USS Sovereign (1855)

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Career (US) Confederate Navy Jack Union Navy Jack
Name: USS Sovereign
Laid down: date unknown
Launched: in 1855 at Shpusetown,
Pennsylvania
Acquired: 9 January 1863
In service: 1862
Out of service: 1865
Struck: 1865 (est.)
Captured: by Union Navy forces
5 June 1862
Fate: sold, 29 November 1865
at Cairo, Illinois
General characteristics
Displacement: 336 tons
Length: not known
Beam: not known
Draught: not known
Propulsion: steam engine
side wheel-propelled
Speed: not known
Complement: not known
Armament: not known

The first USS Sovereign (1855) was a 336-ton steamer captured on the Mississippi River by the Union Navy during the beginning of the American Civil War.

The Navy placed Sovereign in service as a commissary ship, which is a ship's tender responsible for providing ships with provisions. Later in the war, she was used by the Navy as a barracks ship for ship workers.

Built in Pennsylvania in 1855

Sovereign -- a side wheel steamer built in 1855 at Shpusetown, Pennsylvania -- operated on the Mississippi River and its tributaries during the years preceding the Civil War.

She was acquired by the Confederacy in 1861 and served as a transport on the same river system.

Captured by Union Navy forces

On 5 June 1862, on the Mississippi River near Island No. 37, she was fired upon by Benton and, as Union tugboat Spitfire closed for action, was abandoned by her crew. However, a 16-year old lad who was loyal to the Union remained on board, removed weights from the steamer's safety valves, wetted down her fires, and signaled Spitfire with a white sheet. A prize crew from the Union tug then took possession of the ship.

Sovereign was condemned by the Illinois prize court and formally purchased by the Union Navy on 9 January 1863.

Service with the Union Navy

Meanwhile, in the summer of 1862, she had been placed in service as a commissary boat for the Western Flotilla under the command of First Master Thomas Baldwin. She served for the most part off the mouth of the Yazoo River tending combatant ships during operations against Vicksburg, Mississippi.

After the Confederate river fortress fell, she ascended the river to Cairo, Illinois, where she was laid up and used as quarters for workmen in the navy yard.

Post-war decommissioning

Following the collapse of the Confederacy, Sovereign was sold at public auction at Cairo, Illinois, on 29 November 1865 to S. Homer.

References

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

See also

External links