- USS Arkansas (1863)
USS "Arkansas" (1863) was a steamer acquired by the
Union Navy during theAmerican Civil War . She was used by the Union Navy as a supply ship and tender in support of the Union Navy blockade of Confederate waterways."Arkansas" commissioned in Philadelphia in 1863
Arkansas -- a wooden-hulled, barkentine-rigged, screw steamer built at
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , in1863 as "Tonawanda" -- was purchased by the Union Navy at Philadelphia on27 June 1863 from Messrs. S. & J. M. Flanagan; and commissioned in thePhiladelphia Navy Yard on29 June 1863 , Acting Volunteer Lieutenant William H. West in command.Assigned to the West Gulf Blockade
Assigned to the
West Gulf Blockading Squadron , the new steamer reported for duty on10 October 1863 to CommodoreHenry H. Bell who had temporary command of the squadron while Rear AdmiralDavid G. Farragut was home on leave. She was given the task of maintaining communications with, and carrying supplies to, the Union warships which were stationed on blockade duty along the coast ofTexas . Throughout her naval career she alternated with "Augusta Dinsmore" on logistic cruises which took them as far south asBrownsville, Texas .Seizure of schooner "Watchful" by "Arkansas"
On
27 September 1864 , while steaming in theGulf of Mexico on one of these supply runs, "Arkansas" -- then commanded by Acting Volunteer Lieutenant David Cate -- encountered theschooner "Watchful" purportedly sailing fromNew York City to Matamoras, Mexico, with a cargo of lumber and petroleum. Her master claimed that his ship had begun leaking; and he, therefore, had changed course toNew Orleans, Louisiana , to seek repairs. However, when Cate examined the schooner's cargo, he found crates of arms hidden under the lumber and consequently seized the vessel which he sent to New Orleans under aprize crew for adjudication. The seizure was dismissed by the Federal District Court in New Orleans, which found that the arms had been owned by a U.S. citizen, and intended for Mexican revolutionaries fighting underBenito Juarez , in which the United States was officially neutral. The district court's decision was later upheld by theU.S. Supreme Court , which found the case "destitute of all the elements of prize."Post-war decommissioning, sale, and subsequent maritime career
After the collapse of the Confederacy, "Arkansas" departed New Orleans on
5 June 1865 and sailed north toPortsmouth, New Hampshire . She was decommissioned in the navy yard there on30 June 1865 and was sold at public auction on20 July 1865 to Mr. George S. Leach of Portsmouth. Redocumented as "Tonawanda" on1 August 1865 , the steamer served as a coastal merchantman until she was stranded on The Elbow, a reef near Key Largo, Florida, on28 March 1866 and was lost.References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/a11/arkansas-i.htm
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