Expedition to find the lost Vanderbilt steamer, Lexington
which burned and sank in Long Island Sound in 1840 with
a loss of 154 lives.
I can't recall what piqued my interest in the Lexington.
I think perhaps researcher Bob Fleming put me on the track
of her. He certainly did a tremendous amount of digging
in the archives for me. First it was the attraction of
the story behind her burning and sinking and later salvage
attempt. Newspaper accounts said she was raised and lost
by salvagers in 1842. And again in 1850 it was reported
she had been raised for good.
It then became a challenge for me when everyone claimed
the Lexington was long gone because no one had ever
found her over the years.
I'd heard this all before, and it was akin to waving
the red flag in front of a stubborn bull. Besides, there
was no record of her final salvage in insurance company
historic records.
Many had looked for the Lexington since the nineteen
fifties, but none had come close to finding her. No
contemporary report gave an approximate site of her
sinking. Sightings were vague and none gave a ballpark
location. But thanks to the efforts of Fleming, he finally
ran across the coroner's report of the sinking and the
description of the lighthouse keeper at Old Field Point
near Port Jefferson.
He stated the Lexington sank four miles due north of
the point and slightly west. He was damned close. Using
a Klein side scan sonar we found the wreckage three
and a half miles due north of the point and slightly
to the west.
She is broken into three sections, the breaks no doubt
coming during her salvage when she was temporarily raised
to the surface. Two of the reasons divers and fishermen
had not run across her is because she is lying in 140
feet of water, a tricky and dangerous dive, and almost
under the path of the Bridgeport - Port Jefferson ferry
which has been in operation since 1874.
Since NUMA's discovery, many divers have investigated
the wreckage, her location becoming well known among
local dive boat captains.
The Lexington is a fascinating wreck of historical
significance and we were very fortunate in finding her.
NUMA's choice of the Lexington was determined by several
factors regarding her status as an important historical
steamer of Long Island Sound. Cornelius Vanderbilt had
her constructed especially for himself, sparing no expense,
and including many innovations. Vanderbilt was a significant
representative of America's heritage of free interprise
and he began his huge fortune with his use of the Lexington.
The Lexington ,was a great example of the Sound steamers
of the early nineteenth century, being especially fast
and strong, a fine example of our early maritime craftsmanship.
The disaster involved the greatest loss of life at that
time in the Sound and was the first great steamship
disaster in steamboat, history.
She came into existence at a time when the evolution
of the steam engine was shaping the railroad systems
of the future and steamer lines at sea. The tall ships,
powered by the wind, were about to disappear from commercial
shipping and the stagecoach would soon be obsolete.
By 1835, rival sidewheel steamers plied Long Island
Sound with passengers and cargo from New York City to
Providence and Boston where a new railroad connecting
Boston and Providence was completed attracting many
passengers away from the stages, hastening their demise.
New York capitalists were more interested :in expanding
the flourishing railroads by 1840 rather than the steamer
lines with their dangerous route out of New York Harbor
and around the perilous Point Judith near Providence,
and in a few years, the steamers would yield to the
rails . From 1835 to 1840, however, the Lexington was
the fastest vessel on the route from New York City to
Boston.
The Vanderbilts, Cornelius and brother Jacob, were
emergent financial figures in shipping and railroads
at this time and in 1835, Cornelius ordered the Lexington
built in New York City in the Bishop and Simonson shipyards
to his specifications with no contract and unlimited
funds lie supervised her progress daily, including many
new innovations in her construction. The best of woods
were used and she had 30% more faster than other vessels
of her type. The first of its kind, her deck was arched
with pressure against the ends of the timber instead
of against the sides for added strength. Her vertical
beam engine eras so extremely efficient that she consumed
about half the wood other steamers used. The machinery
was all in the middle so many strengthening measures
were taken to make the hull yell supported. Measuring
207' by 21'by 11', with a wide, square stern, she: was
long, slim and fast. Her two paddlewheel.; made her
46' wide there, each having a 9' face and were turned
by a walking beam attached to their shaft.
Wanting a vessel to rival the John J. Richmond, the
New Jersey Steam Navigation and Transportation Company
persuaded Vanderbilt to sell her to them in 1838 for
about $72,000. Her furnaces were converted to coal fuel,
having two huge blowers installed to provide sufficient
draft to ignite coal and she continued satisfactory
service for the next two years.
On Monday, January 13, 1840 at 4:00 o'clock p.m., the
Lexington was chosen for the New York to Stonington
run because of bad weather with strong winds, high seas
and sub zero temperatures would require the strongest
boat for the journey.
The Stonington run was made regularly at night to meet
train that connected with Boston. The Lexington's motto
was "Through by Dawn" and her reputation for
speed guaranteed a quick trip. She could speed along
at twenty three miles per hour, as fast as some of the
later blockade runners of the Civil War.
Her captain was usually Captain Jake Vanderbilt, but
on this night, he was ill at home, unable to make the
trip, so Sound veteran Captain George Child took command
of the vessel loaded with a cargo of cotton bales and
passengers.
As she steamed past Eaton's Neck lighthouse at approximately
7;00 o'clock p.m., fire broke out near the single stack,
setting the bales of cotton afire. A bucket brigade
formed immediately but the high winds fanned the flames
out of control quickly. spreading the fire along the
length of the hull. A few hours later, controlled only
by the elements, the helpless vessel drifted ablaze
in a north easterly direction in the middle of the Sound.
Those unfortunate passengers that survived the burning
by jumping in the water died of exposure or drowning.
The life boats, launched in panic while the boat was
churning along under full power were immediately swamped
in the wake.
Captain Hillard, a surviving passenger, looked at his
watch sitting on a floating cotton bale and noted the
exact time the hull sank below the surface. It was exactly
3;00 o'clock a. m. on the morning of January 14.
There were four survivors, all experienced seamen and
all but one were rescued by the sloop merchant and its
master, Captain Meeker by noon that day. They included
Captain Chester Hillard, Captain Stephen Manchester,
pilot of the Lexington, Charles 13. Smith, fireman,
and David Crowley, second mate. Crowley survived exposure
for forty-eight hours until his cotton bale floated
ashore near Baiting Hollow, Long Island, on the beach
of the Mary Hutchinson property.
When four bodies were recovered and because of the
great loss of life, as much as a possible 154 persons,
a Coroner IC inquest was held immediately afterward
in New York City. All principals were called as witnesses,
including Vanderbilt himself'. Other notables such as
Captain Elihu Bunker, United State: Steam Engine Inspector,
and Captain William Comstock of the New Jersey Steam
Navigation Company testified to the soundness, of her
hull, machinery and boilers. The builders and iron workers
also testified, as did the witnesses who identified
the bodies.
The Jury charged that the use of blowers was dangerous,
that passengers and cotton bales were an unfortunate
mix for cargo; that the inspectors were not accurate
when they passed the soundness of the steam system;
that poor discipline among the crew members and officers
caused loss of life unnecessarily and Captains Child
and Manchester were held culpable for their conduct
after the breakout of the fire.
Two years later, in 1842, somehow the burned hull was
raise(! for a brief time to the surface and a lump of
melted silver coins of 30 pounds was retrieved, part
of a shipment of specie by the Herndon Express Company.
Shortly after, the chains holding her snapped, releasing
her to settle, keel upright on the bottom of the Sound
in 150 feet of water. Forgotten, untouched, and well
preserved, she remained there for the next one hundred.
and forty four years, a historically rich and archaeologically
significant vessel close to Suffolk County's North Shore.
The Lexington, a symbol of Long Island's' maritime history,
dates back to the early part of the nineteenth century
and is irreplaceable as a historical resource for Suffolk
County.
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