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Brockenborough (Tender)

1862-1863

A shortened form of G. L. Brockenborough, the name of a sloop captured by the Union steamer Fort Henry. After purchasing this prize, the Union Navy used this simpler name almost exclusively.

(Tender: complement 4; armament 1 rifled howitzer)

On 16 October 1862, Acting Lt. Edward Y. McCauley, the commanding officer of the Union steamer Fort Henry,  ordered Acting Master Robert B. Smith to lead a reconnaissance expedition up the Apalachicola River. During the ensuing operation, Smith’s boats exchanged fire with Southerners ashore and signaled Sagamore for help. That gunboat’s launch brought a howitzer into the fray, “…cleared the banks of the guerrillas,” and enabled the Union boats to continue on upstream. A short distance past the town of Apalachicola, Smith found a sailing ship which had grounded inside the mouth of a creek. She proved to be G. L. Brockenborough, a sloop carrying 64 bales of cotton. Her master and a single passenger were still on board. The Union sailors refloated the vessel and took her to Key West where she was condemned by the prize court and purchased by Rear-Adm. James L. Lardner on 15 November 1862.

Sent back to waters off the Apalachicola, Brockenborough— (also spelled Brockenboro—) served the East Gulf Blockading Squadron as a tender to the double-ended side wheeler Port Royal and the gunboat (former New York ferryboat) Somerset.

On 18 February 1863, while anchored off New Inlet, St. George’s Sound, Somerset sighted a schooner sailing westward along the southern coast of St. George’s Island, and Lt.-Cmdr. Alexander F. Crosman, her commanding officer, sent Brockenborough in pursuit of the stranger. The armed sloop overtook and captured Hortense, a schooner bound from Havana for Mobile with an escorted cargo. Crosman manned the prize from Somerset and sent her to Key West for adjudication, and she was condemned by the prize court there.

On 20 March 1863, Acting Volunteer Lieutenant George E. Welch, who commanded the Union bark Amanda, sent his executive officer, Acting Master Richard J. Hoffner, in Brockenborough to the mouth of the Ocklocknee River to investigate a report that a schooner was loading cotton at that place. The sloop, accompanied by Amanda’s launch, struggled across the marshy waters of St. George’s Sound for three days before reaching the Ocklocknee where Hoffner found “…a dismasted vessel lying close to [the river’s] starboard bank….” While the Union party approached the partially sunken ship, the Southerners who had been on board escaped to shore in boats. Hoffner tried to tow his quarry back toward the sound, but the prize—the schooner Onward —was stranded by the ebbing tide some two hours later.

The next morning, when Onward was again afloat, the expedition once more headed for deep water, but took the wrong channel and again struck the bottom. After strenuously, although futilely, striving to pull free, the Union sailors decided to wait for help from the rising tide. However, a short while later, some 40 mounted Confederate soldiers and about 150 Southern infantrymen arrived and attacked the expedition. Some of the bluejackets fought back with a howitzer and muskets while their companions set fire to the prize before the whole Union party withdrew in Brockenborough and the launch. Both scraped on the bottom but were kept in motion by wading sailors who dragged the boats for about half a mile over mud flats before they floated free. Confederate riflemen kept the party under fire throughout the retreat, killing one man outright and wounding eight others, including Acting Master Hoffner. Once the boats were free of the mud, they proceeded to waters off St. Mark’s, Fla., where the wounded were embarked in the Union steamer Hendrick Hudson.

Brockenborough soon returned to St. Georges Sound and, some two months later, was within signal distance of Port Royal when boats from that ship captured the cotton-laden sloop Fashion on 23 May 1863. That night a stiff breeze from the northeast arose and the next day it began to increase steadily in intensity. By the 27th, the wind had reached hurricane intensity and had created a shoreward, 8-knot current through the West Pass in St. George’s Sound, threatening to drive Brockenborough ashore on the mainland where she and her crew would be at the mercy of Confederate forces. To avoid this eventuality, the sloop was intentionally beached on St. George’s Island where she was set afire to prevent her being recaptured by the South.

James L. Mooney

Updated, Robert J. Cressman

23 November 2021

 
Published: Tue Nov 23 10:27:31 EST 2021