- Edwin T. Woodward
Edwin T. Woodward (
March 8 ,1843 –February 22 ,1894 ), was a naval officer during and after theAmerican Civil War .Civil War
Woodward was born in
Castleton, Vermont , the son of Edwin C. and Charlotte (Barney) Woodward. He received an appointment to theUnited States Naval Academy and began his studies there onNovember 21 ,1859 . One of several whose academy careers were foreshortened by the war, he served on the sloop USS "Mississippi", the garrison ship "Island" and the gunboat USS "Sciota" in the Gulf Blockading Squadrons, including two attacks on and passage of the Confederate batteries at Vicksburg in 1861 and 1862.In late December 1861, Woodward was part of the prize-crew of the captured Confederate steamer "Henry Lewis", off Ship Island, Mississippi, when he commanded one of two small boat that went ashore and captured a Confederate battery, "which was done as expeditiously as possible and without molestation." [Lieutenant Thomas Mc. Buchanan to Flag-Officer
William W. McKean ,January 2 ,1862 , ORN 17:34.]While on the USS "Sciota" off
New Orleans , in April 1862, he was commended by Fleet CaptainHenry H. Bell , for "gallantly working the rifle on the topgallant forecastle." [Fleet Captain H. H. Bell, to Flag Officer D. G. Farragut,April 26 ,1861 , ORN 18:175.]He then served on the sloop USS "Cyane", in the
Pacific Squadron in 1863, and participated in the capture of the Rebel Privateer "J. L. Chapman" onMarch 15 , in San Francisco harbor. Woodward apparently spent little time at sea during this tour, as Cyane was in port at San Francisco fromFebruary 15 toSeptember 28 . [Peck, 695; details of the Palmer incident can be found under the chapter "The Pacific Squadron of 1861-1866," in Aurora Hunt, The Army of the Pacific; Its operations in California, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, plains region, Mexico, etc. 1860-1866, Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 2004; sited at www.militarymuseum.org/Pac Sqdn.html; Internet; Langley, Henry G. The San Francisco Directory; Chronological History of Principal Events. 1863, 1864, cited at www.sfgenealogy.com/sf/history/he863.htm; Internet.]Promoted to Lieutenant in February 1864, he was assigned to the steam frigate USS "Minnesota", in the
North Atlantic Blockading Squadron . In the assault onFort Fisher onJanuary 14 ,1865 , Lieutenant Woodward commanded a company of 49 men from the "Minnesota", and "behaved bravely," and his conduct was represented as having been "highly commendable" by Commodore Joseph Lanman, commanding Second Division, North Atlantic Squadron. He also "greatly assisted" Lieutenant CommanderWilliam B. Cushing , commanding USS "Monticello", with that vessel's boat crews. [Journal of the executive proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America, 1864-1866, Wednesday, December 14, 1864, recommending his promotion to Lieutenant, //rs6.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/hlaw:@field(DOCID+@lit(ej0148)) ; and Wednesday, December 21, 1864, approving his promotion to Lieutenant, rs6.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/hlaw:@field(DOCID+@lit(ej01412)); Commander Joseph Lanman to Rear-Admiral D. D. Porter, 17 January 1865, ORN 11:494-496; Lieutenant Commander W. B. Cushing, to Rear-Admiral Porter, 17 January 1865, ORN 11:560.]Postwar career
After the war, Woodward served on the screw sloop USS "Kearsarge". Kearsarge had been decommissioned in November 1864 after her famous battle with the Confederate raider CSS "Alabama" off the coast of
France the previous June. She recommissionedApril 1 ,1865 , and sailed on the 14th for the coast ofSpain in an attempt to intercept CSS "Stonewall"; but the Confederate ram eluded Federal ships and surrendered to Spanish authorities atHavana, Cuba , onMay 19 . After cruising theMediterranean Sea and theEnglish Channel south toMonrovia, Liberia , "Kearsarge" decommissionedAugust 14 ,1866 in theBoston Navy Yard .Woodward married, on
August 9 ,1866 , Mary Elizabeth Hawley, daughter of Rev. Bostwick and Elizabeth (Webber) Hawley. According to the 1910 census, Mary had four children, none of whom were still living at that time, but the 1880 census, when Edwin and Mary were enumerated with her father inSaratoga Springs, New York , did not list any children. Woodward was also promoted to Lieutenant Commander in 1866. [www.familysearch.org, and www.ancestry.com; Journal of the executive proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America, THURSDAY,July 26 ,1866 , memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/hlaw:@field(DOCID+@lit(ej01560))]In 1867 and 1868, Woodward served on USS "Guerriere", a screw sloop recommissioned on
May 21 ,1867 , which sailed fromNew York Harbor onJune 28 ,1867 , to serve as flagship of the South Atlantic Squadron protecting American commerce and interests along the coast of South America."In 1869, Woodward served onboard the newly built gunboat USS "Quinnebaug" and the Civil War-era gunboat USS "Kansas", along the Atlantic coast of
South America and the western coast ofAfrica , probably returning to Washington onSeptember 15 ,1869 , when the "Kansas" was decommissioned.He was assigned to the
Brooklyn Navy Yard from 1869 to 1871, reassigned to thePhiladelphia Naval Shipyard , and probably commanded pre-commissioning crews for the Civil War-era single-turreted monitors USS "Canonicus" and USS "Saugus". Canonicus was recommissionedJanuary 22 ,1872 , and cruised in coastal waters in theAtlantic Ocean andGulf of Mexico . Saugus was recommissionedNovember 9 ,1872 , sailed south, and was based atKey West, Florida , until 1876.In 1874 and 1875, Woodward served on the Civil War-era screw sloop USS "Brooklyn", which was reactivated
January 20 ,1874 , and operated "along the southern coast of the United States until autumn when she entered theNorfolk Naval Shipyard to be fitted out for service as flagship of theSouth Atlantic Squadron . She got underway for the coast ofBrazil onJanuary 23 ,1875 , and operated inSouth America n waters protecting American interests until heading home onDecember 7 . Following service in theHome Squadron , she was decommissioned atNew York onJuly 21 ,1876 , and laid up."In 1876, Woodward served on the screw sloop USS "Vandalia". Newly commissioned on
January 10 ,1876 , Vandalia "was soon deployed with theEuropean Squadron and spent most of the next three years cruising in theMediterranean Sea along the coasts ofAfrica , theMiddle East , andTurkey ."Woodward was ordered to torpedo duty in 1877, was promoted to commander in February 1878. He was stationed at the
Philadelphia Naval Shipyard from 1879 to 1880. He was probably on leave in 1880, when he was listed in the New York Census, living with his wife and father-in-law, Bostwick Hawley, inSaratoga Springs, New York . [Woodward, age 37, born VT, is listed as commander in US Navy; wife Mary H., age 36, born NY. (1880 US Census, District 4, Saratoga Springs, Saragota County, New York,Family History Library Film 1254929, NA Film Number T9-0929, Page Number 459D).]After his tour at Philadelphia, Woodward was ordered to his first command, USS "Yantic", a Civil War vintage wooden-hulled screw gunboat. Under his command, "Yantic"'s crew took part in celebrations attending the unveiling of the statue of Admiral
David G. Farragut inWashington, D.C. , onApril 25 ,1881 , before sailing later that spring to Mexican waters. In June, atProgreso, Yucatán , she investigated the detention of the American bark "Acacia" before returning northward to familiar waters off the eastern seaboard of the United States." Woodward received the thanks of the State Department, probably in relation to the Acacia incident. In October 1881, "Yantic" also took part in observances commemorating the centennial of theBattle of Groton Heights and in festivities celebrating the centennial of the American victory atYorktown, Virginia ."In 1884, Woodward is supposed to have commanded a squadron of ironclads, including the USS "Passaic", USS "Nantucket" and USS "Alarm", but the ships' histories do not appear to support such a squadron. "Passaic" was a Civil War-era coastal monitor stationed at the Naval Academy, Annapolis, from 1883 to 1892. "Nantucket" was also a Civil War-era coastal monitor, briefly recommissioned between June and October 1884; it operated along the northern east coast. "Alarm" was an experimental torpedo boat which conducted research duties at New York in 1884 and served there until she was placed out of commission in 1885 and berthed at New York. This time frame bears more research. Whatever he did, Woodward received a commendatory letter from the Secretary of the Navy for his activities.
Woodward commanded USS "Swatara", a screw sloop, from 1885 and 1886. The highlight of Swatara's activities during his command was the transport of a cargo of gold bullion from
New Orleans, Louisiana , toWashington, D.C. , in September 1885. "In early 1886, she was assigned hydrographic duties fixing locations on the Puerto Rican coast. After subsequently cruising as far north as Halifax, Nova Scotia, Swatara arrived at thePortsmouth Naval Shipyard , where she was decommissioned onOctober 27 ,1886 ," and Woodward relinquished command.In 1888, Woodward was in temporary command of USS "Terror", a monitor under construction at the
New York Navy Yard .Woodward spent his last two years at sea in command of the screw steamer USS "Adams". Originally commissioned in 1876, Adams had spent several years in the Pacific before returning to
Mare Island Naval Shipyard for a brief period of repairs in early 1889. OnApril 22 ,1889 , Commander Woodward in command, "Adams took on stores and supplies before departingSan Francisco onJune 18 . She arrived atHonolulu onIndependence Day 1889 and remained there for a month.""The duration of her stay in
Hawaii resulted from the maturation of a plot to dethroneKing Kalakaua and dissolve the reform government installed by American business and missionary interests as a result of the 'Bloodless Revolution of 1887' that had been carried out in the course of Adams' previous extended sojourn in the islands. During the night of 29 and 30 July, insurgents occupied the palace grounds and a local militia unit, styled the Honolulu Rifles, took up positions in support of the government. By the evening of the 30th, the Honolulu Rifles had subdued the insurrection." At that point, Woodward sent a landing party from the ship which established itself in the vicinity of the American legation. But the Hawaiian government restored order quickly without the necessity of American intervention, and the landing party returned to ship the following morning.On
August 4 ,1889 , Adams departed Honolulu and sailed a course south toSamoa , arriving at Apia harbor, Samoa onAugust 20 . For the next nine months, she remained in those islands serving as American station ship there making periodic visits to various islands. OnMay 2 ,1890 , Adams set sail fromPago Pago bound via Hawaii for the west coast of the United States. She entered San Francisco Bay on 24 June and moored at theMare Island Naval Shipyard on the 25th. There she was placed out of commission, in ordinary, onJuly 31 ,1890 .In 1892 he was assigned as Light House Inspector in the 10th Light House District, which comprised 114 miles of the
St. Lawrence River as well asLake Ontario ,Lake Erie and theNiagara River . Of note, he relieved CommanderCharles Vernon Gridley , who would later command USS "Olympia", CommodoreGeorge Dewey 's flagship, during the attack onManila at the beginning of theSpanish-American War . During his tenure, Woodward, on behalf of theUnited States Government , presented a life-saving medal second class to Miss Maebelle L. Mason, at the 'Cadillac Hotel,' Detroit, during the National Convention of theGrand Army of the Republic . Mason had rowed more than a mile in a small flat-bottomed punt, from the Mamajuda lighthouse on the Detroit river, where she lived with her father, and rescued a man who had capsized in his row-boat. [J. B. Mansfield, ed., "History of the Great Lakes," Chicago: J. H. Beers & Co., 1899, retranscribed by Brendon Baillod, 2003, sited at www.halinet.on.ca/GreatLakes/Documents/HGL2/default.asp?ID=s740; Internet.]Woodward was placed on the retired list on
July 3 ,1893 , and diedFebruary 22 ,1894 , probably inSaratoga Springs, New York . [He had been listed in Saratoga Spring in the 1890 Special Schedule of Veterans and Widows, and his widow still resided with her father in that town until at least 1910.]References
* Benedict, G. G., "Vermont in the Civil War. A History of the part taken by the Vermont Soldiers And Sailors in the War For The Union, 1861-5," Burlington, VT: The Free Press Association, 1888, p. ii:795.
* Callahan, Edward W., editor, "Officers of the Navy of the United States and of the Marine Corps from 1775 to 1900...," New York: L. R. Hamersly, 1901.
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/index.html Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]* "Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion," Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1894-1922.
* Peck, Theodore S., compiler, "Revised Roster of Vermont Volunteers and lists of Vermonters Who Served in the Army and Navy of the United States During the War of the Rebellion, 1861-66. Montpelier, VT.: Press of the Watchman Publishing Co., 1892, p. 695.
Notes
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