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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54564 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54564)
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-Project Gutenberg's Some Stories of Old Ironsides, by Holloway Halstead Frost
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Some Stories of Old Ironsides
-
-Author: Holloway Halstead Frost
-
-Release Date: April 18, 2017 [EBook #54564]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOME STORIES OF OLD IRONSIDES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, MFR and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SOME STORIES OF
- OLD IRONSIDES
-
-
- _By_
- Commander Holloway H. Frost, U. S. Navy
- Author of _We Build a Navy_
-
- [Illustration: Medallion]
-
- U. S. NAVAL INSTITUTE
- ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
-
- {Copyright 1931 · United States Naval Institute}
-
- DESIGNED AND PRINTED BY
- GEORGE BANTA PUBLISHING COMPANY
- MENASHA, WISCONSIN
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- _Facing_
- Preble’s First Attack on Tripoli 4
- Old Ironsides 5
- Chase of the _Constitution_ 12
- Edward Preble 13
- _Constitution_ and _Guerriere_ 20
- Capture of the British Frigate _Java_ 21
- The Night Battle Between the U.S.S. _Constitution_ and H. M. Ships
- _Cyane_ and _Levant_ 28
- Stephen Decatur 29
-
- [Illustration: Bowsprit]
-
- [Illustration: _From a painting by M. Carne_
- Preble’s First Attack on Tripoli
- The _Constitution_ (large ship right center foreground) leading the
- attack on Tripoli, August 3, 1804.]
-
- [Illustration: _From a painting by C. R. Patterson_
- “Old Ironsides”]
-
-
-
-
- ACT I
- _In the Mediterranean_
-
-
- SCENE I. ENTER THE “CONSTITUTION”
-
-On a September day in 1803 an American frigate bowled along the rocky
-Spanish coast toward Gibraltar. From her bluff bows curled back a foamy
-wave. Above the blue waters rose a gracefully proportioned black hull.
-Around it, halfway up from the water line, ran a broad white stripe.
-This was broken at regular intervals by the dark squares of the gun
-ports. Spars tapered aloft. White rectangles of billowing canvas
-completed a picture of beauty unsurpassed on the Seven Seas. Such was
-the United States ship _Constitution_. Joshua Humphreys, naval
-constructor, had done his work well.
-
-Watchers on the famous Rock might have noted, had the beauty of this
-strange ship gained their full attention, that from the mizzen truck
-flew the broad blue pennant of a commodore. His name was then unknown.
-It is not too well known even now. But as time passes the conviction
-grows that Edward Preble should be classed in the first rank of our
-naval commanders. He was soon to prove that he was every inch a
-commodore. His pennant flew from a splendid ship, but one which had as
-yet no tradition of victory. Edward Preble was to begin that long series
-of successful cruises and spectacular sea fights which was to endear
-“Old Ironsides” to every American.
-
-Countless ships for countless years had passed these far-famed Pillars
-of Hercules. Some had sailed on errands of peace, but most on the grim
-business of war. Phoenician traders had sailed out northward to Britain
-for cargoes of its precious tin. Carthaginian merchants under Hanno had
-ventured far down the Atlantic coast of Africa. Scipio Africanus with
-his legions had come this way to complete the conquest of Spain. Moorish
-galleys had ferried to Europe those fierce Moslem horsemen who overran
-the Iberian Peninsula and fought for world empire on the battlefields of
-France. Norse sea kings had sailed on through to Sicily and
-Constantinople. Stout De Ruyter and his Dutch seamen had followed in
-their track to make his last campaign in the blue waters of the
-Mediterranean. And only five years before the greatest sea captain of
-them all, a certain Horatio Nelson, had hastened by to match his wits
-with a General Bonaparte and annihilate his fleet at the mouth of the
-Nile.
-
-The entry of Edward Preble in a Yankee frigate into the great sea which
-had supported so many war fleets seemed doubtless at that time utterly
-devoid of historical significance. But now, as we look back over a
-century and a quarter, it takes on a new importance. It was to bring our
-young Navy to a new plane of efficiency. It was to demonstrate to
-Americans in a striking manner the value of an efficient naval service.
-It was to establish our Navy as a permanent American institution. And,
-what is more, it signaled to watchful eyes abroad the rise of a new sea
-power. It indicated, not only to African pirates, but also to astute
-European statesmen, that this American Republic had become a factor they
-would have to reckon with in framing their diplomatic policies.
-
-We believe that, as much as any other man of that era, it was bold and
-forceful Edward Preble who gave the United States that initial impulsion
-along the path of astounding prosperity, unparalleled commercial power,
-and world-wide influence.
-
- [Illustration: Squadron at sea]
-
-For two years we had been at war with the Moslem principalities which
-lined the Mediterranean coast of Africa. For many years before that,
-their piratical craft had captured our merchant ships and sold their
-crews into slavery. We had first begged and then bribed these pirates to
-desist from piracy. And, finally, after all diplomatic measures had
-failed, that task was given the Navy. That service had been in existence
-only a few years. It was, we must confess, not properly prepared to
-conduct a difficult campaign so far from its home bases. So two years of
-desultory fighting had accomplished little. In despair, our statesmen
-had descended again to the artifices of bribery. But, fortunately for
-us, the piratical chieftains did not think our offers worth their while.
-So the Navy was given a final chance and Edward Preble the command. The
-backbone of his squadron were the fine frigates _Constitution_ and
-_Philadelphia_. For inshore work there were the brigs _Argus_ and
-_Siren_ and the schooners _Enterprise_, _Nautilus_, and _Vixen_. It is
-true that seven ships constituted a small force to keep in good humor
-Morocco, Algiers, and Tunis and bring to a favorable conclusion the war
-with Tripoli. But the ships were all finely commanded, well officered,
-and manned with the best sailors in the world. The ships themselves were
-well built, adequately equipped, and completely stored for a long
-campaign. So it was with high hopes that Preble commenced his difficult
-task—one, it may be added, which had baffled Cardinal Ximenes, Charles
-V, Andrea Doria, Blake, De Ruyter, and Duquesne.
-
-
- SCENE II. EXIT THE “PHILADELPHIA”
-
-An effective demonstration off Tangiers soon cooled the ardor of the
-Sultan of Morocco. He reconfirmed the old and highly favorable treaty of
-1786. One potential enemy had been removed. On now for Syracuse, the
-naval base from which our campaign against Tripoli was being conducted.
-
-Off the coast of Sardinia the _Constitution_ hailed H.M.S. _Amazon_, a
-frigate attached to the squadron of Lord Nelson. From her Preble
-received “the melancholy and distressing intelligence of the loss of the
-U.S. ship _Philadelphia_.” Here, Commodore, is a problem which will put
-to the test all your intelligence and stoutness of heart.
-
-At Syracuse Preble learned the full extent of the disaster. The fine
-frigate had been run aground off Tripoli. Captain Bainbridge,
-discouraged by his ill fortune, had surrendered too quickly. Three
-hundred and fifteen of our officers and men had been led ashore in
-triumph. In his haste Bainbridge had not even taken effective measures
-to destroy his own ship. She was floated and brought into the harbor of
-Tripoli. Her guns were fished out of the water and remounted. She was
-manned with a strong Tripolitan crew. Thus she contributed to the
-strength of the defenses, and constituted a threat to every merchant
-vessel in the Mediterranean. Gloomy were the thoughts of poor Bainbridge
-as he viewed these developments from his prison window.
-
-Preble was not the man to worry over past disasters. He was concerned
-with future successes. How could he counteract, in part at least, the
-loss of the _Philadelphia_? There was no direct method for rescuing the
-crew. But there might be a chance to regain the ship, or at least
-destroy her so that the enemy could not use her. Bainbridge, through the
-connivance of the Danish consul at Tripoli, had suggested that she be
-attacked by a party of men secreted in the hold of a merchant vessel.
-The capture of a Tripolitan ketch provided the means of carrying through
-this daring plan. The next essential item was a cool and daring
-commander.
-
-The commodore invited to this post of honor and danger Lieutenant
-Stephen Decatur, then in command of the _Enterprise_. To this young
-officer might well be applied a sentence from Plutarch: “Being ever
-thirsty after honor, and passionate for glory, if anything of a greater
-or extraordinary nature was to be done, he was eager to be the doer of
-it himself.” Decatur eagerly accepted his commodore’s invitation.
-
-Once the squadron got wind of the venture and of the commander selected,
-there was no lack of volunteers. Decatur naturally gave first choice to
-the people in his own ship. Five of her officers and sixty-two of her
-sailors shifted over to the ketch. This was formally commissioned and
-appropriately renamed _Intrepid_. Five midshipmen from the
-_Constitution_ completed the complement. Last, but by no means least,
-was a brave Sicilian pilot, Salvador Catalano.
-
-Edward Preble took upon himself full responsibility for the hazardous
-enterprise. “It is my order,” he wrote Decatur, “that you proceed to
-Tripoli, in company with the _Siren_, Lieutenant Stewart; enter the
-harbor in the night; board the _Philadelphia_; burn her; and make good
-your escape.” The courage it requires to write such an order is seldom
-appreciated. If the expedition had failed, as certainly it looked very
-probable, all the blame would have fallen on Preble. He would have been
-accused of sending officers and men to their death while he remained in
-safety. And, if the attack should succeed, the credit and honor would
-belong to Decatur. But Preble was not guarding his own interests. He was
-striving to further those of the Navy and the country.
-
- [Illustration: In Tripoli harbor]
-
-For two weeks the _Intrepid_ was battered about by a succession of
-storms. On this little craft, much smaller than a submarine chaser,
-seventy-four men were crowded. Their sufferings can scarcely be
-imagined. But at last the weather moderated and the long-awaited
-opportunity was at hand. As a reënforcement Midshipman Anderson and nine
-sailors rowed over in one of the _Siren’s_ cutters. This was towed
-astern of the _Intrepid_. She started in.
-
-The sea now was smooth. The wind lulled slowly to a calm. As night came
-on, a young moon, the enemy’s emblem, diffused a gentle light over the
-phosphorescent waters. Wary Odysseus might have turned back his prow at
-sight of such an unfavorable omen, but not all the gods on Olympus could
-have turned back Stephen Decatur that night.
-
-Slowly and silently steals the _Intrepid_ toward the harbor entrance.
-This cold wintry night there are no vessels on patrol. Only irregular
-ranks of jagged rocks keep watch. The moonlight discloses these ever
-present sentinels. The ship passes through.
-
-Quietly there on deck stand Decatur, Catalano, and ten seamen—all
-disguised as Sicilians. Close down behind the bulwarks crouch the
-remainder of the crew. Ahead looms up the great hulk of the
-_Philadelphia_. Her foremast has not been replaced, but the main and
-mizzenmasts, with their network of rigging, trace a spider web of black
-against the dull red glare of the city’s lights. Fifteen gaping gun
-ports are dotted with the muzzles of frowning 18-pounders, loaded,
-shotted, and ready to be touched off. High overhead towers the dark mass
-of the Bashaw’s castle, its embrasures filled with one hundred and
-fifteen cannon.
-
-The frigate’s bell rings out the hour. It is ten-thirty in the evening
-watch. Her sentinel hails. Catalano answers with long-rehearsed lines.
-He has lost his anchors. May he not secure alongside the frigate for the
-night? The answer is, “Yes.” Lawrence lowers a small boat. With a line
-from the _Intrepid_ he pulls for the frigate’s bows. Quickly he secures
-his end to the fore chains. At the other end crouching seamen haul away.
-
-Watchers on the frigate, if they had not been too sleepy, might have
-wondered at the hidden power which draws the little craft so steadily
-upon her prey. It is not until she is almost alongside that they see the
-crowd of men on her decks. “Americanos!” yells the sentinel. But now it
-is too late. Another pull brings the _Intrepid_ alongside. Then rises a
-confused din as her crew begin a wild scramble for the honor of being
-the first over the enemy’s side. Decatur trips on his scabbard. Morris
-passes him. Over the high bulwarks, sword in teeth, he disappears.
-Lieutenants, midshipmen, sailors follow him. Here have ceased the
-privileges of rank. Those of courage begin.
-
-Surprise has won the day. There is no resistance on the upper decks. The
-startled enemy dive over the side or scuttle below. Wild Americanos or
-hungry sharks—what a choice to have to make! Some twenty Tripolitans
-fall before the former. How many succumb to the latter we may only
-guess. In twenty minutes the ship is everywhere ablaze. As the flames
-shoot up the guns ashore fire on the clearly illuminated target. Back
-into the ketch our sailors spring. Lines are cut with battle-axe and
-cutlass, just in time to evade the outrushing flames. Out ring three
-good American cheers above the crackling roar of fire and the thunder of
-cannonade.
-
-The flames now have mounted the frigate’s rigging turning night into
-day. The _Intrepid_ is clearly disclosed to the enemy gunners. From
-every direction shot converge on the little ship. Out are run sixteen
-great sweeps. Strong men, willing galley slaves for an hour, double-bank
-their handles. Their long blades churn the waters into foam. Away she
-races through the shell splashes.
-
- [Illustration: _From an old painting_
- Chase of the _Constitution_]
-
- [Illustration: _From the painting by John W. Jarvis_
- Edward Preble]
-
-Thus ended with complete success what Lord Nelson called the most bold
-and daring act of the age. When, three days later, the _Intrepid_ sailed
-through the American squadron in Syracuse, each ship gave Decatur and
-his men a deafening salute of cheers. What music to a sailor’s ears!
-
-
- SCENE III. PREBLE ATTACKS TRIPOLI
-
-As spring came on the commodore pushed his preparations for a naval
-attack on Tripoli. He now had only one large ship, the _Constitution_.
-There were five brigs and schooners. A captured Tripolitan brig,
-commissioned as the _Scourge_, made a sixth. Preble knew that these
-ships could not get in close enough to the enemy to win the decisive
-results he was determined to have. So he borrowed six gunboats, two bomb
-vessels, and ninety-six sailors from the King of Naples. Even with this
-reënforcement, Preble had but one thousand and sixty men to attack a
-strongly fortified town defended by twenty-five thousand soldiers and
-sailors. Still his hopes for success were high.
-
-Early in August, 1804, the orders for a grand attack were issued. This
-was to be no distant cannonade. The _Constitution_ was to attack the
-batteries at point-blank range. The gunboats were to board the enemy
-flotilla. The bomb vessels were to toss their 13-inch grenades into the
-town.
-
-The Bashaw, as the Tripolitan ruler was called, saw that a storm was
-about to break over his head. In addition to formidable batteries
-ashore, he had twenty-one gunboats. These were manned by from
-twenty-four to forty men. Each carried one large and two small guns. We
-must not mistake these Tripolitans. They were splendid seamen and fierce
-fighters. Boarding was their usual method of attack. Nine of their
-gunboats were stationed outside the reefs east of the harbor entrance.
-Five were under the powerful batteries to the westward. The remainder
-lay inside the harbor in reserve.
-
- [Illustration: Under sail]
-
-At two o’clock in the afternoon of August 3, the flagship displayed the
-long-awaited signal for attack. Our six gunboats, under Decatur, were to
-attack the nine Tripolitan craft east of the harbor. Only three of his
-detachment, for various reasons, reached the enemy. Now three against
-nine were big odds. But, thought our young fellows, the bigger the odds
-the greater the glory. And they had Stephen Decatur—himself worth a
-couple of gunboats—to lead them. He, like the Spartans, “was not wont to
-ask how many but where, the enemy were!”
-
-So Decatur led the charge. He made for a large gunboat armed with a huge
-29-pound cannon and two howitzers. Her crew, as we learned later,
-numbered thirty-six. Decatur also has one cannon, a long 24-pounder. He
-sails in close until he can see the white of their eyes. Then he fires.
-A hail of grapeshot sweeps the enemy’s deck. As the two ships crash
-together our boarders are away. For a few minutes the fight is furious.
-But American pikes and cutlasses are irresistible. When only five of
-their people remain unwounded the Moors cry for quarter. Here is a
-victory, decided, as the old saying goes, by push of pike.
-
-Meanwhile Sailing Master Trippe is having a bad quarter of an hour. He
-runs his gunboat alongside another enemy ship. Boarding is the order of
-the day. That is a good way for Americans, as well as Tripolitans, to
-fight. Trippe springs into the enemy gunboat. Midshipman Henley and nine
-sailors follow. Then the ships drift apart. Here now is a situation.
-Trippe sees that, being too weak for defense, it is necessary to attack.
-He lunges at the enemy captain with his pike. The Tripolitan is a good
-swordsman, and his scimitar is sharp. He rains blows on Trippe’s chest
-and shoulders—wounds him eleven times in all. But the sailing master
-gets in one effective thrust with his pike, and this more than evens up
-matters. Another Moor, whose cutlass is descending on Trippe’s head from
-behind, is bayoneted by Marine Sergeant Jonathan Meredith. Having lost
-their captain and twenty of their comrades, the remaining Tripolitans
-now surrender.
-
-To cap the climax, Decatur boarded a third enemy gunboat, somewhat
-smaller than his first prize. Here occurred that famous hand-to-hand
-combat between Decatur and the gigantic Moorish captain. The devotion of
-Seaman Daniel Frazier, and his own coolness gave Decatur victory. All
-but three of the enemy were killed or wounded before they would
-surrender. This was real schooling for a young Navy.
-
-Lieutenant Richard Somers, bravest of the brave, had not been able to
-join Decatur. So single-handed he attacked the five enemy craft west of
-the entrance. “They still advanced to within pistol-shot,” Somers wrote,
-“when they wore round and stood for the batteries. I pursued them until
-in musket shot of the batteries, which kept up a continued fire of round
-shot and grape.” That was how Somers fought.
-
-The _Constitution’s_ heavy battery, reënforced by six Neapolitan
-29-pounders, had been engaging these same batteries at point-blank
-range. Several times she was brought within four hundred yards of the
-rocky coast of which no chart was available. The bomb vessels had
-launched a quantity of their huge 13-inch shells into the city, but many
-of them did not explode. At four-thirty the wind shifted and a
-withdrawal was signaled. Preble covered it in great style. “Tacked
-ship,” he wrote, “and fired two broadsides in stays, which drove the
-Tripolitans out of the castle and brought down the steeple of a mosque.”
-
-This three-hour battle had proved highly successful. But do you think
-the commodore was contented? Admiral Gleaves tells how, after the
-battle, Decatur came on board the _Constitution_ to make his report.
-Approaching Preble on the quarter-deck, he said: “Sir, I have the honor
-to report that I have captured three of the enemy’s gunboats.” “Three,
-Sir!” replied the commodore, “where are the rest of them?” This incident
-well illustrates the inflexible character of Edward Preble. In his
-official report, however, he was careful to express complete
-satisfaction with the manner in which his subordinates had conducted
-their attacks.
-
-As the summer wore on four more attacks were made. All were conducted
-with great gallantry. They were not made without loss, for the
-Tripolitans always gave us a good fight. Pirates though they were, we
-must give them credit where due. The last attack, conducted at night,
-was particularly effective. On that occasion, “to draw off the enemy’s
-attention and amuse them while the bombardment was being kept up,” the
-_Constitution_ fired eleven thunderous broadsides at point-blank range.
-
-In the fall Preble returned home. During his year of command not a
-court-martial had been ordered nor a duel fought. Among the many letters
-of congratulation he received was a unique tribute from the Pope: “The
-American commander, with a small force and in a short space of time, has
-done more for the cause of Christianity than the most powerful nations
-of Christendom have done for ages.” His countrymen received the
-returning commodore with every honor. Congress voted him a gold medal.
-The Navy had again come into its own. And the _Constitution_, now a
-veteran of five battles, had firmly established her reputation as a
-lucky and successful ship.
-
-Thus ends the first act of our drama. Eight years pass before the second
-begins.
-
-
-
-
- ACT II
- _On the Ocean_
-
-
- SCENE I. THE FIGHT WITH THE GUERRIERE
-
-At last the day has come. Long and eagerly awaited has it been by
-American seamen. A tall-sparred frigate plows through the purple waters
-of the Gulf Stream. From her mastheads lookouts report a tiny speck upon
-the clear horizon. Sharp eyes distinguish it from the far-distant masses
-of cumulous clouds it counterfeits so well. Larger and larger it grows.
-It becomes, in fact, another frigate, equally large and beautiful.
-Across one of her topsails is painted a cryptic phrase, “Not the Little
-Belt.” This may have little meaning to us today. But in the year of our
-Lord 1812 it was full of grim significance. From her peak flutters a
-white ensign, barred with red, the proud emblem of the Royal Navy.
-
-On the first ship there is a muffled roll of drums, a brief hurrying of
-men about the decks, a period of well-ordered activity—then quiet.
-“Silent is the path of duty for every well-drilled man.” Up to her
-mastheads creep balls of bunting. These at a quiet word of command break
-out into strips of red and white, stars of white against a blue
-field—battle ensigns of the United States. _Constitution_ and
-_Guerriere_ have met. A great moment of history is at hand.
-
-The famous duel between these two frigates cannot, of course, be
-compared to the many sea battles between great fleets which have made
-naval history. But often small events have a far-reaching influence.
-This fight certainly was one of the most important and decisive single
-ship actions ever fought.
-
-To show why this was so we must set the scene before we begin the play.
-To Great Britain, engaged in a death struggle with Napoleon, our little
-war was nothing more than a side show—of even less importance than the
-entry of a Balkan nation into the World War struggle. The chief concern
-of the British statesmen was that it might interfere with the supply of
-Wellington’s army in Spain—a task performed almost exclusively by
-American merchant vessels. It never occurred to them that our frigates
-would put to sea, or, if they should, that they could last long against
-the British cruisers which literally covered the Seven Seas. Theodore
-Roosevelt has stated that during the previous twenty years the Royal
-Navy had fought two hundred single-ship actions where there was
-approximate equality in power, i.e., neither ship had a superiority of
-over three to two. In these actions only five British ships had been
-captured. With such a record of success, it was only natural that the
-British captains should give scant consideration to our young and
-comparatively inexperienced Navy.
-
-It is true that the _Constitution_ was about 7 per cent larger than the
-_Guerriere_; that she carried 24-pounder guns against the 18-pounders in
-the British frigate, thus giving us a ten to seven superiority in weight
-of metal; and that her sides were very thick, stouter in fact than those
-of a British ship-of-the-line. But the British captains showed not the
-slightest concern over these American advantages, which at that time
-were not considered as such. In fact, it was thought that we had
-overweighted our ships with guns and timbers so that their speed and
-handiness were decreased. Captain Dacres of the _Guerriere_ had
-challenged any American frigate to meet him in single combat. He had bet
-Captain Isaac Hull, so the story goes, a perfectly good hat that he
-would beat the _Constitution_. Even after the fight Dacres said he would
-be happy to fight him again with “a frigate of similar force to the
-_Guerriere_.” All the propaganda of our frigates being disguised
-ships-of-the-line was a much later concoction, disseminated after we had
-proved in three battles the advantage of our heavier guns and thicker
-sides, as well as the efficiency of our officers and sailors.
-
-But now let the fight begin. For some hours the _Guerriere_ kept away,
-trying to gain some advantage. But at 6:00 P.M. Dacres decided to end
-this useless maneuvering and get to business. He headed directly before
-the wind, decreased sail, and waited for the American frigate. Hull,
-increasing his sail power, came swiftly down upon him. Zero hour was
-about to strike. What could Yankee seamen do against the might of
-Britannia?
-
- [Illustration: _From the painting by Thomas Birch_
- _Constitution_ AND _Guerriere_]
-
- [Illustration: _Macpherson Collection_
- Capture of the British Frigate _Java_ by the U.S. Frigate
- _Constitution_ off the Coast of Brazil, December 29, 1812]
-
-Moses Smith, sponger of No. 1 gun, describes how the _Constitution_ went
-into action. “Hull was now all animation. He saw that the decisive
-moment had come. With great energy, yet calmness of manner, he passed
-around among the officers and men, addressing to them words of
-confidence and encouragement. ‘Men,’ said he, ‘now do your duty. Your
-officers cannot have entire control over you now. Each man must do all
-in his power for his country.’ The Stars and Stripes never floated more
-proudly than they did at that moment. All was silent beneath them, save
-the occasional order from an officer, or the low sound of the movement
-of our implements of war. _Every man stood firm to his post._”
-
-By 6:05 the Constitution was two hundred yards on the _Guerriere’s_ port
-quarter. Hull then yawed his ship’s head slightly away from the enemy
-and threw his broadside full upon her. As the guns bore on the target
-they fired in rapid succession. “We instantly followed the thunder of
-our cannon with three loud cheers, which rang along the ship like the
-roar of waters, and floated away rapidly to the ears of the enemy.”
-
-The cannonading was terrific. Our gunners, in the heat of battle, looked
-well to their aim. By 6:20 the _Constitution_ was abreast the British
-frigate, distant one hundred yards. Then with a splintering crash came
-down Dacres’ mizzenmast. “Huzza, boys! We’ve made a brig of her!” The
-mast, with its tangle of sails and rigging, dragged in the water and
-checked the _Guerriere’s_ headway. Here was Hull’s chance, and he was
-not the man to miss it. Spinning his wheel to the right, he charged
-across his enemy’s bow. Those terrible 24’s raked her with great effect.
-As the _Constitution_ shot past and her guns would no longer bear there
-was a brief lull in the fight. Seaman Daniel Hogan climbed to the dizzy
-height of the fore truck to replace the battle ensign which had been
-shot away.
-
-Hull wore his ship and again headed across the bow of the almost
-unmanageable _Guerriere_. His gunners had moved across the deck and cast
-loose the port guns. Again they raked the British frigate. But this time
-Hull had come a bit too close. The ships came together. Boarders were
-called away. A storm of musketry broke out. Sharpshooters in the tops
-fired down on the crowded decks. Lieutenant William Bush of the Marines
-fell dead. Lieutenant Charles Morris, who first had scaled the
-_Philadelphia’s_ side, was severely wounded. So also was Sailing Master
-John Aylwin, a brave and skillful officer. At 6:30 the ships came clear.
-And then the _Guerriere’s_ foremasts and mainmasts plunged over her
-side. Twenty-five minutes had sufficed for Yankee gunners to dismast a
-British frigate.
-
-Seeing that the fight was won, Hull hauled off to repair his rigging. He
-must be prepared for another enemy if one should appear. At 7:00 he
-returned to receive the surrender of Captain Dacres. The prize was so
-completely wrecked that there was no hope of bringing her into port.
-After her crew had been taken off, she was set on fire. From the
-_Constitution’s_ quarter-deck Captain Dacres watched. At length her
-magazine exploded and she disappeared beneath the waters. A sad omen it
-must have seemed to the British captain. A new sea power had arrived!
-
-That this was fully appreciated is shown by an article in the London
-_Times_. “It is not merely that an English frigate has been taken,
-after, what we are free to confess may be called a brave resistance, but
-that it has been taken by a new enemy, an enemy unaccustomed to such
-triumphs, and likely to be rendered insolent and confident by them. He
-must be a weak politician who does not see how important the first
-triumph is in giving a tone and character to the war. Never before in
-the history of the world did an English frigate strike to an American.”
-
-In our country the effect was magical. Where before political strife,
-sectional differences, and commercial rivalries combined to bring our
-people to the verge of civil war and secession, now a wave of wildest
-enthusiasm spread like a forest fire. For here was a deed of which every
-man and woman from Maine to Louisiana might be proud. “Thank God for
-Hull’s victory” was a watchword which passed from state to state. It
-gave impetus to naval operations and fired our captains with impatience
-to get to sea and bring the enemy under their guns. It encouraged swarms
-of privateers to cover the Seven Seas and attack the enemy’s vital trade
-routes.
-
-Admiral Sir John Jervis is reported to have said to his flag captain as
-he sighted the Spanish fleet off Cape St. Vincent that a victory was
-very necessary to England at that moment. With equal justice Isaac Hull
-might have made a similar remark on sighting the _Guerriere_. Our
-country needed a victory then as it never had before nor has since.
-Napoleon said that in war the moral is to the physical as three to one;
-in this case it was many times more. The mere sinking of a frigate meant
-nothing to England. But the fact that it was sunk by an American frigate
-at the cost of only fourteen casualties meant a great deal to England,
-and to our United States. What had been done once could be done again!
-
-
- SCENE II. AND NOW FOR THE “JAVA”
-
-While the _Constitution_ was taking a little rest in Boston Stephen
-Decatur in the sister-ship _United States_ had taken the sea. In the
-latter part of October he encountered the British frigate _Macedonian_,
-likewise a sister-ship of the _Guerriere_. So the scene was set exactly
-as in the previous battle. But, whereas Hull had decided the issue by
-sheer overpowering force at point-blank range, Decatur fought a distant
-battle in an effort to capitalize to the full his superiority in gunnery
-and seamanship. He won his fight at the cost of only eleven casualties.
-In ninety minutes his gunners had put a hundred shot into the
-_Macedonian’s_ hull and killed or wounded one hundred and four of her
-crew. This time the prize was brought safely into port. Here was a
-convincing confirmation of American naval efficiency.
-
- [Illustration: Firing a cannon]
-
-By the time this fight had been won the _Constitution_ was again at sea.
-This time she was commanded by William Bainbridge, the unlucky officer
-who had lost the _Philadelphia_ off Tripoli. But now he was in a luckier
-ship. Soon fortune sent a fine British frigate into his arms. This
-happened on December 29 off Bahia on the coast of Brazil.
-
-The _Java_ was considerably more powerful than the other British
-frigates previously captured. She was commanded by an excellent officer,
-Captain Lambert. In weight of metal she was inferior to the
-_Constitution_ only as nine to ten. Neither captain had any idea of
-dodging the issue. Each made ready to fight to the finish. Fighting
-topsails were spread. Battle ensigns decorated every masthead. At 2:10
-P.M. the battle began. At first the range was long. But in a few minutes
-the ships were in to two hundred yards. Then the real business of the
-day began. It was as finely contested a frigate action as ever was
-fought. Both Bainbridge and Lambert maneuvered their ships with masterly
-skill. First one ship would gain an advantageous position, then the
-other. Like two skilled wrestlers, each in turn gained a hold, only to
-have it broken by his opponent.
-
-All this time the guns’ crews were fast at work, rushing from one
-battery to the other as their captains tacked and wore. It was work,
-hard and grim—hauling at the gun tackles, ramming home powder and shot,
-and slewing around the clumsy gun carriages to point the guns squarely
-at the enemy. Acrid smoke clouds swept along the decks and clouds of
-splinters flew around.
-
-For a time the action is very closely fought. But, barring a lucky
-accident, the issue is really never in doubt. For Yankee gunners are
-incomparable and they have _iron sides_ to protect them—twenty inches of
-stout oak beams. They cannot be beaten in such a ship. Slowly but surely
-our superiority in gunnery wears down the enemy. One after another the
-_Java’s_ tall spars crash down. Heroic Lambert fights well but is
-killed. Lieutenant Chads, already wounded, takes command. Half his crew
-is killed or wounded. Still he fights.
-
-The _Constitution_ also has her losses. Bainbridge himself is severely
-wounded, but he still keeps the deck. Brave Aylwin, who already wears a
-wound stripe for the _Guerriere_ battle, is again shot down. This will
-be the last fight for him. Well, he will live long enough to see a
-second British frigate lower her battle flags. Over thirty others lie
-dead or wounded about the decks or under the surgeon’s knife in the
-cockpit. British frigates cannot be taken without losing men.
-
-For two long hours the battle rages. Chads does well but he cannot do
-the impossible. Finally the _Java_ must give in. Here is a fight in
-which there is honor enough for all, vanquished as well as victor. And
-Bainbridge, after such buffets of fate as few have received, at last has
-won his well-deserved victory. A third British frigate had been taken.
-
-When “Old Ironsides” reached Boston a great reception awaited the
-commodore. There he marched through the streets, arm in arm with Rodgers
-and Hull—three commodores of whom any country might be proud. Fifes and
-drums played _Yankee-Doodle_ as the procession moved through the
-streets. It was a big Navy Day!
-
-
- SCENE III. THE LAST FIGHT
-
-The _Constitution_ took a long rest after this battle. The _Java’s_ shot
-had discovered some rotten spots in her sides. A long overhaul was
-required to make her again ready for sea. Meanwhile the Navy had won
-many a victory and had suffered some defeats. Our little sloops-of-war
-won a long succession of splendid successes. Gallant James Lawrence,
-hero of the _Hornet-Peacock_ fight, lost the _Chesapeake_ to the British
-frigate _Shannon_—crying, as he lay dying, “Don’t give up the ship!”
-Sewing this motto on his blue battle flag Perry annihilated the British
-squadron on Lake Erie. Macdonough saved the northern frontier with a
-complete victory on Lake Champlain, which a British marine thought more
-desperately fought than Trafalgar. Our privateers were gathering in
-their prizes on every sea in constantly increasing numbers and sending
-the insurance rates three times higher than all previous levels.
-
- [Illustration: Close combat]
-
-But the war could not well end without a third victory by the
-_Constitution_. Now she was commanded by Charles Stewart, a worthy
-successor to Hull and Bainbridge. On February 20, 1815, north of
-Madeira, the American frigate came in contact with the British corvette
-_Cyane_, thirty-four guns, and the sloop _Levant_, twenty-one. Their
-fifty-five guns threw a slightly heavier weight of metal, but their
-armament consisted mostly of short-range carronades which could not be
-compared with the terrible long 24’s which filled the _Constitution’s_
-gun-deck ports. Still the two Britons formed column and accepted
-Stewart’s challenge.
-
-Stewart might have fought at long range where the British carronades
-could not have reached him. But night was coming on, and, if he were to
-take both ships, there was no time to waste. “At five minutes past six,”
-he wrote, “ranged up on the starboard side of the sternmost ship, about
-three hundred yards distant, and commenced the action by broadsides,
-both ships returning our fire with the greatest spirit for about fifteen
-minutes.” Stewart’s tactics have a lesson: When you are anxious to
-engage and night is approaching, do not try to get all the conditions in
-your favor. Take things as they are and fight in the most decisive
-manner. Otherwise you will never capture your _Cyane_ and _Levant_.
-Perhaps we have here a lesson for the battles of peace as well as those
-of war.
-
-After this first engagement smoke clouds obscured the range and fire
-ceased. But not for long, for now the _Constitution_ began a series of
-beautiful maneuvers—raking each enemy ship in turn. They separated and
-made off. Stewart hung close to the _Cyane_ and soon forced her to
-surrender. By eight o’clock she had been manned by a prize crew. Stewart
-started in search of the _Levant_.
-
-Captain Douglass of the _Levant_ had now repaired his damages. Instead
-of trying to escape, he sailed back to assist his comrade. But he was
-too late. At eight-thirty he ran into the _Constitution_. Attempts to
-escape proved futile and at ten the second prize was made. “At 1:00
-A.M.,” Stewart reported, “the damages to our rigging had been repaired,
-sails shifted, and the ship in fighting condition.” The price of this
-double victory was only fifteen casualties.
-
-The _Cyane_ safely reached home. The _Levant_ was recaptured by a
-British squadron in a neutral port. The _Constitution_ received her last
-battle triumph in New York many months after peace had been signed. She
-had fought her last fight. But for many long years she served her
-country well by showing the flag in every part of the world. After that
-she trained many classes of midshipmen at the Naval Academy. Now her
-useful labors are ended but she serves a still more important purpose.
-For this old hulk, whose iron sides protected iron men, is an
-inspiration to every officer and man in the naval service—and to every
-American.
-
- [Illustration: _Courtesy U. S. Naval Academy_ _From an engraving by
- Sartain, after the original painting by Thomas Birch_
- The Night Battle Between the U.S.S. _Constitution_ and H. M. Ships
- _Cyane_ AND _Levant_
- On the left is the corvette _Cyane_, in the center the frigate
- _Constitution_, and on the right the sloop _Levant_. The
- _Constitution_ captured both vessels.]
-
- [Illustration: _From an engraving by Henry Meyer after the original
- painting by John W. Jarvis_
- Stephen Decatur]
-
-
-
-
- EPILOGUE
-
-
- Scarce one tall frigate walks the sea
- Or skirts the safer shores
- Of all that bore to victory
- Our stout old Commodores.
-
-So wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes in 1865. Many years have passed since
-then. Again a tall frigate walks the sea. She carries a message from
-many a stout old commodore, many an alert topman, many a keen-eyed
-gunner. In fact, she carries a message from our Navy to our People.
-
- All the stories of “Old Ironsides” in this little pamphlet are based
- on chapters of _We Build a Navy_, by Commander H. H. Frost, U. S.
- Navy, published by U. S. Naval Institute, Annapolis, Maryland.
-
-
-
-
- _Information about the “Constitution”_
-
-
-The building of the _Constitution_ resulted from the failure of the new
-United States government to purchase protection from the Algerian
-pirates. By a majority of two, the House of Representatives voted, in
-March, 1794, to provide six frigates that “separately would be superior
-to any European frigate.” The _Constitution_ was one of these. She was
-designed by Joshua Humphreys of Philadelphia and built at Hartt’s Wharf
-in Boston, near the present Constitution Wharf. The copper bolts and
-fittings were supplied by Paul Revere. Construction was all but
-abandoned after a new treaty was made with the pirates, but the
-insistence of Presidents Washington and Adams, coupled with the rising
-difficulties with revolutionary France, finally brought the work to
-completion. She was launched in October, 1797, and commissioned quickly.
-
- [Illustration: Under construction]
-
-The _Constitution_ was rated as a 44-gun frigate but has carried as many
-as 55 guns at various times. The present arrangement closely follows
-that of her early days. The guns on the spar deck are 32-pounder
-carronades, short, light guns which threw heavy shots a short distance
-(300 to 400 yards). On the gun deck are long 24-pounders, heavy guns
-with much greater range but less smashing power than the carronade. In
-the following table the ranges given are for one degree of elevation.
-The long gun could attain ranges up to 2,000 yards by greater elevation,
-the projectile leaving the gun with a velocity of about 1,500 feet per
-second.
-
-The _Constitution_ cost $302,917. Her original dimensions were: length
-over-all, 204 feet; beam, 43.5 feet; draft, forward 21 feet, aft 23
-feet; displacement 2,200 tons. She was generally considered an excellent
-sailer, the report being that “she works within eleven points of the
-wind; steers, works, sails, scuds, and lies-to well; rolls deep and
-easy, and sailing close-hauled has beaten everything sailed with.”
-
-
- Guns of the Constitution
-
- Location Type No. Length Weight Bore Powder Approx.
- lbs. inches charge range
-
- Gun deck, 24-pdr., 12 9′ 5¾″ 5,135 5.824 8 lbs. 700 yds.
- for’d. and aft American
- Gun deck, 24-pdr., 18 10′ 5¾″ 5,733 5.824 8 lbs. 700 yds.
- amidships English
- Spar deck 32-pdr., 20 5′ 5″ 2,240 6.41 4 lbs. 400 yds.
- carronades
- Spar deck, bow 24-pdr. 2 9′ 9½″ 4,170 5.824 8 lbs. 700 yds.
- chasers
-
- The two bow chasers are 18-pounders bored for 24-pound shot. They are
- lighter than the standard 24-pounder to reduce top weights. Total
- weight of broadside, 734 pounds. As shot were frequently underweight,
- this figure is not exact.
-
-Her complement was 400 officers and men, but she usually cruised with
-about 50 men in excess. At sea the men were crowded closely together and
-there was much sickness. The ration was fixed by law and it made a
-monotonous diet. The legal ration for Sunday was 1½ lbs. beef, 14 oz.
-bread, ½ lb. flour, ¼ lb. suet, ½ pt. spirits. On week days pork was
-sometimes substituted for beef, with cheese or dried peas in place of
-suet. The meat was usually salted, the bread stale and moldy, the
-spirits good.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-—Inserted the original page-footer line drawings into the text.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Some Stories of Old Ironsides, by
-Holloway Halstead Frost
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-Project Gutenberg's Some Stories of Old Ironsides, by Holloway Halstead Frost
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Some Stories of Old Ironsides
-
-Author: Holloway Halstead Frost
-
-Release Date: April 18, 2017 [EBook #54564]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOME STORIES OF OLD IRONSIDES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, MFR and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SOME STORIES OF
- OLD IRONSIDES
-
-
- _By_
- Commander Holloway H. Frost, U. S. Navy
- Author of _We Build a Navy_
-
- [Illustration: Medallion]
-
- U. S. NAVAL INSTITUTE
- ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
-
- {Copyright 1931 United States Naval Institute}
-
- DESIGNED AND PRINTED BY
- GEORGE BANTA PUBLISHING COMPANY
- MENASHA, WISCONSIN
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- _Facing_
- Preble's First Attack on Tripoli 4
- Old Ironsides 5
- Chase of the _Constitution_ 12
- Edward Preble 13
- _Constitution_ and _Guerriere_ 20
- Capture of the British Frigate _Java_ 21
- The Night Battle Between the U.S.S. _Constitution_ and H. M. Ships
- _Cyane_ and _Levant_ 28
- Stephen Decatur 29
-
- [Illustration: Bowsprit]
-
- [Illustration: _From a painting by M. Carne_
- Preble's First Attack on Tripoli
- The _Constitution_ (large ship right center foreground) leading the
- attack on Tripoli, August 3, 1804.]
-
- [Illustration: _From a painting by C. R. Patterson_
- "Old Ironsides"]
-
-
-
-
- ACT I
- _In the Mediterranean_
-
-
- SCENE I. ENTER THE "CONSTITUTION"
-
-On a September day in 1803 an American frigate bowled along the rocky
-Spanish coast toward Gibraltar. From her bluff bows curled back a foamy
-wave. Above the blue waters rose a gracefully proportioned black hull.
-Around it, halfway up from the water line, ran a broad white stripe.
-This was broken at regular intervals by the dark squares of the gun
-ports. Spars tapered aloft. White rectangles of billowing canvas
-completed a picture of beauty unsurpassed on the Seven Seas. Such was
-the United States ship _Constitution_. Joshua Humphreys, naval
-constructor, had done his work well.
-
-Watchers on the famous Rock might have noted, had the beauty of this
-strange ship gained their full attention, that from the mizzen truck
-flew the broad blue pennant of a commodore. His name was then unknown.
-It is not too well known even now. But as time passes the conviction
-grows that Edward Preble should be classed in the first rank of our
-naval commanders. He was soon to prove that he was every inch a
-commodore. His pennant flew from a splendid ship, but one which had as
-yet no tradition of victory. Edward Preble was to begin that long series
-of successful cruises and spectacular sea fights which was to endear
-"Old Ironsides" to every American.
-
-Countless ships for countless years had passed these far-famed Pillars
-of Hercules. Some had sailed on errands of peace, but most on the grim
-business of war. Phoenician traders had sailed out northward to Britain
-for cargoes of its precious tin. Carthaginian merchants under Hanno had
-ventured far down the Atlantic coast of Africa. Scipio Africanus with
-his legions had come this way to complete the conquest of Spain. Moorish
-galleys had ferried to Europe those fierce Moslem horsemen who overran
-the Iberian Peninsula and fought for world empire on the battlefields of
-France. Norse sea kings had sailed on through to Sicily and
-Constantinople. Stout De Ruyter and his Dutch seamen had followed in
-their track to make his last campaign in the blue waters of the
-Mediterranean. And only five years before the greatest sea captain of
-them all, a certain Horatio Nelson, had hastened by to match his wits
-with a General Bonaparte and annihilate his fleet at the mouth of the
-Nile.
-
-The entry of Edward Preble in a Yankee frigate into the great sea which
-had supported so many war fleets seemed doubtless at that time utterly
-devoid of historical significance. But now, as we look back over a
-century and a quarter, it takes on a new importance. It was to bring our
-young Navy to a new plane of efficiency. It was to demonstrate to
-Americans in a striking manner the value of an efficient naval service.
-It was to establish our Navy as a permanent American institution. And,
-what is more, it signaled to watchful eyes abroad the rise of a new sea
-power. It indicated, not only to African pirates, but also to astute
-European statesmen, that this American Republic had become a factor they
-would have to reckon with in framing their diplomatic policies.
-
-We believe that, as much as any other man of that era, it was bold and
-forceful Edward Preble who gave the United States that initial impulsion
-along the path of astounding prosperity, unparalleled commercial power,
-and world-wide influence.
-
- [Illustration: Squadron at sea]
-
-For two years we had been at war with the Moslem principalities which
-lined the Mediterranean coast of Africa. For many years before that,
-their piratical craft had captured our merchant ships and sold their
-crews into slavery. We had first begged and then bribed these pirates to
-desist from piracy. And, finally, after all diplomatic measures had
-failed, that task was given the Navy. That service had been in existence
-only a few years. It was, we must confess, not properly prepared to
-conduct a difficult campaign so far from its home bases. So two years of
-desultory fighting had accomplished little. In despair, our statesmen
-had descended again to the artifices of bribery. But, fortunately for
-us, the piratical chieftains did not think our offers worth their while.
-So the Navy was given a final chance and Edward Preble the command. The
-backbone of his squadron were the fine frigates _Constitution_ and
-_Philadelphia_. For inshore work there were the brigs _Argus_ and
-_Siren_ and the schooners _Enterprise_, _Nautilus_, and _Vixen_. It is
-true that seven ships constituted a small force to keep in good humor
-Morocco, Algiers, and Tunis and bring to a favorable conclusion the war
-with Tripoli. But the ships were all finely commanded, well officered,
-and manned with the best sailors in the world. The ships themselves were
-well built, adequately equipped, and completely stored for a long
-campaign. So it was with high hopes that Preble commenced his difficult
-task--one, it may be added, which had baffled Cardinal Ximenes, Charles
-V, Andrea Doria, Blake, De Ruyter, and Duquesne.
-
-
- SCENE II. EXIT THE "PHILADELPHIA"
-
-An effective demonstration off Tangiers soon cooled the ardor of the
-Sultan of Morocco. He reconfirmed the old and highly favorable treaty of
-1786. One potential enemy had been removed. On now for Syracuse, the
-naval base from which our campaign against Tripoli was being conducted.
-
-Off the coast of Sardinia the _Constitution_ hailed H.M.S. _Amazon_, a
-frigate attached to the squadron of Lord Nelson. From her Preble
-received "the melancholy and distressing intelligence of the loss of the
-U.S. ship _Philadelphia_." Here, Commodore, is a problem which will put
-to the test all your intelligence and stoutness of heart.
-
-At Syracuse Preble learned the full extent of the disaster. The fine
-frigate had been run aground off Tripoli. Captain Bainbridge,
-discouraged by his ill fortune, had surrendered too quickly. Three
-hundred and fifteen of our officers and men had been led ashore in
-triumph. In his haste Bainbridge had not even taken effective measures
-to destroy his own ship. She was floated and brought into the harbor of
-Tripoli. Her guns were fished out of the water and remounted. She was
-manned with a strong Tripolitan crew. Thus she contributed to the
-strength of the defenses, and constituted a threat to every merchant
-vessel in the Mediterranean. Gloomy were the thoughts of poor Bainbridge
-as he viewed these developments from his prison window.
-
-Preble was not the man to worry over past disasters. He was concerned
-with future successes. How could he counteract, in part at least, the
-loss of the _Philadelphia_? There was no direct method for rescuing the
-crew. But there might be a chance to regain the ship, or at least
-destroy her so that the enemy could not use her. Bainbridge, through the
-connivance of the Danish consul at Tripoli, had suggested that she be
-attacked by a party of men secreted in the hold of a merchant vessel.
-The capture of a Tripolitan ketch provided the means of carrying through
-this daring plan. The next essential item was a cool and daring
-commander.
-
-The commodore invited to this post of honor and danger Lieutenant
-Stephen Decatur, then in command of the _Enterprise_. To this young
-officer might well be applied a sentence from Plutarch: "Being ever
-thirsty after honor, and passionate for glory, if anything of a greater
-or extraordinary nature was to be done, he was eager to be the doer of
-it himself." Decatur eagerly accepted his commodore's invitation.
-
-Once the squadron got wind of the venture and of the commander selected,
-there was no lack of volunteers. Decatur naturally gave first choice to
-the people in his own ship. Five of her officers and sixty-two of her
-sailors shifted over to the ketch. This was formally commissioned and
-appropriately renamed _Intrepid_. Five midshipmen from the
-_Constitution_ completed the complement. Last, but by no means least,
-was a brave Sicilian pilot, Salvador Catalano.
-
-Edward Preble took upon himself full responsibility for the hazardous
-enterprise. "It is my order," he wrote Decatur, "that you proceed to
-Tripoli, in company with the _Siren_, Lieutenant Stewart; enter the
-harbor in the night; board the _Philadelphia_; burn her; and make good
-your escape." The courage it requires to write such an order is seldom
-appreciated. If the expedition had failed, as certainly it looked very
-probable, all the blame would have fallen on Preble. He would have been
-accused of sending officers and men to their death while he remained in
-safety. And, if the attack should succeed, the credit and honor would
-belong to Decatur. But Preble was not guarding his own interests. He was
-striving to further those of the Navy and the country.
-
- [Illustration: In Tripoli harbor]
-
-For two weeks the _Intrepid_ was battered about by a succession of
-storms. On this little craft, much smaller than a submarine chaser,
-seventy-four men were crowded. Their sufferings can scarcely be
-imagined. But at last the weather moderated and the long-awaited
-opportunity was at hand. As a renforcement Midshipman Anderson and nine
-sailors rowed over in one of the _Siren's_ cutters. This was towed
-astern of the _Intrepid_. She started in.
-
-The sea now was smooth. The wind lulled slowly to a calm. As night came
-on, a young moon, the enemy's emblem, diffused a gentle light over the
-phosphorescent waters. Wary Odysseus might have turned back his prow at
-sight of such an unfavorable omen, but not all the gods on Olympus could
-have turned back Stephen Decatur that night.
-
-Slowly and silently steals the _Intrepid_ toward the harbor entrance.
-This cold wintry night there are no vessels on patrol. Only irregular
-ranks of jagged rocks keep watch. The moonlight discloses these ever
-present sentinels. The ship passes through.
-
-Quietly there on deck stand Decatur, Catalano, and ten seamen--all
-disguised as Sicilians. Close down behind the bulwarks crouch the
-remainder of the crew. Ahead looms up the great hulk of the
-_Philadelphia_. Her foremast has not been replaced, but the main and
-mizzenmasts, with their network of rigging, trace a spider web of black
-against the dull red glare of the city's lights. Fifteen gaping gun
-ports are dotted with the muzzles of frowning 18-pounders, loaded,
-shotted, and ready to be touched off. High overhead towers the dark mass
-of the Bashaw's castle, its embrasures filled with one hundred and
-fifteen cannon.
-
-The frigate's bell rings out the hour. It is ten-thirty in the evening
-watch. Her sentinel hails. Catalano answers with long-rehearsed lines.
-He has lost his anchors. May he not secure alongside the frigate for the
-night? The answer is, "Yes." Lawrence lowers a small boat. With a line
-from the _Intrepid_ he pulls for the frigate's bows. Quickly he secures
-his end to the fore chains. At the other end crouching seamen haul away.
-
-Watchers on the frigate, if they had not been too sleepy, might have
-wondered at the hidden power which draws the little craft so steadily
-upon her prey. It is not until she is almost alongside that they see the
-crowd of men on her decks. "Americanos!" yells the sentinel. But now it
-is too late. Another pull brings the _Intrepid_ alongside. Then rises a
-confused din as her crew begin a wild scramble for the honor of being
-the first over the enemy's side. Decatur trips on his scabbard. Morris
-passes him. Over the high bulwarks, sword in teeth, he disappears.
-Lieutenants, midshipmen, sailors follow him. Here have ceased the
-privileges of rank. Those of courage begin.
-
-Surprise has won the day. There is no resistance on the upper decks. The
-startled enemy dive over the side or scuttle below. Wild Americanos or
-hungry sharks--what a choice to have to make! Some twenty Tripolitans
-fall before the former. How many succumb to the latter we may only
-guess. In twenty minutes the ship is everywhere ablaze. As the flames
-shoot up the guns ashore fire on the clearly illuminated target. Back
-into the ketch our sailors spring. Lines are cut with battle-axe and
-cutlass, just in time to evade the outrushing flames. Out ring three
-good American cheers above the crackling roar of fire and the thunder of
-cannonade.
-
-The flames now have mounted the frigate's rigging turning night into
-day. The _Intrepid_ is clearly disclosed to the enemy gunners. From
-every direction shot converge on the little ship. Out are run sixteen
-great sweeps. Strong men, willing galley slaves for an hour, double-bank
-their handles. Their long blades churn the waters into foam. Away she
-races through the shell splashes.
-
- [Illustration: _From an old painting_
- Chase of the _Constitution_]
-
- [Illustration: _From the painting by John W. Jarvis_
- Edward Preble]
-
-Thus ended with complete success what Lord Nelson called the most bold
-and daring act of the age. When, three days later, the _Intrepid_ sailed
-through the American squadron in Syracuse, each ship gave Decatur and
-his men a deafening salute of cheers. What music to a sailor's ears!
-
-
- SCENE III. PREBLE ATTACKS TRIPOLI
-
-As spring came on the commodore pushed his preparations for a naval
-attack on Tripoli. He now had only one large ship, the _Constitution_.
-There were five brigs and schooners. A captured Tripolitan brig,
-commissioned as the _Scourge_, made a sixth. Preble knew that these
-ships could not get in close enough to the enemy to win the decisive
-results he was determined to have. So he borrowed six gunboats, two bomb
-vessels, and ninety-six sailors from the King of Naples. Even with this
-renforcement, Preble had but one thousand and sixty men to attack a
-strongly fortified town defended by twenty-five thousand soldiers and
-sailors. Still his hopes for success were high.
-
-Early in August, 1804, the orders for a grand attack were issued. This
-was to be no distant cannonade. The _Constitution_ was to attack the
-batteries at point-blank range. The gunboats were to board the enemy
-flotilla. The bomb vessels were to toss their 13-inch grenades into the
-town.
-
-The Bashaw, as the Tripolitan ruler was called, saw that a storm was
-about to break over his head. In addition to formidable batteries
-ashore, he had twenty-one gunboats. These were manned by from
-twenty-four to forty men. Each carried one large and two small guns. We
-must not mistake these Tripolitans. They were splendid seamen and fierce
-fighters. Boarding was their usual method of attack. Nine of their
-gunboats were stationed outside the reefs east of the harbor entrance.
-Five were under the powerful batteries to the westward. The remainder
-lay inside the harbor in reserve.
-
- [Illustration: Under sail]
-
-At two o'clock in the afternoon of August 3, the flagship displayed the
-long-awaited signal for attack. Our six gunboats, under Decatur, were to
-attack the nine Tripolitan craft east of the harbor. Only three of his
-detachment, for various reasons, reached the enemy. Now three against
-nine were big odds. But, thought our young fellows, the bigger the odds
-the greater the glory. And they had Stephen Decatur--himself worth a
-couple of gunboats--to lead them. He, like the Spartans, "was not wont
-to ask how many but where, the enemy were!"
-
-So Decatur led the charge. He made for a large gunboat armed with a huge
-29-pound cannon and two howitzers. Her crew, as we learned later,
-numbered thirty-six. Decatur also has one cannon, a long 24-pounder. He
-sails in close until he can see the white of their eyes. Then he fires.
-A hail of grapeshot sweeps the enemy's deck. As the two ships crash
-together our boarders are away. For a few minutes the fight is furious.
-But American pikes and cutlasses are irresistible. When only five of
-their people remain unwounded the Moors cry for quarter. Here is a
-victory, decided, as the old saying goes, by push of pike.
-
-Meanwhile Sailing Master Trippe is having a bad quarter of an hour. He
-runs his gunboat alongside another enemy ship. Boarding is the order of
-the day. That is a good way for Americans, as well as Tripolitans, to
-fight. Trippe springs into the enemy gunboat. Midshipman Henley and nine
-sailors follow. Then the ships drift apart. Here now is a situation.
-Trippe sees that, being too weak for defense, it is necessary to attack.
-He lunges at the enemy captain with his pike. The Tripolitan is a good
-swordsman, and his scimitar is sharp. He rains blows on Trippe's chest
-and shoulders--wounds him eleven times in all. But the sailing master
-gets in one effective thrust with his pike, and this more than evens up
-matters. Another Moor, whose cutlass is descending on Trippe's head from
-behind, is bayoneted by Marine Sergeant Jonathan Meredith. Having lost
-their captain and twenty of their comrades, the remaining Tripolitans
-now surrender.
-
-To cap the climax, Decatur boarded a third enemy gunboat, somewhat
-smaller than his first prize. Here occurred that famous hand-to-hand
-combat between Decatur and the gigantic Moorish captain. The devotion of
-Seaman Daniel Frazier, and his own coolness gave Decatur victory. All
-but three of the enemy were killed or wounded before they would
-surrender. This was real schooling for a young Navy.
-
-Lieutenant Richard Somers, bravest of the brave, had not been able to
-join Decatur. So single-handed he attacked the five enemy craft west of
-the entrance. "They still advanced to within pistol-shot," Somers wrote,
-"when they wore round and stood for the batteries. I pursued them until
-in musket shot of the batteries, which kept up a continued fire of round
-shot and grape." That was how Somers fought.
-
-The _Constitution's_ heavy battery, renforced by six Neapolitan
-29-pounders, had been engaging these same batteries at point-blank
-range. Several times she was brought within four hundred yards of the
-rocky coast of which no chart was available. The bomb vessels had
-launched a quantity of their huge 13-inch shells into the city, but many
-of them did not explode. At four-thirty the wind shifted and a
-withdrawal was signaled. Preble covered it in great style. "Tacked
-ship," he wrote, "and fired two broadsides in stays, which drove the
-Tripolitans out of the castle and brought down the steeple of a mosque."
-
-This three-hour battle had proved highly successful. But do you think
-the commodore was contented? Admiral Gleaves tells how, after the
-battle, Decatur came on board the _Constitution_ to make his report.
-Approaching Preble on the quarter-deck, he said: "Sir, I have the honor
-to report that I have captured three of the enemy's gunboats." "Three,
-Sir!" replied the commodore, "where are the rest of them?" This incident
-well illustrates the inflexible character of Edward Preble. In his
-official report, however, he was careful to express complete
-satisfaction with the manner in which his subordinates had conducted
-their attacks.
-
-As the summer wore on four more attacks were made. All were conducted
-with great gallantry. They were not made without loss, for the
-Tripolitans always gave us a good fight. Pirates though they were, we
-must give them credit where due. The last attack, conducted at night,
-was particularly effective. On that occasion, "to draw off the enemy's
-attention and amuse them while the bombardment was being kept up," the
-_Constitution_ fired eleven thunderous broadsides at point-blank range.
-
-In the fall Preble returned home. During his year of command not a
-court-martial had been ordered nor a duel fought. Among the many letters
-of congratulation he received was a unique tribute from the Pope: "The
-American commander, with a small force and in a short space of time, has
-done more for the cause of Christianity than the most powerful nations
-of Christendom have done for ages." His countrymen received the
-returning commodore with every honor. Congress voted him a gold medal.
-The Navy had again come into its own. And the _Constitution_, now a
-veteran of five battles, had firmly established her reputation as a
-lucky and successful ship.
-
-Thus ends the first act of our drama. Eight years pass before the second
-begins.
-
-
-
-
- ACT II
- _On the Ocean_
-
-
- SCENE I. THE FIGHT WITH THE GUERRIERE
-
-At last the day has come. Long and eagerly awaited has it been by
-American seamen. A tall-sparred frigate plows through the purple waters
-of the Gulf Stream. From her mastheads lookouts report a tiny speck upon
-the clear horizon. Sharp eyes distinguish it from the far-distant masses
-of cumulous clouds it counterfeits so well. Larger and larger it grows.
-It becomes, in fact, another frigate, equally large and beautiful.
-Across one of her topsails is painted a cryptic phrase, "Not the Little
-Belt." This may have little meaning to us today. But in the year of our
-Lord 1812 it was full of grim significance. From her peak flutters a
-white ensign, barred with red, the proud emblem of the Royal Navy.
-
-On the first ship there is a muffled roll of drums, a brief hurrying of
-men about the decks, a period of well-ordered activity--then quiet.
-"Silent is the path of duty for every well-drilled man." Up to her
-mastheads creep balls of bunting. These at a quiet word of command break
-out into strips of red and white, stars of white against a blue
-field--battle ensigns of the United States. _Constitution_ and
-_Guerriere_ have met. A great moment of history is at hand.
-
-The famous duel between these two frigates cannot, of course, be
-compared to the many sea battles between great fleets which have made
-naval history. But often small events have a far-reaching influence.
-This fight certainly was one of the most important and decisive single
-ship actions ever fought.
-
-To show why this was so we must set the scene before we begin the play.
-To Great Britain, engaged in a death struggle with Napoleon, our little
-war was nothing more than a side show--of even less importance than the
-entry of a Balkan nation into the World War struggle. The chief concern
-of the British statesmen was that it might interfere with the supply of
-Wellington's army in Spain--a task performed almost exclusively by
-American merchant vessels. It never occurred to them that our frigates
-would put to sea, or, if they should, that they could last long against
-the British cruisers which literally covered the Seven Seas. Theodore
-Roosevelt has stated that during the previous twenty years the Royal
-Navy had fought two hundred single-ship actions where there was
-approximate equality in power, i.e., neither ship had a superiority of
-over three to two. In these actions only five British ships had been
-captured. With such a record of success, it was only natural that the
-British captains should give scant consideration to our young and
-comparatively inexperienced Navy.
-
-It is true that the _Constitution_ was about 7 per cent larger than the
-_Guerriere_; that she carried 24-pounder guns against the 18-pounders in
-the British frigate, thus giving us a ten to seven superiority in weight
-of metal; and that her sides were very thick, stouter in fact than those
-of a British ship-of-the-line. But the British captains showed not the
-slightest concern over these American advantages, which at that time
-were not considered as such. In fact, it was thought that we had
-overweighted our ships with guns and timbers so that their speed and
-handiness were decreased. Captain Dacres of the _Guerriere_ had
-challenged any American frigate to meet him in single combat. He had bet
-Captain Isaac Hull, so the story goes, a perfectly good hat that he
-would beat the _Constitution_. Even after the fight Dacres said he would
-be happy to fight him again with "a frigate of similar force to the
-_Guerriere_." All the propaganda of our frigates being disguised
-ships-of-the-line was a much later concoction, disseminated after we had
-proved in three battles the advantage of our heavier guns and thicker
-sides, as well as the efficiency of our officers and sailors.
-
-But now let the fight begin. For some hours the _Guerriere_ kept away,
-trying to gain some advantage. But at 6:00 P.M. Dacres decided to end
-this useless maneuvering and get to business. He headed directly before
-the wind, decreased sail, and waited for the American frigate. Hull,
-increasing his sail power, came swiftly down upon him. Zero hour was
-about to strike. What could Yankee seamen do against the might of
-Britannia?
-
- [Illustration: _From the painting by Thomas Birch_
- _Constitution_ AND _Guerriere_]
-
- [Illustration: _Macpherson Collection_
- Capture of the British Frigate _Java_ by the U.S. Frigate
- _Constitution_ off the Coast of Brazil, December 29, 1812]
-
-Moses Smith, sponger of No. 1 gun, describes how the _Constitution_ went
-into action. "Hull was now all animation. He saw that the decisive
-moment had come. With great energy, yet calmness of manner, he passed
-around among the officers and men, addressing to them words of
-confidence and encouragement. 'Men,' said he, 'now do your duty. Your
-officers cannot have entire control over you now. Each man must do all
-in his power for his country.' The Stars and Stripes never floated more
-proudly than they did at that moment. All was silent beneath them, save
-the occasional order from an officer, or the low sound of the movement
-of our implements of war. _Every man stood firm to his post._"
-
-By 6:05 the Constitution was two hundred yards on the _Guerriere's_ port
-quarter. Hull then yawed his ship's head slightly away from the enemy
-and threw his broadside full upon her. As the guns bore on the target
-they fired in rapid succession. "We instantly followed the thunder of
-our cannon with three loud cheers, which rang along the ship like the
-roar of waters, and floated away rapidly to the ears of the enemy."
-
-The cannonading was terrific. Our gunners, in the heat of battle, looked
-well to their aim. By 6:20 the _Constitution_ was abreast the British
-frigate, distant one hundred yards. Then with a splintering crash came
-down Dacres' mizzenmast. "Huzza, boys! We've made a brig of her!" The
-mast, with its tangle of sails and rigging, dragged in the water and
-checked the _Guerriere's_ headway. Here was Hull's chance, and he was
-not the man to miss it. Spinning his wheel to the right, he charged
-across his enemy's bow. Those terrible 24's raked her with great effect.
-As the _Constitution_ shot past and her guns would no longer bear there
-was a brief lull in the fight. Seaman Daniel Hogan climbed to the dizzy
-height of the fore truck to replace the battle ensign which had been
-shot away.
-
-Hull wore his ship and again headed across the bow of the almost
-unmanageable _Guerriere_. His gunners had moved across the deck and cast
-loose the port guns. Again they raked the British frigate. But this time
-Hull had come a bit too close. The ships came together. Boarders were
-called away. A storm of musketry broke out. Sharpshooters in the tops
-fired down on the crowded decks. Lieutenant William Bush of the Marines
-fell dead. Lieutenant Charles Morris, who first had scaled the
-_Philadelphia's_ side, was severely wounded. So also was Sailing Master
-John Aylwin, a brave and skillful officer. At 6:30 the ships came clear.
-And then the _Guerriere's_ foremasts and mainmasts plunged over her
-side. Twenty-five minutes had sufficed for Yankee gunners to dismast a
-British frigate.
-
-Seeing that the fight was won, Hull hauled off to repair his rigging. He
-must be prepared for another enemy if one should appear. At 7:00 he
-returned to receive the surrender of Captain Dacres. The prize was so
-completely wrecked that there was no hope of bringing her into port.
-After her crew had been taken off, she was set on fire. From the
-_Constitution's_ quarter-deck Captain Dacres watched. At length her
-magazine exploded and she disappeared beneath the waters. A sad omen it
-must have seemed to the British captain. A new sea power had arrived!
-
-That this was fully appreciated is shown by an article in the London
-_Times_. "It is not merely that an English frigate has been taken,
-after, what we are free to confess may be called a brave resistance, but
-that it has been taken by a new enemy, an enemy unaccustomed to such
-triumphs, and likely to be rendered insolent and confident by them. He
-must be a weak politician who does not see how important the first
-triumph is in giving a tone and character to the war. Never before in
-the history of the world did an English frigate strike to an American."
-
-In our country the effect was magical. Where before political strife,
-sectional differences, and commercial rivalries combined to bring our
-people to the verge of civil war and secession, now a wave of wildest
-enthusiasm spread like a forest fire. For here was a deed of which every
-man and woman from Maine to Louisiana might be proud. "Thank God for
-Hull's victory" was a watchword which passed from state to state. It
-gave impetus to naval operations and fired our captains with impatience
-to get to sea and bring the enemy under their guns. It encouraged swarms
-of privateers to cover the Seven Seas and attack the enemy's vital trade
-routes.
-
-Admiral Sir John Jervis is reported to have said to his flag captain as
-he sighted the Spanish fleet off Cape St. Vincent that a victory was
-very necessary to England at that moment. With equal justice Isaac Hull
-might have made a similar remark on sighting the _Guerriere_. Our
-country needed a victory then as it never had before nor has since.
-Napoleon said that in war the moral is to the physical as three to one;
-in this case it was many times more. The mere sinking of a frigate meant
-nothing to England. But the fact that it was sunk by an American frigate
-at the cost of only fourteen casualties meant a great deal to England,
-and to our United States. What had been done once could be done again!
-
-
- SCENE II. AND NOW FOR THE "JAVA"
-
-While the _Constitution_ was taking a little rest in Boston Stephen
-Decatur in the sister-ship _United States_ had taken the sea. In the
-latter part of October he encountered the British frigate _Macedonian_,
-likewise a sister-ship of the _Guerriere_. So the scene was set exactly
-as in the previous battle. But, whereas Hull had decided the issue by
-sheer overpowering force at point-blank range, Decatur fought a distant
-battle in an effort to capitalize to the full his superiority in gunnery
-and seamanship. He won his fight at the cost of only eleven casualties.
-In ninety minutes his gunners had put a hundred shot into the
-_Macedonian's_ hull and killed or wounded one hundred and four of her
-crew. This time the prize was brought safely into port. Here was a
-convincing confirmation of American naval efficiency.
-
- [Illustration: Firing a cannon]
-
-By the time this fight had been won the _Constitution_ was again at sea.
-This time she was commanded by William Bainbridge, the unlucky officer
-who had lost the _Philadelphia_ off Tripoli. But now he was in a luckier
-ship. Soon fortune sent a fine British frigate into his arms. This
-happened on December 29 off Bahia on the coast of Brazil.
-
-The _Java_ was considerably more powerful than the other British
-frigates previously captured. She was commanded by an excellent officer,
-Captain Lambert. In weight of metal she was inferior to the
-_Constitution_ only as nine to ten. Neither captain had any idea of
-dodging the issue. Each made ready to fight to the finish. Fighting
-topsails were spread. Battle ensigns decorated every masthead. At 2:10
-P.M. the battle began. At first the range was long. But in a few minutes
-the ships were in to two hundred yards. Then the real business of the
-day began. It was as finely contested a frigate action as ever was
-fought. Both Bainbridge and Lambert maneuvered their ships with masterly
-skill. First one ship would gain an advantageous position, then the
-other. Like two skilled wrestlers, each in turn gained a hold, only to
-have it broken by his opponent.
-
-All this time the guns' crews were fast at work, rushing from one
-battery to the other as their captains tacked and wore. It was work,
-hard and grim--hauling at the gun tackles, ramming home powder and shot,
-and slewing around the clumsy gun carriages to point the guns squarely
-at the enemy. Acrid smoke clouds swept along the decks and clouds of
-splinters flew around.
-
-For a time the action is very closely fought. But, barring a lucky
-accident, the issue is really never in doubt. For Yankee gunners are
-incomparable and they have _iron sides_ to protect them--twenty inches
-of stout oak beams. They cannot be beaten in such a ship. Slowly but
-surely our superiority in gunnery wears down the enemy. One after
-another the _Java's_ tall spars crash down. Heroic Lambert fights well
-but is killed. Lieutenant Chads, already wounded, takes command. Half
-his crew is killed or wounded. Still he fights.
-
-The _Constitution_ also has her losses. Bainbridge himself is severely
-wounded, but he still keeps the deck. Brave Aylwin, who already wears a
-wound stripe for the _Guerriere_ battle, is again shot down. This will
-be the last fight for him. Well, he will live long enough to see a
-second British frigate lower her battle flags. Over thirty others lie
-dead or wounded about the decks or under the surgeon's knife in the
-cockpit. British frigates cannot be taken without losing men.
-
-For two long hours the battle rages. Chads does well but he cannot do
-the impossible. Finally the _Java_ must give in. Here is a fight in
-which there is honor enough for all, vanquished as well as victor. And
-Bainbridge, after such buffets of fate as few have received, at last has
-won his well-deserved victory. A third British frigate had been taken.
-
-When "Old Ironsides" reached Boston a great reception awaited the
-commodore. There he marched through the streets, arm in arm with Rodgers
-and Hull--three commodores of whom any country might be proud. Fifes and
-drums played _Yankee-Doodle_ as the procession moved through the
-streets. It was a big Navy Day!
-
-
- SCENE III. THE LAST FIGHT
-
-The _Constitution_ took a long rest after this battle. The _Java's_ shot
-had discovered some rotten spots in her sides. A long overhaul was
-required to make her again ready for sea. Meanwhile the Navy had won
-many a victory and had suffered some defeats. Our little sloops-of-war
-won a long succession of splendid successes. Gallant James Lawrence,
-hero of the _Hornet-Peacock_ fight, lost the _Chesapeake_ to the British
-frigate _Shannon_--crying, as he lay dying, "Don't give up the ship!"
-Sewing this motto on his blue battle flag Perry annihilated the British
-squadron on Lake Erie. Macdonough saved the northern frontier with a
-complete victory on Lake Champlain, which a British marine thought more
-desperately fought than Trafalgar. Our privateers were gathering in
-their prizes on every sea in constantly increasing numbers and sending
-the insurance rates three times higher than all previous levels.
-
- [Illustration: Close combat]
-
-But the war could not well end without a third victory by the
-_Constitution_. Now she was commanded by Charles Stewart, a worthy
-successor to Hull and Bainbridge. On February 20, 1815, north of
-Madeira, the American frigate came in contact with the British corvette
-_Cyane_, thirty-four guns, and the sloop _Levant_, twenty-one. Their
-fifty-five guns threw a slightly heavier weight of metal, but their
-armament consisted mostly of short-range carronades which could not be
-compared with the terrible long 24's which filled the _Constitution's_
-gun-deck ports. Still the two Britons formed column and accepted
-Stewart's challenge.
-
-Stewart might have fought at long range where the British carronades
-could not have reached him. But night was coming on, and, if he were to
-take both ships, there was no time to waste. "At five minutes past six,"
-he wrote, "ranged up on the starboard side of the sternmost ship, about
-three hundred yards distant, and commenced the action by broadsides,
-both ships returning our fire with the greatest spirit for about fifteen
-minutes." Stewart's tactics have a lesson: When you are anxious to
-engage and night is approaching, do not try to get all the conditions in
-your favor. Take things as they are and fight in the most decisive
-manner. Otherwise you will never capture your _Cyane_ and _Levant_.
-Perhaps we have here a lesson for the battles of peace as well as those
-of war.
-
-After this first engagement smoke clouds obscured the range and fire
-ceased. But not for long, for now the _Constitution_ began a series of
-beautiful maneuvers--raking each enemy ship in turn. They separated and
-made off. Stewart hung close to the _Cyane_ and soon forced her to
-surrender. By eight o'clock she had been manned by a prize crew. Stewart
-started in search of the _Levant_.
-
-Captain Douglass of the _Levant_ had now repaired his damages. Instead
-of trying to escape, he sailed back to assist his comrade. But he was
-too late. At eight-thirty he ran into the _Constitution_. Attempts to
-escape proved futile and at ten the second prize was made. "At 1:00
-A.M.," Stewart reported, "the damages to our rigging had been repaired,
-sails shifted, and the ship in fighting condition." The price of this
-double victory was only fifteen casualties.
-
-The _Cyane_ safely reached home. The _Levant_ was recaptured by a
-British squadron in a neutral port. The _Constitution_ received her last
-battle triumph in New York many months after peace had been signed. She
-had fought her last fight. But for many long years she served her
-country well by showing the flag in every part of the world. After that
-she trained many classes of midshipmen at the Naval Academy. Now her
-useful labors are ended but she serves a still more important purpose.
-For this old hulk, whose iron sides protected iron men, is an
-inspiration to every officer and man in the naval service--and to every
-American.
-
- [Illustration: _Courtesy U. S. Naval Academy_ _From an engraving by
- Sartain, after the original painting by Thomas Birch_
- The Night Battle Between the U.S.S. _Constitution_ and H. M. Ships
- _Cyane_ AND _Levant_
- On the left is the corvette _Cyane_, in the center the frigate
- _Constitution_, and on the right the sloop _Levant_. The
- _Constitution_ captured both vessels.]
-
- [Illustration: _From an engraving by Henry Meyer after the original
- painting by John W. Jarvis_
- Stephen Decatur]
-
-
-
-
- EPILOGUE
-
-
- Scarce one tall frigate walks the sea
- Or skirts the safer shores
- Of all that bore to victory
- Our stout old Commodores.
-
-So wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes in 1865. Many years have passed since
-then. Again a tall frigate walks the sea. She carries a message from
-many a stout old commodore, many an alert topman, many a keen-eyed
-gunner. In fact, she carries a message from our Navy to our People.
-
- All the stories of "Old Ironsides" in this little pamphlet are based
- on chapters of _We Build a Navy_, by Commander H. H. Frost, U. S.
- Navy, published by U. S. Naval Institute, Annapolis, Maryland.
-
-
-
-
- _Information about the "Constitution"_
-
-
-The building of the _Constitution_ resulted from the failure of the new
-United States government to purchase protection from the Algerian
-pirates. By a majority of two, the House of Representatives voted, in
-March, 1794, to provide six frigates that "separately would be superior
-to any European frigate." The _Constitution_ was one of these. She was
-designed by Joshua Humphreys of Philadelphia and built at Hartt's Wharf
-in Boston, near the present Constitution Wharf. The copper bolts and
-fittings were supplied by Paul Revere. Construction was all but
-abandoned after a new treaty was made with the pirates, but the
-insistence of Presidents Washington and Adams, coupled with the rising
-difficulties with revolutionary France, finally brought the work to
-completion. She was launched in October, 1797, and commissioned quickly.
-
- [Illustration: Under construction]
-
-The _Constitution_ was rated as a 44-gun frigate but has carried as many
-as 55 guns at various times. The present arrangement closely follows
-that of her early days. The guns on the spar deck are 32-pounder
-carronades, short, light guns which threw heavy shots a short distance
-(300 to 400 yards). On the gun deck are long 24-pounders, heavy guns
-with much greater range but less smashing power than the carronade. In
-the following table the ranges given are for one degree of elevation.
-The long gun could attain ranges up to 2,000 yards by greater elevation,
-the projectile leaving the gun with a velocity of about 1,500 feet per
-second.
-
-The _Constitution_ cost $302,917. Her original dimensions were: length
-over-all, 204 feet; beam, 43.5 feet; draft, forward 21 feet, aft 23
-feet; displacement 2,200 tons. She was generally considered an excellent
-sailer, the report being that "she works within eleven points of the
-wind; steers, works, sails, scuds, and lies-to well; rolls deep and
-easy, and sailing close-hauled has beaten everything sailed with."
-
-
- Guns of the Constitution
-
- Location Type No. Length Weight Bore Powder Approx.
- lbs. inches charge range
-
- Gun deck, 24-pdr., 12 9' 5,135 5.824 8 lbs. 700 yds.
- for'd. and aft American 5-3/4"
- Gun deck, 24-pdr., 18 10' 5,733 5.824 8 lbs. 700 yds.
- amidships English 5-3/4"
- Spar deck 32-pdr., 20 5' 5" 2,240 6.41 4 lbs. 400 yds.
- carronades
- Spar deck, bow 24-pdr. 2 9' 4,170 5.824 8 lbs. 700 yds.
- chasers 9-1/2"
-
- The two bow chasers are 18-pounders bored for 24-pound shot. They are
- lighter than the standard 24-pounder to reduce top weights. Total
- weight of broadside, 734 pounds. As shot were frequently underweight,
- this figure is not exact.
-
-Her complement was 400 officers and men, but she usually cruised with
-about 50 men in excess. At sea the men were crowded closely together and
-there was much sickness. The ration was fixed by law and it made a
-monotonous diet. The legal ration for Sunday was 1-1/2 lbs. beef, 14 oz.
-bread, -1/2 lb. flour, -1/4 lb. suet, -1/2 pt. spirits. On week days
-pork was sometimes substituted for beef, with cheese or dried peas in
-place of suet. The meat was usually salted, the bread stale and moldy,
-the spirits good.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Silently corrected a few typos.
-
---Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
---Inserted the original page-footer line drawings into the text.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Some Stories of Old Ironsides, by
-Holloway Halstead Frost
-
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-
-Project Gutenberg's Some Stories of Old Ironsides, by Holloway Halstead Frost
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Some Stories of Old Ironsides
-
-Author: Holloway Halstead Frost
-
-Release Date: April 18, 2017 [EBook #54564]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOME STORIES OF OLD IRONSIDES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, MFR and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Some Stories of Old Ironsides" width="500" height="729" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>SOME STORIES OF
-<br />OLD IRONSIDES</h1>
-<p class="center"><i>By</i>
-<br /><span class="sc">Commander Holloway H. Frost</span>, U. S. Navy
-<br />Author of <i>We Build a Navy</i></p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p01.jpg" alt="Medallion" width="415" height="272" />
-</div>
-<p class="center">U. S. NAVAL INSTITUTE
-<br /><span class="small">ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND</span></p>
-</div>
-<p class="center">{<span class="sc">Copyright 1931 &middot; United States Naval Institute</span>}</p>
-<p class="center"><span class="small">DESIGNED AND PRINTED BY</span>
-<br />GEORGE BANTA PUBLISHING COMPANY
-<br /><span class="small">MENASHA, WISCONSIN</span></p>
-<h2><span class="small">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</span></h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="small"><i>Facing</i></dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig1">Preble&rsquo;s First Attack on Tripoli</a> 4</dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig2">Old Ironsides</a> 5</dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig3">Chase of the <i>Constitution</i></a> 12</dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig4">Edward Preble</a> 13</dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig5"><i>Constitution</i> and <i>Guerriere</i></a> 20</dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig6">Capture of the British Frigate <i>Java</i></a> 21</dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig7">The Night Battle Between the U.S.S. <i>Constitution</i> and H. M. Ships <i>Cyane</i> and <i>Levant</i></a> 28</dt>
-<dt><a href="#fig8">Stephen Decatur</a> 29</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p02.jpg" alt="Bowsprit" width="400" height="383" />
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/p03.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="531" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="small"><i>From a painting by M. Carne</i></span>
- <span class="sc">Preble&rsquo;s First Attack on Tripoli</span>
-<br />The <i>Constitution</i> (large ship right center foreground) leading the attack on Tripoli, August 3, 1804.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/p04.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="532" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="small"><i>From a painting by C. R. Patterson</i></span>
- &ldquo;<span class="sc">Old Ironsides</span>&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small"><span class="smaller">ACT I</span></span>
-<br /><i>In the Mediterranean</i></h2>
-<h3 id="c2">SCENE I. ENTER THE &ldquo;CONSTITUTION&rdquo;</h3>
-<p>On a September day in 1803 an American frigate bowled
-along the rocky Spanish coast toward Gibraltar. From
-her bluff bows curled back a foamy wave. Above the blue
-waters rose a gracefully proportioned black hull. Around
-it, halfway up from the water line, ran a broad white
-stripe. This was broken at regular intervals by the dark
-squares of the gun ports. Spars tapered aloft. White rectangles
-of billowing canvas completed a picture of beauty
-unsurpassed on the Seven Seas. Such was the United
-States ship <i>Constitution</i>. Joshua Humphreys, naval constructor,
-had done his work well.</p>
-<p>Watchers on the famous Rock might have noted, had
-the beauty of this strange ship gained their full attention,
-that from the mizzen truck flew the broad blue pennant
-of a commodore. His name was then unknown. It is not
-too well known even now. But as time passes the conviction
-grows that Edward Preble should be classed in the
-first rank of our naval commanders. He was soon to prove
-that he was every inch a commodore. His pennant flew
-from a splendid ship, but one which had as yet no tradition
-of victory. Edward Preble was to begin that long
-series of successful cruises and spectacular sea fights
-which was to endear &ldquo;Old Ironsides&rdquo; to every American.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<p>Countless ships for countless years had passed these
-far-famed Pillars of Hercules. Some had sailed on errands
-of peace, but most on the grim business of war. Phoenician
-traders had sailed out northward to Britain for cargoes
-of its precious tin. Carthaginian merchants under
-Hanno had ventured far down the Atlantic coast of
-Africa. Scipio Africanus with his legions had come this
-way to complete the conquest of Spain. Moorish galleys
-had ferried to Europe those fierce Moslem horsemen who
-overran the Iberian Peninsula and fought for world empire
-on the battlefields of France. Norse sea kings had
-sailed on through to Sicily and Constantinople. Stout De
-Ruyter and his Dutch seamen had followed in their track
-to make his last campaign in the blue waters of the Mediterranean.
-And only five years before the greatest sea
-captain of them all, a certain Horatio Nelson, had hastened
-by to match his wits with a General Bonaparte
-and annihilate his fleet at the mouth of the Nile.</p>
-<p>The entry of Edward Preble in a Yankee frigate into
-the great sea which had supported so many war fleets
-seemed doubtless at that time utterly devoid of historical
-significance. But now, as we look back over a century and
-a quarter, it takes on a new importance. It was to bring
-our young Navy to a new plane of efficiency. It was to
-demonstrate to Americans in a striking manner the value
-of an efficient naval service. It was to establish our Navy
-as a permanent American institution. And, what is more,
-it signaled to watchful eyes abroad the rise of a new sea
-power. It indicated, not only to African pirates, but also
-to astute European statesmen, that this American Republic
-<span class="pb" id="Page_7">7</span>
-had become a factor they would have to reckon with
-in framing their diplomatic policies.</p>
-<p>We believe that, as much as any other man of that era,
-it was bold and forceful Edward Preble who gave the
-United States that initial impulsion along the path of astounding
-prosperity, unparalleled commercial power, and
-world-wide influence.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p05.jpg" alt="Squadron at sea" width="500" height="324" />
-</div>
-<p>For two years we had been at war with the Moslem
-principalities which lined the Mediterranean coast of Africa.
-For many years before that, their piratical craft had
-captured our merchant ships and sold their crews into
-slavery. We had first begged and then bribed these pirates
-to desist from piracy. And, finally, after all diplomatic
-measures had failed, that task was given the Navy. That
-service had been in existence only a few years. It was,
-we must confess, not properly prepared to conduct a
-difficult campaign so far from its home bases. So two years
-of desultory fighting had accomplished little. In despair,
-our statesmen had descended again to the artifices of
-bribery. But, fortunately for us, the piratical chieftains
-did not think our offers worth their while. So the Navy
-was given a final chance and Edward Preble the command.
-The backbone of his squadron were the fine frigates <i>Constitution</i>
-and <i>Philadelphia</i>. For inshore work there were
-the brigs <i>Argus</i> and <i>Siren</i> and the schooners <i>Enterprise</i>,
-<i>Nautilus</i>, and <i>Vixen</i>. It is true that seven ships constituted
-a small force to keep in good humor Morocco, Algiers,
-and Tunis and bring to a favorable conclusion the
-war with Tripoli. But the ships were all finely commanded,
-well officered, and manned with the best sailors
-<span class="pb" id="Page_8">8</span>
-in the world. The ships themselves were well built, adequately
-equipped, and completely stored for a long campaign.
-So it was with high hopes that Preble commenced
-his difficult task&mdash;one, it may be added, which had baffled
-Cardinal Ximenes, Charles V, Andrea Doria, Blake, De Ruyter,
-and Duquesne.</p>
-<h3 id="c3">SCENE II. EXIT THE &ldquo;PHILADELPHIA&rdquo;</h3>
-<p>An effective demonstration off Tangiers soon cooled
-the ardor of the Sultan of Morocco. He reconfirmed the
-old and highly favorable treaty of 1786. One potential
-enemy had been removed. On now for Syracuse, the naval
-base from which our campaign against Tripoli was being
-conducted.</p>
-<p>Off the coast of Sardinia the <i>Constitution</i> hailed H.M.S.
-<i>Amazon</i>, a frigate attached to the squadron of Lord
-Nelson. From her Preble received &ldquo;the melancholy and
-distressing intelligence of the loss of the U.S. ship <i>Philadelphia</i>.&rdquo;
-Here, Commodore, is a problem which will put
-to the test all your intelligence and stoutness of heart.</p>
-<p>At Syracuse Preble learned the full extent of the disaster.
-The fine frigate had been run aground off Tripoli.
-Captain Bainbridge, discouraged by his ill fortune, had
-surrendered too quickly. Three hundred and fifteen of our
-officers and men had been led ashore in triumph. In his
-haste Bainbridge had not even taken effective measures to
-destroy his own ship. She was floated and brought into
-the harbor of Tripoli. Her guns were fished out of the
-water and remounted. She was manned with a strong
-Tripolitan crew. Thus she contributed to the strength of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_9">9</span>
-the defenses, and constituted a threat to every merchant
-vessel in the Mediterranean. Gloomy were the thoughts
-of poor Bainbridge as he viewed these developments from
-his prison window.</p>
-<p>Preble was not the man to worry over past disasters.
-He was concerned with future successes. How could he
-counteract, in part at least, the loss of the <i>Philadelphia</i>?
-There was no direct method for rescuing the crew. But
-there might be a chance to regain the ship, or at least destroy
-her so that the enemy could not use her. Bainbridge,
-through the connivance of the Danish consul at Tripoli,
-had suggested that she be attacked by a party of men secreted
-in the hold of a merchant vessel. The capture of a
-Tripolitan ketch provided the means of carrying through
-this daring plan. The next essential item was a cool and
-daring commander.</p>
-<p>The commodore invited to this post of honor and danger
-Lieutenant Stephen Decatur, then in command of the
-<i>Enterprise</i>. To this young officer might well be applied a
-sentence from Plutarch: &ldquo;Being ever thirsty after honor,
-and passionate for glory, if anything of a greater or extraordinary
-nature was to be done, he was eager to be
-the doer of it himself.&rdquo; Decatur eagerly accepted his
-commodore&rsquo;s invitation.</p>
-<p>Once the squadron got wind of the venture and of the
-commander selected, there was no lack of volunteers.
-Decatur naturally gave first choice to the people in his
-own ship. Five of her officers and sixty-two of her sailors
-shifted over to the ketch. This was formally commissioned
-and appropriately renamed <i>Intrepid</i>. Five midshipmen
-<span class="pb" id="Page_10">10</span>
-from the <i>Constitution</i> completed the complement. Last,
-but by no means least, was a brave Sicilian pilot, Salvador
-Catalano.</p>
-<p>Edward Preble took upon himself full responsibility for
-the hazardous enterprise. &ldquo;It is my order,&rdquo; he wrote Decatur,
-&ldquo;that you proceed to Tripoli, in company with the
-<i>Siren</i>, Lieutenant Stewart; enter the harbor in the night;
-board the <i>Philadelphia</i>; burn her; and make good your
-escape.&rdquo; The courage it requires to write such an order is
-seldom appreciated. If the expedition had failed, as certainly
-it looked very probable, all the blame would have
-fallen on Preble. He would have been accused of sending
-officers and men to their death while he remained in safety.
-And, if the attack should succeed, the credit and honor
-would belong to Decatur. But Preble was not guarding
-his own interests. He was striving to further those of the
-Navy and the country.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p06.jpg" alt="In Tripoli harbor" width="500" height="384" />
-</div>
-<p>For two weeks the <i>Intrepid</i> was battered about by a
-succession of storms. On this little craft, much smaller
-than a submarine chaser, seventy-four men were crowded.
-Their sufferings can scarcely be imagined. But at last the
-weather moderated and the long-awaited opportunity was
-at hand. As a re&euml;nforcement Midshipman Anderson and
-nine sailors rowed over in one of the <i>Siren&rsquo;s</i> cutters. This
-was towed astern of the <i>Intrepid</i>. She started in.</p>
-<p>The sea now was smooth. The wind lulled slowly to a
-calm. As night came on, a young moon, the enemy&rsquo;s emblem,
-diffused a gentle light over the phosphorescent
-waters. Wary Odysseus might have turned back his prow
-at sight of such an unfavorable omen, but not all the gods
-<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span>
-on Olympus could have turned back Stephen Decatur that
-night.</p>
-<p>Slowly and silently steals the <i>Intrepid</i> toward the harbor
-entrance. This cold wintry night there are no vessels
-on patrol. Only irregular ranks of jagged rocks keep watch.
-The moonlight discloses these ever present sentinels. The
-ship passes through.</p>
-<p>Quietly there on deck stand Decatur, Catalano, and ten
-seamen&mdash;all disguised as Sicilians. Close down behind the
-bulwarks crouch the remainder of the crew. Ahead looms
-up the great hulk of the <i>Philadelphia</i>. Her foremast has
-not been replaced, but the main and mizzenmasts, with
-their network of rigging, trace a spider web of black
-against the dull red glare of the city&rsquo;s lights. Fifteen gaping
-gun ports are dotted with the muzzles of frowning 18-pounders,
-loaded, shotted, and ready to be touched off.
-High overhead towers the dark mass of the Bashaw&rsquo;s
-castle, its embrasures filled with one hundred and fifteen
-cannon.</p>
-<p>The frigate&rsquo;s bell rings out the hour. It is ten-thirty in
-the evening watch. Her sentinel hails. Catalano answers
-with long-rehearsed lines. He has lost his anchors. May
-he not secure alongside the frigate for the night? The answer
-is, &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; Lawrence lowers a small boat. With a line
-from the <i>Intrepid</i> he pulls for the frigate&rsquo;s bows. Quickly
-he secures his end to the fore chains. At the other end
-crouching seamen haul away.</p>
-<p>Watchers on the frigate, if they had not been too
-sleepy, might have wondered at the hidden power which
-draws the little craft so steadily upon her prey. It is not
-<span class="pb" id="Page_12">12</span>
-until she is almost alongside that they see the crowd of
-men on her decks. &ldquo;Americanos!&rdquo; yells the sentinel. But
-now it is too late. Another pull brings the <i>Intrepid</i> alongside.
-Then rises a confused din as her crew begin a wild
-scramble for the honor of being the first over the enemy&rsquo;s
-side. Decatur trips on his scabbard. Morris passes him.
-Over the high bulwarks, sword in teeth, he disappears.
-Lieutenants, midshipmen, sailors follow him. Here have
-ceased the privileges of rank. Those of courage begin.</p>
-<p>Surprise has won the day. There is no resistance on the
-upper decks. The startled enemy dive over the side or
-scuttle below. Wild Americanos or hungry sharks&mdash;what
-a choice to have to make! Some twenty Tripolitans fall
-before the former. How many succumb to the latter we
-may only guess. In twenty minutes the ship is everywhere
-ablaze. As the flames shoot up the guns ashore fire on the
-clearly illuminated target. Back into the ketch our sailors
-spring. Lines are cut with battle-axe and cutlass, just in
-time to evade the outrushing flames. Out ring three good
-American cheers above the crackling roar of fire and the
-thunder of cannonade.</p>
-<p>The flames now have mounted the frigate&rsquo;s rigging
-turning night into day. The <i>Intrepid</i> is clearly disclosed to
-the enemy gunners. From every direction shot converge
-on the little ship. Out are run sixteen great sweeps. Strong
-men, willing galley slaves for an hour, double-bank their
-handles. Their long blades churn the waters into foam.
-Away she races through the shell splashes.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/p08a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="526" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="small"><i>From an old painting</i></span>
- <span class="sc">Chase of the</span> <i>Constitution</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig4">
-<img src="images/p09.jpg" alt="" width="535" height="801" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="small"><i>From the painting by John W. Jarvis</i></span>
- <span class="sc">Edward Preble</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<p>Thus ended with complete success what Lord Nelson
-called the most bold and daring act of the age. When,
-three days later, the <i>Intrepid</i> sailed through the American
-squadron in Syracuse, each ship gave Decatur and his
-men a deafening salute of cheers. What music to a sailor&rsquo;s
-ears!</p>
-<h3 id="c4">SCENE III. PREBLE ATTACKS TRIPOLI</h3>
-<p>As spring came on the commodore pushed his preparations
-for a naval attack on Tripoli. He now had only one
-large ship, the <i>Constitution</i>. There were five brigs and
-schooners. A captured Tripolitan brig, commissioned as
-the <i>Scourge</i>, made a sixth. Preble knew that these ships
-could not get in close enough to the enemy to win the decisive
-results he was determined to have. So he borrowed
-six gunboats, two bomb vessels, and ninety-six sailors
-from the King of Naples. Even with this re&euml;nforcement,
-Preble had but one thousand and sixty men to attack a
-strongly fortified town defended by twenty-five thousand
-soldiers and sailors. Still his hopes for success were high.</p>
-<p>Early in August, 1804, the orders for a grand attack
-were issued. This was to be no distant cannonade. The
-<i>Constitution</i> was to attack the batteries at point-blank
-range. The gunboats were to board the enemy flotilla.
-The bomb vessels were to toss their 13-inch grenades into
-the town.</p>
-<p>The Bashaw, as the Tripolitan ruler was called, saw
-that a storm was about to break over his head. In addition
-to formidable batteries ashore, he had twenty-one gunboats.
-These were manned by from twenty-four to forty
-men. Each carried one large and two small guns. We must
-not mistake these Tripolitans. They were splendid seamen
-and fierce fighters. Boarding was their usual method
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-of attack. Nine of their gunboats were stationed outside
-the reefs east of the harbor entrance. Five were under the
-powerful batteries to the westward. The remainder lay
-inside the harbor in reserve.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p10.jpg" alt="Under sail" width="500" height="288" />
-</div>
-<p>At two o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon of August 3, the flagship
-displayed the long-awaited signal for attack. Our six
-gunboats, under Decatur, were to attack the nine Tripolitan
-craft east of the harbor. Only three of his detachment,
-for various reasons, reached the enemy. Now three against
-nine were big odds. But, thought our young fellows, the
-bigger the odds the greater the glory. And they had Stephen
-Decatur&mdash;himself worth a couple of gunboats&mdash;to
-lead them. He, like the Spartans, &ldquo;was not wont to ask
-how many but where, the enemy were!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So Decatur led the charge. He made for a large gunboat
-armed with a huge 29-pound cannon and two howitzers.
-Her crew, as we learned later, numbered thirty-six.
-Decatur also has one cannon, a long 24-pounder. He sails
-in close until he can see the white of their eyes. Then he
-fires. A hail of grapeshot sweeps the enemy&rsquo;s deck. As
-the two ships crash together our boarders are away. For
-a few minutes the fight is furious. But American pikes
-and cutlasses are irresistible. When only five of their
-people remain unwounded the Moors cry for quarter.
-Here is a victory, decided, as the old saying goes, by push
-of pike.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile Sailing Master Trippe is having a bad
-quarter of an hour. He runs his gunboat alongside another
-enemy ship. Boarding is the order of the day. That is a
-good way for Americans, as well as Tripolitans, to fight.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
-Trippe springs into the enemy gunboat. Midshipman
-Henley and nine sailors follow. Then the ships drift apart.
-Here now is a situation. Trippe sees that, being too weak
-for defense, it is necessary to attack. He lunges at the
-enemy captain with his pike. The Tripolitan is a good
-swordsman, and his scimitar is sharp. He rains blows on
-Trippe&rsquo;s chest and shoulders&mdash;wounds him eleven times
-in all. But the sailing master gets in one effective thrust
-with his pike, and this more than evens up matters. Another
-Moor, whose cutlass is descending on Trippe&rsquo;s
-head from behind, is bayoneted by Marine Sergeant
-Jonathan Meredith. Having lost their captain and twenty
-of their comrades, the remaining Tripolitans now surrender.</p>
-<p>To cap the climax, Decatur boarded a third enemy gunboat,
-somewhat smaller than his first prize. Here occurred
-that famous hand-to-hand combat between Decatur and
-the gigantic Moorish captain. The devotion of Seaman
-Daniel Frazier, and his own coolness gave Decatur victory.
-All but three of the enemy were killed or wounded before
-they would surrender. This was real schooling for a young
-Navy.</p>
-<p>Lieutenant Richard Somers, bravest of the brave, had
-not been able to join Decatur. So single-handed he attacked
-the five enemy craft west of the entrance. &ldquo;They
-still advanced to within pistol-shot,&rdquo; Somers wrote,
-&ldquo;when they wore round and stood for the batteries. I
-pursued them until in musket shot of the batteries, which
-kept up a continued fire of round shot and grape.&rdquo; That
-was how Somers fought.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<p>The <i>Constitution&rsquo;s</i> heavy battery, re&euml;nforced by six
-Neapolitan 29-pounders, had been engaging these same
-batteries at point-blank range. Several times she was
-brought within four hundred yards of the rocky coast of
-which no chart was available. The bomb vessels had
-launched a quantity of their huge 13-inch shells into the
-city, but many of them did not explode. At four-thirty
-the wind shifted and a withdrawal was signaled. Preble
-covered it in great style. &ldquo;Tacked ship,&rdquo; he wrote, &ldquo;and
-fired two broadsides in stays, which drove the Tripolitans
-out of the castle and brought down the steeple of a
-mosque.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This three-hour battle had proved highly successful.
-But do you think the commodore was contented? Admiral
-Gleaves tells how, after the battle, Decatur came on board
-the <i>Constitution</i> to make his report. Approaching Preble
-on the quarter-deck, he said: &ldquo;Sir, I have the honor to report
-that I have captured three of the enemy&rsquo;s gunboats.&rdquo;
-&ldquo;Three, Sir!&rdquo; replied the commodore, &ldquo;where are the rest
-of them?&rdquo; This incident well illustrates the inflexible character
-of Edward Preble. In his official report, however, he
-was careful to express complete satisfaction with the manner
-in which his subordinates had conducted their attacks.</p>
-<p>As the summer wore on four more attacks were made.
-All were conducted with great gallantry. They were not
-made without loss, for the Tripolitans always gave us a
-good fight. Pirates though they were, we must give them
-credit where due. The last attack, conducted at night, was
-particularly effective. On that occasion, &ldquo;to draw off the
-enemy&rsquo;s attention and amuse them while the bombardment
-<span class="pb" id="Page_17">17</span>
-was being kept up,&rdquo; the <i>Constitution</i> fired eleven
-thunderous broadsides at point-blank range.</p>
-<p>In the fall Preble returned home. During his year of
-command not a court-martial had been ordered nor a duel
-fought. Among the many letters of congratulation he received
-was a unique tribute from the Pope: &ldquo;The American
-commander, with a small force and in a short space of
-time, has done more for the cause of Christianity than
-the most powerful nations of Christendom have done for
-ages.&rdquo; His countrymen received the returning commodore
-with every honor. Congress voted him a gold medal. The
-Navy had again come into its own. And the <i>Constitution</i>,
-now a veteran of five battles, had firmly established her
-reputation as a lucky and successful ship.</p>
-<p>Thus ends the first act of our drama. Eight years pass
-before the second begins.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="small"><span class="smaller">ACT II</span></span>
-<br /><i>On the Ocean</i></h2>
-<h3 id="c6">SCENE I. THE FIGHT WITH THE GUERRIERE</h3>
-<p>At last the day has come. Long and eagerly awaited has
-it been by American seamen. A tall-sparred frigate plows
-through the purple waters of the Gulf Stream. From her
-mastheads lookouts report a tiny speck upon the clear
-horizon. Sharp eyes distinguish it from the far-distant
-masses of cumulous clouds it counterfeits so well. Larger
-and larger it grows. It becomes, in fact, another frigate,
-equally large and beautiful. Across one of her topsails is
-painted a cryptic phrase, &ldquo;Not the Little Belt.&rdquo; This may
-have little meaning to us today. But in the year of our
-Lord 1812 it was full of grim significance. From her peak
-flutters a white ensign, barred with red, the proud emblem
-of the Royal Navy.</p>
-<p>On the first ship there is a muffled roll of drums, a brief
-hurrying of men about the decks, a period of well-ordered
-activity&mdash;then quiet. &ldquo;Silent is the path of duty for every
-well-drilled man.&rdquo; Up to her mastheads creep balls of
-bunting. These at a quiet word of command break out
-into strips of red and white, stars of white against a blue
-field&mdash;battle ensigns of the United States. <i>Constitution</i>
-and <i>Guerriere</i> have met. A great moment of history is at
-hand.</p>
-<p>The famous duel between these two frigates cannot, of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
-course, be compared to the many sea battles between
-great fleets which have made naval history. But often
-small events have a far-reaching influence. This fight certainly
-was one of the most important and decisive single
-ship actions ever fought.</p>
-<p>To show why this was so we must set the scene before
-we begin the play. To Great Britain, engaged in a death
-struggle with Napoleon, our little war was nothing more
-than a side show&mdash;of even less importance than the entry
-of a Balkan nation into the World War struggle. The chief
-concern of the British statesmen was that it might interfere
-with the supply of Wellington&rsquo;s army in Spain&mdash;a
-task performed almost exclusively by American merchant
-vessels. It never occurred to them that our frigates would
-put to sea, or, if they should, that they could last long
-against the British cruisers which literally covered the
-Seven Seas. Theodore Roosevelt has stated that during
-the previous twenty years the Royal Navy had fought
-two hundred single-ship actions where there was approximate
-equality in power, i.e., neither ship had a superiority
-of over three to two. In these actions only five British
-ships had been captured. With such a record of success, it
-was only natural that the British captains should give
-scant consideration to our young and comparatively inexperienced
-Navy.</p>
-<p>It is true that the <i>Constitution</i> was about 7 per cent
-larger than the <i>Guerriere</i>; that she carried 24-pounder
-guns against the 18-pounders in the British frigate, thus
-giving us a ten to seven superiority in weight of metal;
-and that her sides were very thick, stouter in fact than
-<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span>
-those of a British ship-of-the-line. But the British captains
-showed not the slightest concern over these American
-advantages, which at that time were not considered as
-such. In fact, it was thought that we had overweighted
-our ships with guns and timbers so that their speed and
-handiness were decreased. Captain Dacres of the <i>Guerriere</i>
-had challenged any American frigate to meet him in single
-combat. He had bet Captain Isaac Hull, so the story goes,
-a perfectly good hat that he would beat the <i>Constitution</i>.
-Even after the fight Dacres said he would be happy to
-fight him again with &ldquo;a frigate of similar force to the
-<i>Guerriere</i>.&rdquo; All the propaganda of our frigates being disguised
-ships-of-the-line was a much later concoction, disseminated
-after we had proved in three battles the advantage
-of our heavier guns and thicker sides, as well as
-the efficiency of our officers and sailors.</p>
-<p>But now let the fight begin. For some hours the <i>Guerriere</i>
-kept away, trying to gain some advantage. But at
-6:00 <span class="small">P.M.</span> Dacres decided to end this useless maneuvering
-and get to business. He headed directly before the wind,
-decreased sail, and waited for the American frigate. Hull,
-increasing his sail power, came swiftly down upon him.
-Zero hour was about to strike. What could Yankee seamen
-do against the might of Britannia?</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig5">
-<img src="images/p13a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="532" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="small"><i>From the painting by Thomas Birch</i></span>
- <i>Constitution</i> <span class="smaller">AND</span> <i>Guerriere</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig6">
-<img src="images/p14.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="567" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="small"><i>Macpherson Collection</i></span>
- <span class="sc">Capture of the British Frigate</span> <i>Java</i> <span class="sc">by the U.S. Frigate</span> <i>Constitution</i> <span class="sc">off the Coast of Brazil, December 29, 1812</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<p>Moses Smith, sponger of No. 1 gun, describes how the
-<i>Constitution</i> went into action. &ldquo;Hull was now all animation.
-He saw that the decisive moment had come. With
-great energy, yet calmness of manner, he passed around
-among the officers and men, addressing to them words of
-confidence and encouragement. &lsquo;Men,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;now do
-your duty. Your officers cannot have entire control over
-you now. Each man must do all in his power for his
-country.&rsquo; The Stars and Stripes never floated more proudly
-than they did at that moment. All was silent beneath
-them, save the occasional order from an officer, or the low
-sound of the movement of our implements of war. <i>Every
-man stood firm to his post.</i>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>By 6:05 the Constitution was two hundred yards on the
-<i>Guerriere&rsquo;s</i> port quarter. Hull then yawed his ship&rsquo;s head
-slightly away from the enemy and threw his broadside
-full upon her. As the guns bore on the target they fired in
-rapid succession. &ldquo;We instantly followed the thunder of
-our cannon with three loud cheers, which rang along the
-ship like the roar of waters, and floated away rapidly to
-the ears of the enemy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The cannonading was terrific. Our gunners, in the heat
-of battle, looked well to their aim. By 6:20 the <i>Constitution</i>
-was abreast the British frigate, distant one hundred
-yards. Then with a splintering crash came down Dacres&rsquo;
-mizzenmast. &ldquo;Huzza, boys! We&rsquo;ve made a brig of her!&rdquo;
-The mast, with its tangle of sails and rigging, dragged in
-the water and checked the <i>Guerriere&rsquo;s</i> headway. Here
-was Hull&rsquo;s chance, and he was not the man to miss it.
-Spinning his wheel to the right, he charged across his
-enemy&rsquo;s bow. Those terrible 24&rsquo;s raked her with great
-effect. As the <i>Constitution</i> shot past and her guns would
-no longer bear there was a brief lull in the fight. Seaman
-Daniel Hogan climbed to the dizzy height of the fore
-truck to replace the battle ensign which had been shot
-away.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<p>Hull wore his ship and again headed across the bow of
-the almost unmanageable <i>Guerriere</i>. His gunners had
-moved across the deck and cast loose the port guns. Again
-they raked the British frigate. But this time Hull had come
-a bit too close. The ships came together. Boarders were
-called away. A storm of musketry broke out. Sharpshooters
-in the tops fired down on the crowded decks. Lieutenant
-William Bush of the Marines fell dead. Lieutenant
-Charles Morris, who first had scaled the <i>Philadelphia&rsquo;s</i>
-side, was severely wounded. So also was Sailing Master
-John Aylwin, a brave and skillful officer. At 6:30 the
-ships came clear. And then the <i>Guerriere&rsquo;s</i> foremasts and
-mainmasts plunged over her side. Twenty-five minutes
-had sufficed for Yankee gunners to dismast a British frigate.</p>
-<p>Seeing that the fight was won, Hull hauled off to repair
-his rigging. He must be prepared for another enemy if
-one should appear. At 7:00 he returned to receive the
-surrender of Captain Dacres. The prize was so completely
-wrecked that there was no hope of bringing her into port.
-After her crew had been taken off, she was set on fire.
-From the <i>Constitution&rsquo;s</i> quarter-deck Captain Dacres
-watched. At length her magazine exploded and she disappeared
-beneath the waters. A sad omen it must have
-seemed to the British captain. A new sea power had arrived!</p>
-<p>That this was fully appreciated is shown by an article
-in the London <i>Times</i>. &ldquo;It is not merely that an English
-frigate has been taken, after, what we are free to confess
-may be called a brave resistance, but that it has been taken
-by a new enemy, an enemy unaccustomed to such triumphs,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
-and likely to be rendered insolent and confident
-by them. He must be a weak politician who does not see
-how important the first triumph is in giving a tone and
-character to the war. Never before in the history of the
-world did an English frigate strike to an American.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>In our country the effect was magical. Where before
-political strife, sectional differences, and commercial rivalries
-combined to bring our people to the verge of civil war
-and secession, now a wave of wildest enthusiasm spread
-like a forest fire. For here was a deed of which every man
-and woman from Maine to Louisiana might be proud.
-&ldquo;Thank God for Hull&rsquo;s victory&rdquo; was a watchword which
-passed from state to state. It gave impetus to naval operations
-and fired our captains with impatience to get to sea
-and bring the enemy under their guns. It encouraged
-swarms of privateers to cover the Seven Seas and attack
-the enemy&rsquo;s vital trade routes.</p>
-<p>Admiral Sir John Jervis is reported to have said to his
-flag captain as he sighted the Spanish fleet off Cape St.
-Vincent that a victory was very necessary to England at
-that moment. With equal justice Isaac Hull might have
-made a similar remark on sighting the <i>Guerriere</i>. Our
-country needed a victory then as it never had before nor
-has since. Napoleon said that in war the moral is to the
-physical as three to one; in this case it was many times
-more. The mere sinking of a frigate meant nothing to England.
-But the fact that it was sunk by an American frigate
-at the cost of only fourteen casualties meant a great deal
-to England, and to our United States. What had been
-done once could be done again!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<h3 id="c7">SCENE II. AND NOW FOR THE &ldquo;JAVA&rdquo;</h3>
-<p>While the <i>Constitution</i> was taking a little rest in Boston
-Stephen Decatur in the sister-ship <i>United States</i> had
-taken the sea. In the latter part of October he encountered
-the British frigate <i>Macedonian</i>, likewise a sister-ship of
-the <i>Guerriere</i>. So the scene was set exactly as in the previous
-battle. But, whereas Hull had decided the issue by
-sheer overpowering force at point-blank range, Decatur
-fought a distant battle in an effort to capitalize to the full
-his superiority in gunnery and seamanship. He won his
-fight at the cost of only eleven casualties. In ninety minutes
-his gunners had put a hundred shot into the <i>Macedonian&rsquo;s</i>
-hull and killed or wounded one hundred and four
-of her crew. This time the prize was brought safely into
-port. Here was a convincing confirmation of American
-naval efficiency.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p16.jpg" alt="Firing a cannon" width="500" height="255" />
-</div>
-<p>By the time this fight had been won the <i>Constitution</i>
-was again at sea. This time she was commanded by William
-Bainbridge, the unlucky officer who had lost the <i>Philadelphia</i>
-off Tripoli. But now he was in a luckier ship. Soon
-fortune sent a fine British frigate into his arms. This happened
-on December 29 off Bahia on the coast of Brazil.</p>
-<p>The <i>Java</i> was considerably more powerful than the
-other British frigates previously captured. She was commanded
-by an excellent officer, Captain Lambert. In
-weight of metal she was inferior to the <i>Constitution</i> only
-as nine to ten. Neither captain had any idea of dodging
-the issue. Each made ready to fight to the finish. Fighting
-topsails were spread. Battle ensigns decorated every masthead.
-At 2:10 <span class="small">P.M.</span> the battle began. At first the range
-<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
-was long. But in a few minutes the ships were in to two
-hundred yards. Then the real business of the day began.
-It was as finely contested a frigate action as ever was
-fought. Both Bainbridge and Lambert maneuvered their
-ships with masterly skill. First one ship would gain an
-advantageous position, then the other. Like two skilled
-wrestlers, each in turn gained a hold, only to have it
-broken by his opponent.</p>
-<p>All this time the guns&rsquo; crews were fast at work, rushing
-from one battery to the other as their captains tacked and
-wore. It was work, hard and grim&mdash;hauling at the gun
-tackles, ramming home powder and shot, and slewing
-around the clumsy gun carriages to point the guns
-squarely at the enemy. Acrid smoke clouds swept along
-the decks and clouds of splinters flew around.</p>
-<p>For a time the action is very closely fought. But, barring
-a lucky accident, the issue is really never in doubt. For
-Yankee gunners are incomparable and they have <i>iron
-sides</i> to protect them&mdash;twenty inches of stout oak beams.
-They cannot be beaten in such a ship. Slowly but surely
-our superiority in gunnery wears down the enemy. One
-after another the <i>Java&rsquo;s</i> tall spars crash down. Heroic
-Lambert fights well but is killed. Lieutenant Chads, already
-wounded, takes command. Half his crew is killed
-or wounded. Still he fights.</p>
-<p>The <i>Constitution</i> also has her losses. Bainbridge himself
-is severely wounded, but he still keeps the deck. Brave
-Aylwin, who already wears a wound stripe for the <i>Guerriere</i>
-battle, is again shot down. This will be the last fight
-for him. Well, he will live long enough to see a second
-<span class="pb" id="Page_26">26</span>
-British frigate lower her battle flags. Over thirty others
-lie dead or wounded about the decks or under the surgeon&rsquo;s
-knife in the cockpit. British frigates cannot be
-taken without losing men.</p>
-<p>For two long hours the battle rages. Chads does well
-but he cannot do the impossible. Finally the <i>Java</i> must
-give in. Here is a fight in which there is honor enough for
-all, vanquished as well as victor. And Bainbridge, after
-such buffets of fate as few have received, at last has won
-his well-deserved victory. A third British frigate had been
-taken.</p>
-<p>When &ldquo;Old Ironsides&rdquo; reached Boston a great reception
-awaited the commodore. There he marched through
-the streets, arm in arm with Rodgers and Hull&mdash;three
-commodores of whom any country might be proud. Fifes
-and drums played <i>Yankee-Doodle</i> as the procession moved
-through the streets. It was a big Navy Day!</p>
-<h3 id="c8">SCENE III. THE LAST FIGHT</h3>
-<p>The <i>Constitution</i> took a long rest after this battle. The
-<i>Java&rsquo;s</i> shot had discovered some rotten spots in her sides.
-A long overhaul was required to make her again ready for
-sea. Meanwhile the Navy had won many a victory and
-had suffered some defeats. Our little sloops-of-war won a
-long succession of splendid successes. Gallant James Lawrence,
-hero of the <i>Hornet-Peacock</i> fight, lost the <i>Chesapeake</i>
-to the British frigate <i>Shannon</i>&mdash;crying, as he lay
-dying, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t give up the ship!&rdquo; Sewing this motto on
-his blue battle flag Perry annihilated the British squadron
-on Lake Erie. Macdonough saved the northern frontier
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-with a complete victory on Lake Champlain, which a
-British marine thought more desperately fought than
-Trafalgar. Our privateers were gathering in their prizes
-on every sea in constantly increasing numbers and sending
-the insurance rates three times higher than all previous
-levels.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p17.jpg" alt="Close combat" width="500" height="335" />
-</div>
-<p>But the war could not well end without a third victory
-by the <i>Constitution</i>. Now she was commanded by Charles
-Stewart, a worthy successor to Hull and Bainbridge. On
-February 20, 1815, north of Madeira, the American frigate
-came in contact with the British corvette <i>Cyane</i>,
-thirty-four guns, and the sloop <i>Levant</i>, twenty-one. Their
-fifty-five guns threw a slightly heavier weight of metal,
-but their armament consisted mostly of short-range carronades
-which could not be compared with the terrible
-long 24&rsquo;s which filled the <i>Constitution&rsquo;s</i> gun-deck ports.
-Still the two Britons formed column and accepted Stewart&rsquo;s
-challenge.</p>
-<p>Stewart might have fought at long range where the
-British carronades could not have reached him. But night
-was coming on, and, if he were to take both ships, there
-was no time to waste. &ldquo;At five minutes past six,&rdquo; he
-wrote, &ldquo;ranged up on the starboard side of the sternmost
-ship, about three hundred yards distant, and commenced
-the action by broadsides, both ships returning our fire
-with the greatest spirit for about fifteen minutes.&rdquo; Stewart&rsquo;s
-tactics have a lesson: When you are anxious to engage
-and night is approaching, do not try to get all the
-conditions in your favor. Take things as they are and fight
-in the most decisive manner. Otherwise you will never
-<span class="pb" id="Page_28">28</span>
-capture your <i>Cyane</i> and <i>Levant</i>. Perhaps we have here a
-lesson for the battles of peace as well as those of war.</p>
-<p>After this first engagement smoke clouds obscured the
-range and fire ceased. But not for long, for now the <i>Constitution</i>
-began a series of beautiful maneuvers&mdash;raking
-each enemy ship in turn. They separated and made off.
-Stewart hung close to the <i>Cyane</i> and soon forced her to
-surrender. By eight o&rsquo;clock she had been manned by a
-prize crew. Stewart started in search of the <i>Levant</i>.</p>
-<p>Captain Douglass of the <i>Levant</i> had now repaired his
-damages. Instead of trying to escape, he sailed back to
-assist his comrade. But he was too late. At eight-thirty
-he ran into the <i>Constitution</i>. Attempts to escape proved
-futile and at ten the second prize was made. &ldquo;At 1:00
-<span class="small">A.M.</span>,&rdquo; Stewart reported, &ldquo;the damages to our rigging
-had been repaired, sails shifted, and the ship in fighting
-condition.&rdquo; The price of this double victory was only
-fifteen casualties.</p>
-<p>The <i>Cyane</i> safely reached home. The <i>Levant</i> was recaptured
-by a British squadron in a neutral port. The
-<i>Constitution</i> received her last battle triumph in New
-York many months after peace had been signed. She had
-fought her last fight. But for many long years she served
-her country well by showing the flag in every part of the
-world. After that she trained many classes of midshipmen
-at the Naval Academy. Now her useful labors are ended
-but she serves a still more important purpose. For this
-old hulk, whose iron sides protected iron men, is an inspiration
-to every officer and man in the naval service&mdash;and
-to every American.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig7">
-<img src="images/p18a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="496" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="small"><i>Courtesy U. S. Naval Academy</i></span>
-<span class="small"><i>From an engraving by Sartain, after the original painting by Thomas Birch</i></span>
- <span class="sc">The Night Battle Between the U.S.S.</span> <i>Constitution</i> <span class="sc">and H. M. Ships</span> <i>Cyane</i> <span class="smaller">AND</span> <i>Levant</i>
-<br />On the left is the corvette <i>Cyane</i>, in the center the frigate <i>Constitution</i>, and on the right the sloop <i>Levant</i>. The <i>Constitution</i> captured both vessels.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig8">
-<img src="images/p19.jpg" alt="" width="532" height="799" />
-<p class="pcap"><span class="small"><i>From an engraving by Henry Meyer after the original painting by John W. Jarvis</i></span>
- <span class="sc">Stephen Decatur</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="small">EPILOGUE</span></h2>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">Scarce one tall frigate walks the sea</p>
-<p class="t0">Or skirts the safer shores</p>
-<p class="t0">Of all that bore to victory</p>
-<p class="t0">Our stout old Commodores.</p>
-</div>
-<p>So wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes in 1865. Many years
-have passed since then. Again a tall frigate walks the sea.
-She carries a message from many a stout old commodore,
-many an alert topman, many a keen-eyed gunner. In fact,
-she carries a message from our Navy to our People.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>All the stories of &ldquo;Old Ironsides&rdquo;
-in this little pamphlet are based on
-chapters of <i>We Build a Navy</i>, by
-Commander H. H. Frost, U. S.
-Navy, published by U. S. Naval
-Institute, Annapolis, Maryland.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<h2 id="c10"><span class="small"><i>Information about the &ldquo;Constitution&rdquo;</i></span></h2>
-<p>The building of the <i>Constitution</i> resulted from the
-failure of the new United States government to purchase
-protection from the Algerian pirates. By a majority of
-two, the House of Representatives voted, in March, 1794,
-to provide six frigates that &ldquo;separately would be superior
-to any European frigate.&rdquo; The <i>Constitution</i> was one of
-these. She was designed by Joshua Humphreys of Philadelphia
-and built at Hartt&rsquo;s Wharf in Boston, near the present
-Constitution Wharf. The copper bolts and fittings
-were supplied by Paul Revere. Construction was all but
-abandoned after a new treaty was made with the pirates,
-but the insistence of Presidents Washington and Adams,
-coupled with the rising difficulties with revolutionary
-France, finally brought the work to completion. She was
-launched in October, 1797, and commissioned quickly.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p27left.jpg" alt="Under construction" width="500" height="358" />
-</div>
-<p>The <i>Constitution</i> was rated as a 44-gun frigate but has
-carried as many as 55 guns at various times. The present
-arrangement closely follows that of her early days. The
-guns on the spar deck are 32-pounder carronades, short,
-light guns which threw heavy shots a short distance (300
-to 400 yards). On the gun deck are long 24-pounders,
-heavy guns with much greater range but less smashing
-power than the carronade. In the following table the
-ranges given are for one degree of elevation. The long
-gun could attain ranges up to 2,000 yards by greater
-elevation, the projectile leaving the gun with a velocity
-of about 1,500 feet per second.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
-<p>The <i>Constitution</i> cost $302,917. Her original dimensions
-were: length over-all, 204 feet; beam, 43.5 feet;
-draft, forward 21 feet, aft 23 feet; displacement 2,200
-tons. She was generally considered an excellent sailer, the
-report being that &ldquo;she works within eleven points of the
-wind; steers, works, sails, scuds, and lies-to well; rolls
-deep and easy, and sailing close-hauled has beaten everything
-sailed with.&rdquo;</p>
-<h3 id="c11"><span class="sc">Guns of the Constitution</span></h3>
-<table class="center" summary="">
-<tr class="th"><th>Location </th><th>Type </th><th>No. </th><th>Length </th><th>Weight lbs. </th><th>Bore inches </th><th>Powder charge </th><th>Approx. range</th></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Gun deck, for&rsquo;d. and aft </td><td class="l">24-pdr., American </td><td class="r">12 </td><td class="r">9&prime; 5&frac34;&Prime; </td><td class="r">5,135 </td><td class="r">5.824 </td><td class="r">8 lbs. </td><td class="r">700 yds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Gun deck, amidships </td><td class="l">24-pdr., English </td><td class="r">18 </td><td class="r">10&prime; 5&frac34;&Prime; </td><td class="r">5,733 </td><td class="r">5.824 </td><td class="r">8 lbs. </td><td class="r">700 yds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Spar deck </td><td class="l">32-pdr., carronades </td><td class="r">20 </td><td class="r">5&prime; 5&Prime; </td><td class="r">2,240 </td><td class="r">6.41 </td><td class="r">4 lbs. </td><td class="r">400 yds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Spar deck, bow chasers </td><td class="l">24-pdr. </td><td class="r">2 </td><td class="r">9&prime; 9&frac12;&Prime; </td><td class="r">4,170 </td><td class="r">5.824 </td><td class="r">8 lbs. </td><td class="r">700 yds.</td></tr>
-</table>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The two bow chasers are 18-pounders bored for 24-pound shot. They are lighter
-than the standard 24-pounder to reduce top weights. Total weight of broadside,
-734 pounds. As shot were frequently underweight, this figure is not exact.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Her complement was 400 officers and men, but she usually
-cruised with about 50 men in excess. At sea the men
-were crowded closely together and there was much sickness.
-The ration was fixed by law and it made a monotonous
-diet. The legal ration for Sunday was 1&frac12; lbs. beef,
-14 oz. bread, &frac12; lb. flour, &frac14; lb. suet, &frac12; pt. spirits. On week
-days pork was sometimes substituted for beef, with
-cheese or dried peas in place of suet. The meat was usually
-salted, the bread stale and moldy, the spirits good.</p>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-<li>Inserted the original page-footer line drawings into the text.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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