Battles of the Nineteenth Century, Page 145.
Hobson and the Merrimac
The first impulse of sailors placed in the position of Sampson
and Schley must have been to use the enormous force now concentrated
before Santiago in order to force the entrance and destroy the enemy’s
fleet inside the harbour. But
this apparently obvious course presented very serious difficulties.
If there had been a broad deep channel such as that through which
Dewey steered his fleet past Corredidor to Manila and victory, doubtless
Sampson would not have hesitated a moment about following his splendid
example. But here the path
lay through a narrow rift in the rocks, where the leading ship,
whichever she might be, would have to face, alone and unsupported, the
plunging fire of high batteries on the cliffs, the horizontal converging
fire of the Spanish cruisers moored just inside the dangerous pass, the
attacks of the destroyers lurking under the rocks, and the explosion of
the submarine mines which Cervera had fixed in the passage.
He might face all this if there was a fair chance that the
destruction of the leading battleship would clear the way for her
consorts, but the difficulty of the problem was that not only would the
first ship be very likely to be sunk, but if she sunk or got around she
would hopelessly block the way for all that followed. Cervera’s fleet would be bottled up by such a result,
though not destroyed, and a young officer in the fleet, Lieutenant
Hobson, a skilled naval constructor, suggested to the Admiral that it
would be better to attempt the bottling up process at a cheaper cost by
sending in and sinking a large unarmed steamer in the entrance.
He suggested a detailed plan of operations, and volunteered to
carry plan of operations, and volunteered to carry it through himself,
with the help of a few brave men.
His plan was accepted, and on this very first of June he began
his preparations. But
before telling the story of his gallant exploit it will be well to say
something of the personal career and character of the man.
Richmond Pearson Hobson came from Alabama, and was a son of one
of the old planter families of the South.
Born in 1870, he had graduated at the Southern University at the
age of seventeen, and then passed into the United States Naval Academy
at Annapolis. As a boy, he
had been remarkable for quiet, reversed and studious ways; but he was
good at all games in which he took part, though he always seemed to care
for books more than games. Making
ship models and sailing them was chief recreation as a boy, and local
tradition in his home at Greenboro tells of one of his few juvenile
battles, when “Master Rich” fairly thrashed a bigger boy who had
interfered with and badly damaged one of his little fleet.
This was Hobson’s first naval engagement.
With such antecedents no wonder as a student at Annapolis, he
showed a marked predilection for the subject of naval architecture, in
which he later on became a specialist.
His time at Annapolis was, in some respects, unhappy.
He had a strong, almost a stern sense of duty, and when he was
appointed monitor, at the beginning of his second year, he paid no
attention to a kind of unwritten traditional law among the young men
that various breaches of discipline were not to be mentioned in the
monitor’s report. Hobson
sent in a complete record, and was promptly boycotted by his aggrieved
comrades. But he managed to
pass his lonely hours of recreation comfortably enough with his books
favourite problems in ship construction, and at the end of the course
passed out first of his year. He
was sent to France to make a special study of naval architecture, and
returned to be a popular professor at Annapolis.
The directors of Cramps Shipbuilding Company, who are among the
chief builders of warships in America, offered him a post on their
staff, with a salary of 10,000 dollars (£2,000) to start with; but he
determined to stick to his naval career, and on the declaration of war
he was posted to Sampson’s fleet, where it was expected that his
special professional skill would enable him to do good service in
dealing with the accidents and injuries to the ships that could be
repaired on the spot, without sending them back to the navy yards. Brave without ostentation, determined self-possessed, he was
certain to do some splendid work if the chance offered.
The spirit in which he embarked for the war is reflected in the
words he wrote to his old home; “For my near and distant future, I
leave myself, without anxiety, in the hands off Almighty God.”
Such was
the man who now offered to venture himself upon an enterprise that meant
all but certain dash to those engaged in it.
His plan was to take the Merrimac into the harbour entrance, lay
her across its narrowest part, and sink her there so as to close the
pass with an iron gate. To use his own more familiar phrase, the harbour of Santiago
was bottle shaped, and he meant to put a cork in the neck of the bottle.
To do this he had to face the fire of the enemy’s fleet and
batteries, and run the risk of the exploding mines, and he and his
comrades had to chance being shot, blown up, or drowned during and after
their exploit, for to get away would be no easy matter.
He arranged that, in order to minimise the risks, very few men
should go with him: that they should all be lightly dressed, ready for a
swim; that s small boat should be towed behind the Merrimac, on which
they might take refuge and that a torpedo boat ot steam launch should
try to run in and bring them out.
He fitted a row of ten small torpedoes, each charged with 82
pounds of gunpowder, along the port side of the steamer.
These were wired and connected electrically with a battery on the
deck. He was to have six
assistants, four on deck and two below.
He had chosen a point just beyond the Estrella battery as the
place where the ship was to be sunk.
The rest of the plan may best be told as Hobson explained before
he started from the flagship.
“I shall go right into the harbour until about four hundred
yards past the Estrella battery which is behind Morro Castle.
I do not think they can sink me before I reach somewhere near
that point. The Merrimac
has seven thousand tons buoyancy, and I shall keep her full speed ahead. She can make about ten knots.
When the narrowest part of the channel is reached I shall put her
helm hard a port, stop the engines drop the anchors, open the sea
connections, touch off the torpedoes, and leave the Merrimac a wreck
lying athwart the channel, which is not as broad as the Merrimac is
long. On deck there will be
four men and myself. In the engine room there will be two other men.
This is the total crew, and all of us will be in our
underclothing, with revolvers and ammunition in the watertight packing
strapped around our waists. Forward
there will be a man on deck and around his waist will be a line, the
other end of the line being made fast to the bridge where I will stand.
“By that man’s side will be an axe.
When I stop the engines I shall jerk this cord, and he will thus
get the signal to cut the lashing, which will behold the forward anchor.
He will then jump overboard and swim to the four oared dingy
which we shall tow astern. The
dingy is full of life buoys and is unsinkable.
In it is rifles. It
is to be held by two ropes, one made fast at her bow and one at her
stern. The first man to
reach her will haul in the towline and pull the dingy out to starboard.
The next to leave the ship are the rest of the crew.
The quartermaster at the wheel will not leave until after having
put it hard a port and lashed it so; he will then jump overboard.
Down below, the man at the reversing gear will stop the engines,
scramble on deck, and get over the side as quickly as possible.
The man in the engine room will break open the sea connections
with a sledgehammer and will follow his leader into the water.
The last step insures the sinking of the Merrimac whether the
torpedoes work or not. By
this time I calculate the six men will be in the dingy and the Merrimac
will have swung athwart the channel to the full length of her three
hundred yards of cable, which will have been paid out before the anchors
were cut loose. Then all
that is left for me is to touch the button-I shall stand on the
starboard side of the bridge. The
explosion will throw the Merrimac on her starboard side.
Nothing on this side of New York City will be able to raise her
after that.”
Such was the daring programme.
When volunteers were called for the execute it they presented
themselves in hundreds. Hobson
shoes the six, but there was a seventh.
Almost at the last5 moment one of the men of the New York, seamen
H. Clausen, though rejected in the first choice of volunteers, was taken
on as an additional hand.
It is only right to put on record the names of the entire little
band. The list is
interesting in many ways. For
one thing it brings out very forcibly the international character of the
personnel of the United States Navy.
We are somewhat too apt to think of its successes as victories of
the Anglo-Saxon. Irish,
French, and German names figure on the brief glorious roll call of the
Merrimac. Thus runs the
list: -
Lieutenant Richmond P. Hobson (in command), George Charette, John
Kelly, H. Clausen, Daniel Montague, Oscar Deignan, J. E. Murphy, John P.
Phillips.
Cadet J. W. Powell of the New York and four men manned the steam
aunch that was to follow them in. they
carried with them bandages, splints and restoratives for giving first
aid to wounded or exhausted men.
All through Wednesday, June 1st, Hobson had been hard
at work getting the Merrimac ready.
She lay near the flagship, and towards evening he paid a visit to
the Admiral to discuss final details.
Just before sunset he went on board the steamer with his little
crew. The men of the other
ships in the neighbourhood crowded decks and rigging, and cheered their
devoted comrades frantically again and again.
There was still a lot to be done on board, and for this purpose
some of the artificers of the fleet remained on the steamer till the
middle of the night. They
left with stokers and the surplus engine room hands as the Merrimac got
under weigh and headed for Morro.
But there had been a miscalculation as to the time.
The dawn was coming quicker than had been anticipated, and the
steamer had not gone far when the Admiral hastily ordered the torpedo
boat Porter to head off and bring her back.
In the growing light the attempt would have been desperate. The Porter overtook the slow tramp steamer, and Hobson
stopped his engines, but he sent back word that if the Admiral would
give him permission he though he could even yet do all he wanted.
The reply was a peremptory order to return and put off the
venture till the next night. So
Hobson steamed back to the fleet, and he and his comrades had to endure
the strain of twenty-four hours of the idle waiting for the desperate
venture.
A second start was made at three o’clock on the Friday morning.
This, it was calculated would give Hobson a full hour of darkness
for the accomplishment of his task.
The sky was cloudy and the moonlight uncertain-everything was
favourable for the enterprise. Followed
by the steam launch, the Merrimac slipped in below Morro Castle, with
all her lights screened a great black mass gliding silently though the
water. But the Spaniards
were on the alert. The
Pluton, one of the destroyers, was patrolling the upper part of the
channel, and several picket boats were growing about.
The look out at Morro was the first to see the American ship, and
took her for one of the fleet trying to force the entrance.
The guns of the battery below the Castle opened fire.
The battery of quick firers below the point near Socapa promptly
came into action. The Reina
Mercedes then brought her battery to bear, and fired two torpedoes; two
more were discharged by the Pluton, which also opened with her light
quick firers. Some of the
submarine mines were exploded. The Merrimac had thus to move in through a wild storm of
fire. The steam launch fell
astern, unable to follow her, and took shelter under the steep shore on
the Morro side.
Hit repeatedly, but still afloat, the Merrimac reached the
appointed spot, and Hobson put the helm hard a port; but, to his dismay,
the ship did not answer it. The
quick firer shells of the Pluton had destroyed her rudder.
There was nothing for it but to sink her as she lay, and trust to
luck. So he gave the signal
and exploded the torpedoes. But
several of them failed to act. A
strong tide was running, and anchors would not hold, and after taking
ground near Estrella Point, the Merrimac, slowly sinking, drifted into
the deep water near Smith Cay. Here
she was struck by one of the Whitehead torpedoes discharged from the
Reina Mercedes, and went down rapidly by the head, her little crew being
swept overboard in the rush of water.
As she sank, the Spaniards on the forts and ships cheered
enthusiastically. They
thought they had sent one of Sampson’s fighting ships to the bottom.
The Spaniards had shattered the boat towed astern, but there was
a raft, or float secured by a long line to the deck, which remained on
the surface of the water. It
was by means of this raft that Hobson and his companions made their
marvellous escape from death. How
they did it had best be related in the lieutenant’s own words, as he
told the story after his release from a Spanish prison: -
“I swam away from the ship as soon as I struck the water, but I
could feel the eddies drawing me back in spite of all I could do.
That did not last very long, however, and as soon as I felt the
tugging cease I turned and struck out for the float, which I could see
dimly bobbing up and down over the sunken hull.
The Merrimac’s masts were plainly visible, and I could see the
heads of my seven men as they followed my example and made for the float
also. We had expected, of
course, that the Spaniards would investigate the wreck, but we had no
idea that they would be at it as quickly as they were before we could
get to the float several row boats and launches came around the bluff
from inside the harbour. They
had officers on board, and armed marines as well, and they searched that
passage, rowing backwards and forwards, until next morning.
It was only by good luck that we got to the float at all, for
they were upon us so quickly that we had barely concealed ourselves when
a boat, with quite a large party on board, was right beside us.
“Unfortunately as we thought then-but it turned out afterwards
that nothing more fortunate could have happened to us-the rope with
which we had secured the float to the ship was too short to allow it to
swing free, and when we reached it we found that one of the pontoons was
entirely out of water and the other one was submerged.
Had the raft laid flat on the water we could not have got under
it, and would have had to climb upon it, to be an excellent target for
the first party of marines that arrived.
As it was, we could get under the raft, and by putting our hands
through the crevices between the slats, which formed its deck we could
hold our heads out of water and still be unseen. That is what we did,
and all night long we stayed there with our noses and mouths barely out
of the water.” So runs
the narrative; but it must be noted that, long as the time must have
seemed to the eight men, there was at most an hour of the night left
when the Merrimac went down.
“None of us,” he continues, “expected to get out of the
affair alive, but luckily the Spaniards did not think of the apparently
damaged, half sunken raft floating about beside the wreck.
They came to within a cable’s length of us at intervals of only
a few minutes all night. We
could hear their words distinctly, and even in the darkness could
distinguish an occasional glint on the rifle barrels of the marines and
on the lace of the officer’s uniforms.
We were afraid to speak above a whisper, and for a good while, in
fact, whenever they were near us, we breathe as easily as we could.
I ordered my men not to speak unless to address me, and with one
exception they obeyed. After
we had been there an hour or two the water, which we found rather warm
at first, began to get cold, and my fingers ached where the wood was
pressing into them. The
clouds, which were running before a pretty brisk breeze when we went in,
blew over, and then by the starlight we could see the boats when they
came out of the shadows of the cliffs on either side, and even when we
could not see them we knew that they were still near, because we could
hear very plainly the splash of the oars and the grinding of the
oarlocks.
“We all knew we would be shot if discovered by an ordinary
seaman or marine, and I ordered my men not to sir, as the boats having
officers on board kept well in the distance.
One of my men disobeyed orders and started to swim ashore, and I
had to call him back. He
obeyed at once, but my voice seemed to create some commotion among the
boats, and several of them appeared close beside us before the
disturbance in the water made by the man swimming had disappeared.
We thought it was all up with us then, but the boats went away
into the shadows again.
“When daylight came a steam launch full of officers and marines
came out from behind the cliff that hid the fleet an harbour and
advanced towards us. All
the men on board were looking curiously in our direction.
They did not see us. Knowing
that someone of rank must be on board, I waited until the launch was
quite close and hailed her. My
voice produced the utmost consternation on board.
Everyone sprang up. The
marines crowded to the bow, and the launches engines were reversed.
She not only stopped, but she backed off until nearly a quarter
of a mile away, where she stayed. The
marines stood ready to fire at the word of command, when we clambered
out from under the float. There
were ten of the marines, and they would have fired in a minute if they
had not been restrained. I
swam towards the launch, and then she started towards me.
I called out in Spanish, ‘Is there an officer on board?’
An officer answered in the affirmative, and then I shouted in
Spanish again, I have seven men to surrender.
I continued swimming, and was seized and pulled out of the water.
“As I
looked up when they were dragging me into the launch I saw that it was
Admiral Cervera himself who had hold of me. He looked at me rather
dubiously at first, because I had been down in the engine room of the
Merrimac, where I got covered in oil, and that with the soot and coal
dust made my appearance most disreputable.
I had put on my officer’s belt before sinking the Merrimac, as
a means of identification, no matter what happened to me, and when I
pointed to it in the launch the admiral understood and seemed satisfied.
The first words he said to me when he learned who I was were
‘Bienvenido sea usted,’ which means, ‘You are welcome.’”
Hobson and his en were taken on board of the Reina Mercedes, and
the Spaniards in their chivalrous admiration for their bravery treated
them more like comrades than prisoners.
Consul Ramsden noted in his diary for the day: “The prisoners
are treated well, and I know hat the officer was bathing himself and
getting into clothes of the first lieutenant of the Mercedes when a
friend of mine went on board. The sailors of the Mercedes were feasting the other men with
coffee and biscuits, while they got into cloths of the former on the
deck of the Mercedes. In
fact, although they had been doing their best to kill them before, they
did not know how to do enough for them.”
On board the American fleet nothing was known for some hours as
to the fate of Hobson and his crew.
Young Powell kept his steam launch under the Morro shore till
after daylight. All he
could make out was that the Merrimac had sunk.
He could see, as the dawn came here masts sticking out of the
water, and Spanish boats near them.
As there was no hope of picking up any of the wrecked ship’s
crew he ran back to the flagship soon after five o’clock the Morro
sending some shots after the launch, but failing to stop her.
In the afternoon a tug was steaming out of the harbour with a
white flag of truce flying from her mast.
She stopped near the New York and sent on board the flagship
Captain Oviedo, Cervera’s chief of the staff.
He bought a courteous message from the admiral, saying that
Lieutenant Hobson and his seven companions were prisoners in Morro
Castle, and what they were all well, though two of the men he admired
their courageous deed so much that he was anxious that their friends
should know that they were well, and that they should have the best of
treatment.
Admiral Sampson sent his thanks to his chivalrous opponent,
giving Captain Oviedo some money for the prisoners, and expressing a
hope that an early exchange would be arranged so as to set them at
liberty. Everyone in the
fleet was charmed with Cervera’s courteous act, and delighted at the
news that Hobson and his comrades were safe.
The only unsatisfactory point in the situation was that the news
had been brought by a fairly large steamer it was there fore clear that
the Merrimac had not completely blocked the channel where she sank.
Still it was showed that even though there was room for a
tugboat, thee was not enough for a cruiser to get past the wreck, and
the newspapers confidently announced that the Spanish fleet was
successfully bottled up. As
a pain matter of fact, the enterprise had failed.
From Ramsden’s diary we get a precise description of the
position of the wreck. Under
date of Sunday June 12th, he writes: -
“I have now ascertained that the Merrimac is sunk twelve
fathoms, halfway between Smith Cay and Soldados Point, which latter is
the one just opposite to Churruca Point, just across the entrance of
Nipero Bay. Between the
ship and the shoal on the Smith Cay side there are 45 metres of channel,
and 35 between her and the shoal on the other side; therefore there is
plenty of room for a vessel to pass on either side of her.
Again, there are six fathoms of water over her bridge and round
house or chart room roof, and therefore blowing away her chimney and
masts the channel will be right over her.”
Comparing this statement with our plan of the harbour it will be
seen that the Merrimac went down far beyond the spot that Hobson had
chosen. Even if she had
been actually sunk in the narrows it is very likely that the Spaniards
would have been able to clear the obstruction away with dynamite.
But though Hobson’s plan thus failed, his splendid daring in
its execution made the sinking of the Merrimac one of the most notable
incidents of the whole war. Even
the fame of Admiral Dewey was eclipsed by that of young Lieutenant
Hobson in the popular mind throughout the United States.