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'SINGEING
GENERAL
TAYLOR'S
BEARD:'
LIEUTENANT
FREDERICK
CROCKER'S
DARING
CALCASIEU RAID
By
W. T. Block
In
the Civil War
chronicles of
Admiral David
Farragut's
West Gulf
Blockading
Squadron, one
incident of
extreme
courage and
bravery might
escape notice,
although the
admiral did
recommend
Acting Master
Frederick
Crocker for a
promotion and
commendation
as a result of
that incident.
And more than
a century in
retrospect, it
requires
minimal
hindsight to
recognize that
Lt. Crocker's
raid up the
Calcasieu
River in
Southwest
Louisiana was
no ordinary
feat. On
October 3,
1862, he and
fourteen of
his
Bluejackets
dashed up the
river in a
sloop, armed
only with
small arms and
a six-pound
boat howitzer,
burned three
blockade-runners,
captured the
steamboat
"Dan," and
after a
six-day,
eighty-mile
penetration
deep into
Confederate
territory,
escaped
downriver
without a
single
casualty or a
shot being
fired at them.
At
the outbreak
of the war,
the United
States Navy
was at a
severe
disadvantage
because of a
shortage of
sailors,
ships, and
equipment, due
in part to the
loss of
Federal
shipping and
facilities in
the southern
states. The
Confederacy
had only one
export
commodity --
cotton -- and
almost no
manufacturing
facilities for
the
necessities of
war. Hence,
the Union navy
was
immediately
faced with the
need to
blockade 3,000
miles of Rebel
coastline to
halt the
shipment of
cotton and
import of
munitions.
The
establishment
of an
effective
blockade of
the Gulf of
Mexico
coastline had
to await the
availability
of men and
ships, the
evacuation of
the Port of
Pensacola by
the
Confederates,
and the Union
capture of New
Orleans in
April, 1862
(as early as
July, 1861,
the U. S.
steamer "South
Carolina" was
already
blockading the
Port of
Galveston). In
1862, Adm.
Farragut
quickly placed
Commander W.
B. Renshaw in
charge of the
blockade fleet
and "mortar
flotilla" off
Galveston
Island, and
one of
Renshaw's
subordinate
officers was
Lt. Crocker,
aboard the U.
S. steamer
"Kensington."
Renshaw was
also fortunate
to have three
Texas ship
captains, L.
W. Pennington,
James G.
Taylor, and
Henry Clay
Smith, all of
them former
residents of
Sabine Pass,
Texas, and all
of them
defectors to
the Union
Navy, who knew
the inland
waters of the
Texas-Louisiana
coastline
superbly.
In
September,
1862, Lt.
Pennington was
already
blockading the
Sabine River
estuary aboard
the U. S.
mortar
schooner
"Henry Janes."
On September
21, Pennington
was joined by
Crocker,
aboard the
"Kensington,"
and Acting
Master Quincy
Hooper, who
commanded the
U. S. schooner
"Rachel
Seaman." Soon
afterward the
little
squadron took
control of the
Sabine estuary
and destroyed
the abandoned
Confederate
fort there,
because a
raging "yellow
jack" (yellow
fever)
epidemic had
already killed
a hundred
soldiers and
civilians at
Sabine Pass,
Texas, and
forced the
evacuation of
most of the
remainder.
On
October 1,
1862, Crocker
steered the
steamer
"Kensington"
to the nearby
Louisiana
coastline to
check for
Rebel shipping
in the
Calcasieu and
Mermentau
Rivers. He
soon captured
a British
blockade-runner,
the
cotton-laden
schooner "West
Florida,"
whose captain
possessed a
"pass,"
purportedly
signed by
Union General
Benjamin F.
Butler of New
Orleans, which
permitted the
English ship
to buy
Confederate
cotton
coastwise and
return it to
Federal
custody at New
Orleans.
Uninformed of
Butler's
duplicity in
the coastwise
cotton trade,
Crocker sent
the "West
Florida" under
a prize crew
to Admiral
Farragut at
Pensacola for
adjudication.
Upon
anchoring at
the mouth of
the Calcasieu
River, which
was at that
moment
undefended,
Crocker and a
whaleboat or
'launch'
filled with
crewmen rowed
inland to the
home of Union
sympathizer
Duncan Smith
to inquire
about Rebel
shipping in
the river.
Smith informed
Crocker that
the
Confederate
steamer "Dan"
had run the
blockade to
Matamoras,
Mexico, a
month earlier
with a load of
cotton, and
had just
returned to
Goosport, its
home port two
miles north of
Lake Charles,
La., carrying
gunpowder,
cannons, lead,
and muskets.
Crocker also
learned that
the Spanish
blockade-runner
"Conchita" was
also anchored
in the
Calcasieu at
Leesburg (now
Cameron),
while its
captain and
crew were gone
to Houston to
purchase
government-owned
cotton.
Unknown to the
Confederates,
the
"Conchita's"
captain also
had a "pass,"
signed by Gen.
Butler,
allowing him
to purchase
cotton with
Union gold
coins and
return his
cargo to New
Orleans.
Smith
also assured
Crocker that
possibly he
might be able
to ascend the
river and
capture the
"Dan." The
former
recounted that
not more than
twenty-five
overage males
lived in the
vicinity of
the river, all
of the younger
men being
away, already
enrolled in
the Calcasieu
Regiment which
was fighting
in General
Richard
Taylor's
Confederate
army. When
Crocker
informed
Duncan Smith
that he needed
a
shallow-draft
steamboat to
use while
burning
bridges,
ferries, and
shipping in
the Texas and
Louisiana
rivers, the
latter
confided to
Crocker that
the fast
packet would
meet his needs
superbly.
The
steamer "Dan"
was fairly
new, having
been built at
Goosport in
1857 by
Captain Daniel
Goos, a Lake
Charles
sawmiller. The
"Dan" was a
28-foot by
99-foot
sidewheeler,
of 112 tons
burden, built
of four-inch
thick white
oak planking
over oak ribs.
Although
possessing
only a
four-foot
depth of
draft, unlike
the average
cotton boat,
the "Dan" had
a V-bottom,
deepsea hull
and and its 5
1/2-foot depth
of hold gave
it an
unusually
large bale
capacity (600)
for a packet
of that size.
The steamboat
had already
hauled cotton
to Mexico on
two or three
occasions,
returning each
time with
munitions as
well as
coffee, salt,
drugs, calico
yard goods,
hardware, and
other
articles.
On
October 3, Lt.
Crocker rigged
his ship's
launch with a
mast and two
sloop sails,
and
accompanied by
two officers,
twelve
sailors, his
six-pound boat
howitzer, and
small arms,
begin sailing
inland. He
stopped at
each landing
and burned
ferries, while
his men spread
rumors that
there were
also ". .
three (Union)
barges in the
river, each
mounting a
six-pound
cannon, and
carrying 20
men each and
in addition, a
schooner with
two hundred
men on board
and six guns
was also in
the river,
only a few
miles below .
. ." Crocker
has assumed
correctly that
riders would
be dispatched
northward to
warn of an
invasion many
times larger
than it
actually was.
At one
landing,
Crocker was
most fortunate
to capture
Colonel
Nathaniel
Clifton,
commander of
the Calcasieu
Regiment, who
was home on
furlough, and
who was to
become a
hostage for
the remainder
of the raid.
Crocker
and his men
sailed on to
Lake Charles,
eventually
reaching
Goosport, two
miles farther
inland, but
found no
steamer there.
He learned,
however, from
informants
along the
river bank
that the "Dan"
had left the
previous day
and was hidden
in a deep
bayou
somewhere to
the north. The
determined
raiders sailed
on, finally
discovering
the packet
partially
hidden by
willow and
cypress
branches in
the west fork
of the
Calcasieu
River, beyond
Clendinning's
Ferry, and
they captured
the steamboat
without firing
a shot.
In
a long letter
from Lake
Charles,
published in
Galveston
"Weekly News"
of October 22,
1862, and
subscribed
only by the
pseudonym
"Louisiana," a
resident
expressed
dismay that a
"Yankee" raid
could
penetrate so
deeply into
Confederate
territory
without
encountering
resistance of
any kind. But
the writer
acknowledged
that there
were only
fourteen
overage white
males in Lake
Charles and
perhaps
fourteen more
on the cotton
plantations
surrounding
the town. In
exactly the
same manner of
Paul Revere a
century
earlier,
"Louisiana"
rode all night
on October 5,
alerting the
planters of
the parish,
and after a
thirty-five
circuitous
route through
the
countryside,
he and about
sixteen old
farmers, armed
only with
musket
shotguns,
arrived at the
banks of the
river. There
they met a
Colonel W. W.
Johnson of the
State Militia
and a handful
of other
residents, who
had gathered
to await the
return of
Crocker's
raiders. The
Rebel Paul
Revere wrote
that, after
remaining in
ambush for
several hours,
"....the men
became
impatient, and
being under no
restraint
other than
their own,
some of the
officers
returned to
their
plantations..."
After
the "Dan's"
capture,
Crocker
removed his
boat howitzer
and remounted
it behind
cotton bales
on the prow of
the steamboat.
He then tied
Col. Clifton,
the "Dan's"
pilot,
captain, and
"ten or
twelve" other
hostages at
exposed
positions near
the helm, and
with the
launch in tow,
the Union
sailors began
their descent
of the river.
They stopped
long enough to
burn
Clendinning's
Ferry, a main
crossing along
the wagon road
which carried
Texas supplies
and
reinforcements
to Gen.
Taylor's army.
At Goosport,
Crocker
discovered an
arriving
schooner, so
he set the
blockade-runner
"Mary Ann"
ablaze. Under
threats to
burn the
sawmill, he
forced Captain
Goos to load
several
hundred bales
of cotton on
the packet.
Crocker's
arrival back
at Lake
Charles is
best retold in
his own words,
as follows:
".
. . I then
levied on the
town a
contribution
of sweet
potatoes and
beef, which
was furnished
. . . and was
informed by
Union men,
plenty of
which I found,
that a large
party had
collected to
attack us
below;
whereupon I
seized upon
ten or twelve
inhabitants of
the place and
posting them
around the man
at the wheel,
made the best
of my way down
the river. I
found one
other large
schooner (the
"Eliza"),
which I also
burned, and
thus destroyed
all the
navigation in
the river,
besides
teaching the
people a
lesson they
will not soon
forget. As
soon as I
reached a
place of
safety, I
released the
prisoners . .
."
After
waiting
several hours,
the ambuscade
of farmers,
comprising
Col. Johnson,
the Rebel Paul
Revere known
only as
"Louisiana,"
and his
Calcasieu
'Minute Men,'
sighted pine
knot smoke
rising above
the
neighboring
cypress
forest, and
they realized
the "Dan": was
steaming
downriver.
Forwarned of
their
presence,
Crocker fired
a number of
shells in
their
direction, all
of which
exploded
harmlessly. As
the "Dan"
approached,
Johnson
ordered that
no shots be
fired, for the
only people
aboard the
packet who
were visible
were the
pilot, Col.
Clifton, and
other Lake
Charles
neighbors who
were tied up
as hostages.
Upon reaching
a safe point
at Leesburg,
where the
"Conchita" lay
at anchor,
Crocker
stopped the
"Dan,"
releasing all
of the
prisoners
aboard except
Col. Clifton,
whom he had
hoped to
exchange for a
Federal navy
lieutenant
being held for
the
Confederates.
Crocker then
burned the
"Conchita,"
whose crew,
fearing arrest
by the Rebels,
had abandoned
her.
After
his return to
Sabine Lake,
the feisty
lieutenant put
his
thirty-pound
Parrott rifle
and twenty
five
Bluejackets
from the
"Kensington"
aboard the
"Dan." And for
three months,
the former
blockade-runner
strutted up
and down the
Lake and Pass
at will,
harassing the
Rebel cavalry
along the
shores and
Sabine's
civilians
alike. On
October 21,
the "Dan's"
crew came
ashore with
their boat
howitzer and
burned
$150,000 worth
of property,
mostly sawmill
factories and
some palatial
residences. On
the night of
January 8,
1863, after
much scheming
and two
previously
unsuccessful
attempts, nine
Confederate
cavalrymen
rowed up to
the "Dan,"
then at anchor
during a dense
fog at Sabine
Lighthouse in
Southwest
Louisiana, and
tossed pine
knot torches
aboard until
the gunboat
was a blazing
inferno from
stem to stern.
And as the
fiery
silhouette in
the pea-soupy
fog
surrendered
once again to
darkness, the
skeleton of
the "Dan" slid
to its final
berth beneath
the shadows of
the
lighthouse.
On
October 28,
1862, Admiral
Farragut
forwarded Gen.
Butler's
"pass," issued
to the 'West
Florida," to
Secretary of
the Navy
Gideon Welles,
along with
Crocker's
report and a
letter which
recommended
Acting Master
Frederick
Crocker ". . .
for promotion
. . . Captain
Crocker's
entire conduct
meets my
highest
approbation;
his energy and
managment in
the whole
affair at
Calcasieu
River is worth
of
commendation .
. ." Farragut
also paroled
Colonel
Nathaniel
Clifton,
captured on
Crocker's
raid, at
Pensacola on
October 30. By
November 11,
1862,
Secretary of
War E. M.
Stanton, by
order of
President
Lincoln,
notified Gen.
Benjamin
Butler at New
Orleans that
he must
refrain from
issuing any
further
"cotton
passes" to
blockade-runners.
For
the next
eleven months
after his
Calcasieu
raid, Lt.
Frederick
Crocker
continued his
services to
the West Gulf
Blockading
Squadron until
he was
selected by
Gen. N. B.
Banks to lead
a flotilla of
gunboats
detailed to
subdue
Confederate
Fort Griffin
at Sabine
Pass, Texas,
on September
8, 1863.
Instead
Crocker's
force fell
victim to the
amazingly
accurate and
savage gunnery
of a young
Irish and
equally
courageous
lieutenant,
Richard "Dick"
Dowling and
his Davis
Guards.
Thereafter,
Crocker
remained a
Confederate
prisoner of
war at either
Camp Groce or
Camp Ford,
Texas, his
brilliant
naval career
effectively
ended in
defeat and
surrender.
Nevertheless,
the story of
this feisty
and daring
sailor's
exploit, when
Crocker sailed
eighty miles
into enemy
territory and
"singed the
beard" of
Confederate
General
Richard
Taylor, should
be worthy of
retelling and
remembance
around the
camp fires.
SOURCE
MATERIAL:
"Official
Records of the
Union and
Confederate
Navies,"
Series I, Vol.
XIX, 217-231;
"The Diary of
First Sergeant
H. N. Connor,"
Co. A,
Spaight's 11th
Texas
Battalion,
unpublished
manuscript;
"The Enemy's
Raid in Lower
Lousiana,"
Galveston
"Weekly News,"
October 22,
1862. The
reader should
note how
closely this
narrative
affected split
allegiances
within the
writer's own
family. Duncan
Smith, the
arch-Unionist
collaborator
on the
Calcasieu
River, was the
writer's
maternal great
grandfather.
Rebel Private
Albert Block,
a 12-pounder
cannoneer
aboard the
cottonclad
"Uncle Ben,"
at which
gunboat
Crocker's
Sabine Pass
flotilla fired
three rounds,
was the
writer's
grandfather.
Rebel Private
Isaac Bonsall
of Grand
Chenier,
killed at the
Battle of
Mansfield, La.
on April 8,
1864, was the
writer's great
uncle by
marriage,
husband of
Elizabeth
Sweeney. Rebel
Lieutenant
William McCall
of Grand
Chenier, who
died of
pneumonia at
Mansfield the
day before the
battle was
fought, was
the writer's
great uncle by
marriage,
husband of
Harriet
Sweeney.
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