RUM, SODOMY AND THE LASH

A Devon Lad's Life in Nelson's Navy

by

Anthony Blackmore

NEWS UPDATE

Other pages are:-


flag   HOME PAGE
flag   SAMUEL'S STORY - AN OUTLINE OF THE BOOK
flag  COMMENT, QUOTES & REVIEWS
flag   BOOK'S TITLE - CHURCHILL'S QUOTE - DID HE SAY IT?
flag   SODOMY - A HANGING   and "THE GOLDEN RIVET."
flag You may also wish to see my new web site "BOWEL CANCER - MY EXPERIENCE"

STOP PRESS.

WETHERBY CHORAL SOCIETY. I took 30 copies of RUM, SODOMY & THE LASH to our rehearsal of Handel's Messiah before Christmas, and only came back with one - and a request to bring more copies the following week, for those who hadn't any money with them! I sold 33 in all. Very many thanks indeed to all my colleagues who, I'm sure, enjoyed singing in the Messiah concert (which was a sell-out) as much as I did.

HMS Trincomalee Trust, to whom I gave 50 copies for sale in the Trincomalee shop, ordered a further 20 copies in the summer of 2004 and at Christmas '04ordered another 30. The Nelson Society have also now sold out of the 50 I gave them and want another 50. So yet another re-print is now urgently required.

John C Dann, Director of the William L.Clements Lbrary at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, the editor of The Nagle Journal, very kindly allowed me to quote extensively from his book. In return, I sent him a copy of RUM, SODOMY & THE LASH as a 'thank you'. The Clements Library has now asked for another copy. So it looks as though I must be getting something right! Don Wilcox, the Curator of Books, writes:-

"Your book will provide our readers with further insights into life at sea for sailors in the British Navy at the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th century. It fits in so very well with the other materials at the library on naval history and is greatly appreciated."

Part 1 - Points arising since publication.

Another letter - women on board

Another Nelson letter to Captain Cockburn has been reproduced in Dr Colin White's scholarly new book NELSON - THE NEW LETTERS which I failed to spot amongst the Cockburn papers in the Library of Congress microfilms. It is is dated Porti Ferrajo, 27 January 1797 and is of interest, as it refers to women on board la Minerve, and was written whilst they were both on board:

"You are hereby required and directed to Victual all Women belonging to the Troops serving as Marines on board His Majesty's ship under your command at two thirds allowance of all Species of Provisions & children at one half allowance."

Yet more evidence that it was regarded as entirely normal that a ship should have women and children on board.

Further reading

I mention in the book that, more than half a century ago, I had summer holidays with a French family at Giens, near Hyeres, to the East of Toulon, where Samuel spent a lot of time blockading Toulon. I have now been sent a reprint of a 1923 book by Conrad, "The Rover", which describes to perfection the area round Giens, the off-shore islands and the days after the English had been expelled from Toulon.

How did Samuel, a prisoner in France, get away? Did he escape, or was he exchanged?

I say in the book, p 144;

“A complicating factor is that Samuel christened his first child, a son, at Dover in 1812, which suggests that he was back in this country again and married his wife in 1811 or earlier. If he was held prisoner, how did he return before the war ended, or at least before 1813 when the allies pushed Napoleon back into France after his disaster at Moscow? Again, a faint but somewhat unlikely clue. A book on prisoners ['Napoleon and his British Captives' by Michael Lewis] contains a list of those few men whose records have been found and a note as to what became of them - 'died', 'escaped', 'exchanged', and so on. Once again, chance plays a hand for there, large as life, is Samuel Blackmore's name, listed as a midshipman. Was this the same man? Probably not; Blackmore was not a particularly rare name in the South West, and Samuel was a popular Christian name. Besides, to have been promoted midshipman would hardly have been likely for a man who, although he attained petty officer rating as a coxswain, had never become a warrant officer - bosun, or gunner, for example. But the chances of an exchange were greater for officers than common seaman. So did he somehow manage to impersonate a midshipman in order to enhance his chances of being sent home, and succeed? Unlikely - but how else did he get back to Dover, marry and produce a son before the allies came in 1813 or 1814 to free him?”

However, Roger Morris says in his ‘Cockburn and the British Navy in Transition’ (p37) that when Cockburn transferred to la Minerve in August 1796, two able seamen who transferred out of Maleager with him were promoted, one to second master’s mate and the other to midshipman.

'The Command of the Ocean, A Naval History of Britain, 1649-1815,' a truly magnificent and detailed book by N A M Rodger and a 'must' for any serious student of the history of this period who can afford the £30 cover price, adds this, quoting Sir George Elliott's 'Memoirs':-

"If I was not as efficient as was desirable, I suspect I was equal to at least two of the lieutenants, who had just been made from common seamen, and were neither used nor very fit to command. Four out of our five lieutenants were made in that way, the distress for officers was so great..."

So it really does seem that it was by no means uncommon for men to be promoted from the lower deck, after all. Perhaps Samuel, too, could have made it at a later date – possibly when, without any explanation in the log or muster book, he ceased to be coxswain - but being promoted Midshipman rather than Lieutenant. As coxswain of la Minerve he was perhaps, of all the men on the lower deck, the one man most likely to have been well known to Cockburn. If his captain took a liking to him, maybe he also was later ‘made up’ to midshipman, notwithstanding his lack of education or status, thereby making it a possibility that he was later released on an exchange of prisoners. So is the Samuel Blackmore, a midshipman, ‘ours’, and was he exchanged for a Frenchman of equal rank before the allies came to release him?

Other quotes.

Two more quotes from Sir George Elliott, culled from N A M Rodger's 'The Command of the Ocean, A Naval History of Britain, 1649-1815:-'

Admiral Hotham.
"Admiral Hotham is a gentlemanlike man and would, I am persuaded, do his duty in a day of battle. But he is past the time of life for action; his soul has got down into his belly and never mounts higher now, and in all business he is a piece of perfectly inert formality."
The Royal Navy - v - the army
"The character of the profession is infinitely more manly. They are full of life and action, while on shore it is all high lounge and still life".

The Captain's Gig

There is an interesting article in the June '04 "All at Sea" on races between Captains' gigs. These are replicas of the captain's gig of the French Redoubtable which was driven ashore in Bantry Bay in 1796, when the French attempted to invade England, and is now to be seen in the Irish National Museum.
This gig is 38ft long, but has a beam of only 6ft 4 inches and a draught of no more than 14 inches. She had a crew of 12 plus cox and when under sail the crew had to sit her out like in a modern racing dinghy. There is, it seems, no direct evidence of her sail plan but, based on known details of other contemporary craft, the replicas are equipped with dipping lug sails on their fore and main masts and either a standing lug or a spritsail on the mizzen. The halyards (uncleated) go over each time she tacks, and serve as stays for her three unstayed masts. She has to be helped round when tacking, either by backing the foresail or by means of a 'tacking oar.' Off the wind she can achieve as much as 10 - 12 knots but, to windward, she has to be oar-assisted and can only manage six knots.

The next races are planned for 2006. There are now 60 replicas world-wide but, sadly, only one, the Integrite in Britain. Details are to be found at www.atlanticchallenge.org or on 01989 730312.

At St Mawes, near Falmouth, Cornwall, they still have regular gig races - both mens' and womens' boats take part. These boats are copies of the old Falmouth pilots' gigs, about 33ft long, I believe, and pulled by six oars with a cox. Some of them are also equipped for sailing.

Was an English frigate captain's gig similar, in Samuel's day, to this French boat? Was a frigate's gig was built to the same design, but perhaps a bit smaller? Perhaps a frigate captain's gig had a crew of only ten, and (being smaller) gave even more excitement in a blow. If so, Samuel (as la Minerve's coxswain, and therefore in command of her captain's gig) must have been in charge of quite a handful!

It is, I regret, unlikely that even a French-built frigate would have had room for an out-and-out 'fun boat' on her booms for her captain's personal use. The standard 'captain's barge' on a British frigate of this period was probably only 28' long and a more useful general purpose boat, although it was smaller, lighter and quite a bit narrower than the ship's launch, which would have been armed with a carronade. Both were fitted with sails, as well as being propelled by oars when there was insufficient wind. Later, captains were permitted a certain amount of latitude and the wealthy ones paid for their own gigs, even on frigates.

NAPOLEON

I intend to add this point of detail to any second edition:
Leaving Basque Roads in HMS Bellerephon on 16 July 1815, on his way to captivity on the remote island of St Helena, Napoleon watched with keen interest as the ship got under way. He noted that things were done differently on French ships, remarking to Captain Maitland;

“What I admire most about your ship is the extreme silence and orderly conduct of your men; on board a French ship everyone calls and gives orders, and they gabble like so many geese.”

Sir Frederick Lewis Maitland, ‘The Surrender of Napoleon’, London, 1826, quoted in David Cordingly’s delightful book ‘Billy Ruffian’.

Part 2 - Book sales to date, and other news.

Sales to date.

The book was launched at The Nelson Society's annual jamboree at Norwich in October '02. At the book signing session, Tom Pocock sold 19 copies of his splendid book The Terror before Trafalgar. My book, too, sold 19 copies. But I sold three more at the subsequent dinner to people who, in the crush at the book signing session, couldn't find it. So I came away with my tail fairly high !

There was, however, one slightly discordant note. I had already been warned that my book's title had not found favour in high places, and at the meeting I was directly chalenged about this; please refer to BOOK'S TITLE - CHURCHILL QUOTATION for details.

I have also been told that many bookshops, especially those attached to museums and other public places, will not stock the book because of its title. It is said to be unsuitable where children could see it. What do you think? If I change the title, what should I call it? Please send me your ideas.

I was particularly busy that Christmas, and the first print-run of 350 copies soon went. A reprint of another 100 copies also went, so a third print-run of 100 copies came in time for Christmas '03. Another batch arrived in time for the Christmas 2004 market, but I now (June 2005) have fewer than half-a-dozen copies left, so will shortly be ordering more. The book now includes, as an Appendix, the contents of my   SODOMY - A HANGIMG page.

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The first print-run.

The first 350 copies were NEVER sold at discounted prices. Most were sold on behalf of BEATING BOWEL CANCER, the charity set up by my fellow bowel cancer victim, the former BBC Watchdog presenter LYNN FAULDS-WOOD, who now appears on GMTV. Others were sold for my local church (Holy Trinity, Little Ouseburn, North Yorkshire) or given as prizes in charity raffles etc. 50 copies were given to The Nelson Society and another 50 to The Friends of HMS Trincomalee, for sale for their own benefit.

Including donations, the book's first print-run raised £2,434 for Beating Bowel Cancer, £251 for Holy Trinity, Little Ouseburn, and a few pounds for other charities.

If one assumes that The Nelson Society and The Friends of HMS Trincomalee sell all their copies, the first print-run therefore raised around £3,700 in all.

Later Impressions

When it came to the second impression, I wanted to gain experience of selling into the book trade and sold some to a few specialist book shops. I had to allow discounts but, here again, I met much generosity; wholesalers and shops who would normally demand a discount of 50% or even more have, on hearing I am giving the entire proceeds to charity, agreed to accept far less. And, to my great surprise, one bookshop gave me a repeat order, and within only a few days of their first order!

Lynn Faulds Wood By then, Lynn Faulds-Wood had moved on and had set up a new charity - LYNN'S BOWEL CANCER CAMPAIGN (charity number 1099455) - so I decided to support her new venture with the second impression. Since then the book has raised over £1,000 for Lynn's new campaign and £120 for my church. In all, the book has now raised over £5,000.

LYNN FAULDS WOOD

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The Future - A Second Edition ?

A second edition would correct my mistake in the first edition over sailing 'on' rather than 'in' a ship, and a few other small mistakes - it will be no big deal. It would also incorporate (as the Christmas 2004 impression now does) the bit about 'A Hanging' as an appendix. I should also like to do more research into how it came about that Samuel Blackmore was restored to la Minerve after being in HMS Seahorse on her return north from Naples, after what has been described as 'Nelson's Disgraceful Episode'.

I have, however, now given up all hope of arranging for a second edition, to be published by a publishing house on a normal, arm's length commercial basis. Any second edition, if there is ever to be one, will therefore have to be a 'DIY' effort as before.

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THANKS

A very, VERY BIG 'THANK YOU' to everyone who has bought the book, and especially to those of you who have also passed the www.press-gang.net web address on by e-mail to their friends, thereby expanding the pool of potential purchasers.

I must say, people have been VERY generous in the amount by which they have kindly 'rounded up' the £9.99 cover price, and not a single person has ever complained about the huge markup I make on the cost of packing and postage - except to say that, as a one-time lawyer, I obviously know how to add it on!

Your generous support has been quite beyond my wildest expectations.

And do please send me your comments, both on the book and on this web site. You can contact me in one of three ways:-

MY E-MAIL ADDRESS

Finally, I have put some notes on Samuel 's - and my - early family history, the story of the Devon Blackmores from Exmouth and Littleham, onto the web. You can find them at  BLACKMORE FAMILY HISTORY. And here is my son Simon's web site SimonBlackmore - trekking in Chamonix He spent some years climbing in the Himalayas and very nearly got to the top of Everest in 1996.

My sincere thanks again to everyone who has helped me.

ANTHONY BLACKMORE

Trafalgar Day, 2004

OTHER USEFUL WEB SITES

HMS UNICORN HMS Trincomalee's sister ship, another Leda class frigate, now "in ordinary" at Dundee,

THE NELSON SOCIETY

THE HMS TRINCOMALEE TRUST