- John Rodgers (American Civil War naval officer)
John Rodgers (
8 August 1812 –5 May 1882 ) was an admiral in theUnited States Navy .Early life and career
Rodgers, a son of Commodore John Rodgers, was born near
Havre de Grace, Maryland . He received his appointment as a Midshipman in the Navy on18 April 1828 . Service in the Mediterranean on board "Constellation" and "Concord" opened his long career of distinguished service, and he commanded an expedition of Naval Infantry and Marines inFlorida during theSeminole Wars . In the mid-1850s he succeeded Commander Ringgold in command of theNorth Pacific Exploring and Surveying Expedition , which added greatly to our knowledge of far eastern and northern waters. Following his promotion to Commander in 1855, he married and settled to work in the Navy's Japan Office inWashington, D.C. , where he was serving when the Civil War broke out.Civil War service
Commander Rodgers' first war assignment was to go with Commodore
Louis M. Goldsborough toGosport Navy Yard on April 20, 1861, where with other officers he was to remove Naval vessels and assets so they could not be used by the Confederates. Virginia had only just declared her secession from the Union. Upon arrival they found the yard in shambles, asCommodore McCauley had already ordered the vessels at Gosport scuttled, including the USS "Merrimack", since he considered the yard indefensible. Commodore Goldsborough made the decision to destroy the yard, and Commander Rodgers and Army Captain of EngineersHoratio G. Wright were given the job of destroying the drydock. They were thwarted in this attempt when the fuse was extinguished by water in the pumping gallery. Much-cherished rumors that the fuse was deliberately extinguished by a Confederate sympathizer are simply not true. Commander Rodgers and Captain Wright were captured byGeneral William Taliaferro of theVirginia State Militia , but since Virginia had not yet joined the Confederate States, and was therefore not at war against theUnited States , GovernorJohn Lecter returned the two officers to Washington.Commander Rodgers was then sent to the Western Rivers, where he organized the
Western Flotilla and supervised construction of the City Class Gunboats, the first ironcladgunboat s on the western rivers. He was relieved by CaptainAndrew Hull Foote , a more senior officer being required by the Navy to deal with the prickly Major GeneralJohn C. Fremont . After blockading operations off of Savannah in command of the USS "Flag", he assumed command of the experimental ironclad "Galena" in April 1862, operating with distinction in the James River. He commanded theJames River Flotilla , including the USS Galena, the IroncladUSS Monitor , and the90-day gunboat Aroostook in an expedition up the James River in May 1862, which was stopped eight miles shy of Richmond by Confederate fortifications atDrewry's Bluff . The damage that the USS Galena suffered in the ensuing battle caused him to report, "We demonstrated that she is not shotproof", and made him disdainful of trying experiments in the fires of war. Thereafter he supported General McClellan'sPeninsula Campaign with Naval bombardment, preventing Confederate forces from overunning theArmy of the Potomac 's position.John Rodgers was promoted to Captain
16 July 1862 and took command of the Ironclad Monitor "Weehawken". After successfully navigating her fromBrooklyn to Charleston through the same storm that sank the USS Monitor, he distinguished himself during the attack onFort Sumter in May 1863, and in capturing the Confederate ram "Atlanta" on June 17, 1863. The latter service won him theThanks of Congress and promotion to Commodore. Unfortunately, this was his last active service in the Civil War. After recovering from an illness, he took command of the Ironclad Monitor USS "Dictator". Design and construction problems with that vessel kept him occupied for the remainder of the war, though he earnestly desired a more active post.Postbellum career
Commodore Rodgers then commanded the
Boston Naval Station until 1869. He was elevated to Rear Admiral in December 1869 and given command of theAsiatic Squadron . In this post he ably handled diplomatic duties in addition to his naval responsibilities, although an encounter between the United States Navy andKorea in 1871 (Sinmiyangyo ) was not exactly one of the shining moments in U.S. diplomatic history. Returning to theUnited States , he commandedMare Island Naval Station and was Superintendent of theUnited States Naval Observatory . While serving in that post, Rear Admiral Rodgers died in Washington on5 May 1882 .Commodore Rodgers' father was John Rodgers (1772–1838), and he was related to
John Rodgers (naval officer, World War I) (1881–1926).Two ships have been named in their honor.
References
*
Robert Erwin Johnson , "Rear Admiral John Rodgers, 1812-1882". Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1967.
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