The Pirate Coast
Thomas Jefferson, the First Marines, and the Secret Mission of 1805
By Richard Zacks
HYPERION
Copyright © 2005
Richard Zacks
All right reserved.
ISBN: 1-4013-0003-0
Contents
Cast of Characters...............................................................IX
Prologue.........................................................................1
1. Tripoli.......................................................................11
2. Washington City...............................................................31
3. American Slaves in Tripoli City...............................................45
4. Home: New England Roots.......................................................59
5. Tripoli: Decatur's Raid.......................................................71
6. Alone At Sea..................................................................85
7. Yussef........................................................................103
8. The Mission: Eaton Unleashed..................................................113
9. Hunting Hamet in Egypt........................................................125
10. White Christmas in Tripoli...................................................145
11. Reeling in Hamet.............................................................151
12. Preparing for War: Fresh Enemies and Money, Money, Money.....................163
13. The Desert...................................................................175
14. Tobias Lear: Peace at Any Cost...............................................209
15. An American Flag on Foreign Soil.............................................223
16. Malta: Diseased Liver and Cold Feet..........................................243
17. Tripoli: Fear................................................................251
18. Tripoli Harbor: Lear to the Rescue..........................................253
19. Derne: Defiance..............................................................261
20. Tripoli: peace? Freedom? Honor?..............................................269
21. Derne: From a Kingdom to Beggary?............................................283
22. Tripoli: Lear Pays..........................................................299
23. Wounded and Restless.........................................................309
24. Homecoming...................................................................317
25. Jefferson vs. Eaton..........................................................331
26. Burr, Bottle, and Six Feet Under.............................................347
Epilogue.........................................................................37I
Acknowledgments..................................................................383
Notes............................................................................387
Bibliography.....................................................................417
Credits..........................................................................423
Index............................................................................425
Chapter One
Tripoli
Would to God that the officers and crew, of the Philadelphia
had
one and all determined to prefer death to slavery; it is possible such a
determination might save them from either.
-COMMODORE EDWARD PREBLE TO SECRETARY
OF THE NAVY ROBERT SMITH
THE CARPENTERS WHO BUILT the USS
Philadelphia, in addition
to their craft skills, demonstrated an extraordinary capacity, for
alcohol. The project overseer, a Thomas FitzSimons, noted in his
expense accounts that he had purchased 110 gallons of rum a month for
thirty carpenters. Sober math reveals that each man working six days a
week consumed about a pint of ruin a day.
The stout frigate showed no ungainly lines. The carpenters, sharpening
their adzes hourly, had hewed the live oak floated north from
Georgia into a 147-foot keel; they had pocked each side of the ship with
fourteen gunports and sheathed the bottom with copper to defeat sea
worms and barnacles. As befitting a ship built in the nation's capital,
famed sculptor William Rush had carved an enormous figurehead: a
Hercules. No ship of the United States would sport a Virgin Mary
(religion) or a King Louis (monarchy), but a muscular classical hero had
proven acceptable.
The
Philadelphia, launched in 1799, added key firepower to the U.S.
Navy, since the entire American fleet in 1803 consisted of six ships. By
contrast, England-then tending off Napoleon's attacks-floated close
to six hundred vessels in its Royal Navy. While Admiral Nelson stymied
the French with thunderous broadsides, the Americans with a bit of
pop-pop from their Lilliputian fleet hoped to overawe the least of the
Barbary powers, Tripoli.
Now, in October of 1803, the USS
Philadelphia, a 36-gun frigate,
was prowling the waters off the coast of Tripoli, trying all by itself to
enforce a blockade. Very few nations would have even bothered with something
as forlorn as a one-ship blockade, but the United States-only a
couple of decades old-wasn't exactly brimming with military options.
In 1801, just after the inauguration of Thomas Jefferson, Tripoli
(modern-day Libya) had become the first country ever to declare war on
the United States. The ruler, Yussef Karamanli, had ordered his
Janissaries to chop down the flagpole at the U.S. consulate to signal his grave
displeasure with the slow trickle of gifts from America. Jefferson, when
he learned the news, had responded by sending a small fleet to confront
Tripoli and try to overawe it into a peace treaty.
For more than two centuries, the Barbary countries of Morocco,
Tunis, Algiers, and Tripoli had been harassing Christian ships, seizing cargo
and capturing citizens. Algiers once boasted more than 30,000 Christian
slaves, including one Miguel Cervantes,
before he wrote
Don Quixote.
European powers in the 1500s and 1600s fought ferocious battles against
Moslem pirates like Barbarosa. However, over time, a cynical system of
appeasement had developed. The nations of Europe paid tribute-in
money, jewels, and naval supplies-to remain at peace. England and
France-in endless wars-found it cheaper to bribe the Barbary pirates
than to devote a squadron to perpetually trawling the sea off Africa. At
its core, expediency outweighed national honor.
When the thirteen American colonies split off from mother
England, they lost British protection. The United States found itself lumped
in the pile of potential Barbary victims, alongside the likes of Sardinia
and Sicily. (From 1785 to 1815, more than six hundred American citizens
would be captured and enslaved. This nuisance would prove to be no
mere foreign trade issue but rather a near-constant hostage crisis.)
Jefferson wanted to send a message that the United States, with its
fresh ideas, refused to pay tribute, but the war with Tripoli was dragging
on. Jefferson's first two U.S. fleets had failed to inflict more than scratches
on the enemy, and the president expected results from this latest armed
squadron.
The USS
Philadelphia cruised off the coast of North Africa on the
lookout for enemy vessels. The youngest captain in the U.S. Navy,
William Bainbridge, had drawn the plum assignment. While the U.S.
Navy was still evolving its style of command, twenty-nine-year-old
Bainbridge, from a wealthy New Jersey family, clearly valued discipline.
"I believe there never was so depraved a set of mortals as Sailors," he
once wrote. "Under discipline, they are peaceable and serviceable-divest
them of that and they constitute a perfect rabble." During one nine-month
stretch on an earlier voyage, he had placed 50 men of a 100-man
crew in irons and flogged 40 of them at the gangway. Charming to fellow
officers, he didn't allow common seamen ever to address him, no
matter how politely. One sailor, back home later, standing on what he described
as the "maindeck of America," said he expected he would have an
easier time speaking to President Jefferson than Captain Bainbridge.
This same disgruntled tar said that the captain often addressed crewmen
as "You damn'd rascal" and that Bainbridge also cheered on the boatswain's
mates, administering cat-o'-nine-tails to a sailor's back, with words
such as "Give it to him! Clear that cat! Damn your eves or I'll give it
to him."
In spring of 1803 when the
Philadelphia had needed a crew, most
potential recruits knew nothing about Bainbridge's reputation as a rough
commander. They also didn't know Bainbridge's service record included
two of the blackest incidents in the history of the young navy.
William Ray, native of Salisbury, Connecticut, certainly didn't. It's
unusual in this era for an articulate "grunt," a private, to record his
impressions in a memoir, but Ray did just that. (His
Horrors of Slavery, an
extremely rare book, provides a counterpoint to the usual self-aggrandizing
officers' letters and memoirs.)
William Ray, 5'4 1/2", thirty-four years old, had failed at many professions.
His general store ... long shuttered; his schoolroom ... now vacant,
and in the latest mishap, he had fallen sick en route from New
England and had lost a newspaper editing job in Philadelphia. So Ray,
penniless, exasperated, discouraged, and inebriated, headed down to the
Delaware River to call it a day and a life and to drown himself.
There, through the haze, he saw flying from a ship in the river the
massive flag of the United States, fifteen stars and fifteen stripes. A
drummer was beating the skin trying to encourage enlistment. Ray
weighed his options: death or the marines. He weighed them again. At
the birth of the Republic, the marines ranked as the lowliest military
service, paying $6 a month, one-third of the wages of an experienced sailor.
The entire marine corps totaled fewer than 500 men, and though it's true
marines wore fancy uniforms and carried arms, they basically came on-board
ship to police the sailors and prevent mutiny or desertion. The major
glory the U.S. Marines could then claim was its Washington City
marching band, which the local citizens of that swampy outpost loved
and President Thomas Jefferson despised.
Ray enlisted. Rarely was a man less suited for the marines than
diminutive William Ray. As a former colonist who had lived through the
War of Independence, he detested Tranny, whether it be that of King
George III or his new captain, William Bainbridge. Onshore he saw "liberty,
equality, peace and plenty" and on board ship, he said he found "oppression,
arrogance, clamour and indigence."
Ray, still smarting that he couldn't find a job onshore in "prosperous"
America, was appalled to discover his new maritime career required addressing
thirteen-year-olds as "Sir" and treating them like "gentlemen."
The
Philadelphia's officer list included eleven midshipmen, all in their
teens. "How preposterous does it appear, to have brats of boys, twelve or
fifteen years old, who six months before, had not even seen salt water,
strutting in livery, about a ship's decks, damning and flashing old
experienced sailors," complained one veteran sailor, who called the job of mid-shipmen
a "happy asylum" for the offspring of the wealthy too vicious,
lazy, or ignorant to support themselves.
Ray once saw a midshipman toss a bucket of water on a sleeping
sailor who, as he woke, spluttered some curses. When the sailor recognized
it was a midshipman, he tried to apologize, saying he didn't expect
"one of the gentlemen" to be tossing water. Captain Bainbridge had the
sailor thrown in irons and flogged. "You tell an officer he is no gentleman?"
shouted Bainbridge at the man's punishment. "I'll cut you in ounce
pieces, you scoundrel."
In that era of sail, navy ships were so crowded that sailors slept in
shifts: Half the crew rocked in the foul-smelling dark while the other
half performed the watch. Some captains allowed the men six consecutive
hours of sleep; Bainbridge allowed four.
A marine comrade of Ray's, David Burling, fell asleep on watch ...
twice. The second time, he was chained in the coal hold until three
captains could be gathered for a court-martial. "It will give me infinite
pleasure to see him hanging at the yardarm," Bainbridge was overheard
saying.
Despite Ray's shock at seaboard life under Bainbridge, the
Philadelphia
for its few months at sea had performed well enough. Then Commodore
Edward Preble in mid-September had sent the vessel, along with
the schooner
Vixen, on the important mission to blockade Tripoli. Preble
represented the third commodore (i.e., ranking squadron captain) in
three years to command the small U.S. fleet in the region; the last two
men-Commodore Richard Dale and Commodore Richard Morris-were
both accused of spending more time showing their epaulets at
dances and bails at various European ports than in the choppy waters off
Tripoli. Preble, a no-nonsense New Englander, was eager to blockade
and to capture hostile ships even in the stormy fall weather. He hoped to
choke the enemy's economy.
Now, on October 31, 1803, in the half light of dawn around 6 A.M.,
the lookout on the
Philadelphia, hovering high above the deck, spotted a
sail far off on the port bow. Standing orders required alerting the captain.
A distant ship, a mere swatch of white at first, usually remains a
complete unknown for quite a while. Thanks to elaborate rules of warfare
in the early nineteenth century, deception was viewed as an acceptable
strategy in the early stages of encountering another ship. (For
instance, the
Philadelphia carried half a dozen foreign flags, including the
Union Jack, a Portuguese pennant, a Danish ensign; Bainbridge a month
earlier had used the British colors to trick a Moroccan ship into furling
canvas and laying by.)
Though a captain might trick another vessel to sidle close, the etiquette
of battle demanded that he fly his true colors before opening fire.
The USS
Philadelphia, at that moment about thirty miles east of
Tripoli, was already flying the American flag to announce the blockade.
As Captain Bainbridge peered through the spyglass, he watched the
other ship suddenly raise the yellow-and-red-striped flag of Tripoli. This
amounted to a dare, a taunt. Any other colors, especially British or French,
would have made the U.S. ship less eager to pursue.
Bainbridge ordered all possible sail to speed the chase of this 12-gun
enemy corsair. Pigtailed men scurried to set the sails. A strong breeze
coming from the east and southeast allowed both ships to ignore the
danger of drifting too close to the shore to the south. The Tripoli vessel
sprinted due west while the
Philadelphia, farther off the coast, had to
zigzag landward to try to catch up.
Officers barked, and the men smartly obeyed. Beyond patriotic zeal,
another incentive spurred the crew: prize money. In the early navy officers
and men received shares of legally captured vessels. The roping of a
gold-laden ship could change an officer's life and dole out more than rum
money to a common sailor.
The chase was on. The men eagerly scampered up the ratlines to unfurl
yet more sail, the topgallants. Standing 190 feet above the deck on a
rope strung along a topgallant yardarm, as the frigate rolled in the waves,
the men were tilted over the sea from starboard, then over the sea to port,
over and over again.
The
Philadelphia proved slightly faster than its quarry, and within
three hours of traveling at about eight knots (nine-plus miles per hour),
it reached within cannon shot for its bow chasers. The Tripoli ship, much
smaller, smartly hugged the shore to tempt the
Philadelphia to follow
landward and accidentally beach itself. Bainbridge kept the
Philadelphia
at least one mile offshore. The port of Tripoli began to loom in the
distance ... at first a minaret then a castle.
"Every sail was set, and every exertion made to overhaul the ship and
cut her off from the town," Ray wrote. "The wind was not very favourable
to our purpose, and we had frequently to wear ship. A constant fire was
kept up from our ship, but to no effect. We were now within about three
miles of the town, and Captain Bainbridge not being acquainted with
the harbour, having no pilot nor any correct chart, trusted implicitly to
the directions of Lieutenant Porter, who had been here several times and
who professed himself well acquainted with the situation of the harbour.
We however went so close in that the captain began to be fearful of venturing
any farther, and was heard by a number of our men, to express to
Lt. Porter the danger he apprehended in pursuing any farther in that direction
and advising him to put about ship."
David Porter, then a twenty-three-year-old lieutenant, and a six-foot
bull of a man, would go on to achieve a remarkable and controversial career.
He would almost singlehandedly wipe out the British whaling fleet
in the Pacific during the War of 1812. He would help root out the pirate
Jean Lafitte from New Orleans, but his reluctance to follow orders would
ultimately lead to court-martial. He was, indeed, a bit of a wild man.
A year earlier, he had killed a fellow in a Baltimore saloon during a
brawl while trying to land new recruits. Six months after that, his
aggressiveness had surfaced again, this time against the enemy. The U.S.
squadron-under Commodore Morris-had trapped in a cove eleven
small Tripoli merchant ships carrying wheat; Porter took four men in an
open boat at night to sneak in and scout the enemy ships. He discovered
that the Moslem merchants had tucked all the vessels by the shore, unloaded
their bales of wheat into breastworks, and were now backed on
land by a thousand militiamen. Porter begged permission, and received
it, for the foolhardy mission to attack in open boats to try to set fire to
the wheat. Within a stone's throw of the shore, he was shot through his
left thigh, and another ball grazed his right thigh. His men managed to
set fire to the wheat, but the Moslems eventually succeeded in extinguishing
the blaze. Porter-though bleeding profusely-begged permission
to attack again, but Morris refused.
Now as the
Philadelphia skirted the shore, Porter encouraged Bainbridge
to go deeper into the harbor; he also gave orders that three leadlines
be cast and recast to look for any perilous change in the depth of
the water. Two lieutenants and one midshipman oversaw sailors who
slung forward a lead weight, itself weighing as much as twenty-eight
pounds. If the toss was timed right, the lead weight would strike bottom
as the ship passed, giving a true vertical depth by a reading of colored
markings tied to the rope. The men sang out lead-line readings of at least
eight fathoms (or forty-eight feet of water), plenty for a ship that needed
a little over twenty feet in depth.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from The Pirate Coast
by Richard Zacks
Copyright © 2005 by Richard Zacks.
Excerpted by permission.
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