USS Sorrel (1864)

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Career (US) Union Navy Jack
Ordered: as W. S. Hancock
Laid down: date unknown
Launched: date unknown
Acquired: 1 August 1864 at Philadelphia
In service: circa 1864
Out of service: late 1870s
Struck: 1883 (est.)
Homeport: Philadelphia Navy Yard
Fate: sold, 27 September 1883
General characteristics
Displacement: 68 tons
Length: 77' 0"
Beam: 16' 6"
Draught: depth of hold. 6' 6"
Propulsion: steam engine
Speed: not known
Complement: not known
Armament: not known

USS Sorrel (1864) was a small 68-ton steamer purchased by the Union Navy towards the end of the American Civil War.

The Navy placed Sorrel in service as a Philadelphia tugboat, a role she maintained through the end of the Civil War and for a short period afterwards.

Purchased at Philadelphia in 1864

Sorrel -- a wooden-hulled steam tug -- was purchased by the Navy at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, under the name W. S. Hancock on 1 August 1864 from Hillman and Streaker.

Service with the Navy

The small steamer apparently served as a general purpose tug at the Philadelphia Navy Yard throughout her naval career.

Deactivation and sale

She was laid up in Philadelphia in the late 1870s and remained inactive until she was sold at there to A. Purvis & Son on 27 September 1883.

References

This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.

See also

External links