THE AMERICAN NAVY ON THE CHINA COAST
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This first appeared in issue #1 of 'History Notes', compiled by the late Phillip Bruce. It is reproduced here on Gwulo by kind permission of Mr Bruce's family.
The activities of the United States in Chinese waters in the [nineteenth] century are not, perhaps, appreciated as much as they should be by British-orientated historians.
It is interesting to read in the Chronicle and Directory for 1873, published by the Hong Kong Daily Press, details of the United States Navy's Asiatic Station.
The ships of the station were listed alphabetically and the first was the Ashuelot. This was an interesting ship, being a side- wheel paddle gunboat of the Mohongo class, designed for operations in shallow and river waters. She sailed out to her Far East station via Europe, nonetheless. Ships of the class were 255 feet long, 35 feet wide, nine feet mean, and normally carried a crew of between 159 and 190, according to the reference works.
The Ashuelot was lost on the Lamock rocks off Swatow in February 1883. The Daily Press reported the arrival in the colony of the captain and surviving crew on February 22, 1883, saying the ship went down in dense fog at about 4 am on February 14.
"We are told her bottom was coated with mud, and the shock did not appear very severe, but she at once commenced to fill and went down in about 40 minutes in 15 fathoms of water. In the meantime the boats had been got out and the men were got into them as speedily as possible. Owing, however, to the steam launch being secured with iron instead of hemp, considerable delay was caused in getting it out, and before all the men could be got off, the ship went down with 11 Americans and three Chinese who were all drowned. The boats reached the light house, and from thence one of them went to Swatow, a distance of 36 miles, for assistance. The Revenue Cruiser, Ling Feng, gave her services and went out to the rock, bringing back the remainder of the ship's company, who came on to Hong Kong by the Thales. We are told the fog was so dense that it was only possible to see a few yards ahead, and the reason of the vessel getting upon the rock was that she was caught in a current of which her officers were unaware and carried far out of her reckoning; indeed at the time she struck it was thought that she was at least eight miles distant from where she actually was. The current was so strong that one of the boats drifted four miles in two hours. It was not until three o'clock in the afternoon that the boats found the light house. The Ashuelot was a double ender of 786 tons, and carried six guns. Her complement consisted of 12 officers, 123 men, and 18 marines. There is, we hear, no hope or raising her."
A report in the same paper of February 24 stated: "Although in the wreck of the American steamer Ashuelot we lost a familiar form to the harbour, she was no great loss to the navy of the Great Republic. The Ashuelot was an antiquated double-ender, being a special type of man of war. She was of low draught, and was built, I believe, during the Civil War to penetrate the narrow rivers being fitted with a rudder at each end so as to obviate the necessity of turning; but since running in the open sea one of these contrivances has been abolished. She was a sister ship of the Monocacy, and both were quite recently placed in thorough repair at Shanghai at very considerable outlay - $30 000 each, if I remember rightly. Whether they were worth the expense is best known to the American Admiralty. The Ashuelot belonged to the Third Class of the American Navy."
The writer regretted the deaths of the sailors: "There has been no such melancholy loss of life in connection with the striking of a steamer on the China Coast for some time.
"The fogs are answerable for the largest proportion of the ship wrecks along the coast during this monsoon. Even with the greatest possible care, catastrophes are sometimes unavoidable, especially if, as in the case of the Ashuelot, a vessel gets into an unknown current. The worst of it is that the sets on this coast are so eccentric as to preclude the possibility of reducing them to any possible system."
A report in paper of February 26, but dated Swatow February 23, put the loss of life at eight Europeans and three Chinese, with the ship striking at 4 am on the 13th rather than the 14th.
The sister ship of the Ashuelot, the Monocacy, put out from Hong Kong for Swatow to pick up the survivors but on arrival there found they had already left for Hong Kong.
The flag ship of the Americans was the Hartford. The unusual thing about this ship is that, though launched in 1858, she survived almost a hundred years, sinking at her berth in 1956. She displaced 2 550 tons with a speed of nine and a half knots. In 1860 she was known to have 20 nine-inch smooth bore guns, though in the 1873 she was listed as having 18 guns, and displacing 2 900 tons.
At Yokohama, Japan, there was the storeship Idaho, a "failure". She was built as a steamship to be capable of maintaining 15 knots for 24 hours but was such a flop that the machinery was removed and she was converted to a full-rigged sailing ship, one of the fastest ever. Launched in 1864, she was recommissioned in 1867 and went originally to Nagasaki as a store and hospital ship.
Attempting to return to the US in September 1869 she was dismasted and then was used at Yokohama until sold in 1874.
The screw-ship Iroquois was launched in 1859 and it was listed the following year as having one five-inch rifled muzzle loader and four 32-pounder guns, 1 488 tons, capable of 11 knots. In the Directory it is said to have six guns and displace 15 75 tons. She was "stricken" in 1910.
The Lackawanna was one of the Ticonderoga class wooden screw ships, commissioned in 1863 and sold in 1887, and present at the battle of Mobile Bay. Displacing about 2 562 tons, she was a barque- rigged, single-funnel ship with a complement of about 270. The Directory has her mounting 10 guns and displacing 2 220 tons.
The Monocacy was another of the Mohongo class of side-wheel gunboats, like the Ashuelot. The last survivor of the class she played a part in the Chinese rebellion of 1900 and was sold in 1903.
The Palos, a screw-ship was said to be a fourth-rate, displacing 806 tons by the Directory.
The Saco was a Kansas class gunboat built in Boston in 1863 and sold in 1883. In 1865 her armament was one 4.2 inch Parrott rifled muzzle loader, two 11-inch smooth bores, two nine-inch smooth bores and five smaller guns. The Directory lists her as having eight guns and displacing 900 tons.
In the same class as the Saco, and a survivor like the Hartford, was the last vessel, the Yantic, commissioned in 1864 and stricken in 1930.
The 1873 Directory gave the following names, several appear twice, being listed both with their ships and with the Asiatic Station:
Surname |
Initials |
Position |
Ship |
Adams |
H.A. |
Commander |
Iroquois |
Astor |
L. A. |
1st Engineer |
Yantic |
Babbin |
H. J. |
Passed Assist. Surgeon |
Hartford |
Baker |
H.R. |
Lieutenant |
Iroquois |
Bartlett |
H. |
Fleet Marine Officer |
Asiatic Station |
Bartlett |
Henry |
Captain Marines |
Hartford |
Birdsall |
J. A. |
Sailmaker |
Hartford |
Bloodgood |
Delavan |
Fleet Surgeon |
Asiatic Station |
Bloodgood |
D. |
Surgeon |
Hartford |
Bolles |
T.D. |
Master |
Ashuelot |
Bowman |
C.G. |
Master |
Yantic |
Breck |
R.A. |
Master |
Yantic |
Brosnahan |
J.G. |
1st Assist. Engineer |
Lackawanna |
Callander |
Albert F. |
Mate |
Palos |
Cassel |
Douglas |
Lieutenant Commander |
Ashuelot |
Colvocoresses |
G.P. |
Master |
Hartford |
Converse |
Geo. A. |
Flag Lieutenant |
Asiatic Station |
Cooper |
Francis |
2nd Assist. Engineer |
Palos |
Cross |
R.H. |
Gunner |
Hartford |
Cuddy |
W. |
Sailmaker |
Lackawanna |
Delano |
F.H. |
Master |
Ashuelot |
Dixon |
Jno. A. |
Carpenter |
Hartford |
Dowenpart |
R.G. |
Master |
Saco |
Downs |
J. |
Midshipman |
Hartford |
Edes |
B.L. |
Lieutenant |
Yantic |
Elliott |
W.P. |
Midshipman |
Lackawanna |
Emory |
W.H. |
Flag Lieutenant |
Asiatic Station |
Field |
W.L. |
Lieutenant |
Lackawanna |
Fisher |
H.G.B. |
Secretary |
Asiatic Station |
Fitch |
H.W. |
Chief Engineer |
Lackawanna |
Ford |
J.D. |
1st Assist. Engineer |
Hartford |
Foster |
C. A. |
Midshipman |
Lackawanna |
Fox |
C.E. |
Midshipman |
Hartford |
Franklin |
T. |
Master |
Saco |
Fuller |
Henry C* |
Mate |
Palos |
Fulmer |
D.M. |
2nd Assist Engineer |
Ashuelot |
Galt |
R.W. |
2nd Engineer |
Yantic |
Garvin |
John |
Master |
Hartford |
Gates |
G.S. |
2nd Assist. Engineer |
Iroquois |
Gill |
C.B. |
Lieutenant |
Hartford |
Gilpatrick |
W.W. |
Lieutenant |
Yantic |
Guild |
Chas. F. |
Paymaster in Charge |
Naval Depot, HK. |
Hall |
G.W. |
1st Assist. Engineer |
Iroquois |
Hall |
M.E. |
Ensign |
Monocacy |
Harber |
G.B. |
Master |
Iroquois |
Harder |
Jacob |
Paymaster's Clerk |
Naval Depot, HK. |
Harms |
J.C. |
Midshipman |
Hartford |
Harvey |
H.P. |
Assist Surgeon |
Hartford |
Hawkins |
C.E. |
Boatswain |
Lackawanna |
Hays |
J. |
Gunner |
Lackawanna |
Heelner |
L.C. |
Midshipman |
Iroquois |
House |
J.B. |
Master |
Iroquois |
Houston |
N.T. |
Ensign |
Ashuelot |
Hunisicker |
J.L. |
Midshipman |
Hartford |
Hurlburt |
S.D. |
P. Assist Paymaster |
Saco |
Impey |
R.E. |
Lieutenant |
Ashuelot |
James |
N.T. |
Midshipman |
Yantic |
Jenkins |
Thornton A. |
Rear Admiral |
Asiatic Station |
Jenkins |
N.H. |
Carpenter |
Lackawanna |
Kellog |
A.G. |
Lieutenant Commander |
Lackawanna |
King |
William M. |
Surgeon in Charge |
Nav. Hosp. Yokohama |
Lisle |
R.M. |
Lieutenant |
Lackawanna |
Long |
George W. |
Assist Paymaster |
Ashuelot |
Lusher |
O.E. |
Midshipman |
Yantic |
Magruder |
A. F. |
Assist. Surgeon |
Iroquois |
Mansfield |
C.D. |
Passed Asst. Paymaster |
Monocacy |
Marshall |
W. A. |
Midshipman |
Hartford |
Marthon |
Joseph |
Lieutenant |
Monocacy |
McCormack |
E. |
Lieutenant |
Hartford |
McDaniel |
C. A. |
Paymaster |
Iroquois |
McDonald |
C. |
Midshipman |
Iroquois |
McGunnigle |
W.S. |
Lieutenant |
Saco |
McIntosh |
H.P. |
Midshipman |
Lackawanna |
McKean |
W.G. |
1st Assist Engineer |
Ashuelot |
McMurtrie |
D. |
P. Assist Surgeon |
Ashuelot |
Mety |
A. |
Midshipman |
Yantic |
Meyers |
T.D. |
Assist. Surgeon |
Monocacy |
Miller |
P. J. |
Boatswain |
Hartford |
Moore |
John W. |
Fleet Engineer |
Asiatic Station |
Moore |
J.W. |
Chief Engineer |
Hartford |
Moore |
A.M. |
Assist. Surgeon |
Saco |
Naber |
F.W. |
Midshipman |
Lackawanna |
Nagle |
C.F. |
2nd Assist. Engineer |
Saco |
Nelson |
T. |
Lieutenant |
Idaho |
Nelson |
Thomas M. |
Mate |
Palos |
Nichols |
H.E. |
Lieutenant |
Lackawanna |
Nickels |
A. H. |
Ensign |
Iroquois |
Nields |
H.C. |
Lieutenant Commander |
Iroquois |
Palos |
Rowland'Jno. H. |
Lieut Commander |
Palos |
Parker |
J . B \ * |
Passed Asst. Surgeon |
Yantic |
Paul |
A.G.V \ |
Lieutenant |
Saco |
Paulding |
R.P. |
Assist. Paymaster |
Palos |
Phillip |
J. |
Lieut. Commander |
Hartford |
Plgman |
G.W. |
Lieut. Commander |
Yantic |
Potter |
W.P. |
Master |
Hartford |
Potts |
H.D. |
2ns Assist. Engineer |
Monocacy |
Rhinebaut |
B.F. |
Midshipman |
Yantic |
Rodger |
J.A. |
Master |
Hartford |
Ruschenberger |
C.W. |
Master |
Iroquois |
Sa |
J. de |
Paymaster's Writer |
Naval Depot |
Schenck |
W. |
2nd Lieut. Marine |
Lackawanna |
Schofield |
W.K. |
Surgeon |
Lackawanna |
Seabury |
S. |
Midshipman |
Iroquois |
Selfridge |
J.R. |
Master |
Lackawanna |
Shepard |
E.M. |
Lieut. Commander |
Hartford |
Shirley |
Paul |
Captain |
Lackawanna |
Sibley |
W.E. |
2nd Assist. Engineer |
Lackawanna |
Smith |
W.S. |
1st Assist. Engineer |
Monocacy |
Smith |
James Gordon |
Captain's Clerk |
Palos |
Spalding |
L.G. |
Master |
Yantic |
Spicer |
W.F. |
Captain |
Asiatic Sta |
Spicer |
W.F. |
Captain |
Hartford |
Sprague |
J. |
1st Assist. Engineer |
Iroquois |
Stanton |
O.F. |
Commander |
Monocacy |
Stevenson |
J.H. |
Paymster |
Lackawanna |
Stewart |
Edwin |
Fleet Paymaster |
Asiatic Stai |
Stewart |
Edwin |
Paymaster |
Hartford |
Terry |
Edward |
Commander |
Saco |
Thompson |
C. |
Midshipman |
Yantic |
Torbert |
W.F.A. |
Paymaster |
Idaho |
Totten |
G.M. |
Lieutenant |
Lackawanna |
Towne |
N.P. |
1st Assist. Engineer |
Hartford |
Tremaine |
H.L. |
Master |
Monocacy |
Turner |
W.H. |
Master |
Saco |
Utley |
J.H. |
Midshipman |
Iroquois |
Vail |
A. H. |
Lieutenant |
Hartford |
Van Buskirk |
P.C. |
Mate |
Palos |
Van Reypen |
W.K. |
Midshipman |
Iroquois |
Wallace |
R.R. |
Commander |
Ashuelot |
Watson |
J.C. |
Lieut. Commander |
Idaho |
Webb |
William H. |
Lieutenant |
Palos |
White |
C.H. |
Surgeon |
Idaho |
White |
G.H. |
1st Assist. Engineer |
Saco |
Whitehead |
Ira C. |
Actting Assist. Surgeon |
Palos |
Wilson |
J.C. |
Master |
Monocacy |
Wilson |
Byron |
Commander |
Yantic |
Wood |
T.T. |
Master |
Monocacy |
Wright |
J.M. |
Midshipman |
Hartford |
Yorke |
L. A. |
Paymaster |
Yantic |