- USS Somerset (1862)
The USS "Somerset"-a wooden-hulled, side-wheel
ferryboat built atBrooklyn , N.Y., in1862 —was purchased by the Navy atWashington, D. C. , on4 March 1862 and was commissioned at theNew York Navy Yard on3 April 1862 , Lt. Earl English in command. She was a larger version of the "Ellen" Class.Cuba
Assigned to the
East Gulf Blockading Squadron , the ferryboat arrived atKey West, Florida , on27 April , and after cooling, sailed on1 May for waters off the coast ofCuba to seek blockade runners. On 4 May, she captured screw steamer "Circassian" flying British colors betweenHavana andMatanzas about 10 miles off the Cuban coast. Lt. English placed a prize crew on the steamer and towed her to Key West for adjudication. There she was condemned and sold to the Navy.Early War Service
After another cruise off the coast of Cuba, "Somerset" was ordered to cruise off Florida between Cedar Key and
Apalachicola Bay . There she began a type of duty which characterized her service during her entire Navy career. In the next few months, she performed blockade duty; made a reconnaissance expedition to Way Key where she engagedConfederate Army troops on15 May ; shelled a Confederate fort near the lighthouse inSt. Marks River , before landing a party of sailors who wrecked the battery on15 June ; captured blockade running schooner "Curlew" off the Cedar Keys the next day; and destroyed salt works at the end of the Fernandia Railroad at Depot Key on4 October and6 October .The Apalachicola River
Because of the shoal waters she patrolled, "Somerset" often sent boat parties to serve the Union cause in areas which she could not reach herself. On
27 December , one of her boats capsized in a squall, and three petty officers and one seaman were drowned during operations in St. George's Sound to seal off theApalachicola River . Up this strategic stream, which held "Somerset"'s attention for much of the next two and one-half years, the Confederates were building screw gunboat "CSS Chattahoochee " and ironclad "CSS Muscogee ".These Confederate warships never got into action; but, in May
1864 , a party of Confederate sailors from "Chattahoochee", commanded by Lt. George W. Gift, attempted to capture Union side wheeler USS "Adela" which was blockading the Apalachicola. Launches from Somerset discovered the Confederate expedition, drove them off, and captured their boats and supplies.Later service
Somerset spent most of the final year of the war guarding lest the Southern warships attempt to break the blockade. From time to time, an expedition to gain intelligence or a foray against Southern salt works would enliven her routine blockade duty. Her last excitement came in the closing weeks of the war when, on
30 March 1865 , she joined "Sunfewer" in destroying salt works on St. Joseph's Bayou.Decommissioned
After peace returned, the steamer-badly in need of repair and towed by Isnomia-headed for New York. She was sold at public auction there on
12 July 1865 to the Union Ferry Co. Documented on 14 February 1866, the rejuvenated Somerset began a career as a New York ferryboat which lasted until she was retired in1914 .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.