Elisha Small
Elisha Small | |
---|---|
Born | Unknown |
Died | asea, aboard USS Somers | December 1, 1842
Cause of death | Execution by hanging |
Occupation | Sailor |
Elisha Small (died December 1, 1842) was an American sailor who was sailing with the rank of Seaman. He had served on several kinds of ships, including, allegedly, a slave ship, before joining the United States Navy.
In November 1842, while serving aboard the brig USS Somers, during the return home from a voyage to Liberia, suspicion arose that Philip Spencer had formed a plan to seize the Somers and sail her as a pirate ship or slaver. His friendship with crew members Samuel Cromwell and Elisha Small was cited as evidence. On November 27, 1842, Small and Cromwell were formally accused of being part of Spencer's supposed plot to mutiny. After a council of officers decided that the threat of mutiny was real, all three men were hanged without court-martial on December 1 and were buried at sea.[1]
A court of inquiry was convened when the brig returned to New York. After a month of testimony, the commander was exonerated, but he requested that he be charged and tried by a court martial. The court martial acquitted him on a split vote. The government accepted the court's decision, but the acquittal did not satisfy public concerns with the case. Many commentators, including James Fenimore Cooper, denounced the hangings as murder and criticized the Navy's handling of the matter as an example of what today could be called a "whitewash."
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Somers Deck Log 26 Nov 01 Dec 1842." www.history.navy.mil. April 27, 2001. Accessed February 1, 2007)
- 1842 crimes in North America
- 1842 deaths
- 19th-century executions by the United States military
- 19th-century executions of American people
- Burials at sea
- Extrajudicial killings by the United States military
- People executed by the United States military by hanging
- People executed for mutiny
- People who died at sea
- United States Navy sailors
- 1842 crimes in the United States
- United States Navy personnel stubs
- Executed military personnel
- 19th-century sailors