- USS Amaranthus (1864)
USS "Amaranthus" (1864) was a screw steamer acquired by the
Union Navy during theAmerican Civil War . She was used by the Union Navy as atugboat in support of the Union Navy blockade of Confederate waterways.Commissioned at Philadelphia in 1864
"Amaranthus" a wooden-hulled screw tug built at
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , in1864 by Bishop, Son, and Company -- was purchased by the Navy there as "Christiana" on1 July 1864 . Renamed "Amaranthus" and fitted out at thePhiladelphia Navy Yard , she was commissioned on12 July 1864 , Acting Master Enos O. Adams in command.Assigned to the South Atlantic Blockade
The
Secretary of the Navy assigned the tug to theSouth Atlantic Blockading Squadron ; but she was kept in theDelaware River performing towing duties, and did not join her squadron until she reachedPort Royal, South Carolina , on6 August . She was assigned to the inner cordon of the forces blockadingCharleston, South Carolina ; but for occasional runs back to Port Royal to carry passengers and dispatches and to receive repairs, she served off that port through the end of the Civil War.Damaged in action against blockade runners
On the night of 9 and
10 September , she sighted a steamer attempting to run out of Charleston and fired repeatedly at theblockade runner which, nevertheless, escaped to sea. Some two-and-one-half months later, she fired upon two incoming steamers which entered the harbor about two hours apart. On both occasions, Confederate shore batteries atFort Moultrie fired upon the Union blockaders; a spent 10-inch shell struck "Amaranthus"' "starboard" counter, damaging the tug sufficiently to require her to enter a nearby inlet for repairs. The patching was quickly completed, and the steamer was back on station three days later.Final operations with the South Atlantic Blockade
On
1 February 1865 , Acting Ensign William R. Cox, the tug'sexecutive officer , assumed command. Following the collapse of the Confederacy early in the spring of1865 , "Amaranthus" remained off Charleston into the summer.Post-war decommissioning, sale and subsequent career
She departed that port on
10 August and entered theNew York Navy Yard on the 18th. Decommissioned there the following day, the tug was sold at public auction on5 September . She was documented under her original name on28 December 1865 and served as the merchant tug "Christiana" until1900 .References
See also
*
United States Navy
*American Civil War External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/a7/amaranthus.htm USS Amaranthus]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.