USS Wabash (1855) was a steam screw
frigate of the
United States Navy that served during the
American Civil War. She was based
on the same plans as
Colorado.
Post-war she continued
to serve her country in European operations
and eventually served as a barracks
ship in Boston,
Massachusetts
, and was sold in 1912.
Pre-Civil War service
Wabash – the first U.S.
Navy ship to bear that name -- was laid
down on 16 May 1854 by the Philadelphia Navy Yard
; launched on 24 October 1855, sponsored by Miss
Pennsylvania Grice; and commissioned there on 18 August 1856,
Captain Frederick K.
Engle in command.
Wabash departed Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania
on 7 September 1856, stopping at Portsmouth, New
Hampshire
, to embark President Franklin Pierce for passage to Annapolis,
Maryland
. She arrived at New York
on 23 October 1856, sailing on 28 November 1856 to
become flagship of Commodore Hiram Paulding's Home Squadron. The squadron was
instrumental in foiling the expedition against Nicaragua
underway by American filibuster, William Walker, who had dreamed of
uniting the nations of Central
America into a vast military empire led by himself.
Through insurrection, he became president of Nicaragua in 1855 only
to have
Cornelius
Vanderbilt—who controlled the country's shipping lifelines—shut
off supplies and aid. A revolt toppled Walker from power, and he
was trying for a military comeback before he was captured in 1857
by the Home Squadron. Stateside controversy over the questionable
legality of seizing American nationals in foreign, neutral lands
prompted President
James Buchanan to
relieve Commodore Paulding of his command.
Wabash was
decommissioned on 1 March 1858 at the New York Navy Yard
.
First recommissioning, 1858-1859
Wabash was recommissioned on 25 May 1858, Captain
Samuel Barron in command, and became the
flagship of Commodore
Elie A.
F. La Vallette's
Mediterranean Squadron.
The future naval hero
of the Battle of Manila Bay
during the Spanish-American War, George Dewey—then a midshipman—served aboard the Wabash when
she touched at her first port of call, Gibraltar
, on 17 August 1858. Dewey would later
write in his autobiography that “The Wabash was quite the finest
ship of the foreign fleet and also the largest.” Wabash
returned to the New York Navy Yard
on 16 December 1859 and decommissioned there on 20
December 1859.
Civil War service, 1861-1865
With the outbreak of the
American
Civil War,
Wabash was recommissioned on 16 May 1861,
Captain
Samuel Mercer in command,
and departed New York on 30 May 1861 as flagship of the
Atlantic Blockading Squadron
under Rear Admiral
Silas H. Stringham.
Wabash captured the brigantine Sarah Starr off Charleston,
South Carolina
, on 3 August 1861, and recaptured the American
schooner Mary Alice, taken earlier
by CSS Dixie. By this
date, she had also captured the brigantines
Hannah,
Balch, and
Solferino, along with 22
Confederate prisoners from the
four vessels.
On 26
August 1861, Wabash departed Hampton Roads
, bound for Hatteras
Inlet, North
Carolina
, to take
part in the first combined amphibious assault of the war.
Wabash accompanied
Monticello,
Pawnee,
revenue cutter Harriet Lane, the tug
Fanny, and two transports, carrying over 900 troops under
Major General
Benjamin Butler. Union
forces secured Hatteras Inlet with the capture of Forts
Hatteras and
Clark on 29 August 1861. The attacking force
suffered no casualties and took over 700 prisoners. Among these was
Captain
Samuel Barron of the
Confederate Navy, the former commander in
the United States Navy of
Wabash when she served under
Rear Admiral La Vallette.
Wabash was later designated the
flagship of Flag Officer
Samuel
Francis du Pont, the new commander of the
South Atlantic Blockading
Squadron, and was sent to the New York Navy Yard for repairs on
21 September 1861.

Wash drawing in grey tones by Clary
Ray, circa 1900, showing USS Wabash under steam and sail.
After
refit, Wabash departed Fort Monroe
on 29 October 1861 to spearhead the Federal assault
on Port Royal,
South Carolina
. The assembled invasion fleet was the
largest yet organized by the Navy, containing 77 vessels and 16,000
Army troops under Brigadier General
Thomas W. Sherman. The combined force secured Port
Royal Sound on 7 November 1861 after a furious four-hour battle.
Wabash led the battle line in this major strategic Union
victory.
Wabash now took up permanent station on the Charleston
blockade, operating out of Port Royal. On 11 March 1862, a landing
party led by ship's commanding officer, Commander
C. R. P. Rodgers, occupied St.
Augustine, Florida
. A detachment of seamen and officers from
Wabash landed and manned a battery which bombarded
Fort
Pulaski
, Georgia
, on 10 April and 11 April 1862 and was instrumental
in forcing that Southern fort to surrender. A naval battery
of three 12 pounder howitzers from
Wabash supported
Union troops at the
Battle of
Pocotaligo, on 22 October 1862.
Confederate vessels twice harassed
Wabash while on duty in
Port Royal Sound.
On 5 August 1863, CSS
Juno, a small steamer on picket duty below Fort Sumter
, fired upon and ran down a launch from
Wabash, capturing 10 sailors and drowning two. The
CSS David submarine torpedo boat also
attacked
Wabash on 18 April 1864. Ensign
Charles H. Craven, officer of the deck, spotted the
cigar-shaped vessel in time for
Wabash to get underway.
The
CSS David disengaged from the attack
in the face of musket fire and round shot discharged from
Wabash.
Wabash departed her station on 1
October, bound for the Norfolk Navy Yard
and an overhaul. En route, she grounded
briefly on
Frying Pan Shoals,
suffering minor damage to her rudder.
Repairs and overhaul
were completed by 16 December, in time for Wabash to join
the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron and to participate in the
first attack on Fort Fisher, North Carolina
, on 24 December and 25 December 1864. The
failure of this initial attempt to take the fort necessitated a
second, successful combined operation between 13 January and 15
January 1865.
It was during this second attack on Fort Fisher
, that corporal Andrew
J. Tomlin and ordinary
seamen
Louis C. Shepard earned the Medal of Honor.
Wabash returned to Hampton Roads
on 17 January 1865, receiving orders on 25 January
1865 to proceed to the Boston Navy Yard
. Wabash was decommissioned at
Boston on 14 February 1865.
Officers during Fort Fisher Siege
- Captain, Melancton Smith
- Lieutenant
Commander, C. H. Cushman.
- Lieutenants, Ellicot C. V. Blake – H.
C. Tallman
- Surgeon, H. F. McSherry.
- Passed Ass't
Surgeon, James H. Tinkham.
- Acting Ass't
Surgeon, N. L. Campbell.
- Paymaster, George Cochran.
- Chaplain, Charles A. Davis.
- Marine Second
Lieutenant, L. E. Fagan.
- Acting Masters, W. U. Grozier – S.
J. White.
- Acting Ensigns, George T. Davis, Whitman
Chase, E. A. Small – Joseph F. Brown.
Notable Crew
Honored Crew
Post-Civil War service, 1866-1912
Wabash was placed in ordinary from 1866 to 1869;
overhauled during 1870 to 1871; and recommissioned on 24 October
1871, Captain
Robert W. Shufeldt commanding.
Wabash
departed the Boston Navy Yard on 17 November 1871 and served as the
flagship of Rear Admiral
James Alden,
commanding the Mediterranean Squadron.
She arrived at
Cadiz,
Spain
, on 14 December 1871 and cruised throughout the
Mediterranean until 30 November 1873 when she departed Gibraltar,
bound for Key West,
Florida
. Wabash arrived in Key West on 3
January 1874. She was decommissioned on 25 April 1874 at the Boston
Navy Yard. In 1875, she was placed in ordinary and served as a
housed-over
receiving ship from 1876
to 1912.
Wabash was struck from the Navy
list on 15 November 1912 and sold that same day to the Boston Iron and Metal Company,
Boston,
Massachusetts
.
See also
External links