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USS Montauk (1862)

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Name
  
USS Montauk

Builder
  
Continental Iron Works

Decommissioned
  
March 1899

Launched
  
9 October 1862

Namesake
  
Montauk, New York

Commissioned
  
14 December 1862

Fate
  
sold, 14 April 1904

USS Montauk (1862) cdn2americancivilwarcomamericancivilwarcdnpic

The first USS Montauk was a single-turreted Passaic-class monitor in the Union Navy during the American Civil War.

Contents

It saw action throughout the war. It was used as the floating prison for the conspirators in the Abraham Lincoln assassination and was the site of the autopsy and identification of assassin John Wilkes Booth.

USS Montauk (1862) USS Montauk 1862 Wikipedia

Construction

USS Montauk (1862) USN ShipsUSS Montauk 18621904

Montauk was built by John Ericsson at Continental Iron Works, Greenpoint, Brooklyn; launched on 9 October 1862; and commissioned at New York on 14 December 1862, Commander John L. Worden in command.

Service

USS Montauk (1862) Battleship Photo Index USS MONTAUK

A principal ironclad in the naval attack on Charleston, South Carolina, Montauk departed New York on 24 December 1862, arriving Port Royal, South Carolina on 19 January 1863 to join the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron. Taking advantage of the opportunity to test the XV-inch Dahlgren gun and armor of the Passaic-class ironclad for the first time, on 27 January, Rear Admiral Samuel F. Du Pont sent Montauk, with the gunboats USS Seneca, USS Wissahickon, USS Dawn and mortar schooner USS C. P. Williams to bombard Fort McAllister, Georgia. Although hit 13 times, Montauk was undamaged. The ironclad made a second attack on 1 February, badly battering the fort; but Montauk was hit 48 times. She destroyed the blockade runner Rattlesnake on 28 February in Ogeechee River but while descending the river was herself damaged by a torpedo (mine) which exploded under her.

USS Montauk (1862) USS Montauk Civil War Union Navy Ship

Montauk steamed into the North Fork of the Edisto River on 1 April in preparation for the attack on Charleston. At midafternoon on 7 April, Admiral Du Pont’s ironclads attacked Fort Sumter. The Union ships braved intense fire from Confederates coastal artillery, and kept their own guns operating effectively until withdrawing toward evening. Damage to the monitors prevented Du Pont from resuming the attack the next day with Montauk taking 20 hits.

USS Montauk (1862) Battleship Photo Index USS MIANTONOMOH

The ironclads launched an attack on Fort Wagner, Morris Island on 10 July. Capturing this island was important as it would permit access to the interior defenses of Charleston Harbor. Assuming command of the naval forces, John Dahlgren boarded Montauk on 16 July and after consultation with the captains, renewed the attack on Fort Wagner and bombarded it daily until it was evacuated by the Confederates on 6 September. The ships then turned their attention to Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie operating for the rest of the year against these fortifications which guarded the Cradle of the Rebellion. However, the Confederate works would never be taken by sea.

USS Montauk (1862) USS Montauk 1862 Wikipedia

Montauk remained off Charleston until July 1864, when she shifted operations to the Stono River. In February 1865, she transferred to the Cape Fear River. Proceeding to the Washington Navy Yard after the end of the conflict, she served as a floating bier for assassin John Wilkes Booth on 27 April and a floating prison for six accomplices.

She was decommissioned at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1865. She remained there until sold to Frank Samuel on 14 April 1904, except for a stint from May 1898 – March 1899, when she served with a crew primarily consisting of local naval reservists to protect the harbor of Portland, Maine during the Spanish–American War.

References

USS Montauk (1862) Wikipedia