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Vandalia Crew Stories
 

The data here is generally gleaned from published sources. In one or two instances, personal descendants have e-mailed with data. In all cases, the information presented here is given in good faith but should not be considered as factual.

If you have any data, and especally images, of USS Vandalia's crew and you would like to share this with the world, or at least, those interested in the Samoa Hurricane, please feel free to e-mail me.

The images are from The American Naval Historical Centre Site unless attributed elsewhere.


Some of USS Vandalia crew survivors
Some of USS Vandalia crew survivors
Some of USS Vandalia crew survivors
Some of USS Vandalia crew survivors

Cook Ah Keau
Intriguingly, it is possible that Ah Keau from USS Vandalia actually survived the storm. I have had an e-mail from a Samoa family, whose tradition has it that an ancestor, whom they knew as Ah Kiau, swam to shore from USS Vandalia when she sank, liked what he found, and decided to stay and start a family. I guess he may have realised the American Navy would not take a very tolerant view of that idea, and to allow himself to be presumed drowned shows great presence of mind to me! Details courtesy of Lani Young.

Captain Cornelius M. Schoonmaker, USN (1839-1889)
Captain Cornelius M. Schoonmaker, USN Friends and colleagues at the grave of C. M. Schoonmaker, USN. Second from the left is the journalist JP Dunning, and on his left another journalist, Mr. Hart. Cornelius M. Schoonmaker was born on 2 February 1839. He was appointed to the U.S. Naval Academy in September 1854 and, following graduation in June 1859, served for about two years off the African west coast. In May-September 1861, during the first several months of the Civil War, he was a junior officer on the steam frigate Minnesota and participated with her in the capture of Forts Hatteras and Clark. From late 1861 until after the end of the Civil War in 1865, Lieutenant Schoonmaker was Executive Officer of several ships, including the gunboats Wyandotte and Octorara, monitors Manhattan and Catskill, and the cruiser Augusta. While in the Manhattan, he took part in the Battle of Mobile Bay in August 1864 and in the subsequent campaign to capture Fort Morgan.

In June 1865, Lieutenant Schoonmaker became Navigator of the sloop Juniata and, after promotion to Lieutenant Commander, was her Executive Officer. In 1867-70, he served as Navigator of the Asiatic Squadron flagship, USS Piscataqua (renamed Delaware in 1869). He received instruction in the emerging field of "torpedo" warfare in 1872, then was given command of the dispatch vessel Frolic. Commander Schoonmaker served at the New York Navy Yard in 1873-74, and was Inspector of the Eighth Light-House District, at New Orleans, until 1878. He took command of the new gunboat Nipsic in 1879, taking her to European waters in 1880-81.

Schoonmaker was stationed at the Norfolk Navy Yard in 1882-85 and received promotion to the rank of Captain in October 1886. He became Commanding Officer of the steam sloop Vandalia, on the Pacific Station, in 1888, and died in the Samoan Hurricane on March 16th, 1889.
Details courtesy of Naval Historical Centre.



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