Trial of the Officers and Crew of the Privateer Savannah, on the Charge of Piracy, in the United States Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York. Warburton Adolphus Frederick
You are the Deputy Collector of the port of Philadelphia? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Have you charge of the register of vessels there?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you take this certified copy of the register of the Joseph from the original book?
A. It is copied from the original book.
Mr. Evarts: It is a temporary register, dated 26th January, 1861, showing the building of the vessel, and the fact of her owners being citizens of the United States.
Q. Who was the master of the vessel then?
A. George H. Cables.
Q. Do you know who was the master afterwards?
A. Yes; I saw him afterwards. That man (pointing to Captain Meyer) is the man. He was endorsed as master after the issuing of this register.
Q. And you recollect this person being master of the vessel mentioned in that register?
A. I do, sir.
George Thomas called, and sworn. Examined by District Attorney Smith.
Q. Where do you reside?
A. Quincy, Massachusetts.
Q. What is your business?
A. Shipbuilder.
Q. Do you know the brig Joseph?
A. I have known her; I built her.
Q. Where did you build her?
A. At Rockland, Maine.
Q. Who did you build her for?
A. For Messrs. Crocket, Shaller, Ingraham, and Stephen N. Hatch—all of Rockland.
Q. Were they American citizens?
A. They were all American citizens.
Q. What was the tonnage of the vessel?
A. About 177 tons. She was a hermaphrodite brig.
Q. Look at this description in the register and say whether it was the vessel you built.
A. I have no doubt that this is the vessel.
George H. Cables called, and sworn. Examined by District Attorney Smith.
Q. Where do you reside?
A. Rockland, Maine.
Q. Look at the description of the brig Joseph, in this register, and see if you know her?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. You were formerly master of the vessel?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Who was the master that succeeded you?
A. I put Captain Meyer in charge of her.
Q. You recognize Mr. Meyer here?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did you own any part of that vessel?
A. I bought a part of it, and gave it to my wife.
Q. Is your wife an American-born woman?
A. She is.
Q. Where does she reside?
A. In Rockland.
Q. Do you know any others of the part-owners of her?
A. Yes; my brother and myself bought a three-eighth interest.
Q. Where does your brother reside?
A. In Rockland.
Q. Is he an American-born citizen?
A. Yes.
Q. Are you an American citizen?
A. Yes.
Q. You spoke of some other owner?
A. Yes; Messrs. Hatch and Shaler.
Q. Are they American citizens?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you know all the owners?
A. Yes.
Q. Were they all American citizens?
A. Yes.
Q. When did you put Meyer in charge of the vessel?
A. On the 26th or 27th of April last.
Q. Where?
A. In Philadelphia.
Q. Where did you sail from?
A. From Cardenas, in Cuba, on a round charter which I made at Cardenas myself with J. L. Morales & Co., consigned to S. H. Walsh & Co.
Q. The ownership remained the same?
A. Just the same.
Q. Was there any change up to the time of her capture?
A. No, sir.
Thies N. Meyer, examined by District Attorney Smith.
Q. You were Captain of the brig Joseph at the time of her capture?
A. I was.
Q. What American port had you sailed from?
A. Philadelphia.
Q. Where did you go to?
A. Cardenas, in Cuba.
Q. What port did you sail for from Cardenas?
A. Back to Philadelphia.
Q. What cargo had you?
A. Sugar.
Q. By whom was it owned?
A. By J. M. Morales & Co., of Cardenas.
Q. When did you leave the port of Cardenas?
A. 28th May, 1861.
Q. And you were captured by the Savannah on the 3d June?
A. Yes.
Q. State the particulars of the capture by the Savannah of the brig Joseph from the time she first hove in sight?
A. Mr. Bridges, my mate, called me some time between 6 and 7 o'clock in the morning, and told me there was a suspicious looking vessel in sight, and he wished me to look at her. I went on deck and asked him how long he had seen her, he told me he had seen her ever since day-light. When I took the spy-glass and looked at her I found that she was a style of vessel that we do not generally see so far off as that. I hauled my vessel to E.N.E., and when I found that she was gaining on me I hauled her E. by N. and so until she ran E. About 8 o'clock she came near enough for me to see a rather nasty looking thing amid-ships, so that I mistrusted something; but when I saw the American flag hanging on her main rigging, on her port side, I felt a little easier—still, I rather mistrusted something, and kept on till I found I could not get away at all. When she got within half a gun shot of me I heaved my vessel to, hoping the other might be an American vessel.
Q. Had she any gun on board?
A. I saw a big gun amid-ships, on a pivot.
Q. How far on was she when you saw the gun?
A. About a mile and a half or two miles; I could see it with the spy-glass very plainly.
Q. Can you give us the size of the gun?
A. Not exactly; I believe it was an old eighteen pound cannonade.
Q. How was it mounted?
A. On a kind of sliding gutter, which goes on an iron pivot: it was on a round platform on deck, so that it could be hauled round and round.
Q. So that it could be pointed in any