FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   >>  
lockade." In times of war, an enemy will often blockade a port by stationing big ships in such positions that they may prevent any vessels from entering or leaving the port, just as the combined fleets of Europe are preventing the Greek fleet, under Prince George, from entering the harbor of Canea. In our late war the harbor of Charleston was actually blockaded, and vessels were regularly employed as blockade runners, many of them getting through without difficulty, and many having hair-breadth escapes. The steamers selected to run the blockade in war times were light, swift, and built so that they lay very low in the water. They were painted a dull gray color, so that they could not be seen at a distance; their funnels were made like telescopes, so that they could be shut up, and be little higher than the deck, when the moment for actually running the blockade arrived. They burned smokeless coal, and could blow their steam off under water, so that it was very hard to discover them, and on dark nights they could often slip by the watching vessels without being observed. Admiral Bunce thought that the search-light system which is in use on all our war-vessels would make it extremely difficult for a blockade runner to pass a modern blockade, and it was to test this that the game of blockade running was tried off Charleston. When all was in readiness for the game to begin, the _New York_, which was the flagship, sent up a rocket, warning the other vessels to be on the lookout for the blockade runner. The flagship of a fleet is always the one which has the admiral on board. The ships in a fleet are like a regiment of soldiers, and act under the orders of the admiral in command; and as the orders are always sent from ship to ship by means of flags or signals, the ship from which the orders are issued is called the flagship. All the search-lights were in play, and there was the greatest excitement on board the various vessels as the little cruiser steamed out to sea to begin the game. Back and forth the search-light flashed along the whole line of the blockade. Here and there, in every direction, the waters were searched for a sign of the little _Vesuvius_, which was surely steaming toward them to try and run the blockade. No sign of the cruiser could be seen, and anxiety was felt lest she should have escaped all the searchers, when the signal came from the _Maine_ that she had been discovered, and all the s
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   >>  



Top keywords:

blockade

 

vessels

 

search

 
flagship
 

orders

 
runner
 

entering

 

running

 
cruiser
 
admiral

harbor

 

Charleston

 
command
 
soldiers
 
regiment
 

warning

 

discovered

 

modern

 

readiness

 
lookout

rocket

 
direction
 

flashed

 

waters

 

searched

 

anxiety

 
steaming
 
Vesuvius
 

surely

 

searchers


lights

 

signal

 

called

 

signals

 

issued

 

greatest

 

steamed

 
escaped
 

excitement

 

arrived


employed
 

runners

 
regularly
 
blockaded
 
George
 

difficulty

 

selected

 
steamers
 
escapes
 

breadth