USS Mattabesett (1863)

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History
Name: USS Mattabesett
Builder: A. & G. T. Sampson, Boston, Massachusetts
Laid down: 1862[1]
Launched: 1863[1]
Commissioned: 7 April 1864
Decommissioned: 31 May 1865
Fate: Sold, 15 October 1865
General characteristics
Type: Gunboat
Displacement: 1,173 long tons (1,192 t)
Length: 205 ft (62 m)
Beam: 35 ft (11 m)
Draft: 8 ft 6 in (2.59 m)
Installed power: 1 × 712 ihp inclined direct-acting steam engine, auxiliary sails
Propulsion: 2 × sidewheels
Sail plan: Schooner-rigged
Speed: 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement: 100 officers and enlisted
Armament:
  • 2 × 100-pounder (45 kg) Parrott rifles
  • 4 × 9 in (230 mm) smoothbore Dahlgren guns
  • 4 × 24-pounder (11 kg) guns
  • 1 × 12-pounder (5 kg) smoothbore gun
  • 1 × 12-pounder (5 kg) rifled gun

USS Mattabesett, sometimes spelled Mattabeset, a schooner-rigged, wooden hulled, double-ended sidewheel gunboat, was built by A. & G. T. Sampson, Boston, Massachusetts, and named for the Mattabesset River in Connecticut. Mattabesett was delivered to the New York Navy Yard on January 18, 1864, and commissioned April 7, 1864, Commander John C. Febiger in command.

Service history

Mattabesett departed New York on April 21, 1864 for duty in the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron and arrived at Hampton Roads on April 23 as escort to USS Onondaga. Continuing down the coast to enter the North Carolina Sounds, she took part in an engagement between Union forces and the Confederate ram CSS Albemarle, accompanied by CSS Bombshell and CSS Cotton Plant, off the mouth of the Roanoke River on May 5. In the course of the battle, leading to the capture of Plymouth, North Carolina by Confederate forces, Mattabesett, with USS Sassacus, captured Bombshell, but Albemarle and Cotton Plant escaped.

But for a brief trip to New York in the fall of 1864, Mattabesett continued to serve the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron for the remainder of the U.S. Civil War, operating primarily in the inland waters of North Carolina. She sailed north in May 1865, decommissioned at New York on May 31, and was sold there on October 15.

See also

Ships captured in the American Civil War

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bauer and Roberts, pp. 80-81.

References

External links