We now come to the glorious part of
the career of Paul Jones upon the ocean. Heretofore
he has been chiefly occupied in the capture of defenceless
merchantmen. His work has been that of the privateer,
even if not of the pirate that the British have always
claimed he was. But the time came when Jones
proved that he was ready to fight an adversary of
his mettle; was willing to take heavy blows, and deal
stunning ones in return. His daring was not confined
to dashing expeditions in which the danger was chiefly
overcome by spirit and rapid movements. While
this class of operations was ever a favorite with
the doughty seaman, he was not at all averse to the
deadly naval duel.
We shall for a time abandon our account
of the general naval incidents of the Revolution,
to follow the career of Paul Jones to the end of the
war. His career is not only the most interesting,
but the most important, feature of the naval operations
of that war. He stands out alone, a grand figure
in naval history, as does Decatur in the wars with
the Barbary pirates, or Farragut in the war for the
Union. The war of 1812 affords no such example
of single greatness in the navy. There we find
Perry, McDonough, and Porter, all equally great.
But in ’76 there was no one to stand beside
Paul Jones.
When the “Ranger” left
the harbor of Whitehaven, her captain was heavy hearted.
He felt that he had had the opportunity to strike a
heavy blow at the British shipping, but had nevertheless
inflicted only a trifling hurt. Angry with himself
for not having better planned the adventure, and discontented
with his lieutenant for not having by presence of
mind prevented the fiasco, he felt that peace of mind
could only be obtained by some deed of successful daring.
He was cruising in seas familiar to
him as a sailor. Along the Scottish shores his
boyhood hours had been spent. This knowledge he
sought to turn to account. From the deck of his
ship, he could see the wooded shores of St. Mary’s
Island, on which were the landed estates of Lord Selkirk,
a British noble, of ancient lineage and political
prominence. On the estate of this nobleman Paul
Jones was born, and there he passed the few years
of his life that elapsed before he forsook the land
for his favorite element.
Leaning against the rail on the quarter-deck
of the “Ranger,” Jones could see through
his spy-glass the turrets and spires of Lord Selkirk’s
castle. As he gazed, there occurred to him the
idea, that if he could send a landing party ashore,
seize the castle, capture the peer, and bear him off
into captivity, he would not only strike terror into
the hearts of the British, but would give the Americans
a prisoner who would serve as a hostage to secure
good treatment for the hapless Americans who had fallen
into the hands of the enemy.
With Jones, the conception of a plan
was followed by its swift execution. Disdaining
to wait for nightfall, he chose two boats’ crews
of tried and trusty men, and landed. The party
started up the broad and open highway leading to the
castle. They had gone but a few rods, however,
when they encountered two countrymen, who stared a
moment at the force of armed men, and then turned
in fear to escape.
“Halt!” rang out the clear
voice of the leader of the blue-jackets; and the peasants
fell upon their faces in abject terror. Jones
directed that they be brought to him; and he questioned
them kindly, setting their minds at rest, and learning
from them much of the castle and its inmates.
Lord Selkirk was away from home. This to Jones
was bitter news. It seemed as though some evil
genius was dogging his footsteps, bringing failure
upon his most carefully planned enterprises.
But he was not a man to repine over the inevitable,
and he promptly ordered his men to the right about,
and made for the landing-place again.
But the sailors were not so unselfish
in their motives as their captain. They had come
ashore expecting to plunder the castle of the earl,
and they now murmured loudly over the abandonment of
the adventure. They saw the way clear before
them. No guards protected the house. The
massive ancestral plate, with which all English landed
families are well provided, was unprotected by bolts
or bars. They felt that, in retreating, they
were throwing away a chance to despoil their enemy,
and enrich themselves.
Jones felt the justice of the complaint
of the sailors; but only after a fierce struggle with
his personal scruples could he yield the point.
The grounds of the Earl of Selkirk had been his early
playground. A lodge on the vast estate had been
his childhood’s home. Lady Selkirk had
shown his family many kindnesses. To now come
to her house as a robber and pillager, seemed the
blackest ingratitude; but, on the other hand, he had
no right to permit his personal feelings to interfere
with his duty to the crew. The sailors had followed
him into danger many a time, and this was their first
opportunity for financial reward. And, even if
it was fair to deny them this chance to make a little
prize-money, it would hardly be safe to sow the seeds
of discontent among the crew while on a cruise in
waters infested with the enemy’s ships.
With a sigh Jones abandoned his intention of protecting
the property of Lady Selkirk, and ordered his lieutenant
to proceed to the castle, and capture the family plate.
Jones himself returned to the ship, resolved to purchase
the spoils at open sale, and return them to their
former owner.
The blue-jackets continued their way
up the highway, and, turning aside where a heavy gate
opened into a stately grove, demanded of an old man
who came, wondering, out of the lodge, that he give
them instant admittance. Then, swinging into
a trot, they ran along the winding carriage-drive
until they came out on the broad lawn that extended
in front of the castle. Here for the first time
they were seen by the inmates of the castle; and faint
screams of fear, and shouts of astonishment, came
from the open windows of the stately pile. The
men-servants came rushing out to discover who the lawless
crowd that so violated the sanctity of an English earl’s
private park could be; but their curiosity soon abated
when a few stout blue-jackets, cutlass and pistol
in hand, surrounded them, and bade them keep quiet.
The lieutenant, with two stout seamen at his back,
then entered the castle, and sought out the mistress,
who received him with calm courtesy, with a trace
of scorn, but with no sign of fear.
Briefly the lieutenant told his errand.
The countess gave an order to a butler, and soon a
line of stout footmen entered, bearing the plate.
Heavy salvers engraved with the family arms of Lord
Selkirk, quaint drinking-cups and flagons curiously
carved, ewers, goblets, platters, covers, dishes,
teapots, and all kinds of table utensils were there,
all of exquisitely artistic workmanship, and bearing
the stamp of antiquity. When all was ready, the
lieutenant called in two of the sailors from the lawn;
and soon the whole party, bearing the captured treasure,
disappeared in the curves of the road.
This incident, simple enough in reality,
the novelist Fenimore Cooper has made the germ of
one of his exquisite sea-tales, “The Pilot.”
British historians have made of it an example by which
to prove the lawlessness and base ingratitude of Paul
Jones. As may readily be imagined, it stirred
up at the time the most intense excitement in England.
Jones became the bugbear of timid people. His
name was used to frighten little children. He
was called pirate, traitor, free-booter, plunderer.
It was indeed a most audacious act that he had committed.
Never before or since had the soil of England been
trodden by a hostile foot. Never had a British
peer been forced to feel that his own castle was not
safe from the invader. Jones, with his handful
of American tars, had accomplished a feat which had
never before been accomplished, and which no later
foeman of England has dared to repeat. It is
little wonder that the British papers described him
as a bloodthirsty desperado.
A few weeks later, the captured plate was put up for sale by the prize
agents. Capt. Jones, though not a rich man, bought it, and returned
it to the countess. Lord Selkirk, in acknowledging its receipt, wrote,
“And on all occasions, both
now and formerly, I have done you the justice to tell
that you made an offer of returning the plate very
soon after your return to Brest; and although you yourself
were not at my house, but remained at the shore with
your boat, that you had your officers and men in such
extraordinary good discipline, that your having given
them the strictest orders to behave well, to
do no injury of any kind, to make no search, but only
to bring off what plate was given them, that
in reality they did exactly as was ordered; and that
not one man offered to stir from his post on the outside
of the house, nor entered the doors, nor said an uncivil
word; that the two officers stayed not one-quarter
of an hour in the parlor and in the butler’s
pantry while the butler got the plate together, behaved
politely, and asked for nothing but the plate, and
instantly marched their men off in regular order;
and that both officers and men behaved in all respects
so well, that it would have done credit to the best-disciplined
troops whatever.”
But the British took little notice
of the generous reparation made by Capt. Jones,
and continued to hurl abuse and hard names at him.
Jones was vastly disappointed at his
failure to capture the person of Lord Selkirk.
The story of the sufferings of his countrymen in British
prisons worked upon his heart, and he longed to take
captive a personage whom he could hold as hostage.
But, soon after leaving St. Mary’s Isle, he
fell in again with the British man-of-war “Drake;”
and as a result of this encounter he had prisoners
enough to exchange for many hapless Americans languishing
in hulks and prisons.
After the wind and tide had defeated
the midnight attempt made by Jones to capture the
“Drake,” that craft had remained quietly
at her anchorage, little suspecting that the bay of
Carrickfergus had held so dangerous a neighbor.
But soon reports of the “Ranger’s”
depredations began to reach the ears of the British
captain. The news of the desperate raid upon
Whitehaven became known to him. He therefore
determined to leave his snug anchorage, and go in search
of the audacious Yankee. Just as the captain
of the “Drake” had reached this determination,
and while he was making sail, the “Ranger”
appeared off the mouth of the harbor.
The “Drake” promptly sent
out a boat to examine the strange craft, and report
upon her character. Jones saw her coming, and
resolved to throw her off the scent. Accordingly,
by skilful seamanship, he kept the stern of the “Ranger”
continually presented to the prying eyes in the British
boat. Turn which way they might, be as swift in
their manoeuvres as they might, the British scouts
could see nothing of the “Ranger” but
her stern, pierced with two cabin windows, as might
be the stern of any merchantman. Her sides, dotted
with frowning ports, were kept securely hidden from
their eyes.
Though provided with spy-glasses,
the people in the boat were totally deceived.
Unsuspectingly they came up under the stern of the
“Ranger,” and demanded to come on board.
As the officer in command clambered up a rope, and
vaulted the taffrail to the quarter-deck, he saw Paul
Jones and his lieutenants, in full uniform, standing
before him.
“Why, why, what ship’s
this?” stammered the astonished officer.
“This is the American Continental
ship ‘Ranger,’ and you are my prisoner,”
responded Jones; and at the words a few sailors, with
cutlasses and pistols, called to the men in the boat
alongside, to come aboard and give themselves up.
From his captives Jones learned that
the news of the Whitehaven raid had reached the “Drake”
only the night before; and that she had been re-enforcing
her crew with volunteers, preparatory to going out
in search of the “Ranger.” As he
stood talking to the captured British naval officer,
Jones noticed slender columns of smoke rising from
the woods on neighboring highlands, where he knew
there were no houses.
“What does that mean?” he asked.
“Alarm fires, sir,” answered
the captive; “the news of your descent upon
Whitehaven is terrifying the whole country.”
Soon, however, the attention of the
Americans was diverted from the signal-fires to the
“Drake.” An appearance of life and
bustle was observable about the boat. The shrill
notes of the boatswain’s whistle, and the tramp
of men about the capstan, came faintly over the waters.
The rigging was full of sailors, and the sails were
being quickly spread to catch the fresh breeze.
Soon the ship began to move slowly from her anchorage;
she heeled a little to one side, and, responsive to
her helm, turned down the bay. She was coming
out to look after her lost boat.
Jones determined to hold his ground,
and give battle to the Englishman. He at once
began to prepare for battle in every way possible
without alarming the enemy. The great guns were
loaded and primed. Cutlasses and pistols were
brought up from the armorer’s room, and placed
in convenient locations on the main deck, so that the
boarders might find them when needed. The powder-monkeys,
stripped for action, and the handlers and cartridge-makers
entered the powder-magazine, and prepared to hand
out the deadly explosive. The cook and his assistant
strewed sawdust and ashes about the decks, to catch
the blood, and keep the men from slipping. Every
one was busy, from the captain down to the galley-boy.
There was plenty of time to prepare;
for the tide was out, and the “Drake,”
beating down a narrow channel, made but slow headway.
The delay was a severe strain upon the nerves of the
men, who stood silent and grim at their quarters on
the American ship, waiting for the fight to begin.
At such a moment, even the most courageous must lose
heart, as he thinks upon the terrible ordeal through
which he must pass. Visions of home and loved
ones flit before his misty eyes; and Jack chokes down
a sob as he hides his emotion in nervously fingering
the lock of his gun, or taking a squint through the
port-holes at the approaching enemy.
At length the Drake emerged from the narrow channel of the harbor, and
coming within hailing distance of the Ranger, ran up the flag of England, and
hailed,
“What ship is that?”
Paul Jones, himself standing on the taffrail, made answer,
“This is the American Continental
ship ‘Ranger.’ We are waiting for
you. The sun is but little more than an hour from
setting. It is therefore time to begin.”
The “Drake” lay with her
bow towards the “Ranger,” and a little
astern. As Jones finished speaking, he turned
to the man at the wheel, and said, “Put your
helm up. Up, I say!”
Quickly responsive to her helm, the
vessel swung round; and, as her broadside came to
bear, she let fly a full broadside of solid shot into
the crowded decks and hull of the “Drake.”
Through timbers and planks, flesh and bone, the iron
hail rushed, leaving death, wounds, and destruction
in its path. The volunteers that the “Drake”
had added to her crew so crowded the decks, that the
execution was fearful. It seemed as though every
shot found a human mark.
But the British were not slow to return
the fire, and the roar of their broadside was heard
before the thunder of the American fire had ceased
to reverberate among the hills along the shore.
Then followed a desperate naval duel.
The tide of victory flowed now this way, and now that.
Jones kept his ship at close quarters with the enemy,
and stood on the quarter-deck urging on his gunners,
now pointing out some vulnerable spot, now applauding
a good shot, at one time cheering, and at another
swearing, watching every movement of his foe, and
giving quick but wise orders to his helmsman, his whole
mind concentrated upon the course of battle, and with
never a thought for his own safety.
For more than an hour the battle raged,
but the superior gunnery of the Americans soon began
to tell. The “Drake” fought under
no colors, her ensign having been shot away early
in the action. But the spirited manner in which
her guns were worked gave assurance that she had not
struck. The American fire had wrought great execution
on the deck of the Englishman. Her captain was
desperately wounded early in the fight; and the first
lieutenant, who took his place, was struck down by
a musket-ball from the “Ranger’s”
tops. The cock-pit of the “Drake”
was like a butcher’s shambles, so bespattered
was it with blood. But on the “Ranger”
there was little execution. The brave Wallingford,
Jones’s first lieutenant and right-hand man,
was killed early in the action, and one poor fellow
accompanied him to his long account; but beyond this
there were no deaths. Six men only were wounded.
The sun was just dipping the lower
edge of its great red circle beneath the watery horizon,
when the “Drake” began to show signs of
failing. First her fire slackened. A few
guns would go off at a time, followed by a long silence.
That portion of her masts which was visible above
the clouds of gunpowder-smoke showed plainly the results
of American gunnery. The sails were shot to ribbons.
The cordage cut by the flying shot hung loosely down,
or was blown out by the breeze. The spars were
shattered, and hung out of place. The main-mast
canted to leeward, and was in imminent danger of falling.
The jib had been shot away entirely, and was trailing
in the water alongside the ship.
Gradually the fire of the “Drake”
slackened, until at last it had ceased altogether.
Noticing this, Capt. Jones gave orders to cease
firing; and soon silence reigned over the bay that
had for an hour resounded with the thunder of cannon.
As the smoke that enveloped the two ships cleared
away, the people on the “Ranger” could
see an officer standing on the rail of the “Drake”
waving a white flag. At the sight a mighty huzza
went up from the gallant lads on the Yankee ship,
which was, however, quickly checked by Jones.
“Have you struck your flag?”
he shouted through a speaking-trumpet.
“We have, sir,” was the response.
“Then lay by until I send a
boat aboard,” directed Capt. Jones; and
soon after a cutter put off from the side of the “Ranger,”
and made for the captured ship.
The boarding-officer clambered over
the bulwarks of the “Drake,” and, veteran
naval officer as he was, started in amazement at the
scene of bloodshed before him. He had left a
ship on which were two dead and six wounded men.
He had come to a ship on which were forty men either
dead or seriously wounded. Two dismounted cannon
lay across the deck, one resting on the shattered
and bleeding fragments of a man, torn to pieces by
a heavy shot. The deck was slippery with blood.
The cock-pit was not large enough to hold all the
wounded; and many sufferers lay on the deck crying
piteously for aid, and surrounded by the mangled bodies
of their dead comrades. The body of the captain,
who had died of his wound, lay on the deserted quarter-deck.
Hastily the American officer noted
the condition of the prize, and returned to his own
ship for aid. All the boats of the “Ranger”
were then lowered, and in the growing darkness the
work of taking possession of the prize began.
Most of the prisoners were transferred to the “Ranger.”
The dead were thrown overboard without burial service
or ceremony of any kind, such is the grim earnestness
of war. Such of the wounded as could not be taken
care of in the sick-bay of the “Drake”
were transferred to the “Ranger.”
The decks were scrubbed, holystoned, and sprinkled
with hot vinegar to take away the smell of the blood-soaked
planks. Cordage was spliced, sails mended, shot-holes
plugged up; and, by the time morning came, the two
ships were sufficiently repaired to be ready to leave
the bay.
But, before leaving, Capt. Jones
set at liberty two fishermen, whom he had captured
several days before, and held prisoners lest they should
spread the news of his presence in those parts.
While the fishermen had been taken on board the “Ranger,”
and treated with the utmost kindness, their boat had
been made fast alongside. Unluckily, however,
the stormy weather had torn the boat from its fastenings;
and it foundered before the eyes of its luckless owners,
who bitterly bewailed their hard fate as they saw
their craft disappear. But, when they came to
leave the “Ranger,” their sorrow was turned
to joy; for Jones gave them money enough to buy for
them a new boat and outfit, a bit of liberality
very characteristic of the man.
When the “Drake” was in
condition to sail, Jones put her in command of Lieut.
Simpson, and the two vessels left the bay. This
choice of commander proved to be an unfortunate one.
Simpson was in many ways a most eccentric officer.
He was a violent advocate of equal rights of all men,
and even went so far as to disbelieve in the discipline
without which no efficiency can be obtained on ship-board.
He was an eighteenth-century Sir Joseph Porter.
He believed that all questions of importance on ship-board
should be settled by a vote of the crew; that the
captain was, in a certain sense, only perpetual chairman
of a meeting, and should only execute the will of
the sailors. Naturally, this view of an officer’s
authority was little relished by Lieut. Simpson’s
brother officers, and he had for some time been greatly
dissatisfied with his position.
When it came about, therefore, that
the “Ranger,” seeing a strange sail in
the offing, left the “Drake” to go in pursuit
of the stranger, Lieut. Simpson saw his chance
to make off with the “Drake,” and thus
rid himself of the disagreeable necessity of submitting
to the orders of a superior officer. This course
he determined to adopt; and when Jones, having overtaken
the stranger and found her a neutral, turned to rejoin
his prize, he was vastly astounded at the evolutions
of the “Drake.” The vessel which
he had left in charge of one of his trusted officers
seemed to be trying to elude him. She was already
hull down on the horizon, and was carrying every stitch
of sail. The “Ranger” signalled to
her colleague to return, but in vain. Several
large ships were in sight; but Jones, perplexed by
the strange antics of his consort, abandoned all thoughts
of making captures, and made after the rapidly vanishing
“Drake.”
As the “Ranger” cut through
the ugly cross seas of the channel, Jones revolved
in his mind the causes which might lead to the inexplicable
flight of his consort. His chief fear was that
the prisoners on the “Drake” might have
risen, overpowered their captors, and were then endeavoring
to take the ship into a British port. Convinced
that this was the true explanation of the matter,
Jones made tremendous efforts to overhaul the prize
before the night should give her an opportunity to
elude pursuit. Every thing from jib-boom to main-truck,
that would draw, was set on the “Ranger;”
and the gallant little vessel ploughed along at a
rate that almost belied her reputation as a slow craft.
After an hour’s run, it became evident that the
“Ranger” was gaining ground. Nevertheless,
darkness settled over the waters, and the “Drake”
was still far in the lead. It was not until the
next day that the runaway was overhauled. Upon
boarding the “Drake,” Jones found, to
his intense indignation, that not to the revolt of
the captives, but to the wilful and silly insubordination
of Lieut. Simpson, the flight of the captured
vessel was due. This officer, feeling himself
aggrieved by something Jones had said or done, had
determined to seize upon the “Drake,”
repair her in some French port, and thenceforward to
cruise as a privateer. This plan was nipped in
the bud by Jones, who put the disobedient officer
in irons, and carried the “Drake” into
Brest as a prize.
All Europe now rang with the praises
of Paul Jones. Looked at in the calm light of
history, his achievements do not appear so very remarkable.
But it is none the less true that they have never been
paralleled. Before the day of Paul Jones, no hostile
vessel had ever swept the English Channel and Irish
Sea clear of British merchantmen. And since the
day of Paul Jones the exploit has never been repeated,
save by the little American brig “Argus”
in the War of 1812. But neither before nor since
the day of Paul Jones has the spectacle of a British
ship in an English port, blazing with fire applied
by the torches of an enemy, been seen. And no
other man than Paul Jones has, for several centuries,
led an invading force down the level highways, and
across the green fields, of England.