While
the oarsmen steadied the dingie, two young ensigns – one barely
fourteen - clambered over the gunwale and splashed into the knee
deep river. It was broad daylight, ten minutes after 1:00 pm on
Tuesday, 12 May, 1863.
With extra pistols and knives jammed into
their belts and boot tops, stripped of their jackets and hats,
carrying no symbols of rank, the would-be buccaneers rushed up the
muddy bank and struggled for a foothold in the cotton stockade wall, until the elder lad pulled the smaller onto the top of the barricade.
Turning, they discovered, laid out before them as if in a Brady
daguerreotype....
...the entire garrison of the cotton fortress of
Warrington, Mississippi. Three hundred drowsy men, playing cards,
cooking ersatz coffee, sewing worn garments, in the building heat of
the day, but every man within arm's reach of their weapons.
There
was a long moment of stunned surprise, while each side examined the
other, and processed their own shock. The only sound was the
panting of the two Yankees. The only movement were the wisps of wood
smoke rising from the occasional smoldering fire. Then, an instant
before rebel gunners managed to uproot their legs, the bareheaded
pirate ensigns shouted, pulled their revolvers and began blazing
away.
The
gunners dove for cover behind their massive cannon. And after a
frenzied moment of shouting and shooting, like schoolboys caught in a
prank, the Yankees disappeared, tumbled back down the bank, and into
the dingie, screaming for the oarsmen to PULL AWAY! Minnie balls cut
the muddy brown river surface. Chipped paint flew off the off the
dingie's stern, and even clanked off the iron slope of the black
behemoth lurking far too close in shore. And after a moment, a great
blast of white smoke erupted from the monster. The crew of the dingie
instinctively ducked while the shell tore the air inches over their
heads, and the ground rattled as a it slammed into the cotton facade
at point blank range.
It
was a grand and foolish adventure, inspired by 2 weeks of
unremitting boredom. Aboard the black ironclad - the very type of ship which had rendered pirates "romantic" - reveille sounded at
5:00 each morning, and the Jack's spent the next 3 ½ hours swabbing
decks and bringing the 13 cannon and 2 engines to a spit shine. At
8:00 came breakfast, and at 9:30, inspection. In the forenoon they
had to replace the 6,000 pounds of black dusty coal burned each day, just to keep up half
steam, It was the always burning engines which earned the ironclads the nickname, Federal Bake
Ovens. The lunch mess was at noon, and in the afternoon the crew ran
drills. The dinner mess was at 4:00, followed by the dog watches and
battle quarters again at 5:30. The 8:00 p.m. tattoo darkened and
silenced the ship, except for the constant rhythmic thump, thump,
thump of the sweating engines. Day after day . Four hours on and four hours off, until the crew were desperate for
anything to break the monotony.
This raid – if you could call it that - had been conceived by Mound
City's 25 year old Ohio born commanding officer, Lieutenant Byron
Wilson (above). Lurking below Vicksburg over the past two weeks, the
Lieutenant was intrigued when gunners in the newly built fortress of Warrenton, 3 miles south of the Vicksburg docks, had
ceased firing at his ship, The new fort was built of cotton bales covered with logs, And while clearly not finished, it was already extensive and maned. But the soldiers inside had even stopped showing their heads above the
parapets. It seemed unlikely they would evacuate such a recently invested
position, but when they remained hidden this morning, Tuesday, 12 May of 1863, Wilson decided
to give the “Johnny Rebs” a poke.
One
after the other, all 4 starboard guns of The Mound City (above) blasted the into the rebel
bales, splintering the logs and shaking the entire fortification. The ship's engine room went
to full speed, and the hidden stern paddle thrashed at the water,
trying desperately to push the 510 ton ironclad out of range. A brave
lad remained on the stern deck long enough to toss a line to the
dingie, and secure it to an iron toggle. And for a few minutes the
landlubbers and seamen aboard the dingie enjoyed a 9 knott taste of a
Nantucket sleigh ride, with the added thrill of 30 pound rebel cannon
shot skipping across the water, threatening to decapitate or
obliterate them at any moment.
Painful death was the ironclad crew's constant companion. The
year before, in June of 1862, under 52 year old Lieutenant Augustus
Henry Kilty, the Mound City had suffered what was generally agreed
was the “deadliest shot of the war” (above, center). Probably through a hatch
left open to lessen the suffocating heat inside her iron shell, a
rebel shot cleanly penetrated to the metal water jacket enclosing the
ship's engine. No other damaged was sustained. But in an instant the
entire vessel was filled with pressurized steam. Over a hundred men
were instantly scalded to death. Another 45 crewmen suffered 2nd
and 3rd degree burns. Many jumped overboard, only to be
shot by snipers along the Arkansas shore. Lieutenant Kilty's left
arm was so deeply charred, it had to be amputated. Towed
out of danger, the ship was quickly repaired, but the psychic wounds
were not fully mended until the Mound City escaped the rebel guns of
Warrington, without a scratch.
But
what capped the legend of the adventure of the two ensigns was what
happened next. One of Mound City's cannon shots - perhaps the first
- ignited a smoldering fire within the splintered wood and cotton bales which proved
impossible to extinguish. Within 15 minutes the work was ablaze, and
in less than an hour the entire fort was destroyed.
Rebel gunners
dragged off their ordinance, to strengthen defenses closer to the
city. And without losing a man the Yankee navy won yet another
victory over the Confederate engineers. Before the army had even laid Vicksburg under siege, the navy was tightening the walls around the defenders.
As
a reward for his initiative, Lieutenant Bryon Wilson would be
promoted a grade, to Lieutenant Commander. And within a year he would
be given a semi-independent command, of the captured southern sidewheel
steamboat renamed the USS Ouachita. With it came a share of the
prize money from the sale of any rebel ships and cargo which he
captured. After serving in the Asiatic Squadron post war, in 1893 Byron Wilson would retire as a full captain, and would die 3 years later. One of last swashbucklers in the United States Navy.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please share your reaction.