Winfield Scott Schley: The Vilified Victor (December 1982 | Volume: 34, Issue: 1)

Winfield Scott Schley: The Vilified Victor

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Authors: Richard F. Snow

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December 1982 | Volume 34, Issue 1

DURING THE summer of 1901, while he was “watching for some hope at the bedside of a beloved son who was desparately ill with blood poisoning … and with mind and heart under the strain of anxiety known only to those who have gone through similar experience,” Rear Adm. winfield Scott Schley got word of a new history of the U.S. Navy. The third and final volume of a work already being used as a textbook by the Naval Academy, it held that during the Spanish-American War, Schley “exhibited … a timidity amounting to absolute cowardice” and that his “contribution to naval strategy, as to plainly shown by his conduct throughout the campaign, was, ‘Avoid your enemy as long as possible, and if he makes for you, run.’”

The accusation would have been galling enough to any naval officer, of course, but it must have been particularly painful to the gregarious and affectionate Schley, who had enjoyed good friendships and good press throughout a thoroughly sunny career.

Born to prosperous Maryland landowners in 1839, Schley entered the Naval Academy in 1856. He admitted to holding “pleasure and holidays in higher esteem than plodding study, which was more interesting in some such ratio as the square of the distance separating us from books,” and was graduated in the bottom of his class. Nevertheless, in 1860 Midshipman Schley reported aboard the steam frigate Niagara for a cruise to Japan. On its return to Boston the following spring, the ship was greeted by a harbor pilot with the news, “The country is all busted to hell!” So the Niagara headed south, and during the next four years Schley proved himself a capable officer, and a brave one. Once, while commanding a sloop, he stood so close inshore to bombard a Confederate battery that Adm. David Glasgow Farragut ordered him to withdraw. Borrowing a tradition from Britain’s greatest sailor, Schley pretended not to notice. When he went aboard the flagship to report, Farragut upbraided him publicly, declaring he “wanted none of this Nelson business … about not seeing signals.” But later, in his cabin, the admiral uncorked a bottle and said, “Had to blow you up, Scott, but, by God, that’s the way to fight. Have a drink.”

After the war the doldrums that settled on the Navy failed to corrode Schley’s natural good spirits. He cheerfully accepted the lighthouse inspectorships and aimless South Atlantic commands that were the best posts those torpid years had to offer. After one cruise he was officially thanked by the Navy Department for the somewhat unglamorous achievement of steaming over forty thousand miles “without losing a spar or sail.” Then, in 1884 Schley got command of the expedition that punched its way through thirteen hundred miles of Arctic ice to rescue Lt. A. W. Greely’s stranded polar exploration party. He came home a hero, and when war broke out with Spain in the