English:
Identifier: deedsofvalorhowa02beye (find matches)
Title: Deeds of valor : how America's heroes won the medal of honor : personal reminiscences and records of officers and enlisted men who were awarded the congressional medal of honor for most conspicuous acts of bravery in battle : combined with an abridged history of our country's wars
Year: 1901 (1900s)
Authors: Beyer, Walter F Keydel, Oscar F. (Oscar Frederick), b. 1871
Subjects: United States. Army United States. Navy
Publisher: Detroit, Mich. : Perrien-Keydel Co.
Contributing Library: Harold B. Lee Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Brigham Young University
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in the undertaking. After having secretly reconnoitered the riverand its banks they started on the 20th of May. They were: Cockswain John W.Lloyd, leader; Firemen Alex. Crawford and John Laverty, and Coalheavers CharlesBaldwin and Benjamin Lloyd. They had all their apparatus, two torpedoes con-taining 100 pounds of powder each, and a contrivance of guiding lines, in a dinghy.When near Plymouth and the Albemarles berth, which place they reached after dark-ness hat set in, they carried the torpedoes on stretchers to a hidden place by thenorth bank. Laverty had been left in charge of the boat secreted in the bushes,while Cockswain Lloyd and Coalheaver Baldwin swam across the river to thePlymouth side with lines which they fastened securely not far from the town.They were then, by means of another guide-rope, to haul the torpedoes across thebow of the ram, where Baldwin intended to fasten them, and Crawford was toexplode them from the opposite bank. All went well until Baldwin neared the
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— 50 — Allieiuaile. A sentry saw liim, an alarm was ^iven and the men had to cut thelines and swim for their lives. Cockswain Lloyd and Laverty reached their ship intheir hoat, the others heing picked up later in a swamp, nearly exhausted andstarved. Although these five men were not successful, their behavior and bravery won forthem their Medals of Honor. THE SINKING OF THE ALABAMA A LL the history of privateering shows nothing comparable to the record of the^~^ Confederate steamer Alabama. Under her unscrupulous but clever andresourceful commander, Raphael Semmes, she captured, ransomed or destroyedwithin the short space of twenty-two months a Federal war vessel and some sixtyships of the then prosperous merchant navy of the United States, until fate finallyovertook her on the 19th of June, 1864. The damage this vessel inflicted upon themerchant marine of this Republic can hardly be computed. In money value it wasestimated at over $10,000,000. Semmes was a commander in the Old Na
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