<SPAN name="THE_ALGERINE_PIRATES"></SPAN>
<h2>THE ALGERINE PIRATES.</h2>
<i>
Containing accounts of the cruelties and atrocities of the
Barbary Corsairs, with narratives of the expeditions sent against
them, and the final capture of Algiers by the French in
</i> 1830.
<p>That former den of pirates, the city of Algiers is situated on
the shores of a pretty deep bay, by which the northern coast of
Africa, is here indented, and may be said to form an irregular
triangular figure, the base line of which abuts on the sea, while
the apex is formed by the Cassaubah, or citadel, which answered the
double purpose of a fort to defend and awe the city, and a palace
for the habitation of the Dey and his court. The hill on which the
city is built, slopes rather rapidly upwards, so that every house
is visible from the sea, in consequence of which it was always sure
to suffer severely from a bombardment. The top of the hill has an
elevation of nearly five hundred feet, and exactly at this point is
built the citadel; the whole town lying between it and the sea. The
houses of Algiers have no roofs, but are all terminated by
terraces, which are constantly whitewashed; and as the exterior
walls, the fort, the batteries and the walls are similarly
beautified, the whole city, from a distance, looks not unlike a
vast chalk quarry opened on the side of a hill.</p>
<p>The fortifications towards the sea are of amasing strength, and
with the additions made since Lord Exmouth's attack, may be
considered as almost impregnable. They occupy the entire of a small
island, which lies a short distance in front of the city, to which
it is connected at one end by a magnificent mole of solid masonry,
while the other which commands the entrance of the port, is crowned
with a battery, bristling with cannon of immense calibre, which
would instantly sink any vessel which should now attempt to occupy
the station taken by the Queen Charlotte on that memorable
occasion.</p>
<p>On the land side, the defences are by no means of equal
strength, as they were always considered rather as a shelter
against an insurrectionary movement of the natives, than as
intended to repulse the regular attacks of a disciplined army. In
fact defences on this side would be of little use as the city is
completely commanded by different hills, particularly that on which
the Emperor's fort is built, and was obliged instantly to
capitulate, as soon as this latter had fallen into the hands of the
French, in 1830.</p>
<p>There are four gates; one opening on the mole, which is thence
called the marine gate, one near the citadel, which is termed the
new gate; and the other two, at the north and south sides of the
city, with the principal street running between them. All these
gates are strongly fortified, and outside the three land gates run
the remains of a ditch, which once surrounded the city, but is now
filled up except at these points. The streets of Algiers are all
crooked, and all narrow. The best are scarcely twelve feet in
breadth, and even half of this is occupied by the projections of
the shops, or the props placed to support the first stories of the
houses, which are generally made to advance beyond the lower,
insomuch that in many places a laden mule can scarcely pass. Of
public buildings, the most remarkable is the Cassaubah, or citadel,
the situation of which we have already mentioned. It is a huge,
heavy looking brick building, of a square shape, surrounded by high
and massive walls, and defended by fifty pieces of cannon, and some
mortars, so placed as equally to awe the city and country. The
apartments set apart for the habitation of the Dey and the ladies
of his harem, are described as extremely magnificent, and
abundantly supplied with marble pillars, fountains, mirrors,
carpets, ottomans, cushions, and other articles of oriental luxury;
but there are others no less valuable and curious, such as the
armory, furnished with weapons of every kind, of the finest
manufacture, and in the greatest abundance, the treasury,
containing not only a profusion of the precious metals, coined or
in ingots, but also diamonds, pearls, rubies, and other precious
stones of great value; and lastly, the store rooms of immense
extent, in which were piled up the richest silk stuffs, velvets,
brocades, together with wool, wax, sugar, iron, lead, sabre-blades,
gun barrels, and all the different productions of the Algerine
territories; for the Dey was not only the first robber but the
first merchant in his own dominions.</p>
<p>Next to the Cassaubah, the mole with the marine forts, presented
the handsomest and most imposing pile of buildings. The mole is no
less than one thousand three hundred feet in length, forming a
beautiful terrace walk, supported by arches, beneath which lay
splendid magazines, which the French found filled with spars, hemp,
cordage, cables, and all manner of marine stores. At the extremity
of the mole, lay the barracks of the Janissaries, entrusted with
the defence of the marine forts, and consisting of several small
separate chambers, in which they each slept on sheepskin mats,
while in the centre was a handsome coffee-room. The Bagnios were
the buildings, in which Europeans for a long time felt the most
interest, inasmuch as it was in these that the Christian slaves
taken by the corsairs were confined. For many years previous to the
French invasion, however, the number of prisoners had been so
trifling, that many of these terrific buildings had fallen to
decay, and presented, when the French army entered Algiers, little
more than piles of mouldering ruins. The inmates of the Bagnio when
taken by the French were the crews of two French brigs, which a
short time before had been wrecked off Cape Bingut, a few French
prisoners of war made during their advance, and about twenty Greek,
and Genoese sailors, who had been there for two years; in all about
one hundred and twenty. They represented their condition as bad,
though by no means so deplorable as it would have been in former
days. The prison was at first so close, that there was some danger
of suffocation, to avoid which the Turks had made holes in the
walls; but as they neglected to supply these with windows or
shutters of any kind, there was no means of excluding wind or rain,
from which consequently they often suffered.</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/442.jpg" alt="On board an Algerine corsair." height-obs="396" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4><i>On board an Algerine corsair.</i></h4>
We shall only trace these pirates back to about the year 1500, when
Selim, king of Algiers, being invaded by the Spaniards, at last
entreated the assistance of the famous corsair, Oruj Reis, better
known by his European name, Barbarossa, composed of two Italian
words, signifying <i>red beard</i>. Nothing could be more agreeable
than the number and hardihood of his naval exploits, had been such
an invitation to this ambitious robber, who elated by for some time
considering how he might best establish his power by land.
Accordingly, attended by five thousand picked men, he entered
Algiers, made himself master of the town, assassinated Selim, and
had himself proclaimed king in his stead; and thus was established
that nest of pirates, fresh swarms from which never ceased to annoy
Christian commerce and enslave Christian mariners, until its late
final destruction, by the French expedition in 1830.
<p>In a piratical career of many centuries, the countless thousands
who have been taken, enslaved, and perished in bondage by these
monsters should long ago have drawn upon them the united vengeance
of all Christendom. Many a youth of family and fortune, of delicate
constitution has been captured and sold in the slave market. His
labor through the long hot days would be to cleanse out the foul
bed of some large empty reservoir, where he would be made to strip,
and descending into the pond, bring up in his arms the black
stinking mud, heaped up and pressed against his bosom; or to labor
in drawing huge blocks of stone to build the mole; or in building
and repairing the fortifications, with numerous other painful and
disgusting tasks. The only food was a scanty supply of black bread,
and occasionally a few decayed olives, or sheep which had died from
some disorder. At night they were crowded into that most horrid of
prisons the Bagnio, to sleep on a little filthy straw, amidst the
most noisome stenches. Their limbs in chains, and often receiving
the lash. Occasionally an individual would be ransomed; when his
story would draw tears of pity from all who heard it. Ladies were
frequently taken by these monsters and treated in the most inhuman
manner. And sometimes whole families were enslaved. Numerous facts,
of the most heart-rending description are on record: but our limits
oblige us to be brief.</p>
<p>A Spanish lady, the wife of an officer, with her son, a youth of
fourteen, and her daughter, six years old, were taken in a Spanish
vessel by the Algerines. The barbarians treated her and both her
children with the greatest inhumanity. The eldest they kept in
chains; and the defenceless little one they wantonly treated so
ill, that the unhappy mother was often nearly deprived of her
reason at the blows her infant received from these wretches, who
plundered them of every thing. They kept them many days at sea on
hard and scanty fare, covered only with a few soiled rags; and in
this state brought them to Algiers. They had been long confined in
a dreadful dungeon in the Bagnio where the slaves are kept, when a
messenger was sent to the Aga, or Captain of the Bagnio, for a
female slave. It fortunately fell to the lot of the Spanish lady,
but at the instant when she was embracing her son, who was tearing
himself from his mother with haggard and disordered looks, to go to
his imperious drivers; and while in despair she gazed on her little
worn-out infant, she heard herself summoned to attend the guard of
the prison to a family that had sent for a female slave. She
obtained permission to take her little daughter with her. She
dreaded being refused, and sent back to the horrid dungeon she was
leaving where no difference was paid to rank, and slaves of all
conditions were huddled together. She went therefore prepared to
accept of anything short of these sufferings. She was refused, as
being in every respect opposite to the description of the person
sent for. At length her entreaties and tears prevailed; compassion
overruled every obstacle; and she, with her little girl, was
accepted. But there remained another difficulty; she had left her
son chained in the midst of that dungeon from which she had just
been rescued. Her kind patrons soon learned the cause of her
distress; but to send for the youth and treat him kindly, or in any
way above that of a common slave, must hazard the demand of so
large a ransom for him and his mother, as would forever preclude
the hope of liberty. He was, however, sent for, and the menial
offices they were both engaged to perform were only nominal. With
circumspection the whole family were sheltered in this manner for
three years; when the war with the Spaniards growing more
inveterate, the Algerines demanded the youth back to the Bagnio, to
work in common with the other slaves, in repairing the damages done
to the fortresses by the Spanish cannon. He was now compelled to
go, loaded with heavy stones, through the whole of the town; and at
almost every step he received dreadful blows, not being able to
hasten his pace from the great weight.</p>
<p>Overcome at last with ill usage, the delicacy of his form and
constitution gave way to the excessive labor, and he one morning
refused the orders of his master, or driver, to rise from the straw
on which he was stretched, declaring they might kill him if they
chose, for he would not even try to carry another load of stones.
Repeated messages had been sent from the Venetian consul's, where
his mother and sister were sheltered, to the Aga, to return him;
and when the Algerines found that they had absolutely reduced him
so near death, they thought it best to spare his life for the sake
of future ransom. They agreed, therefore, to let him return to the
Christians. His life was for some time despaired of; but through
the kind attention he received, he was rescued from the threatened
dissolution. His recovery was concealed, for fear of his being
demanded back to work; and a few months after, the Spanish peace of
1784 being concluded, a ransom was accepted by the Algerines for
this suffering family, and they were set at liberty.</p>
<p>These pirates in old times extended their depredations into the
Atlantic as far as the British Channel. They swarmed in the
Mediterranean, not only belonging to Algiers, but Tunis, and other
ports on the coast of Barbary. Their corsairs making descents on
the coasts of those countries which border on the Mediterranean,
pillaging the villages and carrying off the inhabitants into
slavery. The corsairs were vessels of different descriptions; some
large armed ships, and latterly frigates; others were row gallies
and the various craft used by the nations which navigate that sea,
and had been taken by them and added to their marine. Upon the
slaves being landed at Algiers they were marched to the Dey's or
Bashaw's palace, when he selected the number which according to law
belonged to him; and the rest were sold in the slave market to the
highest bidder. A moiety of the plunder, cargoes and vessels taken
also belonged to the Dey. Occasionally, a person by pretending to
renounce his religion, and turning Mahometan would have his
sufferings mitigated.</p>
<p>The most desperate attempts were sometimes made to effect an
escape from these ruthless monsters, which occasionally
succeeded.</p>
<p>In 1644 William Oakley and four companions escaped from Algiers,
in a most miraculous manner, in a canvas boat. There was at this
time an English clergyman, Mr. Sprat, in captivity, and the
wretched slaves had the privilege of meeting in a cellar, where he
would pray with them. Oakley had got into the good graces of his
master, and was allowed his time by giving his master two dollars a
month. He traded in tobacco and a few trifling articles, so that a
strict watch was not kept on his movements. He conceived the
project of making a canvas boat. He says I now first opened my
design to my comrades, informing them, that I had contrived the
model of a boat, which, being formed in pieces, and afterwards put
together, might be the means of our deliverance. They greedily
grasped at the prospect; but cooler reflection pointed out
difficulties innumerable: some of them started objections which
they thought insuperable, and these I endeavored to overrule.</p>
<p>We began our work in the cellar which had served for our
devotions, though it was not the sanctity of the place, but its
privacy, that induced us to this selection. We first provided a
piece of wood, twelve feet long, and, that it might escape
observation, it was cut in two, being jointed in the middle. Next
we procured the timbers of ribs, which, to avoid the same hazard,
were in three pieces each, and jointed in two places. The flat side
of one of the two pieces was laid over the other, and two holes
bored in every joint to receive nails; so that when united, each
joint would make an obtuse angle, and approach towards a
semicircular figure, as we required. We had, in the formation of an
external covering, to avoid hammering and nailing, which would have
made such a noise in the cellar as to attract the notice of the
Algerines, who are insufferably suspicious about their wives and
slaves. Therefore, we provided as much canvas as would cover the
boat twice over, and as much pitch, tar and tallow, as would make
it a kind of tarpaulin; as also earthen pots in which to melt our
materials. The two carpenters and myself were appointed to this
service in the cellar. We stopped up all chinks and crevices, that
the fumes of these substances might not betray us. But we had not
been long at work, when the smell of the melting materials overcame
me, and obligated me to go into the streets gasping for breath,
where meeting with the cool air, I swooned away, and broke my face
in the fall. My companions, finding me in this plight, carried me
back, extremely sick and unserviceable. Before long, I heard one of
them complain of sickness, and thus he could proceed no further;
therefore, I saw if we abandoned our project this night, it might
not be resumed, which made me resolve to set the cellar door wide
open, while I stood sentinel to give notice of approaching danger.
In this way we finished the whole, and then carried it to my shop,
which was about a furlong distant.</p>
<p>Every thing was fitted in the cellar, the timbers to the keel,
the canvas to the timbers, and the seats to the whole, and then all
were taken to pieces again. It was a matter of difficulty, however,
to get the pieces conveyed out of the city; but William Adams
carried the keel, and hid it at the bottom of a hedge: the rest was
carried away with similar precautions. As I was carrying a piece of
canvas, which we had bought for a sail, I looked back, and
discovered the same spy, who had formerly given us much trouble,
following behind. This gave me no small concern; but, observing an
Englishman washing clothes by the sea side, I desired his help in
washing the canvas. Just as we were engaged with it, the spy came
up, and stood on a rock exactly over our heads, to watch us.
Therefore, to delude him, I took the canvas and spread it before
his face on the top of the rock to dry; he staid his own time, and
then marched off. Still I was jealous of his intentions, which
induced me to carry the canvas, when dry, straight back to the
city, an incident that greatly discouraged my comrades. We also
procured a small quantity of provisions, and two goat skins full of
fresh water.</p>
<p>In the mean time, I paid my patron my wonted visits, kept up a
fair correspondence, and duly gave him his demands; while I
secretly turned all my goods to ready money as fast as I could, and
putting it into a trunk with a false bottom, I committed it to the
charge of Mr. Sprat who faithfully preserved it for me.</p>
<p>The place which we chose for joining the boat together was a
hill about half a mile from the city, thinking by that means the
better to descry the approach of danger. When the pieces were
united, and the canvas drawn on, four of our number carried the
boat down to the sea, where, stripping ourselves naked, and putting
our clothes within, we carried it as far as we could wade, lest it
might be injured by the stones or rocks near the shore. But we soon
discovered that our calculations of lading were erroneous; for no
sooner had we embarked, than the water came in over the sides, and
she was like to sink; so that some new device became necessary. At
last, one whose heart most failed him was willing to be excluded,
and wished rather to hazard the uncertain torments of land, than
the certainty of being drowned at sea. However the boat was still
so deeply laden, that we all concluded that it was impossible to
venture to sea. At length another went ashore, and she held her
head stoutly, and seemed sufficiently capable of our voyage.</p>
<p>Taking a solemn farewell of our two companions left behind, and
wishing them as much happiness as could be hoped for in slavery,
and they to us as long life as could be expected by men going to
their graves, we launched out on the 30th of June 1644, a night
ever to be remembered. Our company consisted of John Anthony,
William Adams, John Jephs, John the carpenter and myself. We now
put to sea, without helm, tackle, or compass. Four of us
continually labored at the oars; the employment of the fifth was
baling out the water that leaked through the canvas. We struggled
hard the first night to get out of the reach of our old masters;
but when the day broke, we were still within sight of their ships
in the haven and road-stead. Yet, out boat being small, and lying
close and snug upon the sea, either was not discovered at all, or
else seemed something that was not worth taking up.</p>
<p>On all occasions we found our want of foresight, for now the
bread which had lain soaking in the salt water, was quite spoiled,
and the tanned skins imparted a nauseous quality to the fresh
water. So long as bread was bread, we made no complaints; with
careful economy it lasted three days, but then pale famine, which
is the most horrible shape in which death can be painted, began to
stare us in the face. The expedients on which we fell to assuage
our thirst rather inflamed it, and several things added to our
distress. For some time the wind was right against us; our labour
was incessant, for, although much rowing did not carry us forward,
still, cessation of it drove us back; and the season was raging
hot, which rendered our toil insupportable. One small alleviation
we had in the man whose province it was to bale the water out of
the boat; he threw it on our bodies to cool them. However, what
with the scorching of the sun and cooling of the water, our skin
was blistered all over. By day we were stark naked; by night we had
on shirts or loose coats; for we had left our clothing ashore, on
purpose to lighten the boat.</p>
<p>One of our number had a pocket dial, which supplied the place of
a compass; and, to say the truth, was not ill befitting such a
vessel and such mariners. By its aid we steered our course by day,
while the stars served as a guide by night; and, if they were
obscured, we guessed our way by the motion of the clouds. In this
woful plight we continued four days and nights. On the fifth day we
were at the brink of despair, and abandoned all hopes of safety.
Thence we ceased our labor, and laid aside our oars; for, either we
had no strength left to use them, or were reluctant to waste the
little we had to no purpose. Still we kept emptying the boat, loth
to drown, loth to die, yet knowing no means to avoid death.</p>
<p>They that act least commonly wish the most; and, when we had
forsaken useful labor, we resorted to fruitless wishes--that we
might be taken up by some ship, if it were but a ship, no matter of
what country.</p>
<p>While we lay hulling up and down, our hopes at so low an ebb, we
discovered a tortoise, not far from us, asleep in the sea. Had the
great Drake discovered the Spanish plate fleet, he could not have
been more rejoiced. Once again we bethought ourselves of our oars,
and silently rowing to our prey, took it into the boat in great
triumph. Having cut off its head, and let it bleed in a vessel, we
drank the blood, ate the liver, and sucked the flesh. Our strength
and spirits were wonderfully refreshed, and our work was vigorously
renewed. Leaving our fears behind us, we began to gather hope, and,
about noon, discovered, or thought that we discovered, land. It is
impossible to describe our joy and triumph on this occasion. It was
new life to us; it brought fresh blood into our veins, and fresh
vigor into our pale cheeks: we looked like persons raised from the
dead. After further exertion, becoming more confident, we were at
last fully satisfied that it was land. Now, like distracted
persons, we all leapt into the sea, and, being good swimmers,
cooled our parched bodies, never considering that we might become a
ready prey to the sharks. But we presently returned to our boat,
and from being wearied with the exertion, and somewhat cooled by
the sea, lay down to sleep with as much security as if it had been
in our beds. It was fortunately of such short duration that the
leaking of the boat occasioned no danger.</p>
<p>Refreshed by sleep, we found new strength for our work, and
tugged hard at the oar, in hopes of reaching a more stable element
before night. But our progress was very slow. Towards evening an
island was discovered, which was Fromentere, having already seen
Majorca; at least, some of our company, who had navigated these
seas, declared that it was so. We debated long to which of the two
our course should be directed; and, because the last discovered was
much infested with venomous serpents, we all resolved to make for
Majorca. The whole of that night we rowed very hard, and also the
next, being the sixth from our putting to sea. The island was in
sight all day, and about ten at night we came under the land, but
it consisted of rocks so steep and craggy that we could not climb
up.</p>
<p>Whilst under these rocks a vessel approached very near. Let the
reader conceive our apprehensions, after all our toil and labor, of
being seized by some Turkish privateer, such as are never off the
seas. Thus we were obliged to lie close; and, when the vessel had
passed, we crept gently along the coast, as near as we durst to the
shore, until finding a suitable place to receive our weather-beaten
boat.</p>
<p>We were not insensible of our deliverance on reaching land;
though, like men just awakened from a dream, we could not duly
appreciate the greatness of it. Having had no food since we got the
tortoise, John Anthony and myself set out in search of fresh water,
and three remained with the boat. Before proceeding far, we found
ourselves in a wood, which created great embarrassment. My comrade
wished to go one way, and I wished to go another. How frail and
impotent a being is man! That we, whom common dangers by sea had
united, should now fall out about our own inclinations at land. Yet
so we did. He gave me reproachful words; and it is well that we did
not come to blows, but I went my way, and he, seeing me resolute,
followed. The path led to one of those watchtowers which the
Spaniards keep on the coast to give timely notice of the approach
of privateers. Afraid of being fired on, we called to the sentinel,
informing him who we were, and earnestly requesting him to direct
us to fresh water, and to give us some bread. He very kindly threw
down an old mouldy cake, and directed us to a well close at hand.
We drank a little water, and ate a bit of the cake, which we had
difficulty in swallowing, and then hastened to return to our
companions in the boat, to acquaint them with our success.</p>
<p>Though now necessary to leave the boat, we did not do it without
regret; but this was lulled by the importunate cravings of hunger
and thirst; therefore, making her fast ashore, we departed.
Advancing, or rather crawling towards the well, another quarrel
rose amongst us, the remembrance of which is so ungrateful that I
shall bury it in silence, the best tomb for controversies. One of
our company, William Adams, in attempting to drink, was unable to
swallow the water, and sunk to the ground, faintly exclaiming, "I
am a dead man!" After much straining and forcing, he, at length,
got a little over; and when we were all refreshed with the cake and
water, we lay down by the side of the well to wait for morning.</p>
<p>When it was broad day, we once more applied to the sentinel, to
point out the way to the nearest house or town, which he did,
directing us to a house about two miles distant; but our feet were
so raw and blistered by the sun that it was long before we could
get this short journey over; and then, the owners of the house,
concluding from our garb that we came with a pilfering design,
presented a fowling-piece, charging us to stand. The first of our
number, who could speak the language of the country, mildly
endeavored to undeceive him, saying, we were a company of poor
creatures, whom the wonderful providence of God had rescued from
the slavery of Algiers, and hoped that he would show mercy to our
afflictions. The honest farmer, moved with our relation, sent out
bread, water and olives. After refreshing ourselves with these, we
lay down and rested three or four hours in the field; and, having
given him thanks for his charity, prepared to crawl away. Pleased
with our gratitude, he called us into his house, and gave us good
warm bean pottage, which to me seemed the best food I had ever ate.
Again taking leave, we advanced towards Majorca, which was about
ten miles distant.</p>
<p>Next morning we arrived in the suburbs, where the singularity of
our attire, being barefoot and bare legged, and having nothing on
except loose shirts, drawn over our coats, attracted a crowd of
enquirers. We gave a circumstantial account of our deliverance;
and, as they were willing to contribute to our relief, they
supplied us with food, wine, strong waters, and whatever else might
renovate our exhausted spirits. They said, however, that we must
remain in the suburbs until the viceroy had notice of our arrival.
We were called before him, and when he had heard the account of our
escape and dangers, he ordered us to be maintained at his expense
until we should obtain a passage to our own country; and, in the
meantime, the people collected money to buy clothes and shoes.</p>
<p>From Majorca they proceeded to Cadiz, and from thence to
England, which they reached in safety.</p>
<p>Several expeditions at different periods were fitted out by
different European nations to chastise the pirates. The Emperor,
Charles V., in the plenitude of his power, sailed with a formidable
armament in the year 1541, and affected a landing. Without doubt he
would have taken the city, if a terrible storm had not risen, which
destroyed a great part of his fleet and obliged him to re-embark
with his shattered forces in the greatest precipitation. The
exultation of the Algerines was unbounded; they now looked on
themselves as the special favorites of heaven; the most powerful
army which had ever attempted their subjection had returned with
the loss of one third their number, and a great part of its ships
and transports. Prisoners had been taken in such abundance, that to
show their worthlessness, they were publicly sold in the
market-place at Algiers, at an onion a head.</p>
<p>For nearly a century after this, little occurs of note in
Algerine history except a constant system of piracy. In 1655 the
British Admiral Blake gave them a drubbing.</p>
<p>The French were the next to attack these common enemies of
Europe. Admiral Duguesne commanded the expedition, and after
bombarding the place a short time, the Dey himself soon began to be
terrified at the destruction these new engines of naval war made,
when an unfavorable wind arising, compelled the fleet to make all
sail for Toulon.</p>
<p>Relieved from the terror of immediate destruction, the Algerines
returned to their old ways, making descents on the coast of
Provence, where they committed the most dreadful ravages, killing,
burning and destroying all that came in their way. The Dey also
recovered, not only his courage, but his humor; for learning what a
large sum the late expedition against his city had cost, he sent to
say, "that if Louis would give him half the money, he would
undertake to burn the whole city to please him." The French
accordingly sent a new expedition under the same officers the next
year. Duguesne again sailed, and in front of the city was joined by
the Marquis D'Affranville, at the head of five other stout ships. A
council of war was held and an immediate attack resolved upon, in
consequence of which, the vessels having taken up their stations, a
hundred bombs were thrown into the town during that day, and as
many more on the following night, when the town was observed to be
on fire in several places; the Dey's palace, and other public
buildings were in ruins; some of the batteries were dismounted, and
several vessels sunk in the fort. This speedy destruction soon
determined the Dey and Janissaries to sue for peace; and a message
to this effect was sent to Duguesne, who consented to cease firing,
but refused to negociate regarding terms, until all the captives
taken fighting under the French flag were given up as a preliminary
step. This was agreed to, and one hundred and forty-two prisoners
immediately sent off. In the mean time the soldiery becoming
furious, assassinated the Dey and elected a new one, who ordered
the flag to be hoisted on the city walls. Hostilities were now
renewed with greater fury than before, and the French admiral threw
such volleys of bombs into the city, that in less than three days
the greatest part of it was reduced to ashes; and the fire burnt
with such vehemence that the bay was illuminated to the distance of
two or three leagues. Rendered desperate by the carnage around him,
the new Dey ordered all the French captives who had been collected
into the city to be cruelly murdered, and binding Father Vacher,
the French Resident, hand and foot, had him tied to a mortar and
fired off like a bomb against the French fleet. This wanton piece
of atrocity so exasperated Duguesne, that, laying his fleet as near
land as possible, he continued his cannonade until he had destroyed
all their shipping, fortifications, buildings; in short, almost the
whole of the lower town, and about two-thirds of the upper; when
finding nothing else which a naval force could do, and being
unprovided for a land expedition, he stood out leisurely to sea,
leaving the Algerines to reflect over the sad consequences of their
obstinacy. For several years after this they kept in the old
piratical track; and upon the British consuls making a complaint to
the Dey, on occasion of one of his corsairs having captured a
vessel, he openly replied, "It is all very true, but what would you
have? the Algerines are a company of rogues, and I am their
captain."</p>
<p>To such people force was the argument; and in 1700 Capt. Beach,
falling in with seven of their frigates, attacked them, drove them
on shore, and burnt them. Expeditions at various times were sent
against them, but without effecting much; and most of the maritime
nations paid them tribute. But a new power was destined to spring
up, from which these pirates were to receive their first check;
that power was the United States of America.</p>
<p>In 1792 his corsairs, in a single cruise, swept off ten American
vessels, and sent their crews to the Bagnio, so that there were one
hundred and fifteen in slavery.</p>
<p>Negociations were at once set on foot; the Dey's demands had of
course risen in proportion to the number of his prisoners, and the
Americans had not only to pay ransom at a high rate, with presents,
marine stores, and yearly tribute, but to build and present to the
Dey, as a propitiatory offering, a thirty-six gun frigate; so that
the whole expenses fell little short of a million of dollars, in
return for which they obtained liberty for their captives,
protection for their merchant vessels, and the right of free trade
with Algiers. The treaty was signed September 5th, 1795; and from
that time, up to 1812, the Dey continued on tolerable good terms
with Congress; indeed, so highly was he pleased with them, in 1800,
that he signified to the consul his intention of sending an
ambassador to the Porte, with the customary presents, in the
Washington, a small American frigate, at that time lying in the
harbor of Algiers. In vain the consul and captain remonstrated, and
represented that they had no authority to send the vessel on such a
mission; they were silenced by the assurance that it was a
particular honor conferred on them, which the Dey had declined
offering to any of the English vessels then in harbor, as he was
rather angry with that nation. The Washington was obliged to be
prepared for the service; the corsair flag, bearing the turbaned
head of Ali, was run up to her main top, under a salute of seven
guns; and in this respectable plight she sailed up the
Mediterranean, dropped anchor before the seven towers, where,
having landed her cargo, she was permitted to resume her own
colors, and was thus the first vessel to hoist the American Union
in the Thracian Bosphorus.</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/458.jpg" alt="Algerines in the act of firing off the French consul from a mortar at the French fleet" height-obs="345" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4>
<i>
Algerines in the act of firing off the French consul from a
mortar at the French fleet.
</i>
</h4>
In 1812, however, the Dey, finding his funds at a low ebb, and
receiving from all quarters reports that a wealthy American
commerce was afloat, determined on trying them with a new war. He
was peculiarly unfortunate in the time chosen, as the States,
having about a month previously declared war with Great Britain,
had, in fact, withdrawn most of the merchant ships from the sea, so
that the only prize which fell into the hands of the Dey's cruizers
was a small brig, with a crew of eleven persons. The time at length
came for putting an end to these lawless depredations, and peace
having been concluded with England, President Madison, in 1815,
despatched an American squadron, under commodores Bainbridge and
Decatur, with Mr. Shaler, as envoy, on board, to demand full
satisfaction for all injuries done to American subjects, the
immediate release of such as were captives, the restitution of
their property, with an assurance that no future violence should be
offered, and also to negociate the preliminaries of a treaty on
terms of perfect equality, no proposal of tribute being at all
admissible. The squadron reached its destination early in June,
and, having captured an Algerine frigate and brig-of-war, suddenly
appeared before Algiers, at a moment when all the cruizers were at
sea, and delivered, for the consideration of the Divan, the terms
on which they were commissioned to make peace, together with a
letter from the President to the Dey. Confounded by the sudden and
entirely unexpected appearance of this force, the Algerines agreed,
on the 30th of June, to the proposals of a treaty, almost without
discussion.
<p>It had long been a reproach to Great Britain, the mistress of
the sea, that she had tamely suffered a barbarian power to commit
such atrocious ravages on the fleets and shores of the minor states
along the Mediterranean. At length a good cause was made for
chastising them.</p>
<p>At Bona, a few miles to the east of Algiers, was an
establishment for carrying on a coral fishery, under the protection
of the British flag, which, at the season, was frequented by a
great number of boats from the Corsican, Neapolitan, and other
Italian ports. On the 23d of May, the feast of Ascension, as the
crews of all the boats were preparing to hear mass, a gun was fired
from the castle, and at the same time appeared about two thousand,
other accounts say four thousand, infantry and cavalry, consisting
of Turks, Levanters, and Moors. A part of these troops proceeded
towards the country, whilst another band advanced towards the
river, where the fishing boats were lying at different distances
from the sea; and opening a fire upon the unfortunate fishermen,
who were partly on board and partly on land, massacred almost the
whole of them. They then seized the English flags, tore them in
pieces, and trampling them under foot, dragged them along the
ground in triumph. The men who happened to be in the country saved
themselves by flight, and declared that they saw the soldiers
pillage the house of the British vice-consul, the magazines
containing the provisions, and the coral that had been fished up. A
few boats escaped, and brought the news to Genoa, whence it was
transmitted by the agent of Lloyd's in a despatch, dated June
6th.</p>
<p>No sooner had the account of this atrocious slaughter reached
England, than all ranks seemed inflamed with a desire that a great
and signal punishment should be taken on this barbarian prince, who
was neither restrained by the feelings of humanity nor bound by
treaties. An expedition, therefore, was fitted out with all speed
at Portsmouth, and the command intrusted to Lord Exmouth, who,
after some delays from contrary winds, finally sailed, July 28th,
with a fleet complete in all points, consisting of his own ship,
the Queen Charlotte, one hundred and twenty guns; the Impregnable,
rear admiral, Sir David Milne; ninety guns; Minden, Superb, Albion,
each seventy-four guns; the Leander fifty guns, with four more
frigates and brigs, bombs, fire-ships, and several smaller vessels,
well supplied, in addition to the ordinary means of warfare, with
Congreve rockets, and Shrapnell shells, the destructive powers of
which have lately been abundantly proved on the continent. August
9, the fleet anchored at Gibraltar, and was there joined by the
Dutch admiral, Van Cappillen, commanding five frigates and a
corvette, who had been already at Algiers, endeavoring to deliver
slaves: but being refused, and finding his force insufficient, had
determined on joining himself with the English squadron, which it
was understood was under weigh. Meanwhile, the Prometheus, Captain
Dashwood, had been sent forward to Algiers to bring off the British
consul and family; but could only succeed in getting his wife and
daughter, who were obliged to make their escape, disguised in
midshipmen's uniform; for the Dey, having heard through some French
papers of the British expedition, had seized the consul, Mr.
Macdonnell, and put him in chains; and, hearing of the escape of
his wife, immediately ordered the detention of two boats of the
Prometheus, which happened to be on shore, and made slaves of the
crews, amounting to eighteen men. This new outrage was reported to
Lord Exmouth soon after leaving Gibraltar, and of course added not
a little to his eagerness to reach Algiers. He arrived off Algiers
on the morning of the 27th of August, and sent in his interpreter,
Mr. Salame, with Lieutenant Burgess, under a flag of truce, bearing
a letter for the Dey, demanding reparation.</p>
<p>Meantime, a light breeze sprung up, and the fleet advanced into
the bay, and lay to, at about a mile off Algiers "It was now," says
Mr. Salame, in his entertaining narrative, "half-past two, and no
answer coming out, notwithstanding we had staid half an hour longer
than our instructions, and the fleet being almost opposite the
town, with a fine breeze, we thought proper, after having done our
duty, to lose no more time, but to go on board, and inform his
lordship of what had happened.</p>
<p>"Mr. Burgess, the flag-lieutenant, having agreed with me, we
hoisted the signal, <i>that no answer had been given</i>, and began
to row away towards the Queen Charlotte. After I had given our
report to the admiral, of our meeting the captain of the port, and
our waiting there, &c., I was quite surprised to see how his
lordship was altered from what I left him in the morning; for I
knew his manner was in general very mild, and now he seemed to me
<i>all-fightful,</i> as a fierce lion, which had been chained in
its cage, and was set at liberty. With all that, his lordship's
answer to me was, '<i>Never mind, we shall see now</i>;' and at the
same time he turned towards the officers, saying, '<i>
Be
ready
</i>,' whereupon I saw every one with the match or the string
of the lock in his hand, most anxiously expecting the word
'<i>Fire</i>'!</p>
<p>"No sooner had Salame returned, than his lordship made the signal
to know whether all the ships were ready, which being answered in
the affirmative, he directly turned the head of the Queen Charlotte
towards shore, and, to the utter amazement of the Algerines, ran
across all the batteries without firing or receiving a single shot,
until he brought up within eighty yards of the south end of the
mole, where he lashed her to the mainmast of an Algerine brig,
which he had taken as his direction, and had then the pleasure of
seeing all the rest of the fleet, including the Dutch frigates,
taking up their assigned stations with the same precision and
regularity. The position in which the Queen Charlotte was laid was
so admirable that she was only exposed to the fire of three or four
flanking guns, while her broadside swept the whole batteries, and
completely commanded the mole and marine, every part of which could
be seen distinctly from her quarter-deck. Up to this moment not a
shot had been fired, and the batteries were all crowded with
spectators, gazing in astonishment at the quiet and regularity
which prevailed through all the British ships, and the dangerous
vicinity in which they placed themselves to such formidable means
of defence. Lord Exmouth, therefore, began to conceive hopes that
his demands would still be granted; but the delay, it appeared, was
caused by the Algerines being completely unprepared for so very
sudden an approach, insomuch that their guns were not shotted at
the moment when the Queen Charlotte swept past them, and they were
distinctly seen loading them as the other ships were coming into
line. Anxious, if possible, to spare unnecessary effusion of blood,
his lordship, standing on the quarter-deck, repeatedly waved his
hat as a warning to the multitudes assembled on the mole to retire,
but his signal was unheeded, and at a quarter before three in the
afternoon the first gun was fired at the Queen Charlotte from the
eastern battery, and two more at the Albion and Superb, which were
following. Then Lord Exmouth, having seen only <i>
the smoke of the
gun,
</i> before the sound reached him, said, with great alacrity,
'<i>That will do; fire my fine fellows!</i>' and I am sure that
before his lordship had finished these words, our broadside was
given with great cheering, which was fired three times within five
or six minutes; and at the same time the other ships did the same.
This first fire was so terrible, that they say more than five
hundred persons were killed and wounded by it. And I believe this,
because there was a great crowd of people in every part, many of
whom, after the first discharge, I saw running away, under the
walls, like dogs, walking upon their feet and hands.</p>
<p>"After the attack took place on both sides in this horrible
manner, immediately the sky was darkened by the smoke, the sun
completely eclipsed, and the horizon became dreary. Being exhausted
by the heat of that powerful sun, to which I was exposed the whole
day, and my ears being deafened by the roar of the guns, and
finding myself in the dreadful danger of such a terrible
engagement, in which I had never been before, I was quite at a
loss, and like an astonished or stupid man, and did not know myself
where I was. At last his lordship, having perceived my situation,
said, 'You have done your duty, now go below.' Upon which I began
to descend from the quarter-deck, quite confounded and terrified,
and not sure that I should reach the cock-pit alive; for it was
most tremendous to hear the crashing of the shot, to see the
wounded men brought from one part, and the killed from the other;
and especially, at such a time, to be found among the <i>
English
seamen
</i>! and to witness their manners, their activity, their
courage, and their cheerfulness during the battle!--it is really
most overpowering and beyond imagination."</p>
<p>The battle continued to rage furiously, and the havoc on both
sides was very great. There were some awful moments, particularly
when Algerine vessels so near our line were set on fire. The
officers surrounding Lord Exmouth had been anxious for permission
to make an attempt upon the outer frigate, distant about a hundred
yards. He at length consented, and Major Gossett, of the corps of
marines, eagerly entreated and obtained permission to accompany
Lieutenant Richards in the ship's barge. The frigate was instantly
boarded, and, in ten minutes, in a perfect blaze. A gallant young
midshipman, although forbidden, was led by his too ardent spirit to
follow in support of the barge, in which attempt he was desperately
wounded, his brother officer killed, and nine of the crew. The
barge, by rowing more rapidly, escaped better, having but one
killed.</p>
<p>About sunset the admiral received a message from rear-admiral
Milne, stating his severe loss in killed and wounded, amounting to
one hundred and fifty, and requesting that, if possible, a frigate
might be sent him to take off some of the enemy's fire. The Glasgow
accordingly was ordered to get under weigh, but the wind having
been laid by the cannonade, she was obliged again to anchor, having
obtained a rather more favorable position. The flotilla of mortar,
gun, and rocket boats, under the direction of their respective
artillery officers, shared to the full extent of their powers the
honors and toils of this glorious day. It was by their fire that
all the ships in the port (with the exception of the outer frigate
already mentioned) were in flames, which, extending rapidly over
the whole arsenal, gun-boats, and storehouses, exhibited a
spectacle of awful grandeur and interest which no pen can describe.
The sloops of war which had been appropriated to aid and assist the
ships of the line, and prepare for their retreat, performed not
only that duty well, but embraced every opportunity of firing
through the intervals, and were constantly in motion. The shells
from the bombs were admirably well thrown by the royal marine
artillery, and, though directed over and across our own men-of-war,
did not produce a single accident. To complete the confusion of the
enemy, the admiral now ordered the explosion ship, which had been
charged for the occasion, to be brought within the mole; but upon
the representation of Sir David Milne that it would do him
essential service, if made to act on the battery in his front, it
was towed to that spot, and blown up with tremendous effect.</p>
<p>This was almost the final blow;--the enemy's fire had for some
time been very slack, and now almost wholly ceased, except that
occasionally a few shots and shells were discharged from the higher
citadel, upon which the guns of the fleet could not be brought to
bear. The admiral, who from the commencement had been in the
hottest of the engagement, and had fired until his guns were so hot
that they could, some of them, not be used again; now seeing that
he had executed the most important part of his instructions, issued
orders for drawing off the fleet. This was commenced in excellent
order about ten at night, and the usual breeze having set off from
shore favored their manoeuvre, so that, all hands being employed in
warping and towing, the vessels were got safely into the bay, and
anchored, beyond reach of shot, about two o'clock the next
morning.</p>
<p>So signal and well contested a victory could not have been
gained without a considerable loss and suffering. It amounted in
the English fleet, to one hundred and twenty-eight men killed, and
six hundred and ninety wounded; in the Dutch squadron, to thirteen
killed, and fifty-two wounded; grand total, eight hundred and
eighty-three. But the enemy suffered much more severly; they are
computed to have lost, in killed and wounded, not less than between
six and seven thousand men. The loss sustained by the Algerines by
the destruction in the mole was four large frigates, of forty-four
guns. Five large corvettes, from twenty-four to thirty guns. All
the gun and mortar-boats, except seven; thirty destroyed. Several
merchant brigs and schooners. A great number of small vessels of
various descriptions. All the pontoons, lighters, &c.,
Store-houses and arsenal, with all the timber, and various marine
articles destroyed in part. A great many gun-carriages,
mortar-beds, casks, and ships' stores of all descriptions.</p>
<p>Negociations were immediately opened in form; and on the 30th
August the admiral published a notification to the fleet, that all
demands had been complied with, the British consul had been
indemnified for his losses, and the Dey, in presence of all his
officers, had made him a public apology for the insults offered
him. On the 1st of September, Lord Exmouth had the pleasure of
informing the secretary of the Admiralty, that all the slaves in
the city of Algiers, and its immediate vicinity were embarked; as
also 357,000 dollars for Naples, and 25,000 dollars for
Sardinia.</p>
<p>The number of slaves thus released amounted to one thousand and
eighty-three, of whom four hundred and seventy-one were
Neapolitans, two hundred and thirty-six Sicilians, one hundred and
seventy-three Romans, six Tuscans, one hundred and sixty-one
Spaniards, one Portuguese, seven Greeks, twenty-eight Dutch, and
not <i>one Englishman</i>. Were there an action more than another
on which an Englishman would willingly risk the fame and honor of
his nation, it would be this attack on Algiers, which, undertaken
solely at her own risk, and earned solely by the expenditure of her
own blood and her own resources, rescued not a single subject of
her own from the tyrant's grasp, while it freed more than a
thousand belonging to other European powers.</p>
<p>In August, 1816, the strength of Algiers seemed annihilated; her
walls were in ruins, her haughty flag was humbled to the dust; her
gates lay open to a hostile power, and terms were dictated in the
palace of her princes. A year passed, the hostile squadron had left
her ports, the clang of the workman's hammer, the hum of busy men
resounded through her streets, fresh walls had risen, new and more
formidable batteries had been added; again she resumed her attitude
as of yore, bid defiance to her foes, and declared war on
civilization:--again her blood-stained corsairs swept the seas,
eager for plunder, ready for combat;--Christian commerce once more
became shackled by her enterprise, and Christian captives once more
sent up their cry for deliverance. In 1819, her piracies had become
so numerous that the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle caused it to be
notified to the Dey, that their cessation was required, and would
be enforced, by a combined French and English squadron. His reply
was brief and arrogant, and the admirals were obliged to leave
without obtaining the least satisfaction. By menaces, however,
accompanied by the presence of some cruisers, England, France, and
the United States caused their flags to be respected.</p>
<p>Ali, the successor of Amar, had died in 1818, and was succeeded
by Hassein Pasha, who, from the commencement of his reign, evinced
the strongest antipathy to the French power. In 1824, he imposed an
arbitrary tax through all his provinces on French goods and
manufactures; the consul's house was frequently entered and
searched in a vexatious manner, contrary to the express
stipulations of treaties; and, finally, April, 1827, the consul
himself, having gone at the feast of Bayram to pay his respects,
was, upon a slight difference of opinion arising during their
conversation, struck across the mouth with a fly-flap which the Dey
held in his hand, and in consequence soon after left Algiers, while
the Dey ordered the destruction of all the French establishments
along the coast towards Bona, and oppressed in every manner the
French residents within his dominions. A blockade was instantly
commenced by the French, and maintained for nearly three years,
until it was found that they suffered much more by it than the Dey,
the expense having reached nearly 800,000<i>l</i> sterling, while
he appeared no way inconvenienced by their efforts, and even
treated them with such contempt as to order his forts to fire on
the vessel of Admiral Le da Bretonnière, who, in 1829, had
gone there under a flag of truce to make a final proposal of terms
of accommodation. So signal a violation of the laws of nations
could not be overlooked, even by the imbecile administrations of
Charles X. All France was in an uproar; the national flag had been
dishonored, and her ambassador insulted; the cry for war became
loud and universal; conferences on the subject were held; the
oldest and most experienced mariners were invited by the minister
at war to assist in his deliberations; and an expedition was
finally determined on in the month of February, 1830, to consist of
about thirty-seven thousand men, a number which it was calculated
would not only be sufficient to overcome all opposition which might
be encountered, but to enable the French to reduce the kingdom to a
province, and retain it in subjection for any length of time that
might be considered advisable. No sooner was this decision
promulgated, than all the necessary preparations were commenced
with the utmost diligence. It was now February, and the expedition
was to embark by the end of April, so that no time could be lost.
The arsenals, the naval and military workships, were all in full
employment. Field and breaching batteries were mounted on a new
principle lately adopted; gabions, earth-bags,
<i>chevaux-de-frise,</i> and projectiles were made in the greatest
abundance maps, notes, and all the information that could be
procured respecting Barbary were transmitted to the war office,
where their contents were compared and digested, and a plan of
operations was drawn out. The commissariat were busied in
collecting provisions, waggons, and fitting out an efficient
hospital train; a deputy-commissary was despatched to reconnoitre
the coasts of Spain and the Balearic Islands, to ascertain what
resources could be drawn from them, and negociate with the king for
leave to establish military hospitals at Port Mahon. Eighteen
regiments of the line, three squadrons of cavalry, and different
corps of artillery and engineers were ordered to hold themselves in
readiness; four hundred transports were assembled, and chartered by
government in the port of Marseilles, while the vessels of war,
which were to form the convoy, were appointed their rendezvous in
the neighborhood of Toulon. After some hesitation as to who should
command this important expedition, the Count de Bourmont, then
minister at war, thought fit to appoint himself; and his etat-major
was soon complete, Desprez acting as chief, and Tholozé as
second in command. Maubert de Neuilly was chosen provost-marshal,
De Bartillat (who afterwards wrote an entertaining account of the
expedition) quarter-master general, and De Carne commissary-general
to the forces. In addition to these, there were about twenty
aid-de-camps, orderlies, and young men of rank attached to the
staff, together with a Spanish general, an English colonel, a
Russian colonel and lieutenant, and two Saxon officers, deputed by
their respective governments. There were also a section of
engineer-geographers, whose business was to survey and map the
country as it was conquered, "and," says M. Roget, who was himself
employed in the service we have just mentioned, and to whose
excellent work, written in that capacity, we are so much indebted,
"twenty-four interpreters, the half of whom knew neither French nor
Arabic, were attached-to the different corps of the army, in order
to facilitate their intercourse with the inhabitants." As the
minister had determined on risking his own reputation on the
expedition, the supplies were all, of course, of the completest
kind, and in the greatest abundance. Provisions for three months
were ordered; an equal quantity was to be forwarded as soon as the
army had landed in Africa; and, amongst the other materials
furnished we observe, in looking over the returns, thirty wooden
legs, and two hundred crutches, for the relief of the unfortunate
heroes, a boring apparatus to sink pumps, if water should run
short, and a balloon, with two aeronauts, to reconnoitre the
enemy's position, in case, as was represented to be their wont,
they should entrench themselves under the shelter of hedges and
brushwood.</p>
<p>The French effected a landing at Sidy-el-Ferruch, a small
promontory, about five leagues to the west of Algiers, and half a
league to the east of the river Massaflran, where it discharges
itself into the bay. On the 14th of June they all landed without
opposition.</p>
<p>After a continued series of engagements and skirmishes the army
got within cannon shot of Algiers, where they broke ground and
began entrenching, and the French works being completed, the heavy
breaching cannon were all mounted; and at day-break on the 4th of
July, General Lahitte, having assured himself by personal
inspection that all was ready, ordered the signal rocket to be
thrown, and at the same moment the whole French batteries opened
their fire within point blank distance, and with a report which
shook the whole of Algiers, and brought the garrison, who were
little expecting so speedy an attack, running to their posts. The
artillery was admirably served, and from one battery which
enfiladed the fort, the balls were seen to sweep away at once an
entire row of Algerine cannoneers from their guns. The Turks
displayed the most undaunted courage; they answered shot for shot,
supplied with fresh men the places of such as were slain, stopped
up with woolsacks the breaches made by the balls, replaced the
cannon which the French fire had dismounted, and never relaxed
their exertions for a moment. But the nature of their works was
ill-calculated to withstand the scientific accuracy with which the
besiegers made their attack. Every ball now told--the tower in the
centre was completely riddled by shots and shells; the bursting of
these latter had disabled great numbers of the garrison. By seven
o'clock the besieged had begun to retire from the most damaged part
of their works; by half-past eight the whole outer line of defence
was abandoned, and by nine the fire of the fort was extinct. The
Turkish general, finding opposition hopeless, had sent to the Dey
for commands; and in reply was ordered to retreat with his whole
remaining force to the Cassaubah, and leave three negroes to blow
up the fort. The tranquillity with which they performed this fatal
task deserves record. The French, finding the enemy's fire to fail,
directed all theirs towards effecting a practicable breach. The
fort seemed to be abandoned;--two red flags floated still on its
outside line of defence, and a third on the angle towards the city.
Three negroes were seen calmly walking on the ramparts, and from
time to time looking over, as if to examine what progress the
breach was making. One of them, struck by a cannon-ball, fell, and
the others, as if to revenge his death, ran to a cannon, pointed
it, and fired three shots. At the third, the gun turned over, and
they were unable to replace it. They tried another, and as they
were in the act of raising it, a shot swept the legs from under one
of them. The remaining negro gazed for a moment on his comrade,
drew him a little back, left him, and once more examined the
breach. He then snatched one of the flags, and retired to the
interior of the tower; in a few minutes he re-appeared, took a
second and descended. The French continued to cannonade, and the
breach appeared almost practicable, when suddenly they were
astounded by a terrific explosion, which shook the whole ground as
with an earthquake; an immense column of smoke, mixed with streaks
of flame, burst from the centre of the fortress, masses of solid
masonry were hurled into the air to an amazing height, while
cannon, stones, timbers, projectiles, and dead bodies, were
scattered in every direction--the negro had done his duty--the fort
was blown up.</p>
<p>In half an hour the French sappers and miners were at work
repairing the smoking ruins, their advanced guards had effected a
reconnoissance along the side of the hill towards the fort
Bab-azoona, and their engineers had broken ground for new works
within seven hundred yards of the Cassaubah. But these preparations
were unnecessary; the Dey had resigned all further intention of
resistance, and at two o'clock a flag of truce was announced, which
proved to be Sidy Mustapha, the Dey's private secretary, charged
with offers of paying the whole expense of the campaign,
relinquishing all his demands on France, and making any further
reparation that the French general might require, on condition that
the troops should not enter Algiers. These proposals met with an
instant negative:--Bourmont felt that Algiers was in his power, and
declared that he would grant no other terms than an assurance of
life to the Dey and inhabitants, adding that if the gates were not
opened he should recommence his fire. Scarcely had Mustapha gone,
than two other deputies appeared, sent by the townsmen to plead in
their behalf. They were a Turk called Omar, and a Moor named
Bouderba, who having lived for some time at Marseilles, spoke
French perfectly. They received nearly the same answer as Mustapha;
but they proved themselves better diplomatists, for they spoke so
much to the general of the danger, there would be in refusing the
Janissaries all terms, and the probability that if thus driven to
despair they might make a murderous resistance, and afterwards
destroy all the wealth and blow up all the forts before
surrendering, that Bourmont, yielding to their representations,
became less stern in his demands; and Mustapha having returned
about the same time with the English vice-consul, as a mediator,
the following terms were finally committed to paper, and sent to
the Dey by an interpreter.</p>
<p>"1. The fort of the Cassaubah, with all the other forts
dependent on Algiers, and the harbor, shall be placed in the hands
of the French troops the 5th of July, at 10 o'clock, A.M.</p>
<p>"2. The general-in-chief of the French army ensures the Dey of
Algiers personal liberty, and all his private property.</p>
<p>"3. The Dey shall be free to retire with his family and wealth
wherever he pleases. While he remains at Algiers he and his family
shall be under the protection of the commander-in-chief. A guard
shall insure his safety, and that of his family.</p>
<p>"4. The same advantages, and same protection are assured to all
the soldiers of the militia.</p>
<p>"5. The exercise of the Mohammedan religion shall remain free;
the liberty of the inhabitants of all classes, their religion,
property, commerce, and industry shall receive no injury; their
women shall be respected: the general takes this on his own
responsibility.</p>
<p>"6. The ratification of this convention to be made before 10
A.M., on the 5th of July, and the French troops immediately after
to take possession of the Cassaubah, and other forts."</p>
<p>These terms were so much more favorable than the Dey could have
expected, that, of course, not a moment was lost in signifying his
acceptance: he only begged to be allowed two hours more to get
himself and his goods out of the Cassaubah, and these were readily
granted. It may, indeed, be wondered at that he and his Janissaries
should be allowed to retain all their ill-gotten booty, under the
name of private property; but Count de Bourmont, though not without
talent, was essentially a weak man, and was in this instance
overreached by the wily Moor. The whole of next morning an immense
number of persons were seen flying from Algiers, previous to the
entry of the French army, and carrying with them all their goods,
valuables, and money. They fled by the fort Bab-azoona, on the
roads towards Constantina and Bleeda; and about a hundred mounted
Arabs were seen caracolling on the beach, as if to cover their
retreat. No opposition to it, however, was made by the French
troops, or by their navy, which had now again come in sight.</p>
<p>At twelve o'clock the general, with his staff, artillery, and a
strong guard, entered the Cassaubah, and at the same moment all the
other forts were taken possession of by French troops. No one
appeared to make a formal surrender, nor did any one present
himself on the part of the inhabitants, to inquire as to what
protection they were to receive, yet, on the whole, we believe the
troops conducted themselves, at least on this occasion, with signal
forbearance; and that of the robberies which took place, the
greater number were perpetrated by Moors and Jews. One was rather
ingenious. The minister of finance had given up the public
treasures to commissioners regularly appointed for the purpose.
Amongst others, the mint was visited, a receipt given of its
containing bullion to the amount of 25,000 or 30,000 francs, the
door sealed, and a sentry placed. Next morning the seal was
perfect, the sentry at his post, but the bullion was gone through a
small hole made in the back wall.</p>
<p>The amount of public property found in Algiers, and appropriated
by the French, was very considerable, and much more than repaid the
expenses of the expedition. The blockade of the last three years
had, by interrupting their commerce, caused an accumulation of the
commodities in which the Algerines generally paid their tribute, so
that the storehouses at the Cassaubah were abundantly filled with
wool, hides, leather, wax, lead and copper. Quantities of grain,
silks, muslins, and gold and silver tissues were also found, as
well as salt, of which the Dey had reserved to himself a monopoly,
and, by buying it very cheap at the Balearic Isles, used to sell it
at an extravagant rate to his subjects. The treasure alone amounted
to nearly fifty million of francs, and the cannon, projectiles,
powder magazines, and military stores, together with the public
buildings, foundries, dock-yards, and vessels in the harbor, were
estimated at a still larger amount; while the entire expense of the
expedition, including land and sea service, together with the
maintenance of an army of occupation up to January, 1831, was
computed not to exceed 48,500,000 francs; so that France must have
realized, by her first connection with Algiers, a sum not far short
of £3,000,000 sterling--a larger amount, we will venture to
say, than is likely to accrue to her again, even after many years
of colonization.</p>
<p>In a few days the Dey had embarked for Naples, which he chose as
his future place of residence; the Janissaries were sent in French
vessels to Constantinople; the Bey of Tippery made his submissions,
and swore allegiance to the French King; orders were issued, and
laws enacted in his name; the Arabs and Kalyles came into market as
usual with their fowl and game; a French soldier was tolerably
safe, as long as he avoided going to any distance beyond the
outposts; and, on the whole, Algiers the warlike, had assumed all
the appearance of a French colony.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;">
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />