Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

USS Courier (1861)

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Laid down
  
date unknown

Acquired
  
7 September 1861

Out of service
  
14 June 1864

Length
  
41 m

Draft
  
4.6 m

Launched
  
date unknown

Commissioned
  
17 September 1861

Struck
  
1864 (est.)

Weight
  
564.9 tons

USS Courier (1861) was a storeship acquired by the Union Navy during the American Civil War. She was used by the Union Navy as a supply ship to support Union Navy ships engaged in the blockade of Southern ports. Courier also operated as a gunboat when the opportunity presented itself from time to time.

Contents

Purchased in New York City in 1861

Courier, a storeship, was purchased 7 September 1861 from W. B. Thomas and Co., New York City, and commissioned 17 September 1861, Acting Master W. K. Cressy in command.

Assigned to support the North Atlantic Blockade

Courier sailed from New York City 17 October 1861 on the first of many voyages to bring supplies to ships at Port Royal, South Carolina, along the Florida coast, and in the Gulf of Mexico as far west as New Orleans, Louisiana.

Courier captures three blockade runners

Always on the alert for blockade runners, she captured three: Angelina and Emeline on 16 May 1863, and Maria Bishop on 17 May 1863.

Grounded and lost in the Bahama Islands

Courier grounded on Abaco Island in the Bahamas 14 June 1864 and had to be abandoned, but her officers and men, together with her stores and cargo, were saved and sent to the United States.

References

USS Courier (1861) Wikipedia