Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2000 21:57:28 EST
From: SWarri1349@aol.com
Subject: NO GREATER LOVE Chapter 9 part 9 Gay/historical
No Greater Love
**Chapter 9**
** And the River Ran Red with Blood **
"Edward, more steam, damn it! We got to outrun that fucking Ironclad!!"
the captain of the WABASH shouted down the speaking tube to the engine room
on the boiler deck.
"Aye, Aye, Capt'n Smith. The boilers are at red line now, one more inch
of steam and the safety valves will open!"
"Tie the son of a bitch closed, damn it." A shell whistled by and
splashed into the brown water of the Red. "God Damn, that was close. Pilot,
hard to port, steer closer to the bank, get out of the current! One hit on
our paddle boxes or our stern and we are dead! You understand ME!" Capt'n
Smith was shouting as the the two pilots handled the big 10 foot diameter
wheel in the pilot house.
The bow of the little steamer cut into the muddy water, splashing it up
on deck while the deck hands kept a close lookout for snags and other
underwater hazards as the two big paddle wheels bit into the water,
churning it into muddy foam.
"Capt'n, Johnston Bar is two miles upstream, if we can cross it we
might have a chance to warn Belle Bend and the MISS LOU."
"Very well, Pilot Clark, MAKE IT HAPPEN!"
"Yes sir, Captain, if we don't kill ourselves trying."
"More wood, you black bastards, move your asses, bring that pork fat
over here!"
"It's cargo, Edward!" the mud clerk shouted.
A shell whistled past and landed near the side of the steamer. The mud
clerk froze for a moment, then he lifted the big barrel on his shoulder and
carried it to Williams.
"Where's a damned axe, Edward? Let's crack this bitch open before one
of those shells cracks us open!"
"About time you show some balls. Here", Edward threw Lacy the single
bit axe. Lacy caught the ax and lifted it in the air and swung down the
sharp blade, biting into the wood and splitting open the top of the
barrel. One of the black firemen raced over and grabbed the barrel and they
started throwing the greasy fat meat into the raging fires under the
boilers which were begining to turn red from the heat. The fireboxes glowed
as more fuel was added to the raging fires and the boilers whined and
hummed as water was sucked from the river and almost instantly turned to
steam.
Edward raced over to the brass speaking tube and shouted into it, "150
pounds, Capt'n, we're on the 2nd red line now and I am not going over
it. If we do, her boilers will blow and we won't do anyone any damned
good. We'll be fish bait!"
"Pilots, we got 150 pounds of steam, get us to Belle Bend," then he
leaned over the speaking tube, "Thank you, Edward, keep up the pressure and
keep your eyes open."
"Aye, Aye, Sir."
BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! The cannons thundered behind them as the little
steamer, running full speed up the river, churned the waters. The
passengers crowded the decks, looking at the iron monster following them;
it was nothing like anything they had seen before. Shells splashed the
water, spraying the people on the second deck but they would not move. They
knew the risk, the boilers red hot, the fireboxes even hotter, and one weak
bolt, one weak seam, one little flaw would send the boat up in flames and
it was better to be thrown off the boat by the explosion rather than to be
trapped below decks or inside where the huge funnels and steam pipes could
crash down and smash you or, even worse, the hot steam scalding your body
but not killing you.
-*-*-*-*-
The USS BENTON was the biggest and meanest Ironclad afloat in the
Western waters. The Benton, commissioned on January 15th, 1862, was 190
feet long, 51 feet in breadth, and had a 6 foot full keel draft and had a
max speed of 6 knots. She carried 13 heavy guns. The BENTON and her six
sisters were equal on fire power but not in speed. Captain Thompson was
pissed in several ways. The BENTON, when turned over to him, was supposed
to have been fully ready to set sail down the Mississippi to meet up with
the rest of Porter's Fleet just north of Memphis in January 1862. But there
was one small problem, two Rebel forts blocking the way, Forts Henry and
Donaldson, located on the twisting, winding Tennessee River. "No problem,"
said Porter, when he called his captains together before they left Cairo
that cold January morning. The CAIRO, commissioned on January 16th, 1862,
was to lead the attack. "THE CAIRO!" stormed Thompson. "YES, the CAIRO,"
replied Porter, "she has more speed, 7 Knots," that was a 1 knot advantage
over the Benton, plus Thomas O. Selfridge was a little higher in rank by 3
days over Thompson. So, with the CAIRO in the lead, they attacked Forts
Donaldson and Henry in Febuary 1862. With the capture of Henry and
Donaldson, it opened the western half of Tennessee to the invasion of
General Grant's army of the Tennessee and Buell's Army of the Ohio, which
led to the battle of Shiloh April 6th and 7th and the defeat of the Army of
the Mississippi under Albert S. Johnston, who lost his life there.
The War on the River was a different story after the capture of Forts
Henry and Donaldson. The fleet steamed south and was met at Memphis by a
makeshift Confederate Navy. Once it was destroyed and with only one small
steamer, the CSS General Van Dorn, escaping south to Vicksburg, the
Ironclads and Elliot Rams then steamed south toward Vicksburg, Mississippi.
"Captain Thompson!" Thompson was brought out of his daydream of the
battle of Memphis, when the BENTON led the attack.
"What is it, Sailor?" the captain barked.
"Sir, we're losing speed!"
"Why, God damn it?"
"The gun recoil, sir, every time we fire and they recoil, it takes
steam to turn the capstan to pull them back into battery, sir!"
"More boiler pressure, Sailor, more damned boiler pressure!"
The Sailor saluted and raced back toward the engine room ladder and
climbed into hell. The wooden rungs of the ladder were wet and slick and
the young sailor took the first step down and his right foot slipped.
"F'Christ's sake, watch your step, Bowen."
The engineer reached up and grabbed the seat of the young sailor's
trousers and helped him down the ladder. "Thank you, Engineer Burr."
"Now, what did the capt'n want?" The twenty-eight year old engineer
looked the young sailor up and down in the dark engine room, the lamps
casting a feeble glow into the darkness of the bowels of the Ironclad.
Counsellor Bowen, all of 14 years old, looked back at the engineer, his
sailor's cap perched on his brown hair, his hazel eyes sparkling, sweat
running down his young face, washing trails of soot down his pale
skin. "Sir, he wants more steam and boiler pressure. I tried to explain to
him why we are losing speed and the usage of the capstan to pull the big
guns into battery, but all he did was shout for more steam, Sir. Sir, if I
may add, I don't think he is a sailor."
George C. Burr smiled and looked at his young assistant. "Very well,
Bowen, give the capt'n more steam." They walked over to where 16 year old
Erik Kroner sat, watching the large glass-enclosed steam gauges, the
needles resting on 125 pounds of pressure per inch in the five long slender
boilers. The firemen shoveled coal by the ton into the massive fireboxes
which glowed a bright red. They worked almost naked in the 100 plus degree
heat, their bodies slick with sweat running down their faces and backs,
stomachs, and legs. Most were no older than 18 to 20 at the most, while the
older men and other boys commanded the guns up on the gun deck or served as
powder monkeys, toting powder and ball to the cannon.
"Erik, increase pressure in the boilers. The Capt'n wants more steam!"
"Aye, Sir, more pressure," Erik replied to the Engineer as he reached
up and turned the brass wheels, letting more water and air into the
boilers.
"Open the dampers on the fireboxes, boys, his Highness wants more steam
and speed!" Erik shouted over the roar of the fires and the clanking of the
machinery.
The firemen opened the doors on the fireboxes located in the front of
the long boilers. The boiler deck was noisy and cramped; engines and
boilers took up a lot of the space, then you had the coal bunkers located
on both sides of the ship, plus the fresh water stores, the ammunition
stores for the powder and shot. In the rear you had officers' quarters and
the surgeon's operating room, all surrounding the large iron paddle wheel.
The heavy iron firebox doors were swung wide as the coal heavers on
both sides shoveled the coal from the bunkers to the fireboxes where the
firemen fed the roaring flames. The needles on the steam gauges began to
rise past 130, then 135, then red line 140, as the minutes passed and the
thunder of the 3 forward guns continued to roar.
"Kroner, what's the pressure?" shouted the voice from the gun deck.
"140, Mid-shipman Phillips, we're at red line now!" Erik shouted back.
"Thank you, Erik. Keep up the good work, laddie!"
"Aye, Davie, and you put that steamer to the bottom!"
Davie walked over to where the Captain was standing, his arms behind
his back. "140 pounds of pressure, Sir. They are at red line now!"
"Thank you, Davie, return to the forward upper casemate and keep an eye
out on how our gunners are doing, they are blinded by their own smoke."
"Yes, Captain." Davie saluted and headed down the gun deck to the
ladder that led to the roof of the gun deck and the upper casemate on top
of the ironclad.
The warm wind hit Davie in the face and he let out a sigh of
relief. The outside temperature hovered in the high 80's but to Davie it
was a welcome relief. The thick iron plating, combined with the heat of the
boilers and the thundering of the guns made inside the Ironclad hell. The
gun deck was over 100 degrees and the boiler deck below even hotter. Davie
could not understand how Erik could do it, staying the heat hour after
hour, watching the gauges and shouting orders. He still could not believe
that after only 4 months, Erik was now assistant engineer along with
another lad from Illinois, Counsellor Bowen, but hell, himself was
mid-shipman and still had no idea what cannon was what. They all looked the
same to him. 'Boy, this was one hell of a way to run a navy.' He put the
field glasses to his eyes and scanned the river in front of him, the WABASH
clipped ahead of the heavy Ironclad, black smoke pouring from her tall
funnels as the shells splashed around her. So far not one had hit the
speedy little steamboat.
John walked up beside him. "How we doing, Davie?"
"Not worth a damn, my boy, we're hitting all around the bitch but can't
seem to land one shell on her decks."
"Shit, you mean we going to let a rebel steamboat beat us to Belle Bend
and warn them?"
"Looks like it, my boy, it sure as hell looks like it. Where's Ernest
at?"
"He's tot'n' shells for the gunners."
"And you?"
"Capt'n wants me to be messenger between you and him. So what should I
report to him about the shots fired?"
"You tell the Capt'n they are falling short."
"OK, Davie." John raced back to the ladder and he vanished into the
dark Ironclad, his blue hat sinking as he went down. The upper deck that,
during peace, was the favorite place of off duty sailors, now was empty
except for Davie, and since he knew the other Steamer had no guns he felt
safe up here as he watched the racing steamer up front. The WABASH began to
swing back out into the main channel of the Red and he noticed something
strange. He strained his eyes through the field glasses, then snatched them
from his eyes and looked again. "GOD DAMN IT!!" He raced for the ladder
leading to the gun deck and ran to the pilothouse. "FULL REVERSE NOW!! he
shouted to the pilots, "SANDBAR, Port BOW!"
"FULL REVERSE ON THE ENGINES, SANDBAR OFF THE PORT BOW! Carr, Erik, and
Counsellor all jumped at the shout of the orders and sprang into
action. Erik turned the brass wheels as fast as he could while Carr shouted
to the firemen to close the doors and dampers to the fireboxes. Counsellor
raced across the cramped space to the large lever located on the port side
engine, waiting for the word. The steam pressure began to drop as the fires
cooled and the big paddle wheel slowed enough to reverse the engines. Erik
stood on the starboard side, his hand on the lever of the starboard engine,
the pressure continued down as the sailors up above shouted orders to each
other and, above all the rest, Captain Thompson shouting curses.
"Reverse, God damn it, reverse, shat the hell Erik and Carr waiting
on?" The ironclad continued to plow through the water, the bow kicking up
little whitecaps in front of her. Davie once again stood on the forward
casemate in front of the armored pilothouse
"NOW, ENGAGE NOW!" shouted Carr. Erik and Counsellor grabbed the levers
and pushed them forward with all their might; their muscles strained under
their skin as the sweat dripped from their bodies. The reversing levers did
not want to budge, too much pressure still in the engine pistons.
"They are stuck, SIR!" shouted Erik, still pushing forward on the
starboard lever, his hard rubber shoes trying to slip on the wood planking
below them.
"GOD FUCKING DAMN IT!" All that extra pressure Thompson wanted was now
haunting them, now the extra pressure was working against the boys on the
reversing levers. "You give them boys a hand unless you want to go a for a
fucking swim!" Two of the firemen raced over and grabbed the reversing
levers and grunted as the lever began to slide to full reverse. The huge
paddle wheel ground to a stop, then slowly began to turn in reverse. Erik
and Consellor did their best to stay on their feet as the levers slid
forward into the notch in the bar closest to the big paddlewheel, while the
two older firemen leaned their hot bodies against the younger boys.
"AHHHHH, OH MY GOD, HELP ME!" a shout sounded as one of the firemen
near the boilers fell against the outer one as the big gunboat began to
shudder as the 26 foot paddle wheel began to reverse, jerking everyone on
every deck around as she did. The young fireman's arm now was begining to
blister as the skin began to peel off the muscle below.
"SOMEONE GET THE SURGEON NOW!" Carr shouted over the noise of the
grinding paddle wheel.
Davie felt the jerk as he was thrown back against the hot metal of the
armored pilothouse. He quickly regained his balance and placed the glasses
back to his eyes. The bar was looming closer. He turned toward the
pilothouse and spoke through one of the eye slits. "Sandbar 100 yards and
still closing fast."
"God Damn it!" Thompson paced the gun deck, his face covered in
sweat. The gunners had chocked the wheels to their big guns to keep them
from rolling back in case the boat hit the sandbar. Officers stood ready at
their posts, not speaking, as the Ironclad continued to move forward
despite the paddle wheel being thrown in reverse moments before.
"Open the dampers on the fireboxes!" shouted Erik as he turned the
wheels to let more steam back into the engines. The firemen pulled the
dampers open and swung the firebox doors wide as they shoveled coal into
the fires to build up pressure again.
"50 yards!" came the shout from above. As the big wooden paddles beat
the water to foam, trying to make purchase but the dead weight of over 122
tons of iron and the momentum of the boat moving forward did not help the
giant wheel as it pounded the muddy water, boilers whined as they strained
to crowd on more pressure still. While Erik and Counsellor doused the
moving piston rods with tallow to ease the friction and Carr helped the
surgeon move the wounded fireman to the stern quarters where the surgeon
did his work. The safety valves began to blow. The shrill whistle of the
escaping steam made everyone jump. Erik dropped his tallow pot and raced to
his position by the starboard engine. "Shit, 150 pounds and it blew. They
were set to pop at 155. Damn it, what now?" thought Erik out loud as he
tried to turn the safety valve off. The boiler pressure was dropping fast
and the big wheel began to slow.
"20 YARDS!"
"HARD TO STARBOARD, HARD TO STARBOARD!" shouted Thompson.
"THE HELM IS HARD TO! CAP'T, WE CAN'T TURN FAST ENOUGH!" shouted the
pilot.
"15 YARDS," shouted Davie.
"BRACE YOURSELVES, MEN, FOR IMPACT!" Thompson ordered.
"10 YARDS."
The gun crews braced themselves against the big guns. The officers
grabbed beams and other supports, the other men grabbed what they could
find to hold on to. Two of the big men grabbed John and Ernest and pulled
them close and held them. One sailor bowed his head in prayer.
"5 YARDS." Davie braced himself against the pilothouse, leaning his
back against the hot metal and bracing his feet on the oak decking.
There was a low groan of creaking wood timbers as the bow timbers hit
the mud and sand, the BENTON's bow and forward keel becoming stuck on the
sandbar. Men tumbled and fell to the decks, pots in the galley crashed to
the floor. The surgeon held onto the wounded fireman as the gunboat
collided, the boy screamed like a woman when his scalded arm made contact
with the table. The gun crews groaned as they made contact with the cannon
barrels and the wooden carriages. The pilots stumbled as they held the
wheel. Ropes, chains, and davits swayed and fell, glassware shattered as it
hit the decks.
"OH MY GOD!" shouted Davie as he was propelled forward toward the bow
of the boat and the slanting casemate armor leading to the exposed
bow. There was nothing to grab, his hands slid when they tried to grab the
slick iron plate and his shoes slid. "AHHHHHHHHHH!" he shouted as he
tumbled from the upper casemate and rolled down and he hit one of the
raised gun ports and was thrown into the air, arms flailing as he sailed
through the air, then a SPLASH as he hit the muddy water of the river.
Erik hit the deck of the boiler deck floor as one of the firemen landed
on top of him; he grunted and groaned as the air in his lungs was knocked
out of him. There was not a man standing in the engine room.
There was a scream as Counsellor Bowen was thrown against the port
engine. Then a another moan as he collapsed to the floor, his stomach
bleeding from where the lever had jammed into it, ripping it open. One of
the firemen raced to him as the boy fainted, then his own crimson blood on
his hands where he grabbed the wound to cover the hole.
The safety valve screamed as the red hot fires burned brightly, the
paddle wheel, still thumping and churning the water. "Close the damned
doors, will ya, move your asses, boys. Erik, Counsellor, ALL STOP ON THE
ENGINES!"
The fireman who fell on him helped the boy to his feet. Erik looked
toward the port side but did not see Counsellor. "COUNSELLOR, PULL THE
LEVER!"
The other fireman shouted back. "HE CAN'T! HE'S BLEEDING TO DEATH! BUT
I'LL PULL YOUR DAMNED LEVER!" The fireman yanked it back as Erik yanked the
starboard one back in place, the huge paddle wheel slowed and stopped, the
water dripping off the wooden paddles.
"I want a damage report now!" ordered Thompson as he looked around the
gun deck. "Move the wounded to the surgeon's quarters."
"Aye, Captain", replied John A. Bingham, first officer. The gun crews
checked their guns, while others picked up rope and other items that had
hit the deck when the ironclad struck the bar. The fireman passed John and
Ernest, carrying the dying boy toward the surgeon's quarters, the boy's
blood covering his chest and stomach as he held the limp boy in his arms.
John and Ernest grabbed each other, "Where's Davie?"
"Dunno, John, could still be topside, come on." Ernest grabbed John and
ran for the ladder leading to the top of the casemate. The hot sun hit them
and for moment they were blinded by the bright light. They ran toward the
pilothouse, still not seeing Davie. They stopped at the edge of the
casemate and looked down. "Holy Shit, Ernest, look!" His brother looked
down to where John was pointing. They saw Davie floating in the muddy water
on his back and they could see the cuts on his face and he was not moving.
Ernest ran and shouted, "MAN OVERBOARD! MAN OVERBOARD!" as he ran. John
climbed down the outside ladder that led down the 45 degree slanted
casemate to the bow, he kicked off his shoes and blue jacket and jumped
into the water and swam toward Davie as the sun was darkened by the heavy
black clouds of coal smoke coming from the 28 foot tall funnels.
-*-*-*-
"Good work, Pilot Clark!" spoke Captain Smith of the steamer WABASH.
"Thank ya, Capt'n, That extra steam paid off, plus we're a lot lighter
than that damned Yankee Ironclad."
The passengers cheered the little WABASH and her crew as they continued
to steam around the bend and north toward Belle Bend. A man in a black
sackcloth suit continued to stand on the stern of the hurricane deck,
smoking a cigar as the smoke curled from the tip. He thought to himself,
'The rebels got lucky with that damned sandbar, but next time Yankee iron
will win the day.' He threw his cigar into the river and walked around the
deck to the door to the main cabin and entered it, thinking just what did
the Rebs have waiting at Belle Bend.
"Mr. Edward, you can slack off on the steam now. We're out of danger."
"Aye, Capt'n Smith."
Mr. Edward reached over and turned the wheels located below the steam
gauges, cutting the amount of steam going to the 8 big boilers of the
WABASH, then he nodded to the black man who was standing near, and with
that nod he ordered the ones below him to close the firebox doors. "Y'all
can take a breather now, job well done!"
"Thank ya, Mast'r Edward," replied the big black man. He then ordered
half his men to take it easy and they put down their tools and walked out
on the bow of the steamer and lay down in the shade of the cargo of crates
and barrels.
Edward let the pressure drop to 125 pounds, then closed the valves,
taking the strain off the old boilers of the little steamer. The WABASH had
been lucky in many ways; the little steamer was seven years old when most
steamers lasted no more than five years at the most, most being sunk by
snags in the river or by boiler explosions caused by excessive pressure
trying to win a race or carelessness of the master engineer or the
impatience of the captain who was the master of the boat. Steamboat safety
was an art that no one practiced. Some of the older, smaller steamers and
tugs did not even have safety valves or steam gauges; the engineer had to
guess steam and water pressure.
The big bronze bell rang twice to signal the hour of 2 PM. Edward
smiled, 'We escaped the monster,' He smiled once more at Lacy who was
sitting on an unmarked keg; there were 50 of these kegs total onboard and
most did not know what they held but the captain on down did. They held
black powder smuggled into Galveston, Texas, then moved overland to
Shreveport, then would be shipped south down the Red, then after half had
been unloaded at Port Hudson, the other 25 kegs would go to Vicksburg. Lacy
walked over. "What you smiling so big about, Edward?"
"Them there kegs, Lacy. Maybe we should waterproof one or two of them
and put a slow fuse on them and float em into that Ironclad."
"Ya, that just might work, then maybe not." He laughed.
"Lacy, you still got that flask on you?"
"Sure do, you want a tipper?"
"Yup, we need a drink to celebrate the WABASH's outrunning of the
Yankee beast."
Lacy pulled the flask out of his pocket and unscrewed the cap. He
tossed it to his lips, then passed it to Edward, who did the same. The
strong whiskey burned as it went down. He then raised the flask "To the
WABASH, the fastest Steamer on the Red River!" and passed the flask back to
Lacy after tossing off another shot. The little steamer tooted her whistle
as the paddlewheels churned the water as she headed north with the news of
the Yankee beast trapped on the sandbar two miles south of Belle Bend.
-*-*-*-
As the WABASH steamed north toward Belle Bend, things looked pretty
grim onboard the USS BENTON. One fireman wounded and laid up, the assistant
Engineer Bowen wounded and bleeding, the surgeon working to save him,
Mid-shipman Phillips thrown overboard but was saved by one of the ship's
drummer boys. Then the big problem - how in the hell do you get a 512 ton
gunboat off a sandbar?
Davie was propped against the pilothouse, wrapped in a towel and
slightly bruised and cut from his solo flight from the top of the ironclad
after it struck the sandbar. The surgeon had bandaged the cut above his
left eye and he was lucky that he was not killed. Now he stood watching the
river and the men trying to figure out how to unstick a 512 ton ironclad
from the sandbar which was more mud than sand, and sticky mud at
that. Thompson stood not far away, looking at the banks of the river
through a telescope. John and Ernest stood close by with their arms wrapped
around Davie's waist. Jack Thompson, Captain of the BENTON, had to smile as
he saw the two younger boys looking after their friend. "Just maybe there
was a reason behind every action, whether good or not."
The four ship's boats, three cutters and the launch, were out in the
river, doing depth soundings around the sandbar; the calls from the men
could be heard echoing back across the water. "MARK TWAIN" from one section
and then from another "MARK QUARTER" or "MARK HALF!" The big guns in the
casemate were aimed toward shore and out in mid-river in the stern, so they
were useless unless raiders were spotted coming in those
directions. Captain Thompson ordered the BENTON'S 14th gun to be uncovered
and readied for action, a 12-pound howitzer mounted on a three wheel
carriage of light iron, it fired a 8.9 pound shell from its stubby barrel,
using a four pound powder charge. The gunners joked with each other about
using the signal gun to defend their Ironclad but at the same time felt a
little bit safer, knowing that they had a gun that they could aim upriver
in case the Rebels decided to show their faces once more.
In the Surgeon's quarters, John Burns worked to save a boy who he knew
was going to die. Counsellor Bowen's wound to the stomach was fatal, the
minute the fireman laid the boy on the table in his cramped quarters
located at the stern on the port side of the boiler deck next to big
paddlewheel. So he dosed the boy with Morphine to ease the pain as he lay
there dying; at times like this John Burns hated his calling of Surgeon but
in his 20 years of being at sea and now on the western rivers he had seen
more than he wanted to see of brave young men dying and him helpless to
save them. The young fireman groaned as he slept, the Morphine easing his
pain but when he awoke could he handle the fact that his right arm now
ended above the elbow? He heard the bronze 1000 pound bell ring the hour of
2 PM and the dim calling of the water soundings as he cleaned the room,
washing his bone saw and needles in the tin wash basin of hot water that
was tinted red from the blood, then he would clean the table and rest of
the areas that now were covered in blood. He had just picked up a clean
towel when he heard the soft cry.
"Papa, papa?" Cousellor called. John walked over to the boy's side.
"Yes, my son?" John did all that he could and decided if the boy wanted
his father then for now he would be.
"I see the angels and mama and me little brother. Papa, please don't be
mad at me for leaving you all alone in the world." He coughed and again
while reaching blindly out for a hand of mercy.
John took the boy's hand and held it, gently stroking the smooth flesh
and wishing he could do more. "My son, I am not mad at you. I am proud of
you and what you have done. You're special to me in many ways and I could
never be mad at you."
"Papa, I love you." Counsellor's breath was ragged and he struggled to
continue on.
"I love you too, my son." John tried to hold back his tears but he
couldn't as he watched the hazel eyes grow dim and the last breath escape
the boy's lungs. As he sat there he heard the engine bell toll. 'How
fitting,' he thought as he reached over and closed the boy's eyes for the
last time, without realizing he was still holding the boy's hand.
"QUARTER REVERSE!" Carr shouted.
"AYE, Sir!" Erik shouted back to the Engineer. Then he looked over to
the port side at the fireman who took Counsellor's place and nodded through
his sweat and tears. Ollie grabbed the lever with his gloved hand and
watched Erik for the 2nd nod and once he saw it he pushed the lever one
notch forward and the big paddlewheel started to turn, kicking up mud off
the river bottom. "FULL REVERSE NOW, MY BOYS!" shouted Carr. They pushed
the levers all the way forward and the big paddle wheel spun faster in the
water but the ironclad refused to budge from her spot on the sandbar. They
felt the entire ironclad vibrate from stem to stern as the massive wheel
beat the water. Then there was a jerk, the gunboat began to move, then once
again stopped. The sailors above cursed.
Captain Thompson continued to walk and pace the upper casemate, then
finally he walked toward the stern and the wheelhouse on top of the
casemate. Two hours had passed since the ironclad had run aground, the
bronze bell rang the hour of 4 PM. The Rebel steamer would be at Belle Bend
now, warning the Rebs of his ship's location. It was time to post guards
and lookouts.
"Bingham, I want the marines to go on watch for any sign of the enemy
by land or river I want to be ready."
"Yes, Captain, how many men and how many rounds each, Sir?"
"20 rounds each for ten men. Those 1842 smoothbore muskets are not the
best in the world but they shall do."
"Very good, Sir!" Bingham saluted and headed below to unlock the gun
chest and ammo boxes for the rifles. Then he gathered ten men and gave them
the Captain's orders.
Davie and the two brothers continued to sit, laid back against the
pilothouse, talking and watching the river flow past them. Thompson had
ordered them to stick with Davie and keep an eye on him after the surgeon
had looked him over.
"Davie, how we going to get off this damned sandbar?" Ernest asked.
"Looks like they are going to have to pull us off," Davie replied, his
arms still around the brothers.
"Huh? Pull us off how?" John asked, looking puzzled.
"Well, you see the men in the boats headed toward shore over there with
the heavy ropes trailing from behind them?" Both brothers nodded.
"Ok, they're going to take those ropes and tie them around the big
trees. Then once they are out of the way they are going use the capstan to
pull the boat up and over the sandbar with the paddle wheel pushing from
behind."
"Wow, Davie, you're smart, how you know they was going to do that?"
John asked.
"I overheard the Capt'n talking to Mr. Burr, the engineer." Davie
winked at John and pulled him closer. The other sailors just looked and
smiled as they continued about their duties. They knew the boys were closer
than brothers.
"TIGHTEN THE ROPES!" came the cry across the river. Steam was let in to
the capstan and the gears started to grind as it pulled the heavy ropes in
through the gun ports of the bow. Sailors stepped back from the ropes as
they lifted from the water; no one wanted to be close if one snapped under
the strain.
The ropes tightened and began to strain. "FULL AHEAD, MR. CARR, FULL
AHEAD!"
"FULL AHEAD SHE IS!" Carr shouted back over the vibrating, thumping,
pounding engines and the splash of the paddlewheel, the ironclad shuddered
and vibrated as the heavy ropes groaned. The ironclad began to inch
forward slowly as the men held their breath and stood as far back as they
could from the ropes.
Davie felt the lurch of the ship and grabbed the boys tighter as they
watched. Captain Thompson stood not far away and the marines with their
rifles ready staggered at the jerk, while below John Burns held the wounded
fireman and prayed.
On shore no one paid attention to the soldiers on horseback galloping
toward the helpless Ironclad. A scream arose from shore as the sailors who
still stood near the ropes, watching, were charged upon by the Confederate
horsemen. The ones who did not jump into the river and swim toward the
boats and safety surrendered or died trying to escape.
"FIRE THE HOWITZER!" Thompson shouted. "BLOW THOSE GRAY BASTARDS TO
HELL, GOD DAMN IT!"
The gunners aimed quickly and the gun crew covered their ears as the
lanyard was yanked and the little gun barked and rolled back. The ball
whistled toward shore and exploded in a cloud of smoke and dust. The
horsemen dismounted and started to fire upon the men in the cutters, rowing
back toward safety. Bullets hit the water like rain drops around the small
boats as men rowed with all their might to get back to the ship. Every now
and then a man grabbed his chest or slumped over with a bullet in his chest
or leg, others fell overboard. The Marines on deck started firing, aiming
high to try to avoid hitting their own men, while the gun crew reloaded the
howitzer with powder and ball, the captain of the gun crew ready with his
next friction primer to be shoved down the vent hole.
"GET BELOW DECK NOW, BOYS!" shouted Thompson to Davie, John, and
Ernest. Davie pulled the boys to their feet and began to run, forgetting
about the towel, and ran naked with the brothers down the ladder and into
the safety of the iron casemate. Once again he thought, 'I am being shot at
buck ass naked.' Once below deck, Davie raced over to his berthing area and
grabbed his blue trousers, slipping them on, then his shoes. The noise
coming from the engine room was deafening as they listened to Erik shouting
orders and replies back and forth.
Just as one of the cutters neared the tightened ropes, a soldier
removed his sword and swung down, chopping the heavy strained rope in
two. The rope ricocheted across the water, making a low whistling
sound. Just as the lead man in the cutter shouted, "LOOK OUT!", the rope
sliced his head off cleaner than a sword. Others in the boat were not so
lucky as the heavy rope swept them out of the boat and into the water, some
with broken arms. Out of the 12 in the boat, only 6 made it back to the
ironclad. The ripped end of the rope shot across the bow, clanging against
the armor plate and spun around on the capstan. The other rope, now under
full pressure, began to fray as the capstan whined. No one dared to get
close enough to it to stop the steam. The big paddlewheel pounded the top
of the bar as the other rope snapped. Men on top of the casemate dropped to
the deck to escape it. Now the ropes spun out of control on the capstan;
they were a blur to the eyes, but Carr refused to slow down the engines as
long as the big ironclad continued to move forward off the bar. The men
were thrown to the deck again as the bow of the ship plowed back into deep
water. The men below cheered and raced for the big guns. Primers were
rammed into the vents as the men on top clambered down the ladders to the
inside and the other two cutters and the long boat rowed to safety behind
the BENTON. Ropes were fastened to the ship as the men climbed on deck and
raced up the stern ladder to the top of the casemate, then inside.
"ALL AHEAD SLOW, MR. BURR!" Thompson shouted. "HARD TO PORT!" he roared
to the pilots. "PREPARE TO FIRE STARBOARD GUNS ON MY COMMAND!" The
BENTON's guns were primed and readied, then run out into battery. The lead
gunners held the lanyards tight as the pilots lined the ship up as the
Confederates continued to pepper the pilothouse with bullets.
"FIRE!" Thompson shouted. The gunners yanked the lanyards and the four
heavy cannon roared to life, sending ball and shell toward shore. They hit
seconds later as tree limbs cracked and fell as the four heavy shells tore
into the shore and the Confederate horsemen. The BENTON was once again back
in action. The gunners and sailors cheered. The gunners swabbed the bores
of the heavy guns and began to reload them with grapeshot and canister - in
effect you now had four very large shotguns.
The Confederate cavalry began to regroup and rein in their horses. Out
of the 40 men that left Belle Bend, eight would not be going anywhere. The
shells had ripped them to pieces. Some, their own mothers would not be able
to recognize, their arms and legs torn from their bodies; one had his head
missing. The others quickly gathered up the muskets and ammo boxes of the
dead. 'It was weird really,' the captain thought, 'a battle with no wounded
- either you lived or died.' The four sailors from the BENTON stood there
with muskets aimed at them, wondering what next.
"Capt'n, what you want to do with these four Blue Bellies?"
The Confederate captain looked down at the four men and smiled. "Put a
bullet in them! After they tell us why they are here in the first place!
Well I'm waiting, boys, or does a catfish got your blue tongues!"
The four men looked at the black bearded man dressed in gray, sitting
high on his mount, the man's gray eyes trying to burn a hole in their very
souls. "Sir, we can not give out that information to the enemy, Sir!"
"Oh you can't, sailor!"
"No, Sir!" the sailor replied.
"Private, your Arkansas tooth pick, please!"
"Yes sir, Capt'n!" The soldier pulled a long knife out of its
holder. The blade was a foot long and shined in the light. The blade formed
a sharp tip at the end and the soldier grinned when he saw the Yanks draw
back.
"Now, boys, tell me the truth or your smart mouthed speaker of the
group will have his tongue cut out and fed to the rest of you in
pieces. Then if no one talks, we'll cut off his balls and guess what you
boys get to sample then. Boys, grab the smart mouthed Son of a Bitch."
Two of the men grabbed the sailor and held him while the one with the
knife moved closer. His comrades dared not move to try and help.
"Now, once more, sailor, why are you on the Red River?"
"Sir, We were ordered by our high command to search and destroy all
boats, barges, and wharves on this river, Sir!"
"Well, well, boys, the blue belly spoke in a proper tone to his
superior officer and at the same time is a fucking coward. Are there any
other boats of yours on my river?"
"No, Sir!"
"No sir, what? Yank!"
"No, Sir, The Benton is alone on this mission."
"I see, but he still has no manners, none at all."
"Private, since he has learned to talk, let him keep his tongue, but
since he thinks he is talking to a nigger, remove his balls! He will make a
nice servant once he learns how to address his master! and if he survives
the pain!" The captain burst into a hearty evil laugh as his men looked at
him and the Yankee sailor who had turned whiter than a ghost.
"Yes, sir, Captain!" replied the private as he eased the long knife
forward and downward toward the sailor's crotch.
'I am dead,' thought Richard Moore, his light brown hair blowing in the
breeze as sweat beaded on his face and his stomach knotted. His eyes did
not move from the skinny Rebel with the long knife. The man looked like he
didn't own a razor and smelled like a chamber pot. The long face was
pock-marked and the ragged beard hung low down to the man's collar. The
man's eyes seemed to glow red as he smiled; several teeth were missing and
the ones left were stained with tobacco juice and who knows what else. 'I
got to get away from this mad man, but how?' He felt the pressure of the
knife as it rubbed his groin through his thick woolen trousers.
"Boys, tie the others' hands and put them on those spare horses. We
might need more answers later."
The other three Union sailors were tied and then placed on horses,
while they watched the Reb torture Richard.
"Boys, head out, take the prisoners north while Private Daws finishes
the smart mouthed bastard!"
"Yes, Sir, Capt'n!"
The horsemen and prisoners headed north, the three men in blue looked
back at their shipmate just in time to see the long knife being jammed into
the groin of Richard. He let out a bloodless scream as the Reb laughed.
On board the BENTON the scream was heard, then the galloping horses
returning north toward Belle Bend.
"FIRE ANOTHER BROADSIDE NOW, DAMN IT!" shouted Thompson.
The guns boomed and sent their deadly cargo toward shore.
Private Daws had just pulled Richard back up when the rounds of
canister tore him to pieces. He tried to scream but the hot metal ripped
through his body like sharpened razor blades. The smile of pleasure he had
when he jabbed his blade into the Yank froze in place. Later when the
Benton's crew found his and Richard's bodies, there was that smile on his
face.
The crew on board the BENTON was uneasy at this surprise attack out of
nowhere; yes, they should have been better prepared and, yes, it was stupid
to send unarmed men to shore. The gun crews reloaded the 4 big cannon on
the starboard side while the marines paced the decks above with rifles
ready. Other crewmen raised the two cutters back onboard, using the davit
pulleys and ropes while the longboat was prepared to go out and pull the
third cutter in and to search the shore. Thompson stood on the casemate
roof, watching his men and the shore. He would be damned if he was caught
with his pants down again. He wondered how many men he had lost already on
this foolish expedition into the heartland of the Confederacy. Where was
one of Boy Wonder's rams when you needed one? Everyone in the fleet knew
about the Boy Wonder and his famous Rams, they had helped to defeat the
Confederate fleet at Memphis and Colonel Charles Elliot was the Union hero
for his actions and his idea to convert 9 old steamboats into fast, lightly
armored rams. His rams turned the tide at Memphis and Elliot lost his life
when a Confederate sharpshooter on board a Confederate ram had shot him
while he steered the QUEEN OF THE WEST into battle at Memphis.
"Captain, Sir, we have 20 men armed with rifles ready to leave and pick
up the other cutter and search for wounded and the enemy," spoke Bingham,
the first officer. He was a tall lean man of 28 with brown hair and hazel
eyes and a ruddy complexion. Most of the crew loved his easy going manner
when the ship was at rest or riding at anchor in a safe harbor, but once
the fighting broke out he was all business, storming the decks like John
Paul Jones himself. John A. Bingham was a deep water man, transferring from
the blockading fleet when the call was given for trained officers for the
river fleet in late 1861. So he transferred, looking for a new adventure.
"Mid-Shipman Phillips, Front and Center!" barked Bingham.
"Yes, Sir, Mr. Bingham?" Davie had redressed in a clean dark blue
jacket, but left it unbuttoned halfway as he hurried over. He did not want
to address his superior officer half dressed.
"You are going to lead the men in the long boat. I want to see what
kind of cloth you're made from. I want the two younger boys to stay on
board, no need for them to see what I know you surely will find."
"Yes, Sir." Davie saluted and walked toward the rear of the ironclad,
then down the slanting casemate to the stern and stepped over the two large
anchors lying on the deck and stepped over into the long boat and sat down
at the bow.
"Shove off!" Davie commanded, looking forward from the bow. He dared
not to look up at Bingham and the two brothers who he knew were smiling
their heads off. Davie was the youngest person in the long boat and
everyone knew it.
"Aye, Aye, Capt'n Phillips!" the crewmen replied as they lowered their
oars in the water.
High up on the casemate came a booming laugh over the water. Davie
looked up and saw Captain Thompson laughing and when the Captain saw him
look up he saluted Davie by lifting his wide officer's hat high in the air
and noticed Bingham and the brothers doing the same, all with large grins
on their faces. Davie saluted them back and then felt a large hand slap him
on the back. Everyone was trying to relax just for a few moments before
they knew what was coming once they landed on shore.
Six men rowed the long boat out into the channel and headed toward the
shoreline where the big guns had fired last. The marines in their white
linen pants and dark double-breasted blue jackets kept a keen lookout with
their long rifles pointing in the air as the six sailors rowed toward shore
and the shell-pocked ground. Once in the center of the stream they closed
in on the abandoned cutter where the fresh blood from the wounded sailors
and the man who lost his head was still wet and sticky on the fresh
whitewash of the boat. Two sailors stepped over in it and picked up the
oars and headed back toward the ironclad.
Davie felt his stomach tighten in a knot. He heard the other men
breathe harder as the oars pushed forward again in the muddy water. The six
dead sailors were taken onboard the Ironclad - already so far seven dead in
less than 30 minutes of fighting. The oars splashed in the water and the
boat creaked but otherwise there was a silent stillness on the river, the
Ironclad sitting silently in the wake of the bar. The long boat made its
landing and Davie jumped out of the bow, followed by the other 24 men. The
marines moved forward, followed by Davie and the regular sailors. They
stepped over the downed tree limbs and branches ripped off by the rounds of
canister, then as they walked farther inland they saw the bodies. A
limbless mass of raw meat covered in what once was a gray uniform lay on
top a man in blue. The odors coming from the two dead men made Davie grab
his stomach; he wanted to puke but did his best not to in front of the
other men. One of the marines rolled the dead Rebel off of their shipmate
and the man's lifeless grin met them head on. Some of the men no longer
could stand the sight of the blood and guts and smell; oh, how awful the
smell. The marines had spread out and they found eight more bodies in gray,
well what was left of them anyway after the grapeshot and canister had
ripped the life out of them. 'WELCOME TO HELL,' thought Davie, eight dead
on our side, seven on the Reb side.
Davie walked back to shore and blew the small tin whistle he held in
his pocket seven times, then paused and blew it once more. The clear ring
of the ship's bell signaled the reply. Once again the cutters were lowered
into the muddy water along with picks and shovels - 'time to bury the
dead.'
Davie watched the boats being lowered and part of the crew loading a
stained white sheet into one and the bodies of the others in the other two
boats. He saw Captain Thompson and John and Ernest get into one, along with
John Burns, the surgeon.
The three small white boats pulled away from the shadows of the black
ironclad with her men standing on top of the casemate, watching the small
boats and the river for signs of the approching enemy. The cutters rowed
toward shore. As Davie watched them approach, he wanted to stay away from
the stinking bodies. The bows of the three boats landed and Captain
Thompson, John Burns, John, and Ernest got out, followed by the other seven
men. The other two boats were also unloading and men carried picks and
shovels toward where the marines were standing; they had gathered the other
dead and piled them up in a mass of gray and red. Richard lay separate from
the dead Rebs.
"OK, men, time to lay our proud boys to rest now." Thompson spoke with
a sadness in his voice.
The men walked over to a fairly flat piece of ground, then, picking up
their shovels and picks, began to dig into the hard ground. While the men
took turns wielding the shovels and picks, other men stood guard against a
sneak attack. Thompson stood overlooking his men while Davie and the
brothers helped to dig the shallow graves for their shipmates. One by one
the graves were dug and one of their shipmates was lowered into the ground
and covered over. The grave for Counsellor Bowen was last. The men dug the
grave deeper than the others and it seemed with more care. Once it was
ready, the men, along with John Burns, lowered the boy's limp body into the
grave and they covered it and patted the earth down on top.
Now the men began to dig one large grave for the Rebs, they hastly dug
it and rolled the bodies into it like they were burying a dead animal and
not humans. When done, the bodies lay with only a few inches of dirt
covering them.
"Gentlemen, if you would, please all gather around," Captain Thompson
asked.
The men gathered around their captain. "Please, let us bow our heads in
a prayer for these brave young men," Captain Thompson spoke as he removed
his hat and the other sailors removed theirs and bowed their heads. "Our
Lord in Heaven, receive these proud men into your care, Father, may you let
them look down upon us and our foolish wars, while they sit on the
silkiness of the clouds with their golden wings resting upon their tired
backs, let them be free, Lord, and forgive them for what they believed was
right. We know killing is against your laws and our country's. Again I ask
these things in your name, Lord, bless and preserve this nation during this
horrible time. In Christ's name, we pray, AMEN." Captain Thompson put his
hat back on as the men did the same and picked up their tools and weapons.
"Counsellor, you hug your momma for your papa now, my lad, I know
you're in a better place than you were, but I'm sorry it was when you were
only 14 and not 94." John Burns wiped the tears from his eyes and walked
toward the waiting boats to carry him back to the ship. As everyone joined
him in walking, they knew and understood it was not the last time they
would gather like this.
The three boats rowed across the muddy water and to the safety of the
ironclad, ropes were thrown out and the three little boats were pulled
close to the stern and the men got out. Once the boats were empty except
for two men in each, the ropes were loosened and each boat rowed to the
proper set of davits for it. Once in position, the ropes from the davits
were lowered and the men fastened them to the boats, one rope on each end,
the oars were stowed, and the men grasped the ropes and started to pull,
raising the boats out of the water. The men pulled until they were in
mounting postion, then the boats were tied down and secured. The men
gathered on deck and the Marines came in from their lookouts on top of the
casemate.
"Sailors of the USS BENTON, please come forward to the gun deck. In
order to pay our final respects to the brave young men who lost their lives
in the defense of our proud nation. Pilot, please pull into the main
channel and, Mr. Burr, please, once in position, all stop on the engines
and have your men to join us on the gun deck, please." The commands were
carried out and the ironclad sat still in the water as the crew gathered on
the deck. "Gun Captains, ready your guns." The 13 heavy cannon were run out
into battery. "May GOD SHINE UPON YOUR NEW SHORE, YOU, THE MEN WHO DIED
TODAY IN DEFENSE OF YOUR NATION, YOUR FAMILY, YOUR GOD. YOU NOW ARE IN CARE
OF THE VICE ADMIRAL OF THE UNIVERSE ON THE SHIP OF LOVE AND HAPPYNESS. Look
down upon us humble men as we try to set things right. May each ray of sun
upon our weary backs be reflected off your golden wings as you soar above
us, looking down on this earth, and may our salute to you be heard upon
high to let the world know you did not die in vain. Gun Captains, FIRE THE
GUNS FOR OUR BRAVE MEN."
Lanyards pulled tight and, with the command, the gun captains jerked
the lanyards and all 13 guns roared and in flame and smoke the volley of
shell and shot roared from the guns across the water in honor of the brave
men who now rested upon the shore.
"Now, my men, back to the business at hand. Mr. Burr, full steam ahead,
Sir! Pilots,watch out for those damned sandbars. AND YOU DAMNED REBELS,
LOOK OUT, HERE WE COME TO SEND YOU ALL BACK TO HELL!"
"Aye, Aye, Capt'n," and the crew cheered and the bell rang the hour of
6.
-*-*-*-*-*-*-
"Wha' in the thunder was that racket?" the old man asked, his double
barreled shotgun resting against his bony shoulder.
"Dunno, Amos, sounded like a boiler explosion down river. You don't
reckon it was that Yank iron boat dun blew up, do ya?"
"Don't think so, Sam, sounded like it had a bunch of little booms in
it. When a steamboat blows up, it is one giant roar, the proof she's gone
to tha battom. Maybe that horse officer over there, one with the yeller
chicken guts on his sleeves and that fancy western hat would know?"
"He might, Amos, looks like he done had some book learn'n. I am worried
about that damned boat coming up here and burning my house down. That's the
reason I'm here I don't give shit about some rich planter and his
plantation house."
"Yah, I have to agree with ya there, Sam. I wonder who them two
young'ns over there is all dressed up in those fancy gray uniforms with the
yeller stripes on the jackets and britches. The tall black-haired one
talks like he comes from down south of here, you know from the bayou
country. The other one has a queer way of talking like he is from Texas or
farther west, sounds like he is a smart one."
"Capt'n Hayes, Sir. The men in the militia wants to know where to move
those three cannon they have."
"Well, Conway, they need to be up on that bluff facing the river to the
south. What kind of shot and shell do they have for them?"
"Capt'n, they are 12 pound guns, smoothbores, one of the volunteers
said. They have round shot for them and plenty of powder now, since MISS
LOU was carrying so much they got four kegs of it, plus the WABASH has some
too. I saw her deck hands unloading it and putting it in wagons so it can
be hauled out of danger. Captain King and Captain Smith are talk'n now
about what to do."
"Thank you, Conway. For a farm boy, how you know something like gun
size, my boy?"
"Papa, Sir, he served with Robert E. Lee in the Mexican War. He was a
gunner's mate with the Mississippi battery."
"Very noble of him. My father also served in that war with Jefferson
Davis and his Mississippi Boys; who knows, they might have met. Where's
Michael?"
"He's helping to move all the passengers off the steamers and telling
them to go to the tavern in town to wait and see what happens if the Yanks
come up the river."
"Very good, let's go help the volunteers move their guns in position
and get some slaves to pile cotton bales in front and around them to help
protect the men and guns."
Captain Hayes put his arm around Conway's shoulders as they walked up
the dirt road from the landing to the top of the bluff. They laughed
together when they heard an outburst from the two steamboat captains over
whose boat was the fastest but they both agreed that MISS LOU would stay at
Belle Bend while the WABASH headed back upstream and out of harm's
way. They continued up the bluff road to the top while Sam and Amos watched
while leaning on their shotguns. The 25 men of the Louisiana Militia were a
mixed assortment of men and weapons. Some carried shotguns that they had
used forever, it seemed, to hunt, while others had Kentucky long rifles
from the War with Mexico and there was a rumor that one old timer still had
a Brown Bess his father had captured at New Orleans when the British
surrendered there is 1814.
The small village of Belle Bend had grown quiet as merchants closed
their shops and the taverns began to operate full boom, full of old men
drinking whiskey, they did not plan to fight someone else's war, as they
deemed it.
Conway and Captain Hayes ran into Michael as he was headed back toward
MISS LOU. "We have moved all the supplies from the WABASH to the MISS LOU,
Capt'n. Now the Capt'ns have decided that the MISS LOU will stay at the
landing behind the guns on the bluff. The Militia has moved them to
positions in front of the church so they can use it as a lookout. Their
Captain and Mr. Delatte is waiting on you and Conway to join them. They
have requested that if you could, would you please send them 25 of the
Mississippi rifles along with powder and ball for them."
"Well..." Captain Hayes scratched his chin while thinking, "OK,
Michael, have two of our men take two crates up to the Militia along with
20 rounds for each gun. Do not tell their Captain that we have 38 more
crates onboard the boat, those must reach Vicksburg."
"Yes, Sir!" Michael replied as he ran down the bluff to the MISS LOU.
Michael walked across the wood landing to the gangplank of the MISS
LOU. He met Sergeant Wells standing at the bow, looking over the 12 pound
gun mounted there. Five of the cavalry troopers were cleaning the gun tube
with the rammer and preparing it for action, area around the gun had been
cleared of all cargo and the black powder except for 10 kegs; the ammo
chest lay open on deck. "Sergeant Wells, Captain Hayes wants to move two
crates of the rifles up to the milita men on the bluff and to give them 20
rounds for each gun, plus powder."
"OK, Michael, you and three of the guys go get the supplies for the
Captain while I finish preparing this piece for action. I hope the three
guns on the bluff are halfway servicable."
"Sergeant, they look to be in fair shape, they are 12 pounder Napoleans
from the Mexican War. From what I heard they been on display at two county
courthouses from around here. Captain Delatte said they have been test
fired since receiving them."
The Sergeant chuckled, "I hope they have men that know how to aim
them."
Michael smiled, "Yes, they got some gunners in the group; their long
beards might get burnt off before we are through. They are veterans from
the War with Mexico, would not surprise me if these are the same men with
the same guns."
Wells let out a bellow of a laugh, "I be damned, old men and young
boys! Go get those rifles before we see smoke coming from the south. Three
men are on the Texas deck; get them to give you a hand. All the Cavalry
will be onboard the MISS LOU. That way, once we see a break we can escape
and not slow down till we reach the Mississippi River."
"Yes, sir!"
Michael ran up the main staircase to the Hurricane deck, then around
the main cabin to a ladder. He climbed it to the top of the Hurricane deck
and walked over to the Texas where he saw Private Fisher lounged back
against the big bell, he walked on around to the ladder and climbed up on
the raised portion of the roof. Fisher's eyes were closed, his jacket
unbuttoned, and the deep toned skin with light blonde hairs was exposed to
the hot sun. Michael deepened his voice, "Private FISHER, ATTENTION!"
Michael sounded. Jimmy Fisher liked to have knocked himself silly when he
jumped, causing the bell to lightly ring.
"Gawd Damned, Michael! You liked to have scared the shit out of me,"
Jimmy said as he looked at Michael.
"Serves you right for sleeping while everyone else is sweating our
asses off. Come on, we got to tote two cases of the rifles to the militia,
along with ball and powder. Captain Hayes' orders."
"And, damn it, you had to pick me," Jimmy said.
"Not me, Wells told me to get you and two of the others to help out."
"Can't get the others," Jimmy said. "They up on the pilothouse nailing
boiler plate around it to help protect it from the marines in case they
decide to open fire on us."
"Shit, OK, Jimmy, looks like it is us then." They walked together over
to the main entrance to the Texas deck Officers' cabins and entered. They
walked side by side down the narrow hallway, their arms brushing each other
and giving Michael a chance to check out this fellow soldier of his while
the one hidden in his trousers started to awaken. They entered the purser's
office and picked up one of the heavy crates. Jimmy put one of the ropes of
one of kegs of fine black powder over his shoulder while Michael picked up
one of the heavy bags holding the round musket balls. They grunted as they
moved out of the office and down the narrow hallway to the open air of the
roof of the Hurricane deck. Once down and on the main roof after easing
down the ladder, they paused for a moment. "Let's take a breather, Jimmy,
these crates are fucking heavy."
"Good idea, Mike," said Jimmy as he sat down his end of the crate onto
the tar paper roof, his gray jacket swinging farther open as he leaned down
and the blonde hair falling over his eyes. Jimmy stood up and brushed his
long blonde curls out of his eyes and smiled at Michael. "Watcha lookin'
at, Mike?"
"Huh, Oh, nothin', just thinkin about what's going to happen." Michael
smiled lightly, hoping that Jimmy didn't notice what he was looking at was
him.
"Oh yeah, you reckon we will make it through this alive?" Jimmy's voice
was quiet and there was an unsure tone in it.
"I hope we do, Jimmy. I have made a wonderful friend and I sure don't
want to lose him or any of you, all of y'all are great friends."
"Your friend Conway? How long have you known him? You two seem real
close."
Michael smiled, "I have known him for almost half a day now and, yes,
we are getting close as friends."
"A half of a day, wow!" Jimmy smiled, "how did y'all meet?"
"On board the MISS LOU this afternoon. He needed a place to bunk since
all the rooms were full so I offered to share mine." Michael blushed a
little as he thought, 'If only Jimmy knew how close we have become.'
Jimmy noticed the blush but did not say anything and thought to
himself, 'They more than friends, no one blushes over talking about a plain
old friend or bunkmate.' "Come on, Mike, let's get these guns to the
Militia boys."
They bent over and once again lifted the heavy crate and headed to the
ladder leading to the Hurricane deck. Once down the ladder it was easy
going. They had flat deck once again and from the Hurricane deck to the
boiler deck was actual stairs and not a narrow ladder.
Sergeant Wells smiled when he saw Michael and Jimmy pass him and onto
the gangplank and up the bluff. "That Michael is going to be one tough
cookie!" The other men looked at him. "What you mean, Serge?" asked one of
them as the shirtless man rammed the long rammer down the barrel and pulled
it back out. "What I meant is that boy has both book learning and
willpower, he is not that big, but look at him move with that crate plus a
another 20 pounds of musket balls banging on his back as he totes a crate
of 12 muskets. Just like his friend Conway, that boy is a Cajun if I ever
met one but I be damned if he is not smart too, and the way the Captain
done took to them boys it is amazing. Hayes has never been that close that
fast to anyone and I went to school with him in Orleans."
The five men nodded in agreement. When they first met their Captain,
Isaac Hayes, he seemed almost cold and heartless; at first you only spoke
to him when you were called by him or given an order by him. The 30 men
serving under him got used to the rugged life of a cavalry man quick,
learning the drills and proper ways of firing your rifle while charging on
a rushing horse. Then once you fired your rifle and hoped you hit your
mark, you put your rifle in the mount and, while holding the bit in your
teeth, grabbed your sword and went head on into the fight. As the early
weeks passed, Isaac Hayes became a better captain and leader and, most
importantly, a friend to every man in the small company. The company had
left New Orleans two days before her capture by the Yankee army and with
them they brought out one gun, the 12 pound Napolean, the gun that they now
readied with ease after they had drilled with it day after day as they
moved north, yes, to most of them it seemed weird. Both Gunners and Cavalry
men, now this dual training might just save their hides.
Captain Delatte stood watching his rough green men move the heavy
cannon into position in front of the little wooden church. The small church
sat on the highest of the bluffs south of Belle Bend and the bell tower
would work perfectly for sighting the ironclad before she had time to spot
the guns. He noticed the Cavalry officer and one of his young privates
walking up the bluff where he stood. The one he had met earlier, Michael,
seemed like a very fine young man, both smart and willing to do anything to
help out. 'Better than some of the ragamuffins I got in my sorry lot,' he
thought as he put his spyglass back to his right eye. He scanned the river
to the south, then toward the lower landing where the two steamboats sat
with dark gray smoke rising from their tall stacks. He saw Michael step on
board the MISS LOU and stop to talk to the men there working with their
gun, then disappear up the stairs. One of his own young boys walked
past. "Robby, step over here for a moment, please?"
"Yes, Dad?" Robby Delatte was 16 years old and stood 5'7, three whole
inches higher than his father. The dark brown hair was short under his kepi
cap, his gray eyes sparkled and were alert to every movement around him as
he stood with his father.
"My boy, I want you to go ahead and get ready to climb the bell tower
of the church, you got the best eyes of anyone I know. Our friend Michael
is going to bring us some of the Mississipi Rifles they have on board the
steamer, plus powder and ball. They are better than our Kentucky Long
rifles, the Misissippis have riflings in the barrel to make the ball spin.
Here, take my telescope with you up into the bell tower. Now, the minute
you spot smoke from the south, you ring that damned bell."
"Yes, Sir! Dad, here comes that Cavalry captain. Is the soldier with
him carrying one of those Mississippi Rifles? It sure looks longer than the
ones we got."
"Yes, it is, my boy, it uses a percussion cap just like your Kentucky
but, like I said, if that is the modified version, it is rifled so it is
more true when it fires." Dave pulled at his graying beard, watching
Captain Hayes approach and the young man beside him.
"Papa, promise me one thing. That when the ironclad shows up that you
don't take off your hat, becaue if you do they might see us with your bald
spot shining like it does." Robby grinned as his father swatted him.
Captain Hayes and Conway walked over to where Captain Delatte and his
son stood, looking at the river. Captain Hayes and Conway saluted the older
man and Captain Delatte returned the salute. "Captain Isaac Hayes, 3rd
Louisiana Cavalry, and this is Private Conway James."
"I am Captain Dave Delatte, Shreveport Home Guards, and my son Robby. I
see one of my junior officers sent for on helping us to place our guns. I
figured since this is the highest point of the bluffs south of town, this
would be the perfect position. Also we have the church steeple we can use
as a lookout and signaling tower. I have ordered my son here to climb the
tower with my telescope and one of the Mississippi Rifles. It will give us
ample time for warning, Robby here can spot the ironclad before it can make
it around the bend."
"Very good, Captain Delatte, I have to agree with you this is the best
place for your guns, and you're right about using the church steeple for a
lookout post. How good of a shot is your son with a rifle?"
"He is a fine shot with a rifle, he has won the last two shooting
matches at the Parish Fair." Dave sniled while talking about his son.
"Very good indeed. Conway, give Robby your musket and ammo box. I want
to see what the boy can do!" Captain Hayes smiled as Conway unshouldered
his brand new musket and handed it to Robby along with his leather ammo
box.
Robby smiled, then gently took the long musket with its oiled walnut
stock and blued barrel, "WOW, it's brand new!"
Conway smiled at the boy, "Yes, it is only been test fired twice since
I got it."
"Well, let's see what you can do with it," spoke Captain Hayes.
Robby sat the butt of the long musket down on the ground and pulled the
ramrod out of the brass bands that held it below the barrel. He then
reached into the ammo box and pulled out a paper-wrapped ball and powder
charge. He bit the end off the paper and poured the powder down the barrel,
then seated the ball on top of the muzzle and raised the ramrod. He seated
the end of the ramrod onto the ball and shoved it down the barrel, then,
lifting the ramrod back up, he pushed it again down the barrel to pack the
powder and seat the ball on top. Robby then put the ramrod back into its
holder and reached into the ammo box once more and removed the small brass
percussion cap. He cocked the hammer back half way and seated the cap on
the nipple and cocked the hammer all the way back; the musket was now ready
to fire.
Captain Hayes scanned the river for a target and spotted a log in the
middle of the stream floating down. He pointed it out to Robby. "There's
your target. Let's see how good you really are."
Robby shouldered the musket and took aim at the floating log. His
finger tightened on the trigger and squeezed gently. The musket fired with
a loud bang and a flash of smoke and flame. They all looked at the log and
saw splinters fly from it. Captain Hayes looked impressed and pleased,
while the boy's father beamed.
"Now climb the steeple to the bell platform. Conway will hand you the
musket and telescope once you're in position. I am quite sure the Federals
will want to attack today instead of waiting out the night. So, my boy,
keep those eagle eyes open."
"Yes, sir, father!" Robby and Conway walked toward the small clap-sided
wooden church and to the ladder leading up into the steeple and bell
platform. Robby handed Conway the musket, ammo box, and telescope while he
mounted the ladder and began to climb up. Conway watched the firm gray-clad
butt go up the ladder and thought to himself, 'Too bad I will be on MISS
LOU when the fightin' starts and, when it is over, I would not mind doing a
little bit of ramming a certain charge up that chute.' He smiled as he
continued to watch the boy climb the ladder. Once in position, Conway
passed up the musket and other items and returned to where the two captains
stood.
"He's in position, Sir."
"Thank you, Conway," Dave spoke in a high voice, so that Captain Hayes
would hear him thank one of his men.
Captain Hayes was over by one of the guns, running his hand over the
bronzed barrel. Feeling the warm metal below his fingers, he thought back
for a few moments about his father and what he told him before he left New
Orleans. The old man's voice was soft in the room below the ramparts of
Fort Saint Phillip that sat guarding the Mississippi River. "Always take
care of your gun and she will never do you wrong in battle. They are like
fine women, treat them right and they will do the same to you, but neglect
her care and she will fail you." He now wondered if his father had surrived
the fight at New Orleans and the bombardment of the Federal Fleet. His
father was no longer a young man, at 61. Isaac loved to hear the stories of
the battles in Mexico and how the American guns had hammered the Mexicans
back time after time. His father said that every time one boomed it seemed
to say "Remember the ALAMO", but he wondered would anyone remember him and
his men after this war was over.
"Capt'n Hayes, Sir, here are the two crates of muskets plus the powder
and ball. Where would you like to stack them?"
"Set them here right now, Michael. Captain Delatte will issue them to
his men. How are things aboard ship?"
"Looking fine, Sir. The captain had boiler iron nailed to the
pilothouse and Sergeant Wells has our piece ready for action. We're just
waiting now."
"Thank you, Micheal." Captain Hayes smiled as they walked away from the
bronze 12 pound gun and let Captain Delatte's men prepare her for
action. He stood and watched the men and boys look the gun over like a fine
watch. Two others came over and picked up the crate and ammo and started
issuing guns and powder to the other men who had piled cotton bales along
the bluff to protect them and the guns mounted in the positions where they
had dug depressions in the ground as to help control the recoil of the
heavy guns.
They walked over to where Captain Delatte was standing with a group of
his men. Delatte's men saluted Captain Hayes and the two privates and the
three returned the salutes.
"Captain Hayes, I am hoping that Captain Jasper will soon return from
his scouting mission south of here. He left with 40 men. He is part of the
Shreveport Home Guards like us. He is a maverick you could say likes to do
things on his own terms. He equipped his own men from his plantation with
horses and saddles, also most of the Enfield rifles they have."
"Yes, it would be nice to have an idea of what we're facing. I have
never seen one of these Iron Beasts."
"Nor have I, Captain Hayes."
"From what I have gathered, they are slow and hard to maneuver, about
160 feet long or more and mounting about 14 big guns. They have armored
plate around the pilothouse and sides and I understand a layer around the
paddlewheel house and machinery. So when we fire, Captain Delatte, we got
to find her weak spot to give MISS LOU a chance to escape. Have your boy to
aim for the pilothouse. All we can do is pray that one of the bullets will
kill or wound one of her pilots and give us the needed time. I would
suggest you increase your powder charge from two pounds to three on the 12
pounders, but I am in no position to tell you how to man your guns."
"Thank you, Captain, for that information. I believe we can increase
our powder charges by a little since we are using a finer grade powder than
should be used, but a word of warning - once the barrel is hot and too much
powder and she will explode."
"Yes, Captain Delatte, my father explained that to me very carefully
before I left New Orleans before the Federals captured our proud city. I
only hope that he surived at Fort Saint Phillip."
Captain Delatte's eyes perked up. "Fort Saint Phillip. Was your father
Joe Hayes, about 6 foot 1, heavy-set man with a gray beard?"
"Yes, Sir, he is. What do mean 'was'?"
"I am sorry, Captain I was there during the bombardment by the Federal
Navy. He was killed while commanding a set of 24 pounders during the night
assault, I am truly sorry, Sir, he was a fine man."
Isaac's eyes darkened and misted over - his father dead, his home in
enemy hands. "Thank God my mother did not live to see this." Conway and
Michael stood close by as the words of Captain Delatte sank in with their
Captain. He was silent as the tears began to flow, he reached up and wiped
his eyes, then looked at the surrounding men. "THE GOD DAMNED YANKEE
BASTARDS WILL PAY DEARLY, MEN, I SWEAR TO MY MAKER THEY WILL PAY!!"
Robby was sitting up in the hot cramped space beside the bronze church
bell, scanning the river and occasionly looking toward where the Captains
were having their little meeting. He used the telescope to get a closer
look at the two young boys standing with Captain Hayes. He would look them
up and down, 'wishing his own group had a set like that to bunk with'. He
swung back around and almost dropped the telescope from his hands. There it
was, he saw black smoke coming around the bend. He put the telescope down
and covered one of his ears and started to ring the bell with a fevered
pace. Then he leaned out from the enclosure and shouted "HERE COMES THE
IRON MONSTER!"
Captain Hayes' eyes lit up with a blue fire, "TO THE MISS LOU, BOYS,
HURRY!"
"MAN YOUR GUNS, MEN, MAN YOUR GUNS!" shouted Dave Delatte to his men as
he raced to the waterfront. The men of the Shreveport Home Guards raced to
the guns and got into position, men grabbed the rammers and spongers, while
others opened the ammo boxes mounted on the two-wheel limbers. Five men
stood at each gun. "LOAD!" Delatte shouted.
The first man grabbed the sponge and rammer and dipped it into the
small leather bucket of water sitting below the gun, then he sponged the
bore as the 2nd man passed the round cannonball and powder charge to the
3rd man while the vent is closed as the first man rams the powder and ball
down the gun. Then the master gunner aims the gun as men on the hand spikes
turn and level it as the master gunner sticks the vent primer into the fuse
hole to puncture the powder charge, then he pushes the fricton primer in
the the vent and holds the lanyard, waiting the order to fire. The men are
silent as they watch the ironclad come into view.
Captain Hayes stood on the bow of the MISS LOU, the captain with his
pilots in the pilothouse awaiting orders. Cavalry men stood on the
hurricane deck roof, their long Mississippi Rifles loaded and ready. Others
lay on the flat roof, rifles pulled to their shoulders while others sat
back, ready to pass another rifle as the men up front fired them and passed
them back to be reloaded.
Robby had taken the telescope as he watched the Ironclad come into full
view. He knew in a few minutes there was going to be a hell storm of shot
and shell. He knew that he could not hold onto his musket and fire it while
trying to use the telescope to aim with at such a distance, then he saw the
small pieces of old bell cord. He picked up a piece and took the telescope
and placed it on top of the musket barrel and tied it in place, then
another piece and tied it in the center and finally the third piece and
tied it to the very end of the telescope. He picked up the musket and
looked down the barrel. The telescope worked, he now could aim and see what
he wanted to see. Now he sat and waited.
-*-*-*-*-
"Full steam, Mr. Burr, I want to get in close and repay that Rebel
steamer." He paced the gun deck, his long black beard hanging down as his
gray-blue eyes sent sparks of fire.
"Aye, Captain, we got plenty of boiler pressure this time," the chief
engineer replied as he stood beside the captain on the gundeck.
The pilots and the twenty marines had the best view of what lay
ahead. They first noticed the two steamers still at the landing and the
cotton bales stacked high on the bluffs. No one paid much attention to them
until they noticed the four bronzed barrels sticking above them. "Captain
Thompson, the enemy has mounted guns on the bluff; we count four
total. Shall we steam toward shore or continue in the main channel?"
"Thank you, Pilot, continue in the main channel for now, no need to
risk running aground again. Most likely they are old 6 pounders, nothing to
worry about. I want to destroy those two steamers."
"Aye, Captain."
Davie stood on top of the casemate, looking at the river ahead and the
two Rebel steamboats at the landing. He noticed both had steam up from the
clouds of grayish black smoke rising from their tall stacks. Then the
second one cast off her ropes and swung out into the river. He saw the name
WABASH and his blood began to boil. The twenty marines had gathered on the
side where the town lay, checking their muskets once again. He heard them
complaining about them and trying to hit anything with a smoothbore. He
heard Captain Thompson curse when the pilot told him the WABASH was casting
off and headed upstream and that the other steamer was just sitting there
waiting, with her ropes cast off and paddle wheel spinning slowly, keeping
her in position. He saw the men standing on her deck, most likely crew
members watching for them. He heard the bronze bell ring six times, then a
pause, and once more to signal the half hour. 6:30 PM, the sun was like a
fireball in the western sky, glinting off the metal of the ironclad and off
the gun barrels of the four Rebel guns on the bluff. They were silent for
now, like him waiting and watching as they continued to steam closer and
into range. 'Who would fire first', he wondered. The field glasses now hung
down onto his chest by the leather strap; they bounced when he walked
toward the ladder and down into the bowels of the ship. Soon they would be
abreast of the cannon.
"All slow!" Captain Thompson ordered as he peered out of one of the gun
ports. Then he stepped back to the center of the deck. "RUN OUT THE GUNS!"
Thompson again ordered to his gun crews on the starboard side and in the
bow.
"Aye, captain!" the men sounded back as he heard the engine bell ring
as the ship began to slow her pace. Men grunted as the heavy guns were
rolled into battery with their long black snouts pointing at the
bluffs. "MAX ELEVATION!" the gun captains ordered and the elevating screws
were turned and wooden elevation wedges adjusted. Minutes passed and all
was quiet except for the thumping of machinery and the slashing of the
paddle wheel. John Burns waited in the surgeon's quarters. He already had
moved the wounded fireman to a cot in one of the recovery rooms, small
windowless rooms that were cramped and smelled of whitewash and
turpentine. He bowed his head and said a silent prayer.
-*-*-*-*-
Robby Delatte, like everyone else, wondered and waited. 'Who was going
to fire the first shot? Was the ironclad in range of the old 12 pounders or
not? What about MISS LOU and her crew?' His hands were sweating around the
barrel of his musket and it dripped from his brow. He watched his father
standing close to the first gun, watching the black beast slowly steaming
closer. Then looking north toward the landing, he saw Captain Hayes still
standing on the bow of MISS LOU. The gray wood smoke pouring from her
stacks like so many times before when she had called on the sleepy little
town on her way south to Vicksburg or Port Hudson, but this time it was
different, she had that iron beast blocking her way. He turned once more
and laid his sights on the Ironclad. He could make out men standing on her
decks now in their white britches and blue jackets, they had muskets, but
what scared him the most was the four big cannon with their noses pointed
at him and the rest of the men and town on the bluff. He saw a red-haired
boy that looked no older than him walking from what he figured was the low
pilothouse to the middle of the boat and disappear inside. Robby's finger
itched to pull the trigger, he knew that he could have hit him. 'But why?
What had he done to me?' His father's harsh voice was heard in his
mind. 'What they have done to us? Plenty, my boy, they have not given us
our fair share, raising our taxes, raising the tariffs we pay, trying to
tell us how to live, preachin' to us about the evils of slavery, but the
most of all, trying to steal our state's rights to govern ourselves.' The
boy had disappeared into the ship. 'The Enemy boy, that is!' Robby blocked
that the people on that ship were even humans but a barbarian horde here to
destroy his way of life and to that was only one answer - 'To hell they
must go'. He leveled his rifle with the improvised scope on the ledge of
the bell platform and looked down to see his father looking at him. He read
the words on his father's lips, "Fire when you're ready, son, picture the
target in your mind, ease the pressure on the trigger, and fire, send the
ball straight and true." Robby nodded to his father as he took aim on the
officer who just appeared in his sights, a tall man with dark brown hair
and who had a ruddy, sickly-looking face, the brim of his officer's hat
shielding his eyes. The mental picture formed perfectly in Robby's mind as
his fingers began to do their work. His hand tightened its grip on the
stock and seated it firmly against his shoulder, his trigger finger
increased the pressure on the trigger, the front sight lined up with the
space between the man's eyes, he knew the ball would drop in flight so his
hope was that it would get the target in his chest. He held his breath as
he pulled the trigger.
-*-*-
John A. Bingham had just stepped up onto the casemate of the ship to
order the marines to start scoping out targets, when there was the crack of
the musket. He started to duck when the ball hit him in the chest and he
fell to the roof of the casemate, the crimson rose forming on his blue
jacket, the look of shock in his dead eyes.
"GET HIM BELOW DECKS NOW!" Thompson shouted. "CLEAR THE VENTS AND
PREPARE TO FIRE AT MY COMMAND! ALL HANDS, BATTLE STATIONS, PREPARE FOR
ACTION!"
The crew of the USS BENTON looked at their Captain in a whole new
way. Something inside him had snapped and now he was nothing but fire and
smoke, shouting orders and taking control of his ship and his men. John and
Ernest got in line and beat the call to battle stations, their drumsticks
hammering the canvas cloth that covered the drum rims. Once the call was
sounded, they moved their drums out of the way and helped to form a supply
line to the 4 starboard guns to pass the powder to the men while others
passed the shells. High on the bluffs they heard the call of a bugler,
calling the enemy to the ready. "The Ball is opened and I pray that our
suits of blue do not turn into our suits of burial blue." The big gunner
smiled as he swabbed the bore of his eight inch Navy smoothbore cannon.
-*-*-*-*-
Robby quickly reloaded his musket and once again lined up his
sights. 'I have just killed a man but I feel none of his pain. Is this what
war is about? Killing people but not feeling their pain? Father knows it,
so does most of the men and now I know. But will I burn in hell for my
sins?' He pulled the trigger again and saw a sailor grab his stomach. Two
down, Robby thought and not one of our guns has opened fire nor has the
iron beast. His fingers quickly started their work again, reloading the
musket as he watched the sailors scramble to get the wounded man below.
Captain Delatte looked up and smiled at his son when he saw the second
sailor fall to the casemate roof. His boy had made his first two shots
count. Now it was his turn. "Gunners, prepare to fire at the command!
Bugler, sound the call to the MISS LOU that we are preparing to fire!" The
young man lifted the bugle to his lips and sounded the call to the men on
the MISS LOU.
Captain Hayes smiled at his men, "That boy is a crack shot, but let's
see what hot metal can do. Bugler, answer the call!" The bugler of the 3rd
Louisiana sounded the call to the men on the bluff as they watched the
ironclad come closer into range. The men on the hurricane roof were tense
at their open prone positions, lying spread eagle with their rifles ready
while the others bent down low to pass the reloaded rifles back and the
others standing at the bow with the bow chaser waiting. The few cotton
bales stacked around the gun offered a lot of protection from musket fire
but none from cannon fire, as the last of the notes echoed off the
bluff. There were four booms and the white smoke rose from the bluff as the
12 pounders fired their opening shots. Captain Hayes, with a glint of cold
steel in his eyes, yanked the lanyard of the bow chaser, sending the 12
pound ball across the water and toward the enemy in the river. With that
signal, MISS LOU pulled away from the landing and into mid stream.
Captain Smith of the WABASH heard the opening shots coming from
downstream and even though he was ordered to stay out of the fight, he
figured he had nothing to lose, "Pilot, steer for that barge of cotton and
lash on to it!"
"Aye, Sir!"
The WABASH pulled out of the still bayou and headed over to the barge
piled high with white cotton bales. The deck crew grabbed the ropes and
lashed the heavy barge to the bow of the steamer. They knew what was up
when Lacy brought out the barrel of kerosene to be poured all over the
cotton, a fire raft in case it was needed. The men doused the cotton as the
steamer headed back toward Belle Bend, where the thunder of cannon and the
crack of rifles grew steadly into a roar.
-*-*-*--*-*-*-
"FIRE STARBOARD BROADSIDE NOW!" Thompson commanded, pacing the gundeck;
he had to counter that fire. The four shells were aimed for his weakness
and he had to silence those guns. The armor around the paddle wheel was
some of the weakest on the ship. The main armor was around the bow and
sides, protecting the guns, past that there was only heavy timber. Two and
a half inch plate protected the engines and boilers while one and a half
protected the bow. The two cutters lashed to the side of the ship were
blasted by pieces of metal; the shots were low.
The three 32 pound smoothbore cannon and the 8 inch Navy roared when
they fired, filling the casemate with burning powder smoke. The gunners
reloaded as quick as possiable; they could fire the guns twice a
minute. Boys passed powder as the men swabbed the bores and reloaded with
shot and shell with the fuses set to explode in 15 seconds after leaving
the gun. Sailors did their best to stay away from the iron casemate, the
ringing of the iron as the shells hit could kill an man or destroy his
hearing, leaving him deaf.
The four guns thundered again, sending their shells in a high arc
toward the bluff. The nineteen marines left standing now hugged the iron
caremate roof, their muskets leveled as they fired up the bluff, trying to
hit the gray gunners; every now and then they would see a puff of cotton as
one of their balls tore into a bale but not one man in gray had dropped.
They had to find the sniper hidden on the bluff. The other riflemen were
hitting all over the deck and small pieces of the lead would hit them and
sting but that was about it but every time that lone musket sounded, a man
fell to the deck dead. The marine Corporal watched the big shells fall
short, hitting in front of the cotton bales, 'Shit,' he thought, 'all along
this river there was nothing but flat land until they came to this area,
and the damned Rebels had to mount their guns on the highest point. The
commander at Vicksburg must have trained these men as well!' "Roll that
HOWITZER over here, men!"
"Yes, Sir," they laid down their muskets and raced over to the Howitzer
on its three wheel carriage and began to roll it toward the center of the
ship. Once in position behind the pilothouse and pointed toward starboard,
they began to load it with solid shot. Canister and grape would do no good
at the range they needed. Above the 2nd gun on the bluff he noticed
something glinting in the sunlight, looked like a rifle barrel to him, the
corporal raised his field glasses to his eyes. 'I be a Son of a Bitch!' It
was a rifle barrel with a telescope tied to it, no wonder the Rebel could
pick his targets at will. "MAX ELEVATION ON THE SCREW! 9.0 pound shell
with a 20 second fuse! 5 pound powder charge!"
"Five Pounds, that is one pound too much, Sir!"
"FIVE POUNDS, PRIVATE, NOW!"
"Yes, Sir." The private put the five pound charge down the muzzle and
the shell was rammed home. The vent was closed and the friction primer
inserted. The Corporal took the lanyard and yanked. The howitzer boomed and
the shell whistled through the air, sailing over the Confederate guns and
exploding in the churchyard. "Shit! Reload!"
Captain Thompson heard the bark of the howitzer on the casemate
roof. "God damned Marines are finally using something they have a chance of
hitting something with. Davie, go up top and spot their shells and ours. I
think I know what their target is!"
"Yes, Sir, Captain!" Davie climbed the ladder to the top of the
casemate and stood behind the Corporal.
"Ah, Mid-shipman Phillips, come to keep an eye on Thompson's little
toy?"
"I was ordered up here to spot both your shells and the ones from
below, Sir! Captain Thompson knows the target! The Church, SIR!"
The marine corporal was taken back at the sternness in the boy's
voice. "Very good, Mr. Phillips! Let's see if we can blow the devil out of
the father's house of worship, shall we!"
-*-*-*-*-*-
"God Damn, that was close!" Captain Delatte looked behind him at the
smoking hole in the ground where the shell had hit. They are using the
howitzer on top. He looked up at his son still in the church steeple. He
saw the long barrel steady and watched the rifle kick back as his son fired
again. "I WANT ALL FOUR GUNS TRAINED ON THE PILOTHOUSE NOW! The men on the
hand spikes picked up on the rear of the carriages and spun them to match
the movement of the Ironclad, elevation was set as they swapped from solid
shot to exploding shells. "ON MY COMMAND!"
Robby saw the redheaded boy appear again on the open part of the
deck. He looked at the boy, he was quite handsome. Then he saw the officer
of the gun who had fired that last shot; the sorry bastard had him singled
out. "Now it is my turn!" Robby got the officer in his sights and aimed a
little high to counter the ball drop in flight "I want him right between
the eyes!" He pulled the trigger just as his father yanked the lanyard on
gun number 1 below him.
-*-*-*-
"Davie, get below and report how.." The corporal's face went slack as
he hit the deck, a round hole the size of a musket ball had formed in the
center of the corporal's forehead. Davie scrambled to the ladder and
ducked down inside just as all hell broke loose on the decks above just as
he hit the gun deck, THUD, KABOOM, THUD, KABOOM. Two of the rebel shells
hit their target. Men on top fell to their knees with bloody body parts of
others; out of the 19 marines on top 9 scrambled down below. Dragging the
wounded with them, four more were carried to the surgeon's quarters where 4
men helped him work on the wounded; already the small recovery rooms were
full.
THUD, KABOOM! The second pilot grabbed his face as blood poured down
it, "OH, MY GOD, I'M BLIND!" The pilot stumbled from the pilothouse and
Captain Thompson grabbed the man himself and passed him to another to be
rushed to John Burns. The Ironclad was out of control as the other pilot
still on his feet tried to wrestle with the large wheel alone. Then there
was another thud on the pilothouse roof and claag, then a splash and a
muffled explosion as water shot up from the river.
-*-*-*-*-
Captain King, standing in the pilothouse of the MISS LOU, saw his
chance of escape and blasted the steam whistle. "FULL STEAM AHEAD,
MR. MATTHEWS, FULL STEAM AHEAD!", he shouted into the speaking tube. The
steamer pulled out into the current and began to pick up speed. Captain
Hayes stood on the bow, waiting and watching, holding the lanyard tight on
his own 12 pounder. He looked up at his boys on the roof and saw Micheal
and Conway standing in the pilothouse with King; they were there to help in
case one of the pilots was killed. He knew both boys were itching for
action but he wanted them safe. He did not want to lose two such fine
boys. MISS LOU came closer and closer to the ironclad, her bow now pointing
closer to shore where her big guns could do little harm to the
steamer. Hayes wondered why the forward guns had never fired upon the MISS
LOU, "Were they disabled?"
-*-*-*-*-
"I want five brave men to go topside and man that howitzer!" Thompson
called.
Davie stepped forward and six other men. "We'll do it, sir!" Davie
replied.
"You men go topside now. Davie, you go but I want you in the ladder way
to spot those guns. Every officer up there has been shot or killed by that
damned sniper. Gentlemen, you have one target - THE CHURCH! blast it to
hell!"
"Captain Thompson, the MISS LOU is headed straight toward us, SIR!"
"Man the forward guns!" Thompson commanded.
"We can't, Sir! None of them are ready, they used the carriage ropes to
pull us over the bar. If we fire them we have no way to control the
recoil!"
"GOD DAMN IT! GUN CREW, MAN THE CENTER GUN NOW!
"AYE, CAPTAIN!" Men rushed over and started to sponge the bore of the 8
inch Navy gun and commenced loading it. Once loaded, they all stepped far
back. Without ropes that gun could go wild on the recoil and smash
bones. The port gun crews were busy removing ropes off of one of the port
side guns.
"Wait before you fire it", here they brought the heavy ropes over and
began to run them through the arresting holes in the iron casemate and
carriage. "One will help control it better than none at all."
The chief gunner sighted the piece and pulled the lanyard taut, it was
a hit or miss but what harm would it do.
"FIRE!" The lanyard was yanked and the big gun recoiled back against
the one rope and snapped. The gun hit the capstan and the barrel broke
loose from the trunnions and rolled onto the deck, useless.
The shell splashed the water right in front of MISS LOU, covering the
men on the bow and their piece with muddy water.
"GOD DAMN IT!" Thompson shouted, he was momentarily deaf when all four
of the starboard guns fired, the shells whistling high up onto the bluff
and the men cheered when they saw one of the rebel guns disabled, the
barrel pointing downward at a crooked angle. Then from top of the casemate
the little howitzer barked, sending her shell flying through the darkening
skies to land inside the church building where it exploded. setting the
building on fire.
BOOM, BOOM, BOOM, BOOM, the starboard batteries fired again, the shells
exploding around the Rebel guns. BOOM, BOOM, BOOM came the reply back as
the shells rained down on the iron plates of the armor. The sponger on the
3rd gun collapsed, bleeding from both ears when a rebel shell exploded
right outside the gun port.
"Captain, I could really use some help up here!" shouted the pilot.
"You there, get your ass up there and help that man now!"
The sailor climbed into the pilothouse and stood gripping the big
wheel. "Now, hard to Port!" The new man grasped the slick wheel and began
to turn it as the bow swung back upstream. Minie balls peppered the
pilothouse as the men on the MISS LOU fired and kept firing at the
pilothouse. The port side gun crew had the big 42 pounder smoothbore loaded
and ready with grapeshot. As the bow of the MISS LOU lined up with her
sights, the chief gunner yanked the lanyard, sending grape into the bow of
the MISS LOU, knocking men to their knees and blasting bits of cotton from
the bales. Rifle fire poured into the open gun portal, hitting the gunners
as they fought to reload the cannon. One gunner staggered back, his arm
bloody. The others crouched behind the carriage and iron plate. The
starboard guns continued to rain hell upon the shore battery.
Davie ducked just as the MISS LOU passed the ladder hole where he was
directing fire for the small howitizer. He was learning fast the gun trade
of sighting guns and he had gotten to know the little signal gun well. He
saw men staggering on the bow of the MISS LOU with blood on their uniforms
and their Captain, O' their Captain, looked him right in the eyes with his
own blue steel eyes and Davie swore later that if those eyes were a sword
he would be burning in hell.
-*-*-*-*-*-
"DAD, HELP MEEEEEEE!" Robby screamed as he held onto the crumbling bell
platform as the old dry church began to burn hotter from that Yank shell.
"OH, MY GOD!" Dave shouted as he raced to the burning church. "AMOS,
SAM, give me a hand, will ya!"
"Come on, Sam, the boy is in trouble."
"A'right Amos." They laid their muskets down and raced for the church
where Dave stood trying to reach his boy.
"Amos, stand on my shoulders." Amos climbed up on Dave's shoulders and
grabbed Robby by his legs. "Now, ease down, Dave, I got your boy and he
still got that damned rifle in his hand." Dave squatted down and Sam took
the rifle from the boy's trembling hands and helped to steady the boy. Once
down low enough, Sam grabbed Robby and helped him to the ground as another
shell whistled over and crashed into the burning church, scattering the
flames more. "Let's get away from here before that damned bell falls and
kills us all." Sam grabbed the rifle and Dave toted his boy out from under
the bell platform. Just as they turned to look, it collapsed into the
inferno.
"FULL STEAM EDWARD, I WANT RAMMING SPEED!" shouted Captain Smith of the
WABASH.
"AYE, CAPTAIN SMITH!" Edward spun the wheels, crowding on as much steam
as the boilers could handle. "LIGHT THE COTTON BARGE!"
Deckhands threw lit torches upon the barge, and soaked cotton burst
into flames. "Now when we get close, cut the ropes and let the barge crash
into the ironclad."
"Aye, Sur!" the black deckhands replied to Lacy.
The bow of the WABASH was now 1000 feet away from the Ironclad. She was
turned with her bow toward shore as she turned around in the river to give
her starboard guns a needed rest. The steamer closed in to within 500
feet. "CUT THE ROPES!" The black deckhands sliced the ropes with an
axe. The barge, now free, headed toward the ironclad but the current began
to push it away.
-*-*-*-*-
"OH, MY FUCKING GOD!" shouted Davie. "THE WABASH IS CLOSING IN AND IS
ABOUT TO RAM US PORT BOW WITH A FLAMING BARGE!" He shouted down the ladder
to the crew below, the little Howitzer now silent as the sun set, too dark
to see how to aim.
"HARD TO STARBOARD!" shouted Captain Thompson.
The Ironclad turned, lining up the 42 pounder on the port bow, the gun
crew ready with an exploding 40 pound shell. Through the smoke the sights
lined up with the steamer herself, the gun crew covered their ears as the
gun fired. The shell screamed toward the bow of the WABASH and before the
crew had time to react, her boilers exploded in a cloud of smoke, fire, and
steam. The roar echoed up the bluffs as the Confederates looked on, the
steamer, burning, now exploded, sending fragments of burning wood all over
the BENTON and the river men flew in the air, lifeless as they came back
down, splashing the water and turning it red with their blood. The fire
barge continued to float downriver, harmless, as the mighty WABASH, once
the fastest steamer on the Red, settled to the bottom. The battle was over.
Captain Thompson took a deep breath and sighed, then looked at his
exhausted men, "Pilot, swing her around and let's head south. The ball is
over, gentlemen!"
"Aye, Captain! Hard to port she is, sir!"
The USS BENTON began to turn, swinging her bow out into the river,
facing the now empty landing, the paddlewheel thumping slowly against the
muddy water as she swung in a wide circle, her guns silent, it was too dark
in the casemate to see how to load them. Up on deck the bronze bell rang
the hour of 8 pm. High upon the bluffs the old church still burned, casting
shadows against the silent Confederate batteries and the river. Once facing
south, the ironclad swung out into the current and picked up speed.
George C. Burr, chief engineer, walked through the engine room, toting
a small leather notebook and candle; he was writing. They were able to keep
130 pounds of pressure up even without the proper draft; the tall iron
smokestacks were riddled with bullet holes. He climbed the ladder to the
gun deck and swapped his candle for one of the iron lanterns as he walked
toward the engines that hummed and thumped. He noticed bolts were loose on
the port side. He climbed topside and in the moonlight he looked at the
tall stacks and saw them glowing red from the bullet holes that had pierced
them. Two of the boat's cutters shot away and indentions on the ironplate
from the impact of the cannonballs. Sky lights were destroyed on the
wheelhouse, one of the large air vents destroyed, and the smokestack guide
wires and stay wires loosened. The pilothouse armor had held and was only
dented in the places where the shells hit and by a miracle it seemed that
the last ball had bounced from it to land in the river. If it would have
landed where the Rebels intended, it would have crashed through the top and
exploded inside, destroying the wheel and rudder ropes and chains. 'Yes,'
he thought, 'Mr. Eads built one tough ship'. As he closed his notebook he
heard a grinding on the portside and walked back to the wheelhouse and
noticed one of the axle bearings had been damaged. He flipped his notebook
back open and licked his pencil stub and noted it 'Paddlewheel axle bearing
starboard side damaged, reduced speed by 2 knots until repaired.' He
flipped the cover closed and pulled a cigar out of his coat pocket and
licked it, then put it in his mouth and struck a match.
Davie, John, and Ernest, all tired and covered in powder dust and soot
mixed with the sweat running down their faces, helped to carry the wounded
to the surgeon's quarters where they laid the men on the deck outside
because there was no room inside. The surgeon and his four young helpers
did their best to save the wounded men; some they knew would die in the
night. Finally when there were no more wounded to carry, they asked and
received permission to go topside for a break. They met engineer Burr as he
threw his cigar overboard and was headed to the ladder. "I will send Erik
topside for a while, he needs a rest," as he went inside.
Davie draped his right arm around John as they waited in the moonlight,
the river was peaceful, it had already forgotten a battle was even
fought. Erik walked over to where they were standing, his face covered in
soot and sweat, Ernest put his arm around Erik as they walked toward the
wheelhouse and the stern of the ironclad. Fragments of shells and
cannonballs covered the decks along with splinters of wood and bits of
metal. Davie told the others to go ahead and walk around to the rear of the
wheelhouse and climb to the roof, he would be there in a minute. He entered
the little shower stall located in front of the massive wheel and filled a
leather bucket hanging on the wall and grabbed two of the towels that were
in the little holder and walked to the ladder and began to climb. He saw
the three lying sprawled out on the wooden roof of the wheelhouse, silent;
only the constant thud of the wheel broke it. Davie walked over to them and
sat the bucket of water down and the towels and he too flopped down onto
the roof and took one of the towels and wet one end and washed the grime
off his face then he leaned over and washed John's, John broke into a grin
as Davie leaned over and kissed him on the lips for a brief moment. "It's
over for now and we all made it through it." Erik and Ernest looked over
and smiled at John and Davie. "Yeah, but there's one missing from our group
now," Erik spoke softly and they all nodded. Erik and the others looked
into the western sky and smiled. "Counsellor, we know you're watching us
from up there and now you don't even have to close your eyes when Davie
kisses John." They smiled as from the top of the casemate as the BENTON
steamed south. the notes of 'Nearer My God To Thee' floated up to where
they sat and, without speaking, the four boys wrapped their arms around
each other and lay back against the curving center of the wheelhouse,
already drifting off to sleep.
-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-
Conway sat high up on the hurricane roof of MISS LOU as the steamed
south toward the mouth of the Red River and Port Hudson. He was thinking
of all that took place in one day, the meeting of Michael and then of
Captain Hayes and his company of men, then the battle which would stay with
him for as long as he lived. He and Michael had seen the last shot fired by
the BENTON as they swung around the bend and saw the proud little WABASH
blow up. All those brave men dead, including Captain Smith, who loved to
boast and brag but in friendly way. He wished Michael would soon be
finished helping the men stack the crates of rifles in one of the officers'
quarters on the Texas Deck and would soon join him. The river was peaceful
with the moon shining brightly above in the clear western sky with its
countless stars shining brightly as they twinkled. Five of their men would
never see that sight again after the charge of grapeshot had blasted across
the bow, six more wounded, including their friend Jimmy Fisher who was now
resting in their cabin. Nothing badly serious, just a graze across his
right arm, but still the handsome lad needed some rest and Conway and
Michael decided to let him bunk with them for the rest of the trip, two
more days before Vicksburg. Conway was brought out of his dream when he
felt a warm cup being pressed into his hand and he looked up and saw
Michael standing there.
"You dreaming, angel?" Michael asked as he sat down beside his best
friend.
"Yeah, I guess I was, thinking about so much has happened in one day,
both good and bad, but meeting you was the best thing to ever happen in my
life so it was all worth it." He took a sip of the strong black coffee and
put his arm around Michael as they sat on the raised deck, their feet
dangling down.
Michael smiled at Conway, "We made it through it all right."
"Yes, we did, my boy, yes, we did." Michael laid his head on Conway's
shoulder as the first mate walked out on the deck and rang the big bell
eight times. He smiled when he saw the two boys close together like young
lovers. He turned around and walked back inside, thinking 'Love and War,
men are fools for both of them.'
-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-
Robby Delatte sat on a cotton bale, alone staring at the river. Not
long before he had helped to finish burying the thirty-eight men who had
died while manning their positions and who died when the WABASH blew
up. The glow of the burning church cast his lone shadow across the bluffs.
It was quiet here, the little town was booming tonight, the other men of
his company drinking the free whiskey that poured from the saloons like
water. He was not in the mood to celebrate their little victory if you
could call it that. His long Mississippi musket lay at his feet as he
looked at everything and nothing at all. A face burned in his mind - who
was the red-haired boy he saw so many times through his sights but could
not pull the trigger. If only they were on the same side. He dreamed as he
sat there alone in the glow of the burning church, the red glow haunting
him like the bright red hair of the young Yankee officer.
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Hello, Dear Readers, there's a lot of action in chapter 9. So I hope it
made up for me taking so long to get it out to you. Even tho' the events
that take place are pure fiction, the actions are based on real-life
events, including Davie's solo flight off the top of the USS BENTON, which
actually took place in 1863 near Grand Gulf, Mississippi. Same with Robby's
idea of tying the telescope to his musket.
The Civil War has been called the first modern war for many reasons,
including the first use of Ironclad warships and the first war in which the
civilian population was also targeted and not just the opposing armies in
the field. The Civil War saw the passing of the old ways of fighting into
the modern ways. The Rules of War were not always followed, as seen in the
Confederate Cavalry officer's treatment of the Union sailor. This was done
on both sides and quite often.
Well, this is the last chapter for this year but there is plenty more to
come, as we continue our adventure into the past and present. May you all
have a wonderful New Year.
I must thank Ed for his great work he does on these chapters in both NO
GREATER LOVE and HIGH IRON.
As always, I love to hear from you, so drop me line or two.
SWARRI1349@aol.com
and visit my pages at http://swarri1349.tripod.com/
Check out the Writings page located off the main page there. Just click the
little black and white drawing of the flag and cannon where it says Idle
Thoughts and a Few Good Words In Between.
Thank y'all, and I'll see ya on the gray side of the blue.
Stephen