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The terrible boiler explosion which occurred, on July 21, on the U. S.
gunboat Bennington, has been the subject of a protracted official
investigation by the Navy Department, and we have thought it only courteous to
the Department to defer the publication of any extended account of the disaster,
until the completion of the official proceedings. It appears likely, at the
present writing, that no further action is to be taken; and hence we present the
following account of the accident, which gives the general facts so far as they
can be gathered from the data that are available.
The Bennington was authorized by Congress on March 3, 1887, and was
built by N. F. Palmer & Company, of Chester, Pa., the successors of John
Roach. Her keel was laid in June, 1888, and she was launched on June 3, 1890,
and commissioned for the first time on June 20, 1891. She was classed as a
gunboat, and her hull was constructed of steel, with a single bottom. Her
displacement was 1,710 tons, and her main battery consisted of six 6-inch
breech-loading rifles, an her secondary battery of four 6-pounders, four
1-pounder rapid-firing guns, and two 30-caliber Colt guns. The engines of the
Bennington were horizontal, triple expansion, and operated two screws. The
cylinders were 22, 31, and 50 inches in diameter, respectively, with a stroke Of
30 inches. The maximum indicated horse power developed was 3,392, and the
estimated speed attained on the trial trip was 17.5 knots per hour. The total
weight of her machinery was 282.65 tons, and her coal bunkers had a capacity of
391 tons, with a coal endurance (at a speed of ten knots per hour) or 4,262
knots.
The Bennington had four cylindrical straight-way boilers, commonly
known as locomotive gunboat boilers, each 17 ft. 9 in. long and 9 ft. 9 in. in
diameter. Each of these boilers had three furnaces, with one combustion chamber,
which was divided into three parts by a transverse arch of firebrick, and a
longitudinal wall built on the crown of the arch and between the nests of tubes.
There was a hanging bridge-wall in each of the divisions of the combustion
chamber. Each combustion chamber was 45 inches deep (that is, lengthwise of the
boiler), and 8 ft. 10 in. in extreme width. The main shell-plates of the boilers
were 13/16 in. in thickness, the tube-sheets were 9/16 in. thick, and the front
head was 3/4 in. thick.
The longitudinal joints of the shells were butted and double riveted, with
straps inside and out, and the girth joints were lapped and double riveted. The
rivets were 1 inch in diameter. Each boiler had fifteen fore-and-aft braces
2-1/4 in. in diameter. Each boiler had a heating surface of 2,053 sq. ft., a
grate area of 55 sq. ft., a water surface of 149.5 sq. ft., a steam space of 328
cu. ft., and a free area through the tubes of 9.42 sq. ft. Each boiler weighed
26.68 tons when empty, and 41.66 tons when filled with water to the normal
level.
We have no information as to the diameter and thickness of the furnaces and
tubes of the Bennington's boilers, but the boilers of the
Bennington and Yorktown are supposed to be identical, and they are
so, so far as we have been able to compare the two. The Yorktown has
corrugated furnaces 41 in. in diameter outside and 37 in. inside, and the
furnaces are one-half an inch thick. Of the Yorktown's 438 tubes, all are
2-1/4 in. in diameter externally, and 370 are No. 11 B. W. G. in thickness,
while the remaining 68 are No. 6 on the same gauge, and are spaced as uniformly
as practicable among the others, so as to give additional staying support to the
tube sheets. We presume, in the absence of information to the contrary, that the
Bennington's furnaces and tubes were substantially the same as here
described. (The boilers of the Yorktown are illustrated in Engineering
(London) for April 24, 1891, page 493.)
The Bennington's boilers (four in number) were placed in two separate
water-tight compartments. In each fire-room there were two blowers for producing
forced draft, these drawing air from the fire-rooms and discharging it into
ducts which led to the ash-pit fronts and door frames. One of the blowers in the
after fire room was arranged to draw air from the engine-room or fire-room, as
might be desired. There was one smoke stack, 7 ft. in diameter and 57 ft. 6 in.
high, for the four boilers; the uptakes from each pair uniting above the
water-tight bulkheads between the fire-rooms. The boilers were originally
designed (it is said) for a steam pressure of 160 lbs. per square inch; but the
pressure had been reduced to 135 or 140 lbs. for cruising, the safety valves
being set to blow at 145 lbs. The boilers were re-tubed in 1903-1904, and we
understand that temporary repairs of some character were made upon the boilers
in May, 1905, at the Mare Island Navy Yard.
The Bennington has been used mainly in Pacific waters, and her last
service previous to the explosion was at the Hawaiian Islands. She sailed from
Honolulu on July 7, proceeding to San Diego, Cal., where she arrived on July 19.
The monitor Wyoming having just dropped one of her propellers near Port
Harford, Cal., and become unmanageable, the Bennington was ordered to go
to her assistance, and see her safely into San Francisco. The Bennington
was to sail for this purpose on July 21, and on that day she was lying in the
stream at San Diego, just off the Commercial wharf at H street, nearly ready to
depart, when the disasterous explosion occurred. Commander Lucien Young says,
in his telegram to the Navy Department announcing the explosion, "At 10:30 this
morning, while making preparations for getting under way with all hands at their
stations, the top of the lower furnace of boiler B exploded, forcing the boiler
astern in contact with boiler D, which was also forced astern, and
exploded." If we understand the phraseology correctly, it would imply that
the initial rupture consisted in the failure of the lower furnace of the forward
starboard boiler, by collapse from above downward, and that the boiler so
affected was thrown violently astern, so that it came into collision with the
aft starboard boiler, and caused that to explode also. (See, however, the Report
of the Court of Inquiry, subsequently given.) Commander Young was ashore at the
time, but the discipline appears to have been excellent, and the magazines were
promptly flooded, and steps were at once taken to rescue the injured. Sections
of the upper deck were carried away and a hole was blown in the side of the
vessel, through which water entered, causing a rapid listing to starboard. The
vessel was at first said to be almost totally wrecked, but she was subsequently
found to be "practically uninjured except in and about the boiler and
engine-room." By the assistance of other craft she was beached on a mud bank,
between two wharves.
The total number of persons killed was 62, counting those killed outright and
those that died within a short time. In addition, there were 14 who were
seriously injured and 26 others who were injured less seriously. The ship's
complement of men numbered 197, including officers and crew, so that it appears
that more than half (namely, 102,) of the men were killed or injured. We shall
not attempt to give any account whatever of the scenes of horror that prevailed
upon the fated ship. Commander Young stated that not even the leper settlement
at Molokai, in the Hawaiian Islands, could show anything so fearful.
Secretary of the Navy Charles J. Bonaparte made the very reasonable request
that judgment as to the responsibility for the disaster be suspended until an
official investigation could be made. He said: "I promise the public that nobody
shall be whitewashed, and the Service that nobody shall be made a scapegoat." A
Court of Inquiry was appointed to investigate the explosion, and this began its
work at San Diego on July 28. The Court consisted of Commander Holland N.
Stevenson, Captain Thomas S. Phelps, and Captain Edwin K. Moore. The finding of
the Court reached the Navy Department on August 21, and was made public on
August 22. From this report it appears that when the orders to sail for Port
Harford were received, the boilers and engines of the Bennington were
being overhauled, preparatory to an expected voyage to Panama. Boilers A and B
were ordered to be filled with fresh water. Fires were started in the lower
furnaces of these two boilers (the remaining boilers being already under steam)
at about 8 o'clock on the morning of July 21, and at about 9:15 fires were
started also in the wing furnaces of A and B. What followed is best given in the
precise words of the Court, which found: "That at about twenty minutes after
nine o'clock, a. m., the steam gauge on boiler B showed about five pounds of
steam pressure, and at this time Oiler Frank De Courtani, acting as water
tender, directed D. H. Holland, fireman, second class, to close the air cock on
boiler B; that the said Holland climbed up and closed a valve, and almost
immediately the steam gauge on boiler B failed to register any pressure; that
this was apparently not noticed by either the water tender or the fireman, and
no attention appears to have been paid to the fact that the steam gauge failed
to register, but they kept on working the fires and firing heavily; that when
the steam gauge on boiler A showed one hundred and thirty-five pounds there was
no pressure showing on the steam gauge of boiler B.
"That at about a quarter to ten o'clock, a. m., the engines were turned over,
using steam from boilers C and D; that as it was not thought that steam would be
ready in boilers A and B before early in the afternoon, it had been decided to
get under way and leave the harbor under boilers C and D, but steam appears to
have formed much more rapidly than it was thought possible it could be formed,
and boiler A was connected with boilers C and D at about twenty minutes after
ten o'clock, a. m.; that no pressure was showing on the steam gauge of boiler B
at this time.
"That at about this time a small leak developed in No. 1 furnace of boiler B,
and coal passer A. J. Worthen was sent on deck by De Courtani, the acting water
tender, to inform the boiler maker about the leak and request him to come below
and attend to the same; and just about this time, as Worthen was leaving Dustin,
the boiler maker (who was, we believe, on the berth deck), the explosion
occurred.
"That the lower corrugated furnace flue of boiler B collapsed throughout its
entire length on top, and partly so on its bottom, which caused boiler B to
break from its saddles, forcing the boiler aft through a bulkhead and against
boiler D which also broke from its saddles, both boilers moving aft, until
boiler D, after having broken through the engine room bulkhead, brought up
against the forward engine framing, boiler B having moved aft about fourteen
feet from its original position, breaking all steam connections of all the
boilers, allowing the steam from the four boilers to escape into the ship, also
breaking many sea-water connections, in the fire rooms and engine room, giving
water access to the ship, and disabling everything in the boiler and
engine-rooms; that steam escaped with terrific force into almost all parts of
the ship, carrying with it water, ashes, and coal, killing or wounding 51.45 per
cent. of the officers and crew, and damaging almost everything throughout the
ship."
It is but natural to ask why the safety-valve did not blow upon boiler B,
under the circumstances so plainly indicated. Upon this point the finding of the
Court was: "That no one seemed to have noticed any escape of steam from the
safety-valves of any of the boilers, and no one can state that any of tile
safety-valves blew off at any time that morning. That we can find no record of
the safety-valve of boiler B having been overhauled since July, 1904, nor any
positive evidence of its having been done, though orders had been given for this
to be done in March, 1905; that there is no record of the sentinel valve having
been overhauled since July, 1904; that the safety-valves were set at 145 pounds,
but en route from Honolulu to this port orders were given to carry the steam
pressure at from 130 to 135 pounds, and not to exceed the latter, but the
safety-valves were not changed; that this order had been clearly understood;
that the hand gear for lifting the safety-valves was not in working order, and
there is no record or direct evidence that the safety-valves had been tested in
accordance with the Navy Regulations."
Summing up the evidence as to the cause of the explosion, the Court says:
"The Court is of the opinion that the explosion was caused by excessive steam
pressure in boiler B, which came about first by shutting the valve connecting
the boiler with the steam gauge, instead of the valve on the air cock alone as
was intended, so that the steam gauge did not indicate the pressure in the
boiler; second, by unusual and heavy firing in the boiler, to get up a pressure
which the gauge failed to show; third, by the failure of the sentinel and
safety-valves to lift at the pressure at which they were set, and the pressure
increased without relief until it was beyond the strength of the boiler, which
gave way in its weakest part, afterward found to be the corrugated flue of No.
2, the lowest or middle furnace of which collapsed."
The Court found "that the ship was in an excellent state of discipline, and
in a good and efficient condition, with the exception of her boilers, which were
in fair condition and efficient considering their age (fourteen years) and the
use to which they had been subjected." Fireman D. N. Holland is held responsible
for closing the valve to the pressure gauge instead of the air cock as was
indicated; Oiler Frank De Courtani is held responsible for pushing the fires
without noting that the gauge did not respond, and for not immediately taking
steps to relieve the boiler as soon as distress was shown; and Chief Machinist's
Mate E. B. Ferguson, on watch in charge of the engine and fire rooms, is held
responsible for failure to exercise due supervision during the raising of the
pressure upon boiler B. All three of these men are dead, however, so that
proceedings against them are impossible.
The only person still living, who appears to have been censured by the Court,
is Ensign Charles T. Wade, who was in charge of the engineering department of
the Bennington. It was recommended that Ensign Wade be court-martialed,
on the grounds (1) that he failed to see to it personally that the safety-valve
on the boiler was overhauled at the proper time and kept in good working order,
but accepted the oral statement of one or more of his subordinates that it had
been overhauled in March, 1905; (2) that he failed to keep the sentinel valve in
good working order; and (3) that he failed to have the safety and sentinel
valves on all the boilers tested in accordance with the Navy Regulations.
In reviewing the findings of the Court of Inquiry, under date of August 29,
Secretary of the Navy Bonaparte approves the findings of fact, except in regard
to the paragraph stating that "the ship was in an excellent state of discipline
and in a good and efficient condition, with the exception of her boilers, etc."
Concerning this paragraph the Secretary says: "The Department does not consider
this particular finding sustained by the evidence; the proof tends strongly to
show that the enlisted force of the engineering division had been permitted to
fall into habits of laxity and inattention in the discharge of their duties, and
that at least some of this force were also imperfectly instructed regarding
their duties. In the view of the Department, the evidence establishes, further,
that certain appurtenances, to wit, the safety and sentinel valves of at least
one of the boilers, were not in an efficient condition at the date mentioned,
and had not been in such condition for a considerable time previously, and, in
the judgment of the Department, this evidence renders the statements that the
ship was in a 'good and efficient condition,' and that her boilers were in 'fair
condition and efficient,' inappropriate to the facts disclosed by the proof."
The Secretary commended, very cordially, the "highly creditable conduct of
all the survivors of the officers and crew of the Bennington, after the
explosion occurred," and he especially mentioned that he desired to include in
this commendation Commander Lucien Young, and Ensign Charles T. Wade. The
Secretary nevertheless approved of the recommendation of the Court that Ensign
Wade be tried by court-martial. He also said: "Inasmuch as the Court of Inquiry
did not pass expressly in its findings and opinion upon the conduct of Commander
Lucien Young, U. S. N., commanding the U. S. S. Bennington, and the question of
his responsibility for the explosion thereon and the consequent loss of life and
injuries to persons and property, the Department must treat this silence as an
implied finding that he was not thus responsible. After very careful
consideration, the Department is compelled to disapprove this implied finding. .
. . The foregoing provisions of the Regulations, and the facts disclosed by the
Report of the Court of Inquiry and by the testimony and exhibits thereto
attached, make it the duty of the Department to require Commander Lucien Young,
U. S. N., to clear himself, before a general court-martial, of the charge of
neglect of his official duty above indicated. Such court-martial is, therefore,
ordered."
In accordance with the order here indicated, court-martial proceedings were
instituted against Commander Lucien Young and Ensign Charles T. Wade, at the
Mare Island Navy Yard, California, with Captain Ernest E. West as Judge
Advocate. The first meeting was held on Friday, September 15. This, however, was
only a formal meeting, to fulfil the requirements of the Department. The regular
sessions began on Monday, September 18, on which date Commander Young pleaded
"not guilty." Commander Young was represented at the proceedings by Judge George
D. Gear, of Honolulu, a personal friend, who came on from Honolulu especially to
conduct the defense. After being in session for about a week, the court-martial
adjourned on account of the illness of Ensign Charles T. Wade, who was needed as
a witness. The sittings were resumed on October 9, and the prosecution closed
its case on October 18. The defense was immediately begun, and on October 25 the
court-martial proceedings against Commander Young came to an end. The finding of
the court was transmitted to Secretary Bonaparte, who held it under
consideration until the early part of January. On January 6 the Secretary
addressed a letter of censure to Commander Young, in which he refers to Young's
"brilliant services in the past," and his "merited reputation for seamanship and
gallantry," and says: "The court-martial by which you were tried has convicted
you of remissness in the discharge of your official duty in that you failed to
sign the smooth steam log of the U. S. S. Bennington while that vessel
was under your command, as required by the Regulations for the government of the
Navy; for such remissness its sentence is that you be reprimanded by the
Secretary of the Navy."
Commander Young's failure to sign the log has but slight bearing, apparently,
upon the accident to the Bennington.
Ensign Wade's trial was begun on October 30, before the same Court that tried
Commander Young. It lasted but a few days, and resulted in the young man's
acquittal.
We certainly have no disposition to lay the blame for the explosion upon
Commander Young, and it may be that the men who were actually responsible for it
were all killed. Nevertheless it will appear to the lay mind, we think, that the
final outcome of the court of inquiry, and of two courts-martial in which three
dozen witnesses were examined, is absurdly out of proportion to the fearful
explosion that was under investigation. "A mountain was in labor, sending forth
dreadful groans, and there was in the region the highest expectation. After all,
it brought forth a mouse."
Excerpted from The Locomotive January 1906