登陆注册
14731200000021

第21章 THE BURNING OF THE "PHILADELPHIA"(1)

It is difficult to conceive that there ever was a time when the United States paid a money tribute to anybody. It is even more difficult to imagine the United States paying blackmail to a set of small piratical tribes on the coast of Africa. Yet this is precisely what we once did with the Barbary powers, as they were called the States of Morocco, Tunis, Tripoli, and Algiers, lying along the northern coast of Africa. The only excuse to be made for such action was that we merely followed the example of Christendom. The civilized people of the world were then in the habit of paying sums of money to these miserable pirates, in order to secure immunity for their merchant vessels in the Mediterranean. For this purpose Congress appropriated money, and treaties were made by the President and ratified by the Senate.

On one occasion, at least, Congress actually revoked the authorization of some new ships for the navy, and appropriated more money than was required to build the men-of-war in order to buy off the Barbary powers. The fund for this disgraceful purpose was known as the "Mediterranean fund," and was intrusted to the Secretary of State to be disbursed by him in his discretion.

After we had our brush with France, however, in 1798, and after Truxtun's brilliant victory over the French frigate L'Insurgente in the following year, it occurred to our government that perhaps there was a more direct as well as a more manly way of dealing with the Barbary pirates than by feebly paying them tribute, and in 1801 a small squadron, under Commodore Dale, proceeded to the Mediterranean.

At the same time events occurred which showed strikingly the absurdity as well as the weakness of this policy of paying blackmail to pirates. The Bashaw of Tripoli, complaining that we had given more money to some of the Algerian ministers than we had to him, and also that we had presented Algiers with a frigate, declared war upon us, and cut down the flag-staff in front of the residence of the American consul. At the same time, and for the same reason, Morocco and Tunis began to grumble at the treatment which they had received. The fact was that, with nations as with individuals, when the payment of blackmail is once begun there is no end to it. The appearance, however, of our little squadron in the Mediterranean showed at once the superiority of a policy of force over one of cowardly submission.

Morocco and Tunis immediately stopped their grumbling and came to terms with the United States, and this left us free to deal with Tripoli.

Commodore Dale had sailed before the declaration of war by Tripoli was known, and he was therefore hampered by his orders, which permitted him only to protect our commerce, and which forbade actual hostilities. Nevertheless, even under these limited orders, the Enterprise, of twelve guns, commanded by Lieutenant Sterrett, fought an action with the Tripolitan ship Tripoli, of fourteen guns. The engagement lasted three hours, when the Tripoli struck, having lost her mizzenmast, and with twenty of her crew killed and thirty wounded. Sterrett, having no orders to make captures, threw all the guns and ammunition of the Tripoli overboard, cut away her remaining masts, and left her with only one spar and a single sail to drift back to Tripoli, as a hint to the Bashaw of the new American policy.

In 1803 the command of our fleet in the Mediterranean was taken by Commodore Preble, who had just succeeded in forcing satisfaction from Morocco for an attack made upon our merchantmen by a vessel from Tangier. He also proclaimed a blockade of Tripoli and was preparing to enforce it when the news reached him that the frigate Philadelphia, forty-four guns, commanded by Captain Bainbridge, and one of the best ships in our navy, had gone upon a reef in the harbor of Tripoli, while pursuing a vessel there, and had been surrounded and captured, with all her crew, by the Tripolitan gunboats, when she was entirely helpless either to fight or sail. This was a very serious blow to our navy and to our operations against Tripoli. It not only weakened our forces, but it was also a great help to the enemy. The Tripolitans got the Philadelphia off the rocks, towed her into the harbor, and anchored her close under the guns of their forts.

They also replaced her batteries, and prepared to make her ready for sea, where she would have been a most formidable danger to our shipping.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 鹿晗之遇见

    鹿晗之遇见

    鹿晗和她会遇见吗?他们会继续在韩国发展吗?还是到中国去发展?
  • 遇见,在最美好的季节

    遇见,在最美好的季节

    她,没有什么太大奋斗目标,是个平凡的不能再平凡的女人。喜欢一切美好的事物,爱美食,爱旅游,爱看电影。活的简单而又满足的她,以为自己会一直这么简单,快乐的活下去。直到遇见了他,她的生活开始变的复杂,麻烦不断。她只希望早点甩掉他,回到自己简单快乐的生活。他,智商180,情商0,冷心冷情,孤僻冷傲,毒嘴毒舌的腹黑男。除了工作还是工作。当他遇见她,他开始当机。他最讨厌“麻烦”,在他的概念里女人,小孩和动物就是麻烦的代名词,勿近。她最喜欢女人,小孩和狗。在她的概念里每个女人都是很美的;每个小孩就是上天送到人家的天使;而狗就是人类最忠实的朋友。当简单的她碰到复杂的他;当怕麻烦的他遇见制造麻烦的她····
  • EXO之暗夜日记

    EXO之暗夜日记

    生命之树的灵体雅希,魔族混血忆小七;天使长老鹿晗,神族大法官吴世勋,血狼皇室金钟大,吸血伯爵朴灿烈、边伯贤,狼族少年金钟仁,恶魔撒旦金俊绵,魔族阵法师吴亦凡,吸血伯爵日行者黄子韬,降魔者都暻秀,魔人族长金珉硕,独角兽张艺兴;一个传说,一个不可置信的事实,一个个危机,来自天使的追杀,展开希望渺小的复仇之旅,一个个深埋心底的秘密……………
  • 勿问之谜

    勿问之谜

    吴问是一家侦探事务所的主人,机缘巧合的他走到了侦探这条路上,在经历了一系列事件之后,吴问发现,原来所有的一切都在被算计在一个局里……所有的事情都是有计划的在发生,包括自己都是这局中的一部分
  • 冷王追妻:萌妃要爬墙

    冷王追妻:萌妃要爬墙

    当堂堂毒枭的祸害女儿一朝穿越而来成为王妃的时候,楚嫱满门心思想的是,爬墙!!!墙外自有颜如玉,墙外自有黄金屋。当楚嫱第一次坐在墙头的时候,六王府的暗卫道:“王爷,王妃娘娘爬墙了。”某王爷黑着脸,“院墙加高一丈。”当楚嫱第二次坐在墙头的时候,暗卫颤抖着小心肝“王爷,王妃娘娘又爬墙了。”某王爷冷笑:“加高两丈。”楚嫱第三次爬墙,一巴掌呼开暗卫:“穆泽羲,你有本事加高院墙三丈,有本事就把你的硬件也加长三丈啊!!!”某王爷:······【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 无尽危途

    无尽危途

    这个世界已经成为地狱!绝望中众人靠双腿踩出了一条崭新的道路这条路是残酷的,血淋淋的,每天都有人不停倒下,但是也有人得到新生一手红颜一手情,背负种种血与泪,纵然脚下全是枯骨,他必将继续前行,直到……最后
  • 下嫁公主不如妾:斗夫

    下嫁公主不如妾:斗夫

    【原创作者社团未央宫出品】如果不爱,那便倾尽一生,斗下去。冷宫公主下嫁状元,他说她不配,固执的将她拒之门外。是天定姻缘还是命中劫难。三天上青楼两天不归家,婆婆要纳妾,公公要休她,小妾要逼她,斗夫斗妾斗婆婆,铁腕乾坤,公主闹革命,绵羊急了也变狼,她从来不是善类!
  • 无敌剑痴

    无敌剑痴

    新书《真剑傲世》简介:万物生灭,无尽轮回。世间至强无数,开天辟地,星空无敌!然,神通终不敌天数!天命如狱,谁能永恒?叶歌没有仙根本无缘仙途,却无意中获得神秘金珠,吞灵噬仙,脱凡炼真,浴血万劫,一步步踏上真道之路……朋友们来点支持吧!!!点击,收藏,推荐多多益善,桥头在此谢过!
  • 璀璨的年华,美丽的芬芳

    璀璨的年华,美丽的芬芳

    不打不相识,如果说生命是上天的恩赐,那么,我与他,是不是我们努力的结果?一生一世一双人,我,等你。青青子衿,悠悠我心。来生转世,绝不会错过!
  • 七北斗之血月

    七北斗之血月

    母亲去世,父亲生死不明,她为了变强,愿疯愿成魔………科技和魔幻结合在一起的世界……前一秒她的一笑,后一秒你已不在……杀……人……于……无……形。