623.82 Sh15n ILLINOIS HISTORY AND LINCOLN COLLECTIONS U. OF I. 623.82 Shl5] ^ NAVAL HISTORY of VINCENNES Illinois History and LINCOLN Collections UBRARY U. OF 1. URBAHft-CHAMPWGH ^ ^ ^ ^A NAVAL HISTORY of VINCENNES, INDIANA By Curtis G. Shake Published by the Citizens Committee on the Participa- tion of the City of Vincennes in the Launching of the Cruiser Vincennes, at Ouincy, Massachusetts, May 21, 1936. A Limited Edition of 2000 Copies. 1936 •^ ^ i^ 1^ 1^ 1^ DEDICATION The City of Vincennes takes pride in dedicating this booklet to the memory of her sons who have served with honor to themselves and with credit to her in the Navy of the United States. -4-1' PREFACE 1 HE READER iuto whose haiids this booklet may chance to fall will no doubt be struck with surprise to learn that a city with a population of less than 20,000, located 500 miles from the sea, should have a naval history worthy of mention. How- ever, the writer has no apology for the title selected, though the use of the materials available leaves much to be desired. Vincennes has the unique distinction of having furnished to the United States navy a vice admiral, a rear admiral and a number of other officers of lesser rank. The city also takes pardonable pride in the fact that the government has twice honored it by giving its name to a warship. One of these, the sloop Vincennes, was, in its prime, the fastest sailing ship in the navy. It was also the first American naval vessel to cir- cumnavigate the globe, the flagship of the expedition that re- sulted in the discovery of the Antarctic continent, and one of the first two United States naval vessels to enter a Japanese port. The other ship named for the City of Vincennes, is a heavy cruiser now (1936) under construction at Quincy, Mass. The writer offers as his excuse for this publication the fact that it constitutes the first attempt that has been made, so far as he has been able to learn, to record the facts pertaining to this interesting phase of the history of Vincennes. THE AUTHOR. * * * CONTENTS Page Preface .............. 3 The Visit of the Willing 5 The Slooji of ^^'ar \'iiicennes .......... 5 \'incLiines Naval Officers ........... 10 The Cruiser \'inceiiiies ........... 13 "Sweethearts and Wives" . 14 A Local Naval Tradition 15 ILLUSTRATIONS Sloop of War Vincennes at the Discovery of the Antarctic Continent, January 19, 1840 17 Sloop of War Vincennes in Japan, 1846 ........ 18 Sloop of War Vincennes Leaving Japan, 1846 18 Vice-Admiral Albert Parker Nihiack 19 Rear Admiral Nathaniel Reiliy lusher 20 Commander Frank Carey McCord ......... 21 Laying the Keel of the Cruiser Vincennes 22 Miss Harriet Virginia Kimmell 23 * * * THE VISIT OF THE WILLING Ihe only ship of war to actually visit Vincennes was in connection with the celebrated campaign of Col. George Rogers Clark, during the war of the Revolution. Clark took the town of Kaskaskia on the Mississippi River by surprise and captured it from the British without an engagement on July 4, 1778. The reduction of Vincennes was not so simple a matter, however. Fort Sackville had, in the meantime, been re-built and amply garrisoned under the personal command of Gen. Henry Hamilton, Governor of the Detroit district. Worse yet, between Kaskaskia and Vincennes lay 150 miles of flooded wilderness that had to be crossed by Clark and his little army in winter. To accomplish his purposes Col. Clark planned a naval as well as a military campaign against Vincennes. He purchased a large Mississippi river boat at Kaskaskia and converted it into a galley or batteau. This boat was named the "Willing, in honor of John ^Villing of Pennsylvania, who was agent of the United States in the lower Mississippi valley, and placed under the command of John Rogers, a cousin of Col. Clark's. Manned with a crew of forty-six and armed with four large swivels and two four-pounders, the Willing left Kaskaskia in advance of Clark's little army, with instructions to proceed down the Mississippi and up the Ohio and Wabash rivers to a point ten leagues below Vincennes, where it was to stand-by until the arrival of the land forces. It was then to move up to Vincennes and bombard Fort Sackville from the river simultaneously with the military attack. Due to the swift currents of the Ohio and Wabash rivers, which were at flood stage, the AVilling did not make the speed anticipated. AVhen, finally, on February 27, 1779, it arrived at Vincennes, the members of its crew learned, much to their mortification, that Fort Sackville had sur- rendered two days before. Had Clark's plans worked out as he conceived them, the capture of Vincennes would have been recorded in history as a naval as well as a military victory. • * * THE SL()()P-()F-WAR VINCENNES The sloop-of-\var Vincennes, launched at New York in 1826, well de- serves to be listed among the famous ships of the United States navy. Put to sea after the \Var of 1812 and practically obsolete by the time of the Civil ^Var, she never had an opportunity to prove her worth as a fighting craft. Her contribution to the nation's maritime history was, for the most part, confined to the pursuits of peace, but her service in that regard was noteworthy and distinguished. The Vincennes was a three-masted sailing vessel with a capacity of 700 tons and a complement of 170 officers and men. Her length was 127 feet and her beam measured 33.9 feet. Her maximum draft was 16.5 feet and her rated speed 18 knots per hour. She was, in her prime, the fastest sailing vessel in the American navy. Her cost was $119,175 — a small sum in comparison with the cost of a modern steel cruiser. During 1829-1830 the Vincennes circumnavigated the globe, the first U. S. naval vessel to accomplish that feat. In 1835 she visited the island of Guam, now an important American naval base, the first naval vessel to call there. Perhaps the most important service rendered by the sloop Vincennes was as flagship of Commodore Charles ^Vilkes' famous exploring expe- dition. This history-making voyage was authorized by an Act of Congress in 1836. Commodore Wilkes was equipped with two sloops-of-war, a brig, a storeship, and two tenders. In the crew were naturalists, botanists, taxi- dermists, a mineralogist, and a philologist. The expedition got under way ofif Hampton Roads. Virginia, August 18th, 1838, after President Van Buren and his cabinet had been entertained aboard the Vincennes. For four long and eventful years the Vincennes and her sister ships sailed the great deep, visiting strange islands in the South Seas and dis- covering many that were theretofore unknown to civilized nations. A distinguished American naval officer of high rank recently remarked that "if the officers of the Vincennes had emulated the absent minded and philanthropic British naval officers and hoisted a few flags on loose places we might have had some more naval bases to let slip at disarmament conferences." The outstanding accomplishment of the Wilkes expedition took place, however, on January 19th, 1840, when it discovered the existence of the Antarctic continent. This occurred just one day before the continent was sighted by Dumont d'Urville, a French explorer, at another point 400 miles away. The significance attached to the discovery of the new continent * * * and the part played in that achievement by the sloop V^incennes is well illustrated by a song written by a member of the crew and sung on the homeward cruise: Huzza, my boys! The ship Vincennes Comes proudly o'er the wave; Bold Captain Wilkes in her command, Two hundred seamen brave. With joyful hearts and hopes all bright These Yankee sailors come, And glorious, full, meridian light Shines on the passage home. ''These are my sons," bright Freedom cries, "From the Antarctic sea." And proudly from our mizzen flies The stars of Liberty. "These are the tars that dared explore The new Antarctic world, And nobly on the frozen shore Columbia's flag unfurled." Let England boast her Cook and Ross, And other chiefs of fame ; They ail must stand like mounds of dross Beside our captain's name. On Fame's broad pillar, hand in hand. Shall stand in bold relief O'er all the rest of all the land, Columbus and our chief. Then speed thee on, our gallant ship. And homeward bear thy tars; While proudly glitters from thy peak Columbia's flag of stars. The scientific specimens gathered by the ^Vilkes expedition formed the basis for the magnificent collection of the Smithsonian Institution at \Vash- ington. Another historic episode in which the Vincennes played an important part occurred in 1846. For many \ears the United States had sought in vain to establish trade relations with the Japanese Empire. From time im- memorial the government of the Rising Sun had stubbornly refused all commercial intercourse with the outside world. Repeated attempts on the part of European nations, as well as the United States, to penetrate this trade barrier had met with stern rebuffs. Finally, in 1846. Captain James * • * Biddic, in coniniainl of the men-of-war Vincennes and Cohinibus, was dis- patched to Japan with specific instructions to press chiinis for American recognition but under no circumstances to resort to force. T he convoy reached Jeddo, or Yeddo, bay, now known to the world as 1 olcio, on July 2()th, 1846. For nine days Captain Biddle sought in vain to establish amicable relations but the Japanese, though extremely polite, refused to permit the imwelcome visitors to land. On the 29th, the Vincennes and Columbus, the first American naval vessels ever to enter a Japanese port, departed. Eight years later Commodore Matthew C. Perry succeeded in negotiating a treaty that allowed American vessels to enter certain Japanese ports for trade and thus began the rapid development of Japan as a world power. From 1849 to 1852 the Vincennes was assigned to the exploration of the Pacific Ocean. During this service she was 586 days at sea and sailed 62,520 miles. Speaking of this service her commanding ofi^cer reported that she behaved well under all circumstances and added that "in a head sea, and in a strong breeze, she can compete with any vessel." In 1854 the Vincennes figured prominently in one of the unsolved mys- teries of the sea. On September 12th of that year she set sail from Hong Kong in company with the two-masted brig, U. S. S. Porpoise, for a sur- vey of the South Seas Islands. On September 21st, the two ships became separated in a dense fog in mid-channel between China and Formosa. The Porpoise, carrying a crew of 69 men under command of Lieut. William King Bridge, was never heard from again. Several warships spent nearly a year in searching for her. but no trace of the ill-fated vessel was ever found. In 1855 the Vincennes, luider command of Commander John Rodgers, headed an official expedition into the Arctic regions, penetrating further north in the direction of AVrangel Land than white men had ever done before. In 1856 the Vincennes completed her second circumnavigation of the globe. By the time of the Civil ^Var the Vincennes was approaching the end of her usefulness. Sailships were rapidly giving way to steam-propelled vessels. On October 12th, 1861, the Vincennes was attacked at the mouth of the IVIississippi by the Confederate ship ]VIanassas, grounded, and was abandoned by her crew. A slow match was set to her magazine but it failed to explode. The next day the crew returned aboard and succeeded in floating her, after throwing over all her guns and shot. The last active * * * service of the old sloop was with the West Gulf Rlockading Squadron. On August 28th, 1865, the Vincennes was ordered placed in ordinary at Boston, and on October 5th, 1867 she was sold at public sale for $8,600 by Messrs. Harris «^ Phinney, auctioneers for the navy department. Thus, after forty years of useful and eventful service, came to an end the official career of the U. S. Sloop-of-War Vincennes. ^Vho acquired her or to what use she was put is unknown to the writer. Perhaps she was con\erted into a fishing smack or a tramp freighter, and most likely she sleeps somewhere in Davy Jones' locker, beneath the restless waves she once so proudly rode. The sloop Vincennes occupies an interesting place in the traditions, literature and art pertaining to the United States Navy. It seems proper to make mention of some of the more important items of this memorabilia in connection with this sketch. In 1833 C. S. Stewart, A. M., a chaplain in the naval service, published at New York two volumes of travels under the title, "A Visit to the South Seas in the U. States Ship Vincennes, During the Years 1829 and 1830." The official narrative of the U. S. exploring expedition under Commo- dore Charles Wilkes was published under that title in five volumes and an atlas at Philadelphia in 1845. Volume two of this work contains an excellent engraving of the Vincennes by C. A. Jewett. Another book re- lating to the same subject, by John S. Jenkins, was published at Peoria, Illinois, in 1852. In 1890 Charles Erskine, who, as a mere lad. had been a member of the trew of the Vincennes during the \Vilkes expedition, published, "Twenty Years Before the Mast." This is a thrilling story of sea adventure, much enjoyed by young men and boys of a generation ago. In the Peabody Museum at Salem, Massachusetts, hangs an oil painting by an unknown artist showing the Vincennes surrounded by icebergs as she stood by in Disappointment Bay, at the discovery of the Antarctic Continent in 1840. N. Currier, who styled himself "print maker to the American people," and whose works are much sought after by collectors, published a beautiful color lithograph over the title, "The U. S. Sloop-of-\Var Vincennes, 20 Guns," in 1846. In 1846 \Vagner «S: McGinjjiui of Philadelphia published two prints after sketches drawn by John Eastley, showing the U. S. S. Vincennes and Columbus at anchor in and departing from Jeddo Bay. These pictures are extremely interesting for the opportunity they afford of comparing Ameri- can ships of the period with the crude craft of the Japanese. * • * VINCENNES NAVAL OFFICERS I^OXSIOERIXG its size and location the City of Vincennes has furnished to the nation an unusually large number of naval officers. The list that follows is probably incomplete. The underlying reason, if there is any, for the large number of young Vincennes men who have chosen naval careers would make an interesting sociological study, but this is beyond the scope of what the writer has undertaken to do. That field is left, undisturbed, for someone else to pur- sue. ^ ^ Vice Admiral Albert Parker Niblack. Born at X'iiiceniies July 25, 1859. Son of William E. Niblack, member of Con- gress and Judge of the Supreme Court of Indiana. Educated at \'incennes University and United States Naval Academy, graduating from latter in 1880. From 1884-'88, engaged in surve> and exploration in Alaska. Flag Lieutenant, North Atlantic Squadron, 1893-'94. Inspector of naval militia, 1895-'96. Writer and lecturer at Naval War College, 1893-'96. Served as naval attache at Berlin, Rome and Vienna, also in Argentina, Brazil and Chile. Participated in Spanish-American War, Fili- pino Insurrection and Boxer campaign. Commanded U. S. S. Iroqouis, 1904-'06, the U. S. S. Tacoma, 1910, and the U. S. S. Michigan, 1914. Graduated from Naval War College, 1916. Promoted to commander 1907, rear admiral, 1917, and vice admiral, 1921. In command of U. S. naval forces based at Gibraltar, 1917, and in the Mediterranean in 1919. Director of Naval Intelligence, 1919-'20. Commander U. S. naval forces in Europe, 1920-'21. Author of "The Coast Indians of Alaska and Northern British Columbia," 1889, "Why Wars Come," 1922. Awarded U. S. Distinguished Service Medal ; Commander of the Royal Victorian Order, Companion of St. Michael and St. George, and Knight Commander of St. Michael and St. George by Great Britain; Commander of the Legion of Honor by France; Grand Officer of the Avis by Portugal; Commander of St. Maurice and St. Lazarus by Italy; White Eagle, Second Class (Military) and White Eagle, First Class (Civil) by Serbia; Order of the Sacred Treasure by Japan; Grand Officer Ouissam Alonite by the Sultan of Morocco; and Grand Officer of Niftar Ichitar by the Bey of Tunis. Retired 1923. Died August 20, 1929. Buried at Arlington. 1^ i^ 10 • • • Rear Admiral Xathaxiel Reilly Usher Born at \'incennes, Indiana, April 7, 1855. Preliminary education under Dr. R. M. Chapman, president of \'incennes University. Appointed to United States Naval Academy and graduated in 1875. Commissioned an ensign in 1876, and through the grades to rear admiral in 1911. Commanded the U. S. S. Ericsson in the Spanish- American War. With the General Board of the Navy Department, 1903-'04 and the Bureau of Navigation, 1904-'06. Commanded the V. S. S. St. Louis, 1906-'08. President of the Naval Examining and Retiring Boards, 1911-'12. Commanded the 4th Division of the Atlantic fleet, 1912, the 2nd Division, 1912-'13, the 3rd Division, 1913-'14. Commanded the New York Navy Yard, 1914-'18. Retired 1919. Awarded the Navy Cross for services during World War; Commander of the Legion of Honor of France. Died January 8, 1931. Buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Captaix Richard L. Law Born at \'incennes, December 12, 1824. Appointed to the Navy February 17, 1841. Promoted to Midshipman, 1847; Lieutenant, 1855; Lieutenant Commander, 1862; Commander, 1866; Captain, 1877. Retired, 1886. Commanded the "Clifton" during the Civil War. Died June 8, 1891. Commander Frank Carey McCord Born in Vincennes, August 2, 1890. Appointed to Naval Academy, 1907, graduat- ed, 1911. Commissioned Ensign, 1912; Lieutenant, 1917; Lieutenant Commander, 1921; Commander, 1931. Assigned to the command of the dirigible, U. S. S. Akron, 1932. Died at sea off the coast of New Jersey, in the crash of the Akron, April 4, 1933. Buried at Arlington. His last command to his crew to "Stand by for a crash!" will long be remembered as indicative of the cool courage of the men in the naval air service. LiEUTEXAXT Commander Albert G.allatin Caldwell Born at \'inccnnes. Appointed to Naval Academy, 1861. Promoted to Master, 1866; Lieutenant, 1868; Lieutenant Commander, 1868. Died {Date I'nkno^vn). Paymaster Edward C. Doran Born in Pennsylvania, December 25, 1820. Appointed to V. S. Navy from \'in- cennes, 1845. With Perry's Expedition to Japan, 1851-'54. Fleet paymaster. North Pacific Squadron, 1868-'69. On special duty at Paris Exposition, 1878. Died October 30, 1883. 11 * * * JvIEUTEXANT COM.MAN'DER FrANCIS EmERSOX GrEEXE Born in Louisville, Kentucky, July 1, 1853. Appointed a midshipman from Vin- cennes, on recommendation of Hon. W. E. Niblack, 1867. Ciraduated from Naval Academy, 1871; Promoted to Ensign 1872; Master, 1876; Lieutenant, 1882; Lieuten- ant Commander, 1899. Died on board V. S. S. Montgomery at Montevideo, Uru- ■Autn, Jaiuiary 10, 1900. LlEUTEXAXT AlLEX TiXDOLPH AgXEW Horn in Vincennes, July 8, 1891. Appointed Lieutenant (junior grade) Medical Corps, U. S. Naval Reserve, April 11, 1917; discharged, September 5, 1917. Reap- pointed, with rank of Lieutenant, February 1, 1918. Resigned October 29, 1919. Died September 28, 1935. LlEUTEXAXT Oliver Edward White Born at Vincennes December 12, 1908. Graduated from local high school, 1925. Spent one year at Rose Polytechnic Institute, and appointed to Naval Academy, 1926. Graduated and commissioned a Lieutenant, 1931. Killed in plane accident off Point Loma, Calif., March 17, 1936. Body lost at sea. Vincennes is represented at the present time by three commissioned of- ficers in the active service of the United States Navy. These young men, alumni of the local high school, are likewise graduates of the Naval Acad- emy at Annapolis. Sketches of their careers follow: LlEUTEXAXT Co.mmaxder Fraxcis ALarlix ALaile Born in Vincennes, January 1, 1892. Appointed Midshipman to Naval Academy, 1911. Commissioned Ensign, 1915; Lieutenant, junior grade, 1918; Lieutenant, 1920; Lieutenant Commander, 1926. Detailed as Assistant Naval Attache, American Em- bassy, Berlin, Germany, 1936. LlEUTEXAXT Morris James Westfall Born in \'incennes, April 17, 1897. Appointed Midshipman to Naval Academy, 1917. Commissioned Ensign, 1921; Lieutenant, junior grade, 1924; Lieutenant, 1927. Attached to Post (iraduate School, Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md., since 1933. Lieltexaxt Nicholas August Drai.m Born in \'incennes, January 18, 1901. Appointed Midshipman to Naval Academy, 1918. Commissioned Ensign, 1922; Lieutenant, junior grade, 1925; Lieutenant, 1928. On aeronautical engineering duty. Navy Department, Washington, 1936. 12 * * * THE CRUISER VINCENNES The heavy cruiser Vincennes, (CA44) the second U. S. naval vessel to carry that name, is one of nine ships of the same class authorized by an Act of Congress, June 16, 1933. The contract for her construction was awarded to the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, Ltd., August 3, 1933. Her keel was laid at the Fore River Yard. Quincy, Mass., January 2. 1934. The cruiser will cost $11,720,000. Her displacement will be 10,000 tons, and her designed speed 32.5 knots per hour. She will carry nine 8- inch and eight 5-inch guns. Mr. Harry E. Gould, General Alanager of the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, has taken a special interest in keeping the people of Vincennes informed as to the progress of the construction of the new cruiser. On February 25, 1936, Aliss Harriet V^irginia Kimmell, the charming daughter of Hon. Joseph W. Kinunell, Mayor of Vincennes, was officially designated by the Acting Secretary of the Navy as sponsor of the new Vincennes, the launching of which is scheduled to take place on May 21, 1936. For this traditional ceremony Aliss Kimmell will make use of a bottle of rare champagne sent to America for that specific purpose by Alonsieur Leon Bonvoisin, Chevalier de la Legion d'Honneur. Mayor of Vincennes, France. The citizens of Vincennes are also taking steps to present an appropriate sterling silver tea service for the Captain's quarters of the new cruiser. The presentation of this gift will take place when the ship is commissioned. Li addition, a number of radios will be supplied for the use of the crew, and the school children of the citv will present to the ship a fine American flag. The Vincennes is scheduled for completion Januar\ 2, 1937. She will bear an honored name and will, no doubt, play an important part in our nation's "first line of defense." 13 • * * -SWEETHEARTS AND WIVES" For many years it has been a tradition for the men in the naval service of the United States, wherever they may be assembled on New Year's day, to sing "Sweethearts and ^Vives," as a toast to their loved ones at home. This beautiful son*:; was written by "Hub" Smith, a native son of old V^incennes. Hubbard Taylor Smith was born March 29th, 1853. Upon graduating from Vincennes University, he went to Washington, D. C, where he be- came private secretary to John W. Foster, Secretary of State, in 18Q2. Later, he entered the diplomatic service and held many important posts in various parts of the world. He distinguished himself during the Boxer up- rising in China. His career was cut short by his death which occurred at Genoa on February 10, 1903. "Hub" Smith will be best remembered, however, as the composer of a number of delightful songs. Among these are, "Listen to My Tale of AVoe," "Swinging on the Grape Vine Swing," "Johnny Jones and His Sis- ter Sue," and "Sweethearts and AVives." The words of the last mentioned follow : "Now, comrades, fill your glasses and cease each merry jest. Let every one among you think of her whom he loves best. From Maine to California, in lands far off and near, God bless the girls who love us, the girls our hearts hold dear. Chorus "Sweethearts and wi\es, wherever we may roam, Back fly our thoughts to you and home. Sweethearts and wives, fond hearts and true, AVith tear dimmed eyes we drink to you. "ALake it a bumper, comrades, and each one standing here Can whisper above his glass, the name he holds most dear. "While as we drink in silence, across the ocean foam. Our loving greetings flv tonight, we drink to those at home." 14 * • * A LOCAL NAVAL TRADITION Due to the unusual interest in matters pertaining to the United States Navy in Vincennes, it has been a custom there for many years to carry out a distinctive program in honor of the city's sailor dead on each Memo- rial Day (May 30th). These ceremonies usually embrace patriotic music reminiscent of the nation's naval history, an appropriate address emphasiz- ing the part played by the sons of Vincennes in naval achievements of the past, and the casting of flowers into the historic ^Vabash as a silent tribute m memoriam. In the past these ceremonies were held on the crude bridge that spanned the river at Vincennes. However, the completion of the imposing George Rogers Clark Memorial and Lincoln Memorial Bridge, adjacent thereto, now provide a beautiful and impressive setting. To one who is fortunate enough to attend one of these ceremonies on a May afternoon, when the setting sun is casting flickering shadows on the rippling waters of the ^Vabash, there is presented a picture long to be remembered. 15 * * * BIBLIOGRAPHY (Material Relating to I'. S. Sloop of War \'incennes) Report of the Secretary of the Navy, 18 52, pp. 297-298. Report of the Secretary of the Navy, 1854, pp. 388-389. Report of the Secretary of the Navy, 1855, pp. 7-9. Report of the Secretary of the Navy, 1856, pp. 409-410. U. S. Senate Document, No. 59, 32 Cong., 1 sess., pp. 64-66. U. S. Naval Institute Proceedings, Vol. 36, pp. 726-734. U. S. Naval Institute Proceedings, Vol. 37, pp. 243-249. Record of I'nion and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion, Series II, Vol. I, p. 232-233. Wilkes, Charles, "Narrative of the U. S. Exploriru/ Expedition," 5 vols, and Atlas. Jenkins, John S., "The JVilkes Expedition." Bowen, Frank C, "The Sea, Its History and Romance," pp. 90-94-259. Moore, Sir Alan, "Sailinrj Ships of Jf'ar," pp. 61, 68. Emmons, Lieut. George F. ( U. S. N.) "The Na-vy of the United States, (1775- 1853)," pp. 26, 104-105. Stewart, C. C, A. M., "./ I'isit to the South Seas, in the I'. States Ship J'incennes, during the Years JS29 and 1830." Lewis, C. L., "Life of Franklin Buchanan," pp. 84-87. Foster, John W., " A rnerican Diplomacy in the Orient," pp. 140-141. Erskine, Charles, "T^wenty Years Before the Mast." 16 * * * The Sloop J'incennes in Disappointment Bay, at the Discovery of the Antarctic Continent , January 19 , 1840. (From an oil painting by an unknown artist, in the Peabody Museum, Salem, Mass.) 17 • * * "Till^^S^!^'^- "^V^Nscs^ The U. S. S. Columbus and Viiuenncs in Japan ^1 Departure of the l. S. S. Columbus and Vineennes from Jeddo Bay. July 19, 1S46. (From lithoKraiihs after sketches drawn by John Eastley, published by Wagner & McGingan. Philadelphia, 1846.) 18 * * * (Copyright Hiwris & Ewins;) J 'ice Ad //lira! Albert Parker Nibhick {1859-1929) 19 * * * Rear Admiral Nathaniel Reilly Usher {1855-1931) 20 • * • (Copyright Harris & Ewing) CoiniiKinder Frank Carey JMcCord {1890-1933) 21 * * * Layitu/ the Keel of the U. S. (Jruiser Vincennes. at Fore River P/ntit of the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation . Ltd., Quiney, Mass., January 2, 1^^34 22 * • * iMiss Harriet J iryinia kiminell Sponsor of the Cruiser Vincemies 23 KELtER-CRESCENT CO., EVANSVILLE» IND. UNIVERSfTY OF ILLINOIS-URBANA llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 3 0112 07258221 y^ 3 0112 072582213