<h2>THE LAST OF THE MONITOR</h2>
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<h2><SPAN name="THE_LAST_OF_THE_MONITOR" id="THE_LAST_OF_THE_MONITOR"></SPAN>THE LAST OF THE MONITOR</h2>
<p class='center'>III</p>
<p class='center'><i>By an eye-witness, Rear-Admiral E.W. Watson, U.S.N.</i></p>
<p>On the 29th of December, 1862, nine months after her memorable combat
with the <i>Merrimac</i>, the <i>Monitor</i>, Commander John P. Bankhead, left
Hampton Roads in tow of the <i>Rhode Island</i>, commanded by Captain Stephen
Decatur Trenchard, for Beaufort, North Carolina. The weather at the time
of starting looked favorable for the trip, but on the following day,
when nearing Cape Hatteras, the wind came out from the southeast and
gradually freshened until by evening it was blowing a moderate gale,
with a tolerably heavy sea running. It was soon seen that the <i>Monitor</i>
was making heavy weather of it, and the engines were slowed down, but
the course was still kept head to the wind and sea.</p>
<p>This was a mistake, for experience later on in towing other vessels of
her class proved that the safest way to handle them in heavy weather was
to let them lie in the trough of the sea, when the waves would wash over
their decks and the roll would not be excessive. The <i>Monitor</i> was
closely watched, all on board the <i>Rhode Island</i> feeling anxious for her
safety. Toward the end of the first watch—between 8 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> and
midnight—the signal of distress, a red lantern, was hoisted on the
<i>Monitor</i>, and, unknown to those on the <i>Rhode Island</i>, the hawser was
cut and the anchor of the <i>Monitor</i> let go.</p>
<p>The <i>Rhode Island</i> immediately stopped her engine, and three boats were
called away with an officer in charge of each, and were sent to take off
the <i>Monitor's</i> people. With the heavy sea running it was a difficult
matter to go alongside of her, and the first boat to reach her was
thrown by a wave upon the deck and a hole stove in her. The next wave
washed the boat off, and with considerable difficulty she took on board
as many of the men as in her leaky condition could make the return trip
safely.</p>
<p>When the boats came alongside of the <i>Monitor</i>, her captain and
executive officer went upon the deck and, clinging to the life-lines
with the waves washing over them, called to the crew to come down from
the turret and get into the boats, which they were reluctant to do at
first. Some were able to jump into the boats, and some landed in the
water and were hauled in. Seeing an old quartermaster with a large
bundle under his arm, the executive officer, thinking that it was his
clothes-bag, told him that that was no time to be trying to save his
effects. He said nothing, but threw it into the boat. When the bundle
was passed up over the side of the <i>Rhode Island</i> it proved to be a
little messenger-boy—probably the smallest and youngest one in the
service. The three boats were finally loaded and made their way back to
the ship.</p>
<p>In the mean while the <i>Rhode Island</i>, in backing her engines, had fouled
the hawser with her port paddle-wheel, and being directly to windward of
the <i>Monitor</i>, with her engines helpless, drifted down upon her. It
looked at one time as if she would strike the bow of the <i>Monitor</i>, but,
fortunately, she just missed it, and, scraping along her side, drifted
off to leeward.</p>
<p>Another boat was sent to bring off the remainder of the <i>Monitor's</i>
crew, but, being to leeward now, she could make only slow headway
against the seas, and before she got to her the men saw the <i>Monitor's</i>
light disappear, and knew that she had gone down. The hawser having
finally been cleared from the <i>Rhode Island's</i> wheel, she steamed around
searching for the boat, sending up rockets and burning blue lights to
show her position. When the day dawned nothing could be seen. After
hailing a passing government vessel and telling them to search for the
boat, the <i>Rhode Island</i> steamed with all speed for Fortress Monroe to
report the loss.</p>
<p>When the survivors of the ill-fated vessel were mustered on the deck of
the <i>Rhode Island</i>, four officers and twelve men were found missing, all
of them probably buried in an iron coffin in a watery grave about fifty
miles to the southward and eastward of Cape Hatteras Light.</p>
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<p>The missing boat and crew of the <i>Rhode Island</i> were found by that
vessel a week later safe in Beaufort, North Carolina. They had been
picked up by a schooner and taken into that port. The officer in charge
of the boat reported that in the early morning he had sighted a schooner
standing toward them, and had hoisted a black silk handkerchief
belonging to one of the crew on an oar as a signal of distress, but the
people in the schooner, evidently thinking them pirates who had come out
of some one of the inlets of the coast, turned tail and scudded away
from them. A second schooner, coming along soon after, was more
hospitable and took them aboard.</p>
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<h2>THE END</h2>
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