Skirmishes with the subject generally
It ought to be known to all English
boys that there is a terrible and costly war in which
the British nation is at all times engaged. No
intervals of peace mark the course of this war.
Cessations of hostilities there are for brief periods,
but no treaties of peace. “War to the
knife” is its character. Quarter is neither
given nor sought. Our foe is unfeeling, unrelenting.
He wastes no time in diplomatic preliminaries; he
scorns the courtesies of national life. No ambassadors
are recalled, no declarations of war made. Like
the Red Savage he steals upon us unawares, and, with
a roar of wrathful fury, settles down to his deadly
work.
How does this war progress?
It is needful to put and reiterate this question from
time to time, because new generations of boys are always
growing up, who, so far from being familiar with the
stirring episodes of this war, and the daring deeds
of valour performed, scarcely realise the fact that
such a war is being carried on at all, much less that
it costs hundreds of lives and millions of money every
year.
It may be styled a naval war, being
waged chiefly in boats upon the sea. It is a
war which will never cease, because our foe is invincible,
and we will never give in; a war which, unlike much
ordinary warfare, is never unjust or unnecessary;
which cannot be avoided, which is conducted on the
most barbarous principles of deathless enmity, but
which, nevertheless, brings true glory and honour
to those heroes who are ever ready, night and day,
to take their lives in their hands and rush into the
thick of the furious fray.
Although this great war began at
least in a systematic manner only little
more than fifty years ago, it will not end until the
hearts of brave and generous Britons cease to beat,
and the wild winds cease to blow, for the undying
and unconquerable enemy of whom we write is the
Storm!
“Death or victory!” the
old familiar warwhoop, is not the final war-cry here.
Death is, indeed, always faced sometimes
met and victory is often gained; but, final
conquests being impossible, and the “piping
times of peace” being out of the question, the
signal for the onset has been altered, and the world’s
old battle-cry has been exchanged for the soul-stirring
shout of “Rescue the perishing!”
Though our foe cannot be slain, he
can, like the genii of Eastern story, be baffled.
In the days of old, the Storm had
it nearly all his own way. Hearts, indeed, were
not less brave, but munitions of war were wanting.
In this matter, as in everything else, the world
is better off now than it was then. Our weapons
are more perfect, our engines more formidable.
We can now dash at our enemy in the very heart of
his own terrible strongholds; fight him where even
the boldest of the ancient Vikings did not dare to
venture, and rescue the prey from the very jaws of
death amid the scenes of its wildest revelry.
The heroes who recruit the battalions
of our invincible army are the bronzed and stalwart
men of our sea-coast towns, villages, and hamlets
men who have had much and long experience of the foe
with whom they have to deal. Their panoply is
familiar to most of us. The helmet, a sou’wester;
the breastplate, a lifebelt of cork; the sword, a strong
short oar; their war-galley, a splendid lifeboat;
and their shield the Hand of God.
In this and succeeding chapters I
purpose to exhibit and explain in detail our Lifeboats,
and the great, the glorious work which they annually
accomplish; also the operations of the life-saving
Rocket, which has for many years rescued innumerable
lives, where, from the nature of circumstances, Lifeboats
could not have gone into action. I hold that
we especially those of us who dwell in the
interior of our land are not sufficiently
alive to the deeds of daring, the thrilling incidents,
the terrible tragedies and the magnificent rescues
which are perpetually going on around our shores.
We are not sufficiently impressed, perhaps, with
the nationality of the work done by the Royal
National Lifeboat Institution, which manages our fleet
of 270 lifeboats. We do not fully appreciate,
it may be, the personal interest which we ourselves
have in the great war, and the duty to say
nothing of privilege which lies upon us
to lend a helping hand in the good cause.
Before going into the marrow of the
subject, let us put on the wings of imagination, and
soar to such a height that we shall be able to take
in at one eagle glance all the coasts of the United
Kingdom a sweep of about 5000 miles all
round! It is a tremendous sight, for a storm
is raging! Black clouds are driving across the
murky sky; peals of thunder rend the heavens; lightning
gleams at intervals, revealing more clearly the crested
billows that here roar over the sands, or there churn
and seethe among the rocks. The shrieking gale
sweeps clouds of spray high over our windward cliffs,
and carries flecks of foam far inland, to tell of
the dread warfare that is raging on the maddened sea.
Near the shore itself numerous black
specks are seen everywhere, like ink-spots on the
foam. These are wrecks, and the shrieks and the
despairing cries of the perishing rise above even the
roaring of the gale. Death is busy, gathering
a rich harvest, for this is a notable night in the
great war. The Storm-fiend is roused. The
enemy is abroad in force, and has made one of his
most violent assaults, so that from Shetland to Cornwall,
ships and boats are being battered to pieces on the
rocks and sands, and many lives are being swallowed
up or dashed out; while, if you turn your gaze further
out to sea, you will descry other ships and boats
and victims hurrying onward to their doom. Here,
a stately barque, with disordered topsails almost bursting
from the yards as she hurries her hapless crew all
ignorant, perchance, of its proximity towards
the dread lee-shore. Elsewhere, looming through
the murk, a ponderous merchantman, her mainmast and
mizzen gone, and just enough of the foremast left
to support the bellying foresail that bears her to
destruction.
Think you, reader, that this sketch
is exaggerated? If so, let us descend from our
lofty outlook, and take a nearer view of facts in
detail. I quote the substance of the following
from a newspaper article published some years ago.
The violence of the storm on Wednesday
and Thursday night was terrific. The damage to
shipping has been fearful. On sea the tremendous
gale proved disastrous beyond precedent. Falmouth
Harbour was the scene of several collisions, and one
barque and a tug steamer sank at their anchors.
A wreck is reported at Lelant, to which the Penzance
lifeboat with a stout-hearted crew had started, when
our despatch left, to rescue thirteen men who could
be descried hanging in the shrouds. A fine new
ship is on Hayle bar, and another vessel is believed
to be wrecked there also. Doubtless we have
not yet heard of all the wrecks on the Cornish coast;
but it is in the magnificent bay which includes Torquay,
Paignton, and Brixham that the most terrible havoc
has occurred. On Wednesday, about sixty sail
were anchored in Torbay. Eleven have gone ashore
at Broadsands, five of which are total wrecks.
The names of those we could ascertain were the Fortitude,
of Exeter; the Stately, of Newcastle; the Dorset,
of Falmouth, and a French brigantine. At five
o’clock on Thursday evening some of the crews
were being drawn ashore by lines and baskets.
At Churston Cove one schooner is ashore and a total
wreck; there is also another, the Blue Jacket, which
may yet be saved. At Brixham there are two fine
ships ashore inside the breakwater. At the back
of the pier ten vessels have been pounded to matchwood,
and all that remains are a shattered barque, her masts
still standing, two brigs, and a schooner, all inextricably
mingled together. Twelve trawlers have been
sunk and destroyed. Out of the sixty ships at
anchor on Wednesday night there were not more than
ten left on Thursday afternoon. Many of these
are disabled, some dismasted. A fishing-boat
belonging to Brixham was upset in the outer harbour
about eight o’clock, and two married fishermen
of the town and a boy were drowned. At Elbury
a new brig, the Zouave, of Plymouth, has gone to pieces,
and six out of her crew of ten are drowned.
Eleven other vessels are on shore at Elbury, many
of the men belonging to which cannot be accounted for.
One noble woman, named Wheaton, wife of a master
mariner, saved two lives by throwing a rope from the
window of her house, which is built on the rocks overhanging
the bay at Furzeham Hill. Scores of poor shipwrecked
men are wandering distractedly about Brixham and Churston,
the greater part of them having lost all they possessed.
The total loss of life arising from these disasters
is variously estimated at from seventy to a hundred.
Is not this a tremendous account of
the doings of one gale? And let it be observed
that we have lifted only one corner of the curtain
and revealed the battlefield of only one small portion
of our far-reaching coasts. What is to be said
of the other parts of our shores during that same
wild storm? It would take volumes instead of
chapters to give the thrilling incidents of disaster
and heroism in full detail. To convey the truth
in all its force is impossible, but a glimmering of
it may be obtained by a glance at the Wreck Chart
which is published by the Board of Trade every year.
Every black spot on that chart represents
a wreck more or less disastrous, which occurred in
the twelve months. It is an appalling fact that
about two thousand ships, upwards of seven hundred
lives, and nearly two millions sterling, are lost
every year on the shores of the United Kingdom.
Some years the loss is heavier, sometimes lighter,
but in round numbers this is our annual loss in the
great war. That it would be far greater if we
had no lifeboats and no life-saving rockets it will
be our duty by-and-by to show.
The black spots on the Wreck Chart
to which we have referred show at a single glance
that the distribution of wrecks is very unequal naturally
so. Near the great seaports we find them thickly
strewn; at other places, where vessels pass in great
numbers on their way to these ports, the spots are
also very numerous, while on unfrequented parts they
are found only here and there in little groups of
two, three, or four. Away on the nor’-west
shores of Scotland, for instance, where the seal and
the sea-mew have the ocean and rugged cliffs pretty
much to themselves, the plague-spots are few and far
between; but on the east coast we find a fair sprinkling
of them, especially in the mouths of the Forth and
Tay, whither a goodly portion of the world’s
shipping crowds, and to which the hardy Norseman now
sends many a load of timber both log and
batten instead of coming, as he did of old,
to batten on the land. It is much the same with
Ireland, its more important seaports being on the
east.
But there is a great and sudden increase
of the spots when we come to England. They commence
at the border, on the west, where vessels from and
to the busy Clyde enter or quit the Irish Sea.
Darkening the fringes of the land on both sides,
and clustering round the Isle of Man, they multiply
until the ports have no room to hold them, and, as
at Liverpool, they are crowded out into the sea.
From the deadly shores of Anglesea, where the Royal
Charter went down in the great and memorable storm
of November, 1859, the signs of wreck and disaster
thicken as we go south until we reach the Bristol
Channel, which appears to be choked with them, and
the dangerous cliffs of Cornwall, which receive the
ill-fated vessels of the fleets that are perpetually
leaving or entering the two great channels.
But it is on the east coast of England that the greatest
damage is done. From Berwick to the Thames the
black spots cluster like bees. On the coasts
of Norfolk and Suffolk, off Great Yarmouth, where
lie the dangerous Haisborough Sands, the spots are
no longer in scattered groups, but range themselves
in dense battalions; and further south, off the coast
of Kent, round which the world’s commerce flows
unceasingly into the giant metropolis, where the famous
Goodwin Sands play their deadly part in the great war,
the dismal spots are seen to cluster densely, like
gnats in a summer sky.
Now, just where the black spots are
thickest on this wreck chart, lifeboats and rocket
apparatus have been stationed in greatest numbers.
As in ordinary warfare, so in battles with the sea,
our “Storm Warriors” are
thrown forward in force where the enemy’s assaults
are most frequent and dangerous. Hence we find
the eastern shores of England crowded at every point
with life-saving apparatus, while most of the other
dangerous parts of the coast are pretty well guarded.
Where and how do our coast heroes
fight? I answer sometimes on the
cliffs, sometimes on the sands, sometimes on the sea,
and sometimes even on the pierheads. Their operations
are varied by circumstances. Let us draw nearer
and look at them while in action, and observe how the
enemy assails them. I shall confine myself at
present to a skirmish.
When the storm-fiend is abroad; when
dark clouds lower; when blinding rain or sleet drives
before the angry gale, and muttering thunder comes
rolling over the sea, men with hard hands and weather-beaten
faces, clad in oilskin coats and sou’-westers,
saunter down to our quays and headlands all round
the kingdom. These are the lifeboat crews and
rocket brigades. They are on the lookout.
The enemy is moving, and the sentinels are being
posted for the night or rather, they are
posting themselves, for nearly all the fighting men
in this war are volunteers!
They require no drilling to prepare
them for the field; no bugle or drum to sound the
charge. Their drum is the rattling thunder; their
trumpet the roaring storm. They began to train
for this warfare when they were not so tall as their
fathers’ boots, and there are no awkward squads
among them now. Their organisation is rough-and-ready,
like themselves, and simple too. The heavens
call them to action; the coxswain grasps the helm,
the oars are manned, the word is given, and the rest
is straightforward fighting over everything,
through everything, in the teeth of everything, until
the victory is gained, and rescued men, women, and
children are landed in safety on the shore.
Of course they do not always succeed,
but they seldom or never fail to do the very uttermost
that it is in the power of strong and daring men to
accomplish. Frequently they can tell of defeat
and victory on the same battlefield.
So it was on one fearful winter night
at the mouth of the Tyne in the year 1867. The
gale that night was furious. It suddenly chopped
round to the South South East, and, as if the change
had recruited its energies, it blew a perfect hurricane
between midnight and two in the morning, accompanied
by blinding showers of sleet and hail, which seemed
to cut like a knife. The sea was rising mountains
high.
About midnight, when the storm was
gathering force and the sentinels were scarcely able
to keep a lookout, a preventive officer saw a vessel
driving ashore to the south of the South Pier.
Instantly he burnt a blue light, at which signal
three guns were fired from the Spanish Battery to
call out the Life Brigade. The men were on the
alert. About twenty members of the brigade assembled
almost immediately on the pier, where they found that
the preventive officer and pier-policeman had already
got out the life-saving apparatus; but the gale was
so fierce that they had been forced to crawl on their
hands and knees to do so. A few minutes more
and the number of brigade men increased to between
fifty and sixty. Soon they saw, through the hurtling
storm, that several vessels were driving on shore.
Before long, four ships, with their sails blown to
ribbons, were grinding themselves to powder, and crashing
against each other and the pier-sides in a most fearful
manner. They were the Mary Mac, the Cora, and
the Maghee, belonging to Whitstable, and the Lucern
of Blyth.
Several lifeboats were stationed at
that point. They were all launched, manned,
and promptly pulled into the Narrows, but the force
of the hurricane and seas were such that they could
not make headway against them. The powers of
man are limited. When there is a will there is
not always a way! For two hours did these brave
men strain at the tough oars in vain; then they unwillingly
put about and returned, utterly exhausted, leaving
it to the men with the life-lines on shore to do the
fighting. Thus, frequently, when one arm of the
service is prevented from acting; the other arm comes
into play.
The work of the men engaged on the
pier was perilous and difficult, for the lines had
to be fired against a head wind. The piers were
covered with ice, and the gale was so strong that
the men could hardly stand, while the crews of the
wrecks were so benumbed that they could make little
effort to help themselves.
The men of the Mary Mac, however,
made a vigorous effort to get their longboat out.
A boy jumped in to steady it. Before the men
could follow, the boat was stove in, the rope that
held it broke, and it drove away with the poor lad
in it. He was quickly washed out, but held on
to the gunwale until it drifted into broken water,
when he was swallowed by the raging sea and the boat
was dashed to pieces.
Meanwhile the crew of the Cora managed
to swing themselves ashore, their vessel being close
to the pier. The crew of the Lucern, acting on
the advice of the brigade men, succeeded in scrambling
on board the Cora and were hauled ashore on the life-lines.
They had not been ten minutes out of their vessel
when she turned over with her decks towards the terrible
sea, which literally tore her asunder, and pitched
her up, stem on end, as if she had been a toy.
The crew of the Maghee were in like manner hauled
on to the pier, with the exception of one lad from
Canterbury. It was the poor boy’s first
voyage. Little did he think probably, while
dreaming of the adventures of a sailor’s career,
what a terrible fate awaited him. He was apparently
paralysed with fear, and could not spring after his
comrades to the pier, but took to the rigging.
He had scarcely done so when the vessel heeled over,
and he was swung two or three times backwards and
forwards with the motion of the masts.
It is impossible to imagine the feelings
of the brave men on the pier, who would so gladly
have risked their lives to save him he was
so near, and yet so hopelessly beyond the reach of
human aid!
In a very brief space of time the
waves did their work ship and boy were
swallowed up together.
While these events were enacting on
the pier the Mary Mac had drifted over the sand about
half a mile from where she had struck. One of
her crew threw a leadline towards a seaman on the
shore. The hero plunged into the surf and caught
it. The rest of the work was easy. By means
of the line the men of the Life Brigade sent off their
hawser, and breeches-buoy or cradle (which apparatus
I shall hereafter explain), and drew the crew in safety
to the land.
That same morning a Whitby brig struck
on the sands. The lifeboat Pomfret, belonging
to the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, put out
and rescued her crew. In the morning the shores
were strewn with wreckage, and amongst it was found
the body of the boy belonging to the Mary Mac.
All these disasters were caused by
the masters of the vessels mistaking the south for
the north pier, in consequence of having lost sight
of Tynemouth light in the blinding showers.
Of course many lifeboats were out
doing good service on the night to which I have referred,
but I pass all that by at present. The next
chapter will carry you, good reader, into the midst
of a pitched battle.