CSS Appomattox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

NameAppomattox
Launched1850, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
CommissionedNorfolk, 1861
Home portPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
History
Confederate States
NameAppomattox
Launched1850, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
CommissionedNorfolk, 1861
Home portPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
FateBurned on February 10, 1862
General characteristics
Tons burthen120 tons
Length86 ft (26 m)
Beam20.5 ft (6.2 m)
Draft?
Propulsionsteam engine, 1 propeller
Speed?
Complement?
Armament2 guns: 1 bow 32-pounder gun, 1 stern howitzer.

CSS Appomattox was a small propeller-driven steamer used early in the war by the Confederate Navy to defend the sounds of northeastern North Carolina. After participating in the battle for Roanoke Island, it was burned to prevent capture on February 10, 1862, near Elizabeth City, North Carolina.

The Appomattox was originally named the Empire when launched in Philadelphia in 1850. Details of her prewar career are unknown. In May 1861, she was chartered by the Virginia State Navy under Captain Milligan, towing blockships into position to obstruct the channels of the Elizabeth River around Norfolk.[1] In that same month, she twice sailed as a flag-of-truce boat under Captain Thomas T. Hunter of the Virginia Navy to arrange exchanges of wounded Union prisoners and passage north from Norfolk of certain families wishing to return to their Northern friends. In the latter part of June 1861, she again served as the bearer of a flag-of-truce off Fortress Monroe, this time for Brigadier General Huger, CSA.[2]

Confederate Service in North Carolina

Rediscovery

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI