The Sinking of the Independence

As experienced by Andrew Fuller Rodgers and Ellis Elwell (and other unknown young men) of Upper Alton, Illinois.

SINKING OF THE SHIP, INDEPENDENCE
February 16, 1853

We have received letters from my son and some other of the Upper Alton young men, who were on the unfortunate ship, Independence. I have made a few extracts in their own words, which may be interesting to your readers. Signed, Rev. Ebenezer Rodgers (Father of Andrew F. Rodgers)

Letter from Andrew Fuller Rodgers, Son of Ebenezer Rodgers
Dated April 18, 1853
Source: Alton Daily Telegraph, May 27, 1853

Colonel Andrew Fuller RodgersDear Father,
I arrived in Sacramento on May 4, 1853. You have heard by this time of the difficulties we had to encounter on our passage. It is perfectly vain for me to attempt to find language to express and describe the distress, horror, and consternation which took place onboard on February 16, a little after daylight. The vessel [the steamship Independence] struck a rock on Margaretta [Margarita] Island, and commenced leaking rapidly. The consternation among the ladies was so great, that they rushed out of their rooms in their nightclothes. We prevailed on them to go back and dress, but such was the excitement that they could not do it with any kind of propriety.

If the ship had sunk where she first struck, not one of us could have been saved, for the rock on the shore was perpendicular, and more than two hundred feet high. But as fortune would have it, we were able to run about two miles to a small beach of sand. The water, however, rushed into the vessel so fast, that we had to burn pine plank and resin. The doors then burst open, and set the ship on fire, and in a short time, she was in a solid blaze. Then the scene was awful, and past all description. Men drowning, women pulling their hair off their heads, and shrieking and begging for someone to save their children. Mothers with their clothes on fire, and their children in their arms, and as the fire approached their vitals, jumped overboard and sunk to rise no more. The scene was so horrid and sickening, that my nerves are too weak to write about it, or to even think of it.

I think I never was as thankful in my life as I was when I found all the Alton boys saved, for there was not another company or another family on board, who did not lose one or more. But Ed Willis, who knew less about swimming than any of our company, was nearly lost. When the fire was advancing, I separated from the boys and was trying to assist Colonel Watson’s family. I picked up their youngest daughter in my arms, and made my way through the crowd, and told the rest of the family to follow me to the forward part of the ship. I found one small boat left at the side of the vessel. I got to the side where the small boast was, and gave the little girl to her mother, and got down on the side of the ship and put my leg through the hawser hole, and held on with one hand, while the Captain passed the ladies down to me, and I let them fall into the boat. When the boat was full, I jumped upon deck, and Mr. Farr was standing there with his little boy by the hand. He caught hold of me, and asked me to save his boy. I told him I did not know whether I could or not, but I would do my best. I took his boy by the arm and slid down the top into the water, and succeeded in getting ashore with him, but his father, Mr. Farr, in attempting to swim to land, was drowned.

Mr. Farr was an old acquaintance of mine. He used to practice law in Sacramento [California]. He had been back in Missouri, and married Miss Phillips of Boone County. The little boy was his child by his first wife, and about eight years old. I have to pay all the attention I can to Mrs. Farr and the little boy I saved, who are here at Sacramento. I am in the Sheriff’s office again, and will remain here for some time. I lost the papers belonging to my land, and everything else but my pantaloons and shirt, but I was better off than many, for some landed on the island perfectly naked.

Colonel Watson has three daughters, one seventeen years old, one fifteen, and one eight. His only son, eleven years old, was drowned. The rest of the family we saved. The Alton boys saved a great many, but after they got to shore, they went into the water to their arm pits and pulled out the dead and dying. There were, at least, one hundred and seventy-five lives lost.

My love to all.
Your affectionate son,
Andrew Fuller Rodgers

 

Isla of Santa Margaurita

 

THE SINKING OF THE SHIP INDEPENDENCE
Letter from Ellis Elwell to John Rodgers
Our passage from San Juan Del Sud was very pleasant until the morning of February 16. Early that morning, I was waked up by the ship striking a rock. I got up and looked out, and saw that we were not more than half a mile from shore. I then looked for our boys, and found most of them hard at work bailing. But it was of no use, for they could not make the least impression. After backing her off the rock, they turned her head on the island, and succeeded in beaching her in a pretty good place at the distance of two hundred yards from shore. The vessel took fire about ten minutes after she was beached. All were running to and fro, laying hold of everything that could be of any assistance in the water. A great many that could not swim jumped overboard without anything to hold them up, and of course, were drowned.

The Alton boys took it perfectly cook, and therefore succeeded in saving their lives. When she was first beached, I went up above, and threw down a great many boxes and trunks and other things to the drowning men, but soon the flames came too near me, and I had to leave. When I found that all the Alton boys were saved, that was the happiest moment of my life. There was no other party, consisting of over four persons, but lost some of their number. There were thirty-one women aboard, and twelve were lost, and God knows how many children. The next day, we managed to get some salt pork and beef out of the hold of the vessel, which we lived on for three days. Our drink consisted of vinegar and molasses, which served the purpose very well. But if we had been forced to use it much longer, there would have been a great many deaths, for the salt meat increased our thirst. About one half of the number that was drowned drifted ashore, and we buried them in the sand about two feet deep, by digging with pieces of plank.

The Captain and Purser, after loitering and idling around a week or so, chartered a vessel, the Meteor, to convey up to San Francisco for the sum of twenty thousand dollars. The passengers had to furnish their own provisions. The ship was small, and we were quite crowded. Fourteen of us slept in a room, seven feet by nine, but take all in all, we did pretty well for shipwrecked persons. We left Magdalena Bay March 03, and arrived in San Francisco March 31, destitute of everything. But we found a friend who loaned us money enough to get to Sacramento City. There, we called on our old generous friend, Mr. John Hatch, and he told us we could have as much money as we wanted. Such a friend in need is a friend indeed.
Yours, Ellis Elwell

 

NOTES:
On February 16, 1853, the American steamer, Independence, under the command of Captain Sampson, with approximately 359 passengers and a crew of 56, was on a voyage from San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua, to San Francisco, California, when she struck a rock off the south point of Isla Santa Margarita, off of Baja California, Mexico, within three hundred yards of the shore. She began to fill with water immediately, and Captain Sampson tried to beach her in a better place, but failed. 117 passengers and 15 crew members were drowned when jumping overboard, or burned to death when the flames from the boilers set the ship on fire. The flames spread rapidly, as terrified parents embraced their children. Some jumped overboard, hoping to make it to shore. Men and women screamed frantically. Women were seen clambering down the sides of the ship, clinging to the ropes and rigging. Some were hanging by their skirts, which caught in the ropes, leaving them dangling piteously. Some of the women tossed their children overboard, rather than see them burn in the fire. Those who made it to shore plundered the dead for their clothing, while others pulled the dead from the water. Alone on the abandoned island with no fresh water, they survived for three days until picked up by small ships.

 

NOTES ON ANDREW FULLER RODGERS:
Andrew Fuller Rodgers was born on October 13, 1827, in Fayette, Missouri. He was the son of a pioneer Baptist minister, Reverend Ebenezer Rodgers and Permelia M. Jackson Rodgers. His father was a native of England, who immigrated to America in 1818, locating first in Louisville, Kentucky, then Fayette, Missouri. The family moved to Upper Alton, and located on a 40 acre farm east of Upper Alton (near the present-day Gordon Moore Park). Rev. Rodgers served as one of the early trustees of Shurtleff College. A total of ten or twelve children were born to Rev. Rodgers and his wife. Andrew F. Rodgers was one of the early students of Shurtleff College. In 1844 he became a clerk in a St. Louis hardware store, but returned to Upper Alton before the outbreak of war with Mexico (1846). He enlisted in the Second Illinois Infantry, and was a brave and respected solider. After the war he returned home, but farm life was dull and unexciting. He joined the gold rush to California in 1849, and served as Deputy Sheriff of Sacramento County, and was a member of the famed Sutter Rifle Company. Andrew returned home for a visit, and on his return voyage in 1853 to California, onboard the American steamer, “Independence,” he was shipwrecked. He was one of the survivors, and saved many lives that fateful night.

After the shipwreck, Andrew again served as a deputy sheriff in California until 1853, when he entered the mining business. The following year his father died, and Andrew returned home to Upper Alton in July 1854. He married in 1860, and lived on the farm until the outbreak of the Civil War. In 1862, he enlisted as Captain of Company B, of the Eightieth Illinois Infantry. He was appointed Lieutenant Colonel of the regiment, and served with distinction. He was wounded, but recovered, continuing his service. In 1863 his unit was captured in Georgia, and was kept as a prisoner of war in Danville, Georgia. He was transferred to the notorious Libby prison, spending twelve months there, until he was transferred to a prison in Charleston. While in prison, Andrew was commissioned a Colonel. Upon his return to the North, he recruited 500 men for the 144th Illinois Regiment, which served as guards at the Alton prison. He resigned from the army on November 25, 1864.

After the war he lived on his farm and was a leader in civic affairs. In 1870 he was elected to the State legislature. In later years, a young girl that he had saved after the shipwreck of the Independence discovered where he was living, and came to Upper Alton to thank him for saving her life. Colonel Rodgers died on January 20, 1922, and was buried in the Upper Alton Oakwood Cemetery.

 

SUGGESTED READING ON THE WRECK OF THE INDEPENDENCE:

The S. S. Independence, on Wrecksite.eu

Ship Passengers – Sea Captains, a Maritime Heritage Project

 

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