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SABINE
PASS AND
GALVESTON WERE
SUCCESSFUL
BLOCKADE-RUNNING
PORTS
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
ENTERPRISE,
February 5,
1984.
Source: 2
articles, "A
Tribute" and
"Capt. Henry
Scherffius,"
Galveston
Daily News,
Nov. 26, 1894
and many other
sources.
One
of the most
colorful
chapters of
Civil War
history, yet
rarely written
about, is the
story of
blockade-running
to and from
the Texas
seaports.
Galveston was
the focal
point of such
commerce in
Texas, as well
as each Texas
river which
empties into
the Gulf of
Mexico.
Despite a
five-ship
flotilla of
Union Navy
blockaders off
the port of
Galveston for
most of the
war,
Confederate
vessels
entered and
exited there,
as well as at
Sabine Pass,
with the
clock-like
frequency of
passenger
trains.
As
early as July
2, 1861, the
Federal
steamer "South
Carolina"
began
blockading
Galveston,
after which
the fame of
Sabine Pass,
where no
permanent
blockade was
established
until
September,
1862, grew
steadily. By
1862, much of
the gunpowder
entering Texas
came through
that port. And
in fact, it
was the
Confederate
sea captains,
due to their
bragging at
Havana, Cuba,
of the ease of
entry at
Sabine Pass,
who accounted
for the first
blockader that
arrived.
In
July, 1862,
Major Julius
Kellersberg,
the
Confederate
chief engineer
for East
Texas, wrote
that : ". . .
the Pass at
Sabine is
certainly a
very important
port, and in
fact, the only
port from
where we
receive our
powder and
other
articles."
Shortly
afterward, Lt.
Frederick
Crocker, the
Federal
blockade
commander at
Sabine
estuary,
reported that:
". . .the
importance of
Sabine Pass to
the Rebels has
been entirely
underated by
us."
The
first
blockade-runner
at Sabine was
Captain Henry
Scherffius, an
immigrant
German, who
was already
engaged in the
Orange export
lumber trade
at the
outbreak of
the war. In
antebellum
days, the
Sabine Pass
had two
channels,
divided by a
shallow oyster
reef, and two
treacherous
mud flats at
Texas and
Louisiana
Points. And
only the most
experienced of
pilots, one of
whom was
Scherffius,
could expect
to navigate
there,
especially at
night, without
running
aground.
When
the war began,
export
commerce ended
abruptly in
Southeast
Texas, as
Texans
hurriedly
enlisted and
left for
Virginia. Late
in April,
1861,
Scherffius
ferried the
first company
mustered in
Tyler County
from Sabine
Pass to
Brashear
(Morgan) City,
La., aboard
his schooner
"Clarinda."
The vessel
belonged to
Sims and
Bazile, lumber
manufacturers
of Orange, who
because of
invasion
rumors,
proposed to
dismast the
schooner and
hide the hull
in Cow Bayou
until the
emergency
subsided. As a
counter
proposal, the
captain
offered to
sail the
"Clarinda" to
Vera Cruz,
Mexico, with a
load of
cypress lumber
and trade for
a cargo that
would yield
the highest
profits, to be
shared equally
by the captain
and the
owners.
On
August 29,
1861, he
cleared Sabine
bar with
35,000 feet of
lumber. Upon
reaching his
destination,
he was delayed
for one month
by the slow
grinding of
the Mexican
bureaucracy,
but five days
after leaving
there, he was
back at the
Sabine estuary
with a
profitable
cargo of
merchandise,
". . .his
achievement
making him the
hero of all
this portion
of the coast."
One of his
adveraries at
Vera Cruz was
the United
States consul,
who sought to
libel his
vessel in an
admiralty
court. Hence,
Scherffius,
using one of
his full bag
of Confederate
tricks and
ruses,
promptly
converted the
"Clarinda" to
British
registry and
flew the
English flag.
Successful
blockade-runners
soon learned
to employ
every skill
and guise in
their bag of
tricks to
avoid capture.
For example,
anywhere from
two to ten
cotton
schooners
would attempt
to clear the
Sabine bar
simultaneously,
some headed
east and some
headed west.
This ruse
usually
guaranteed the
escape of all
but one of
them because
the blockade
fleet could
afford to keep
steam up on
only one
vessel at a
time, and
sailing ships
at anchor
always had
sails furled.
Confederate
captains often
sailed at high
tide of a dark
night or in a
fog bank,
turned their
shallow-draft
schooners east
or west to hug
the coast, and
then escaped
when the first
opportunity
arose.
Of
eight incoming
vessels
arriving at
Sabine with
gunpowder and
other
munitions
during the
summer of
1862, the
first seven
were of
English
registry, as
follows:
steamer
"Victoria,"
from Havana;
schooner
"Rambler,"
from Havana;
schooner
"Henrietta,"
from Belize;
schooner
"Tampico,"
from Tampico;
schooner
"Henry
Colthirst,"
from Belize;
schooner
"Stingray,"
from Kingston,
Jamaica;
schooner
"Governor,"
from
Campeachy,
Mexico; and
the
Confederate
States
schooner "Sara
Jordan," also
from Belize.
The
"Victoria"
also brought
yellow fever
to Sabine
Pass, and the
epidemic
rampaged for 2
1/2 months,
killing 100
soldiers and
civilians. As
a result the
town was
evacuated, and
no sailors
wanted to land
or go ashore
there that
fall. The
"Tampico,"
although
flying the
British flag,
was owned by
Sabine and
Beaumont
merchants,
usually
hauling cotton
only from the
latter town.
On
July 8, 1862,
the Union
blockader
"Hatteras"
arrived from
Havana and
patrolled
offshore from
Sabine Pass
for about ten
days before
moving on to
Galveston to
the blockade
fleet there.
The next
December, the
C. S. S.
raider
"Alabama,"
while sailing
without
running lights
and attempting
to run into
the port of
Galveston for
fuel, was
discovered by
the
"Hatteras,"
the only Union
vessel with
steam up. The
"Alabama"
retreated 20
miles
offshore, and
in a freakish,
one-sided,
night battle,
the "Hatteras"
was sunk in 13
minutes by the
Confederate
States
steamer.
From
July to
September 20,
1862, Sabine's
Confederate
collector B.
F. McDonough
wrote: ". . .
There are
vessels of the
enemy off the
bar
occasionally
during this
time. There
never were
more than one
vessel at a
time.
Sometimes they
remained a few
hours and in
two or three
instances a
day or two.
There were
intervals of
from one to
four weeks
during which
no vessel of
the enemy
appeared in
sight."
During
the epidemic,
and until the
burning of the
Union gunboat
"Dan" at
Sabine
lighthouse on
the night of
Jan. 8, 1863,
the Sabine
Pass and Lake
were under
Federal
control.
Thereafter,
the Sabine
blockaders,
never more
than two ships
at a time,
were usually
of such deep
draft that
they were
forced to
anchor five
miles beyond
the bar. The
time needed to
hoist sails or
get up steam
always slowed
them in their
pursuit of
victims. The
smoke or
sparks emitted
by the stacks
of
blockade-running
steamers
always
foretold their
presence
before they
were in sight;
hence, a
small, fleet
schooner with
a favorable
wind always
had the best
chance for
escape.
After
his first
voyage, Capt.
Scherffius
learned that
cotton was in
much greater
demand in
Mexico than
lumber, and
thereafter he
left Sabine
Pass with 125
or more bales
of the fluffy,
white
commodity on
each voyage.
During the
next two
years,
although fired
upon on
several
occasions by
the blockade
flotilla, he
escaped 13
times,
sometimes
sailing to
Vera Cruz or
Tampico if he
sailed to the
west, or on
other
occasions to
Havana;
Kingston,
Jamaica; or
Belize,
British
Honduras.
On
his thirteenth
voyage, he was
doggedly
pursued by a
blockader for
48 hours.
During a
thunderstorm,
he ran the
"Clarinda"
aground near
the Aransas
Pass
lighthouse,
set fire to
his schooner,
and he and his
crew escaped
to Corpus
Christi in
their yawl
boat.
In
September,
1862, there
were thirteen
blockade-runners,
eight steamers
and five
schooners,
loaded with
2,000 bales of
cotton, docked
in Jefferson
and Orange
counties,
awaiting
favorable
conditions to
escape the
coast. During
that period,
there is also
the unpleasant
story of those
blockade-runners
who failed to
escape the
clutches of
their
pursuers.
Earlier in the
war, D. R.
Wingate of
Sabine Pass
lost one of
his lumber
schooners,
loaded with
cotton, to the
Union navy
near Cuba. In
1862, he
bought the
steamer "Pearl
Plant" and
with 500 bales
loaded aboard,
attempted to
run the
blockade.
Instead, to
avoid capture,
he had to run
his steamer
aground in the
soft mud at
Texas Point,
after which he
and his crew
burned the
boat and cargo
before wading
ashore.
When
the blockader
"Hatteras"
arrived, it
soon captured
the schooner
"Sarah,"
loaded with
molasses and
sugar, as it
attempted to
enter the
Sabine
estuary.
During the
same week, the
blockader also
seized the
steamer
"Indian No.
2," loaded
with flour and
bacon, and the
outgoing
schooner,
"William,"
loaded with
cotton.
Two
months later,
Lt. Frederick
Crocker, the
new Sabine
blockade
master,
promptly
captured four
British
Schooners, the
"Dart,"
"Velocity,"
"Adventure,"
and "West
Florida," all
attempting to
enter at
Sabine Pass.
Crocker was
mystified when
the "West
Florida's"
master
presented a
"cotton pass,"
purportedly
signed by
Union Gen.
Benjamin F.
Butler of New
Orleans, which
allowed the
schooner to
buy cotton
along the
coast and
return it to
Federal
custody in New
Orleans.
Instead,
Crocker sent
the
blockade-runner
under a prize
crew to
Pensacola,
Fla., for
adjudication
in the prize
court of
Admiral David
Farragut.
Eventually, by
order of
President
Lincoln, Gen.
Butler was
ordered to
discontinue
the issuance
of such
"passes."
A
week later,
during a
daring foray
80 miles up
the Calcasieu
River with
only 14 men,
Crocker burned
the cotton
schooners
"Conchita,"
"Mary Ann,"
and "Eliza,"
and captured
the steamboat
"Dan," which
he converted
to a Union
gunboat for
patrolling
Sabine Lake.
During
December,
1863, an
incoming
vessel, the
schooner
"Rosalee," was
trapped by a
blockader, and
during a
24-hour chase,
jettisoned 180
forty-pound
kegs of
gunpowder
overboard in
an effort to
outdistance
its pursuer.
Failing the
chase, the
captain drove
his schooner
onto the beach
a few miles
west of
Sabine, and
when the
blockader
lowered a
whaleboat, the
skipper
lighted a
fuse, and
while wading
ashore, blew
up his ship
and cargo.
After
the loss of
the
"Clarinda,"
Capt.
Scherffius
returned to
Orange after
the Battle of
Sabine Pass,
and the
captured
steamers
"Clifton" and
"Sachem" were
in an Orange
shipyard,
undergoing
conversion to
blockade-runners.
By 1864,
Scherffius'
fame as a
successful
blockade-runner
had spread
throughout the
South. When T.
W. House, Sr.,
a Houston
cotton broker,
bought the
"Sachem" at a
public
auction, he
promptly
employed
Scherffius and
assigned him
as the
"Sachem's" new
master. The
captain
quickly
renamed it
after his old
schooner, the
"Clarinda."
The
steamer is
believed to
have made two
successful
voyages during
the summer of
1864. On Sept.
14, the
Galveston
"Tri-Weekly
News" noted
that the
vessel was
loaded with
cotton at
Sabine and
awaiting a
favorable
opportunity to
escape the
coast. A week
later,
Scherffius put
to sea with
500 bales.
Alerted by
sparks emitted
from the
ship's funnel
during the
night, one
blockader took
up the chase,
but the saucy
"Clarinda,"
its fire boxes
red hot and
its steam drum
ever in danger
of rupturing,
soon
outdistanced
its pursuer.
Capt. J. B.
Marchand,
chief of the
Galveston
blockade
fleet,
immediately
dispatched two
gunboats to
the Mexican
coast with
orders to
await the
return voyage
of the
"Clarinda" and
recapture her.
Upon
arrival at
Vera Cruz,
Scherffius
sold his
cargo,
accepting in
payment a gold
sight draft on
Baring
Brothers of
London. When
he learned
that the two
gunboats were
offshore from
the city,
awaiting his
sailing, he
then sold the
"Clarinda" to
a British
firm,
accepting
another L8,000
pound gold
draft as
payment. He
returned
overland to
Houston and
delivered both
drafts to
House, who
immediately
rewarded him
with another
command.
Earlier
in the war,
the
Confederacy
had ordered
three fleet,
iron-hulled
steamers from
Laird
Shipyards of
Liverpool,
England, for
use as Texas
blockade-runners,
only two of
which reached
Galveston
before the war
ended. The
"Lark" arrived
in December,
1864, and the
"Wren" one
month later.
On its last
return to
Galveston
about April 1,
1865, the
"Wren," loaded
with
gunpowder,
muskets, and
shells, was
fired upon by
every gun in
the blockader
flotilla, but
made it into
the bay
without
mishap.
House
also gave
command of the
"Lark" to
Scherffius,
who was
unloading
cotton at
Havana when
General Robert
E. Lee
surrendered on
April 12,
1865, at
Appomattox
Courthouse,
Va. After the
sale of the
second
"Clarinda,"
the captain
never returned
to Orange
again, except
as a visitor.
He continued
in House'
employ, and
was president
of a Houston
bank when he
died on Nov.
22, 1894.
Beaumont's
best-known
blockade-runner
was the
British
schooner
"Tampico,"
which belonged
to Otto and C.
H. Ruff,
merchants of
Beaumont, and
Charles H.
Alexander, the
largest cotton
merchant at
Sabine Pass.
Unfortunately,
surviving
Confederate
records only
cover the
summer of
1862, but the
incoming
"Tampico"" was
one of those
listed,
arriving with
gunpowder on
August 11th.
According
to court house
records, the
"Tampico" must
have made six
or seven
voyages,
carrying
cotton, before
its loss. When
Otto Ruff, who
was one-third
owner, died of
yellow fever
in October,
1862, his
estate
consisted of
$4,410 on hand
from the
"Tampico's"
previous
voyages;
$5,787 in
cotton credits
owed by the
firm of
Diomicio
Camacho of
Mexico; and
one-third of
the cargo of
the "Tampico,"
which was then
at sea. On a
subsequent
voyage in
April, 1863,
the Beaumont
schooner was
captured
offshore from
Sabine Pass
with 112 bales
aboard.
Another
sad loss was
that of the
captured
gunboat
"Clifton,"
converted to
blockade-runner.
In March,
1864, the
"Clifton" ran
aground at
Texas Point
with 600 bales
aboard and had
to be burned
when capture
was imminent.
There
were other
blockade-runners
from Orange,
Texas.
Alexander
Gilmer, a
sawmiller, ran
cotton abroad
until his
schooner was
captured off
Sabine Pass by
the U. S. S.
"Hatteras"
during the
fall of 1862.
Dennis Call,
Sr., a pioneer
merchant of
Orange, was
another who
made a few
successful
voyages,
eventually
wrecking his
cotton-laden
schooner off
the Campeachy
coast of
Mexico. He
barely escaped
with his life.
Capt.
Gus Pavell, a
long-time
cotton broker
at Pavell's
Island,
Louisiana, the
delta island
in the Sabine
River, was
another who
had an
illustrious
career,
escaping
capture for
two years
before
quitting the
sea in
January, 1864.
When he died
of yellow
fever at
Galveston in
1867, his old
blockade-running
schooner
"Sophia" was
still floating
serenely at
anchor at
Pavell's
Island, a part
of the
inventory of
his estate.
As
already
stated, the
Beaumont and
Orange
blockade-runners
had mixed
results at the
end of the
war. Wingate,
Call, and
Gilmer were
bankrupt by
1865, but
later, each
recouped his
fortunes in
the
sawmilling,
merchandising,
and shipping
businesses.
However,
Scherffius and
Pavell were
among those
who lined
their pockets
with gold
coins and were
financially
secure for the
remainder of
their lives.
When
one considers
that all of
the
Confederacy's
cotton and
probably 95
percent of its
munitions were
ferried by
blockade-runners,
their role in
the Civil War
becomes
apparent. A
successful
schooner
master was
almost as
valuable as
any general.
Hence,
Scherffius,
Pavell and
other
successful
practitioners
of the
blockade-running
trade helped
the
Confederate
States to
survive for
four long
years against
astronomical
odds.
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