- USS Alonzo Child (1857)
USS "Alonzo Child" (1857) was a side wheel steamer seized by the
Union Navy during theAmerican Civil War . She was used by the Union Navy as abarracks ship in support of the Union Navy blockade of Confederate waterways."Alonzo Child", in the service of the Confederacy
"Childs", "A. Child", "A. Childs", "Child", and "Childs" -- was a large side-wheel "river boat" built in
1857 atJeffersonville, Indiana . During the next few years, she operated out ofSt. Louis, Missouri , plying the waters of theMississippi River and its tributaries. Early in the Civil War, the ship found herself in waters controlled by Confederate forces and, by the end of1861 , was apparently serving the Confederate Government. In any case, on18 December of that year, the South's Secretary of the Navy,Stephen R. Mallory , authorized payment of $1,000.00 to her owners for the performance of some now unknown service. It seems that at some time during the ensuing year and one-half, title to the steamer passed into the hands of the Confederate Government, but no details of the transaction have been discovered.Her engines removed and placed in CSS Tennessee
In the spring of
1862 , when Rear AdmiralDavid Farragut wrested control of the lower Mississippi River from the South, "Alonzo Child" found temporary safety in theYazoo River . In December1862 , her engines were removed and taken toAlabama to provide power for one of the Confederate ironclads under construction in that state to assist in the defense ofMobile, Alabama , and ultimately to challenge the Union blockade of that port.The remains of "Alonzo Child" seized by the Union Navy
The fact that these engines were installed in CSS "Tennessee" is supported by the Union Navy's inspection of that ironclad ram in August
1864 soon after she surrendered to Rear Admiral Farragut in the closing moments of theBattle of Mobile Bay . "These engines," the board of inspection reported on13 August 1864 , "were taken out of the river steamer called the "Alonzo Child".""Alonzo Child" considered for use as a fireship
After losing her engines, the former steamer -- now reduced to a barge -- remained in the Yazoo River anchored at
Yazoo City, Mississippi . As Major GeneralUlysses S. Grant and Rear AdmiralDavid Dixon Porter increased the tempo of their operations against Vicksburg, the Southern defenders of that strategic Confederate cliff-side fortress filled "Alonzo Child" with combustibles to ready her for possible use as afireship and then moved her down stream so that, as an alternative, she might be employed to obstruct the channel of the Yazoo between Haynes and Snyders Bluffs.On
19 May 1863 , Lt. Comdr.John G. Walker -- commanding the ironclad gunboat "Baron De Kalb" -- found her there, abandoned and ". . . much knocked to pieces." She had not been set ablaze and apparently had not been sunk. Walker also found ". . . guns, ammunition, tents, etc. ..." which had been left behind in nearby evacuated Confederate riverbank fortifications. His report of seizing the ". . . 8-inch, 10-inch, and 6-inch rifles ... in these works" has led some historians to conclude mistakenly that "Alonzo Child" carried these guns.Sent north for reconditioning as a barracks ship
The damage to the former steamer was apparently only cosmetic for, on
25 July , Porter sent her toCairo, Illinois , with the recommendation that "she will make a good receiving ship or marine barracks."Picking up 350 POWs for the trip north
En route north under tow by Union side-wheeler "New National", she came across "Sam Young" hard aground above the mouth of the White River, "... nearly high and dry" with some 350 captured Confederate soldiers and an armed guard on board. "Alonzo Child" embarked the prisoners and their guards and carried them to
Helena, Arkansas .Converted into a receiving ship by the Union Navy
After reaching
Cairo, Illinois , early in August, the prize was fitted out by the navy yard atMound City, Illinois , for duty as areceiving ship , and she served there and at Cairo until close to the end of the Civil War. The Union Navy's de facto possession of the former steamer was ratified by the Federal court inSpringfield, Illinois , when it condemned "Alonzo Child" as a lawful prize on29 March 1864 .End-of-war demobilization and sale of "Alonzo Child"
As Confederate defenses were crumbling throughout the South and the Navy slowly began to demobilize its
Mississippi Squadron , "Alonzo Child" was sold at Mound City on29 March 1865 .References
See also
*
United States Navy
*American Civil War
*Confederate States Navy External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/a7/alonzo_child.htm USS Alonzo Child]
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