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of three thousand two hundred tons, and forty guns. Built at the Charlestown navy-yard, near Boston, in 1855, she had proved herself ever since to be one of the most powerful and valuable steamers in the United States navy.

Commodore Macaulay, supposed to be acting with the concurrence of the authorities at Washington, now determined to save what little he could of this valuable Government property, and destroy the remainder in order to prevent its falling into the possession of the April Virginians. The commander of 20. the insurgents at Norfolk, General Taliafero, had already demanded the surrender of the navy-yard, and after a conference with the Commodore, at noon, declared that he had his assurance that "none of the vessels should be removed, nor a shot fired, except in self-defence." However this may be, the Commodore doubtless was so persuaded of the hostile intent of the threatening force in Norfolk, as to believe that the most decided measures had become necessary to thwart it.

In the evening the United States April steamer the Pawnee arrived from

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peak the commodore's pennant, moved from the dock of Fort Monroe cheered by the shouts of the garrison gathered on the parapet of the fortress, and steamed off for Norfolk. Notwithstanding the sunken vessels in the channel, the steamer passed without difficulty up Hampton Roads, past Norfolk, to Gosport navy-yard, where she arrived at half-past eight o'clock. The people of Norfolk and Portsmouth were greatly disturbed by her approach, as they believed she had come to aid in bombarding their towns. Overcome with fright, and unprepared for resistance, they made no show of opposition, but every inhabitant took care to keep at a discreet distance.

Our people at the navy-yard, expecting the coming of the Pawnee, were on the alert, and as she came alongside the dock, the sailors on board the Cumberland and Pennsylvania, crowding into the shrouds and manning the yards, heartily cheered her. Cut off as they had been for so long a time from all communication with the town, insulted and threatened daily with attack by the infuriated insurgents of Virginia, they saw, in the arrival of the Pawnee, a means of relief, if not an opportunity of vindicating the national dignity, and exulted greatly.

As soon as the steamer had made fast to the dock, Colonel Wardrop, the military commander, marched out his men and stationed them at the gates of the navy-yard, to prevent the entrance of the insurgents, should they make the attempt. The marines of the different

DESTRUCTION OF NORFOLK NAVY YARD.

vessels were now mustered and set busily to work. Some collected the records, papers, and archives from the offices and placed them on board the Pawnee, and some gathered whatever was valuable, important, and easily transferable from the various ships, and stored it in the Cumberland. After thus having secured what could be readily carried away, the marines were ordered to begin the work of destruction. Many thousand stands of arms, and a large quantity of pistols and revolvers, were broken by severing the barrels from the stocks, and thrown into the river. Thousands of shot and shell followed, and everything on the ships that might be of service to the insurgents met with the same fate. The cannon which were still left unspiked were now spiked and dismantled, and some fifteen hundred cannon, of which several were Dahlgrens and columbiads, were thus destroyed. The men kept on at this work of destruction from nine o'clock until midnight, when the moon, sinking behind the horizon, failed any longer to give its light. The barracks, within the yard, were now set on fire, in order that the marines might see by the glare to continue their labors, which they renewed with increased spirit, as if enlivened by the crackling and blaze of the conflagration. The day, however, was approaching, and it was feared that the insurgents, gathering in force, might obstruct the escape of the Pawnee and the Cumberland. Gunpowder trains were now laid upon the decks of the doomed ships and the ship-houses. The

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crews of the various ships and all who belonged to the navy-yard, with the exception of two left behind to fire the trains, now hurried on board of the April Pawnee and Cumberland. The for- 21. mer left the dock on Sunday morning, at four o'clock, on her return. As she cast off her moorings she sent up a signal rocket, and as it burst, the torch was applied, and in a moment the whole yard seemed to be wrapped in a common flame. Ships and ship-houses caught simultaneously, and the old New York, the keel of which had been laid forty-five years before, and was still on the stocks, burned, with its huge wooden cover, like tinder. The Pennsylvania, the Merrimac, the Germantown, the Plymouth, the Raritan, the Columbia, and the brig Dolphin caught at the same time, and were left in flames. Some of the guns were loaded, though not charged with shot, and when the fire reached them they exploded and added to the effect of this scene of destruction. "The Pennsylvania burned like a volcano for five hours and a half before her mainmast fell. I stood watching," says an eye-witness, "the proud but perishing old leviathan, as this sign of her manhood was about to come down. At precisely half-past nine o'clock by my watch, the tall tree that stood in her centre tottered and fell, and crushed deep into her burning sides, while a stream of sparks flooded the sky."

Two of the ships-the Delaware and Columbus-had been already scuttled and sunk on the day before the arrival

New York Times, April 26.

of the Pawnee. The rest, with the exception of the old hulk, the United States, left untouched, had been fired. The only vessel thus which was saved was the fine man-of-war Cumberland, which, in tow of the Yankee tug-boat, followed the Pawnee down the river.

No sooner had the Pawnee steamed away, than the people of Norfolk and Portsmouth broke through the gates and filled the navy-yard. Soon after, a military company raised the flag of Virginia and took formal possession of the place in the name of that State. The insurgents, though grieved at the loss of the Cumberland, which they had hoped to secure, were surprised that the destruction, when once begun, had not been more thorough. A hopeful writer, whose sanguine speculations it is curious now to read, gives, at the time of the act, this reason for its incompleteness. "Long before," he says, "the workshops and armories, the foundries, and ship-wood left unharmed, can bring forth new weapons of offence, this war will be ended. And may be, as of yore, the stars and stripes will float over Gosport navy-yard. All that is now spared will then be so much gained!"

A Norfolk editor reported, after a cursory visit, that "the property destroyed embraced, besides the ship-houses and contents, the range of buildings on the north line of the yard (except the commodore's and commander's residences, which are unhurt), the old marine barracks and one or two work-shops, the immense lifting shears, the ships Pennsylvania, Merrimac, Raritan, Columbus,

and brig Dolphin-burned to the water's edge; the sloop Germantown, broken and sunk; the Plymouth, scuttled and sunk even with her deck; and a vast amount of small arms, chronometers, and valuable engines and machinery in the ordnance and other shops, broken up and rendered utterly useless."

The feeling at the North, on the destruction of this valuable public property, was one of national humiliation, not unmixed with anger at the Government for not having avoided it by timely precaution. Every one spoke of it as a great loss and a national disgrace. By proper foresight, steam-tugs could have been provided, it was believed, to tow every vessel away from the navy-yard in safety. Even when by delay it had become too late to make such means available, it was thought that a more resolute commander might have kept the threatening insurgents at Norfolk at bay. With a fleet of ships heavily armed at his command, it was urged that he might have turned his guns upon the towns of Norfolk and Portsmouth, and have successfully repelled every attack.

The insurgents, on the very day of the departure of the Pawnee, had begun to unspike the cannon and remove them below Norfolk to mount the sand batteries which they had raised in defence of their harbor and in defiance of the Federal authorities.

The Cumberland was towed from the navy-yard by the steam-tug Yankee, which followed in the wake of the Pawnee. The three vessels proceeded down

GREAT MEETING AT NEW YORK.

the river until nine o'clock in the morning, when they came to anchor at the point where the channel had been obstructed with sunken vessels. Boats were sent out to sound, with the view of discovering another passage. This, however, proving without avail, the fleet weighed anchor and forced its way directly through the obstructions. The Cumberland got entangled with one of

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the sunken vessels and carried it along with her, and for a time there seemed danger of her drifting on the shore, where the enemy had their batteries. Another steamer, the Keystone State, however, arriving from Washington, went to her aid, and, in conjunction with the tug Yankee, succeeded in freeing her from the wreck and towing her safely under the guns of Fort Monroe.

CHAPTER XVI.

Increased War Spirit of the North.-Unity of Sentiment.-Great Meetings.-Great Meeting at New York.-The Patriotic Enthusiasm of the Citizens.-The display of Union Colors and Symbols.-The immense Gathering at Union Square.-A dozen "Monster Meetings."-Officers and Orators.-The supposed effect of the New York Demonstration upon the Southern Rebellion.-No passing Effervescence of Popular Emotion.-Generous Largesses of Men and Money.-Rapid Military Organization.-March to the Capital.-Dangers of Washington.-Precautions for its Safety.-Disaffection of Maryland.-An anxious Proclamation.—The Agitation of Baltimore.-Continued Anxiety about Washington.-Rumored Approach of Jefferson Davis.-The effect at the North.-Military Aspect of the Northern Cities.-March of the Sixth Massachusetts Regiment.-Triumphal Ovations on its route.-Arrival in Baltimore. Anxieties about its reception.-The Mob of Baltimore.-The Cars Attacked.—Obstruction of the Track.The March of the Massachusetts Men through the Streets of Baltimore.-The Attack on them by the Mob.-The First Shot.-The Soldiers return the Fire.-A continued Struggle.-The tragic Result.-The Massachusetts Men Fight their way and reach Washington.—The Philadelphia Men turned back.-The Killed and Wounded.—Indignation at the North.-A pathetic Dispatch from the Governor of Massachusetts.-An Official Statement.-Determined Hostility of Maryland.-The impotent Authorities of Maryland.-Vague Response of the Mayor of Baltimore to the Governor of Massachusetts. -A decided Rejoinder.-The Governor of Maryland perplexed.-A Message to the President.-Commissioners sent.-The President's Answer -Continued Alarm of the Governor of Maryland.A strange Proposition.-A dignified Rebuke from the Secretary of State.

THE war spirit which had been aroused | troops for the defence of the Union and at the North by the fall of Fort Sumter

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vindication of an insulted government.

The most memorable of these great gatherings was that which was called by "leading citizens, without dis- April tinction of party," and assembled 20. around Union Square, New York. On the day appointed, the business of the city was by common consent arrested. Commerce, trade, and wealth all deserted their usual resorts, and sought to

join in the demonstration of patriotism. of many people at the North. Nor was

Immense numbers of people gathered from all parts of the town and flowed in continuous streams from early morning until evening, through the main streets, toward the square. The buildings everywhere were decorated with flags; the "stars and stripes" floated from church steeples, and canopied the thoroughfares. The national colors bloomed freshly upon patriotic coats and gowns, and the whole population was alive with the excitement of the occasion.

this great demonstration a mere passing effervescence of popular emotion. The people throughout the North soon gave a vigorous proof of the earnestness of their devotion to the Union by their generous largesses of men and money. In two short weeks about forty millions of dollars-more than two millions of which were given by the city of New York-were voluntarily contributed toward suppressing the rebellion; and those who offered their services to take up arms in behalf of the Union exceeded by several hundred thousand the whole number called for from both free and slave States by the President in his procla mation. The legislatures of the States. passed war-bills, and voted large appropriations of money. In Boston, the banks agreed to lend ten per cent. of their whole capital to the State of Massachusetts to aid in the defence of the Government. In other Northern cities, the municipal corporations voted large sums, and capitalists vied with each other in their generous offers of financial

It was estimated that a hundred thousand people or more were gathered within and about Union Square. The throng was so immense, that, expanding beyond the limits of a single "monster meeting," it supplied material for a score. Separate "stands" were raised, "stands" were raised, and a dozen orators at the same moment found a crowd of earnest listeners to their fervid and patriotic rhetoric. Presided over by imposing dignitaries, aided by a long list of notable citizens as vice-presidents and secretaries, opened with prayer by civic divines of popular repute, and addressed by eloquent speak-service. ers, these meetings were conducted with unusual eclat. It was proclaimed in the gigantic capitals of the next morning's papers as "the greatest demonstration the world ever saw."

It was sanguinely believed by many that this emphatic expression of attachment to the Union, and resolution to uphold it, would alone suppress the Southern rebellion, the leaders of which were thought to have hitherto presumed upon a supposed sympathy with their cause

Many of the regularly organized militia corps were at once ready to take the field, and march without delay to Washington, the capital, which was supposed to be in danger from the insurgents of Virginia and the disaffected of Maryland. The Virginians had already erected batteries on the Potomac, mustered large forces, and it was rumored that Ben McCulloch, the noted Texan ranger at their head, who had been lately seen in Washington, was, in con

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