SMITH A.
DAYTON Smith A. Dayton As a seaman, it was natural that Smith Dayton would enlist in the Navy as an Ensign on July 22, 1863 at the age of 37. He left behind his wife and their son, Norman, who was born in 1857. He was assigned to the U.S.S. Glaucus. The Glaucus was a screw steamer built in New York in 1863 and was commanded by Captain Caldwell. The Glaucus' first task was to transport Senor Manuel Murilo, the newly elected President of Colombia, home to Cartagena in March.
Constant gun drill,
was the order of the day for Union ships, of the North
Atlantic Blockading Squadron. Dayton was honorably discharged from the navy as an Ensign on September 14, 1865. He then returned to Yaphank, where he and Marie had two more children: Adelade, born in 1866; and Prudence, born in 1967. He also returned to his maritime occupation, and became the owner and Captain of his own Bark, or ship, the Florence. The ship sank in a storm off the coast of the Washington Territory on November 17, 1875. Nearly all hands, including Dayton, drowned. There was only one survivor, a crew member named Deasy. Marie was left to raise their three children, and mourn the death of her second husband lost at sea. |