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USS Shepherd Knapp (1861)

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Laid down
  
date unknown

In service
  
1961

Struck
  
1863 (est.)

Weight
  
851.4 tons

Launched
  
date unknown

Out of service
  
May 1863

Length
  
49 m

Acquired
  
28 August 1861 at New York City

USS Shepherd Knapp (1861) was a large (838-ton) ship with eight guns, purchased by the Union Navy during the beginning of the American Civil War.

Contents

With her eight guns and a crew of 93, she was employed by the Union Navy as a heavy gunship outfitted to pursue major Confederate States of America blockade runners, especially Confederate Captain Raphael Semmes. Her limited ability as a sailing ship in pursuit of steam powered adversaries was eventually recognised and a different strategy adopted. She became a decoy, disguised as an unarmed merchant ship sailing in areas where Confederate raiders were known to operate.

During the course of her fruitless searches for Semmes, she ran aground on a reef near Haiti and was abandoned.

Purchased at New York City in 1861

Shepherd Knapp — a ship-rigged sailing vessel — was purchased at New York City on 28 August 1861 from Laurence Giles & Co.

Searching for Captain Raphael Semmes

Since the logs of Shepherd Knapp are missing, many details of her career are unknown. However, there are records of correspondence between Naval Command and her captain published in Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion. Her commanding officer was Acting Volunteer Lieutenant Henry S. Eytinge, who was ordered on 1 November 1861 to cruise in the West Indies seeking to capture or destroy any "vessels of the rebels" he might encounter. The special object of his attention was the Confederate commerce raider, CSS Sumter, which had been preying on Union shipping since early summer. After a long cruise in which she never quite caught up with Capt. Raphael Semmes and his elusive steamer, Shepherd Knapp returned to New York City on 17 April 1862. One month later she was ordered to the blockade squadron at Charleston where she remained for the next six months, four of which were guarding St Helena Sound where she captured the blockade runner Fanny Laurie (4 September 1862).

In November, Shepherd Knapp was back in New York and by early February 1863 she was heading to the West Indies seeking Confederate ships, especially the CSS Alabama. Being a sailing ship, it was unlikely that the Shepherd Knapp could overhaul a steam powered raider such as CSS Alabama that had 2 x 300 hp engines. However, a letter from Charles Wilkes, Acting Rear Admiral of the West Indies Squadron, to the Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles dated 26 February 1863, shows that their plan was for the USS Shepherd Knapp to disguise as a merchantman and act as decoy. By following a trade route they hoped to draw in a raider so that they could engage at close quarters.

Sunk on a coral reef

After cruising in the Caribbean for over three and one-half months, Shepherd Knapp struck a coral reef off Cap-Haïtien on the 18 May 1863 and was abandoned. All equipment, including her guns, was salvaged.

References

USS Shepherd Knapp (1861) Wikipedia


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