- USS Grand Gulf (1863)
USS "Grand Gulf" (1863) was a screw steamer acquired by the
Union Navy during theAmerican Civil War . She was effective in performing blockade duty, and captured a number of Confederateblockade runner s."Grand Gulf" was purchased in
New York as "Onward"14 September 1863 from her builders, Cornelius and Richard Poillon; and commissioned28 September 1863 , Comdr. George Ransom in command.Assigned to the North Atlantic Blockade
"Grand Gulf" stood to sea from New York on
11 October and 9 days later joined theNorth Atlantic Blockading Squadron offWilmington, North Carolina . Her two exits to the sea at Beaufort and theCape Fear River made Wilmington one of the most important and most difficult to blockade of all Confederate ports. She remained on blockade duty there, with intervals for repair at the New York andNorfolk Navy Yard s, until4 October 1864 .Capturing blockade runners and their valuable cargoes
On
21 November 1863 , assisted by Army Transport "Fulton", "Grand Gulf" took blockade runner "Banshee" with a general cargo of contraband from Nassau. Off the Carolina coast, "Grand Gulf",6 March 1864 , captured the British steamer "Mary Ann" trying to run the blockade with a cargo ofcotton andtobacco ; seizing the cargo and 82 passengers and crew members, "Grand Gulf" put aprize crew on the steamer and sent her toBoston, Massachusetts . A second British ship, "Young Republic", fell captive to "Grand Gulf" after a wild chase6 May 1864 , with both ships steaming at full speed and the blockade runner throwing overboard bale after bale of precious cotton and even the anchor chain in a futile attempt to lighten ship. "Grand Gulf" garnered some 253 bales of cotton as well as 54 prisoners from this prize. Two weeks later, Rear AdmiralSamuel Phillips Lee wrote Ransom congratulating him on taking the prize; "Every capture made by blockaders deprives the enemy of so much of the 'sinews of war,' and is equal to the taking of two supply trains from the rebel Army."Searching for Confederate raider "Tallahassee"
Returning to New York
4 August 1864 , she was ordered out in search of the Confederate raiderCSS Tallahassee , reported inLong Island Sound . However,17 August she gave over the search to tow into port demasted brig "Billow", and claim her as a prize. "Billow" had been captured by "Tallahassee"; scuttled but did not sink.Grand Gulf left New York23 September to convoy California steamer "Ocean Queen" to Aspinwall (now Colon), Panama, arriving there3 October and returning to New York16 October . From24 October to16 November she and "Ocean Queen" repeated the voyage. One day from New York on the outward passage, "Grand Gulf", herself leaking badly, took into tow sinking British bark "Linden". She then put intoNew York Navy Yard for extensive repairs.Reassigned to the West Gulf Blockade
With the ironclad USS|Casco|1864 in tow, "Grand Gulf" put to sea
8 March 1865 ; arriving atHampton Roads 12 March , she left "Casco" there and17 March sailed to join theWest Gulf Blockading Fleet offGalveston, Texas . She reached Galveston4 April and remained on blockade duty until25 June , when she steamed up theMississippi River toNew Orleans, Louisiana . There she served as aprison ship and site forcourts martial until18 October , when she cleared New Orleans forNew York, New York .Decommissioning
Arriving in New York
2 November , "Grand Gulf" decommissioned10 November and was sold30 November to C. Comstock & Co. She was later resold to William F. Feld & Co. ofBoston, Massachusetts ; renamed "General Grant"; and put in service in their Merchants of Boston SS. Co. operating between Boston and New Orleans. She burned and sank at a wharf in New Orleans19 April 1869 .References
See also
*
United States Navy
*American Civil War External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/g7/grand_gulf.htm USS Grand Gulf]
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-civil/civsh-g/gen-grnt.htm USS Grand Gulf]
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