Thursday, June 6, 2019

C.S.S. SHENANDOAH AND CAPTAIN WADDELL'S WORLD CRUISE


CONFEDERATE STEAMSHIP SHENANDOAH

CAPTAIN WADDELL'S CRUISE

Captain James Iredell Waddell, a daring Carolina sailor, the commander of the
C.S. S. Shenandoah was the only mariner to carry the flag of the Confereracy around the world. The facts of Captain Waddell's cruise were gathered by Captain S. A. Ashe, who
as a 1858 Naval Academy Midshipman, sailed under Lieuttenant Waddell and learned
what a good officer and gentleman he was and was proud of him as a North Carolinian.
The story as follows was given in Wilmington, Delaware in 1904 by Captain Ashe.

James Iredell Waddell, was born July 13, 1824, to Francis Nash and Elizabeth
Davis Moore Waddell .
At age 17 Waddell received an appointment as midshipman in the U. S. Navy,
ordered to vessel in Norfolk. There, almost before he had got his uniform to fit, his fighting
blood showed. An older midshipman was offensive to him and Waddell called him to
the field of honor where he received a wound to the hip and caused him to limp a little through life. A Navy record told he was on leave to recover from the effects of a duel.
Later, when the Navy was going to steam, a science was added, famous ship
masters became obslete, machines, turrets and armor plate were to supplant sails and
6 pounder's, Waddell's inspirations led him to a challenge with an older officer to mortal combat, made him sort of a hero to the younger officers, learning to fight at a longer distance and the importance of armor protection.
In 1848, passing his examinations, he was put on duty at the Observatory in Washington for three tears, then assigned to a practice ship at Annapolis, then to vessel
Germantown, a ship named to commemorate the battle in which his distinguished grandfather
received a mortal wound.
Retuning from a cruise as a Naval Officer August 1861 he tendered his resignation
which was refused. On a dark and stormy night he and a brother in law, Mr. Inglehart,
shipped as oystermen on an oyster boat out into the Chesapeake avoiding capture made
good their way to Dixie. Waddell , now a Confederate Officer, was assigned to disrupt American shipping. There not being many ships on the Atlantic to fly an American flag the
Confederates wanted to destroy an American whaling fleet active in the Pacific and selected
Lieutenant Waddell to do so.
At this time a Confederate representative in Europe, Captain Bullock, had purchased
The Sea King which was large and could carry a large group of men , sailed well under canvas, had steam screw able to raise out of water when not in use. 1864 Waddell was ordered to Madeira to take command of the Sea King, fly the Confererate flag, refit and provision her, then rename and christened her, The Shenando . Waddell had trouble finding a crew to serve within conditions not to be
married and to become Confederates so he ended up with half a crew of 23 men. Officers
were obliged to work with the crew and did so. The Shenandoah entered her career with the flag of the South to the breeze , taking her place as a Confederate cruiser afloat duly
commissioned on her ocean home with noble, brave men.
The Shenandoah was a composite vessel, frame of iron, hull of teak six inches thick, steam speed of 9 mph and under sail 15 mph. She had a battery of four 8 inch guns smooth
bore , two rifle bore Whitworth 2 pounders and two 12 ponders


The Shenandoah made a prize on her first chase and later prizes furnished 20 more
seamen, bringing the crew and officers to 62 man. 5th of December they made Tristam da
Canha, near St. Helena, and passed to the east of Africa, reaching Melbourne Australa, on
January 25 1865. Here they landed prisoners, refitted, left February 18. After leaving
sight of harbor, a number of men who had stowed aboard came on deck and enlisted to the crew, now 114 . Sailing northward with many adventures and capturing many prizes they were off the shores of Kamakatka in May. The farther north they sailed the longer the days
became which was more and more interesting to the crew. They went as far as Gifinski and
Transk Bay but unable to enter for the15 foot thick ice. . More captures were made and the
smoke of the burning vessels made landmarks against the sky.
On June 23 midsummer Waddell captured two whalers which had news of Grant and Lee and Appomattox, not good news for one in the Polar Ocean cleaning up the whaling
ships, twenty four in the next six days.
June 29 the Confederate flag was flying in the Artic Ocean and on that day Waddell
turned away from the pole and passed southward through the Bering Strait, July 5 they passed
Aleutian Islands and the last land Shenandoah would see for days. August 3, in N latitude
16, 122 west longitude Shenadoah gave chase to a sailing bark and overtook the British
Harraconta, 13 days from San Francisco, to Liverpool, and asked news of the Captain about the war and told the war was over and the Shenandoah was being searched for and would be considered pirates when caught. Our first duty was to suspend hostilities and to proclaim
such suspension. An entry was made in the log book 5 August 1885 Shenandoah off the coast of Mexico “Having receivd intelligence by the bark Barraconta of the Confederate government's overthrow, all attempts to destroy shipping or property of the United State will cease this date. First Lieutenant W. C. Whittle has received orders to disarm the ship and its crew. The next step was to seek asylum with any country strong enough to see we have a full and fair trial. Waddell , who now had no authority since his commission expired with the
end of the Confederacy, set sail to England with his well disciplined crew.
The 15th September, running 15 mph , Shenandoah turned Cape Horn and set her
course northward for Liverpool and exchanged no signals. Crossing the equator for the forth time on October 11, 1865, The afternoon of October 25, 500 miles south of the
Azores, they sighted a Federal cruiser and crossed courses with her to find she was in waiting for Shenandoah an her crew. Capt Waddell declared a situation of anxious
suspense, and kept the course. As they passed darkness of the night prevented any signals
and when 4 miles apart sailed past , set a southward course and ordered full steam running
15 miles east, then north 100 miles, when a southwest wind blew her within 700 miles
of Liverpool . The calm left Shenandoah in sight of 11 sails all day long as she remained
under sail until dark when all sails were furled and she went under steam and pushed her
way toward the desired haven at Liverpool. November 5th Shenandoah entered St. Georges
Channel, 122 days from the Aleutian's with out sight of land and saw the beacon right where it was supposed to be. This was a remarkable record of navigation. A pilot came aboard at
night and was informed of the character of the ship.
There was great satisfaction for our success reaching an European port and the
chief danger was over when on the 6th November 1865 Shenendoah steamed up the Mersey
bearing the Confederate flag. After anchoring, a British Officer boarded Shenandoah to
inform Captain Waddell the Confederacy was no more and the Confederate flag that had been around the world was lowered at 10 am, 6th November, 1865. The Shenandoah was then
given in charge of the British government.
For several days British and American officials were in correspondence regard the ship and its crew. November 8th, the crew was ordered to depart , the British turned Shenandoah over to United States authorities who in turn sold her to the Sultan of Zanzibar
and later lost at sea.
C.S.S. Shenandoah ran 58,000 miles during her thirteen month cruise and met with no
accident and did not drop anchor for eight months. She had destroyed more vessels than any other ship of war,
Captain Waddell lingered several years in Europe because of feelings of the United States government against him but in 1875 took command of a Pacific Mail Company steamer from San Francisco to Japan and Australia .
On one of his return voyages he had another chance to prove his seamanship abilities
when his ship struck an uncharted obstacle which had been thrown in the channel by a
recent earthquake about 13 miles from shore. The damage to the vessel left a fifty foot
hole which quickly flooded the vessel, he took personal control of 420 passengers, men, women and children , his crew members and prepared to abandon the sinking ship about 3 miles from shore. Captain Waddell was the last to leave the sinking vessel. No one was lost.
The admirable conduct of Captain Waddell won highest praise among the maritime
people of the world. After this incident he retired to live in Annapolis where the governor of Maryland chose him to master the Oyster Guard Boats of the Chesapeake to enforce Maryland's laws upon the fleet of the bays oystermen. It was at this job that he died, March
25, 1886 at the age of 62. Maryland's Legislature adjourned to do him honor. Old Dixie
soldiers under General George Stuart as Marshall marched to his grave with pallbearers
Captain Morris, General Bradley Johnson and other Confederates, an escort of honor led
by Colonel William Morris. The Maryland governor and State Officers participated. It was
a State Funeral, the only one accorded to a Confederate north of the Potomac River.

Abstract: The North Carolina Review, Richmond Times Dispatch, Sunday, September



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