USS Sangamon

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USS Sangamon
Career
33 star flag.png
Type and class Ironclad monitor
Passaic class
Authorized 1862
Shipyard Reaney, Son & Archbold
Chester, Pennsylvania
Keel laid 1862
Launched October 27, 1862
Commissioned February 9, 1863
Fate Sold for scrapping, 1905
Specifications
Length 200 feet
Beam 46 feet
Draft 10 feet 6 inches
Displacement 1,875 tons
Propulsion Steam engine
Single screw propeller
Speed 7 knots
Armament One 15-inch Dahlgren smoothbore
One 11-inch Dahlgren smoothbore
Compliment 75 officers and men


USS Sangamon was laid down under the name Conestoga in the summer of 1862; renamed Sangamon on 9 September 1862; launched on 27 October 1862; and commissioned on 9 February 1863 at Chester, Pennsylvania, Commander Pierce Crosby in command.

The monitor was assigned to the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron and soon began efficient but unspectacular operations in Hampton Roads and in the roughly parallel rivers which drain tidewater Virginia and empty into Chesapeake Bay. Sangamon was one of the vital ships of the Navy which guaranteed the Union Army control of the waters which border and penetrate the bitterly contested land which separated Washington and Richmond.

After repairs at Philadelphia on 21 February 1864, she was towed by Wachusetts to Port Royal, South Carolina for duty with the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron. After blockade duty off Charleston, she returned to Hampton Roads in the summer to support Grant's drive on Richmond.

Sangamon performed widely varied duties. She conducted reconnaissance expeditions up the river to obtain information, and often dueled Southern forces hidden along the banks. She guarded Union troop concentrations and served as part of the Union naval force which patrolled the upper James to prevent the Confederate flotilla from threatening Union transports.

Early in April 1865, during the final thrust on Richmond, she assisted in clearing the river of Confederate torpedoes so that Union shipping could proceed safely to the Confederate capital.

After the war ended, Sangamon was decommissioned at Philadelphia and placed in reserve; by 1869, her name was changed to Jason. No record has been found of any subsequent active service until she was recommissioned on 13 May 1898 for service during the Spanish-American War. The old monitor was stationed at Fisher's Island, Long Island. In 1899, she returned to reserve at League Island, Pa., and she remained there until she was sold in 1905.

This article incorporates text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, a work in the public domain.

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