up, wriggling with every swell like a willow basket—the
sea all round us full of the floating fragments of
her sheeting, twisted and torn into a spongy condition.
In less than an hour the boat returned, saying that
the beach was quite near, not more than a mile away,
and had a good place for landing. All the boats
were then carefully lowered, and manned by crews belonging
to the ship; a piece of the gangway, on the leeward
side, was cut away, and all the women, and a few of
the worst-scared men, were lowered into the boats,
which pulled for shore. In a comparatively short
time the boats returned, took new loads, and the debarkation
was afterward carried on quietly and systematically.
No baggage was allowed to go on shore except bags
or parcels carried in the hands of passengers.
At times the fog lifted so that we could see from
the wreck the tops of the hills, and the outline of
the shore; and I remember sitting on, the upper or
hurricane deck with the captain, who had his maps and
compass before him, and was trying to make out where
the ship was. I thought I recognized the outline
of the hills below the mission of Dolores, and so
stated to him; but he called my attention to the fact
that the general line of hills bore northwest, whereas
the coast south of San Francisco bears due north and
south. He therefore concluded that the ship
had overrun her reckoning, and was then to the north
of San Francisco. He also explained that, the
passage up being longer than usual,
viz., eighteen
days, the coal was short; that at the time the firemen
were using some cut-up spars along with the slack
of coal, and that this fuel had made more than usual
steam, so that the ship must have glided along faster
than reckoned. This proved to be the actual case,
for, in fact, the steamship Lewis was wrecked April
9, 1853, on “Duckworth Reef,” Baulinas
Bay, about eighteen miles above the entrance to San
Francisco.
The captain had sent ashore the purser in the first
boat, with orders to work his way to the city as soon
as possible, to report the loss of his vessel, and
to bring back help. I remained on the wreck
till among the last of the passengers, managing to
get a can of crackers and some sardines out of the
submerged pantry, a thing the rest of the passengers
did not have, and then I went quietly ashore in one
of the boats. The passengers were all on the
beach, under a steep bluff; had built fires to dry
their clothes, but had seen no human being, and had
no idea where they were. Taking along with me
a fellow-passenger, a young chap about eighteen years
old, I scrambled up the bluff, and walked back toward
the hills, in hopes to get a good view of some known
object. It was then the month of April, and
the hills were covered with the beautiful grasses
and flowers of that season of the year. We soon
found horse paths and tracks, and following them we
came upon a drove of horses grazing at large, some
of which had saddle-marks. At about two miles