On the Joint
Resolution tendering the thanks of Congress to Commodore Foote and his officers
and men.
The joint resolution is as follows:
Be it resolved by the
Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress
assembled, That the thanks of Congress and of the American people are due,
and are hereby tendered to Captain A. H. Foote, of the United States Navy, and
to the officers and men of the western flotilla under his command, for the
great gallantry exhibited by them in the attacks upon Forts Henry and Donelson,
for their efficiency in opening the Tennessee, Cumberland, and Mississippi
rivers to the pursuits of lawful commerce and for their unwavering devotion to
the cause of the country in the midst of the greatest difficulties and dangers.
Sec. 2. And be it further resolved, That the
President of the United States be requested to cause this resolution to be
communicated to Captain Foote, and through him to the officers and men under
his command.
Mr. GRIMES. Mr.
President, I conceive it to be my duty, and it certainly is a great pleasure to
be, to call the special attention of the Senate to the achievements of the
newly created naval flotilla on the western waters, and to the gallant part
borne by its officers and men against the armed rebels in Kentucky and
Tennessee. Surely no one could more
properly be proud of the deeds of our Army
in that quarter than a Senator from Iowa.
Yet, I know that whatever adds to the glory of our Navy in the recent
conflicts in the West, adds also to the glory of the Army, and that the two
branches of the service have been and are so conjoined that no rivalry ought to
exist between them, except a virtuous emulation in the performance of patriotic
duty. No examples can be found in the
history of any country of more important results attained in an equal time, in
an untried field of naval enterprise, than those we have lately witnessed on
the Ohio, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Cumberland rivers; and I feel assured
that the successes that have thus far been achieved, will be surpassed by the
same forces whenever they can find an enemy with whom to cope between Cairo and
New Orleans.
On the 16th day of May last, Commander John Rodgers was ordered
by the Secretary of the Navy to proceed to Cincinnati and to purchase or
commence the construction of several gunboats for service on the western
rivers. Under his auspices the three
boats, Taylor, Lexington and Conestoga, were purchased and fitted up for war
purposes. They were put in commission
and reached Cairo, after some delay arising from the low stage of water on the
Ohio river, on the 12th of August, Commander Rodgers taking command of the
Taylor, and assigning Commander Stembel to the Lexington and Lieutenant Phelps
to the Conestoga. The Taylor carried
seven guns, of large caliber, the Lexington six, and the Conestoga four. Here was the beginning of the western
flotilla. We all remember the
unfavorable criticisms indulged in when these three stern-wheel steamers, with
oak casings, arrived at that military post.
Some said they would be shake to pieces by the recoil of their own guns’
others that they would be speedily sunk by the shore guns of the rebels; while
not a few were alarmed by visions of Hollins’ ram butting them to pieces with
impunity. From the day they reached
their destinations to the present no rebel craft has shown itself ten miles
above Columbus and no rebel force of any
description has harbored on the two rivers in proximity which could be deemed
threatening to their navigation or to the two cities of St. Louis and
Cairo. A few experimental trips
dispelled all doubts of their efficiency; and when the people became assured
that they would do the work they were intended for, all fear of rebel incursion
into any of the northwester States, other than Missouri, was also
dispelled. A band of Jefferson Thompson’s
robbers did, indeed, make a demonstration of crossing the Mississippi river, in
August last, from the town of Commerce, Missouri; but at the first intimation
that the gunboats were coming, they fled with what booty they could lay their
hands on, pillaged impartially from friends and foes on the Missouri shore. The boon of security to the people of the
northwestern States is a debt due, in no small degree, to these wooden
gunboats, for however numerous and brave
our armies, it would have been impossible with them alone to have guarded all
points on our river line. Thus, our people
were not only protected from danger of invasion but they were enabled to give
all their time and energies to preparation for those offensive movements which
have reclaimed so much important territory from the domination of the enemy.
On the 23d of September, Commander Rodgers was detached from
service in the West, and Capt. A. H. Foote was ordered to take command as flag
officer. Since that time the following
boats, with iron-clad bows, have been built or prepared for service, and added
to the flotilla under his command; St. Louis, thirteen guns, Lieut. Paulding;
Carondelet, thirteen guns, Commander Walk; Pittsburg, thirteen guns, Lieut.
Thompson; Louisville, thirteen guns, Commander Dove; Cincinnati, thirteen guns,
Commander Stembel; Essex, five guns, Commander Porter; Mound City, thirteen
guns.
The first engagement of the gunboats with the enemy took place
on the 9th of September at Lucas Bend, in the Mississippi river, a short
distance above, and in full view of the rebel stronghold at Columbus. In that engagement, the Lexington, Commander
Stembel, and the Conestoga, Lieut. Phelps, silenced two shore batteries,
dispersed a large body of rebel Cavalry, and so disabled the rebel gunboat
Yankee that she has not been heard of since.
On the 29th of October, the Conestoga, Lieut. Phelps,
proceeded with three companies of Illinois volunteers, sixty-two miles up the
Tennessee river to Eddyville, Kentucky, where they jointly attacked and routed
a rebel encampment, bringing away their horses, arms, camp equipage, and negro
slaves.
There could hardly have been an occasion where the presence
of an efficient naval support was more necessary than at the battle of Belmont,
fought on the 7th day of November last; and there has been no conflict during
the war where this support, when finally called into requisition, was more
effectively and opportunely rendered.
Nothing but the well directed fire of grape and canister from the guns
of the Taylor and Lexington saved our land forces from being utterly cut to
pieces while retiring on board their transports. Every effort of the enemy to bring his
artillery to bear on our columns was defeated by the storm of iron that
assailed him from the boats. His pieces
were dismounted and his horses and men swept down as fast as they were placed
in position.
A great [deal] has been said about the origin of the
proposition to take possession of the Tennessee river. The credit of originating the idea of a
military campaign in that direction has been claimed, first by one, and then
for another military commander. I desire
that impartial justice should be done to every man; and acting upon the
intention to do justice, I must be permitted to say, that so far as I can
learn, the project of turning the enemy’s flanks by penetrating the Tennessee
and Cumberland rivers, originated with Commodore Foote. The great rise of water in those rivers was
providential, and with the quick eye of military genius he saw at once the
advantage that it might secure to our arms.
Accordingly he sent to Gen. Halleck, at St. Louis the following
dispatch:
CAIRO, January 28,
1862.
General Grant and myself are of the opinion that Fort Henry
and the Tennessee river can be carried with four iron-clad gunboats and troops,
and be permanently occupied. Have we
your authority to move for that purpose when ready?
A. H. FOOTE.
To this despatch no reply was vouchsafed, but an order was
subsequently sent to General Grant to proceed up the Tennessee river with his
troops under convoy of the armed flotilla, and attack Fort Henry, directing
General Grant to show to Commodore
Foote his orders to this effect.
Commodore Foote was at once ready for the expedition, and advised the
Department to that effect, in the following despatch:
PADUCAH, February 3,
1862.
SIR:– I have the honor to inform you that I left Cairo
yesterday with this vessel, having ordered the armored gunboats Essex,
Carondolet, Cincinnati and St. Louis to precede me to Paducah, and arrived here
last evening.
To-day I propose ascending the Tennessee river with four new
armored boats and the old gunboats Taylor, Conestoga and Lexington, in convoy
of the troops under General Grant, for the purpose of conjointly attacking and
occupying Fort Henry and the railroad bridge connecting Bowling Green with Columbus. The transports have not yet arrived, although
expected last night from Cairo, which causes detention, while in the mean time,
unfortunately the river is falling. I am
ready with seven gunboats to act offensively whenever the Army is in condition
to advance, and have every confidence, under God, that we shall be able to
silence the guns at Fort Henry and its surroundings, notwithstanding I have
been obliged, for want of men, to take from the five boats remaining at Cairo
all the men except a sufficient number to man one gunboat for the protection of
that important post.
I have Commander Kitly, as senior officer in charge of the
guns and mortar boats. It is peculiarly
unfortunate that we have not been able to obtain men for the flotilla, as they
only are wanting to enable me to have at this moment, eleven full-manned
instead of seven partially-manned gunboats ready for efficient operations at
any point. The volunteers for the Army
to go in the gunboats exceed the number of men required; but the derangement of
companies and regiments in permitting them to leave, as the reason assigned for
not more than fifty of the number having been thus far transferred to the flotilla.
I inclose a copy of my orders to the Commanders of the
gunboats, in anticipation of the attack on Fort Henry; also a copy of the
orders to Lieutenant Commanding Phelps, who will have more especial charge of
the old gunboats, and operate in a less exposed condition than the armored
boats.
I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your obedient
servant,
A. H. FOOTE, Flag
Officer,
Com’g Naval Forces on
the Western Waters.
Hon. GIDEON WELLES.
Sec’y of the Navy, Washington, D. C.
P. S. – Several transports
with the troops have just arrived. A. H.
F.
I proceed up the Tennessee early in the morning, and there
make the Cincinnati my flagship. A. H.
F.
On the preceding day he had issued the following order to
Lieutenant Phelps:
[Special Orders, No. 3.]
UNITED STATES GUNBOAT
TAYLOR,
PADUCAH, February 2,
1862.
Lieutenant Commanding Phelps, will, as soon as the fort
shall have surrendered, and upon signal from the flag ship, proceed with the
Conestoga, Taylor, and Lexington, up the river to where the railroad bridge
crosses, and if the army shall not already have got possession, he will destroy
so much of the track as will entirely prevent its use by the rebels.
He will then proceed as far up the river as the stage of the
water will admit, and capture the enemy’s gunboats and other vessels which
might prove available to the enemy.
A. H. FOOTE, Flag
Officer,
Command’g Naval Forces
on Western Waters.
The fleet, consisting of the iron-clad boats, Essex,
Carondelet, Cincinnati, and St. Louis, and the three wooden boats Taylor,
Lexington, and Conestoga proceeded to Fort Henry and reduced it in one hour and
twenty minutes, Commodore Foote being, as is his wont, in the forefront of the
battle. It appears from the order to
Lieutenant Phelps, (which that gallant officer promptly executed,) that
Commodore Foot knew before leaving Paducah that he should take Fort Henry, no
matter what might be the force or the resistance he should meet there. – He was
thoroughly inspired by the great idea of victory. The contingency of failure did not enter into
his calculations. He, therefore,
addressed himself to plans for reaping the fruits of victory, rather than to
pans for repairing the consequences of defeat.
It will be observed from the foregoing letter to the Secretary of the
Navy written before the battle of Fort Henry, that the efficiency of the
flotilla was much impaired by the want of seamen, or by a neglect in some
quarter to have those transferred from the military service who had been
selected for that purpose.
After reducing Fort Henry and sweeping the Tennessee river
as far up as Florence, in Alabama, Commodore Foote returned to Cairo to prepare
the mortar boats for operations against Fort Donelson. He was aware of the formidable character of
the rebel works at Donelson, and he desired to delay a few days to complete the
mortar boats, by which he believed the garrison, however extensive, could be
shelled out without much loss of life on our side. General Halleck believed an immediate attack
to be a military necessity. In this, I
doubt not, he was right, and I only refer to it to show that the crippled
condition of the fleet and the heavy loss of life on our side are not to be attributed
to rashness or bad management on the part of the flag officer. Of the gallant attack on Fort Donelson no one
need be reminded. Subjected, as our
vessels were, to a long-continued and hot fire of three rebel batteries at four
hundred yards’ distance, they continued the fight for one hour and thirty
minutes, and not until the wheel of one and the tiller ropes of another of his
boats were shot away, did the well managed guns of the commodore cease to scatter
death and consternation among the foes of this country. Although wounded himself, and his gunboats
crippled, but with the glory of the combat on his brown, he indulged in no repinings
for his personal misfortunes or laudations of his successes; but like a true
Christian hero, he thought only of his men.
In a letter written the morning after the battle to a friend, he said:
“While I hope ever to rely on Him who controls all things,
and to say from the heart, ‘Not unto us, but unto Thee, O Lord, belongs the
glory,’ yet I feel sadly at the result of our attack on Fort Donelson. To see the brave officers and men who say
they will go wherever I lead them fall by my side, makes me feel sad to lead
them to almost certain death.”
But he obeyed what was believed to be the military necessity
of the situation.
The Senator from Massachusetts nearest me has this morning
kindly furnished me with a letter from a trustworthy friend of his who has from
the beginning been with the army of the West, from which I am permitted to read
the following extracts:
“When Fort Henry surrendered, the gate was opened by which
the rebellion will be finally and utterly crushed. In a few days Com. Foote will open the
Mississippi, provided he is not hampered, and also provided he is properly
supported by Government. He has done a
great work for his country – a work which, I am sorry to say, has not been
properly appreciated. He has improvised
a navy with almost insurmountable obstacles against him. I see it stated in the papers that the
gunboats did but little service at Donelson, which is a monstrous mistake. The silenced nearly all the enemy’s guns, and
had not the wheel of one boat and the tiller ropes of another been shot away,
in fifteen minutes more the batteries would have been flanked and the entire
rebel army exposed to the broadsides of the fleet. He would have mowed them down like grass.” * * * * * * *
“As it was, he made the work of the army in the fight of
Saturday much easier than it would otherwise have been. Several of the Mississippi officers
(prisoners) informed me that the shells of the gunboats had a demoralizing
effect upon their men. The Memphis
Appeal sys it dispirited them.” * * *
* “I have had a fair opportunity to
observe the operations of both army and navy, and I can say with emphasis that
there are no more self-denying, patriotic hard working, faithful men than the
flag officer and his captains, Stembel, Pennock, Phelps, and others.” * * * *
“I make these statements from my own sense of justice and honor, and not
from any man’s prompting or request.”
The next movement of Commodore Foote with his floatilla, was
to take possession of Clarksville, where he arrived on the 19th day of February,
and issued his proclamation to the inhabitants three days before the arrival of
the land forces, though that fact, from some unexplained cause, nowhere appears
in the official reports of the military commander of that department.
On the 21st of February, 1862, Commodore Foote telegraphed
to General Cullum, the chief of General Halleck’s staff, then at Cairo, as
follows:
PADUCAH, February 21,
1862.
General CULLUM, Cairo:
General Grant and myself consider this a good time to move
on Nashville; six mortar boats and two iron-clad steamers can precede the
troops and shell the forts. We were
about to moving for this purpose when General Grant, to my astonishment, received
a telegram from General Halleck, “not to let the gunboats go higher than
Clarksville;” no telegram sent to me.
The Cumberland is in a good stage of water and General Grant
and I believe that we can take Nashville.
Please ask General Halleck if we shall do it. We will talk per telegraph – Captain Phelps
representing me in the office as I am still on crutches.
A. H. FOOTE, Flag
Officer.
It may be that there was some great military reason why
General Grant was directed “not to let the gunboats go higher than Clarksville,”
but up to this time it is wholly unappreciable by the public. Had they been permitted to go, as was
proposed by Commodore Foote, Nashville would undoubtedly have capitulated some
days earlier than it did, and an immense amount of rebel stores been captured,
which were destroyed or removed before the army reached there, the value of
which has been estimated at $2,000,000, and would probably have intercepted a
part of the rebel Johnston’s army.
I ought not to omit to mention the gallant attack by a part
of the Western flotilla under Lieutenant Gwinn, upon the enemy at Pittsburg on
the Tennessee river, where fifteen hundred rebel infantry and cavalry were
completely routed, with a loss of twenty killed and one hundred wounded.
The next fact of importance in the campaign at the West, and
indeed the most important of all, was the evacuation of Columbus. Why was this stronghold, which cost so much
labor and expense, abandoned without firing a shot? It is not for me to underrate the advantages
of position secured by the valor of our troops at Fort Donelson; yet I undertake
to say, from the knowledge I have been able to obtain of the defenses of
Columbus, that there was nothing in the mere fact of the capture of Donelson
and Nashville, and exclusive of our command of the river, which need have
caused the evacuation except after a long and bloody siege. From the letter of a correspondent writing on
the spot, I obtain the information that the forts at Columbus
“Were so located and construct as to be almost impregnable
to an assault by storm. The capture of
one by no means involved the capture of the balance. A fresh assault must be made in each
instance. At the main fort, and many of
the earthworks, stockades, crossed the trenches, exposing the assaulting party
to a storm of bullets from riflemen firing through loop-holes. Every ravine and ditch was thoroughly
protected, and the various approaches of the river commanded for a long
distance in every direction. It is
sufficient to say, that an unusually strong natural position was seized upon,
and so improved by rare engineering skill, that the equal of the Columbus
fortifications, in extent and perfection of detail combined, can hardly be
found in the United States.”
Another correspondent, describing the fortifications after
the evacuation says:
“The fortifications were strong – perhaps stronger than any
other in the South – but they were injudiciously constructed, and could not
have stood an hour’s bombardment by the gunboats and mortar fleet. The water battery stood out in such relief from
the bluff that a well-directed mortar shell would have buried it under a
hundred tons of earth from above. There
were no casemates to protect the artillery from the galling fire of seven
gunboats; and how long could men, unsheltered, have stood a continuous hail
from twenty-one guns, throwing eight-inch shell?”
It is well understood that Commodore Foote was opposed to
giving the rebels an opportunity to leave Columbus. He felt sure of his ability, with his gun and
mortar boats, to shell them into a speedy surrender, but was compelled to give
way to counsels of military commanders.
When we couple the strategic position acquired by our occupation
of the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers with the completion of the mortar boats
and the absolute command of the river given us by the armored gunboats, there
remains no mystery about the evacuation of Columbus. The two arms of the public service are
equally entitled to the credit of frightening the rebels from their strongest
position on the Mississippi river, if not the strongest in their whole military
jurisdiction.
Yesterday the intelligence reached us that the western floatilla,
composed of ten gunboats and ten mortar boats had started for new scenes of
conflict and to achieve, I doubt not, new and greater triumphs. The country is assured that whatever can be
accomplished by gallantry and nautical experience will be performed by
Commodore Foote and the brave officers and men under his command. We await the announcement of new victories.
I have thought it proper, Mr. President, as a western
Senator, in some degree charged with the examination of naval affairs by this
body, to bear this testimony to the worth of that branch of the public service
in the western campaign, and to the noble deeds of the flag officer in that
command. On one can over-estimate their
services to the country, and to the Northwest in particular; and in the name of
that great section and of the whole country I thank them one and all, officers
and men.
But I would avail myself of this occasion to accomplish
another purpose. I am anxious that the
people of this entire country may feel that the exploits of the Navy wherever
performed are their exploits, that its glory, and that while they are taxing
themselves to support it, they are supporting the right arm of the national
defense. I desire the citizen of the
most remote frontier to feel that he is equally protected and equally honored
by the brave deeds of our naval officers with the citizen of the Atlantic
coast. I wish the men of Iowa and
Minnesota to know that they are as effectually defended in their liberties at
home and in their honor abroad, by the achievements of Du Pont and Goldsborough
and Stringham and Foote on the water, as they can be by any victories won by
our armies on the land.
Mr. President, ours must be a great maritime nation. Heaven has ordained that it should be such,
and we could not make it otherwise if would.
We have a coast, both on the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, which, with
its numerous indentations, is many thousand miles in extent, occupied by a
hardy, nautical population, and flanked on either side by soils and climates
that furnish the most valuable productions of the globe, and which must be
supplied to other nations. On the north
we have a succession of great lakes already bearing upon their bosoms a
registered commercial tonnage of nearly half a million, and navigated by a race
of daring, industrious, northern seamen.
Unlike any other maritime nation, ours is traversed by navigable rivers,
thousands of miles in length, floating an inland commerce unequalled by that of
any other country in the world, except, possibly, that of China, and capable of
navigation by armed vessels of great capacity.
With a country of such extent, a soil and climate furnishing such productions,
and a population along our ocean, gulf, bay, lake and river coasts, accustomed
to navigation, who does not see that ours must, from the very necessities of
our geographical position, and the conformation of our continent, become a
great commercial people? Our products
must be borne to remote nations in our own ships, navigated by our own seamen,
and protected wherever they may go by our vessels of war.
I know not with whom originated the phrase that the “Navy is
the right arm of the public defense;” but I know that a truer sentiment was
never uttered. In my conviction it will
always be in this country the most efficient and far least dangerous arm of the
public service by which to maintain the national integrity and to defend the
national honor. History teaches us that
every nation that has depended upon a navy for protection has been
comparatively free by the side of those which placed their reliance upon
armies. I need not go back to antiquity
to prove this. I point to Holland and
England in modern times. The former,
while she continued to be the greatest naval power on earth, was the freest
Government on earth, and only began to be shorn of her liberties and of her
territory when she neglected to maintain her fleets. – England, the most liberal
all Governments save our own, is in no small degree indebted for her present position
to the fact that she maintains only a small military force in the British
Islands, and relies upon her wooden walls as a means of attack and
defense. She puts no faith in large
standing armies, and will not until her people shall be prepared to surrender
their freedom. With her garrisoned
possessions encircling the globe, her entire military establishment does not
exceed one hundred and twenty thousand men.
France, Austria, Russia, Prussia maintain large standing armies on their
soil; and in those countries the liberties of the people is measured by the
will of the sovereign. The freedom they
enjoy is the gratuity of the emperors and kings; the servitude they endure is
enforced by the presence of standing armies.
The people of this country can never accept the rights which they enjoy
as the gift of any being inferior to their creator.
I do not believe that anybody but the public enemy has had
anything to fear from the numerous and well appointed armies we have raised,
yet no one of us is prepared to say that with an army much longer isolated from
home scenes and home ideas, concentrated in large bodies, and taught the duty
of most implicit obedience, danger to our free institutions may not arise. No such danger can arise from the existence
of a navy, however, large or however commanded.
Seamen are cosmopolitans. Always
employed and generally afloat, they never become, as armies sometimes do, as
dangerous to friends in time of peace as to enemies in time of war.
I might go on and show that situated as all of our large
cities are, upon arms of the sea or upon navigable rivers, the Navy might be
made more efficient in suppressing domestic insurrections, as well as in
repelling a foreign invasion, than the Army.
I might show, too, that, notwithstanding what is said by professed
statisticians, the support of a navy is less expensive, in comparison with the
service it renders to a maritime nation, than that of an army; but I shall not
detain the Senate by attempting to enter upon such an exposition at this time.
As I said at the outset, Mr. President, my purpose in rising
to address the Senate at this time was to call the attention of the country to
the successful operations of the western flotilla; but I cannot refrain from
alluding, for one moment before I close, to the success of our Navy elsewhere
in this war. The whole south-western
Atlantic coast has been swept by the fleet of the gallant Du Pont, and is now
effectually held by both and inside and outside blockade. The enemy have been driven from the waters of
North Carolina by Goldsborough, their whole navy in that quarter destroyed, and
their coast towns occupied. Such
progress has been made in the Gulf of Mexico, that I venture to predict that in
a few days at furthest intelligence will reach us that the forts at the mouth
of the Mississippi river have been captured, and that Farragut and Porter are
now or soon will be in possession of New Orleans. But the startling events that have recently
occurred in Hampton Roads attract, as they ought, the attention of all. It would be well for us to reflect upon what
those events have clearly demonstrated. They
are – first, that in modern naval warfare, wooden sailing vessels of war are perfectly
harmless and helpless; second, that the strongest stone fortifications can be
no obstruction to the entrance of iron clad vessels of war into any of our
harbors, and that one or two such vessels, unopposed by vessels of a similar
character can hold any commercial city on the continent at their mercy; third,
that we can now commence the creation of a proper navy upon a footing of
comparative equality with all of the naval Powers of the world.
Mr. President, no man sympathizes with the relatives and
friends of the gallant dead who perished on the Congress and Cumberland more
deeply that I do. Perhaps, however their
loss was necessary to teach us that our true path of duty to the country. Let us not suffer more valuable lives to be periled
upon such worthless vessels; and while we deplore the loss of so many brave
men, let us rejoice that so many more are left to the service who are willing
to do and die for their country. Especially
let us give thanks for the brilliant example of courage, seamanship, and
patriotism furnished to the country and to the world by that matchless officer,
Lieutenant John L Worden, and the officers and men under his command on board
the Monitor. In that unexampled
engagement of Sunday last, after a terribly suffocating and dangerous passage
from New York, without having slept, with an undrilled crew and handling an
untried experiment, Lieut. Worden and his crew performed prodigies of skill and
valor that will render all on board the Monitor immortal. They will be immortal not for their valor
alone. Who shall undertake to estimate
the influence that ballet will exert upon all of the maritime powers of the
earth? Who shall undertake to tell the
number of homes to which the news of its successful result carried quiet on
that eventual evening, which had been for hours disturbed by the most
distracting fears? Is it too much to say
that it rescued our commerce and our commercial cities from ravage, and in one
hour completely revolutionized all systems of naval architecture and naval
warfare? Captain Ericsson, too, may well
be proud of the place his name will henceforth occupy in the history of
nautical science, and we may well be proud that the country of our birth is the
country of his adoption.
But, Mr. President, while I would thus honor the gallant
living, I would bear my tribute of affectionate respect for the memory of the
heroic dead who fell in the engagement in Hampton Roads. Let the remembrance of that brave young
officer, whose obsequies are now being performed in another part of this city,
who, when his vessel was sinking beneath his feet, replied to a summons to
surrender, that he would never give up the flag [entrusted] to his keeping, and
the next moment met death with composure, be cherished by his countrymen. – The
name of Smith, already illustrious in the annals of the American Navy, will be
added to the bright galaxy of those who have freely laid down their lives at
the call of their country.
Mr. President, the nation has cause to be proud of the Navy;
let it be honored and maintained.
– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye,
Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, March 22, 1862, p. 1