A STORY OF HIGH SEAS HEROISM


William Tillman faced a brutal choice: slavery or death.

He was steward and cook onboard the merchant schooner "S.J. Waring," about 300 tons, bound for Montevideo, Uruguay with an assorted cargo. Three days out from port, July 7, 1861, and one hundred fifty miles out from Sandy Hook, New Jersey, at lat. 38o, long. 69o. Tillman's vessel was boarded by men from the rebel privateer "Jeff Davis." They declared the schooner property of the Confederate States of America. The Civil War was less than four months old.

The rebels ransacked the vessel and ordered Captain Smith, the ship's master, to haul down the Stars and Stripes. He was then taken to the privateer. Tillman was told that he, like the ship, was southern property and that he would be sold into bondage when the ship reached its new destination.

The confederates put a five man prize crew on Tillman's ship and turned her south, toward Charleston. Now, each day at sea beat down on Tillman like a hammer. An overwhelming sense of dread, however, was gradually replaced by iron-willed resolve. Tillman, in concert, with a handful of passengers hatched a bold plan.

Tillman's duties gave him the run of most of the vessel. The rebels were used to seeing him moving about. Moreover, while cautious around the handful of white crewmen and passengers, the prize crew did not consider Tillman capable of either bravery or treachery; it was to be their undoing. Tillman was key to the recapture of the "S.J. Waring." And he struck in the middle of the night.

William Wells Brown, an African American writer and historian described Tillman's heroism and subsequent actions in a book written in 1867:

Harper's Weekly, August 3, 1861 reported that Tillman was held briefly in the House of Detention as a witness and "that he had been before the Chamber of Commerce, and it is in contemplation to present him with a substantial reward."

Brown records that Tillman received $6,000 in prize money and he also wrote:

A few weeks later, there was another attempt by the "Jeff Davis" to seize a northern vessel. This time the capture of the "Enchantress," was foiled by a black steward named Jacob Garrick when he alerted a nearby union gunboat.

The long tradition of black seamenship and courage of men like Tillman and Garrick may have paid off in another more unexpected way. Perhaps these exploits also helped persuade Navy Secretary Gideon Welles to open enlistment in the Union Navy to African Americans in September 1861, long before the Army permitted such enlistment.

-- written by C.R. Gibbs