[The Cruise of the Alabama and the Sumter by Raphael Semmes]@TWC D-Link bookThe Cruise of the Alabama and the Sumter CHAPTER XXIII 4/11
He returned our fire in a minute or two, and the action was thus commenced. We continued to run side by side at a distance ranging from two to five hundred yards, both of us keeping up a rapid fire of both artillery and rifles, when, after the lapse of thirteen minutes, the enemy fired two guns from his off, or starboard side, and showed a light above his deck in token of his being whipped. At once we ceased firing, and approaching him still nearer, asked him if he surrendered and needed assistance.
To both of these questions he replied in the affirmative, and we immediately despatched our quarter boats to him; these, with his own four boats, were busily employed in transporting the crew on board, which had only been accomplished when the ship went down.[11] [Footnote 11: United States Consulate, Kingston, Jamaica, Jan., 21, 1868. SIR,--It is my painful duty to inform the Department of the destruction of the United States steamer Hatteras, recently under my command, by the rebel steamer Alabama, on the night of the 11th instant, off the coast of Texas.
The circumstances of the disaster are as follows:-- Upon the afternoon of the 11th inst., at 2.30 P.M., while at anchor in company with the fleet under Commodore Bell, off Galveston, Texas, I was ordered by signal from the United States flag-ship Brooklyn to chase a sail to the southward and eastward.
I got under weigh immediately, and steamed with all speed in the direction indicated.
After some time, the strange sail could be seen from the Hatteras, and was ascertained to be a steamer, which fact I communicated to the flag-ship by signal.
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