It seems the propeller left Tonawanda with a supply of fuel insufficient to take her through to the river, and although she may have been guilty of fault in that particular, it did not contribute to the subsequent loss in any such sense as would make the propeller responsible therefor. After reaching Long point the wind which had been to the northward veered around to the southward, and the propeller took her course along the south shore until she reached Cleveland. The weather during the day had been threatening but not stormy, and the master of the propeller decided to leave the :barges outside, and about a mile
While it is undoubtedly customary to leave a tow of barges outside in pleasant weather, I think it showed a great lack of prudence to do so under the indications that evening. The testimony, including that of the officers of the propeller itself, is almost uncontradicted that the weather looked very bad, and the indications of a storm such that its approach could be predicted almost to a certainty. But the fault of the master in this particular was surpassed by his conduct during the evening. Instead of- going out himself, or sending a tug, as the indications grew more threatening, he made no efforts to save them whatever, until the storm burst upon them with such fury, that all efforts would have been unavailing. If he were so anxious about the weather that he deemed it necessary to visit the signal office three times during the evening, he certainly should have shown solicitude enough for the safety of the barges to have sent a tug to their assistance. Having elected to take the chances of their riding out the storm in safety he cannot now be heard to complain of his ill luck. While the propeller was coaling at her dock, a tug lay directly astern of her awaiting an engagement He was guilty not only of gross negligence, for which the propeller must be condemned, but of an indifference to the lives of those in his charge, approximating closely to inhumanity.
There was no unskillfulness shown on the part of the Chamberlain in holding on to the other barges as long as she could. She had every reason to expect that the propeller or a tug would come out to her assistance, and in order to pick them all up, in such weather as that, it was necessary that she should hold on to the rear barges. After all hope of this kind was abandoned, and the storm became so violent as .to drag her anchor, she cast tliem off, let out more chain and did what she could to hold on alone. It seems that in letting out more chain, about midnight, the butt end of one of the chain shackels got caught in the norman, by which the shackel pin was broken and the anchor lost. It is insisted that if the round end of the shackel had been turned toward the anchor, this accident would not have occurred, the anchor would not have been lost, and the barge would have ridden out the storm in safety. While it is quite probable that this is the better mode of attaching the shackels, it is by no means universal to do so. Indeed the testimony shows that they are frequently fastened with the lug end outward, and in this conflict of opinion I certainly cannot pronounce this method of fastening to be such a fault as would condemn the barge, certainly without clear proof that her loss was attributable to it The accident was such a one as might have happened with the most skillful management, and I see nothing in connection with it that I can call faulty or negligent seamanship. The master of the propeller says that he was familiar with the outfit, condition, and sailing qualities of the barge; that he had towed her frequently before, and knew that she had but a single anchor. With this knowledge his abandonment of her is the more reprehensible.
Nor was the barge in fault for not taking a tug and being towed in. Not only is there an entire lack of evidence showing that she had an opportunity of doing this, but the Elmira had contracted to take her safely back to Bay City. She had left the barge for a temporary purpose, and the master of the Chamberlain had a right to rely on her speedy return, or at least, on her sending out a tug if good judgment required that the barges should be towed in.
The barge was not in fault in making no effort to set sail and get off the shore. Being a flat bottomed vessel, drawing but eighteen inches of water and light, an attempt to make sail could only have resulted in her destruction. I have no doubt she did the best thing that was possible under the circumstances.