
Augusta
The name source for the first two ships named Augusta is not certain. The third ship named Augusta retained the name she had carried prior to acquisition by the U.S. Navy. The fourth Augusta (CL-31) was named for the city in Georgia. The fifth Augusta (SSN-710) was named for capital city of the state of Maine.
II
(SwStr: t. 1,310; 1. 220'; b. 35'4"; dph. 21'10"; dr. 14'3"; s. 11 k.; cpl. 157: a. 8 32-pdr. sb., 1 12-pdr. r.)
Designed and constructed by the noted American shipbuilder, William Henry Webb, the second Augusta was completed in 1853 at New York City and operated out of that port carrying passengers and freight for the New York and Savannah Steam Navigation Co. on runs to Savannah and New Orleans. Early in the Civil War, as the Union Navy was expanding its fleet for the Herculean task of blockading the Confederate coast, the Federal Government purchased the side-wheeler at New York on 1 August 1861. She was fitted out for naval service by the New York Navy Yard and commissioned there on 28 September 1861, Comdr. Enoch Greenleafe Parrott in command.
A part of Flag Officer Du Font's newly established South Atlantic Blockading Squadron, Augusta was assigned to the task force then being formed to capture a naval base on the Confederacy's Atlantic coast somewhere within the new squadron's jurisdiction which stretched from the Florida Keys to the border separating North and South Carolina.
Augusta departed New York on 16 October, reached Hampton Roads two days later, and remained there while the other warships of Du Font's fleet assembled. When she sortied with them on the 29th, the captain of each ship carried sealed orders to be opened only in the event of the force's separation. While the fleet of some 75 ships slowly sailed south, a storm arose in the wee hours of the 31st, shortly after Augusta passed Cape Hatteras. By 3:30 that afternoon, the wind had increased so greatly in violence that Du Pont signaled the commanding officer of the other vessels that they were free to leave the formation and to proceed in whatever manner seemed most conducive to safety. While suffering varying amounts of damage as they battled the tempest, some vessels were forced to turn back; two transports went to the bottom; but most continued on toward their original objectives.
As she proceeded south, Augusta—which had been steaming on the starboard flank of the transports—managed to weather the hurricane; and the wind had abated by the time she passed Charleston on 3 November. The next day, she reached an anchorage just off the bar outside Port Royal harbor. Two days were then spent in charting the nearby waters—from which all aids to navigation had been removed; in making reconnaissance probes to feel out the Confederate defensive forces and to locate their guns; and in seeing that the commander of each unit clearly understood his role in the forthcoming attack.
For the invasion, Du Pont divided his warships into two groups a main squadron which was to bombard the Southern forts that defended the harbor and a flanking squadron which was to parry any attempted counter thrust by the Confederate fleet. Augusta was the last of the five ships composing the flanking group.
Fort Walker on Hilton Head—the stronger of the two defensive works protecting the harbor—was some two and one-half miles across the water to the southwest from Fort Beauregard on Bay Point. Since this distance was great enough to prevent the guns of one fort from effectively supporting those of the other, Du Pont decided to engage the Southern positions, one at a time, beginning with the stronger, Fort Walker. Having learned that most of its guns faced south, the flag officer had his main squadron steam by the Hilton Head shore along a counterclockwise, elliptical path which kept its warships out of effective range of the Confederate batteries. Then, when it had reached a point beyond the traversing limit of these guns, this squadron began a turn to port along a wide arc which closed the shore as the Union ships opened fire on the fort and steamed back in the direction from which they had come. This maneuver prevented most of Fort Walker's cannon from getting into action while leaving them almost completely exposed to the Federal salvoes.
Meanwhile, Du Font's flanking squadron—including Augusta— followed the main group into the harbor and took station to the northwest of this ellipse in position to turn back any Southern warships which attempted to enter the fray. They did not have long to wait. The small Confederate squadron—commanded by Flag Officer Josiah Tattnall, CSN—soon steamed out and opened fire on Augusta and her consorts. However, the Union ships answered with a barrage that soon convinced Tattnall that his ships had more than met their match and compelled him to with-draw into Skull Creek. Nevertheless, Tattnall's ships did aid the Southern cause by ferrying Fort Walker's troops from Hilton Head to the mainland.
After driving off the Confederate squadron, the warships of Du Font's flanking squadron joined in the bombardment of Fort Walker. When Penguin was disabled by a shot from Hilton Head, Augusta took her in tow and enabled her to resume firing.
Unable to withstand the Union shelling, the Confederates evacuated Fort Walker which was soon occupied by Northern sailors and marines. Du Pont then turned his attention to Fort Beauregard across the harbor and soon had it too in his hands.
Immediately after the battle, Du Pont ordered Augusta to sail for Savannah. She arrived off that port that same day, and reestablished the blockade which had been open since 1 November when the hurricane had blown Savannah and Monticello out to sea. At the end of the second week of November, she accompanied Flag on a reconnaissance of Tybee Island, which guarded the entrance to Savannah Harbor and found it to be abandoned. On the 18th, she reconnoitered Wassau Sound and reported that it must be covered if the blockade of Savannah were to be effective. Finally on the last day of November, Augusta aided Savannah, Flag, Pacohontas, Seneca, and Seminole in taking E. J. Waterman after that Charleston schooner had run aground on Tybee Island.
The next day, 1 December, Du Pont ordered Augusta to Charleston for blockade duty, and she spent much of the next year and one-half as the flagship of the senior Union naval officer off that strongly defended city, the "birthplace of secession." On the 6th, she took the British blockade runner Cheshire, of and from Liverpool, some 12 miles southeast of Tybee light. She towed the captured vessel as far north as Charleston and then sent her on to New York under a prize crew for adjudication.
On New Year's Eve, she captured Island Belle about 12 miles southeast of Bull's Island light. Laden with sugar and molasses, that 166-ton schooner of Nassau, New Providence, had departed Trinidad de Cuba ostensibly bound for Baltimore under English colors. However, the vessel—which had been built at Charleston earlier that year under the name, General Ripley—was heading straight for Bull's Bay. Since her British registration—dated 11 November 1861—seemed to be a subterfuge and her clearence was obviously spurious, Parrott sent the prize to New York.
One of Augusta's more interesting experiences during the war occurred on the morning of 13 May 1862 when the Confederate armed steamer Planter steamed out of Charleston harbor. This vessel had been used by the Confederate Army as a transport and dispatch boat. While the Planter had been moored to a wharf in Charleston and her captain was ashore, her pilot—a slave named Robert Smalls—had embarked his family and a few friends and quietly slipped out to sea. When Planter had passed beyond range of the last Southern gun, Smalls lowered her Confederate colors and hoisted a white flag, before steaming up to the Union clipper ship Onward and surrendering. His brave deed brought freedom to himself, seven other black men, five women, and three children. The following day, Parrott—the senior naval officer of Charleston—sent Planter to Port Royal where Du Pont took her into the Union Navy.
On the night of 24 and 25 May, the inbound steamer Kate dashed past the Union blockaders off Charleston but ran ashore under the protection of Confederate guns. In the morning, Augusta and Pocahontas tried to destroy the blockade runner by gunfire; but heavy seas and fire from Southern shore batteries prevented their succeeding. During the half-hour the Union ships were under fire, Confederate shells passed overhead and between Augusta and Pocahontas but none scored. On the other hand, although raised to their maximum elevation, the Union guns were unable to reach shore. This failure dramatically demonstrated Augusta's need for heavier guns.
The following day, Augusta and Huron chased a runner named Cambria. Huron captured that steamer which had departed Nassau, cleared for St. John, New Brunswick, but was obviously headed for Charleston.
On 18 June, Du Pont ordered Parrott to move to Wassau Sound where Augusta labored to close that approach to Savannah until Flag relieved her at the end of the first week of July. Parrott then took his ship back to Charleston and by mid-month was again the senior officer blockading that strategic port.
But her hard service had taken a toll on Augusta and had been especially hard on her engines. On 5 August, Lt. Daniel Ammen— who had recently participated in a survey of the ship—felt that repairing her might well cost more than constructing a new ship. Instead of repairing her, he suggested that her bow be reinforced so that she could be used as a ram to destroy Atlanta, a Southern ironclad ram at Savannah. This recommendation was not followed—probably because the Union Navy still needed more warships for blockade duty, and because Augusta had established a wide reputation for her outstanding sea-keeping ability. Instead, on 27 August, Du Pont sent her North for repairs. In his orders to Parrott, Du Pont—now an acting rear admiral— expressed his ". . . very sincere approbation and appreciation of the services rendered by Augusta on this station. He went on to point out that ". . . no vessel has seen more outside blockade service and has been less in port, and whose fires have been so seldom drawn."
Two days later, Augusta—towing Seneca—departed Port Royal. Upon her arrival at Philadelphia on 3 September 1862, Parrott commented, "The Augusta is the best sea boat I have ever seen; is fast, and, having very little motion, the steadiness of her decks aids very much the accuracy of her fire. I think her well worthy of an improved battery and a thorough outfit." The ship was decommissioned on 17 September 1862, and the Philadelphia Navy Yard gave her a speedy overhaul so that she might get to sea in pursuit of the Confederate commerce raider Alabama which had recently been preying upon Union shipping in the North Atlantic.
Recommissioned on 31 October 1862, Augusta received orders the next day to get underway for a cruise ". . . via Bermuda and St. Thomas through the Windward Islands and along the coast of South America . . ." to seek out and to destroy Capt. Raphael Semmes' elusive cruiser. However, some ghosts or gremlins must have been left over from her Halloween recommissioning ceremony for engine trouble kept her in port and others went out instead.
On 5 November, Augusta was assigned a different mission, convoy duty for a group of transports which were to carry Army troops to the Gulf of Mexico to reinforce those already there under Major General Benjamin F. Butler. Four days later, General Nathaniel Banks received orders to command these troops and upon arrival at New Orleans, to relieve Butler in command of the Department of the Gulf.
When she was finally ready for sea, Augusta proceeded
to Hampton Roads and there awaited Banks' transports. The convoy,
which was not complete until early in December, sortied from the Virginia capes on
the fourth. While the Union ships were en
route south, a fierce storm partially dispersed them; but Augusta After Parrott had delivered his charges, Augusta headed
back to the east coast. At the request of General Banks, she touched, en
route, at Havana, Cuba, and at Key West to inquire about the stray
ships of the convoy that had not yet reported. She also replenished her coal bunkers
at the latter port; but, before she could
resume her voyage to Port Royal to rejoin her squadron, she received new orders
from Rear Admiral Theodoras Bailey.
On 22 December, Cornelius Vanderbilt's California mail steamer Ariel had
steamed into Key West with word that—as she
was steaming from New York toward Panama, she had been captured off the coast of Cuba by CSS Alabama and
had been released on ransom. Her master had urged that the Navy hence forth escort Ariel and her sister mail
steamers, especially those heading
north from the isthmus with shipments of bullion from the California gold
fields. On Christmas Day, Bailey directed Parrott to proceed to Aspinwall and to offer convoy or such other
assistance to such steamers as may be necessary. Augusta got underway immediately and,
after completing this important mission, finally reported for duty to Du
Pont at Port Royal on 18 January 1863. Following coaling and
replenishment, she sailed for Charleston to relieve Rhode Island on
blockade duty. On the 29th, her boat crews joined those of Housatonic
in
assisting officers of Unadilla in refloating the
iron-hulled screw steamer Princess Royal. Unadilla had forced her
aground while that blockade runner was attempting to slip into
Charleston with
a cargo of arms and ammunition as well as an unrecorded
number of large rifled naval guns and two powerful steam engines slated
to be installed in Southern ironclads then under construction. In the early morning fog of the last day of January, the
Confederate
ironclads Chicora and Palmetto State steamed out of Charleston
and attacked the Union blockading fleet. PalmettoState rammed
and fired into Mercedita, reducing that Federal screw gunboat to "... a sinking and perfectly
defenseless condition." Meanwhile, Chicora
engaged Keystone State. One round burst the Northern
side-wheeler's boiler, releasing scalding steam lwhich killed one officer and 19 men and disabled another score of bluejackets. When the Southern warships first emerged, Augusta was
. . . lying off the Swash Channel and saw flashes to the southward and
westward and heard a few reports." Since gunfire at night was
not unusual, Parrott concluded that some vessel was probably
attempting to run the blockade. He followed longstanding instructions
and kept Augusta on station, on the lookout.
At the first sign of dawn, Quaker City, next in
line to the southward of Augusta, got underway and began firing. Parrott
soon saw black smoke rising in the direction of the action, signaled the
senior officer present—in Housatonic, next in line to the
northward—that an enemy was present, and stood to the southward.
A short while later, the two Southern ironclads passed successively
between Augusta and the shore. During the exchange of
fire, a nine-inch Southern shell entered Augusta's starboard
side, passed just above her boiler, and lodged in her port
side. Housatonic and Memphis also engaged the Confederate
ironclads before the secessionist warships retired into the entrance to
Maffitt's Channel.
But for occasional short runs to Port Royal to replenish
her provisions and to refill her coal bunkers or to tow vessels to other
points within the limits of her squadron, Augusta labored into the
summer to tighten the blockade of Charleston during the
ensuing months. Then, on 5 July, Du Pont—who was to be relieved of command of the
South Atlantic Blockading Squadron by Rear
Admiral Dahlgren—ordered Parrott". . . to prepare the Augusta for sea, as I propose to go to the Delaware in your vessel." The transfer of command took place
the next day on board the Wabash and,
once Du Pont had embarked in Augusta, she sailed for the Delaware capes.
After dropping off her former squadron
commander at New Castle, the steamer proceeded upstream and arrived at the Philadelphia Navy Yard on 10 July.
The next day, Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles wired Commodore
Cornelius K. Stribling, the commandant of the Philadelphia
Navy Yard, orders for Augusta ". . . to make a cruise to the
fishing banks . . . ." CSS Florida—commanded by Comdr. John N.
Maffitt—had recently been terrorizing Union shipping in the North Atlantic, and
Augusta was sent out to join in the hunt for that Confederate
commerce raider. As soon as she had finished coaling, the Union
steamer put to sea and spent the rest of the month looking in vain for Florida. His
inquiries of vessels and at visited ports
prompted Parrott to conclude that the Southern cruiser had left the northwestern Atlantic more than a fortnight before. Welles was also convinced that
Maffitt had sought warmer waters. As a
result, soon after she arrived at the New
York Navy Yard on the last day of July, Augusta was decommissioned for the long overdue complete
overhaul that had first been
interrupted by CSS Alabama's antics in the North Eutaw, and the ill-fated
monitor departed Hampton Roads on 5 July. The decision to send two
escorts to tow Tecumseh proved to be a wise
one, since all three ships suffered engine trouble during the voyage; but, by
helping each other, the trio finally reached Pensacola on the 28th.
Augusta remained at that port undergoing
repairs to her machinery while the monitor moved to Mobile Bay to
participate in
the historic battle on 5 August which brought her short
career to
a tragic close. When the yard work was finished, the
steamer
sailed north on 3 September and arrived back at Hampton
Roads on the 12th and she entered the Norfolk Navy Yard to have her hull
scraped before resuming duty. She returned to service in October
and was assigned to the squadron's third division.
However, before the month ended, engine trouble forced Augusta to New
York for repairs. Before this work could be accomplished, the Navy Department
became aware of renewed and intensified threats to the security of the
California mail steamers from Confederate cruisers and from groups of
Southern passengers
who were plotting to seize these ships. To help in countering
these dangers, Augusta—the only vessel available at New York for convoy
duty—departed that port on the morning of 6 November in the wake of North Star, about
two and one-half days after that steamer had
sailed for Panama. Upon reaching Panama Augusta was to escort North
Star back home. She arrived at
Aspinwall on the morning of the 16th and, two days later, followed her charge out to sea. With great
difficulty, she managed to keep North
Star in sight for over three days; but, on the evening of the 21st, a loud
and vibrant thump developed in her
engine. She followed North Star to the Bahamas: and both ships stopped at Mathew Town, Great Inagua, in that
island group. There, engineers
inspected Augusta's machinery and confirmed that the piston rod was loose. Nevertheless, the commanding officers of the vessels decided to proceed
north. About an hour after midnight on
the 25th, the loose piston and rod
North Star towed her escort to Port Royal,
S.C., where the two ships arrived on the 28th, and then proceeded on north alone. Comdr. Corbin was unable to arrange for a tow
until the afternoon of 8 December when
the Army transport Arago undertook the task. Bad weather plagued both ships as they fought their way northward, but they reached Hampton Roads
safely on the evening of the 12th.
There, General Butler forbade the master of the Arago to continue towing Augusta to New York, probably
because he felt that she would be
needed in the impending attack upon
Fort Fisher. In some way Comdr. Corbin managed to arrange for a vessel which towed his ship to
Baltimore. After she finally reached that port, Augusta was
decommissioned on 6 January 1865. Despite the seriousness of the ship's damage, the Navy decided to
keep Augusta because of her outstanding sea-keeping qualities. Nevertheless, the
fighting had ended before the steamer was
again ready for service. By that time, the Government was cutting the Fleet
back to peacetime size, so the ship remained in reserve until the spring of
1866, a year after the collapse of the Confederacy. Augusta was recommissioned at the
Washington Navy Yard on 2 April 1866, Comdr. Alexander Murray in command. A fort night later, she received orders to proceed to New
York; and she arrived at the New York
Navy Yard on the 23d. On 5 May, she stood out into the Atlantic in company with
the double-turreted monitor Miantonomoh
and the side-wheel, double-ended gun boat Ashuelot. Two days later, Ashuelot left the group and
set course for Boston where she
embarked Gustavus Vasa Fox, the Assistant
Secretary of the Navy. Augusta and the monitor arrived at Halifax, Nova
Scotia, on the 10th and there, Murray later
reported, received". . . the first flow of that tide of visitors which, wherever we went, overwhelmed us."
Underway again on the 18th, the two
ships arrived at St. John's Newfoundland, on the 24th. Ashuelot rejoined the group there on 3 June. The cruise the three ships were about to begin was undertaken to
serve several purposes. First, it carried Mr. Fox to Russia
as President Andrew Johnson's personal representative and as
the bearer of a resolution of Congress congratulating Tsar Alexander II for his
escape from the attack of a nihilist assassin. The United States also wished to
express to the Tsar its appreciation for Russia's warm—albeit unofficial—support of the Union cause during the Civil War, especially of the
Russian Fleet's friendly visit to Union controlled waters during the conflict.
Secondly, the cruise was made to show the world's naval
powers the Nation's innovation in warship design, the monitor, and to
demonstrate its ability to operate in the open sea. Finally, the operation was
an effort to cultivate friendly relations with all of the nations visited—an
early example of the Navy's "show-the-flag" policy.
The flotilla departed St. John's on 5 June and reached
Queens-town, Ireland, on the 16th. Ashuelot parted from
the group at that port. The two remaining warships headed for England on the 21st;
and, during the ensuing year visited most of the maritime
countries of Europe and, in every case, received enthusiastically
friendly hospitality from royalty and commoners alike. The
highlight of the cruise was the visit to Russia which began upon the warships' arrival at
Helsingfors (Helsinki) on 3 August. Finland
was then an autonomous duchy owing allegiance to the Tsar. Three days later, the pair reached
Kronstadt, the port serving St.
Petersburg and the Americans, home-away-from- home for more than a month in which they enjoyed the warmest of welcomes. The Tsar and members of the Russian
royal family
visited the ships on the 9th. Lavish entertainment on board the royal yacht, sightseeing tours, and an
inspection of the Russian Fleet
filled the ensuing days until Augusta and Miantonomoh got underway again on 15 September and headed for
Stockholm.
Besides their four days in Sweden, the Americans visited Germany—including
the port of Kiel in the King of Prussia's newly acquired province of
Schleswig-Holstein—France, Portugal, and Spain before they transited the Strait
of Gibraltar two
days before Christmas. They welcomed in the new year,
1867, at Malaga,
Spain, and spent the next four and one-half months l visiting the traditionally popular ports of call in the Mediterranean
before departing Gibraltar on 15 May and heading home, via the Canary
Islands, the Cape Verdes, Barbados, and the Bahamas. Following a week at
Nassau, they began the final passage of the
cruise on 17 July and moored in the Philadelphia Navy Yard on the 22d. Soon thereafter, Augusta was laid up in the New York Navy Yard and remained there until
sold at auction on 2 December 1868
to "Commodore" Cornelius Kingsland Garrison.
Redocumented as Magnolia on 23 December 1868, the
steamer
was completely reconditioned and then operated out of New
York to Charleston and Florida ports. In 1872, Garrison sold her to the
Central Georgia Railway and Banking Co. for whom she continued to operate on the
same route. Two years later, this corporation organized the Ocean Steamship Company as a subsidiary and gave the new firm all of its ships including Magnolia. On
27 September 1877, Magnolia departed Savannah and headed for New York.
Two days out, a severe storm arose imperiling
the ship. Before dawn the next morning, the vessel began taking on water faster than her pumps could
expel it. Soon the engine room floor
collapsed and, by 8:00 a.m., rising water put put the boiler's fires.
After a futile struggle to pump out and bail out the ship, the master ordered
the crew to abandon ship. No one was lost or
injured in the sinking.