Argosy
Argosy
(StwStr: t. 219; 1. 156'4"; b. 33'; dph. 4'8"; dr. 4'6"; s. 5 mph (upstream); a. 6 24-pdr. sb., 2 12-pdr. r.)
On 24 March 1863, the Union Navy purchased Argosy-a stem-wheel river steamer built in late 1862 and early 1863 at Monongahela, Pa.-and, five days later, placed her in commission, Acting Master William N. Griswold in command.
On 3 April, she got underway up the Ohio to join a group of gunboats-commanded by Lt. Comdr. Le Roy Fitch-operating on that river and on its tributaries, the Tennessee and the Cumberland. Her duties consisted of patrolling these waters to safeguard their use as lines of communication and supply supporting Union troops then pushing south through the state of Tennessee and, later in the war, into Georgia. She also labored to deny the use of these waters to Southern forces.
For example, on 5 May, she joined four other gunboats in an expedition up the Tennessee. As they ascended that river, they destroyed". . . every kind ofboat that could serve the rebels . . .
On the 1lth, she, Covington, and Silver Cloud left Queen City and Champion, the division flagship, at Cerro Gordo and continued on upriver to Eastport, ". . . the highest navigable point at
that stage of water." Their presence far up the Tennessee provided General Rosecrans with a possible haven of naval gunfire support to which his troops could retire in the event of a serious setback in an engagement with Confederate forces which, Union leaders then felt, were massing for a major offensive.
For a number of reasons-including the assassination of General Earl Van Dorn on 7 May-the Southern push did not materialize, but Argosy's operations on this occasion were typical of her service throughout the remaining two years of the Civil War. By this time, the South's naval forces had been swept from the Mississippi and its branches; and Vicksburg and Port Hudson, the last Confederate riverside forts blocking Northern shipping, were about to fall. Thus, other than routine patrol and escort duty, little work was left for the gunboat.
One exception occurred on 6 September 1863 when a arty from Argosy landed at Bruinsburg, Miss., to destroy a ferry. The Northern sailors also found a small group of horsemen with a large quantity of ordnance supplies. Upon seeing the Union men, the Southerners mounted and rode away, abandoning a ... wagonload consisting of 250,000 waterproof percussion caps, 1 box containing 5, 000 friction ners . . . " and a few other items.
Then Argosy serving in the 1st District of the Mississippi was responsible for the river
between New Donaldsonville, La. In the predawn darkness of 24 April, the Confederate steam ram Webb-which had just emerged from the mouth of the Red River-dashed downstream past Argosy in an attempt to escape to sea. False rumors-that President Jefferson Davis and other high officials of the collapsed Confederacy were on board the Southern steamer- heightened interest in her race toward freedom. Her Success depended upon the steamer's slipping by Union warships without being identified. When her true nature was discovered and a warning of her coming had been wired downriver, her commanding officer, Lt. Charles W. Read, CSN, realized that all chance of safely reaching the Gulf of Mexico had disappeared.
As a result, he ran Webb on a riverbank, set her afire, ordered his crew to scatter, and attempted to slip away ashore.
Argosy continued to serve the Mississippi Squadron as it demobilized during the months following the end of the fighting. One of its last ships, the stern-wheeler, was finally decommissioned at Mound City, Ill., on 11 August 1865. She was sold at Public Auction there on 17 August 1865 to Mr. V. P. Schenck, and was redocumented under her original name on 11 October 1865. Argosy operated commercially on the Mississippi and its tributaries until she was destroyed by fire at Cincinnatti, Ohio, on 7 March 1872.