USS Cayuga (1861)

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USS Cayuga
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Name: USS Cayuga
Builder: Gildersleeve & Son, East Haddam, Connecticut
Launched: 21 October 1861
Commissioned: 21 February 1862
Decommissioned: 31 July 1865
Fate: Sold, 25 October 1865
General characteristics
Type: Steam gunboat
Displacement: 691 long tons (702 t)
Length: 158 ft (48 m)
Beam: 28 ft (8.5 m)
Draft: 10 ft 3 in (3.12 m)
Propulsion: Steam engine
Speed: 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph)
Complement: 100 officers and enlisted
Armament: • 1 × 11 in (280 mm) smoothbore Dahlgren gun
• 1 × 20-pounder Parrott rifle
• 2 × 24-pounder guns

The first USS Cayuga was a 691-ton Unadilla class screw steam gunboat in the United States Navy.

Cayuga was launched 21 October 1861 by Gildersleeve and Son, East Haddam, Connecticut; outfitted at New York Navy Yard; commissioned 21 February 1862, Lieutenant N. B. Harrison in command; and reported to the West Gulf Blockading Squadron.

Service history

Cayuga arrived at Ship Island in Mississippi Sound on 26 March 1862, for service in the lower Mississippi River, its tributaries, and along the Gulf coast of Texas. Only once did she leave this area, from 1 May to 8 July 1862, during which she made repairs at New York Navy Yard.

Playing an important part in the blockade which cut the Confederacy off from overseas sources of supply, Cayuga took an impressive number of prizes, including schooner Jesse J. Cox (25 March 1862), schooner Tampico (3 April 1863), sloop Blue Bell (2 July 1863), schooner J. T. Davis (10 August 1863), and schooner Wave (22 August 1863). In addition, she shared in the capture of sloop Active (21 June 1863).

Cayuga also joined in the engagement with Forts Jackson and St. Philip below New Orleans, Louisiana in April 1862, which led to the fall of the city to Flag Officer David Farragut and bombarded Donaldsonville, Louisiana, 9 August 1862. On 18 April 1863, at Sabine Pass, Texas, Cayuga's commanding officer, Lieutenant David McDermut, led a party of men ashore in a reconnaissance designed as the last step in a plan to cut out Confederate steamers lying at Sabine, then to establish control of the Sabine River, separating southern forces in Texas from those in Louisiana. The party was surprised by Confederate soldiers; and McDermut, mortally wounded, and six men were taken prisoner.

Cayuga's active service ended with her departure from Galveston, Texas, 4 July 1865 for New York, where she arrived 26 July. She was decommissioned 31 July 1865, and sold 25 October 1865.

References