BY JACOB ABBOTT.
The engraving at the head of this
article represents the operation of transporting the
officers and crew of a wrecked vessel to the shore,
by means of one of the Life-Cars invented by Mr. Joseph
Francis for this purpose. A considerable appropriation
was made recently by Congress, to establish stations
along the coast of New Jersey and Long Island as
well as on other parts of the Atlantic seaboard at
which all the apparatus necessary for the service
of these cars, and of boats, in cases where boats
can be used, may be kept. These stations are
maintained by the government, with the aid and co-operation
of the Humane Society a benevolent association
the object of which is to provide means for rescuing
and saving persons in danger of drowning and
also of the New York Board of Underwriters, a body,
which, as its name imports, represents the principal
Marine Insurance Companies associations
having a strong pecuniary interest in the saving of
cargoes of merchandize, and other property, endangered
in a shipwreck. These three parties, the Government,
the Humane Society, and the Board of Underwriters,
combine their efforts to establish and sustain these
stations; though we can not here stop to explain the
details of the arrangement by which this co-operation
is effected, as we must proceed to consider the more
immediate subject of this article, which is the apparatus
and the machinery itself, by which the lives and property
are saved. In respect to the stations, however,
we will say that it awakens very strong and very peculiar
emotions in the mind, to visit one of them on some
lonely and desolate coast, remote from human dwellings,
and to observe the arrangements and preparations that
have been made in them, all quietly awaiting the dreadful
emergency which is to call them into action.
The traveler stands for example on the southern shore
of the island of Nantucket, and after looking off over
the boundless ocean which stretches in that direction
without limit or shore for thousands of miles, and
upon the surf rolling in incessantly on the beach,
whose smooth expanse is dotted here and there with
the skeleton remains of ships that were lost in former
storms, and are now half buried in the sand, he sees,
at length, a hut, standing upon the shore just above
the reach of the water the only human structure
to be seen. He enters the hut. The surf
boat is there, resting upon its rollers, all ready
to be launched, and with its oars and all its furniture
and appliances complete, and ready for the sea.
The fireplace is there, with the wood laid, and matches
ready for the kindling. Supplies of food and
clothing are also at hand and a compass:
and on a placard, conspicuously posted, are the words,
SHIPWRECKED MARINERS REACHING THIS
HUT, IN FOG OR SNOW, WILL FIND THE TOWN OF NANTUCKET
TWO MILES DISTANT, DUE WEST.
It is impossible to contemplate such
a spectacle as this, without a feeling of strong emotion and
a new and deeper interest in the superior excellency
and nobleness of efforts made by man for saving life,
and diminishing suffering, in comparison with the
deeds of havoc and destruction which have been so
much gloried in, in ages that are past. The Life-Boat
rests in its retreat, not like a ferocious beast of
prey, crouching in its covert to seize and destroy
its hapless victims, but like an angel of mercy, reposing
upon her wings, and watching for danger, that she
may spring forth, on the first warning, to rescue
and save.
The Life-Car is a sort of boat,
formed of copper or iron, and closed over, above,
by a convex deck with a sort of door or hatchway through
it, by which the passengers to be conveyed in it to
the shore, are admitted. The car will hold from
four to five persons. When these passengers are
put in, the door, or rather cover, is shut down
and bolted to its place; and the car is then drawn
to the land, suspended by rings from a hawser which
has previously been stretched from the ship to the
shore.
To be shut up in this manner in so
dark and gloomy a receptacle, for the purpose of being
drawn, perhaps at midnight, through a surf of such
terrific violence that no boat can live in it, can
not be a very agreeable alternative; but the emergencies
in which the use of the life-car is called for, are
such as do not admit of hesitation or delay.
There is no light within the car, and there are no
openings for the admission of air. It is subject,
too, in its passage to the shore, to the most frightful
shocks and concussions from the force of the breakers.
The car, as first made, too, was of such a form as
required the passengers within it to lie at length,
in a recumbent position, which rendered them almost
utterly helpless. The form is, however, now changed the
parts toward the ends, where the heads of the passengers
would come, when placed in a sitting posture within,
being made higher than the middle; and the opening
or door is placed in the depressed part, in the centre.
This arrangement is found to be much better than the
former one, as it greatly facilitates the putting in
of the passengers, who always require a greater or
less degree of aid, and are often entirely insensible
and helpless from the effects of fear, or of exposure
to cold and hunger. Besides, by this arrangement
those who have any strength remaining can take much
more convenient and safer positions within the car,
in their progress to the shore, than was possible under
the old construction.
The car, as will be seen by the foregoing
drawings, is suspended from the hawser by means of
short chains attached to the ends of it. These
chains terminate in rings above, which rings ride upon
the hawser, thus allowing the car to traverse to and
fro, from the vessel to the shore. The car is
drawn along, in making these passages, by means of
lines attached to the two ends of it, one of which
passes to the ship and the other to the shore.
By means of these lines the empty car is first drawn
out to the wreck by the passengers and crew, and then,
when loaded, it is drawn back to the land by the people
assembled there, as represented in the engraving at
the head of this article.
Perhaps the most important and difficult
part of the operation of saving the passengers and
crew in such cases, is the getting the hawser out in
the first instance, so as to form a connection between
the ship and the land. In fact, whenever a ship
is stranded upon a coast, and people are assembled
on the beach to assist the sufferers, the first thing
to be done, is always to “get a line ashore.”
On the success of the attempts made to accomplish
this, all the hopes of the sufferers depend. Various
methods are resorted to, by the people on board the
ship, in order to attain this end, where there are
no means at hand on the shore, for effecting it.
Perhaps the most common mode is to attach a small line
to a cask, or to some other light and bulky substance
which the surf can easily throw up upon the shore.
The cask, or float, whatever it may be, when attached
to the line, is thrown into the water, and after being
rolled and tossed, hither and thither, by the tumultuous
waves, now advancing, now receding, and now sweeping
madly around in endless gyrations, it at length reaches
a point where some adventurous wrecker on the beach
can seize it, and pull it up upon the land. The
line is then drawn in, and a hawser being attached
to the outer end of it, by the crew of the ship, the
end of the hawser itself is then drawn to the shore.
This method, however, of making a
communication with the shore from a distressed vessel,
simple and sure as it may seem in description, proves
generally extremely difficult and uncertain in actual
practice. Sometimes, and that, too, not unfrequently
when the billows are rolling in with most terrific
violence upon the shore, the sea will carry nothing
whatever to the land. The surges seem to pass
under, and so to get beyond whatever objects lie floating
upon the water, so that when a cask is thrown over
to them, they play beneath it, leaving it where it
was, or even drive it out to sea by not carrying it
as far forward on their advance, as they bring it
back by their recession. Even the lifeless body
of the exhausted mariner, who when his strength was
gone and he could cling no longer to the rigging,
fell into the sea, is not drawn to the beach, but
after surging to and fro for a short period about
the vessel, it slowly disappears from view among the
foam and the breakers toward the offing. In such
cases it is useless to attempt to get a line on shore
from the ship by means of any aid from the sea.
The cask intrusted with the commission of bearing
it, is beaten back against the vessel, or is drifted
uselessly along the shore, rolling in and out upon
the surges, but never approaching near enough to the
beach to enable even the most daring adventurer to
reach it.
In case of these life-cars, therefore,
arrangements are made for sending the hawser out from
the shore to the ship. The apparatus by which
this is accomplished consists, first, of a piece of
ordnance called a mortar, made large enough to throw
a shot of about six inches in diameter; secondly,
the shot itself, which has a small iron staple set
in it; thirdly, a long line, one end of which is to
be attached to the staple in the shot, when the shot
is thrown; and, fourthly, a rack of a peculiar
construction to serve as a reel for winding the line
upon. This rack consists of a small square frame,
having rows of pegs inserted along the ends and sides
of it. The line is wound upon these pegs in such
a manner, that as the shot is projected through the
air, drawing the line with it, the pegs deliver the
line as fast as it is required by the progress of
the shot, and that with the least possible friction.
Thus the advance of the shot is unimpeded. The
mortar from which the shot is fired, is aimed in such
a manner as to throw the missile over and beyond the
ship, and thus when it falls into the water, the line
attached to it comes down across the deck of the ship,
and is seized by the passengers and crew.
Sometimes, in consequence of the darkness
of the night, the violence of the wind, and perhaps
of the agitations and confusion of the scene, the
first and even the second trial may not be successful
in throwing the line across the wreck. The object
is, however, generally attained on the second or third
attempt, and then the end of the hawser is drawn out
to the wreck by means of the small line which the
shot had carried; and being made fast and “drawn
taut,” the bridge is complete on which the car
is to traverse to and fro.
The visitors at Long Branch, a celebrated
watering place on the New Jersey coast, near New York,
had an opportunity to witness a trial of this apparatus
at the station there, during the last summer:
a trial made, not in a case of storm and shipwreck,
but on a pleasant summer afternoon, and for the purpose
of testing the apparatus, and for practice in the
use of it. A large company assembled on the bank
to witness the experiments. A boat was stationed
on the calm surface of the sea, half a mile from the
shore, to represent the wreck. The ball was thrown,
the line fell across the boat, the car was drawn out,
and then certain amateur performers, representing
wrecked and perishing men, were put into the car and
drawn safely through the gentle evening surf to the
shore.
A case occurred a little more than
a year ago on the Jersey shore not very far from Long
Branch, in which this apparatus was used in serious
earnest. It was in the middle of January and during
a severe snow storm. The ship Ayrshire, with
about two hundred passengers, had been driven upon
the shore by the storm, and lay there stranded, the
sea beating over her, and a surf so heavy rolling
in, as made it impossible for any boat to reach her.
It happened that one of the stations which we have
described was near. The people on the shore assembled
and brought out the apparatus. They fired the
shot, taking aim so well that the line fell directly
across the wreck. It was caught by the crew on
board and the hawser was hauled off. The car
was then attached, and in a short time, every one
of the two hundred passengers, men, women, children,
and even infants in their mothers’ arms, were
brought safely through the foaming surges, and landed
at the station. The car which performed this
service was considered as thenceforth fully entitled
to an honorable discharge from active duty, and it
now rests, in retirement and repose, though unconscious
of its honors, in the Metallic Life-Boat Factory of
Mr. Francis, at the Novelty Iron Works.
In many cases of distress and disaster
befalling ships on the coast, it is not necessary
to use the car, the state of the sea being such that
it is possible to go out in a boat, to furnish the
necessary succor. The boats, however, which are
destined to this service must be of a peculiar construction,
for no ordinary boat can live a moment in the surf
which rolls in, in storms, upon shelving or rocky
shores. A great many different modes have been
adopted for the construction of surf-boats, each liable
to its own peculiar objections. The principle
on which Mr. Francis relies in his life and surf boats,
is to give them an extreme lightness and buoyancy,
so as to keep them always upon the top of the
sea. Formerly it was expected that a boat in such
a service, must necessarily take in great quantities
of water, and the object of all the contrivances for
securing its safety, was to expel the water after it
was admitted. In the plan now adopted the design
is to exclude the water altogether, by making the
structure so light and forming it on such a model
that it shall always rise above the wave, and thus
glide safely over it. This result is obtained
partly by means of the model of the boat, and partly
by the lightness of the material of which it is composed.
The reader may perhaps be surprised to hear, after
this, that the material is iron.
Iron or copper, which in
this respect possesses the same properties as iron though
absolutely heavier than wood, is, in fact, much
lighter as a material for the construction of receptacles
of all kinds, on account of its great strength and
tenacity, which allows of its being used in plates
so thin that the quantity of the material employed
is diminished much more than the specific gravity
is increased by using the metal. There has been,
however, hitherto a great practical difficulty in
the way of using iron for such a purpose, namely that
of giving to these metal plates a sufficient stiffness.
A sheet of tin, for example, though stronger than
a board, that is, requiring a greater force to break
or rapture it, is still very flexible, while
the board is stiff. In other words, in the case
of a thin plate of metal, the parts yield readily to
any slight force, so far as to bend under the
pressure, but it requires a very great force to separate
them entirely; whereas in the case of wood, the slight
force is at first resisted, but on a moderate increase
of it, the structure breaks down altogether. The
great thing to be desired therefore in a material
for the construction of boats is to secure the stiffness
of wood in conjunction with the thinness and tenacity
of iron. This object is attained in the manufacture
of Mr. Francis’s boats by plaiting or
corrugating the sheets of metal of which the
sides of the boat are to be made. A familiar illustration
of the principle on which this stiffening is effected
is furnished by the common table waiter, which is
made, usually, of a thin plate of tinned iron, stiffened
by being turned up at the edges all around the
upturned part serving also at the same time the purpose
of forming a margin.
The plaitings or corrugations of the
metal in these iron boats pass along the sheets, in
lines, instead of being, as in the case of the waiter,
confined to the margin. The lines which they form
can be seen in the drawing of the surf-boat, given
on a subsequent page. The idea of thus corrugating
or plaiting the metal was a very simple one; the main
difficulty in the invention came, after getting the
idea, in devising the ways and means by which such
a corrugation could be made. It is a curious
circumstance in the history of modern inventions that
it often requires much more ingenuity and effort to
contrive a way to make the article when invented,
than it did to invent the article itself. It was,
for instance, much easier, doubtless, to invent pins,
than to invent the machinery for making pins.
The machine for making the corrugations
in the sides of these metallic boats consists of a
hydraulic press and a set of enormous dies. These
dies are grooved to fit each other, and shut together;
and the plate of iron which is to be corrugated being
placed between them, is pressed into the requisite
form, with all the force of the hydraulic piston the
greatest force, altogether, that is ever employed in
the service of man.
The machinery referred to will be
easily understood by the above engraving. On
the left are the pumps, worked, as represented in the
engraving, by two men, though four or more are often
required. By alternately raising and depressing
the break or handle, they work two small but very
solid pistons which play within cylinders of corresponding
bore, in the manner of any common forcing pump.
By means of these pistons the water
is driven, in small quantities but with prodigious
force, along through the horizontal tube seen passing
across, in the middle of the picture, from the forcing-pump
to the great cylinders on the right hand. Here
the water presses upward upon the under surfaces of
pistons working within the great cylinders, with a
force proportioned to the ratio of the area of those
pistons compared with that of one of the pistons in
the pump. Now the piston in the force-pump is
about one inch in diameter. Those in the great
cylinders are about twelve inches in diameter, and
as there are four of the great cylinders the ratio
is as 1 to 576. This is a great multiplication,
and it is found that the force which the men can exert
upon the piston within the small cylinder, by the
aid of the long lever with which they work it, is
so great, that when multiplied by 576, as it is by
being expanded over the surface of the large pistons,
an upward pressure results of about eight hundred
tons. This is a force ten times as great in intensity
as that exerted by steam in the most powerful sea-going
engines. It would be sufficient to lift a block
of granite five or six feet square at the base, and
as high as the Bunker Hill Monument.
Superior, however, as this force is,
in one point of view, to that of steam, it is very
inferior to it in other respects. It is great,
so to speak, in intensity, but it is very small
in extent and amount. It is capable
indeed of lifting a very great weight, but it can raise
it only an exceedingly little way. Were the force
of such an engine to be brought into action beneath
such a block of granite as we have described, the
enormous burden would rise, but it would rise by a
motion almost inconceivably slow, and after going
up perhaps as high as the thickness of a sheet of
paper, the force would be spent, and no further effect
would be produced without a new exertion of the motive
power. In other words, the whole amount of the
force of a hydraulic engine, vastly concentrated as
it is, and irresistible, within the narrow limits within
which it works, is but the force of four or five men
after all; while the power of the engines of a Collins’
steamer is equal to that of four or five thousand
men. The steam-engine can do an abundance
of great work; while, on the other hand, what
the hydraulic press can do is very little in amount,
and only great in view of its extremely concentrated
intensity.
Hydraulic presses are consequently
very often used, in such cases and for such purposes
as require a great force within very narrow limits.
The indentations made by the type in printing the pages
of this magazine, are taken out, and the sheet rendered
smooth again, by hydraulic presses exerting a force
of twelve hundred tons. This would make
it necessary for us to carry up our imaginary block
of granite a hundred feet higher than the Bunker
Hill Monument to get a load for them.
In Mr. Francis’s presses, the
dies between which the sheets of iron or copper are
pressed; are directly above the four cylinders which
we have described, as will be seen by referring once
more to the drawing. The upper die is fixed being
firmly attached to the top of the frame, and held
securely down by the rows of iron pillars on the two
sides, and by the massive iron caps, called platens,
which may be seen passing across at the top, from
pillar to pillar. These caps are held by large
iron nuts which are screwed down over the ends of
the pillars above. The lower die is movable.
It is attached by massive iron work to the ends of
the piston-rods, and of course it rises when the pistons
are driven upward by the pressure of the water.
The plate of metal, when the dies approach each other,
is bent and drawn into the intended shape by the force
of the pressure, receiving not only the corrugations
which are designed to stiffen it, but also the general
shaping necessary, in respect to swell and curvature,
to give it the proper form for the side, or the portion
of a side, of a boat.
It is obviously necessary that these
dies should fit each other in a very accurate manner,
so as to compress the iron equally in every part.
To make them fit thus exactly, massive as they are
in magnitude, and irregular in form, is a work of
immense labor. They are first cast as nearly
as possible to the form intended, but as such castings
always warp more or less in cooling, there is a great
deal of fitting afterward required, to make them come
rightly together. This could easily be done by
machinery if the surfaces were square, or cylindrical,
or of any other mathematical form to which the working
of machinery could be adapted. But the curved
and winding surfaces which form the hull of a boat
or vessel, smooth and flowing as they are, and controlled,
too, by established and well-known laws, bid defiance
to all the attempts of mere mechanical motion to follow
them. The superfluous iron, therefore, of these
dies, must all be cut away by chisels driven by a hammer
held in the hand; and so great is the labor required
to fit and smooth and polish them, that a pair of
them costs several thousand dollars before they are
completed and ready to fulfill their function.
The superiority of metallic boats,
whether of copper or iron, made in the manner above
described, over those of any other construction, is
growing every year more and more apparent. They
are more light and more easily managed, they require
far less repair from year to year, and are very much
longer lived. When iron is used for this purpose,
a preparation is employed that is called galvanized
iron. This manufacture consists of plates of
iron of the requisite thickness, coated on each side,
first with tin, and then with zinc; the tin being
used simply as a solder, to unite the other metals.
The plate presents, therefore, to the water, only
a surface of zinc, which resists all action,
so that the boats thus made are subject to no species
of decay. They can be injured or destroyed only
by violence, and even violence acts at a very great
disadvantage in attacking them. The stroke of
a shot, or a concussion of any kind that would split
or shiver a wooden boat so as to damage it past repair,
would only indent, or at most perforate, an iron one.
And a perforation even, when made, is very easily
repaired, even by the navigators themselves, under
circumstances however unfavorable. With a smooth
and heavy stone placed upon the outside for an anvil,
and another used on the inside as a hammer, the protrusion
is easily beaten down, the opening is closed, the continuity
of surface is restored, and the damaged boat becomes,
excepting, perhaps, in the imagination of the navigator,
as good once more as ever.
Metallic boats of this character were
employed by the party under Lieut. Lynch, in
making, some years ago, their celebrated voyage down
the river Jordan to the Dead Sea. The navigation
of this stream was difficult and perilous in the highest
degree. The boats were subject to the severest
possible tests and trials. They were impelled
against rocks, they were dragged over shoals, they
were swept down cataracts and cascades. There
was one wooden boat in the little squadron;
but this was soon so strained and battered that it
could no longer be kept afloat, and it was abandoned.
The metallic boats, however, lived through the whole,
and finally floated in peace on the heavy waters of
the Dead Sea, in nearly as good a condition as when
they first came from Mr. Francis’s dies.
The seams of a metallic boat will
never open by exposure to the sun and rain, when lying
long upon the deck of a ship, or hauled up upon a
shore. Nor will such boats burn. If a ship
takes fire at sea, the boats, if of iron, can never
be injured by the conflagration. Nor can they
be sunk. For they are provided with air chambers
in various parts, each separate from the others, so
that if the boat were bruised and jammed by violent
concussions, up to her utmost capacity of receiving
injury, the shapeless mass would still float upon
the sea, and hold up with unconquerable buoyancy as
many as could cling to her.
A curious instance occurred during
the late war with Mexico which illustrates the almost
indestructible character of these metallic boats.
The reader is probably aware that
the city of Vera Cruz is situated upon a low and sandy
coast, and that the only port which exists there is
formed by a small island which lies at a little distance
from the shore, and a mole or pier built out from
it into the water. The island is almost wholly
covered by the celebrated fortress of St. Juan de Ulloa.
Ships obtain something like shelter under the lee of
this island and mole, riding sometimes at anchor behind
the mole, and sometimes moored to iron rings set in
the castle walls. At one time while the American
forces were in possession of the city, an officer of
the army had occasion to use a boat for some purpose
of transportation from the island to the shore.
He applied to the naval authorities in order to procure
one. He was informed that there was no boat on
the station that could be spared for such a purpose.
In this dilemma the officer accidentally learned that
there was an old copper life-boat, lying in the water
near the castle landing, dismantled, sunk, and useless.
The officer resolved, as a last resort, to examine
this wreck, in hopes to find that it might possibly
be raised and repaired.
He found that the boat was lying in
the water and half filled with rocks, sand, and masses
of old iron, which had been thrown into her to sink
and destroy her. Among the masses of iron there
was a heavy bar which had been used apparently in
the attempt to punch holes in the boat by those who
had undertaken to sink her. These attempts had
been generally fruitless, the blows having only made
indentations in the copper, on account of the yielding
nature of the metal. In one place, however, in
the bottom of the boat, the work had been done effectually;
for five large holes were discovered there, at a place
where the bottom of the boat rested upon the rocks
so as to furnish such points of resistance below as
prevented the copper from yielding to the blows.
The officer set his men at work to
attempt to repair this damage. They first took
out the sand and stones and iron with which the boat
was encumbered, and then raising her, they dragged
her up out of the water to the landing. Here
the men lifted her up upon her side, and began to
beat back the indentations which had been made in the
metal, by holding a heavy sledge hammer on the inside,
to serve as an anvil, and then striking with a hand-hammer
upon the protubérances on the outside. In
the same manner they beat back the burrs or protrusions
formed where the holes had been punched through the
bottom of the boat, and they found, much to their
satisfaction, that when the metal was thus brought
back into its place the holes were closed again, and
the boat became whole and tight as before.
When this work was done the men put
the boat back again in her proper position, replaced
and fastened the seats, and then launched her into
the water. They found her stanch and tight, and
seemingly as good as new. The whole work of repairing
her did not occupy more than one hour much
less time, the officer thought, than had been spent
in the attempt to destroy her.
The boat thus restored was immediately
put to service and she performed the work required
of her, admirably well. She was often out on the
open sea in very rough weather, but always rode over
the billows in safety, and in the end proved to be
the strongest, swiftest, and safest boat in the gulf
squadron.
The surf-boats, made in this
way, will ride safely in any sea and though
sometimes after protracted storms, the surges roll
in upon shelving or rocky shores with such terrific
violence that it is impossible to get the boats off
from the land, yet once off, they are safe, however
wild the commotion. In fact there is a certain
charm in the graceful and life-like buoyancy with
which they ride over the billows, and in the confidence
and sense of security which they inspire in the hearts
of those whom they bear, as they go bounding over the
crests of the waves, that it awakens in minds of a
certain class, a high exhilaration and pleasure, to
go out in them upon stormy and tempestuous seas.
To illustrate the nature of the scenes through which
such adventurers sometimes pass, we will close this
article with a narrative of a particular excursion
made not long since by one of these boats a
narrative now for the first time reduced to writing.
One dark and stormy night Mr. Richard
C. Holmes, the collector at the port of Cape May,
a port situated on an exposed and dangerous part of
the coast, near the entrance to the Chesapeake, was
awakened from his sleep by the violence of the storm,
and listening, he thought that he could hear at intervals
the distant booming of a gun, which he supposed to
be a signal of distress. He arose and hastened
to the shore. The night was dark, and nothing
could be seen, but the report of the gun was distinctly
to be heard, at brief intervals, coming apparently
from a great distance in the offing.
He aroused from the neighboring houses
a sufficient number of other persons to man his surf-boat,
embarked on board, taking a compass for a guide, and
put to sea.
It was very dark and the weather was
very thick, so that nothing could be seen; but the
crew of the boat pulled steadily on, guided only by
the compass, and by the low and distant booming of
the gun. They rowed in the direction of the sound,
listening as they pulled; but the noise made by the
winds and the waves, and by the dashing of the water
upon the boat and upon the oars, was so loud and incessant,
and the progress which they made against the heavy
“send” of the surges was so slow, that
it was for a long time doubtful whether they were advancing
or not. After an hour or two, however, the sound
of the gun seemed to come nearer, and at length they
could see, faintly, the flash beaming out for an instant
just before the report, in the midst of the driving
rain and flying spray which filled the dark air before
them.
Encouraged by this, the oarsmen pulled
at their oars with new energy, and soon came in sight
of the hull of the distressed vessel, which began
now to rise before them, a black and misshapen mass,
scarcely distinguishable from the surrounding darkness
and gloom. As they came nearer, they found that
the vessel was a ship that she had been
beaten down upon her side by the sea, and was almost
overwhelmed with the surges which were breaking over
her. Every place upon the deck which afforded
any possibility of shelter was crowded with men and
women, all clinging to such supports as were within
their reach, and vainly endeavoring to screen themselves
from the dashing of the spray. The boat was to
the leeward of the vessel, but so great was the commotion
of the sea, that it was not safe to approach even
near enough to communicate with the people on board.
After coming up among the heaving and tumbling surges
as near as they dared to venture, the crew of the surf
boat found that all attempts to make their voices
heard were unavailing, as their loudest shouts were
wholly overpowered by the roaring of the sea, and
the howling of the winds in the rigging.
Mr. Holmes accordingly gave up the
attempt, and fell back again, intending to go round
to the windward side of the ship, in hopes to be able
to communicate with the crew from that quarter.
He could hear them while he was to leeward
of them, but they could not hear him; and his object
in wishing to communicate with them was to give them
directions in respect to what they were to do, in order
to enable him to get on board.
In the mean time daylight began to
appear. The position of the ship could be seen
more distinctly. She lay upon a shoal, held partly
by her anchor, which the crew had let go before she
struck. Thus confined she had been knocked down
by the seas, and now lay thumping violently at every
rising and falling of the surge, and in danger every
moment of going to pieces. She was covered with
human beings, who were seen clinging to her in every
part each separate group forming a separate
and frightful spectacle of distress and terror.
Mr. Holmes succeeded in bringing the
surf-boat so near to the ship on the windward side
as to hail the crew, and he directed them to let down
a line from the end of the main yard, to leeward.
The main yard is a spar which lies horizontally at
the head of the main mast, and as the vessel was careened
over to leeward, the end of the yard on that side
would of course be depressed, and a line from it would
hang down over the water, entirely clear of the vessel.
The crew heard this order and let down the line.
Mr. Holmes then ordered the surf-boat to be pulled
away from the ship again, intending to drop to leeward
once more, and there to get on board of it by means
of the line. In doing this, however, the boat
was assailed by the winds and waves with greater fury
than ever, as if they now first began to understand
that it had come to rescue their victims from their
power. The boat was swept so far away by this
onset, that it was an hour before the oarsmen could
get her back so as to approach the line. It seemed
then extremely dangerous to approach it, as the end
of it was flying hither and thither, whipping the surges
which boiled beneath it, or whirling and curling in
the air, as it was swung to and fro by the impulse
of the wind, or by the swaying of the yard-arm from
which it was suspended.
The boat however approached the line.
Mr. Holmes, when he saw it within reach, sprang forward
to the bows, and after a moment’s contest between
an instinctive shrinking from the gigantic lash which
was brandished so furiously over his head, and his
efforts to reach it, he at length succeeded in seizing
it. He grasped it by both hands with all his force,
and the next instant the boat was swept away from beneath
him by the retreating billows, and he was left safely
dangling in the air.
We say safely, for, whenever
any one of these indomitable sea-kings, no matter
in what circumstances of difficulty or danger, gets
a rope that is well secured at its point of suspension,
fairly within his iron gripe, we may at once dismiss
all concern about his personal safety. In this
case the intrepid adventurer, when he found that the
boat had surged away from beneath him, and left him
suspended in the air over the raging and foaming billows,
felt that all danger was over. To mount the rope,
hand over hand, till he gained the yard-arm, to clamber
up the yard to the mast, and then to descend to the
deck by the shrouds, required only an ordinary
exercise of nautical strength and courage. All
this was done in a moment, and Mr. Holmes stood upon
the deck, speechless, and entirely overcome by the
appalling spectacle of terror and distress that met
his view.
The crew gathered around the stranger,
whom they looked upon at once as their deliverer,
and listened to hear what he had to say. He informed
them that the ship was grounded on a narrow reef or
bar running parallel with the coast, and that there
was deeper water between them and the shore.
He counseled them to cut loose from the anchor, in
which case he presumed that the shocks of the seas
would drive the ship over the bar, and that then she
would drift rapidly in upon the shore; where, when
she should strike upon the beach, they could probably
find means to get the passengers to the land.
This plan was decided upon. The
cable was cut away by means of such instruments as
came to hand. The ship was beaten over the bar,
awakening, as she was dashed along, new shrieks from
the terrified passengers, at the violence of the concussions.
Once in deep water she moved on more smoothly, but
was still driven at a fearful rate directly toward
the land. The surf-boat accompanied her, hovering
as near to her all the way as was consistent with
safety. During their progress the boat was watched
by the passengers on board the ship, with anxious eyes,
as in her were centred all their hopes of escape from
destruction.
The conformation of this part of the
coast, as in many other places along the shores of
the United States, presents a range of low, sandy
islands, lying at a little distance from the land,
and separated from it by a channel of sheltered water.
These islands are long and narrow, and separated from
each other by inlets or openings here and there, formed
apparently by the breaking through of the sea.
The crew of our ship would have been glad to have
seen some possibility of their entering through one
of these inlets. The ship could not, however,
be guided, but must go wherever the winds and waves
chose to impel her. This was to the outer shore
of one of the long, narrow islands, where at length
she struck again, and was again overwhelmed with breakers
and spray.
After much difficulty the seamen succeeded,
with the help of the surf-boat, in getting a line
from the ship to the shore, by means of which one
party on the land and another on board the vessel could
draw the surf-boat to and fro. In this way the
passengers and crew were all safely landed. When
the lives were thus all safe, sails and spars were
brought on shore, and then, under Mr. Holmes’s
directions, a great tent was constructed on the sand,
which, though rude in form, was sufficient in size
to shelter all the company. When all were assembled
the number of passengers saved was found to be one
hundred and twenty-one. They were German
emigrants of the better class, and they gathered around
their intrepid deliverer, when all was over, with such
overwhelming manifestations of their admiration and
gratitude, as wholly unmanned him. They had saved
money, and jewels, and such other valuables as could
be carried about the person, to a large amount; and
they brought every thing to him, pressing him most
earnestly, and with many tears, to take it all, for
having saved them from such imminent and certain destruction.
He was deeply moved by these expressions of gratitude,
but he would receive no reward.
When the tent was completed and the
whole company were comfortably established under the
shelter of it, the boat was passed to and fro again
through the surf, to bring provisions on shore.
A party of seamen remained on board for this purpose loading
the boat at the ship, and drawing it out again when
unloaded on the shore. The company that were
assembled under the tent dried their clothes by fires
built for the purpose there, and then made a rude
breakfast from the provisions brought for them from
the ship: and when thus in some degree rested
and refreshed, they were all conveyed safely in boats
to the main land.