USS Hydrangea (1862)

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Career (US) Union Navy Jack
Ordered: as Hippodame
Laid down: date unknown
Launched: 1862
Acquired: 16 October 1863
Commissioned: 18 April 1864
Decommissioned: 1 September 1865
Struck: 1865 (est.)
Homeport: Hampton Roads, Virginia
Port Royal, South Carolina
Fate: sold, 25 October 1865
General characteristics
Displacement: 224 tons
Length: 120'
Beam: 20' 3"
Draught: depth of hold 9' 6"
Propulsion: steam engine
screw-propelled
Speed: 11 knots
Complement: not known
Armament: one 20-pounder Parrott rifle
two 12-pounder howitzers

USS Hydrangea (1862) was a steamer acquired by the Union Navy during the American Civil War. She served the Navy in various ways: as a tugboat, a dispatch boat, a ship's tender, and as a gunboat in waterways of the Confederate States of America.

Built at Buffalo, New York, in 1862

Hydrangea, a wooden steam tug, was built as Hippodame in 1862 at Buffalo, New York, and purchased by the Navy at New York City, from her owner, C. TV. Copeland, 16 October 1863. She commissioned at New York Navy Yard 18 April 1864, Ens. C. W. Rogers in command.

Assigned to the North Atlantic blockade

Reporting to Hampton Roads, Virginia, for duty with the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron, Hydrangea spent May towing monitors and acting as tender to Onandaga. She then took up station in the James River, where she acted as a tug and mail boat.

Making two trips a day from Deep Bottom, near the front lines, to the large supply base at City Point, Virginia, she helped support the Union efforts to break the military stalemate around Richmond, Virginia.

Transferred to the South Atlantic blockade

Hydrangea was then transferred to the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron 23 July 1864, and after repairing reported to Port Royal, South Carolina, 30 September.

She was used as a blockading ship and tug inside the Charleston Bar until the end of the war.

Post-war decommissioning, sale, and subsequent career

Hydrangea decommissioned at New York City 1 September 1865, and was sold 25 October to S. and J. M. Flanagan. Redocumented Norman 4 January 1866, she returned to private service and was stranded and lost off Cape May, New Jersey, 17 November 1886.

References

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

See also

External links