USS Mercedita (1861)

USS Mercedita (1861) was a wooden steamer that served as a gunboat in the Union Navy during the American Civil War.

USS Mercedita
History
Name: USS Mercedita
Launched: 1861
Commissioned: 8 December 1861
Decommissioned: 14 October 1865
Fate: Sold, 9 November 1865
General characteristics
Type: Screw steamer / Gunboat
Displacement: 1,000 long tons (1,000 t)
Length: 183 ft 6 in (55.93 m)
Beam: 30 ft 3 in (9.22 m)
Draft: 12 ft 9 in (3.89 m)
Propulsion: Steam engine
Speed: 11.5 kn (13.2 mph; 21.3 km/h)
Armament: 8 × 32-pounder guns

Mercedita was built at Brooklyn, New York in 1861. She was purchased by the Union Navy on 31 July 1861 from J. C. Jewett & Co., and commissioned at New York on 8 December 1861, Commander Henry S. Stellwagen in command.

Civil War service

Mercedita joined the Gulf Blockading Squadron on 3 January 1862, and the next day chased two vessels attempting to run the blockade; Julia and an unidentified ship ran aground trying to escape and were set afire by their crews. In March, Mercedita was ordered to Apalachicola, Florida to relieve Marion in West Pass. There she destroyed the Confederate batteries at St. Vincent Island, Florida on 21 March. She and Sagamore captured Apalachicola on 3 April. Mercedita pursued blockade runner Magnolia on 12 April, but during the chase Confederate ships Whitmore and Florida slipped through the blockade. Mercedita captured blockade runner Bermuda on 27 April and schooners Victoria and Ida on 12 July.

In September, she transferred to the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron and arrived at Charleston, South Carolina on 19 September. She served on the blockade of Charleston Harbor until the end of January 1863. On the night of 31 January, CSS Palmetto State and Chicora, both Confederate ironclad rams, slipped out of the main ship channel of the harbor. They hoped to recapture British iron propeller Princess Royal, taken by Union blockaders two days earlier with two powerful steam engines for new Confederate ironclads aboard.

Mercedita was the first Union ship the southern raiders encountered, and Palmetto State succeeded in ramming her, ripping a hole in her keel, piercing her boiler, and leaving her in a sinking condition. Challenged "Surrender or I'll sink you," Mercedita — unable to move or bring her guns to bear — struck her colors. However, the Confederate rams — eager for further action — accepted paroles for Mercedita's officers and crew and sped off to attack Keystone State, Quaker City and Augusta before retiring to Charleston.

Hardly captured before abandoned, Mercedita made temporary repairs before proceeding to Port Royal, South Carolina and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for complete repairs. In April, she was attached to the West Indies Squadron, to escort California steamers over part of their route, from New York to Aspinwall, Panama. Later that spring, she joined the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron and operated from Beaufort, North Carolina for much of the remainder of the year.

Joining the West Gulf Blockading Squadron in March 1865, she saw only brief action with it. In May, she searched for Susquehanna. When the conflict ended, the Union Navy resumed its peacetime activities, protecting American citizens and their property throughout the world. Mercedita went to Santo Domingo on 3 August to protect Americans there. Arriving at Ciudad de Santo Domingo on 11 August, the ship found the country in an unsettled political state, but there was no sign of the reported Spanish man-of-war on the southern coast. Mercedita departed Santo Domingo on 14 August, touching at Kingston, Jamaica on 17 August for coal en route home.

Post-war service

Decommissioned on 14 October 1865, Mercedita was sold at public auction at New York on 25 October, and redocumented in merchant service on 9 November. She was converted to a brigantine on 16 June 1879.

gollark: Wondrous.
gollark: Sounds great.
gollark: Overthrow init WHEN?
gollark: Sounds like unjust hierarchy.
gollark: Are there ones for other binary formats?

References

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.