Neha Patil (Editor)

USS Huron (1875)

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Name
  
USS Huron

Builder
  
John Roach & Sons

Commissioned
  
15 November 1875

Construction started
  
1873

Area
  
6,500 m²

Added to NRHP
  
15 November 1991

Namesake
  
Lake Huron

Laid down
  
1873

Length
  
53 m

Launched
  
1875

Year built
  
1877

Nearest city
  
Nags Head

USS Huron (1875) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Fate
  
Wrecked 24 November 1877

USS Huron was an iron hulled gunboat of the United States Navy. She was a screw steamer with full-rig auxiliary sail, built by John Roach & Sons in Chester, Pennsylvania from 1873–75 and commissioned at Philadelphia Navy Yard on 15 November 1875, Commander George P. Ryan in command.

Contents

Service history

Huron arrived on 11 December 1875 for duty at the Norfolk Navy Yard, and spent the next two years cruising in the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. She stopped at Veracruz and Key West on her first cruise, returning to Port Royal on 4 August 1876 and visited many Caribbean and Venezuelan ports from March–June 1877.

Loss

After repairs at New York Navy Yard in August, the ship sailed to Hampton Roads, and departed on 23 November 1877 for a scientific cruise on the coast of Cuba. Soon after her departure, Huron ran aground off Nags Head, North Carolina in heavy weather, and was wrecked shortly after 1 a.m. next morning. For a time, her crew worked in relatively little danger, attempting to free their ship, but she soon heeled over, carrying 98 officers and men to their deaths. Of the fatalities 83 remains were recovered and buried; of which the remains of 8 officers and 61 men were identified while 14 others who could not be identified.

References

USS Huron (1875) Wikipedia