The History of Our Navy from Its Origin to the Present Day, 1775-1897, Volume 1C. Scribner's Sons, 1897 - 607 pages |
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Page xii
... Sailors , of whom Seven- tenths were Picked Men , Armed with the Heaviest Guns , were Pitted under a Courageous Leader against 700 Yankees , chiefly Hay- makers , Poorly Armed and with Insufficient Ammunition - Savages with Scalping ...
... Sailors , of whom Seven- tenths were Picked Men , Armed with the Heaviest Guns , were Pitted under a Courageous Leader against 700 Yankees , chiefly Hay- makers , Poorly Armed and with Insufficient Ammunition - Savages with Scalping ...
Page xiii
... Sailors and Soldiers . PAGE CHAPTER VIII . PRIVATEERS OF THE REVOLUTION 196 A Tale of the American Patriots who Went Afloat outside of the Regular Navy - Their Part in Driving the British from Boston— Remarkable Work of the Lee ...
... Sailors and Soldiers . PAGE CHAPTER VIII . PRIVATEERS OF THE REVOLUTION 196 A Tale of the American Patriots who Went Afloat outside of the Regular Navy - Their Part in Driving the British from Boston— Remarkable Work of the Lee ...
Page xxii
... sailor about to be flogged is saved by a comrade's confession . ) ( From a drawing by George Cruikshank ) , THE UNITED STATES FRIGATE ESSEX . • ( From a lithograph at the Naval Academy , Annapolis ) , CAPT . HENRY WHITBY , R. N. ( From ...
... sailor about to be flogged is saved by a comrade's confession . ) ( From a drawing by George Cruikshank ) , THE UNITED STATES FRIGATE ESSEX . • ( From a lithograph at the Naval Academy , Annapolis ) , CAPT . HENRY WHITBY , R. N. ( From ...
Page 5
... sailor- man would care to see , but when that length of course had been sailed over , the racers found themselves close up at the Providence bar . The Yankee knew his ground as well as he knew the deck of his sloop , but the captain of ...
... sailor- man would care to see , but when that length of course had been sailed over , the racers found themselves close up at the Providence bar . The Yankee knew his ground as well as he knew the deck of his sloop , but the captain of ...
Page 10
... sailors of the Gaspé strove to resist the onslaught , but they were quickly knocked down and secured . As soon as this was done the schooner was effectually fired , and her captors , with their prisoners , pulled away ; but they ...
... sailors of the Gaspé strove to resist the onslaught , but they were quickly knocked down and secured . As soon as this was done the schooner was effectually fired , and her captors , with their prisoners , pulled away ; but they ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abraham Whipple afloat Alfred Ameri American fleet American navy American ships anchor Andrea Doria armed Arnold ashore Barry battle boat Bonhomme Richard Boston brig British ship broadside Capt Captain Jones captured cargo Carleton carried Chesapeake coast colonies command committee Commodore Hopkins Congress Constellation convoy crew cruise cruisers Decatur deck Drake Dudley Saltonstall Elisha Hinman enemy enemy's English escape Esek Hopkins fight fire flagship force France frigate Gaspé gondola gunboats harbor hauled Hyder Ali John Paul Jones ketch Lake Champlain Landais Lenox Library Lexington Lieutenant loaded marines Meantime merchant merchantmen nation naval Nicholas Biddle night nine-pounders o'clock October officers ordered Philadelphia pirates port powder privateer prizes Raleigh Ranger Revolution Rhode Island Richard Dale rigging sail sailor schooner seamen sent Serapis shore shot sloop sloop-of-war squadron story stranger supplies surrender tain tion told Tripoli Tripolitan Truxton United vessels warships wind Yankee
Popular passages
Page 132 - that the flag of the thirteen United States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that the union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation.
Page 270 - Richard afloat, and, if possible, to bring her into port. For that purpose, the first lieutenant of the Pallas continued on board with a party of men to attend the pumps, with boats in waiting ready to take them on board, in case the water should gain on them too fast. The wind augmented in the night, and the next day, on the 25th, so that it was impossible to prevent the good old ship from sinking.
Page 270 - Richard afloat so as to reach a port, if the wind should increase, it being then only a very moderate breeze. I had but little time to remove my wounded, which now became unavoidable, and which was effected in the course of the night and next morning. I was determined to keep the Bon Homme Richard afloat, and, if possible, to bring her into port.
Page 268 - ... it was moderate from the explosion of so much gunpowder, yet the three pumps that remained could with difficulty only keep the water from gaining. The fire broke out in various parts of the ship...
Page 304 - It will not be to the interest of any of the great maritime Powers to protect them from the Barbary States. If they know their interests, they will not encourage the Americans to be carriers. That the Barbary States are advantageous to maritime Powers is certain.
Page 166 - When the skilful operator had obtained an equilibrium, he could row upward or downward, or continue at any particular depth, with an oar placed near the top of the vessel, formed upon the principle of the screw, the axis of the oar entering the vessel ; by turning the oar one way, he raised the vessel, by turning it the other way he depressed it...
Page 167 - nade exceedingly strong ; and to strengthen it as much as possible, a firm piece of wood was framed, parallel to the conjugate diameter, to prevent the sides from yielding to the great pressure of the incumbent water, in a deep immersion.
Page 173 - In the year 1777, 1 made an attempt from a whale-boat against the Cerberus frigate, then lying at anchor between Connecticut river and New London, by drawing a machine against her side by means of a line. The machine was loaded with powder, to be exploded by a gun-lock, which was to be unpinioned by an apparatus to be turned by being brought along side of the frigate.
Page 268 - Richard, the rudder was cut entirely off the stern frame, and the transoms were almost entirely cut away; the timbers, by the lower deck especially, from the main-mast to the stern, being greatly decayed with age, were mangled beyond my power of description...