USS Saratoga, a
sloop-of-war, was the third ship of the
United States Navy to be named
for the Battle of
Saratoga
of the American Revolutionary
War. Her keel was laid down in the summer of 1841
by the Portsmouth Navy
Yard
. She was
launched on 26 July 1842 and
commissioned on 4 January 1843
with Commander
Josiah Tattnall in
command.
Service history
Africa Squadron
The ship
sailed from Portsmouth, New Hampshire
, on 16 March 1843, but was dismasted in a gale the
next day and forced to return to Portsmouth for repairs. She
got underway again on 3 May and proceeded down the coast to
New York Harbor to prepare for
service on the west coast of
Africa.
On the
morning of 5 June, she was towed to Sandy Hook, New
Jersey
, where, at noon, Commodore Matthew Perry came on board
and broke his broad pennant as Commander of the Africa Squadron. At mid-afternoon, the
ship stood out to sea, proceeded via the Canary Islands
and the Cape Verde Islands
and reached Monrovia
, Liberia
, on 1
August. Saratoga operated along the coast of
western Africa protecting American citizens and commerce and
suppressing the slave trade. She occasionally returned to the Cape
Verdes for replenishment and rest for her crew. At
Porto Grande, Cape Verde,
Saratoga rendezvoused with and on 9 September, and Perry
shifted his flag to the latter two days later.
Much of
Saratoga's service in the Africa Squadron was performed in
implementing Perry's policy of supporting Liberia
which had
been founded some two decades before on the African "Grain Coast
" as a haven for freed Negroes
from the United
States
. The new colony was deeply resented by the
local, coastal tribes which had acted as the slave trade's
middlemen, buying slaves from their bushmen captors and selling
them to masters of
slave ships. Missing
their former profits from the now outlawed commerce in "black
ivory", these natives gave vent to their anger by harassing,
threatening, and sometimes attacking the black colonists from
America. From time to time, they also preyed upon American merchant
shipping.
Perry's problem was one of reconciling the conflicting demands of
protecting American interests on the African coast, of remaining
aloof from African internal affairs, and encouraging the colonists
in Liberia. The Commodore's prudence, firmness, fairness, and tact
in reconciling these conflicting objectives was illustrated by his
handling of two incidents soon after the squadron returned to
Liberia in the early autumn.
Reports greeted him upon arrival that the
hostile tribes had been making trouble for the colonists in the
colony of Sinoe
and had killed two sailors from American schooner,
Edward Burley.
Saratoga sailed from Monrovia on 21 November, and Perry
followed two days later with the rest of the squadron bringing
along as a guest Liberian Governor
Joseph Jenkins Roberts. The American
warships assembled at Sinoe on 28 November. The next day, a large
force of sailors and Marines accompanied the Commodore and Governor
ashore for a conference with an assembly of tribal kings. First on
the agenda was the
Edward Burley incident. Governor
Roberts' questioning of a number of witnesses divulged the
following story:
- After the schooner's skipper, Captain Burke, had paid a
Krooman in advance for serving in the ship's
crew, the native deserted. Burke retaliated by capturing two canoes
and taking their crews prisoner. Then he dispatched two of his own
men after a third canoe, but these sailors were themselves
captured. After cruelly torturing the two Americans, they killed
them. Once he felt sure of the story, Perry held that, while the
homicides were unjustified, the Americans had been the aggressors.
Perry then stated that the United States government wished to
remain friendly with all African tribes but had sent him to protect
American lives and property and to prevent Americans from wronging
natives. He then dropped the matter, but remained in the area while
Liberian colonists aided by friendly tribes drove trouble-making
natives back into the hinterland.
In mid-December, the squadron sailed to
Little Berebee to investigate the plundering
of trading schooner,
Mary Carver, and murder of her entire
crew. During the ensuing palaver, when Perry refused to accept the
far-fetched explanation of King
Ben Krako,
a native fired a musket at the American party. The king and his
interpreter, who was known to be one of the murderers, attempted to
escape. Commander Tattnall of
Saratoga killed the
interpreter with a rifle shot and the king was also killed in
attempting to flee.
After
demonstrating the determination and ability of the United States
to control events along the coast of Africa, the
squadron got underway late in the year for Madeira
where it
arrived on 18 January 1844. She returned to the African
coast via the Cape Verdes and reached Monrovia on 2 March.
The late
spring was devoted to a cruise eastward along the coast to the
Bight of
Biafra
. Yellow fever
plagued the crew during the summer.
The ship sailed for the Cape Verdes on 8
July and reached Porto
Praia
on 21 July. The ship returned to Liberia in
September for a last visit before leaving the African coast in
mid-October and heading home.
She reached Norfolk, Virginia
, on 22 November and decommissioned there on 10
December 1844.
Mexican–American War
Recommissioned on 15 March 1845 with Commander Irving Shubrich in
command,
Saratoga was assigned to a squadron commanded by
Commodore
Robert F. Stockton and originally intended for duty
in European waters.
However, on 22 April, because of tension
between the United
States
and Mexico
over an
impending annexation of Texas
, this naval
force was ordered to the Gulf of Mexico
. Saratoga departed Norfolk on 27
April and proceeded to the Texas coast.
She remained at
Galveston,
Texas
, with Stockton for the remainder of spring.
The
Commodore sailed for Washington, DC
, on 23 June after ordering Saratoga and
the rest of his squadron to Pensacola, Florida
, to replenish their stores.
On 3 July,
Secretary of the
Navy George Bancroft transferred
Saratoga to Commodore
David Conner's Home Squadron
which was then operating "... in such a manner as will be most
likely to disincline Mexico to acts of hostility ..."
Saratoga
operated in the Gulf attempting to help Conner carry out this
mission until she sailed from Pensacola on 4 December for Rio de
Janeiro
to join the Brazil
Squadron.
Brazil Squadron
The sloop-of-war cruised along the South American coast until
mid-summer. Then, under orders to the Pacific for service under
Commodore
John D. Sloat on the California
coast, she got underway on 24 August and headed
south along the coast. However, after rounding Cape Horn
, the sloop-of-war ran into a fierce storm which
caused severe damage and forced her to turn back toward
home. She reached Hampton Roads
on 29 December and
decommissioned on 9 January 1847.
Home Squadron
Repaired
at the Norfolk Navy
Yard
, Saratoga was recommissioned in 1847,
Commander David G. Farragut in command.
Assigned to the
Home Squadron, she rounded Cape Henry on 29 March, sailed south along the
coast, entered the Gulf of
Mexico
, and joined Commodore Perry's Home Squadron off
Veracruz
, on 26 April. Three days later, the
sloop-of-war was ordered to proceed some 150 miles up the
coast to blockade Tuxpan
. She
reached the station on 30 April and remained there until heading
back toward Veracruz on 12 July.
About a fortnight later, she got underway
for Tabasco
, carrying dispatches; remained at that river port
but a day, and returned to Veracruz on 11 August. On 1
September,
Saratoga relieved Decatur at Tuxpan and
remained on station there, despite a serious outbreak of
yellow fever on board, for about two months
before heading back to Veracruz.
After a month there, the ship got
underway for the Florida
coast to land her sick and replenish her
stores. She arrived at
Pensacola on 6 January 1848;
and, after disembarking all the seriously sick patients at the base
hospital, got underway north on the last day of the month.
She made
New York
City
on 19 February and was decommissioned a week
later.
On 17
April, a week after recommissioning, the sloop-of-war departed
New York
City
and proceeded via Norfolk, Virginia
, to the West Indies
for service in the Home
Squadron. She returned to Hampton Roads
on 27 November 1849 and decommissioned at the
Norfolk Navy
Yard
on 30 November.
East India Squadron
Recommissioned on 12 August 1850,
Saratoga got underway on
15 September and proceeded to the western Pacific for service in
the
East India Squadron. The
highlight of her service in the Far East was her participation in
Commodore Perry's opening of Japan.
After visiting Japan with Perry in July
1853, she sailed for the China
coast and
protected American interests at Shanghai
while Japanese officials discussed Perry's proposals.
She
returned with Perry in February 1854, and, after the formal signing
of a treaty between the United States
and Japan
on the last
day of March, sailed for the Sandwich
Islands carrying Commander Henry
A. Adams, to whom Perry
had entrusted the American copy of the treaty.
After leaving Adams
at Honolulu
, Saratoga sailed south, rounded Cape Horn
, reached Boston, Massachusetts
, in September, and was decommissioned on 10 October
1854.
Caribbean, West Africa
The
sloop-of-war was recommissioned on 6 September 1855 and, but for a
period out of commission in ordinary at Norfolk early in 1858,
cruised in the Caribbean
Sea
and the Gulf of Mexico
until decommissioning at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
, on 26 June 1860. Reactivated on 5 November
1860, she sailed from Philadelphia ten days later to return to the
scene of her first cruise, the west coast of Africa.
On 21 April 1861, she
captured slaver, , off Cabinda
freeing a cargo of numerous slaves. After
word of the outbreak of the
American
Civil War reached
Saratoga, she returned to the United
States and decommissioned at Philadelphia on 25 August 1861.
American Civil War
Recommissioned on 24 June 1863, the ship was
ordered to the Delaware
Capes
for guard duty off the Delaware breakwater
protecting Union shipping approaching and departing Delaware Bay
and performed this duty through the end of the
year. On 13 January 1864, she was ordered to Carolina waters
for duty in the
South Atlantic Blockading
Squadron. During her service off the lower Atlantic coast,
landing parties from the ship made several raids in August and
September which resulted in the capture of many prisoners and the
taking or destruction of substantial quantities of ordnance,
ammunition, and supplies. A number of buildings, bridges, and salt
works were destroyed during the expedition.
As the
American Civil War was
drawing to a close,
Saratoga was detached on 4 April 1865,
sailed north, and was decommissioned on 28 April. For the next
decade, only two periods in commission for coastal operations (1
October 1867 to 7 July 1869 and 16 May to 14 October 1871)
interrupted the veteran ship's rest in ordinary.
Training ship
Saratoga reactivated on 1 May 1875
for a year as a gunnery ship at Annapolis, Maryland
. Another year in ordinary beginning 7 May
1876 preceded her final recommissioning on 19 May 1877 to start
more than eleven years as a school ship training naval apprentices.
This duty took her to various naval bases and yards along the
Atlantic coast and to Europe on occasion. She decommissioned on 8
October 1888.
The ship
served on loan to the state of Pennsylvania between 1890 and 1907,
operating as a state marine school ship in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
, until sold there on 14 August 1907 to Thomas Butler & Company of
Boston.
See also
References