
THE men-of-war
in which Anson (1) went to
sea were built mostly of oak. They were painted externally yellow,
with a blue stripe round the upper works. Internally, they were painted
red. They carried cannon on one, two, or three decks according to
their size. The biggest ships carried a hundred cannon and nearly
a thousand men. The ship in which this famous voyage was made was
of the middle size, then called the fourth-rate. She carried sixty
cannon, and a crew of four hundred men. Her lower gun deck, a little
above the level of the water, was about 140 feet long. She was of
about a thousand tons burthen.
Though this seems
small to us, it is not small for a wooden ship. It is not possible to
build a long wooden ship. The Centurion, though
short, was broad, bulky, and deep. She was fit for the sea. As she was
built more to carry cannon than to sail, she was a slow sailer. She
became slower as the barnacles gathered on her planks under the water.
She carried three wooden masts, each fitted with two or three square
sails, extended by wooden yards. Both yards and masts were frequently
injured in bad weather.
The cannon were
arranged in rows along her decks. On the lower gun deck, a little above
the level of the water; she carried twenty-six twenty-four-pounders,
thirteen on a side. These guns were muzzle-loading cannon which flung
twenty-four-pound balls for a distance of about a mile. On the deck
above this chief battery, she carried a lighter battery of twenty-six
nine- or twelve-pounder guns, thirteen on a side. These guns were also
muzzle-loading. They flung their balls for a distance of a little more
than a mile.
On the quarter-deck,
the poop, the forecastle, and aloft in the tops (the strong platforms
on the masts), were lighter guns, throwing balls of from a half to six
pounds weight. Some of the lightest guns were mounted on swivels, so
that they could be easily pointed in any direction. All the guns were
clumsy weapons. They could not be aimed with any nicety. The iron round
shot fired from them did not fit the bores of the pieces. The gun-carriages
were clumsy, and difficult to move. Even when the carriage had been
so moved that the gun was accurately trained, and when the gun itself
had been raised or depressed till it was accurately pointed, the gunner
could not tell how much the ball would wobble in the bore before it
left the muzzle. For these reasons all the effective sea-fights were
fought at close range, from within a quarter of a mile of the target
to close alongside. At a close range, the muskets and small-arms could
be used with effect.
The broadside cannon
pointed through square portholes cut in the ship’s sides. The
ports were fitted with heavy wooden lids which could be tightly closed
when necessary. In bad weather, the lower-deck gun ports could not be
opened without danger of swamping the ship. Sometimes, when the lower-deck
guns were fought in a gale, the men stood knee deep in water.
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In
action the guns were run out till their muzzles were well outside
the port, so that the flashes might not set the ship’s side
on fire. The shock of the discharge made them recoil into a position
in which they could be reloaded. The guns were run out by means
of side tackles. They were kept from recoiling too far by strong
ropes called breechings. When not in use, and not likely to be
used, they were “housed,” or so arranged that their
muzzles could be lashed firmly to the ship’s side. In a
sea way, when the ship rolled very badly, there was danger of
the guns breaking loose and rolling this way and that till they
had knocked the ship’s side out. To prevent this happening,
clamps of wood were screwed behind the wheels of the gun-carriages,
and extra breechings were rove, whenever bad weather threatened.
The great
weight of the rows of cannon put a severe strain upon the upper
works of the ship. In bad weather, during excessive rolling, this
strain was often great enough to open the seams in the ship’s
sides. To prevent this, and other costly damage, it was the custom
to keep the big men-of-war in harbour from October until the spring.
In the smaller vessels the strain was made less by striking down
some of the guns into the hold. The guns were fired by the application
of a slow-match to the priming powder in the touch-holes. The
slow-matches were twisted round wooden forks called linstocks.
After firing, when the guns had recoiled, their bores were scraped
with scrapers called “worms,” to remove scraps of
burning wad or cartridge. They were then sponged out with a wet
sponge, and charged by the ramming home of fresh cartridges, wads,
and balls. A gun’s crew numbered from four to twelve men,
according to the size of the piece. When a gun was trained aft
or forward, to bear on an object before or abaft the beam, the
gun’s crew hove it about with crows and handspikes. |
As this, and the
other exercise of sponging, loading, and running out the guns in the
heat, stench, and fury of a sea-fight, was excessively hard labour,
the men went into action stripped to the waist. The decks on those occasions
were thickly sanded, lest the blood upon them should make them too slippery
for the survivors’ feet. Tubs of water were placed between the
guns for the wetting of the sponges and the extinguishing of chance
fires. The ship’s boys carried the cartridges to the guns from
the magazines below the water-line. The round-shot were placed close
to hand in rope rings called garlands. Nets were spread under the masts
to catch wreck from aloft. The decks were cleared for action.”
All loose articles about the decks, and all movable wooden articles
such as bulkheads (the partitions between cabins), mess-tables, chests,
casks, etc., were flung into the hold or overboard, lest shot striking
them should splinter them. Splinters were far more dangerous than shot.
The ships of war
carried enormous crews. The Centurion carried
four hundred seamen and one hundred soldiers. At sea, most of this complement
was divided into two watches. Both watches were subdivided into several
divisions, to each of which was allotted some special duty, as the working
of the main-mast, the keeping of the main deck clean, etc., etc. Many
members of the crew stood no watch, but worked at special crafts and
occupations about the ship. A wooden ship of war employed and kept busy
a carpenter and carpenter’s mates, a sailmaker and sailmaker’s
mates, a cooper and a gunner, each with his mates, and many other specially
skilled craftsmen and their assistants. She was a little world, carrying
within herself all that she needed. Her daily business required men
to sail her and steer her, men to fight her guns, men to rule her, men
to drill, men to play the spy, men to teach, preach and decorate, men
to clean her, caulk her, paint her and keep her sweet, men to serve
out food, water, and intoxicants, men to tinker, repair, and cook and
forge, to doctor and operate, to bury and flog, to pump, fumigate and
scrape, and to load and unload. She called for so many skilled craftsmen,
and provided so much special employment out of the way of seamanship,
that the big crew was never big enough. The special employments took
away now one man, now another, till there were few left to work the
ship. The soldiers and marines acted as a military guard for the prevention
of mutiny. They worked about the ship, hauling ropes, etc., when not
engaged in military duty.
The hundreds of
men in the ship’s crew lived below decks. Most of them lived on
the lower gun deck in the narrow spaces (known as berths) between the
guns. Here they kept their chests, mess-tables, crockery, and other
gear. Here they ate and drank, made merry, danced, got drunk, and, in
port, entertained their female acquaintance. Many more, including the
midshipmen, surgeon, and gunner, lived below the lower gun deck, in
the orlop or cable tier, where sunlight could never come and fresh air
never came willingly. At night the men slept in hammocks, which they
slung from the beams. They were packed together very tightly, man to
man, hammock touching hammock. In the morning, the hammocks were lashed
up and stowed in racks till the evening.
(1)
A Voyage Round the World in the Years 1740-1794. by Lord Anson (“Everyman’s
Library “)

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