
THE STEAMER “PLANTER” AND HER
CAPTOR
We publish herewith an engraving of the steamer Planter lately run out of Charleston by
her negro crew, and a portrait of her captain, ROBERT SMALLS – both from
photographs sent us by our correspondent at Hilton Head. The following, from
the Herald correspondence, will
explain the transaction:
One of the most heroic and daring
adventures since the war commenced was undertaken and successfully accomplished
by a party of negroes in Charleston on Monday night last. Nine colored men,
comprising the pilot, engineers and crew of the rebel gunboat, Planter, took the vessel under their
exclusive control, passed the batteries and forts in Charleston harbor, hoisted
a white flag, ran out to the blockading squadron, and thence to Port Royal, via
St. Helena Sound and Broad River, reaching the flagship Wabash shortly after ten o’clock last evening.
The following are the names of the black men who performed this gallant and perilous service: Robert Smalls, pilot; John Smalls [no relation] and Alfred Gradine, engineers; Abraham Jackson, Gabriel Turno, William Morrison, Samuel Chisholm, Abraham Allston, and David Jones. They brought with them the wife and three [sic] children of the pilot, and the wife, child and sister of the first engineer, John Smalls.
The Planter
is a high-pressure, side-wheel steamer, one hundred and forty feet in length,
and about fifty feet beam, and draws about five feet of water. She was built in
Charleston, was formerly used as a cotton-boat, and is capable of carrying
about 1,400 bales. On the organization
of the navy, she was transformed into a gun-boat, and was the most valuable
vessel the Confederates had at Charleston. Her armaments consisted of one 32-pound
rifle gun forward, and a 24-pound howitzer aft. Besides, she had on board when
she came into the harbor one seven-inch rifled gun, one eight-inch Columbiad, one eight-inch Howitzer, one long 32-pounder,
and about two hundred rounds of ammunition, which had been consigned to Fort
Ripley, and which would have been delivered at that fortification on Tuesday
had not the designs of the Rebel authorities been frustrated. She was commanded
by Captain Relay [sic], of the Confederate navy – all the other employees of
the vessel, excepting the first and second mates, being persons of color.
Robert Smalls, with whom I had a brief interview at
General Benham’s headquarters this morning, is an
intelligent negro, born in Charleston [sic], and employed for many years as a
pilot in and about that harbor. He entered upon his duties on board the Planter some six weeks since, and, as he
told me, adopted the idea of running the vessel to sea from a joke which one of
his companions had perpetrated. He immediately cautioned the crew against
alluding to the matter in any way on board the boat, but asked them, if they
wanted to talk it up in sober earnestness, to meet at his house, where they
would devise and determine upon a plan to place themselves under the protection
of the Stars and Stripes instead of the Stars and Bars.
Various plans were proposed, but finally
the whole arrangement of the escape was left to the discretion and sagacity of
Robert, his companions promising to obey him and be ready at a moment’s notice
to accompany him. For three days he kept the provisions of the party secreted in the
hold, awaiting an opportunity to slip away. At length, on Monday evening, the
white officers of the vessel went on shore to spend the night, intending to
start on the following morning for Fort Ripley, and to be absent the city for
several days. The families of the contrabands were notified and came stealthily
on board. At about three o’clock the fires were lit under the boilers, and the
vessel steamed quietly away down the harbor. The tide was against her, and Fort
Sumter was not reached till broad daylight. However, the boat passed directly
under its walls, giving the usual signal – two long pulls and a jerk at the
whistle cord – as she passed the sentinel.
Once out of range of the rebel guns, the white flag
was raised, and the Planter steamed
directly for the blockading steamer Augusta
[sic]. Captain Parrott, of the latter vessel, as you
can imagine, received them cordially, heard their report, placing Acting-Master
Watson, of his ship, in charge of the Planter,
and sent the Confederate gun-boat forward to Commodore Du Pont. The families of
the crew have been sent to Beaufort, where General Stevens will make a suitable
provision for them. The crew will be
taken care of by Commodore Du Pont.
The Planter
is just such a vessel as is needed to navigate the shallow waters between
Hilton Head and the adjacent islands, and will prove almost invaluable to the
Government.
It is proposed, I hear, by the Commodore, to recommend an appropriation of
$20,000, as a reward to the plucky Africans who have distinguished themselves
by this gallant service - $5000 to be given to the pilot, and the remainder to
be divided among his companions.
Our correspondent sends us a drawing of an infernal machine, drawn by one of the negro hands of the Planter named Morrison. This chattel, Morrison, gives the following account of himself: Belonged to Emile Poinchignon; by trade a tinsmith and plumber; has lived all his life in Charleston; was drum-major of the first regiment of the Fourth Brigade South Carolina Militia, and paraded on the 25th of last month; has a wife and children in Montgomery, Alabama, whom he expects to see when the war is over. I asked him how he learned to read and write. Answer: “I stole it in the night, sir.”