing the Warren Hastings of eighteen English sea- 
 men : and you can be sure they were some of the 
 best men in the ship. In addition to the four guns 
 already mentioned, four of the i8-pounder carron- 
 ades were also transferred to the hold. The net 
 result was that when she put to sea for her homeward 
 voyage she mounted 36 guns only and carried a crew 
 of 138 men and boys. 
 
 It was on the 2ist of June at 7.30 in the morning 
 that, while this ship was foaming along under a 
 smart press of canvas before a strong breeze, she 
 descried a strange ship under treble-reefed topsails 
 and courses. This turned out to be the French 
 frigate Piemontaise of 40 guns, commanded by 
 Captain Jacques Epron. This ship was armed 
 rather differently from the rest of French frigates 
 which were so famous at this period, and as we are 
 about to watch the contest between her and the India- 
 man it will be well to notice these details. The 
 
308 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Piemontaise had the usual twenty-eight long 
 i8-pounders on her main-deck. On her quarter- 
 deck and forecastle she mounted ten iron and two 
 brass 36-pounder carronades, two long French 
 8-pounders, and four long English g-pounders, these 
 having belonged to the British frigate Jason, which 
 had been compelled to throw them overboard when 
 she grounde'd off Pointe de la Trenche at the capture 
 of the Seine in 1798. 
 
 In addition to her forty-six carriage guns, the 
 Frenchmen also carried swivel guns and musketoons 
 in her tops and along her gunwales. On each fore 
 and main yard-arm there was fixed a tripod to 
 contain a shell weighing a quarter of a ton, the idea 
 being that when in combat she got alongside another 
 ship, the shell was to have its fuse lighted by a man 
 lying out on the yard. It would then be thrown 
 from the tripod, fall on the enemy's deck, pass 
 through to the deck below, and then exploding 
 would cause wholesale destruction. Meanwhile, the 
 French crew would rush on board, profiting by this 
 confusion, and the capture of the Frenchman's enemy 
 would be an easier matter. The French crew would 
 also be armed each with a dagger in the buttonholes 
 of his jacket in addition to the boarding-pike which 
 he would hold in his hand. These tactics were, even 
 at the beginning of the nineteenth century, a curious 
 survival of the mediaeval methods of fighting. 
 Gunnery was not the chief reliance, but was looked 
 upon merely as a means for quelling the enemy so 
 that she might be boarded and a hand-to-hand fight 
 begun. In seems strange in this twentieth century, 
 when a battleship would open fire at six miles and be 
 pretty sure to keep a good distance from its opponent, 
 
WARREN HASTINGS AND PI^MONTAISE 309 
 
 that the older fashion should have survived so long. 
 If the French frigates of yesterday were the German 
 light cruisers of to-day, and the old East Indiamen 
 were the crack ships of the Cunard Line of the 
 P. & O., the latter could, if desired, be attacked and 
 sunk without the vessels ever getting within several 
 miles of each other, let alone any thought of board- 
 ing, unless the German was determined to spare 
 human life, keep within the limits of international 
 law and take the merchant ship captive. Thus have 
 the conditions changed in the course of time. 
 
 But to return to the incident before us. An hour 
 and a half after sighting the Frenchman, the Warren 
 Hastings noticed that the frigate was shaking out 
 her reefs from her topsails and was approaching the 
 English ship, the latter still keeping on her course. 
 At half-past nine that morning the frigate was fast 
 gaining on the Indiaman, and nevertheless set her 
 topgallant-sails as well as her fore and maintopmast 
 stuns'ls. Her next act was to hoist an English blue 
 ensign and pennant. However, the skipper of the 
 Warren Hastings was far too experienced in the 
 ways of the sea to be taken in by this piece of bluff, 
 and still kept his ship on her way. He replied to 
 the signals by hoisting his English colours and 
 making the private signal, of which we have spoken 
 elsewhere in this volume. The Frenchman, how- 
 ever, made no reply to this private signal, so it was 
 pretty certain that there was treachery. 
 
 On came the frigate, tearing through the water 
 with the smart breeze, doing good work all the time. 
 Meanwhile, the East Indiaman's commander was 
 seeing that everything was in readiness for obvious 
 impending trouble. At eleven o'clock he shortened 
 
310 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 sail, hauled up a point and cleared his ship for 
 action. One hour later the frigate also took in her 
 " fancy " canvas her stuns'ls and her staysails, but 
 also her mainsail too. And having approached to 
 within one mile hauled down her English colours 
 and sent up her French flag. She had intentionally 
 chosen the leeward position, because of the high 
 wind, and opened fire at the Indiaman's port quarter 
 within musket-shot distance that is to say, about 
 four hundred yards away ; and so soon as the India- 
 man could bring her guns to bear this fire was re- 
 turned. This firing went on for about a quarter of 
 an hour, when the frigate bore away, let her sails 
 fill, and went on ahead. The only damage that had 
 been done to the Indiaman was to carry away part 
 of the rigging. 
 
 After the frigate had got about a mile and a half 
 ahead the latter tacked, passed close to leeward of 
 the Warren Hastings again, and once more a smart 
 fire was exchanged. This time several of the Warren 
 Hastings' crew were killed and wounded, and in addi- 
 tion the whole of the port fore shrouds, the foretop- 
 sail tie, her chief running gear, her stays and her 
 ensign were cut away and her foremast seriously 
 injured. The ensign, however, was quickly rehoisted 
 at the maintopgallant-masthead. Quickly the India- 
 man repaired her damage, but then the frigate 
 having put about astern of the Indiaman began the 
 action a third time, though this did little more 
 damage than crippling the merchant ship's foremast 
 altogether. Owing to this fact and the heavy sea 
 and high wind the Warren Hastings could carry sail 
 only on her main and mizen masts. The result was 
 
WARREN HASTINGS AND PI&MONTAISE 311 
 
 that the Frenchman could run round her even more 
 easily than before. 
 
 This time she went ahead again, tacked, and was 
 about to make a further onslaught when the Warren 
 Hastings opened a hot fire. The Frenchman replied, 
 but it was seen that the Englishman was being 
 injured still more and more. She was now injured 
 not merely at her foremast, but at her main 
 too. Her standing and running rigging had also 
 been considerably damaged, two quarter-deck guns 
 were disabled, five men had been killed and others 
 were wounded. However, in this crippled state she 
 had to sustain a fifth attack. For the frigate, coming 
 on the Indiaman's port quarter, poured in a heavy 
 and destructive fire which smashed the driver-boom 
 to splinters, and soon the mizen-mast went. And as 
 it fell it succeeded in disabling every effective gun 
 on the upper deck. Troubles seldom come singly, 
 and in addition to these misfortunes the lower deck 
 was on fire from the shot which had entered the 
 counter, and as the nail of the tiller rope on the 
 barrel of the steering wheel had drawn, the rudder 
 became useless. 
 
 The surgeon was in the act of amputating and 
 dressing the wounded when a shot entered and 
 destroyed the whole of his instruments. Altogether 
 it was a bad business, and the poor, crippled India- 
 man, after having done her best to fight against a 
 superior foe, was reluctantly compelled to lower her 
 colours just before five o'clock that evening. She 
 had been rendered almost a mere hulk, she had lost 
 her purser and six men all killed. Thirteen more, 
 including her chief, third and sixth officers and her 
 surgeon's mate had been wounded, whereas the 
 
312 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 Frenchman out of her enormous crew of 385 men 
 and boys had lost only seven men killed and five 
 badly wounded. Her hull was practically undam- 
 aged and her rigging and sails were only partially 
 injured. But this, of course, was natural enough, 
 for the frigate's weight of broadside was 533 Ib. as 
 against the Indiaman's 312 Ib. The Indiaman 
 carried only 138 men and boys, as against the 
 Frenchman's 385. 
 
 But it is necessary also to bear in mind that a 
 warship exists solely for the purpose of being an 
 efficient fighting unit. This frigate had to think of 
 nothing else. Whenever she cruised about, her 
 intention was to find some opportunity of inflicting 
 injury on an English ship. The Indiaman, on the 
 other hand, had to consider primarily how best she 
 could carry the greatest amount of cargo, how she 
 could get this to port in the quickest manner : and 
 then only in a secondary sense had she to contem- 
 plate being an able fighter. Necessarily, therefore, 
 the frigate was always better armed and more ready 
 for war. It so happened that the Warren Hastings 
 was still further handicapped by the fact that she 
 could make very little use of her upper deck and 
 poop batteries after the second or third round of 
 shot. Owing to lack of men she could man only 
 eight out of her eleven guns on her lower deck, while 
 the frigate was in no way impeded. 
 
 " Under these circumstances," says James, " the 
 defence made by the Warren Hastings, protracted as 
 it was to four hours and a half, displayed a highly 
 commendable zeal and perseverance on the part of 
 Captain Larkins, his officers, and ship's company, 
 but with all their gallant efforts, the latter could 
 
WARREN HASTINGS AND PI&MONTAISE 313 
 
 never have succeeded in capturing although, had 
 the ship's guns been in an effective state, they might, 
 in beating off an antagonist so well armed, manned, 
 and appointed as the Piemontaise." 
 
 But we have not yet concluded. The Warren 
 Hastings being dismasted, and a heavy sea running, 
 the ship was allowed to fall off. And as the 
 French frigate was lying close to leeward, under 
 three topsails, with the mizen one aback and the main 
 one on the shake, this warship had to bear up to 
 avoid collision with the Indiaman. The former 
 filled her maintopsail, but as there was none left at 
 the helm she luffed up into the wind and fouled 
 the Warren Hastings on the latter's port bow. You 
 can readily imagine that with such a sea running 
 there followed a series of sickening thuds as these 
 two heavy ships banged against each other's sides. 
 But the situation was now suitable for boarding 
 tactics, and the Frenchmen, led by the first lieuten- 
 ant, poured aboard the merchant ship. But they 
 came not as conquerors, but as assassins, with up- 
 lifted daggers and threatening the lives of all. 
 
 One of these villains dragged the English captain 
 about the ship, accusing him of an attempt to run 
 the frigate down in order to cripple her masts. The 
 first lieutenant also stabbed the captain on the right 
 side. It was a brutal affray, which cannot be said to 
 redound to the credit of any naval officer. Captain 
 Larkins, brave man though he was, soon fainted 
 through loss of blood, and was then ordered on 
 board the frigate. It should be added that the first 
 lieutenant and many of his men were highly intoxi- 
 cated at the time and so cannot be held fully 
 responsible for their base treatment of their victims. 
 
314 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 The second officer, the surgeon and the boatswain's 
 mate were also stabbed, and a midshipman was 
 pierced in seven different places by the first lieuten- 
 ant. The ship was afterwards pillaged by this 
 drunken gang^ but after such excesses had been 
 allowed to have their way the French captain did 
 his best to make the survivors comfortable. The 
 Piemontaise then steered for the Isle of France, 
 taking her fine prize in tow, one of the handsomest 
 vessels which the Honourable East India Company 
 ever possessed. Captor and captive arrived at the Isle 
 of France on the 4th of July, and a strange sight these 
 two must have made as they proceeded. The reader 
 may have marvelled that the Piemontaise had been 
 able to overhaul the Warren Hastings so quickly 
 and to manoeuvre so easily when she kept returning 
 to make one attack after another. But these French 
 frigates were splendid craft and wonderfully fast, 
 for although the East Indiamen were built on frigate 
 lines more or less, yet they were modified to allow 
 of a large cargo being carried, and this of course 
 could be done only by sacrificing speed possibility. 
 Some idea of the pace which these French frigates 
 could reach may be gathered from the statement that 
 the Piemontaise^ in a moderate breeze, carrying three 
 single-reefed topsails, foresail and mizen staysail, 
 was able to tow her prize, a deeply laden ship of 
 bigger tonnage than herself, having very small jury- 
 sail set, at the rate of seven and a half knots an 
 hour. 
 
 This fight and capture show the kind of adventure 
 that was always imminent during a great portion of 
 the East Indiaman period. It is almost difficult for 
 us who travel with safety and punctuality in modern 
 
steamship liners to realise the uncertainty, the 
 danger and anxieties with which the old merchant 
 ships to the East proceeded on their way. There 
 was not a species of disaster peculiar to maritime 
 travel that was not ready to bring the career of such 
 fine ships to a speedy end. Every conceivable kind 
 of enemy seemed to be lying in wait for these craft : 
 and the wonder really is, not that they were so often 
 lost, but that they got to port. Knowing, as we do, 
 something of the characters of the commanders who 
 took these East Indiamen over the ocean, we need 
 not be altogether surprised that their sagacity, their 
 determination, leadership, seamanship and ability as 
 navigators and tacticians when tested did so much 
 for the honour of their service and for the safety 
 of the ships and cargoes which the Company en- 
 trusted to their care. They were men of whom the 
 Company and the country had every right to be 
 proud. 
 
CHAPTER XXII 
 
 PIRATES AND FRENCH FRIGATES 
 
 ANOTHER pirate who was a thorn in the flesh to the 
 East Indiamen was a man named Jean Lafitte, who 
 was born at St Malo. This man was no stranger 
 to the Eastern seas. He had been appointed mate 
 of a French East Indiaman which was bound from 
 Europe to Madras. But on the way out the ship 
 encountered bad weather off the Cape of Good Hope, 
 by which she was so damaged that the captain deter- 
 mined to call at Mauritius : and a quarrel having 
 sprung up between Lafitte and the captain, the former 
 decided to quit the ship at the island. Now there 
 were several privateers or pirates fitting out at this 
 island, and before long Lafitte became captain of 
 one of these vessels. 
 
 For a time he cruised about the seas robbing what- 
 soever ships he could, but was eventually chased by 
 an English frigate as far north as the Equator : and 
 from there he later on came south and proceeded 
 to the Bay of Bengal to obtain provisions. His ship 
 was of 200 tons, with only two guns and twenty-six 
 men. This should be noted, because it shows how 
 much inferior as a fighting unit she was to any 
 Indiaman. Nevertheless whilst off the Bengal 
 coast he fell in with the East Indiaman Pagoda, 
 
 316 
 
PIRATES AND FRENCH FRIGATES 317 
 
 which was armed with twenty-six 12 -pounders and 
 had a crew of a hundred and fifty men. With this 
 disparity in strength it was obvious that Lafitte could 
 only hope for victory by employing artifice. So he 
 manoeuvred as if he were a pilot for the Ganges 
 ready at his station cruising about. The Pagoda 
 came along and was quite taken in by this trickery, 
 and, to cut the story short, when it was all too late 
 to get out of the trap, the East Indiaman found 
 Lafitte's ship alongside, and the pirate, together 
 with his men, suddenly leapt on board the merchant 
 ship, overcame every opposition and very speedily 
 captured the ship. And it was this same pirate who 
 at a later date became skipper of that notorious Con- 
 fiance of which we have had need to speak in this 
 volume. 
 
 We pass over the intervening period until we come 
 to the year 1807, when we find Lafitte during the 
 month of October still on the prowl. Off the Sand 
 Heads he fell in with the East Indiaman Queen, a 
 vessel of about 800 tons, a crew of nearly four 
 hundred, and carrying forty guns. She was such a 
 fine ship that this Frenchman determined to become 
 her owner. Compared with the pirate the Queen, 
 with her tall masts and high freeboard, her guns and 
 crew, seemed absurdly superior to the smaller vessel. 
 But Lafitte was as plucky as he was adventurous, 
 and this apparent inequality only added zest to 
 his plans. As the two ships were getting nearer and 
 nearer, he exhorted his men with that wild, almost 
 fanatical enthusiasm which was usually an electrify- 
 ing force to a band of desperadoes, and then having 
 manoeuvred his ship with no little cleverness, 
 brought her alongside the Indiaman. Just as he did 
 
318 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 this the English vessel greeted him with a broadside, 
 but the Frenchman was expecting this, and ordered 
 his men to lie flat on the deck. And when the first 
 fire had been made, the pirates all got up again, and 
 from the yards and tops hurled down bombs and 
 grenades into the Indiaman's forecastle. 
 
 These tactics entirely surprised the Queeris cap- 
 tain, and great havoc was wrought. Lafitte realising 
 the amount of consternation which had now been 
 caused sent aboard the Queen forty of his men with 
 pistols in their hands and daggers between their 
 teeth, and as soon as their feet touched the India- 
 man's deck they drove the terrified and astonished 
 crowd into the steerage, where the latter endeavoured 
 to defend themselves as best they could. Lafitte 
 now reinforced his forty men with another division, 
 and himself went as their leader, and the result was 
 that the Queen's captain was killed and the rest of 
 the survivors were swept into one terror-stricken 
 crowd. He then caused a gun to be loaded with 
 grape and pointed to the place where the crowd were 
 gathered, and threatened to blow them into eternity. 
 Upon this the English determined that further 
 opposition was useless, and surrendered. Lafitte 
 therefore ceased his bloody slaughter, and became 
 possessor of the ship. The incident, when the news 
 reached India, caused a deep sensation, and the 
 name of this scoundrel was spoken of with horror. 
 But as East Indiamen now began to traverse the 
 Indian Ocean only under powerful convoys, Lafitte 
 found his opportunities very few and rare, so he 
 betook himself to other waters, to end his days with 
 a violent death. 
 
 We come now to the year 1810. About this time 
 
CC 
 
 < 
 K 
 
 -f 
 
 55* ? 
 
PIRATES AND FRENCH FRIGATES 319 
 
 the French frigates were very actively on the qui 
 vive for our East Indiamen and other merchant 
 ships, and the neighbourhood of Madagascar and 
 Mauritius was popular for setting forth to lie in wait 
 for the victims. When any prisoners were brought 
 in here from the Company's ships they were made 
 to form part of the crews of these French frigates. 
 And if any British soldiers were also found on board 
 they were likewise destined to become part of the 
 frigates' complement. Some were made so to do 
 only by vehement threats if they declined : while 
 some others were base enough to desert the English 
 flag. 
 
 On the 3rd of July of the year just mentioned, 
 just as the day was dawning, the French frigates, 
 Bellone and Minerve, and the corvette Victor, having 
 stood leisurely up the Mozambique Channel, were 
 about thirty-six miles off the island of Mayotta, when 
 they were sighted by three outward-bound East 
 Indiamen, who were steering to the north before a 
 fresh breeze from the south-south-east. The frigates 
 were about nine miles off to the north-north-east, 
 close-hauled on the port tack. A signal was made 
 by the senior officer or commodore of the British 
 ships half-an-hour later, and the three Indiamen 
 hauled their wind on the port tack under double- 
 reefed topsails, courses, jib and spanker. The 
 names of these vessels were the Ceylon (commodore's 
 flagship), Windham and Astell, the commodore being 
 Captain Henry Meriton. At half-past seven the 
 Ceylon made the private signal, as was customary. 
 This was in accordance with the secret code provided 
 by the Admiralty : and if the strange ships had been 
 British naval frigates or fellow East Indiamen they 
 
320 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 would have answered in accordance with the code. 
 Failure to reply would have indicated that they were 
 hostile. 
 
 Inasmuch as there was no reply in this case the 
 East Indiamen's commodore ordered his ships to 
 clear for action. There could be no sort of doubt 
 now, and every minute was valuable, for the enemy 
 was passing on the opposite tack. At half-past nine 
 the Astell was carrying rather more sail than she 
 could do with and made a signal to that effect : the 
 Ceylon and Windham therefore shortened sail to 
 keep her company. Captain Meriton now tele- 
 graphed to his two consorts the following message : 
 " As we cannot get away, I think we had better go 
 under easy sail and bring them to action before 
 dark." It was the only thing to be done : otherwise 
 the Astell might have been lost. The Windham, 
 however, replied thus : " If we make all sail and get 
 into smooth water under the land we can engage to 
 more advantage." But half-an-hour later, as the 
 force of the wind had increased, it became necessary 
 for the East Indiamen to heave-to and take in a 
 third reef in their topsails. But even under this 
 shortened canvas the ships were making heavy 
 weather of it. As a fact, they heeled over so much 
 that the high sea that was running made it quite 
 impossible for the lower-deck ports on the lee side 
 to be kept open. 
 
 James, with his characteristic love of detail, has 
 given full particulars of this incident, and we can 
 well watch with him what followed. At 11.30 A.M. 
 the Minerve tacked in the wake of the Indiamen and 
 at about six miles away. Soon afterwards iheBellone 
 and the Victor also went about. When Captain 
 
PIRATES AND FRENCH FRIGATES 321 
 
 Meriton had watched these tactics and observejd the 
 Minerve coming up at a great rate astern he made 
 the following signal : " Form line abreast, to bear 
 on ships together, Ceylon in the centre." So the 
 Windham, Ceylon and Astell formed a close line in 
 the order named and awaited the oncoming of the 
 enemy, and the Victor and Minerve were approach- 
 ing rapidly on the starboard quarter, which was also 
 the weather side. 
 
 Presently the Minerve arrived abreast of the 
 British centre, the Victor being ahead. Up went 
 French colours, a shot was fired at the Windham 
 and then a whole broadside was fired into the Ceylon, 
 which was so close astern of her consort as almost 
 to touch her. The Astell, however, was a long way 
 to leeward and astern of the Ceylon. When the 
 corvette opened fire the action became general be- 
 tween the Minerve and Victor of the one side and 
 the Windham, Ceylon and Astell on the other. But 
 inasmuch as the Ceylon, by reason of her situation, 
 was just abeam of the frigate, this Indiaman received 
 a pretty hot time. After a little while the corvette 
 found the fire of the British too warm, so bore up 
 and passed to leeward of the Astell, and the captain 
 of the latter becoming wounded severely, the chief 
 mate had to take command. It is quite certain that 
 an officer of a modern steamship liner is a much 
 abler navigator than those who served in the old 
 East Indiamen. But it is unquestionable that even 
 if he were a Royal Naval Reserve officer, and had 
 served for a year in his Majesty's fleet, he would 
 not be such a master of tactics as his forefathers 
 who served in the " John " Company. I have not 
 the slightest doubt in asserting that if a European 
 
322 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 war broke out to-morrow every officer in the British 
 mercantile marine would render an excellent account 
 of himself for resource and bravery. Recent dis- 
 asters and rescues in mid-ocean have shown that the 
 fine old British stuff still goes to the making of our 
 sailors. But if their ships were attacked by cruisers 
 the merchantman would have no opportunity for 
 displaying fighting tactics, since there is to-day a far 
 greater difference between the fighting qualities of a 
 liner and a navy's cruiser than there existed between 
 an armed East Indiaman and a French frigate. And 
 this even if we include the recently built Aquitania of 
 the Cunard line, which happens to be the most 
 heavily armed British liner which ever put to sea. 
 
 In these sea-fights, then, between the Indiamen 
 and their foreign enemies we have a condition that 
 is not comparable with anything to-day. It belongs 
 to the past absolutely, and therefore the difference 
 between the captains of yesterday and to-day is also 
 different, and that not merely owing to the fact that 
 one commanded a ship propelled by sails, whereas 
 his successor handles a steamship. We cannot help 
 admiring the many-sided ability of the East India- 
 men captains. Taking them by and large, with all 
 their defects in respect of smuggling and other 
 delinquencies which need not be enlarged upon, they 
 were extraordinarily successful in most complicated 
 circumstances. It is characteristic of any kind of 
 seaman, in whatever service he is enrolled, that he 
 is adaptable, but could you find a greater strain im- 
 posed on any man than that which had to be borne 
 by the commanders of the vessels whose history we 
 are considering? As exponents of the art of pure 
 seamanship they were never beaten, unless by their 
 
PIRATES AND FRENCH FRIGATES 323 
 
 immediate successors, who made such wonderful pass- 
 ages during the clipper-ship era. And certainly as 
 tacticians and fighting men they had few superiors even 
 in the Royal Navy of that time. I feel that it is only 
 just to emphasise these points, for with the transition 
 from one period of the ship to another the ability of 
 our mercantile officers has changed not in degree but 
 in kind : and very shortly the last link in the person 
 of a steamship captain who formerly commanded a 
 sailing ship connecting the ships of yesterday with 
 to-day will have been broken for ever. No one can 
 fail to admire the consummate cleverness with which 
 a modern mercantile captain brings a gigantic liner 
 through a narrow, twisting channel in a strong tide- 
 way and berths his ship so quietly as not to break the 
 proverbial eggshell. No one can help being struck 
 with the scientific and practical ability by which 
 perfect land-falls are made and punctual voyages 
 are carried through even in thick weather. The 
 captains of the Indiamen of yesterday were never 
 called upon to bear the kind of responsibility which 
 attaches to a man who has a 4o,ooo-ton ship and 
 5000 lives under his care. But at the same time our 
 modern commanders in the merchant service have 
 never yet been called upon to think out battle tactics 
 and manoeuvre so as to fight a superior enemy with- 
 out losing one's ship or cargo. 
 
 This was always the anxiety which an East India- 
 man's skipper had to think of. Was he justified in 
 remaining to fight : or was his chief duty to run 
 away? His command was not primarily a fighting 
 ship, but a means of trade. And even if he got 
 his ship safe in port would be incur the displeasure 
 of the Honourable East India Company's directors? 
 
324 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 His job was too valuable to be thrown away by an 
 error of judgment. It would be a fine feather in his 
 cap if he could follow the example of Commodore 
 Dance, and he was sure to be well rewarded by his 
 Company. To deal a smashing blow at the nation's 
 enemy would ensure fame for this captain to the 
 end of his days and after. But if he should forget 
 that his first duty was to get the valuable cargo home 
 he might find himself a broken man and not a hero. 
 
 Such, then, was the position of Captain Meriton in 
 the incident we are discussing. He had to take in 
 the situation at a glance and form a quick but not 
 hasty judgment, and then act accordingly, flinging 
 out his signals and disposing his squadron. At four 
 o'clock the Minerve went ahead and then bore down 
 as if intending to get alongside the Windham. Now 
 this was a mode of attack which the Indiamen in the 
 present instance had reason to fear least of all, for 
 they chanced to have plenty of soldiery on board. 
 The Windham therefore made sail so as to strike 
 the French frigate on the port side at the quarter, 
 whilst the Ceylon and Astell closed on their consort 
 so as to assist in this manoeuvre. However, the 
 Windham had been greatly damaged in regard to 
 her sails and rigging, so did not possess enough way 
 to act as she had hoped. The result was that the 
 Minerve was able to cross her bows only a few yards 
 away. All this time the three Indiamen had kept up 
 an incessant and well-aimed musketry fire from their 
 troops on board. 
 
 Just as the Minerve got out of gun-shot that is to 
 say, about a mile away the Astell passed astern of 
 the Windham and became the headmost and 
 weathermost ship. The Windham was now the stern- 
 
most and leewardmost vessel of the three, and the 
 Minerve, true to the best tradition of tactics em- 
 ployed by Nelson and other great admirals, endeav- 
 oured to cut the Windham off from the other two : 
 but the best laid schemes of clever tacticians some- 
 times do not fructify : for the Minerve now lost her 
 main and mizen topmasts, and there came a lull in 
 the contest, though not for long. It was now six 
 in the evening, and the Bellone, followed by the 
 Victor, began a most destructive fire on the Wind- 
 ham. Taking up her position presently a little 
 farther on, the Bellone began to attack the commo- 
 dore's ship, whilst with her foremost guns she 
 attacked the Astell. The Victor was some distance 
 away, and so her fire at the Windham was not so 
 effective. Captain Meriton now endeavoured to 
 close with the French frigate in order that he might 
 be able to give full opportunity to the troops' 
 musketry, but had the misfortune to receive a severe 
 wound in the neck from grape-shot. The command 
 therefore fell to the chief mate, Mr T. W. Oldham. 
 But the latter, being himself wounded not many 
 seconds later, was obliged to yield the command to 
 the second mate, Mr T. Penning. By seven o'clock 
 the poor Ceylon, which had endured much, was in a 
 sorry plight. Her two principal officers had been 
 wounded, her masts, rigging and sails were all 
 damaged badly, all the guns on her upper deck had 
 been disabled and five on the lower deck. Her hull, 
 too, had been so badly holed that she was leaking 
 to such an extent that she made three feet an hour. 
 In addition, many of her people had been killed and 
 wounded. 
 
 She therefore came out of the firing-line and 
 
326 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 passed astern of the Bellone, which was engaging 
 the Windham all the time. And then there appears 
 to have been some misunderstanding. The Wind- 
 ham hailed the Astell time after time, asking her 
 to join in making an attempt to board the Bellone : 
 but the Astell put out her lights, crowded on sail, and 
 went off, receiving a heavy parting fire from the 
 frigate. As for the Ceylon, there was nothing left 
 for her to do but to haul down her colours, and she 
 then had the humiliation of being taken possession 
 of by a prize crew sent off in a boat from the 
 Minerve. As the Ceylon passed the Wmdham, the 
 former hailed the latter that she had struck. The 
 Wmdham was therefore now left alone : and since 
 she, too, was considerably damaged as to her masts 
 and rigging, so that it was impossible to set sail, she 
 doggedly continued the action, so that the Astell 
 might be able to make good her escape. Nine of 
 the Wmdham? s guns had been put out of action, 
 many of her crew had been killed or wounded, so 
 finally she too had to haul down her colours, and was 
 taken possession of by the Bellone. Meanwhile the 
 Victor had gone in pursuit of the Astell, but the 
 latter was able to get right away owing to the extreme 
 darkness of the night and the length of time which 
 had been taken in securing the two prizes. 
 
 The result of this fight, which had lasted almost 
 from dawn till after dark, was melancholy : but the 
 Indiamen had fought very gallantly, and it is not 
 always that success comes to those who seem 
 assuredly most to deserve it. Each of these 
 merchant ships was of 800 tons, and their armament 
 was quite unequal to that of the French frigates, 
 which had no cargo to carry and could mount more 
 
PIRATES AND FRENCH FRIGATES 327 
 
 numerous guns. There were about two hundred and 
 fifty troops on board each of these Indiamen, in 
 addition to a hundred lascars, but there were only 
 about twelve or a score of British seamen. So in 
 respect of numbers the merchant ships were quite 
 inferior to the trained men-of-war's-men of the 
 French. The Ceylon lost four seamen, one lascar 
 and two soldiers killed. Her captain, chief mate, 
 seven of her seamen, one lascar, one lieutenant- 
 colonel and ten soldiers had been wounded a pretty 
 heavy toll to pay. The Windham had a seaman, 
 three soldiers and two lascars killed : and seven 
 soldiers, two lascars and three of her officers and 
 half-a-dozen others wounded. The Astell had four 
 seamen and the same number of soldiers killed : 
 whilst her captain, her fifth mate, nine seamen, a 
 lascar, five cadets and twenty soldiers were all 
 wounded. 
 
 Everyone in these Indiamen had fought splen- 
 didly against heavy odds. The commodore had ful- 
 filled his part as well as the difficulty of the situation 
 allowed him. Soldier and sailor alike had done their 
 level best. How did the East India Company 
 eventually consider this forlorn fight? It may be 
 said at once that, in spite of the result, the directors 
 showed their appreciation of their servants by pre- 
 senting each of these three captains with the sum of 
 ,500, whilst the rest of the officers and men were 
 also handsomely rewarded. The captain of the 
 Astell received a pension of ^460 a year from the 
 East India Company, whilst the officers and crew 
 were presented with the sum of ,2000 between 
 them. It is said that one of the AstelVs seamen, a 
 man named Andrew Peters, nailed the pennant to 
 
328 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 the maintopmast-head and was killed as he was on 
 his way down : and the AstelVs colours were shot 
 away no fewer than three times. 
 
 To show their appreciation of the AsteWs fine 
 defence the Admiralty granted the ship's company 
 protection from impressment for three years. But 
 even all this exhibition of approbation must have 
 been unable to wipe out from officers and men the 
 miserable recollection of having been compelled to 
 yield to the nation's deadly enemy. 
 
CHAPTER XXIII 
 
 THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 IT must not be thought that even after that momen- 
 tous change of 1834, when the " free traders," as 
 they were called, began to send their ships to India, 
 the Company were freer of anxiety. It has already 
 been shown that they were being badly defeated in 
 the new competition. But this was not all. In the 
 year 1816 the owners of thirty-four ships which had 
 been engaged by the Company under the Act of 
 1799 for six voyages on a settled peace freight now 
 complained that these rates were inadequate to meet 
 the increased charge of outfit and repairs. For since 
 the Treaty of Paris the cost and equipment of ships 
 had gone up, and to an extent that could not have 
 been expected. The long duration of the war, and 
 the extraordinary price of articles of a ship's inven- 
 tory continued long after the cessation of hostilities : 
 and therefore it was but natural that an improved 
 rate should be granted for the remainder of the 
 voyages. 
 
 And with the much larger number of men required 
 for the bigger ships it was frequently found when 
 lying in an Indian port that with " dead, run, or dis- 
 charged " men a vessel had not the required number 
 of crew in her that she ought to have. So now these 
 
 329 
 
330 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 East Indiamen were allowed to sail with less than 
 their full complement. Great Britain had won her 
 fights chiefly on the sea, yet for all that she was not 
 abundantly blessed with seamen. 
 
 And then came the final change, which had really 
 been foreshadowed by that event of 1814. True the 
 East India Company had been bereft of their 
 Indian monopoly, but China had been reserved to 
 them. However, in 1832 the subject had to be faced 
 again in Parliament. The mind of the public was 
 distinctly adverse to the Company and its mono- 
 poly : too long it had been permitted to enjoy these 
 privileges and keep back the stream of trade. Dis- 
 content increased both in vehemence and volume, 
 and so at length the Company were powerless to 
 hold on to their China monopoly. Private ship- 
 owners desired to trade with all parts of the Orient, 
 and this desire had to be met. From the year 1833, 
 then, the East India Company lost their exclusive 
 trading privilege. And inasmuch as the free traders 
 had done so much, and were determined to do more, 
 it were useless for the Company to continue in com- 
 merce at all. Instead they became entirely a political 
 body and permitted British subjects to settle in 
 India. Actually the Company's commercial charter 
 came to an end in April 1834, and thereafter it pro- 
 ceeded to close its business as soon as possible. 
 
 For a Company that had always relied for its 
 success on protection from competition, paying high 
 prices for its ships, and being squeezed very tightly 
 by many of its servants, it could not be expected that 
 when the free traders introduced their voyages to 
 China and a strong, sensible spirit of competition 
 that this ancient but decaying Company could hold 
 
THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 331 
 
 its own. The new blood would be too vigorous, 
 the enterprise would be irresistible, and in any case 
 the Company would be doomed to further humility. 
 No other course, therefore, was possible than to sub- 
 mit to what had come as the result of the advance of 
 time. In a word, that East India Company which 
 had ruled the Eastern seas for so long now resolved 
 to get rid of the whole of their fleet. Some of these 
 were condemned and some were bought up by those 
 new aspirants to Eastern wealth. Some of these old 
 " tea-waggons," as they were nicknamed, were 
 broken up for their valuable copper fastenings, and 
 the rest were sold, not at once, but after they had 
 completed their voyages to India and China. 
 
 One of the very last of the Company's ships to 
 make the voyage to China in the employ of this 
 ancient corporation was the Elisabeth, which sailed 
 from the Thames in the spring of 1833, arrived in 
 China in January 1834 and left there in March. 
 From there she proceeded to St Helena, where she 
 arrived in June, and then crossed the Atlantic, arriv- 
 ing in Halifax the following August. Probably this 
 was the very last of the Company's ships to leave 
 China. I have examined her log-book and have 
 been able to verify the dates, but what happened 
 after she reached Halifax I cannot find out. Prob- 
 ably she was sold there. But, at any rate, there is a 
 sentimental interest attached to her voyage, and the 
 following few abstracts from her log may form a 
 connecting link with the last voyages of a fleet whose 
 inception dates back to the time when Elizabeth was 
 on the throne. 
 
 The log opens on 23rd May 1833 with the usual 
 details of getting the ship ready for sea and taking 
 
332 THE OLD EAST INDTAMEN 
 
 aboard cargo in the Thames. It ends on 3rd Sep- 
 tember 1834, when the last of the cargo had been 
 landed at Halifax. Her master was John Craigie, 
 and, as was the custom at this time, the manuscript 
 log-book is prefaced with a page of black-faced 
 print which read as follows : 
 
 " The Honourable Court of Directors of the 
 United Company of Merchants of England trading 
 to the East Indies have ordered me to send you this 
 log book, in which pursuant to your Charter-party, 
 you are to take care that a full, true, and exact 
 account of the ship's run and course, with the winds, 
 weather and her draught of water at the time of 
 leaving every port, and all occurrences, accidents 
 and observations, that shall happen or be made dur- 
 ing the voyage, from the time of the ship's first 
 taking in goods, until the time of her return, be duly 
 entered every day at noon, in a fair and legible 
 manner. And that the officer commanding the watch 
 from eight o'clock till noon, do, before he dines, 
 sign his name at length to every day's log so 
 entered. ..." 
 
 This vessel drew 17 feet 6 inches forward and 
 17 feet 4 inches aft when she left Gravesend, and 
 after bringing up in nine fathoms off Margate rode 
 to forty-eight fathoms of cable until she received 
 the Company's dispatches which she was taking out 
 to the East. As she proceeded down Channel she 
 was handicapped by light easterly breezes and calms, 
 so that although she passed Beachy Head on 28th 
 July, it was not till 2 P.M. of the following day that 
 she was off Brighton, where she dropped her pilot. 
 Six hours later she had passed the Owers Lightship 
 (off Selsey Bill), and so after leaving the Wight 
 
THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 333 
 
 made her way past Portland Bill and out into the 
 Bay of Biscay. We need not follow her throughout 
 her passage, but on Sunday, 6th October 1833, she 
 was caught in very bad weather, as the following 
 extracts show : 
 
 "3 A.M. Hard squalls attended with most 
 tremendous gales. In fore and mizen topsails. 
 Reef'd fore sail and close reefed main topsail. 
 
 " 5 A.M. Heavy sea running, ship labouring much. 
 Hove to under close reefed . . . topsail, reefed fore- 
 sail . . . staysail and fore-topmast staysail. Housed 
 fore and mizzen topgallantmasts. 
 
 ; ' Noon. Hard gales and a tremendous sea 
 running. Ship labouring much." 
 
 Two days later there is this entry : 
 
 ; ' During the late severe gale I find from the 
 heavy labouring of the ship many seams in the upper 
 and lower 'decks much opened and the caulking 
 worked out, and from the great quantity of water 
 ship'd over all and the ship requiring constant pump- 
 ing during the above period, I apprehend consider- 
 able damage is done to the cargo." 
 
 However, she got safely across the ocean to 
 China, and brought up on 28th January 1834 at her 
 port with small bower anchor in seven fathoms, 
 giving her thirty-five fathoms of cable to ride to. 
 As the ship approaches her port we see interesting 
 little details entered in the log, such as these : " Bent 
 larboard bower cable and unstowed the anchor " ; 
 then a little later on, " bent starboard chain " ; and 
 again, " bent the sheet cable." On the I3th of 
 March she weighed anchor, proceeded south, crossed 
 the Indian Ocean, as so many of the Company's 
 ships had done for over two centuries, rounded the 
 
334 
 
 Cape of Good Hope and dropped anchor off St 
 Helena on igth June 1834, eventually arriving in 
 Halifax harbour on i8th August 1834, where she 
 proceeded to Mr Cunard's wharf Mr Cunard was 
 the East India Company's agent, as we have men- 
 tioned and thus brought her voyage to an end. By 
 3rd September the whole of her cargo was taken out 
 of her. 
 
 But already, long before the East India Company 
 had decided to sell their fleet, the death-knell of 
 the steamship had been sounded in the Orient, 
 though actually the decease was to be preceded 
 by a wonderful rally in the famous China clippers. 
 In the year 1822 a public meeting had been called 
 together in London to discuss the practicability of 
 running steamships to the East, and as a result a 
 steam navigation company was formed. Lieutenant 
 (afterwards Captain) J. Johnson was sent out to Cal- 
 cutta to see what could be done in this respect, and 
 the outcome was that a steamship called the Enter- 
 prize was built at Deptford and proceeded to India 
 under the command of this Captain Johnson. She 
 was of only 470 tons and 120 nominal horse-power. 
 She started on i6th August 1825, and after a voyage 
 of 113 days reached Calcutta, though ten of these 
 days were spent in taking on board fuel. Her aver- 
 age speed was only a little under nine knots : but 
 here was a precedent. She had come all the way 
 under steam, and some day soon this speed would 
 be improved upon. Already in that same year the 
 Falcon, of 176 tons, had also voyaged round the 
 Cape to Calcutta. But this vessel was an auxiliary 
 steamship, using partly steam and partly sails; so 
 the Enterprise was really the first Anglo-Indian 
 
THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 335 
 
 steamship. It was not till the year 1842 that the 
 P. & O. Company started sending their steamers 
 to India via the Cape of Good Hope. This was 
 another nail in the coffin of the sailing ships which 
 had been trading to the East for so long a time. 
 The name of the first ship was the Hindostan. She 
 was a three-master with a long bowsprit, setting 
 yards on her foremast for foresail, topsail and top- 
 gallant sails, while her main and mizen were fore- 
 and-aft-rigged : and before long other steamers 
 followed her. 
 
 But before the Government built its transports 
 specially for trooping the modern sailing Indiamen 
 that is to say, the successors of the East India 
 Company's ships carried all the military to the 
 East. Even when, in the days before the opening 
 of the Suez Canal, the P. & O. were the only steam- 
 ships voyaging to India, most of the passengers still 
 travelled to the Orient in the East Indiamen, with 
 the exception of the wealthy and the principal 
 officials. Therefore, though the East India Com- 
 pany was dead as a commercial concern, those 
 private firms who had bought up the Company's 
 ships or built new ones were doing a good business 
 both in freights and passengers. 
 
 Before the Suez Canal was opened there were 
 three ways of reaching India. You could go by a 
 sailing East Indiaman round the Cape of Good 
 Hope or in a P. & O. steamship by the same route, 
 or you could go by P. & O. steamship to Alexandria, 
 then overland by camels, and then by boat on the 
 Mahmoudieh Canal to the Nile, whence passengers 
 proceeded to Cairo by steamer. From there they 
 went across the desert to Suez. Three thousand 
 
336 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 camels had to be employed for transporting a single 
 steamer's loading, and every package had to be sub- 
 jected to no fewer than three separate transfers. The 
 opening of the Suez Canal, therefore, in the year 
 1870, made all the difference in the world, and by the 
 end of the next year scarcely any passengers went 
 round the Cape in sailing ships, but journeyed to 
 the East in steamships via the canal. Troops were 
 also taken through the latter, and so the old and the 
 new East Indiaman sailing ships passed out of 
 existence. 
 
 After April 1834 the directors of the East India 
 Company were not traders, but rather a council 
 advising and assisting in the control of the political 
 India. In 1857 occurred the Indian Mutiny. The 
 martial races began suddenly to move, the native 
 army of Bengal revolted, and the northern pre- 
 datory races rebelled. As everyone knows, the 
 Mutiny was eventually quelled, but for our present 
 consideration the most important result was that it 
 was to bring to an end the great career of the East 
 India Company. It was deemed best that Queen 
 Victoria should assume the direct government and 
 rule through a Viceroy, the first of whom was Cann- 
 ing. On ist November 1858 proclamation was made 
 throughout India that the government had been 
 transferred from the East India Company to the 
 British Sovereign. The Board of Control was 
 abolished and a Council of State for India insti- 
 tuted. Thus, having ceased to be either traders 
 or a political power, this unique corporation came to 
 an end. It had lost its prestige, lost its privileges 
 and strength in India and China, sold its fleet, and 
 at length, on i5th May 1873, came the resolution 
 
THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 337 
 
 to dissolve the Company altogether, as from ist June 
 1874. East India House, which had been built in 
 the year 1726, enlarged in 1799, was sold with its 
 furniture in the year 1861 and pulled down in the 
 following year. Of course there had been a much 
 earlier East India House in Leadenhall Street also, 
 and the accompanying reproduction of an old print 
 shows the house which stood from 1648 to 1726. 
 The reader will notice on the building a picture of 
 a seventeenth-century ship. 
 
 By many of the Indian natives the East India 
 Company had been known as the " Honourable John 
 Company." The origin of this designation is not quite 
 clear, but it was in effect a personification of the 
 corporation taken quite seriously by the natives. 
 John he knew as a man's name, for was not his 
 English master called John? Naturally enough, 
 therefore, the Company might also be called the 
 ' John " or " Honourable John." The idea im- 
 printed in the native's mind was that the Company 
 was one mighty prince, who had to be respected. 
 
 But before we close this chapter we want to know 
 what became of the ships and men. If the Com- 
 pany had come to an end the East Indiamen and 
 those who used to work her across the ocean were 
 not ipso facto wiped out of existence. Some of the 
 ships fetched quite good prices, considering that the 
 sale was virtually compulsory. The Earl of Bal- 
 carres, for instance, that big ship of which we spoke 
 on a previous page, fetched the sum of ,10,700, 
 and she sailed the seas for fifty-two years before 
 being turned into a hulk. The Lady Melville also 
 was sold for ,10,000; that fine, handsome ship, the 
 Thames, of which we have given an illustration, 
 
338 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 obtaining ; 10,700 as her price. The Buckingham- 
 shire fetched ,10,550; the General Kyd, ,9100; 
 the Asia, ^6500, whilst other ships fetched sums 
 from about ^4500 upwards. Of those sold for 
 breaking up were the Waterloo, which fetched about 
 ^"7200; the Atlas, ^"4100; the Canning, ^5750; 
 the Princess Charlotte, ,3000; the London, ,5900 ; 
 General Harris, ,6600; Farquharson, ^6000. Of 
 course, not all these were sold at the same time. 
 In some cases, the Company having foreseen the 
 inevitable, began to sell as far back as 1830, and 
 they went on selling until the end of 1834. Those 
 shipowners who were out looking for bargains knew 
 that these vessels would not fetch the highest prices, 
 yet they were known to be soundly put together of 
 first-class material. The best prices were obtained 
 by the Company, not in auction, but privately. 
 Among the buyers one finds such well-known ship- 
 ping names as Joseph Somes, Wigram & Green. 
 The former was one of the founders of Lloyd's 
 Register. Robert Wigram and Richard Green built 
 and owned some of the finest sailing ships which 
 ever floated in the Thames, and these men, together 
 with the Smiths of Newcastle and other shipowners, 
 began to construct more modern frigate type of 
 ships for the China and India trade now that all 
 privileges had been thrown on one side. These 
 ships used to snug down at night like their pre- 
 decessors when crossing the sea. But they were run 
 commercially on more sensible lines, and the extra- 
 vagant privileges to the captains were largely 
 curtailed. 
 
 And inasmuch as many of the captains, officers 
 and crew who had served in the East India Com- 
 
THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 339 
 
 pany's craft were now employed in the ships of the 
 new firms there was not such a vast change in the 
 conditions as might have been imagined. Gone was 
 the stately dignity, gone the semi-naval character of 
 the East Indiamen, but in most other respects 
 matters were much the same. Gradually as the 
 newer types of ships began to be built, improved 
 models were effected with finer lines, and the old 
 kettle-bottom type of the Company's ships gave 
 place to that which was to become historic as the 
 China tea-clippers of 1850 to 1870. With these, 
 however, our present story has no concern. But it 
 was a long time before the main traditions of the 
 East India Company died entirely. Frigate-fashion 
 had been the motto of the shipbuilder for too long 
 for this to be thrown over at once. The Blenheim 
 and the Marlborough, for instance, which came out 
 in 1848, were constructed exactly like the contem- 
 porary naval frigates : in design and scantlings they 
 were identical with a 4O-gun ship of that class, the 
 Government surveying them and reporting them as 
 fit to carry armaments. These two ships had been 
 built by Messrs T. & W. Smith of Newcastle-on- 
 Tyne. They carried enormous jibbooms " steeved " 
 very high. With their overhanging stern, figure- 
 head, row of square ports, stuns'ls, and dolphin- 
 striker they were very picturesque craft. As regards 
 speed these were an improvement on the ships pos- 
 sessed by the East India Company, and represent 
 the intermediate stage between the latter and the 
 famous China clippers which were to come in a few 
 years' time. The new type of East Indiaman, 
 frigate-built and copper fastened, cost about ^40 
 a ton to build, so that a looo-ton ship cost about 
 
340 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 '; 40,000. The ships of Messrs Wigram & Green 
 were not pierced for guns, the square windows in 
 these vessels at the poop being used for lighting 
 the passengers' cabins. These were ships of finer 
 lines than the old East Indiamen or even the vessels 
 which Smith built. Duncan Dunbar also owned a 
 number of fine East Indiamen; in fact, he became 
 at one time the largest shipowner in Great Britain, 
 and many of his vessels were constructed in India, 
 as, for instance, the Marion, of 684 tons, which was 
 launched at Calcutta in 1834, and from that date 
 sailed the seas until she was wrecked off Newfound- 
 land nearly fifty years later. But even before the 
 East India Company lost their China monopoly they 
 possessed a very few ships whose speed was just 
 about as good as any of the more modern successors 
 until the coming of the first tea-clippers of about 
 1840 onwards. The East Indiaman Thames, of 
 which we give an illustration, was certainly one of 
 the fastest. 
 
 At the time when the East India Company lost 
 their China charter and sold off their fleet, the com- 
 manders and officers considered themselves very 
 much aggrieved. It is quite true, as we have stated, 
 that a good many of them afterwards shipped on 
 board the modern East Indiamen, who, of course, 
 did not fly the naval pennant which the Company's 
 ships had been allowed to wear. But these officers, 
 in July 1834, banded together and sent a letter to the 
 'directors of the East India Company, in which it 
 was pointed out that the Company's ships and sea- 
 men otherwise known as the Maritime Service in 
 contrast with the Bombay Marine or East India 
 Company's navy had been employed for over two 
 

THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 341 
 
 hundred years. These ships and men had been 
 instrumental to a great degree in securing the vast 
 territory of British India. These commanders and 
 officers of the present day had entered the Com- 
 pany's service in the confident expectation that it 
 was a provision for life. But now they found them- 
 selves deprived of their profession owing to the 
 sudden ceasing of the Company's trade. Although 
 the commanders and officers were in the first instance 
 recommended by the shipowners to the Company, 
 yet the latter examined and approved them, and into 
 the latter's service they were sworn. They were 
 paid, fined, suspended or dismissed by the Company 
 and not by the owners. They wore the Company's 
 uniform, enjoyed rank and command under the 
 latter, and became eligible to offices of high honour 
 and emolument. And the extraordinary fact was 
 that they even took precedence of the Company's 
 Bombay Marine. These maritime commanders 
 ranked with the field officers in India, were saluted 
 with guns, and were eligible for important offices 
 of profit in India. 
 
 The position now was therefore not one which 
 seemed to have a bright outlook. They had served 
 in capacities of great trust, and many of them had 
 devoted the whole of their lives to service in the 
 Company's ships. But when the " free traders " 
 now came on to the scene the latter did not care to 
 employ captains and officers who had been accus- 
 tomed to navigate only vessels of the size and 
 expensive equipment of those of the East India 
 Company. Only one-fifth of these men were there- 
 fore at once taken over by the shipowners, who were 
 now buying up the Company's ships or building new 
 
842 THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 
 
 ones. As for the rest of these officers they had 
 enjoyed the dignity and privileges of the Company 
 for so long a period that they did not care to be 
 employed in " free trade," considering it derogatory. 
 In any case they could not obtain, from the new 
 owners, the same amount of remuneration as they 
 had been accustomed to receive from the Company. 
 For the latter's extravagant methods were to give 
 place to a more business-like method. In plain 
 language, the rest of the merchant service rather 
 fought shy of employing these former East India- 
 men skippers, and the latter were not anxious to 
 degrade themselves by signing on in these inter- 
 lopers. 
 
 So the captains and officers appealed to the East 
 India Company for compensation in the shape of 
 pensions. The petition was received with little 
 enthusiasm, but the directors could not deny that 
 there was a good deal of truth in what was set 
 forth by these men, and ultimately decided to grant 
 compensation to all commanders and officers who 
 had been actually employed in the Maritime Service 
 for five years on 22nd April 1834. Thus a com- 
 mander received a monetary payment of ^1500, 
 with lesser sums for the other officers. In addition 
 to this, each commander received ,4000 for three 
 unexpired voyages, ^"3000 for two voyages and 
 ^"2000 for one voyage which they would have made 
 had they continued in the service. Besides these 
 sums, commanders who had served for ten years 
 were granted a pension for life of ^250 a year, the 
 chief mate receiving a pension of ^160, and so on 
 down to the carpenter and gunner. The condition 
 being that these men assured the Company of their 
 
THE LAST OF THE OLD EAST INDIAMEN 343 
 
 inability to obtain further employment, and that any 
 income which they possessed was to be in abatement 
 of these pensions. 
 
 Thus, at last, the historic East India Company 
 came to an end, its ships and men scattered or 
 employed by other owners. No company in the 
 world, no fleet of mercantile vessels can boast of 
 such a long and adventurous story as this : no ships 
 of commerce were so closely and continuously con- 
 cerned in establishing political power in the East. 
 For this reason the old East Indiamen sailing ships, 
 whether of the seventeenth, eighteenth or nineteenth 
 centuries, must always possess a unique interest for 
 Britons generally, for Anglo- Indians in particular, 
 and for all who take an interest in the world's 
 development. People ordinarily do not realise the 
 full extent of their indebtedness to the ships and 
 sailors of the past in respect of discovery, empire, 
 power and wealth. Such men as worked the vessels 
 which we have been considering in this volume were 
 very far from perfect in respect of many virtues. 
 But they are deserving of our great respect and 
 admiration for their pluck, their endurance and their 
 enterprise : for without them India would have been 
 the possession of some other European nation. 
 
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