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<h2> THE BURNING OF THE "PHILADELPHIA" </h2>
<p>And say besides, that in Aleppo once,<br/>
Where a malignant and a turban'd Turk<br/>
Beat a Venetian and traduced the state,<br/>
I took by the throat the circumcised dog<br/>
And smote him, thus.<br/>
—Othello.<br/></p>
<p>It is difficult to conceive that there ever was a time when the United
States paid a money tribute to anybody. It is even more difficult to
imagine the United States paying blackmail to a set of small piratical
tribes on the coast of Africa. Yet this is precisely what we once did with
the Barbary powers, as they were called the States of Morocco, Tunis,
Tripoli, and Algiers, lying along the northern coast of Africa. The only
excuse to be made for such action was that we merely followed the example
of Christendom. The civilized people of the world were then in the habit
of paying sums of money to these miserable pirates, in order to secure
immunity for their merchant vessels in the Mediterranean. For this purpose
Congress appropriated money, and treaties were made by the President and
ratified by the Senate. On one occasion, at least, Congress actually
revoked the authorization of some new ships for the navy, and appropriated
more money than was required to build the men-of-war in order to buy off
the Barbary powers. The fund for this disgraceful purpose was known as the
"Mediterranean fund," and was intrusted to the Secretary of State to be
disbursed by him in his discretion. After we had our brush with France,
however, in 1798, and after Truxtun's brilliant victory over the French
frigate L'Insurgente in the following year, it occurred to our government
that perhaps there was a more direct as well as a more manly way of
dealing with the Barbary pirates than by feebly paying them tribute, and
in 1801 a small squadron, under Commodore Dale, proceeded to the
Mediterranean.</p>
<p>At the same time events occurred which showed strikingly the absurdity as
well as the weakness of this policy of paying blackmail to pirates. The
Bashaw of Tripoli, complaining that we had given more money to some of the
Algerian ministers than we had to him, and also that we had presented
Algiers with a frigate, declared war upon us, and cut down the flag-staff
in front of the residence of the American consul. At the same time, and
for the same reason, Morocco and Tunis began to grumble at the treatment
which they had received. The fact was that, with nations as with
individuals, when the payment of blackmail is once begun there is no end
to it. The appearance, however, of our little squadron in the
Mediterranean showed at once the superiority of a policy of force over one
of cowardly submission. Morocco and Tunis immediately stopped their
grumbling and came to terms with the United States, and this left us free
to deal with Tripoli.</p>
<p>Commodore Dale had sailed before the declaration of war by Tripoli was
known, and he was therefore hampered by his orders, which permitted him
only to protect our commerce, and which forbade actual hostilities.
Nevertheless, even under these limited orders, the Enterprise, of twelve
guns, commanded by Lieutenant Sterrett, fought an action with the
Tripolitan ship Tripoli, of fourteen guns. The engagement lasted three
hours, when the Tripoli struck, having lost her mizzenmast, and with
twenty of her crew killed and thirty wounded. Sterrett, having no orders
to make captures, threw all the guns and ammunition of the Tripoli
overboard, cut away her remaining masts, and left her with only one spar
and a single sail to drift back to Tripoli, as a hint to the Bashaw of the
new American policy.</p>
<p>In 1803 the command of our fleet in the Mediterranean was taken by
Commodore Preble, who had just succeeded in forcing satisfaction from
Morocco for an attack made upon our merchantmen by a vessel from Tangier.
He also proclaimed a blockade of Tripoli and was preparing to enforce it
when the news reached him that the frigate Philadelphia, forty-four guns,
commanded by Captain Bainbridge, and one of the best ships in our navy,
had gone upon a reef in the harbor of Tripoli, while pursuing a vessel
there, and had been surrounded and captured, with all her crew, by the
Tripolitan gunboats, when she was entirely helpless either to fight or
sail. This was a very serious blow to our navy and to our operations
against Tripoli. It not only weakened our forces, but it was also a great
help to the enemy. The Tripolitans got the Philadelphia off the rocks,
towed her into the harbor, and anchored her close under the guns of their
forts. They also replaced her batteries, and prepared to make her ready
for sea, where she would have been a most formidable danger to our
shipping.</p>
<p>Under these circumstances Stephen Decatur, a young lieutenant in command
of the Enterprise, offered to Commodore Preble to go into the harbor and
destroy the Philadelphia. Some delay ensued, as our squadron was driven by
severe gales from the Tripolitan coast; but at last, in January, 1804,
Preble gave orders to Decatur to undertake the work for which he had
volunteered. A small vessel known as a ketch had been recently captured
from the Tripolitans by Decatur, and this prize was now named the
Intrepid, and assigned to him for the work he had in hand. He took seventy
men from his own ship, the Enterprise, and put them on the Intrepid, and
then, accompanied by Lieutenant Stewart in the Siren, who was to support
him, he set sail for Tripoli. He and his crew were very much cramped as
well as badly fed on the little vessel which had been given to them, but
they succeeded, nevertheless, in reaching Tripoli in safety, accompanied
by the Siren.</p>
<p>For nearly a week they were unable to approach the harbor, owing to severe
gales which threatened the loss of their vessel; but on February 16 the
weather moderated and Decatur determined to go in. It is well to recall,
briefly, the extreme peril of the attack which he was about to make. The
Philadelphia, with forty guns mounted, double-shotted, and ready for
firing, and manned by a full complement of men, was moored within half a
gunshot of the Bashaw's castle, the mole and crown batteries, and within
range of ten other batteries, mounting, altogether, one hundred and
fifteen guns. Some Tripolitan cruisers, two galleys, and nineteen gunboats
also lay between the Philadelphia and the shore. Into the midst of this
powerful armament Decatur had to go with his little vessel of sixty tons,
carrying four small guns and having a crew of seventy-five men.</p>
<p>The Americans, however, were entirely undismayed by the odds against them,
and at seven o'clock Decatur went into the harbor between the reef and
shoal which formed its mouth. He steered on steadily toward the
Philadelphia, the breeze getting constantly lighter, and by half-past nine
was within two hundred yards of the frigate. As they approached Decatur
stood at the helm with the pilot, only two or three men showing on deck
and the rest of the crew lying hidden under the bulwarks. In this way he
drifted to within nearly twenty yards of the Philadelphia. The suspicions
of the Tripolitans, however, were not aroused, and when they hailed the
Intrepid, the pilot answered that they had lost their anchors in a gale,
and asked that they might run a warp to the frigate and ride by her. While
the talk went on the Intrepid's boat shoved off with the rope, and pulling
to the fore-chains of the Philadelphia, made the line fast. A few of the
crew then began to haul on the lines, and thus the Intrepid was drawn
gradually toward the frigate.</p>
<p>The suspicions of the Tripolitans were now at last awakened. They raised
the cry of "Americanos!" and ordered off the Intrepid, but it was too
late. As the vessels came in contact, Decatur sprang up the main chains of
the Philadelphia, calling out the order to board. He was rapidly followed
by his officers and men, and as they swarmed over the rails and came upon
the deck, the Tripolitan crew gathered, panic-stricken, in a confused mass
on the forecastle. Decatur waited a moment until his men were behind him,
and then, placing himself at their head, drew his sword and rushed upon
the Tripolitans. There was a very short struggle, and the Tripolitans,
crowded together, terrified and surprised, were cut down or driven
overboard. In five minutes the ship was cleared of the enemy.</p>
<p>Decatur would have liked to have taken the Philadelphia out of the harbor,
but that was impossible. He therefore gave orders to burn the ship, and
his men, who had been thoroughly instructed in what they were to do,
dispersed into all parts of the frigate with the combustibles which had
been prepared, and in a few minutes, so well and quickly was the work
done, the flames broke out in all parts of the Philadelphia. As soon as
this was effected the order was given to return to the Intrepid. Without
confusion the men obeyed. It was a moment of great danger, for fire was
breaking out on all sides, and the Intrepid herself, filled as she was
with powder and combustibles, was in great peril of sudden destruction.
The rapidity of Decatur's movements, however, saved everything. The cables
were cut, the sweeps got out, and the Intrepid drew rapidly away from the
burning frigate. It was a magnificent sight as the flames burst out over
the Philadephia and ran rapidly and fiercely up the masts and rigging. As
her guns became heated they were discharged, one battery pouring its shots
into the town. Finally the cables parted, and then the Philadelphia, a
mass of flames, drifted across the harbor, and blew up. Meantime the
batteries of the shipping and the castle had been turned upon the
Intrepid, but although the shot struck all around her, she escaped
successfully with only one shot through her mainsail, and, joining the
Siren, bore away.</p>
<p>This successful attack was carried through by the cool courage of Decatur
and the admirable discipline of his men. The hazard was very great, the
odds were very heavy, and everything depended on the nerve with which the
attack was made and the completeness of the surprise. Nothing miscarried,
and no success could have been more complete. Nelson, at that time in the
Mediterranean, and the best judge of a naval exploit as well as the
greatest naval commander who has ever lived, pronounced it "the most bold
and daring act of the age." We meet no single feat exactly like it in our
own naval history, brilliant as that has been, until we come to Cushing's
destruction of the Albemarle in the war of the rebellion. In the years
that have elapsed, and among the great events that have occurred since
that time, Decatur's burning of the Philadephia has been well-nigh
forgotten; but it is one of those feats of arms which illustrate the high
courage of American seamen, and which ought always to be remembered.</p>
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