USS Marion (1839)

From SpottingWorld, the Hub for the SpottingWorld network...
Career 100x35px
Name: USS Marion
Builder: Boston Navy Yard
Launched: 24 April 1839
Commissioned: 11 December 1839
Decommissioned: 1871
Refit: Rebuilt as third-rate screw steamer
Recommissioned: 12 January 1876
Decommissioned: 11 December 1897
Struck: 14 March 1907
Fate: Sold, 24 July 1907
General characteristics
Type: Sloop-of-war
Displacement: 566 long tons (575 t)
Length: 117 ft (36 m)
Beam: 32 ft (9.8 m)
Draft: 15 ft 8 in (4.78 m)
Propulsion: Sail
Armament: 16 × guns

USS Marion was a sloop-of-war of the third rate in the Union Navy during the American Civil War.

Marion was launched at the Boston Navy Yard on 24 April 1839. On 10 November 1839, she departed Boston on her first cruise, to Brazil. Sunk when heaved down in the harbor at Rio de Janeiro early in 1842, she was raised and sailed back to Boston, arriving in May. She then set sail for the Caribbean, returning in May 1843. For the next few years, she remained in ordinary at Boston and then cruised off the West Coast of Africa and in the Mediterranean until 1848. After a tour in the East Indies from 1850-52, she resumed operations with the African Squadron from 1853-55 and 1858-60. 1856-57 was spent in ordinary at Norfolk.

Gulf Coast operation

Marion was in ordinary service at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, when the Civil War broke out. She was recommissioned on 21 June 1861, and on 14 July sailed in search of the Confederate cruiser CSS Jeff Davis. In September, she joined the Gulf Blockading Squadron, participating in the capture of Ship Island on the 16th. In March-April 1862, she was just off Apalachicola, Florida in the West Pass when she was relieved by Mercedita.

Decommissioning

In May 1862, Marion was ordered to Boston for repairs. Back in service by 24 July, she sailed south to Annapolis, Maryland where she was employed as a practice ship for midshipmen until 1870. In 1871, she entered the Portsmouth Navy Yard, decommissioned and was rebuilt as a third-rate screw steamer.

Recommissioned on 12 January 1876, she cruised on the European and South Atlantic Stations until December 1882, when she returned to Portsmouth. In 1885, she was ordered to the Pacific, where she was employed on the Asiatic Station until 1890. She then returned to the U.S., served briefly in the Bering Sea on duty connected with the seal fisheries, and, in late 1891, resumed operations with the Asiatic Squadron. Assigned to the Pacific Squadron in 1895, she cruised along the west coast of the Americas and amongst the Hawaiian Islands until 11 December 1897, when she decommissioned at Mare Island, California.

Subsequently transferred to the custody of the State of California, she was employed as a training ship and headquarters for the California State Naval Militia. She was docked at San Francisco, California, pier No. 10 until 1907. On 14 March 1907, she was struck from the Navy list and sold on 24 July to C. E. Boudrow, San Francisco.

References

This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.