Authors: George C. Daughan
63
     Â
Cook's experience in the Royal Navy:
Alan Villiers,
Captain James Cook
(New York: Penguin, 1969), 23.
64
     Â
There was no excuse for any captain in 1812:
Porter,
Journal
, 40.
64
     Â
He was particularly enthusiastic about the good effects:
Porter to Dr. Barton, Dec. 31, 1811, Newport, in Porter Papers.
65
     Â
Later in life, Porter gave this striking description:
Porter,
Constantinople and Its Environs,
2:10â11.
66
     Â
At sunrise on November 26, a lookout:
Porter,
Journal
, 29â30.
Chapter Seven: In the South Atlantic, Dreaming of the Pacific
69
     Â
David Porter continued on to the next place:
Porter,
Journal
, 43â44.
70
     Â
On December 11, the
Essex
crossed:
Journal of Midshipman William W. Feltus
, Dec. 13, 1812.
71
     Â
Unfortunately, the
Nocton
never made it back:
Lieutenant William B. Finch
to Secretary of the Navy Jones, Feb. 13, 1813, in Dudley, ed.,
Naval War of 1812
, 2:684â85.
72
     Â
On December 14, two days after Porter:
William Jones to Commodore William Bainbridge, Oct. 11, 1812, in Dudley, ed.,
Naval War of 1812,
1: 512â15.
72
     Â
Now began a game of false identities and coded messages:
Thomas Harris,
The Life and Services of Commodore William Bainbridge, United States Navy
(Philadelphia: Carey, Lea, & Blanchard, 1837), 138â39; William Jones to Commodore William Bainbridge, Oct. 11, 1812, in Dudley, ed.,
Naval War of 1812
, 1: 512â15; Porter,
Journal
, 51â54.
73
     Â
On December 20, the
Essex
spoke a Portuguese vessel:
Porter,
Journal
, 56â57.
74
     Â
It did not take long to get there:
Dixon to Croker, March 19, 1813, in Gerald S. Graham and R.A. Humphreys, eds.,
The Navy and South America, 1807â1823: Correspondence of the Commanders-in-Chief on the South American Station
(London: Naval Records Society, 1962), 85â86; Porter,
Journal
, 58.
74
     Â
During the few days that the
Essex
patrolled off Rio:
Long,
Nothing Too Daring,
78; Porter,
Journal,
59â60; Dudley ed.,
The Naval War of 1812
, 2:690.
75
     Â
On January 2, 1813, Porter stopped a Portuguese:
Porter,
Journal
, 60â63.
76
     Â
Porter had no way of knowing that meeting Bainbridge and Lawrence:
Daughan,
1812,
140â45.
78
     Â
Bainbridge also had to think about Lawrence:
Ibid., 135â49.
79
     Â
At the moment, Porter had no inkling:
Porter,
Journal
, 63â65.
79
     Â
“With my water and provisions getting short”:
Porter to Bainbridge, March 23, 1813, in Dudley, ed.,
Naval War of 1812
, 2:689.
80
     Â
On the way to St. Catharine's, Porter distributed:
Porter,
Journal
, 65.
80
     Â
On January 18, Porter spoke to:
Ibid., 68â77.
83
     Â
As far back as 1809, Porter had written to former president Jefferson:
Porter to Jefferson, Aug. 17, 1809, in J. Jefferson Looney et al., eds.,
The Papers of Thomas Jefferson: Retirement Series
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004), 1:443â49.
83
     Â
Porter sent a copy of the letter to Charles Goldsborough:
Charles Goldsborough to James Madison, Sept. 20, 1809,
Papers of James Madison: Presidential Series
, 1:388; J.C.A. Stagg,
Borderlines in Borderlands: James Madison and the Spanish-American Frontier
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009), 185â90.
83
     Â
Still not deterred, Porter wrote on February 7, 1811:
David Porter to Secretary of the Navy, Feb. 7, 1811, USND, vol. I, LRMC (Letters Received
by Secretary of the Navy from Masters Commandant, USND); Long,
Nothing Too Daring
, 58.
83
     Â
Porter had also urged his plan on Bainbridge:
Porter,
Journal
, 72â73.
84
     Â
He wrote later to Bainbridge explaining his thinking:
Porter to Bainbridge, March 23, 1813, in Dudley, ed.,
Naval War of 1812
, 2:688â89.
84
     Â
Porter claimed that he had no idea:
Porter,
Journal
, 73â74.
85
     Â
Porter understood well the disadvantages:
Ibid., 74.
Chapter Eight: Doubling Cape Horn
87
     Â
It was an American sealer, the
Topaz:
Alexander,
The
Bounty, 346â48.
87
     Â
As the
Essex
plowed south, the temperature dropped steadily:
Porter,
Journal
, 79â81.
88
     Â
The
Essex
was running fast:
Ibid., 82.
89
     Â
The following day, February 4:
Ibid., 89.
90
     Â
Captain Cook on his first voyage in 1768:
Richard Hough,
Captain James Cook: A Biography
(New York: W.W. Norton, 1994), 73.
90
     Â
Sailing to the east of Staten Island:
Porter,
Journal
, 84â86.
92
     Â
Staten Island and the Strait of Le Maire:
Ibid., 90.
92
     Â
Before long, they were there:
Ibid., 91â98.
94
     Â
The terrifying deluge persisted:
Ibid., 98.
95
     Â
Birds, kelp, and whales appeared:
Ibid.
95
     Â
David Farragut remembered that:
Farragut,
Life of David Glasgow Farragut
, 20; Mahan,
Admiral Farragut
, 22.
95
     Â
Miraculously, the men at the wheel stood firm:
Farragut,
Life of David Glasgow Farragut
, 20
95
     Â
Porter, though severely bruised, led the fight back:
Porter,
Journal
, 101â5.
Chapter Nine: Navigating Chile's Political Waters
97
     Â
Porter ran north with the Humbolt current:
Edouard A. Stackpole,
Whales and Destiny: The Rivalry between America, France, and Britain for Control of the Southern Whale Fishery, 1785â1825
(Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1972), 275â76.
98
     Â
Porter thought he could scoop up enough prizes:
Porter,
Journal
, 101â2.
98
     Â
As the Essex
approached Mocha:
Farragut,
Life of David Glasgow Farragut,
21; Porter,
Journal
, 108.
99
     Â
The incident cast a pall over the ship:
Farragut,
Life of David Glasgow Farragut
, 21.
100
   Â
As Porter steered for Santa Maria:
Porter,
Journal
, 112.
101
   Â
The unexpectedly dreary landscape:
Ibid., 113â14.
102
   Â
Young Farragut, who knew how much:
Farragut,
Life of David Glasgow Farragut
, 21â22.
102
   Â
For some reason, perhaps the obviously deteriorating:
Porter,
Journal
, 116â17.
103
   Â
Porter was surprised that Chile had a new, pro-American:
John Lynch,
The Spanish American Revolutions, 1808â1826
(New York: W.W. Norton, 1973), 1; Alan Schom,
Napoleon Bonaparte
(New York: Harper, 1997), 453â72.
105
   Â
When Chileans received reports of the Napoleonic conquest in 1808:
Luis Galdames,
A History of Chile
, translated and edited by Isaac Joslin Cox (New York: Russell & Russell, 1964, first published in 1941 by the University of North Carolina Press), 173.
105
   Â
Alexander von Humbolt, the Prussian explorer:
Quoted in Lynch,
Spanish American Revolutions,
1.
108
   Â
When Porter arrived on the scene:
Galdames,
History of Chile
, 178.
Chapter Ten: A Packed Week at Valparaiso
111
   Â
“With respect to Spanish America generally”:
Madison to Ambassador Pinkney, Oct. 30, 1810 in Ralph Ketcham,
James Madison
(Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1990), 502; Secretary of State Robert Smith to Joel Roberts Poinsett, Aug. 24, 1810, in Poinsett Papers, 1785â1851, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Guide 512, Box 1, 1800â1817.
111
   Â
Britain had been trying to increase her influence:
Charles K. Webster, ed.,
Britain and the Independence of Latin America, 1812â1830: Select Documents from the Foreign Office Archives
, two vols. (London: Oxford University Press, 1938), 1:3â12; Robert Harvey,
Liberators: Latin America's Struggle For Independence
(Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 2000), 8â13.
112
   Â
While the British continued to fight for the Spanish monarchy:
Poinsett to Secretary of State James Monroe, Sept. 15, 1814, Poinsett Papers, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, HSP Guide 512, Box 1.
112
   Â
When Poinsett left for South America on October 15, 1810:
J. Fred Rippy,
Joel R. Poinsett, Versatile American
(New York: Greenwood, 1968, reprint of 1935 edition by Duke University Press), 36â42; Samuel Flagg Bemis,
The Latin American Policy of the United States
(New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1943), 31.
113
   Â
Without any communication from Washington, Poinsett:
Poinsett to Monroe, Sept. 10, 1814, Poinsett Papers, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Box 1.
114
   Â
Poinsett and Carrera were so enthusiastic about the
Essex:
Porter,
Journal
, 120â21.
114
   Â
When news of Porter's arrival reached Santiago:
Ibid., 138.
114
   Â
Actually, the
Standard
had departed:
Captain Peter Heywood to Dixon, April 3, 1813, Dixon to Croker, April 30, 1813, in Gerald S. Graham and R.A. Humphreys, eds.,
The Navy and South America, 1807â1823: Correspondence of the Commanders-in-Chief on the South American Station
(London: Navy Records Society, 1962), 86â87.
115
   Â
Without Dixon and the
Standard
to worry about at the moment:
Porter,
Journal
, 127.
115
   Â
Porter was also entertaining Governor Lastra:
Ibid., 121â25.
116
   Â
The following day was Sunday:
Journal of Midshipman William W. Feltus
, March 22, 1813.
117
   Â
An American whale ship, the
George:
Stackpole,
Whales and Destiny,
338â39.
117
   Â
On March 23, just before leaving Valparaiso:
Porter to Bainbridge, March 23, 1813, in Dudley, ed.,
Naval War of 1812
, 2: 688â89.
Chapter Eleven: Peru and the Elusive
Nimrod
119
   Â
He estimated that there were in excess:
Porter,
Journal
, 211.
121
   Â
Porter now went after the
Nimrod:
Journal of Midshipman William W. Feltus,
March 25 and 26, 1813; Porter,
Journal
, 131â34.