
Josiah Tattnall
Commodore
Josiah Tattnall, Jr. (14 June 1794 – 14
June 1871) was an officer in the
United States Navy during the
War of 1812, the
Second Barbary War, and the
Mexican-American War. He later served
in the
Confederate Navy during the
American Civil War.
Schooling and War of 1812
Josiah was the son of
Josiah
Tattnall who was Governor and U.S.
Senator from Georgia
. He was born on his father's plantation of
Bonaventure, near Savannah, Georgia
. After studying in England, he was appointed a
midshipman on 1 January 1812 and attended
the Naval School at Washington,
D.C.
, until 1 August when he was assigned to the
frigate Constellation.
When his
ship tried to slip out to sea, the strong British
squadron
operating in the Chesapeake Bay
forced her to put into Norfolk, Virginia
. Constellation remained bottled up in
Hampton
Roads
for the duration of the War of 1812, but Tattnall
and his comrades still managed to get into the fray. He was
among the 100 or so sailors and
marines assigned to the shore
battery on
Craney Island.
On 22 June 1813, the
British
attempted to
carry the island by storm in preparation for an attack on nearby
Norfolk. Tattnall's battery and a force of American boats
gave the attackers a sound rebuff that deterred the British from
further attempts to take the city.
In April
1814, Midshipman Tattnall was detached from Constellation
and, by 24 August, was in command of a
force of employees from the Washington Navy Yard
. He led them into the
Battle of Bladensburg in an
unsuccessful effort to stop the British advance on the American
capital.
On 14 October, he
was ordered to Savannah
for duty on
Epervier.
In May
1815, that sloop sailed for the Mediterranean
with Commodore Stephen
Decatur's squadron to engage the Barbary Pirates in Algiers
in the
Second Barbary War. On 17
June, she participated in the
capture of the frigate Mashouda and, two days later, of the
brig Estedio. In July, when
Epervier was ordered back to the United States with
dispatches, Tattnall remained in the Mediterranean in
Constellation. In January 1817, he transferred to
Ontario and returned in her to
the United States.
Interwar Years, 1818-1845
Promoted
to lieutenant on 1 April 1818, Tattnall was assigned to the frigate
Macedonian on
30 June, and he sailed in her for the
Pacific
in November. He was detached from
Macedonian on 30 August 1820, and returned to the United
States. Ordered to Norfolk on 26 December 1822, he joined Commodore
David Porter's squadron
in
schooner Jackall.
Lieutenant Tattnall
served in the West
Indies
on an expedition to suppress piracy until he was
detached on 4 May 1823. On 23 June 1824, Tattnall was
ordered to
Constitution for Mediterranean service. In
March 1826, he transferred to
Brandywine and returned home in her
in May. On the 15th of that month, he was granted six months leave,
which was later extended into 1828.
Tattnall served in
Erie
from October 1828 to August 1829 and then went on to survey the
Tortugas until March 1830. Lt.
Tattnall took command
of schooner Grampus on
15 April 1831, and cruised the West Indies and the Gulf of
Mexico
. In August 1832, he captured the Mexican
schooner,
Montezuma, which
had boarded and robbed an American ship on the high seas. He was
detached from
Grampus in September 1832 and went on leave
awaiting orders for almost four years before being ordered in, July
1836, to recruit men for Captain
Thomas ap Catesby Jones' survey and
exploration expedition.
Tattnall
was promoted to commander on 25 February 1836, and, in April,
reported for a three-year tour of duty at the Boston Navy
Yard
.
Mexican-American War
Following service with the
Mediterranean and
African squadrons, Commander Tattnall
joined the
Mosquito Division in
the Gulf of Mexico in 1846, commanding the steam gunboat,
Spitfire.
During the Mexican-American War, he took part in
the attacks on Vera
Cruz
, San Juan d'Ulloa,
and Tuxpan
, and he
suffered an arm wound. For his gallantry before Vera Cruz, the
state of Georgia
presented him with a sword.
Interwar Years, 1848-1860

Portrait showing him in pre-Civil War
uniform.
In 1848 and 1849, he returned to shore duty at the Boston Navy
Yard. On 5 February 1850, he was commissioned captain and, the
following month, was given command of
Saranac. Next, he commanded the
Pensacola Navy Yard from July
1851 to June 1854. From August 1854 to November 1855, Captain
Tattnall was flag captain in
Independence to Commodore
William Mervine with the
Pacific Squadron.
At Hong Kong
on 29 January 1858, he relieved Commodore James Armstrong taking command
of the East India Squadron,
breaking his flag in San
Jacinto. During his two years in the Far East, Commodore Tattnall violated American
neutrality to come to the assistance of a British squadron under
fire from the Taku
Forts
at the mouth of the Pei Ho
(Hai
River). His explanation of his action, "
Blood is thicker than water",
subsequently became a famous slogan. On his return voyage early in
1860, carried the first diplomatic embassy from
Tokugawa Japan to the United
States.
American Civil War
At the outbreak of the Civil War, Capt. Tattnall held command of
the
Sackett's Harbor
Station. Though he opposed secession, Tattnall resigned his
commission on 21 February 1861. A week later, Governor
Joseph E. Brown commissioned Tattnall as the senior
flag officer of the
Navy of Georgia.
On 26 March 1861, he received his commission as a captain in the
Confederate Navy.
Tattnall commanded
Southern naval units during the defense of Port Royal
until the harbor was captured by Union forces on 7
November 1861. From there, he moved to overall command of
the defense of Virginia
's waters early in March 1862. Tattnall, by
then a flag officer in the Confederate Navy as well as the Navy of
Georgia, directed
CSS
Jamestown and other warships in captures of Federal
merchantmen off
Sewell's Point in
April 1862.
On 11 May 1862, in the face of advancing Federal forces, Flag
Officer Tattnall ordered the destruction of his
flagship,
CSS
Virginia (ex-
Merrimack). He was later
acquitted by a court martial of all charges stemming from that
action. He resumed command of the naval forces of Georgia on 29 May
1862, and retained it until 31 March 1863, when he turned over
command of forces afloat to Comdr.
Richard L. Page and concentrated upon the shore
defenses of Savannah. When Savannah fell to General
William Tecumseh Sherman's troops,
Tattnall became a prisoner of war.
He was paroled on 9 May 1865, and, soon thereafter, took up
residence once more in Savannah.
Captain Tattnall died there and was
buried in Bonaventure Cemetery
.
Namesakes
Two ships,
USS Tattnall, have
been named for him.
References