Kuala Batu Archives - Today in Naval History https://navalhistorytoday.net/tag/kuala-batu/ Naval History Stories Mon, 30 Jan 2023 14:09:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 214743718 The First Battle of Quallah Battoo https://navalhistorytoday.net/2023/02/07/the-first-battle-of-quallah-battoo/ https://navalhistorytoday.net/2023/02/07/the-first-battle-of-quallah-battoo/#respond Tue, 07 Feb 2023 10:06:00 +0000 https://navalhistorytoday.net/?p=395                        5-7 FEBRUARY 1832                THE FIRST BATTLE OF QUALLAH BATTOO His trading mission scrubbed, Captain Charles Endicott refitted Friendship for sea and departed 4 March 1831 for Salem.  His landfall on 16 July was preceded several days by the arrival of another Read More

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                       5-7 FEBRUARY 1832

               THE FIRST BATTLE OF QUALLAH BATTOO

His trading mission scrubbed, Captain Charles Endicott refitted Friendship for sea and departed 4 March 1831 for Salem.  His landfall on 16 July was preceded several days by the arrival of another trader to Boston bearing news of Friendship’s tragedy.  The public outcry was intense, and crowds lined the shores at the merchantman’s arrival.  Friendship’s owners boldly petitioned the US government for redress.  When news of the event reached Andrew Jackson’s Secretary of the Navy, John Branch, he demanded retribution.  The 44-gun frigate USS Potomac was ordered to be specially repainted and re-rigged to resemble a Danish trader.  Sailing under CAPT John Downes, USN, and embarking an extra complement of Marines, Potomac stood down from Sandy Hook bound for the South Seas on 28 August 1831.  When Downes asked the Navy Department to clarify what actions he might take in Sumatra he was answered simply, “Give the rascals a good thrashing.”  Downes’ “trader” dropped anchor in Quallah Battoo on February 5th, 1832, keeping her gunports deceptively closed.  The pirates failed to take the bait however, and the next morning Downes landed a scouting party of the ship’s officers dressed as merchant seamen.  They counted 500 Malays in three wooden stockades that protected the Rajah, Sultan Po Mohamet, and the village.  Po Mohamet had been a kingpin of pirate activity in the region for years.

Then at 0200 this morning a storming party of 282 Marines and bluejackets went ashore.  Divided into three sections, they attacked at dawn.  Two stockades fell within minutes, but the third was more tenaciously defended.  Two assaults were beaten back, the Marines finding their muskets nearly useless at such close quarters.  Shortly reinforced from the other sections, several more assaults were mounted.  Finally, after two hours of cutlass and pistol action the natives were routed.

The Malays regrouped into a fourth stockade that had been too well camouflaged to be noticed the day before.  Two American charges against this redoubt, now against native cannon and muskets, were also rebuffed.  But a third sent the remaining natives scurrying into the jungle.  Only two Americans were lost in the day’s fighting, but 150 natives, including Po Mohamet, lay dead.  While the shore party set about torching the village, Potomac slipped across the harbor to the site of another pirate den and reduced this with a fierce hour-long cannonade.

Shortly a promise was received that the Stars and Stripes would be respected in the future.  Potomac weighed anchor, continuing on a diplomatic mission to China.  But alas, the pirates honored their promise only until Downes faded over the horizon.

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CAPT James Bloom

Rehabilitation Medicine

Corn, Charles.  The Scents of Eden:  A History of the Spice Trade.  New York, NY: Kodansha International, 1998, pp. 291-98.

Department of the Navy, Naval History Division.  Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Vol 5 “N-Q”.  Washington, DC: GPO, 1979, pp. 362-63.

Love, Robert W.  History of the US Navy, Vol 1  1775-1941.  Harrisburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 1992, pp. 155-58.

Metcalf, Clyde H.  A History of the United States Marine Corps.  New York, NY: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1939, p. 90.

Nalty, Bernard.  “Pirates and Pepper”.  IN:  Schuon, Karl.  The Leathernecks.  New York, NY: Franklin Watts, Inc., 1963, pp. 67-70.

Sweetman, Jack.  American Naval History: An Illustrated Chronology of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, 1775-Present, 2nd ed.  Annapolis, MD: USNI Press, 1991, pp. 44, 46.

ADDITIONAL NOTES:  In the same manner as America’s 21st century War on Terrorism, an organized national military operating at distance from its shores can find it difficult to sustain gains won against local terrorist cells.  Within weeks of Potomac’s departure, piracy against American traders resumed in Sumatra.  Our Navy was forced to make a second foray to this same location in December 1838–but that’s another story for another time.

The gallant actions of the Leathernecks at Quallah Battoo have become legendary in USMC heritage.  Noted artist Charles Waterhouse has rendered a depiction of the Marines this day, reprints of which are often seen hanging in modern USMC facilities.

Charles Waterhouse painting

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Friendship and the Sumatran Pirates https://navalhistorytoday.net/2023/02/06/friendship-and-the-sumatran-pirates/ https://navalhistorytoday.net/2023/02/06/friendship-and-the-sumatran-pirates/#respond Mon, 06 Feb 2023 10:00:00 +0000 https://navalhistorytoday.net/?p=391                       EARLY FEBRUARY 1831               FRIENDSHIP AND THE SUMATRAN PIRATES Salem, Massachusetts, was one of our busiest seaports in the early days of our young nation.  In fact, it was the major port through which the American spice trade was conducted.  About the Read More

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                      EARLY FEBRUARY 1831

              FRIENDSHIP AND THE SUMATRAN PIRATES

Salem, Massachusetts, was one of our busiest seaports in the early days of our young nation.  In fact, it was the major port through which the American spice trade was conducted.  About the turn of the 19th century Salem shipping firms learned of the handsome profits to be made trading for pepper, then grown only in the Far East.  Salem’s merchant fleet was soon calling regularly on several Javanese and Sumatran villages where local rajahs would collect pepper from the interior for sale to the white men.  Thus, it was that the American merchantman Friendship anchored off on the village of Quallah Battoo in what is now Indonesia in January of 1831.

Piracy was a clear risk that pepper traders assumed, for along this western coast of Sumatra the practice had thrived for centuries.  So was Captain Charles Endicott suspicious when a native prahu pulled near the ship on a dark January night.  Its occupants confessed to be smuggling pepper and were cautiously permitted to board.  In truth they were reconnoitering Friendship.

Days later the local rajah lured Endicott and his officers ashore with promises of more pepper recently transhipped from the interior.  While the officers were thus engaged, a party of natives outnumbering Friendship’s remaining crew boarded.  Within minutes the 1st Mate, Mr. Knight, the steward, and several crewmen fell to the native’s krises.  Four crewmen jumped overboard and managed to swim away as the natives became distracted by the booty for which they had attacked.  Ashore, Endicott observed his crewmen jumping from Friendship and discerned the ruse.  He quietly mustered his officers and pushed-off in the ship’s pinnacle.

Correctly judging his remaining strength to be less than necessary to challenge the natives, Endicott’s men began rowing for the port of Muckie, 25 miles distant.  Through the day they labored, reaching the mouth of the Soo Soo River after nightfall.  Here they were able to obtain fresh water but dared not make a landfall.  Braving a sudden squall, they struggled onward, passing several hostile villages along the way.  With a makeshift sail of gunny sacks, Endicott’s men safely reached Muckie at 0100 that night.  They were sheltered by three American traders lying at anchor.  They were eventually reunited with the haggard four who had swum for their lives only to endure mosquitos, crocodiles, starvation, and exposure before reaching friendly natives.

The sympathetic captain of James Monroe, one of the traders, mounted a successful effort to re-take Friendship in the days that followed, but she was found to have been stripped of her specie, cargo, and $12,000 worth of spars and rigging the pirates could re-sell to future traders.  Endicott further observed many natives bedecked in red, white, and blue striped finery, clearly cut from Western cloth.  Even the wardroom’s gingham tablecloth was noted to be gracing the shoulders of a native warrior.

Continued tomorrow…

Corn, Charles.  The Scents of Eden:  A History of the Spice Trade.  New York, NY: Kodansha International, 1998, pp. 280-92.

Miller, Nathan.  The U.S. Navy:  An Illustrated History.  Annapolis, MD: American Heritage and USNI Press, 1977, p. 114.

Quallah Battoo (red arrow)
Javanese Kris

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