The first
USS Cumberland was a 50-gun
sailing frigate of the United States Navy.
She was the first ship sunk by the
ironclad CSS
Virginia.
Cumberland began in the pages of a Congressional Act.
Congress passed in 1816 'An act for the gradual increase of the
Navy of the United States.' The act called for the United States to
build several ships-of-the-line and several new frigates, of which
Cumberland was one of them. Money issues, however,
prevented
Cumberland from being finished in a timely
manner. It was not until Secretary of the Navy Able Parker Upshaw
came to office that the ship was finished. A war scare with Britain
led Upshaw to order the completion of several wooden sailing ships
and for the construction of new steam powered ships.
Designed by famed American designer
William Doughty,
Cumberland was one
a series of frigates in a class called the
Raritan-class.
The design borrowed heavily from older American frigate designs
such as
Constitution and
Chesapeake.
Specifically, Doughty liked the idea of giving a frigate more guns
than European designs called for. As a result, he called for
Cumberland and her sister ships to have a fully armed spar
deck, along with guns on the gun deck. The result was a heavily
armed, 50-gun warship.
First Mediterranean Cruise
She was
launched 24 May 1842 by Boston Navy Yard
. Her first commanding officer was Captain
S. L.
Breese, and her first service was as
flagship of the
Mediterranean Squadron from 1843 to
1845 where she had among her officers men like
Foote (who served as executive officer)
and
Dahlgren (who served as a flag
aide to Commodore Joseph Smith). The ship sailed to several parts
of the Mediterranean including Port Mahon (homeport for U.S. Navy
ships operating in the Mediterranean at this time), Genoa, Naples,
Toulon, Jaffa, and Alexandria. The cruise was largely uneventful,
though there was a diplomatic scuffle with the Sultan of Morocco
who refused to recognize the newly appointed American ambassador.
The incident possibly was the result of the Sultan being misled by
the outgoing American ambassador who did not want to leave his
post. Smith cleared up the misunderstanding and the new ambassador
assumed his duties. The most notable event was Foote's successful
effort to ban the
grog ration. He believed it
was a grand success in turning sailors into harder working,
upstanding men. It later became Department policy in 1862 and it is
still in effect to this day (with some exceptions.)
Mexican-American War
As the ship was being made ready for a second trip to the
Mediterranean, the Secretary of the Navy ordered the vessel to
Mexico to assist in a show of force off the coast of Vera Cruz.
Here she
was flagship of the Home Squadron
between February and December 1846, serving in the Gulf of Mexico
during the Mexican-American War under the command
of Commodore David Conner and Captain Thomas Dulay. Captain
French Forrest later took command when Dulay fell ill. Other
notable officers in this cruise were future Civil War rivals
Raphael Semmes and
John Winslow. The ship oversaw the blockade of
the eastern Mexican coast for most of the war. She participated in
several aborted attacks on Mexican ports, before running aground on
28 July off the coast of Alvarado. The ship was freed and her
ship's company later participated in a raid on Tabasco. The
grounding damaged her enough to force her to retire to Norfolk for
repairs. Her crew, however, stayed behind and swapped ships with
the crew of the sister frigate USS
Raritan, which had been
at sea for three years. The old crew participated in the siege of
Vera Cruz as part of the Naval battery.
Cumberland returned to Mexico just as a cease fire was in
place. Commodore
Matthew C.
Perry took over as flag officer
from Conner. From
Cumberland, Perry was instructed by the
Polk Administration to assist settlers fleeing a major Mayan
insurrection (known as the
Caste War of Yucatán). Perry was
also ordered to enforce the
Monroe
Doctrine and keep Spanish and English forces from interfering.
With no realistic way to assist the setters Perry partially ignored
the order when Spanish warships arrived from Cuba loaded with guns,
bullets, and money. Perry left the region when he read that the
Treaty of
Guadalupe-Hidalgo had been ratified.
Second Mediterranean Cruise
Cumberland made her second cruise to the Mediterranean
from 1849 to 1851. Notable officers on board during the second and
third cruises to the Mediterranean included Louis Goldsborough,
John Upshur, Silas Stringham, Andrew Hardwood, John Worden (future
commanding of officer of USS Monitor), and naval surgeon Dr. Edward
Squibb (co-founder of the company now known as
Bristol Myers
Squibb)
Cumberland's primary mission during these two cruises was
to uphold American neutrality during a very turbulent period in
European history by assisting American diplomats, merchants, and
increasingly large number of American missionaries. The ship made
visits to La Spezia (the U.S. Navy's new overseas homeport after
being expelled from Port Mahon), Naples, Trieste, and Brindisi. At
one point police in Naples boarded the ship based on a false rumor
that Italian nationalist
Giuseppe
Garibaldi was on board. The ship also sailed to the eastern
half the Mediterranean and visited Athens, Beirut, and
Alexandria.
Third Mediterranean Cruise
During the third cruise, the ship worked closely with diplomat and
early environmentalist
George
Perkins Marsh who was serving as American ambassador to the
Ottoman Empire. Marsh needed
Cumberland's help in dealing with zealous Greek priests
who were harassing American missionaries, notably Rev. Jonas King.
Commodore Stringham and Marsh
met with Greek monarch
King Otto and
stopped the harassment. Marsh needed
Cumberland a second
time when the powers of Europe were about to clash in the
Crimean War. Stringham invited any American on
board who felt they needed protection or assistance.
Abd-ul-Mejid I, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire,
invited Stringham and Marsh for an official visit to determine the
position of the United States in a possible war with Russia. Both
Stringham and Marsh expressed their sympathies to the Sultan but
maintained American neutrality on the subject.
The third was long even by 19th century standards. Due to a lack of
sailors to man a replacement ship, Secretary of the Navy
James C. Dobbin did not recall
Cumberland
until the ship had been at sea for three years. The ship returned
home to Boston in 1855.
Conversion
Between 1855 and 1857,
Cumberland was
razeed at the Charlestown Navy Yard in Boston. From
his office in Washington, D.C.,
John
L. Lenhart, the chief of the
Bureau of Construction and Repair, directed the changes to the
ship. The Navy gave her new weapons in the form of 24 Dahlgren
smoothbore cannons (22 IX-inch and 2 X-inch). By razeeing the ship,
Cumberland got an extension of life. The Navy made her a
lighter ship and thus slightly faster. Specifically, the shipyard
workers removed the top deck, removed the quarter galleries,
removed all guns from the spar deck, and removed several of
sections of wood.
This move was assisted by the revolution in naval weapons that
provided more powerful guns (and thus needing fewer guns). While
steam powered ships were entering the fleet, there was still a need
for all the sail ships. As late as 1860, Secretary of the Navy
Isaac Toucey suggested that all
Potomac-class frigates be razeed.
Africa/Slave Trade Patrol
From 1857 to 1859 she cruised on the coast of
Africa as flagship of the
African Squadron patrolling for the
suppression of the
slave trade. Like
many U.S. Navy ships in Africa,
Cumberland employed a
number of
Krooman (indigenous Africans who
lived on the western coast) to serve as scouts, interpreters, and
fishermen. The ship's surgeons had to deal with a number of issues,
including an outbreak of
smallpox.
Cumberland boarded several dozen merchant ships. Her crew
almost seized one, the schooner
Cortez, after shackles and
known slave trading items had been found on the deck of the
schooner, a slave trading holding pen had been spotted in the
distance, the ship's papers were highly suspect, and the ship was
far from any port.
Cumberland's boarding officer, however,
chose not seize the ship possibly realizing the legal difficulty of
bringing slave traders to trial without overwhelming evidence.
Cortez was later captured by HMS Arrow in 1858 off the
coast of Cuba.
Otherwise, the ship served as the squadron's supply vessel
providing supplies to the other three ships in the squadron, the
sloops-of-war
Dale,
Vincennes, and
Marion and
served as roving diplomat along the three thousand mile coast
line.
Home Squadron
After her return from Africa,
Cumberland became flagship
of the Home Squadron in 1860. She made a return trip to Vera Cruz
Mexico, which was in the middle of a civil war.
The Navy recalled her
to Hampton
Roads
, VA when domestic issues in the United States took
a turn for the worse.
American Civil War
At the
outbreak of the American Civil
War, Cumberland was at the Gosport Navy
Yard
, with orders to monitor the situation in Norfolk
and Portsmouth. After the attack on Fort Sumter, the ship's
company was ordered to gather up or destroy U.S. Government
property. This included several crates of small arms and possibly
(not yet confirmed) gold from the U.S. Customs House in Norfolk.
The company was also ordered to spike all 3,000 guns at the Navy
Yard within just a few hours. This latter task was impossible,
given that only 100 sailors were assigned to the task. Sailors from
the Yard and the barracks ship USS
Pennsylvania boarded
Cumberland as a part of the evacuation.
She was towed out of the yard by the steam sloop USS
Pawnee, escaping destruction when other ships there were
scuttled and burned by Union forces 20
April 1861 to prevent their capture. She sailed back to Boston for
repairs. The aft X-inch Dahlgren was removed and replaced with what
many officers referred to as a 70-pounder rifle. This gun did not
exist in the Navy's inventory at the time. It was possibly a
5.3-inch, 60-pounder Parrott Rifle.

CSS Virginia ramming and sinking USS
Cumberland, 1862.
She sailed back to Hampton Roads and took up station as a
blockader. She served as one several ships of the
North Atlantic Blockading
Squadron until 8 March 1862. The sloop-of-war engaged
Confederate forces in several minor actions in Hampton Roads and
captured many small ships in the harbor.
Additionally,
Cumberland was a part of the expedition that captured the
forts at Cape
Hatteras
.
Cumberland was rammed and sunk in an engagement with the
Confederate ironclad CSS Virginia (formerly USS Merrimack) at Newport News,
Virginia
on 8 March 1862. The engagement known as the
first day of the
Battle of
Hampton Roads between the two ships is considered to be a
turning point in the history of world naval affairs as it showed
the advantage of steam powered, armored ships over sail powered
wooden hulled ships. It should be noted that because of
Cumberland,
Virginia lost two of her guns, her
ram, and suffered some internal damage. Congress later recognized
that
Cumberland did more damage to
Virginia than
the U.S. Navy's ironclad
USS
Monitor, which did battle with
Virginia the
next day.
The battle with CSS
Virginia was commemorated in a poem
On Board the Cumberland that was illustrated by
F. O.
C. Darley.
Salvage
Cumberland became an archaeological site the moment she sank to a
watery grave, in that the federal government almost immediately
solicited work from salvage companies to secure valuable items from
the shipwreck.
In his memoir "When the Yankees Came" Virginia resident George
Benjamin West described some post-war work on the USS Cumberland:
"After the war ... I have very often been on the boats that worked
on the Cumberland, first by a German named West and then by a
company of Detroit, Michigan, which purchased her from West and
which brought down a great many of the [Great] Lakes divers to try
to secure the $40,000 in gold said to be in an iron chest in the
paymaster's stateroom. ...... His [the German diver West's] plan,
as told to me, was to start under the stern, which lay down the
river, and blow a hole in her and work towards the paymaster's
stateroom. He did the diving himself and did not attempt to get any
wreckage save the pieces he blew out of the side and brought up on
deck, and the copper bolts cut out. The difficulty he had was the
foiling-in of mud and sand, and having to grope in the utter
darkness. It was very dangerous, and several times he was brought
up unconscious."

USS Cumberland.
Image taken by a joint U.S.
Occasional salvage of the shipwrecks continued into the early 20th
century. In 1909 part of the Cumberland's anchor chain was
recovered and sent to the museum of the Confederacy in Richmond
(Newport News Daily Press, 12 November 1909).
In 1981, the National Underwater and Marine Agency (NUMA)
contracted with Underwater Archaeological Joint Ventures (UAJV), a
private firm based in Yorktown, VA. UAJV team members consulted
local watermen whose oyster dredges had picked up artifacts for
years) to help locate the ships. This information and a remote
sensing survey, led archaeologists to two significant wrecks. The
recovery of numerous artifacts confirmed that these shipwrecks were
most likely USS Cumberland and
CSS
Florida. Artifacts recovered included fasteners,
fittings, apothecary vessels, a ship's bell (from Cumberland),
canon fuses and other ordnance items. The artifacts proved the
NUMA/UAJV team had indeed found Cumberland and Florida. Most of the
artifacts from this NUMA/UAJV excavation are on exhibit at the
Hampton Roads Naval Museum in Norfolk, VA (Newport News Daily
Press, 8 March 1987).
Cumberland today
USS
Cumberland is currently a ship wreck under the
protection of several Federal laws including the Sunken Military
Craft Act of 2005, the Abandoned Shipwreck Act of 1987, and the
Territorial Clause of the U.S.
Constitution (which gives the U.S. Government exclusive rights to
its own property). Federal courts have upheld these laws and the
U.S. Government's exclusive rights to its own ships.
Since her sinking, the ship has been the subject of many
expeditions. Some of these expeditions have been in violation of
Federal law and artifacts were seized by Federal agents.
Many
artifacts from these expeditions (both legal and illegal) are at
the Hampton Roads
Naval Museum
.
Wreck is facing west to east, with the bow of the vessel slightly
above the floor of Hampton Roads.
Gallery
Image:Log book wiki.jpg|Cover of USS Cumberland log book,
1848Image:Frigate wiki.jpg|Drawing of hull plan of USS Cumberland
as a frigate.Image:Sloop of war wiki.jpg|Drawing of USS Cumberland
after being razeed.Image:Portsmouth wiki.jpg|USS Cumberland at the
Portsmouth Navy Yard, 1859.Image:Newport-news wiki.jpg|USS
Cumberland (right) with the frigate USS Congress at Newport News
Point, 1862.Image:Prey_wiki.jpg|Wreck of USS Cumberland, 1862
References
External links