- USS Constellation (1854)
USS "Constellation" constructed in
1854 is asloop-of-war , orcorvette , and the secondUnited States Navy ship to carry this famous name. According to the US Naval Registry, the original frigate was disassembled down to the keel on25 June 1853 , inGosport Navy Yard inNorfolk, Virginia , and she was rebuilt as a faster, heavy sloop-of-war.ervice History
19th Century
The sloop was launched
26 August 1854 , and commissioned28 July 1855 , with Captain Charles H. Bell in command.From 1855 to 1858, "Constellation" performed largely diplomatic duties as part of the US Mediterranean Squadron. She was flagship of the US African Squadron from 1859 to 1861. In this period, she disrupted the African
slave trade by interdicting threeslave ship s and releasing the imprisoned slaves. The last of these was captured at the outbreak of theAmerican Civil War : "Constellation" overpowered the slaverbrig "Triton" in African coastal waters. "Constellation" spent much of the war as a deterrent to Confederate cruisers and commerce raiders in the Mediterranean Sea.After the Civil War, "Constellation" saw various duties such as carrying famine relief stores to
Ireland and exhibits to theParis, France Exposition Universelle (1878) . She also spent a number of years as a receiving ship (floating naval barracks).20th Century
After being used as a practice ship for Naval Academy midshipmen, "Constellation" became a training ship in
1894 for the Naval Training Center inNewport, Rhode Island , where she helped train more than 60,000 recruits duringWorld War I .Decommissioned in
1933 , "Constellation" was recommissioned as a national symbol in1940 by President Franklin Roosevelt. She spent much of theSecond World War as relief (i.e. reserve) flagship for the US Altlantic Fleet, but spent the first 6 months of 1942 as the flagship for AdmiralErnest J. King and Vice AdmiralRoyal E. Ingersoll .Restoration
"Constellation" was again decommissioned on
4 February 1955 , and stricken from theNaval Vessel Register on15 August 1955 —about two weeks and one hundred years from her first commissioning. She was taken to her permanent berth—Constellation Dock,Inner Harbor at Pier 1, 301 East Pratt Street,Baltimore, Maryland (coord|39|17|07.95|N|76|36|40.28|W|)—and designated aNational Historic Landmark (reference number 66000918) on23 May 1963 [cite web|url=http://www.marylandhistoricaltrust.net/nr/NRDetail.aspx?HDID=22&FROM=NRNHLList.aspx|title=Maryland Historical Trust|date=2008-06-08|work= National Register of Historic Places:Properties in Baltimore City|publisher=Maryland Historical Trust] . She is the last existingAmerican Civil War -era naval vessel and was one of the last sail-powered warships built by the US Navy. She has been assigned thehull classification symbol IX-20.In 1994, "Constellation" was condemned as an unsafe vessel. She was towed to drydock at
Fort McHenry in 1996, and a $9-million restoration project was completed in July1999 .On
26 October 2004 , "Constellation" made her first trip out of Baltimore'sInner Harbor since1955 . The trip to theUS Naval Academy inAnnapolis , lasting 6 days, marked the ship's first trip to the city in 111 years.Tours are regularly available, self-guided or with the assistance of staff. Nearly all of the ship is accessible, and about half the lines used to rig the vessel are present (amounting to several miles of
rope andcordage ). A cannon is demonstrated daily, and tour groups can also participate in demonstrations such as turning the yards.Identity controversy
For some time, there was controversy over whether or not the 1854 sloop was a new ship, or a rebuilt version of the 1797 frigate. Much of the controversy was created when the city of Baltimore promoted the ship and even rebuilt sections of the ship to resemble the 1797 frigate. Additionally, when the ship was to be rebuilt in the 1990s, naval historians that favored the theory that the ship was indeed the 1797 original, relied on three main points:
# Some of the funds used to build the sloop were originally allocated to rebuild the frigate
# Some timbers from the broken-up frigate were used in the construction of the sloop
# The frigate was never formally stricken from theNaval Vessel Register —a wooden, sailing man-of-war called "Constellation" was continuously listed from1797 until1955 Supporting the position that they are different ships are the facts that the sloop was designed anew from the keel up (without reference to the frigate), and was planned to have been built even if the frigate had not arrived in the yard at that moment. The paper "Fouled Anchors: The "Constellation" Question Answered", by Dana M. Wegner, "et al.", published by the Navy's
David Taylor Research Center in1991 , concludes that they are different ships. The proof advanced in this paper was confirmed during the 1999 renovation, during which evidence was uncovered pointing to the construction of an entirely new sloop-of-war of the 1850s era.References
External links
* http://www.constellation.org/ USS "Constellation" Museum
* [http://www.hnsa.org/ships/constellation.htm HNSA Web Page: US Sloop of War Constellation]
* [http://www.comicbookbrain.com/a_uss_constellation_history.php The Question of the USS Constellation] Ship history and summation of the ongoing controversy, with images
* [http://www.marylandhistoricaltrust.net/nr/NRDetail.aspx?HDID=22&FROM=NRNHLList.aspx U.S.S. Constellation, Baltimore City] , including photo in 2003, at Maryland Historical Trust
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.