<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">RUNNING THE BLOCKADE (1861)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">North <i>v.</i> South—A new President hates slavery—Fort Sumter is
bombarded—Ladies on the house-top—Niggers don’t mind shells—A
blockade-runner comes to Oxford—The <i>Banshee</i> strips for the
race—Wilmington—High pay—Lights out—Cast the lead—A stern
chase—The run home—Lying <i>perdu</i>—The <i>Night-hawk</i> saved by
Irish humour—Southern need at the end of the war—Negro
dignity waxes big.</p>
<p>In November, 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected President
of the United States. As the new President was in
sympathy with those who wished to abolish slavery,
and as the Southern States were mostly inhabited by
large landholders possessing thousands of slaves, this
election was felt to doom their ascendancy unless they
could resist the will of the North. Therefore, on the
17th of December a convention of the State of South
Carolina was held at Charleston, which formally repealed
their acceptance of the United States Constitution.</p>
<p>Neither side at first foresaw the results of secession.
Each thought the other would offer little resistance. The
North were totally unprepared for war; the South were
weakened by internal dissensions, but they fought as
long as they had any soldiers left, and at last “robbed the
cradle and the grave.” The South were in the end quite
exhausted, while the North seemed to gather new strength
every month. As the war went on the soldiers of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</SPAN></span>
South, or Confederates, wore out their clothes, and could
not replace them. Things were so scarce and dear that
it became a proverb, “In going to market, you take your
money in your basket and bring your purchases home in
your pocket.” Planters in the South had to borrow
money to support their hordes of negroes in idleness while
they themselves were away at the front.</p>
<p>On the 4th of March Lincoln formally entered on office.
Secession, he said, meant rebellion. The Constitution
must be preserved, if necessary, even by force.</p>
<p>Major Anderson, who held a small fort in Charleston
Harbour for the North, spiked his guns and moved into
Fort Sumter, also in the harbour. This was considered
an act of war, and Fort Sumter was bombarded and
taken. The little town was full of excited soldiers,
singing and shouting. We have a peep of what was
going on and what it felt like in Mrs. Chestnut’s diary
for the 12th of April:</p>
<p>“I do not pretend to go to sleep. How can I? If
Anderson does not accept terms at four the orders are
he shall be fired upon. I count four. St. Michael’s
bells chime out, and I begin to hope. At half-past four
the heavy booming of a cannon! I sprang out of bed,
and on my knees prostrate I prayed as I never prayed
before. There was a sound of stir all over the house,
pattering of feet in the corridors. All seemed hurrying
one way. I put on my double gown and went on the
house-top. The shells were bursting. The roar of the
cannon had begun. The women were wild there on the
house-top. Prayers came from the women and imprecations
from the men. Then a shell would light up the
scene, and we all wondered why Fort Sumter did not
reply.”</p>
<p>On the next day Fort Sumter was on fire. The warships
of the North were outside the bar, and could not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</SPAN></span>
enter for want of depth of water. On the 15th Anderson
had to give the fort up to the South.</p>
<p>The slaves were taking it all very quietly, seemed not
much moved by the thought of being free—rather
preferred to be slaves and be well fed.</p>
<p>A negro was rowing in the bay towards Charleston
during the bombardment with some supplies from a plantation.
He was met and asked: “Are you not afraid
of Colonel Anderson’s cannon?”</p>
<p>“No, sar. Mars Anderson ain’t daresn’t hit me. He
knows marster wouldn’t ’low it.”</p>
<p>The next step taken by the President was to declare
all the Southern ports in a state of blockade, in order that
the seceding States might be starved out. The coast-line
was some 3,000 miles in length, and the whole fleet
of the United States did not reach 150 ships, of which
many were unseaworthy. But the energy of the North
increased this fleet to nearly 700 vessels. Thus any
attempt to run in through the blockading squadron was
very dangerous.</p>
<p>A royal proclamation in England admonished all loyal
subjects to respect the Federal blockade; but the high
profits to be made tempted many Liverpool firms to
adventure their argosies. A ship taken while running
the blockade is treated as an enemy, and if she resists
she is treated as a pirate.</p>
<p>During the first year of the war many captures were
made, and stories came to England of hairbreadth escapes
which set many young men longing to join in the exciting
game.</p>
<p>I remember a man coming to Oxford when I was an
undergraduate with a letter of introduction from a friend.
He was running into Charleston, and had brought from
that port a store of watches and jewellery, which he persuaded
us to take in exchange for a quantity of discarded<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</SPAN></span>
clothing. The lady’s gold watch which I got is, I hear,
still going strong, and belies the suspicion with which I
took it. At this time there were no mills, and almost no
manufactories in the Southern States, so that they soon
began to feel the want of clothes, buttons, boots, socks,
medicines, and chemicals. Nassau, a little island in
the Bahamas, was the chief base for the steamers that
were running the blockade. It is about 560 miles from
Charleston and 640 from Wilmington.</p>
<p>The Bahama group afforded neutral water to within
fifty miles of the American coast, but it required a very
fast vessel to succeed in evading the chain of cruisers
which soon patrolled the coast. These fast vessels were
being built in England and elsewhere. Let us follow the
fortunes of one of them—the <i>Banshee</i>.</p>
<p>She arrived safely across the Atlantic and put into
Nassau. There she was stripped for the work that lay
before her. Everything aloft was taken down, and
nothing was left standing but the two lower masts, with
cross-trees for a look-out man. The ship was painted a
dull white, and the crew wore a grey uniform. As the
success of a blockade-runner depends much on her speed,
the qualities of the engineer are important.</p>
<p>The <i>Banshee</i> possessed a model chief engineer in Mr.
Erskine, a man cool in danger and full of resource. In
her pilot, Tom Burroughs, she had a man who knew the
waters thoroughly, and was a genius in smelling out a
blockader on the darkest night. A good pilot received
about £800 for the trip there and back, for there was
some risk in the service, and if they were captured they
went to prison. The pay of the seamen was from £50
to £60 for the trip. So the <i>Banshee</i> stole out of Nassau
Harbour on a dark night, laden with arms, gunpowder,
boots, and clothing, on her way to Wilmington.</p>
<p>Wilmington lies to the north of Charleston, some<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</SPAN></span>
sixteen miles up the Cape Fear River. Off the mouth of
this river lies Smith’s Island, which divides the approach
to the port into two widely different channels.</p>
<p>Fort Fisher, placed at the northern point, obliged
the blockaders to lie far out, beyond the range of the
guns. Further out still was a cordon of cruisers, and outside
these were gunboats always on the move; so that it
required speed and a good look-out to elude the three
lines of blockaders. They crept as noiselessly as possible
along the shores of the Bahamas, and ran on safely
for the first two days out, though as often as they saw
a sail on the horizon they had to turn the <i>Banshee’s</i> stern
to it till it vanished. The look-out man had a dollar for
every sail he sighted, and was fined five dollars if it were
seen first from the deck. On the third day they found
they had only just time to run under cover of Fort Fisher
before dawn, and they tried to do it.</p>
<p>“Now the real excitement began,” says Mr. Taylor,
who was in charge of the cargo, “and nothing I have
ever experienced can compare with it. Hunting, pig-sticking,
big-game shooting, polo—all have their thrilling
moments, but none can approach ‘running a blockade.’
Consider the dangers to be encountered, after three days
of constant anxiety and little sleep, in threading our way
through a swarm of blockaders, and the accuracy required
to hit in the nick of time the mouth of a river only half
a mile wide, without lights, and with a coast-line so low
that as a rule the first intimation we had of its nearness
was the dim white line of the surf.”</p>
<p>They steamed along cautiously until nightfall. Though
the night was dark it was dangerously clear. No lights,
not even a cigar. The hatchways of the engine-room
were covered with tarpaulins, and the poor stokers had
to breathe as best they could.</p>
<p>All hands were on deck, crouching down behind the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</SPAN></span>
bulwarks. On the bridge were Taylor, the captain,
Mr. Steele, and the pilot, all straining their eyes into the
“vasty deep.”</p>
<p>Presently the pilot muttered: “Better cast the lead,
captain.”</p>
<p>Steele murmured down the tube that led to the engine-room,
and the vessel slowed down and then stopped. A
weird figure crept into the fore-chains and dropped the
leaded line, while the crew listened to see if the engines
would seize the opportunity to blow off steam and so
advertise their presence for miles around. In two minutes
came the seaman, saying: “Sixteen fathoms, sir. Sandy
bottom, with black specks.”</p>
<p>“We are not so far in as I thought,” said the pilot.
“Port two points and go a little faster.”</p>
<p>He knew by the speckled bottom where they were.
They had to be north of that before it was safe to head
for the shore.</p>
<p>In an hour or less the pilot asked for another sounding.
No more specks this time. “Starboard and go ahead
easy” was the order now.</p>
<p>The paddle-floats were flapping the water softly, but
to the crew the noise they made was terrifying. They
could be heard a long way.</p>
<p>Suddenly the pilot said: “There’s one of them, Mr.
Taylor, on the starboard bow.”</p>
<p>Presently straining eyes could see a long, low, black
object lying quite still. Would she see the <i>Banshee</i>?</p>
<p>They passed within a hundred yards of her and were
not heard.</p>
<p>Soon after Burroughs whispered: “Steamer on the
port bow.”</p>
<p>A second cruiser was made out close to them.</p>
<p>“Hard a port,” said the captain, and the steamer
swung round, bringing the enemy upon her beam. No<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</SPAN></span>
sound! The enemy slept! Then suddenly a third
cruiser came out of the gloom and steamed slowly across
the <i>Banshee’s</i> bows.</p>
<p>“Stop her,” said Captain Steele down the tube, and
the blockade-runner gurgled to a standstill, while the
cruiser moved across and was lost in the darkness.</p>
<p>Then “Slow ahead” was the order, until the low-lying
coast and the grey surf came dim to the eye. But it was
getting near dawn, and there was no trace of the river
mouth.</p>
<p>They knew not quite where they were, and thoughts
of prison and prison fare would come uppermost.</p>
<p>At length the pilot said: “All right, boys. I can see
the big hill yonder.”</p>
<p>The only hill on the coast was near Fort Fisher. Now
they knew where they were; so did six or seven gunboats,
which, in the silver light of early dawn, catching
sight of their prey, steamed hard and fast towards the
<i>Banshee</i>, with angry shots from the bow gun. The balls
were dropping all around and churning up the sea. It
was mighty unpleasant to men who knew they had several
tons of gunpowder in the hold; and just then they were
obliged to steer out to avoid the North Breaker shoal,
so that the gunboats crept ever nearer and nearer, barking
like disappointed puppies.</p>
<p>The pilot looked at the captain and the captain at the
supercargo. Their lips tightened and their breath came
faster as they eyed the gunboats askance.</p>
<p>“One good shot into the paddle will end this trip,”
thought Mr. Taylor; “and it is my first run in, too!”</p>
<p>Then came a welcome sound overhead. A shell from
the fort whirred its way towards the gunboats and
warned them off.</p>
<p>With a parting broadside they sheered off out of range,
and after half an hour’s run the <i>Banshee</i> was over the bar<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</SPAN></span>
and in quiet waters. They soon sped up the sixteen
miles to Wilmington, and found a large posse of willing
slaves ready to discharge their cargo.</p>
<p>The poor folk at Wilmington were then very much
pinched for want of good food and drink, and the advent
of the <i>Banshee</i> restored smiles all round. Living on corn-bread,
bacon, and water grows monotonous, and invitations
to lunch on board the <i>Banshee</i> were never declined—in
fact, many friends did not even wait for an invitation.</p>
<p>Within a very few days the <i>Banshee</i> was again ready
for sea, ballasted with tobacco and laden with cotton—three
tiers even on deck! High profit tempted them to
pile up their vessels like hay-waggons, and put to sea in
a condition quite unfit to meet a boisterous wind.</p>
<p>It was fortunately more easy to run out than to run in,
as there was no harbour mouth to find in the dark, and
the open sea lay before them. They learnt that the
Admiral’s ship remained at anchor during the night, while
the other vessels moved slowly to and fro across the
mouth of the river; so they formed a bold plan, thinking
that security lay in a startling impudence. They hid
the <i>Banshee</i> behind Fort Fisher till nightfall, rowing
ashore to get the latest news from Colonel Lamb, who
commanded the fort.</p>
<p>“Which, sir, is the Admiral’s flag-ship?”</p>
<p>“The <i>Minnesota</i>, a sixty-gun frigate. Don’t go too
near her.”</p>
<p>“That is just what we mean to do, Colonel; but first
we will take her bearings exactly. We don’t want to
bump into her.”</p>
<p>The Colonel was very kind and helpful, and they often
enjoyed his society and that of his wife, who lived in a
cottage not far off.</p>
<p>As soon as night fell over the sea the <i>Banshee</i> slipped
quietly from her secret anchorage, crossed the river bar,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</SPAN></span>
and following the observations they had taken, ran close
by the flagship, and so out to sea, clear of the first cordon.
But in trying to pass the second they ran across a gunboat,
which at once opened fire. The men lay down on
the deck, and the engines throbbed and thumped.
Luckily the gunboat was very slow, and they soon lost
one another; but as they could hear her pounding along
behind, they attempted a ruse. The helm was put hard
over, so that they steamed in a direction at right angles
to their former course, and in a few minutes their engines
were stopped. The <i>Banshee</i> lay perfectly still. The
crew rose on their elbows and peeped over the bulwarks,
following the course of the gunboat by the flashes of her
guns and by the rockets she was sending up madly to
attract or warn her consorts. So they saw her go plunging
past them and firing madly into the dark abyss of
the night.</p>
<p>After resting five minutes on the heaving wave, the
<i>Banshee</i> started again as noiselessly as she could. One
danger remained—the third cordon. You may be sure
they stared wide-eyed round the horizon as morning
broke. With the <i>Banshee</i> so heavily laden it would be
fatal to meet a cruiser in the daylight.</p>
<p>No smoke visible—no sail! All that day and for
two days more they steamed on with fear beside them.
On the evening of the third day they steamed proudly
into Nassau, though a heavy list to starboard made them
present a rather drunken appearance.</p>
<p>The profits of blockade-running may be estimated by
the fact that though the <i>Banshee</i> afterwards became a
total loss by capture, she earned enough on her eight successful
trips to pay the shareholders 700 per cent. on their
investment. The Northerners turned her into a gunboat,
but she asserted her sympathies for the South by running
foul of the jetty in the naval yard at Washington.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>On another run in the <i>Night Hawk</i>, after getting safely
through the blockading fleet, they grounded on the
bar, and two launches speedily boarded them. The
Northerners were very excited, and evidently expected
to meet with desperate resistance, for firing of revolvers
and wild cutlass blows surprised the crew of the <i>Night
Hawk</i>, who stood quietly on the poop waiting to be taken
prisoners.</p>
<p>“This roused my wrath,” says Taylor, “and I expostulated
with the Lieutenant upon his firing on unarmed
men.”</p>
<p>They then cooled down and began a search for portable
valuables; but, perhaps because they feared Colonel
Lamb might come to the rescue, they made haste about
this, and then set fire to the ship fore and aft.</p>
<p>They were quickened in their departure by the humour
of an Irish fireman, who sang out lustily:</p>
<p>“Begorra! begorra! but we shall all be in the air in a
minute, with this ship full of gunpowder!”</p>
<p>The men who were holding Taylor dropped him “like
a hot potato,” and away they rowed, taking some of the
crew as prisoners. The gunpowder existed only in the
fancy of the Irishman.</p>
<p>The blockaders opened fire on the <i>Night Hawk</i>, which
was blazing merrily, and Colonel Lamb shelled the
blockading fleet; then through the boiling surf the rest
of the crew rowed safely, wet through and exhausted.</p>
<p>With the rising tide she bumped herself over the sandbank,
still burning. They telegraphed to Wilmington
for help, and some 300 negroes came down the river to
assist in baling and pumping. So they managed to save
the <i>Night Hawk</i> and make her fit to undertake other
voyages, though to look at she was no beauty, for her
sides were all corrugated with the heat, and her stern
twisted, and not a bit of woodwork on her was left un<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</SPAN></span>consumed
by the fire. Yet she managed to stagger
across the Atlantic through some very bad weather.</p>
<p>Such were some of the adventures of the blockade-runners
in the Civil War of the United States. To those
who bought the ships it was a matter of pecuniary profit
merely; to the Southerners in Richmond, Wilmington,
and Charleston, and even on the plantations inland, the
arrival of these vessels staved off famine and cold and
nakedness. To the Northerners they meant a prolongation
of the unequal struggle, and it was no wonder that
they dealt rather harshly with those whom they caught.</p>
<p>A rich lady of South Carolina wrote during this war:
“I have had an excellent pair of shoes given me. For
more than a year I have had none but some dreadful
things made by our carpenter, and they do hurt my feet
so. Uncle William says the men who went into the war
to save their negroes are abjectly wretched. Neither
side now cares a fig for these beloved negroes, and would
send them all to heaven in a hand-basket to win the
fight.”</p>
<p>The negroes on the whole were very faithful to their
old masters, for many of them had been treated with all
justice and kindness. Of course, some of them gave
themselves airs on becoming free and independent voters.
One old negro said to his master: “When you all had de
power you was good to me, and I’ll protect you now,
massa. No niggers nor nobody shall tech you. If you
want anything, call for Sambo. Ahem! I mean call for
Mr. Samuel: dat my name now.”</p>
<p class="source">From “Running the Blockade,” by T. E. Taylor. By kind permission
of Mr. John Murray.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</SPAN></span></p>
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