- USS Stepping Stones (1861)
USS "Stepping Stones" (1861) was a steamer purchased by the
Union Navy during the early part of theAmerican Civil War .She was used by the Union Navy first as a dispatch boat, and also as a gunboat assigned to patrol Confederate waterways.
Built in New York City in 1861
"Stepping Stones" -- a wooden
ferryboat built atNew York City in1861 -- was purchased by the Navy at New York on30 September 1861 , and was commissioned on or before21 October 1861 .Civil War operations
Assigned Potomac River operations
The ferryboat departed
New York City on21 October , served briefly atHampton Roads, Virginia , reached theWashington Navy Yard on5 November , and was promptly placed in service as a dispatch boat in thePotomac Flotilla . These first few weeks of her service typified her fortunes throughout the Civil War.Her services were wanted both in the Potomac Flotilla and in the
North Atlantic Blockading Squadron for service along the west coast of theChesapeake Bay and on the rivers -- roughly parallel to the Potomac -- which drainTidewater Virginia . As a result, the ferry was shuttled between the two commands as ground operations ebbed and flowed over theVirginia farmlands which separatedWashington, D.C. , and Virginia.When assigned to the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron, the ship was moved from the James, to the York, or to the
Rappahannock River as demanded by the military situation ashore.Operations on the James River in Virginia
Highlights of "Stepping Stones"' service were the operations on the James in July
1862 to help protect GeneralGeorge B. McClellan 's beleaguered army atHarrison's Landing ; her rescuing, under heavy fire, of "Mount Washington" when that ship had been grounded and disabled nearSuffolk, Virginia ; and her participation in a mid-April 1864 Army-Navy expedition up theNansemond River .In May
1864 , she became part of a torpedo sweeping (mine sweeping) and patrol force on the James.Capturing Confederate blockade runners
On
9 November , she captured two blockade-runningsloop s, "Reliance" and "Little Elmer", inMobjack Bay .In March
1865 , less than a month beforeRobert E. Lee surrendered, "Stepping Stones" was in a naval expedition upMattox Creek toColonial Beach, Virginia , where the Union ships attacked a supply base for Confederateguerrillas operating on the peninsula between that river and thePotomac River .Post-war decommissioning, sale and subsequent civilian career
After the war ended, "Stepping Stones" was decommissioned at the
Washington Navy Yard on23 June 1865 and was sold on12 July 1865 to W. D. Wallach. Redocumented as "Cambridge" on27 July 1865 , the steamer was reduced to a barge on2 August 1871 and soon disappeared from maritime records.References
See also
*
United States Navy
*American Civil War External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/s18/stepping_stones.htm USS Stepping Stones]
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