fbpx
Wikipedia

Blockade runners of the American Civil War

Throughout the American Civil War, blockade runners were seagoing steam ships that were used to get through the Union blockade that extended some 3,500 miles (5,600 km) along the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coastlines and the lower Mississippi River. The Confederate states were largely without industrial capability and could not provide the quantity of arms and other supplies needed to fight against the industrial north. To meet this need blockade runners were built in Scotland and England and were used to import the guns, ordnance and other supplies that the Confederacy desperately needed, in exchange for cotton that the British textile industry needed greatly. To penetrate the blockade, these relatively lightweight shallow draft ships, mostly built in British ship yards and specially designed for speed, but not suited for transporting large quantities of cotton, had to cruise undetected, usually at night, through the Union blockade. The typical blockade runners were privately owned vessels often operating with a letter of marque issued by the Confederate States of America. If spotted, the blockade runners would attempt to outmaneuver or simply outrun any Union ships on blockade patrol, often successfully.

Advance
Civil War blockade-runner

To avert war-time legalities and confiscation, these vessels would carry cargoes to and from neutral ports, often located in Nassau and Cuba. Neutral merchant ships in turn carried these cargoes, usually coming from or destined to Great Britain or other points abroad. Outbound ships chiefly exported cotton, tobacco and other goods for trade and revenue, while also carrying important mail and correspondence to suppliers and other interested parties in Europe, most often in England. Inbound ships usually brought badly needed supplies and mail to the Confederacy. Most of the guns and other ordnance of the Confederacy were imported from Britain via these blockade runners. Some runners made many successful runs, while many others were either captured or destroyed. Historians estimate that 2,500–2,800 attempts were made to run the blockade, with at least an 80% success rate. By the end of the Civil War, the Union Navy had captured more than 1,100 blockade runners and had destroyed or run aground another 355 vessels. But more importantly, it had reduced the South’s exports of cotton by 95% from pre-war levels, devaluing its currency and severely damaging its economy.[1][2]

Background

When the American Civil War broke out on April 12, 1861, the newly formed Confederate States of America had no ships to speak of in its navy. In the months leading up to the war, the Confederate government sought the help of Great Britain to overcome this, as much of the Britain's industry depended on cotton exports from the plantations of the South.[3] Although officially neutral, the British became the primary ship builders and source of military and other supplies for the Confederate government for the duration of the American Civil War.

In 1861 the Confederate naval fleet consisted of only about 35 ships, of which 21 were steam-driven.[4] The Confederacy was in dire need of many basic supplies. Without the resources of the industrial North, it had to look elsewhere for its supplies. Coming to their aid, Raphael Semmes[a], an experienced former U.S. naval captain, devised a plan by which to thwart the naval supremacy of the North. He proposed a militia of privateers that would both strike at the North's merchant ships and provide supplies to the South by out running or evading the ships of the Union blockade. Confederate President Jefferson Davis approved of the plan.[5]

On April 15 President Lincoln issued his first proclamation, calling out 75,000 troops in response to the Confederate bombardment of Fort Sumter. On April 17 Davis issued a proclamation, offering a letter of marque to anyone who would offer their ship in the service of the Confederacy.[6][7][8] To this end British investors were the most prolific in offering such aid.

The North refused to recognize either the sovereignty of the Confederacy or its right to issue letters of marque and, two days later, on April 19, Lincoln issued a second proclamation, threatening the Confederacy with a blockade along its coastlines.[9][10] This was part of General Winfield Scott's Anaconda plan, with the blockade to extend along the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico coastlines and up into the lower Mississippi River.[11][12] Lincoln's proclamation said that any actions against the Union by crews of ships acting under a Confederate letter of marque would be treated as piracy, subject to prosecution, which usually called for the death penalty. In response Davis countered with threats of retaliation. Britain said that it would not abide by the United States prohibitions in nearby Nassau and its territorial waters.[13][14][15]

 
Blockade-runner mail to New Orleans via Nassau, Bahamas, stamped incoming ship 10-cents postage due

Lincoln's proposed blockade was met with mixed criticism among some of his contemporaries. Thaddeus Stevens angrily referred to it as "a great blunder and a absurdity", arguing that "we were blockading ourselves" and, in the process, would be recognizing the Confederacy as a belligerent of war.[16]

Soon after Lincoln announced the blockade, the profitable business of running supplies through the blockade to the Confederacy began.[17] At first the Union was slow to establish its blockade, as the task of patrolling thousands of miles (6,000 km) of coastline was enormous. Many considered the blockade to be little more than a 'paper blockade'. Wilmington, North Carolina, was not blockaded until July 14, 1861, three months after Lincoln's proclamation.[18]

An enormous naval industry evolved which brought great profits for shipbuilders, shippers, and suppliers alike. Throughout the conflict mail was carried also by blockade runners to and from intermediary ports in the West Indies, Nassau, and Bermuda.[19]

Soon Federal forces began to more effectively enforce the coastal blockade and established squadrons at the various Southern ports. They also set up roving patrols just outside British territorial waters in the Caribbean, most notably in the Bahamas, to intersect blockade runners there. As the risk of capture or destruction increased, amateur blockade runners began to cease operations. Most of the trade was handled by sea captains who were soon using specially made steamers to enable them to evade or outrun Union ships on blockade patrol.[12][20]

Union blockade

 
1861 map of Scott's blockade plan, depicting an Anaconda surrounding the Confederate states with a "strangle hold".

General Winfield Scott was one of the few senior men in Washington who realized that this could be a long war. He developed an appropriate naval strategy that would be decisive to the war's outcome. What was called his Anaconda Plan established a naval blockade around the coastline of the Confederacy to limit its economy and supply lines. Because of the thousands of miles of coastline, with many rivers, bays and inlets in addition to developed ports, the blockade proved largely ineffectual during the first couple of years of the war.[21][b] Blockade runners initially imported military supplies to the Confederacy with relative ease. Deliveries of armaments and military supplies to the South, and cotton exports to England were coordinated by military agents such as Major Walker, who played a key role in supplying the Confederacy.[23] Lincoln's proclamation raised issues with England and other powers relating to international law.[24]

In the midst of the blockade, the Confederacy received a supply of arms and other goods from Europe, and exchanged mail. But her exports of cotton fell by 95% from pre-war levels, due to the effectiveness of the blockade in preventing large capacity ships from hauling cargo from Southern ports. This resulted in a dramatic devaluing of the Confederacy’s currency and wrecked its economy.[25][26]

During the course of the Civil War, most of the South's attempts to run the blockade in small ships succeeded. But the captains and crews on blockade patrol became more seasoned and grew wiser to the various tactics employed by blockade runners. During the last two years of the war, the only vessels that continued to get through the blockade were those ships specifically designed for speed.[27][28]

During the first year of the Civil War, the southern ports in the Gulf of Mexico were sites of frequent blockade-running activity. In the first ten months, New Orleans, Louisiana, the largest cotton port in the world, gave port to more than 300 blockade runners. When New Orleans fell to Union forces on April 25, 1862, the center for blockade-running activity shifted to Mobile, Alabama. Once New Orleans and the Mississippi River were secured, the Union Navy increased its blockade of Mobile, Alabama and other ports along the Gulf coast, forcing blockade runners to shift to the port at Galveston, Texas, especially after the summer of 1864. Blockade runners used Havana as a stopover point, for transferring cargoes to and from neutral ships.[29]

Supplying the Confederacy

 
CSS Atlanta, made many runs through the blockade carrying supplies for the Confederate army

The newly formed Confederacy (C.S.A.) was not officially recognized by the various foreign powers, a situation that led the seceded states to seek the aid of various private shipping companies and other businesses, especially overseas where there was interest and willing compliance to sell and ship the much-needed supplies and ordnance to the Confederacy. To handle its important supply dealings and various business affairs, the Confederate government turned to John Fraser & Company, a well-known, patriotic, and respected Charleston-based importing and exporting company which was well connected in England, France, and elsewhere.[30] Established in 1835, John Fraser (Sr.) had turned the business over to his son, John Augustus Fraser, and his senior partner George Alfred Trenholm, who later became Confederate Secretary of the Treasury.[31]

Fraser, Trenholm and Company operated from Liverpool, England, and New York. By 1860 the company had five seagoing vessels, among them the Kate, the Cecil and the Herald,[32] making shipping runs from Liverpool to New York and Charleston, and back again. When the southern states seceded from the Union, it opened the door to even greater business, and in little time nearly all of their business was with the C.S.A.[33] The firm of Fraser, Trenholm & Company in Liverpool became the common connection for the Confederacy's naval and financial dealings in Europe.[34]

Prior to the actual battles of the war, Fraser & Company had already begun negotiations for steamship service between England and points along the southern coast of the Confederacy. Taking advantage of the fact that neither side was fully prepared for war, George Trenholm and his partners began shipping arms from Liverpool and New York to Charleston. The state of South Carolina was the buyer for these first shipments, which in turn sold them to the Confederate government for a substantial profit.[35]

Before war broke out, military arms for the C.S.A. states were in short supply. Little gunpowder was stored among the seceded states, and the availability of fuses and percussion caps was also very limited (the caps in the South amounting to only a half a million). There was no manufacturing facility in the South to produce them in any of the Confederate states. Powder supplies in Florida were so low that, in April 1861, General John B. Grayson warned President Jefferson Davis in Richmond:

As sure as the sun rises, unless cannon, powder, etc., be sent to Florida in the next thirty days, she will fall into the hands of the North. Nothing human can prevent it.

 
A Confederate blockade runner at anchor at St. George's, Bermuda

Every military center in the South urgently requested ordnance and supplies from Richmond. Because of the incursions of the Union Army, the Confederate Navy had limited coal, with the only domestic sources being located in North Carolina and Alabama.[36]

The well-funded Importing and Exporting Company of Georgia was founded in 1863 by Gazaway Bugg Lamar, a Wall Street banker who had returned to his native Georgia at the outbreak of hostilities.[37]

At this time, the Confederate government depended almost entirely on privately owned commercial ships used as blockade runners. However, the leaders of the Confederacy had enough foresight to realize that the federation needed its own vessels to bring in supplies. Acting for the Confederate Navy Department, James Dunwoody Bulloch began procuring vessels in Europe, most notably the CSS Atlanta. It reached Savannah, Georgia carrying ten thousand Enfield rifles, a million cartridges, two million percussion caps, and 400 barrels of gunpowder, along with swords, revolvers, and other military supplies.[38]

In 1862, because of the Confederate embargo on cotton, more than 75% of textile workers in Britain were either unemployed or working fewer hours. This forced Britain to turn to other nations, like Egypt and India, for badly needed cotton. The Confederate government, in dire need of munitions and other supplies subsequently lifted their embargo on cotton and began selling it at reduced prices to win back British trading.

Late in 1863 the Confederate government began selling cotton to various buyers in Europe, especially Britain, while it also passed a law requiring blockade runners to reserve one-third of their cargo space for shipping cotton. Because of the small cargo capacity of blockade runners, exports of Confederate cotton still fell by 95% from pre-war levels. This also dramatically reduced the import of salt, vital for preserving meat and tanning leather, which had previously been ballast on returning cargo ships.[39]

Central figures

Coordinating the business affairs of the C.S.A. with shipbuilders, purchasing agents, suppliers, and shippers in Liverpool, Nassau, Wilmington and other ports involved the concerted efforts of a number of notable men and shipping firms. Foremost in this effort were Major Josiah C. Gorgas and George Trenholm of Fraser, Trenholm and Company – who worked closely with Gorgas, the Confederate Naval Secretary, and other agents.[40]

 
Major Josiah C. Gorgas

Josiah C. Gorgas

Blockade runners became the chief means to supply the Confederacy. Major Josiah Gorgas, a West Point graduate of 1841, prior to the war had worked in the United States Ordnance Bureau and had served in nearly every arsenal in the nation. While working in the South, he became sympathetic to the secessionist movement. He eventually sided with the Confederacy, becoming the head of the Confederate Ordnance Bureau. Gorgas liaised with Charles Prioleau, who headed Trenholm's Liverpool office, arranging for the shipping of arms and other supplies. Most of the arms sent to the Confederacy departed from Liverpool. During the summer of 1861, Gorgas stockpiled supplies and prepared his first load of cargo, while Trenholm's company procured a suitable ship for the voyage. A 1,200-ton iron-hulled steamer, the Bermuda, was chosen to make the voyage.[41]

Caleb Huse

To coordinate the business and the buying of weapons and supplies in England, Gorgas relied on agents Captain Caleb Huse and Major Edward C. Anderson. Under Gorgas' direction, Huse, a West Point graduate, recently commissioned a captain in the newly established Confederate army,[42] served as an arms procurement agent and purchasing specialist, well known for his successful acquisition of weapons contracts with various European nations. These included Great Britain and Austria, among others. Anderson was sent along to aid Huse and check on his activity.[43]

Huse arranged the sale and procurement of rifles and other ordnance from the London Armoury Company, which became the chief supplier of arms to the Confederacy throughout the war. By February 1863, the Armoury had shipped more than 70,000 rifles to the Confederacy.[41][44] Huse owned several seagoing steamers used in blockade running, and made several trips to Europe and back aboard these vessels.[45]

In April 1861, Huse departed the South for New York, where he met with James Welsman of Trenholm Brothers, and received funds for his trip to England. After stopping at Portland, Maine, he sailed to Liverpool, arriving there on May 10, 1861. He began to search the market for Enfield rifles, a weapon comparable to the popular Springfield rifle used by the Union Army. Because the market was already flooded with orders, Huse finally sought out S. Isaac, Campbell & Company to purchase the supplies needed. His purchase did not reach the Confederacy until later that summer. In the meantime, Huse continued to search for sellers of military supplies.[46]

While in Europe Huse represented the Confederate War Dept. and Ordnance Bureau throughout the entire war; he arranged for credit to be extended when funds were short.[47] These men also acted as liaisons with Charles Prioleau of Fraser, Trenholm & Co. in Liverpool. Through him they would procure the vessels and arrange for the shipment of goods to the Confederacy. Bulloch worked in close correspondence with Confederate Secretary of the Navy Stephen Mallory in the procurement of several British-made blockade-running vessels.[41][48]

James Dunwoody Bulloch

 
James Dunwoody Bulloch, (at left) shown with his half-brother Irvine Stephens Bulloch, was the youngest officer on the CSS Alabama. They were the uncles of Theodore Roosevelt. Photo taken about 1865.

The half-brother of noted C.S.N. officer Irvine Bulloch, James Dunwoody Bulloch was the Confederacy's chief foreign agent in Great Britain. Inside two months after the attack on Fort Sumter, Bulloch arrived at Liverpool where he established his base of operations. As his first order of business he made contact with Confederate Commissioners, Hon. William Yancey and Hon. Dudley Mann, in London. After being welcomed they discussed the diplomatic situation, since they had not been officially received by the British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs – as the Confederate government had not permanently established themselves as an independent foreign power.[49] Bulloch then established a relationship with the shipping firm of Fraser, Trenholm & Company, where he set up a conference with the Fraser-Trenholm officials who were the designated financial agents of the new Confederate government.[50] They arranged for the buying and selling of cotton, being ultimately responsible for shipping approximately seven-eighths of all the cotton exported from the Southern states during the war.[51] Bulloch also arranged for the construction and purchase of the Florida, the Alabama and the Shenandoah.

In 1863 Bulloch contracted with the Laird shipyard for the construction of two ironclad rams to be used against the Union blockade. However, if it could be proven that the contract (or commission) for building these ships was in violation of Britain's neutrality law, the ships could be seized. The Union's minister to Britain, Charles F. Adams, tried to do just that; but he could only gather circumstantial evidence, as Bulloch went to great lengths to conceal his movements. Adams threatened the British government with reprisal: that if the rams escaped, the United States would consider it an act of war. After further consideration, British authorities seized the two vessels and from that point on kept a close watch on Bulloch and other such propositions made by the Confederate government, forcing C.S.A. officials to turn to the French for future commissions.[52] Following that turn of events Bulloch then commissioned a shipbuilder in France to construct the Stonewall, another armored ram.[53][54]

 
John Newland Maffitt

John Newland Maffitt

On April 11, 1862, George W. Randolph, the new Confederate Secretary of War appointed John Newland Maffitt, an officer of the Confederate Navy[55] and a notorious privateer with a long success record, to be the acting agent in Nassau for the Confederacy. Nassau was one of several off shore stopover points for shipments coming into or leaving the Confederate States. Maffitt's duties were broad. "You are authorized to take entire control of all vessels loaded with arms and munitions for the Confederate States." Maffitt's duties included selecting ports of entry and discharging and replacing officers and crews as needed. His only condition was that he first confer with Louis Heylinger, Confederate agent in Nassau.[56] Maffitt would later be given command of the CSS Albemarle.[57]

Blockade runners

The ships employed in blockade-running were almost all privately owned, many of them built by the British or French who sought to maintain trade with the southern states. The Confederate government only had about eleven ships of its own that were employed in the blockade-running effort. Among the most famous blockade runners was the CSS Robert E. Lee, a Scottish built iron-hulled steamer which was eventually captured by Union forces in 1863 [58] and the privately owned SS Syren which made a record 33 successful runs through the Union blockade.[59][60] The blockade runners had a specific function in the handling of cargoes headed for the Confederacy. Purchases of supplies made in England were first shipped to Nassau in the bottoms of British vessels where the cargoes would be transferred to blockade runners, ships of lighter draft and greater speed. From Nassau they would make their way to ports in Wilmington, Charleston and Savannah. Lewis Heylinger of New Orleans was the agent and representative in Nassau for the Confederacy throughout the war. His job was to coordinate the transferring of cargoes arriving from England to the blockade runners and then arrange for shipping to the Confederacy.[61][62]

 
Wilmington on the Cape Fear River
 
See also :First and Second Battles of Charleston Harbor

The first outbound blockade runner to elude the blockade made its way to Nassau, landing there on December 5, 1861. Blockade runners would typically export cotton to Nassau where it would be stored, then transferred to a neutral ship and sent to England, usually Liverpool.[41] By the end of the war, 397 ships sailed from the Confederacy to Nassau, and 588 went from Nassau to the Confederacy.[63]

Because of the great bulk and weight involved with shipping cannons, arms and gunpowder, owners of the small blockading vessels instead preferred to ship luxury and other smaller items of less weight into Confederate ports. This began to compromise the purpose of the blockade runners original mission, i.e. supplying the Confederate Army. Subsequently, the Confederacy enacted regulations in February, 1864, limiting the importation of luxury items, which however, were often evaded.[64][65]

Oftentimes vessels departing from various ports in Bermuda ran to Wilmington and Charleston from where most of the supplies were then shipped by rail to Augusta, the main depot for the Western armies, or to Richmond, the main eastern depot. Imports shipped to Galveston were also sent by rail to Houston. By 1863 Union attacks along the Confederate coast made running the blockade more difficult, forcing blockade runners to use other ports besides those at Wilmington, Charleston and Savannah. After the capture of New Orleans in 1862 the ports in Mobile and Galveston were the next choice, used in conjunction with Havana as a transfer point.[29][66]

Unlike Charleston and Savannah, Wilmington was the central depot for blockade runners throughout most of the Civil War. Between October, 1864, and January, 1865, 8,632,000 pounds of meat, 1,507,000 pounds of lead, 1,933,000 pounds of saltpeter, 546,000 pairs of shoes, 316,000 pairs of blankets, half a million pounds of coffee, 69,000 rifles, and 43 cannon reached the Confederates through the port of Wilmington alone, while cotton sufficient to pay for these purchases was exported. When Wilmington fell in February, 1865, the Confederacy's major supply line was cut, and Union victory was assured.[67]

The Union made several attempts to stop the ships coming and going; but it proved to be a futile effort, as the blockade runners were built for speed. This was made plainly evident on December 23, 1864, when the largest Union fleet ever to assemble in the Atlantic attacked Fort Fisher, a massive fortification protecting the Cape Fear River entrance and Wilmington. While the fleet of 125 Men-of-war and transports were blockading the harbor, an incoming blockade runner passed through the fleet and took refuge upriver. The last blockade runner to make its way into Wilmington's port was the SS Wild Rover, on January 5, 1865. The fort was attacked a second time on January 13, and after a two-day siege it was captured on January 15 by the Union Army and Navy.[68] Several blockade runners previously docked upriver managed to escape in the midst of the battle. Prior to the capture of the fort, Rear Admiral Porter, in command of the eastern flotilla, wrote to the war department,

"Blockade running seems almost as brisk as ever, the new class of blockade runners are very fast and sometimes come in and play around our vessels, they are built entirely for speed."[69]

Eventually, Union attacks were also being made along the Bermuda coast, where Union man-of-war ships often seized neutral vessels and their cargoes. This outraged Lewis Heyliger, who was appointed by the Treasury of the Confederacy as head of the "depository" of Confederate funds in Nassau, Bahamas. Among his chief duties was to coordinate shipments of cotton and tobacco to England, and to organize and conduct the purchase of incoming cargoes.[70][71]


The first blockade-runners

Soon after Lincoln's proclamation, lighter vessels specifically designed to evade and outrun Union ships on blockade patrol, called blockade-runners, were being produced. Many of the vessels were built in English shipyards and were designed to be used as fast transports for dispatch purposes, carrying important (often business) correspondence and light cargoes. Inbound vessels carried general mail and other correspondence and typically imported firearms, military ordnance, and paper, a simple commodity that was scarce throughout the agrarian south and badly needed by the Confederate government and general population.[72] One use of paper was for an 1862 postage stamp, Scott catalogue CSA 6. Both the paper and printing plates were brought through the blockade, and enough were printed to make this a very common issue.[73]

The Confederate Navy had a small number of its own seagoing ships used in blockade-running efforts, but most of the ships employed were privately owned vessels. Many of these ships were built and designed in England by various shipping companies and other interested parties for the express purpose of getting through the blockades quickly. The ships that emerged from this enterprise were all side-wheel steamers, long and narrow vessels with a shallow draft allowing them to cut through the water more efficiently. Many were painted a dark gray color so they would blend in better with the backdrop of the night sea. A few ships were painted white to help obscure their profile against the daytime horizon. While crossing great expanses of ocean, the steamers would burn normal coal that produced a dark smoke but when they were about to approach land they would often switch to burning a smokeless anthracite coal which greatly reduced their profile along the horizon. Sometimes these ships would use cotton soaked in turpentine as fuel as it gave off little smoke and produced intense heat that resulted in a marked increase in ship's speed.[74][75]

The first vessel to run the blockade from England was the SS Fingal, Commanded by James D. Bulloch.[76] The first Confederate blockade runner from America bound for England left Charleston and arrived at Nassau on December 5, 1861, with 144 bales of cotton. The trip between Charleston and Nassau took a first-class steamer approximately 48 hours to complete, taking another three days to unload and load again and to recoal.[69]

Notable blockade runners

The first Confederate ship to put to sea was the CSS Sumter, a former Spanish screw steamer of 500 tons, that was outfitted with cannons and other provisions for war time use. On April 18, 1861, Commander Raphael Semmes took command of the vessel and a dozen officers and crew. [c] On June 30, 1861, the Sumter sailed from the mouth of the Mississippi River and was promptly chased by a Union steamer, USS Brooklyn, but managed to get out to sea and make her way to Cuba, where it engaged other merchant ships and took them as prizes.[5]

Among the notable blockade runners were privately owned vessels like the SS Syren, a 169-foot (52 m) steel-hulled sidewheel steamer that made a record 33 successful runs through the Union blockade.[59][60] and the CSS Advance that completed more than 20 successful runs before being captured. After its capture it was renamed USS Advance in 1864 and USS Frolic in 1865.[77]

The first ship to evade the Union blockade was the A and A, a bark from Belfast, making its way from Charleston harbor. The General Parkhill, a British ship built in Liverpool, England, was the first blockade runner to be captured by the USS Niagara also at Charleston harbor.[78] Clyde steamers were particularly suitable, and many were sold to Confederate agents.

Screw-driven steamers:


  • SS Fingal (1861) [d], (CSS Atlanta ironclad 1862–63). An iron merchant screw-steamer of 462 tons built by J & G Thomson at Govan, Scotland, 1861. Sold to John Low for the Confederate States Navy. Fingal was the last blockade runner to enter Savannah, GA, November 1861, with a large cargo of Enfield rifles, cannon and military supplies. After two unsuccessful attempts to break out of the blockade, she was converted into the ironclad CSS Atlanta (1862–1863). On its second sortie she was out-dueled by two Union monitors, captured and put into service on the James River as the ironclad USS Atlanta.[79][80][81][82]
  • CSS Florida (1862), (cruiser 1862–64). Commissioned August 17, 1862, at Green Cay, Bahamas. Commanded by Capt. John Newland Maffitt. Sailed to Cardenas and Havana, Cuba, before making the famous run into Mobile Bay, Alabama, on September 4, 1862.[83][84]
  • SS Laurel (1864). A 207-foot iron hull single-screw steamer, commanded by Lt. John F. Ramsey, CSN, made 1 successful blockade run as CSS vessel, owned by the CSA, renamed Confederate States and survived the war.[85]
  • CSS Sumter (1861), (cruiser 1861–62). A 437-ton screw steamer cruiser, was built at Philadelphia as the merchant steamship Habana Purchased by the Confederate Government at New Orleans in April 1861, she was converted to a cruiser and placed under the command of Raphael Semmes. While coaling and getting supplies at Martinique she was blockaded by Federal sloop of war USS Iroquois, but ran the blockade and made her way out to sea. Sumter captured another six ships from late November into January 1862, while cruising in European waters.[86] In January 1862 the Sumter was sent to Gibraltar but was unexpectedly captured by Federal men-of-war ships and was later sold, thus ending her career as a blockade-runner.[87] [CSS Sumter is not the CSS General Sumter cottonclad river gunboat (1861–1862), then named USS Sumter on capture and deployed in the Gulf blockade.]

Side-wheel steamers:


  • CSS Advance (1863–64), also A.D. Vance. A side-wheel steamer, built at Greenock, Scotland, in 1862, purchased by the CSA (North Carolina) [88] under the name Lord Clyde in 1863, renamed Advance for running Union blockade. Vessel made 20 blockade runs before its capture on September 10, 1864, by USS Santiago de Cuba off Wilmington, North Carolina. Renamed USS Frolic in 1865.[89]
  • CS Eagle, a Spofford & Tileston steamship.[90]
  • CSS Flamingo, three stacked, sloop rigged steamer, Confederate Navy owned. One of the largest types of blockade running vessels operating out of ports in England that carried high priority cargoes.[48]
  • CSS Kate (1861–1862). A 165-foot wooden sidewheel steamer of 477 tons, made 20 successful blockade runs. Built in New York and purchased by John Fraser & Co, it eventually ran aground at Cape Fear, November 18, 1862.[91][92]
  • SS Lynx (1861–1864), a 220-foot steel hull sidewheel steamer, made 9 successful blockade runs, owned by Fraser Trenholm & Co., destroyed trying to leave Wilmington, September 25, 1864.[23]
  • CSS Robert E. Lee (1862–1863). A schooner-rigged, iron-hulled, paddle-steamer of the Confederate Navy, used as a blockade runner, commanded by Lieutenant Richard H. Gayle. Captured November 9, 1863, off the coast of North Carolina by USS James Adger and USS Iron Age.[93][94]
  • Scottish Chief (1861-1864), a steamer owned and captained by Tampa, Florida mayor James McKay which made several runs carrying Florida cattle and cotton from Tampa to Spanish Cuba through the Union blockade of Tampa Bay. Burned at its moorings on the Hillsborough River during the Battle of Fort Brooke, a Union raid with the primary objective of destroying the Chief.[95]
  • SS Syren (1863–1865), a privately owned iron-hulled sidewheel steamer, built at Greenwich, Kent, England, in 1863 for a blockade runner. Owned by the Charleston Importing and Exporting Company, she made her first run on November 5, 1863, running supplies from Nassau to Wilmington. The Syren completed a record 33 runs through the blockade, the most of any blockade runner.[59][96] Her career as a blockade runner came to an end when the Syren, along with the other steamers Celt, Deer and Lady Davis, were captured in Charleston harbor at the Ashley River, where she had successfully run in through the blockade the night before, on February 18, 1865.[97]
  • SS Tristram Shandy (1864), an iron-hulled sidewheel steamer completed in 1864 at Greenock, Scotland, used as a blockade runner, captured May 15, 1864 by the USS Kansas.[98]
Less notable Blockade Runners

This list is by no means complete. Hundreds of ships attempted to run the blockade throughout most of the Civil War.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Some historians spell it as 'Semins'[5]
  2. ^ Though the Union Navy was slow to meet the needs of the blockade, it is generally accepted that if it was not for its presence at various battles, along with the blockade it had imposed on the Confederacy, the Union would have lost the war.[22] When Union troops were not coordinated with the Union Navy, they often had to retreat from engagements. i.e., George McClellan was forced to retreat from Richmond and seek protection along the James River under the guns of the naval vessels stationed there. Without support of a naval presence on the Rappahannock and Rapidan rivers, Union General John Pope's flanks were pushed back by Stonewall Jackson as Confederate troop movement went unabated at the Battle of Cedar Mountain.
  3. ^ Officers of CSS Sumter, first Confederate ship put to sea.
    Lieuts. John M. Kell, Robert T. Chapman, John M. Stribling, William E. Evans, paymaster Henry Myers, Suergon Francis L. Galt, Midshipman William A. Hicks, Richard F. Armstrong, Albert G. Hudgins, John F. Holden and Joseph D. Wilson; Lieut. of Marines B.K. Howell; Engineers Miles J. Freeman, William P. Brooks, Matthew O'Brian and Simeon W. Cummings; Boatswain Benjamin P. McCaskey; Gunner J.O. Cuddly; Sailmaker W.P. Beaufort, Carpenter William Robinson and Captain's clerk Breedlove Smith.[5]
  4. ^ Not to be confused with SS Fingal (1923)

References

  1. ^ Tans, 1995 p. 24
  2. ^ Homser, 1913 pp.163–165
  3. ^ Bulloch, 1884 p.2
  4. ^ Calore, 2002 p.60
  5. ^ a b c d Evans, 1899 p.100
  6. ^ Cooper, 2001 p.366
  7. ^ Scharf, 1894 pp.53–54
  8. ^ Boyd, 2010, p. 48
  9. ^ Bostick, 2010 p.11
  10. ^ Richter, 2004 p.228
  11. ^ Sandburg, 1954 p.234
  12. ^ a b Merli, 1970 p.236
  13. ^ Merli, 1970 p.48
  14. ^ Jones. 1992 p.22
  15. ^ Semmes, 1869 p.83
  16. ^ Donald, 1996 pp.302–303
  17. ^ Tans, 1995 p.18
  18. ^ Frajola, 2012 p.2
  19. ^ Walske, 2011 p.1
  20. ^ Shingleton, 1994 p.39
  21. ^ Tans, 1995 p.1
  22. ^ Bennett, 1897 p.196
  23. ^ a b Frajola, 2012 p.12
  24. ^ Jones. 1992 p.47
  25. ^ Scharf, 1894 p.v-vi
  26. ^ Tans, 1995 p.26
  27. ^ Merli, 1970 p.246
  28. ^ Bulloch, 1884 p.57
  29. ^ a b Tans, 1995 p.13
  30. ^ Carr, 1988, pp. 15, 101, 166
  31. ^ Soley, 1885 p.182
  32. ^ Konstam, Bryan, 2004 p.11
  33. ^ Wise, 1991 pp.46–47
  34. ^ Spencer p.6
  35. ^ Wise, 1991 p.47
  36. ^ Scharf, 1894 pp.49–51
  37. ^ Thomas Lamar Coughlin, Those Southern Lamars ISBN 0-7388-2410-0
  38. ^ Coulter, 1950 p. 290
  39. ^ Nelson & Sheriff, 2007, p. 166
  40. ^ Wise, 1991 p. 48
  41. ^ a b c d Konstam, Bryan, 2004 p.8
  42. ^ Mendelsohn, 2012, p. 41
  43. ^ Spencer p.20
  44. ^ Katcherl, 2003 p.54
  45. ^ Wise, 1991 pp.48–50
  46. ^ Wise, 1991 p.49
  47. ^ Bulloch, 1884 p.53
  48. ^ a b Wyllie, 2007 p.51
  49. ^ Bulloch, 1884 pp.51–52
  50. ^ Merli, 1970 p.62
  51. ^ Scharf, 1894 p.468
  52. ^ Richter, 2004, pp.143–144
  53. ^ Scharf, 1894 p.783
  54. ^ Heidler, 2004 p.1881
  55. ^ Soley, pp.183–184
  56. ^ Shingleton, 1994 p.41
  57. ^ Browning, 1993 p.112
  58. ^ Tans, 1995 p.25
  59. ^ a b c Wise, 1991 p.163
  60. ^ a b Heidler, 2002 p.245
  61. ^ U.S. Congress, 1893–1894 p.581
  62. ^ Wyllie, 2007 p.184
  63. ^ Stark, 1891 p.93
  64. ^ Stern, 1962, p. 225
  65. ^ McPherson, 1988, p. 380
  66. ^ Wagner, Gallagher, McPherson, 2006 p.236
  67. ^ Fuller, 1929, p. 33
  68. ^ a b Walske, 2011 p.8
  69. ^ a b Stark, 1891 pp.97–98
  70. ^ Wise, 1991 p. 133
  71. ^ Peters, 1939 p. 16
  72. ^ Herbert, 1894 p. 53
  73. ^ . Archived from the original on October 5, 2017. Retrieved October 5, 2017.
  74. ^ Tans, 1995 p. 19
  75. ^ Herbert, 1894 p. 46
  76. ^ Huse, 1904, p. 32
  77. ^ Wyllie, 2007 p. 22
  78. ^ Bostick, 2010 pp.11–12
  79. ^ Merli, 1970 p. 244
  80. ^ Soley, 1885 p. 116
  81. ^ Wise, 1991 pp. 53–54
  82. ^ Spencer, 1997 pp. 24, 87
  83. ^ a b Walske, 2011 p. 4
  84. ^ Ellis, Article
  85. ^ Frajola, 2012 p. 8
  86. ^ U.S. Navy, DANFS, CSS General Sumter page article
  87. ^ Homser, 1913 p.109
  88. ^ Coulter, 1950 p. 292
  89. ^ U.S. Navy, DANFS, Advance, page article
  90. ^ a b Walske, 2011 p. 2
  91. ^ Walske, 2011 p. 17
  92. ^ Frajola, 2012 p. 4
  93. ^ Wyllie, 2007 p. 196
  94. ^ Wilkinson, 1877 p. 65
  95. ^ Bair, Cinnamon (April 13, 2012). "Scottish Chief, the Pride of Tampa Bay". The Lakeland Ledger. Retrieved January 5, 2021.
  96. ^ Frajola, 2012 p. 6
  97. ^ "Civil War Naval History". History Central. Retrieved May 17, 2012.
  98. ^ U.S. Navy, DANFS, Tristram Shandy, page article
  99. ^ U.S. Navy, DANFS, (USS) Hornet, page article
  100. ^ Walske, 2011 p.3
  101. ^ Walske, 2011 p.9
  102. ^ Scharf, 1894 p. 532
  103. ^ Walske, 2011 p.x
  104. ^ a b Walske, 2011 p. 21
  105. ^ Walske, 2011 p. 14
  106. ^ Walske, 2011 p. 16
  107. ^ Walske, 2011 p.18
  108. ^ Walske, 2011 p. 19
  109. ^ Walske, 2011 p. 22
  110. ^ Walske, 2011 p. 24
  111. ^ a b Walske, 2011 p. 25
  112. ^ Walske, 2011 p. 29
  113. ^ a b Walske, 2011 p. 30
  114. ^ a b Walske, 2011 p.31
  115. ^ Bennett, 1897 p. 251

Works cited

Secondary sources

  • Bennett, Frank M. (1897). The Steam Navy of the United States (PDF). Warren & Company Publishers, Philadelphia. 979 pages.
  • Bostick, Douglas W. (2010). Charleston Under Siege: The Impregnable City. The History Press, Charleston, South Carolina, 158 pages. ISBN 978-1-5962-9757-9.
  • Boyd, Steven R. (2010). Patriotic Envelopes of the Civil War: The Iconography of Union and Confederate Covers. LSU Press. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-8071-3796-3.
  • Browning, Robert M. Jr. (1993). From Cape Charles to Cape Fear. The North Atlantic Blockading Squadron during the Civil War. University of Alabama Press, 472 pages. ISBN 978-0-8173-0679-3.
  • Cochran, Hamilton (1958). Blockade Runners of the Confederacy. Bobbs-Merrill; Original, Univ. California, 350 pages.
  • Dept U.S. Navy. Ships of the Confederate States. Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Department Of The Navy -- Naval Historical Center.
  • Calore, Paul (2002). Naval Campaigns of the Civil War. McFarland, 232 pages. ISBN 978-0-7864-8032-6.
  • Canney, Donald L. (1998). Lincoln's Navy: The Ships, Men and Organization, 1861-65. Naval Institute Press. pp. 232. ISBN 978-1-5575-0519-4. screw steamer.
  • Carr, Dawson (1988). Gray Phantoms of the Cape Fear: Running the Civil War Blockade. John F. Blair, Publisher. 227 pages. ISBN 978-0-8958-7552-5.
  • Confederate Congress, 1861–1865 (1905). Journal of the Congress of the Confederate States of America, 1861–1865. U.S. Government Printing Office, 917 pages. Washington.
  • Cooper, William J. (2001). Jefferson Davis, American. Random House Digital, Inc, 848 pages. ISBN 0-394-56916-4.
  • Coulter, Ellis Merton (1950) [1994 reprint]. The Confederate States of America, 1861–1865 (7th printing ed.). Louisiana State University Press. p. 644. ISBN 0-8071-0007-2.
  • Donald, David Herbert (1996). Lincoln. Simon and Schuster, New York. ISBN 978-0-6848-2535-9. 714 pages.
  • Ellis, John E. "Confederate States Navy, Museum, Library & Research Institute". Confederate States Navy Research Library, Mobile, Alabama. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
  • Evans, Clement Anselm (1899). Confederate military history: a library of Confederate States history, Volume 12. Confederate publishing company. 403 pages.
  • Frajola, Richard (2011). (PDF). Richard Frajola. p. 16. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 16, 2012. Retrieved May 5, 2012.
  • Heidler, David Stephen & Jeanne T.; Coles, David J. (2002). Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History. W. W. Norton & Company, New York. p. 2733. ISBN 978-0-3930-4758-5.
  • Hosmer, James Kendall (1913). The American civil war, Volume 2. Harper & Brothers Publishers, New York, London. pp. 351.
  • Jones, Howard (1992). Union in Peril: The Crisis Over British Intervention in the Civil War. University of North Carolina Press Press. p. 300. ISBN 9780807820483.
  • Katcher, Philip R. N. (2003). The Army of Northern Virginia: Lee's Army in the American Civil War, 1861–1865. Fitzroy Dearborn, New York. p. 352. ISBN 1-57958-331-8.
  • Konstam, Angus; Bryan, Tony (2004). Confederate Blockade Runner 1861-65. Osprey Publishing, Wisconsin. p. 48. ISBN 978-1-8417-6636-2.
  • MacDonald, John (2009). The Historical Atlas of the Civil War. Chartwell Books, New York. p. 400. ISBN 9780785827030.
  • McNeil, Jim (2003). Masters of the Shoals: Tales of the Cape Fear Pilots Who Ran the Union Blockade. Da Capo Press. p. 188. ISBN 0-306-81280-0.
  • McPherson, James M. (1988). Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-503863-0.
  • McPherson, James M., War on the Waters: The Union & Confederate Navies, 1861-1865 University of North Carolina Press, 2012, ISBN 978-0-8078-3588-3
  • Mendelsohn, Adam (2012). Mark K. Bauman (ed.). "Samuel and Saul Isaac: International Jewish Arms Dealers, Blockade Runners, and Civil War Profiteers". Southern Jewish Historical Society. Academia.edu. 15: 41–79.
  • Merli, Frank J. (1970). Great Britain and the Confederate Navy, 1861–1865. Indiana University Press, Indiana. p. 342. ISBN 0-253-21735-0.
  • Nelson, Scott Reynolds; Sheriff, Carol (2007). A People at War: Civilians and Soldiers in America's Civil War. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-1997-2597-7.
  • Peters, Thelma Peterson (1939). The Bahamas and Blockade-running During the American Civil War. Duke University, North Carolina. p. 145. ISBN 1-57958-331-8.
  • Richter, William L. (2004). Historical Dictionary of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Scarecrow Press, Maryland. p. 968. ISBN 9780810865631.
  • Sandburg, Carl (1954). Abraham Lincoln. Galahad Books, New York. pp. 762. ISBN 0-88365-832-1.
  • Shingleton, Royce (1994). High Seas Confederate: The Life and Times of John Newland Maffitt. University of South Carolina Press. pp. 160. ISBN 0-87249-986-3.
  • Soley, James Russell (1885). The Blockade And The Cruisers. Digital Scanning Inc. p. 276. ISBN 1-58218-556-5.
  • Spencer, Warren F. (1997). The Confederate Navy in Europe. University of Alabama Press Press. p. 288. ISBN 0-87249-986-3.
  • Stark, James H. (1891). Stark's history and guide to the Bahama Islands. Duke University, North Carolina. p. 243.
  • Stern, Phillip Van Doren (1962). The Confederate Navy. Doubleday & Company, Inc.
  • Tans, Jochem H. (1995). (PDF). The Concord Review, Inc. p. 30. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 16, 2010. Retrieved April 29, 2012.
  • U.S. Congress, 1893–1894 (1895). Congressional edition, Volume 3267, Issue 1. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington. p. 989.
  • Wagner, Margaret E.; Gallagher, Gary W.; McPherson, James M. (2006). The Library of Congress Civil War Desk Reference. Simon and Schuster Inc., New York, 2006. p. 976. ISBN 9785878530880.
  • Walske, Steven (2011). Civil War Blockade Mail: 1861–1865 (PDF). Steve Walske Exhibition at WESTPEX 2011. p. 32.
  • Wilson, Walter E.; McKay, Gary L. (2012). James D. Bulloch: Secret Agent and Mastermind of the Confederate Navy. McFarland, North Carolina. p. 362. ISBN 978-0786466597.
  • Wise, Stephen R. (1991). Lifeline of the Confederacy: Blockade Running During the Civil War. Univ of South Carolina Press. pp. 403. ISBN 0-87249-554-X.
  • —— (1994). Gate of Hell: Campaign for Charleston, 1863. Univ of South Carolina Press. p. 312. ISBN 9780872499850.
  • Wyllie, Arthur (2007). The Union Navy. Lulu.com. p. 668. ISBN 978-1-4303-2117-0.[self-published source]
  • —— (2007). Confederate Officers. Lulu.com. p. 580. ISBN 978-0-615-17222-4.
  • —— (2007). The Confederate States Navy. Lulu.com. p. 466. ISBN 978-0-615-17222-4.[self-published source]

Primary sources

  • Bulloch, James Dunwody (1884). The secret service of the Confederate States in Europe, or, How the Confederate cruisers were equipped. G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 460 pages.
  • Huse, Caleb (1904). The supplies for the Confederate Army : how they were obtained in Europe and how paid for. Boston: Press of T. R. Marvin & son.
  • Gorgas, Josiah (1995). Wiggins, Sarah Woolfolk (ed.). The Journals of Josiah Gorgas, 1857–1878. University of Alabama Press, 305 pages. ISBN 0-8071-0007-2.
  • Scharf, John Thomas (1894). History of the Confederate States navy from its organization to the surrender of its last vessel. Joseph McDonough, Albany, N.Y. pp. 824. ISBN 1-58544-152-X.
  • Semmes, Raphael (1864). The Cruise of the Alabama and the Sumter. Massachusetts: Digital Scanning, Inc. p. 348. ISBN 1-58218-355-4.
  • —— (1869). Memoirs of service afloat: during the war between the states. Kelly, Piet & Co., Baltimore. pp. 833. ISBN 1-58218-556-5.
  • Wilkinson, John (1877). The Narrative of a Blockade-Runner. Sheldon & Company, New York. p. 252. ISBN 978-1287791980.
  • Woods, Robert H.; Rush, Richard (1896). Official records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion. Government Printing Office, United States. Naval War Records Office, United States. p. 276. ISBN 1-58218-556-5. under the direction of Hon. H.A. Herbert, Secretary of the Navy Office of Naval Records and Library

Further reading

  • Abbot, Willis J. (1890). The Naval History Of The United States. New York: Peter Fenelon Collier. pp. 438. decatur.
  • Bennett, Michael J. (2004). Union Jacks: Yankee Sailors in the Civil War. Univ of North Carolina Press. pp. 337. ISBN 978-0-8078-2870-0.
  • Bigelow, John (1888). France and the Confederate navy, 1862-1868. New York, Harper & brothers.
  • Buker, George E. (1993). Blockaders, Refugees & Contrabands: Civil War on Florida's Gulf Coast, 1861–1865. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. p. 235. ISBN 978-0-8173-0682-3.
  • Durham, Roger S. (2005). High Seas and Yankee Gunboats: A Blockade-Running Adventure from the Diary of James Dickson. Univ of South Carolina Press. p. 185. ISBN 978-1-57003-572-2.
  • Graham, Eric J. (2006). Clyde Built: Blockade Runners, Cruisers And Armoured Rams of the American Civil War. Birlinn, UK. p. 238. ISBN 978-1-84158-584-0.
  • Hearn, Chester G. (1992). Gray raiders of the sea: How eight Confederate warships destroyed the Union's high seas commerce. International Marine Pub. 351 pages. ISBN 978-0-393-04758-5.
  • Jones, Llewellyn Archer (1907). Commerce in war. London, Methuen & co.
  • Jones, Virgil Carrington (1960). The Blockaders: January 1861 - March 1862. Holt, Rinehart, Winston. p. 483.
  • Rhodes, James Ford (1917). History of the Civil War. New York, Boston, London: Macmillan & Co. p. 467. Awarded the Pulitzer Prize in History in 1918: Extensive coverage of Naval theater, blockade runners, David Farragut, David Dixon Porter etc.
  • Scharf, John Thomas (1894). History of the Confederate States Navy from Its Organization to the Surrender of Its Last Vessel. J. McDonough.
  • Tucker, Spencer (2010). The Civil War Naval Encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO, 829 pages. ISBN 978-1-59884-338-5.
  • Still, William N. Jr.; Taylor, John M.; Delaney, Norman C. (1998). Raiders & Blockaders: The American Civil War Afloat. Washington, D.C: Brassey's Inc. p. 263. ISBN 978-1-57488-164-6.
  • Watson, William (1893). The Adventures of a Blockade Runner: Or, Trade in Time of War. T. F. Unwin.
  • Woodworth, Steven E. (1996). The American Civil War: A Handbook of Literature and Research. Greenwood Publishing Group, 754 pages. ISBN 978-1-57958-331-6.

External links

  • Bermuda National Trust Museum
  • Listing of business records of Fraser, Trenholm & Company, 1860–1877
  • Selection of Public Domain books about the Confederate Navy
  • Smithsonian Institution: Blockade mail

blockade, runners, american, civil, throughout, american, civil, blockade, runners, were, seagoing, steam, ships, that, were, used, through, union, blockade, that, extended, some, miles, along, atlantic, gulf, mexico, coastlines, lower, mississippi, river, con. Throughout the American Civil War blockade runners were seagoing steam ships that were used to get through the Union blockade that extended some 3 500 miles 5 600 km along the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coastlines and the lower Mississippi River The Confederate states were largely without industrial capability and could not provide the quantity of arms and other supplies needed to fight against the industrial north To meet this need blockade runners were built in Scotland and England and were used to import the guns ordnance and other supplies that the Confederacy desperately needed in exchange for cotton that the British textile industry needed greatly To penetrate the blockade these relatively lightweight shallow draft ships mostly built in British ship yards and specially designed for speed but not suited for transporting large quantities of cotton had to cruise undetected usually at night through the Union blockade The typical blockade runners were privately owned vessels often operating with a letter of marque issued by the Confederate States of America If spotted the blockade runners would attempt to outmaneuver or simply outrun any Union ships on blockade patrol often successfully AdvanceCivil War blockade runner To avert war time legalities and confiscation these vessels would carry cargoes to and from neutral ports often located in Nassau and Cuba Neutral merchant ships in turn carried these cargoes usually coming from or destined to Great Britain or other points abroad Outbound ships chiefly exported cotton tobacco and other goods for trade and revenue while also carrying important mail and correspondence to suppliers and other interested parties in Europe most often in England Inbound ships usually brought badly needed supplies and mail to the Confederacy Most of the guns and other ordnance of the Confederacy were imported from Britain via these blockade runners Some runners made many successful runs while many others were either captured or destroyed Historians estimate that 2 500 2 800 attempts were made to run the blockade with at least an 80 success rate By the end of the Civil War the Union Navy had captured more than 1 100 blockade runners and had destroyed or run aground another 355 vessels But more importantly it had reduced the South s exports of cotton by 95 from pre war levels devaluing its currency and severely damaging its economy 1 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Union blockade 3 Supplying the Confederacy 3 1 Central figures 3 1 1 Josiah C Gorgas 3 1 2 Caleb Huse 3 1 3 James Dunwoody Bulloch 3 1 4 John Newland Maffitt 4 Blockade runners 4 1 The first blockade runners 5 Notable blockade runners 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Works cited 9 1 Secondary sources 9 2 Primary sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground EditWhen the American Civil War broke out on April 12 1861 the newly formed Confederate States of America had no ships to speak of in its navy In the months leading up to the war the Confederate government sought the help of Great Britain to overcome this as much of the Britain s industry depended on cotton exports from the plantations of the South 3 Although officially neutral the British became the primary ship builders and source of military and other supplies for the Confederate government for the duration of the American Civil War In 1861 the Confederate naval fleet consisted of only about 35 ships of which 21 were steam driven 4 The Confederacy was in dire need of many basic supplies Without the resources of the industrial North it had to look elsewhere for its supplies Coming to their aid Raphael Semmes a an experienced former U S naval captain devised a plan by which to thwart the naval supremacy of the North He proposed a militia of privateers that would both strike at the North s merchant ships and provide supplies to the South by out running or evading the ships of the Union blockade Confederate President Jefferson Davis approved of the plan 5 On April 15 President Lincoln issued his first proclamation calling out 75 000 troops in response to the Confederate bombardment of Fort Sumter On April 17 Davis issued a proclamation offering a letter of marque to anyone who would offer their ship in the service of the Confederacy 6 7 8 To this end British investors were the most prolific in offering such aid The North refused to recognize either the sovereignty of the Confederacy or its right to issue letters of marque and two days later on April 19 Lincoln issued a second proclamation threatening the Confederacy with a blockade along its coastlines 9 10 This was part of General Winfield Scott s Anaconda plan with the blockade to extend along the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico coastlines and up into the lower Mississippi River 11 12 Lincoln s proclamation said that any actions against the Union by crews of ships acting under a Confederate letter of marque would be treated as piracy subject to prosecution which usually called for the death penalty In response Davis countered with threats of retaliation Britain said that it would not abide by the United States prohibitions in nearby Nassau and its territorial waters 13 14 15 Blockade runner mail to New Orleans via Nassau Bahamas stamped incoming ship 10 cents postage due Lincoln s proposed blockade was met with mixed criticism among some of his contemporaries Thaddeus Stevens angrily referred to it as a great blunder and a absurdity arguing that we were blockading ourselves and in the process would be recognizing the Confederacy as a belligerent of war 16 Soon after Lincoln announced the blockade the profitable business of running supplies through the blockade to the Confederacy began 17 At first the Union was slow to establish its blockade as the task of patrolling thousands of miles 6 000 km of coastline was enormous Many considered the blockade to be little more than a paper blockade Wilmington North Carolina was not blockaded until July 14 1861 three months after Lincoln s proclamation 18 An enormous naval industry evolved which brought great profits for shipbuilders shippers and suppliers alike Throughout the conflict mail was carried also by blockade runners to and from intermediary ports in the West Indies Nassau and Bermuda 19 Soon Federal forces began to more effectively enforce the coastal blockade and established squadrons at the various Southern ports They also set up roving patrols just outside British territorial waters in the Caribbean most notably in the Bahamas to intersect blockade runners there As the risk of capture or destruction increased amateur blockade runners began to cease operations Most of the trade was handled by sea captains who were soon using specially made steamers to enable them to evade or outrun Union ships on blockade patrol 12 20 Union blockade Edit 1861 map of Scott s blockade plan depicting an Anaconda surrounding the Confederate states with a strangle hold General Winfield Scott was one of the few senior men in Washington who realized that this could be a long war He developed an appropriate naval strategy that would be decisive to the war s outcome What was called his Anaconda Plan established a naval blockade around the coastline of the Confederacy to limit its economy and supply lines Because of the thousands of miles of coastline with many rivers bays and inlets in addition to developed ports the blockade proved largely ineffectual during the first couple of years of the war 21 b Blockade runners initially imported military supplies to the Confederacy with relative ease Deliveries of armaments and military supplies to the South and cotton exports to England were coordinated by military agents such as Major Walker who played a key role in supplying the Confederacy 23 Lincoln s proclamation raised issues with England and other powers relating to international law 24 In the midst of the blockade the Confederacy received a supply of arms and other goods from Europe and exchanged mail But her exports of cotton fell by 95 from pre war levels due to the effectiveness of the blockade in preventing large capacity ships from hauling cargo from Southern ports This resulted in a dramatic devaluing of the Confederacy s currency and wrecked its economy 25 26 During the course of the Civil War most of the South s attempts to run the blockade in small ships succeeded But the captains and crews on blockade patrol became more seasoned and grew wiser to the various tactics employed by blockade runners During the last two years of the war the only vessels that continued to get through the blockade were those ships specifically designed for speed 27 28 During the first year of the Civil War the southern ports in the Gulf of Mexico were sites of frequent blockade running activity In the first ten months New Orleans Louisiana the largest cotton port in the world gave port to more than 300 blockade runners When New Orleans fell to Union forces on April 25 1862 the center for blockade running activity shifted to Mobile Alabama Once New Orleans and the Mississippi River were secured the Union Navy increased its blockade of Mobile Alabama and other ports along the Gulf coast forcing blockade runners to shift to the port at Galveston Texas especially after the summer of 1864 Blockade runners used Havana as a stopover point for transferring cargoes to and from neutral ships 29 Supplying the Confederacy Edit CSS Atlanta made many runs through the blockade carrying supplies for the Confederate army The newly formed Confederacy C S A was not officially recognized by the various foreign powers a situation that led the seceded states to seek the aid of various private shipping companies and other businesses especially overseas where there was interest and willing compliance to sell and ship the much needed supplies and ordnance to the Confederacy To handle its important supply dealings and various business affairs the Confederate government turned to John Fraser amp Company a well known patriotic and respected Charleston based importing and exporting company which was well connected in England France and elsewhere 30 Established in 1835 John Fraser Sr had turned the business over to his son John Augustus Fraser and his senior partner George Alfred Trenholm who later became Confederate Secretary of the Treasury 31 Fraser Trenholm and Company operated from Liverpool England and New York By 1860 the company had five seagoing vessels among them the Kate the Cecil and the Herald 32 making shipping runs from Liverpool to New York and Charleston and back again When the southern states seceded from the Union it opened the door to even greater business and in little time nearly all of their business was with the C S A 33 The firm of Fraser Trenholm amp Company in Liverpool became the common connection for the Confederacy s naval and financial dealings in Europe 34 Prior to the actual battles of the war Fraser amp Company had already begun negotiations for steamship service between England and points along the southern coast of the Confederacy Taking advantage of the fact that neither side was fully prepared for war George Trenholm and his partners began shipping arms from Liverpool and New York to Charleston The state of South Carolina was the buyer for these first shipments which in turn sold them to the Confederate government for a substantial profit 35 Before war broke out military arms for the C S A states were in short supply Little gunpowder was stored among the seceded states and the availability of fuses and percussion caps was also very limited the caps in the South amounting to only a half a million There was no manufacturing facility in the South to produce them in any of the Confederate states Powder supplies in Florida were so low that in April 1861 General John B Grayson warned President Jefferson Davis in Richmond As sure as the sun rises unless cannon powder etc be sent to Florida in the next thirty days she will fall into the hands of the North Nothing human can prevent it A Confederate blockade runner at anchor at St George s Bermuda Every military center in the South urgently requested ordnance and supplies from Richmond Because of the incursions of the Union Army the Confederate Navy had limited coal with the only domestic sources being located in North Carolina and Alabama 36 The well funded Importing and Exporting Company of Georgia was founded in 1863 by Gazaway Bugg Lamar a Wall Street banker who had returned to his native Georgia at the outbreak of hostilities 37 At this time the Confederate government depended almost entirely on privately owned commercial ships used as blockade runners However the leaders of the Confederacy had enough foresight to realize that the federation needed its own vessels to bring in supplies Acting for the Confederate Navy Department James Dunwoody Bulloch began procuring vessels in Europe most notably the CSS Atlanta It reached Savannah Georgia carrying ten thousand Enfield rifles a million cartridges two million percussion caps and 400 barrels of gunpowder along with swords revolvers and other military supplies 38 In 1862 because of the Confederate embargo on cotton more than 75 of textile workers in Britain were either unemployed or working fewer hours This forced Britain to turn to other nations like Egypt and India for badly needed cotton The Confederate government in dire need of munitions and other supplies subsequently lifted their embargo on cotton and began selling it at reduced prices to win back British trading Late in 1863 the Confederate government began selling cotton to various buyers in Europe especially Britain while it also passed a law requiring blockade runners to reserve one third of their cargo space for shipping cotton Because of the small cargo capacity of blockade runners exports of Confederate cotton still fell by 95 from pre war levels This also dramatically reduced the import of salt vital for preserving meat and tanning leather which had previously been ballast on returning cargo ships 39 Central figures Edit Coordinating the business affairs of the C S A with shipbuilders purchasing agents suppliers and shippers in Liverpool Nassau Wilmington and other ports involved the concerted efforts of a number of notable men and shipping firms Foremost in this effort were Major Josiah C Gorgas and George Trenholm of Fraser Trenholm and Company who worked closely with Gorgas the Confederate Naval Secretary and other agents 40 Major Josiah C Gorgas Josiah C Gorgas Edit Blockade runners became the chief means to supply the Confederacy Major Josiah Gorgas a West Point graduate of 1841 prior to the war had worked in the United States Ordnance Bureau and had served in nearly every arsenal in the nation While working in the South he became sympathetic to the secessionist movement He eventually sided with the Confederacy becoming the head of the Confederate Ordnance Bureau Gorgas liaised with Charles Prioleau who headed Trenholm s Liverpool office arranging for the shipping of arms and other supplies Most of the arms sent to the Confederacy departed from Liverpool During the summer of 1861 Gorgas stockpiled supplies and prepared his first load of cargo while Trenholm s company procured a suitable ship for the voyage A 1 200 ton iron hulled steamer the Bermuda was chosen to make the voyage 41 Caleb Huse Edit To coordinate the business and the buying of weapons and supplies in England Gorgas relied on agents Captain Caleb Huse and Major Edward C Anderson Under Gorgas direction Huse a West Point graduate recently commissioned a captain in the newly established Confederate army 42 served as an arms procurement agent and purchasing specialist well known for his successful acquisition of weapons contracts with various European nations These included Great Britain and Austria among others Anderson was sent along to aid Huse and check on his activity 43 Huse arranged the sale and procurement of rifles and other ordnance from the London Armoury Company which became the chief supplier of arms to the Confederacy throughout the war By February 1863 the Armoury had shipped more than 70 000 rifles to the Confederacy 41 44 Huse owned several seagoing steamers used in blockade running and made several trips to Europe and back aboard these vessels 45 In April 1861 Huse departed the South for New York where he met with James Welsman of Trenholm Brothers and received funds for his trip to England After stopping at Portland Maine he sailed to Liverpool arriving there on May 10 1861 He began to search the market for Enfield rifles a weapon comparable to the popular Springfield rifle used by the Union Army Because the market was already flooded with orders Huse finally sought out S Isaac Campbell amp Company to purchase the supplies needed His purchase did not reach the Confederacy until later that summer In the meantime Huse continued to search for sellers of military supplies 46 While in Europe Huse represented the Confederate War Dept and Ordnance Bureau throughout the entire war he arranged for credit to be extended when funds were short 47 These men also acted as liaisons with Charles Prioleau of Fraser Trenholm amp Co in Liverpool Through him they would procure the vessels and arrange for the shipment of goods to the Confederacy Bulloch worked in close correspondence with Confederate Secretary of the Navy Stephen Mallory in the procurement of several British made blockade running vessels 41 48 James Dunwoody Bulloch Edit James Dunwoody Bulloch at left shown with his half brother Irvine Stephens Bulloch was the youngest officer on the CSS Alabama They were the uncles of Theodore Roosevelt Photo taken about 1865 The half brother of noted C S N officer Irvine Bulloch James Dunwoody Bulloch was the Confederacy s chief foreign agent in Great Britain Inside two months after the attack on Fort Sumter Bulloch arrived at Liverpool where he established his base of operations As his first order of business he made contact with Confederate Commissioners Hon William Yancey and Hon Dudley Mann in London After being welcomed they discussed the diplomatic situation since they had not been officially received by the British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs as the Confederate government had not permanently established themselves as an independent foreign power 49 Bulloch then established a relationship with the shipping firm of Fraser Trenholm amp Company where he set up a conference with the Fraser Trenholm officials who were the designated financial agents of the new Confederate government 50 They arranged for the buying and selling of cotton being ultimately responsible for shipping approximately seven eighths of all the cotton exported from the Southern states during the war 51 Bulloch also arranged for the construction and purchase of the Florida the Alabama and the Shenandoah In 1863 Bulloch contracted with the Laird shipyard for the construction of two ironclad rams to be used against the Union blockade However if it could be proven that the contract or commission for building these ships was in violation of Britain s neutrality law the ships could be seized The Union s minister to Britain Charles F Adams tried to do just that but he could only gather circumstantial evidence as Bulloch went to great lengths to conceal his movements Adams threatened the British government with reprisal that if the rams escaped the United States would consider it an act of war After further consideration British authorities seized the two vessels and from that point on kept a close watch on Bulloch and other such propositions made by the Confederate government forcing C S A officials to turn to the French for future commissions 52 Following that turn of events Bulloch then commissioned a shipbuilder in France to construct the Stonewall another armored ram 53 54 John Newland Maffitt John Newland Maffitt Edit On April 11 1862 George W Randolph the new Confederate Secretary of War appointed John Newland Maffitt an officer of the Confederate Navy 55 and a notorious privateer with a long success record to be the acting agent in Nassau for the Confederacy Nassau was one of several off shore stopover points for shipments coming into or leaving the Confederate States Maffitt s duties were broad You are authorized to take entire control of all vessels loaded with arms and munitions for the Confederate States Maffitt s duties included selecting ports of entry and discharging and replacing officers and crews as needed His only condition was that he first confer with Louis Heylinger Confederate agent in Nassau 56 Maffitt would later be given command of the CSS Albemarle 57 Blockade runners Edit CSS Ella amp Annie The ships employed in blockade running were almost all privately owned many of them built by the British or French who sought to maintain trade with the southern states The Confederate government only had about eleven ships of its own that were employed in the blockade running effort Among the most famous blockade runners was the CSS Robert E Lee a Scottish built iron hulled steamer which was eventually captured by Union forces in 1863 58 and the privately owned SS Syren which made a record 33 successful runs through the Union blockade 59 60 The blockade runners had a specific function in the handling of cargoes headed for the Confederacy Purchases of supplies made in England were first shipped to Nassau in the bottoms of British vessels where the cargoes would be transferred to blockade runners ships of lighter draft and greater speed From Nassau they would make their way to ports in Wilmington Charleston and Savannah Lewis Heylinger of New Orleans was the agent and representative in Nassau for the Confederacy throughout the war His job was to coordinate the transferring of cargoes arriving from England to the blockade runners and then arrange for shipping to the Confederacy 61 62 Wilmington on the Cape Fear River Charleston HarborSee also First and Second Battles of Charleston Harbor Mobile Bay The first outbound blockade runner to elude the blockade made its way to Nassau landing there on December 5 1861 Blockade runners would typically export cotton to Nassau where it would be stored then transferred to a neutral ship and sent to England usually Liverpool 41 By the end of the war 397 ships sailed from the Confederacy to Nassau and 588 went from Nassau to the Confederacy 63 Because of the great bulk and weight involved with shipping cannons arms and gunpowder owners of the small blockading vessels instead preferred to ship luxury and other smaller items of less weight into Confederate ports This began to compromise the purpose of the blockade runners original mission i e supplying the Confederate Army Subsequently the Confederacy enacted regulations in February 1864 limiting the importation of luxury items which however were often evaded 64 65 Oftentimes vessels departing from various ports in Bermuda ran to Wilmington and Charleston from where most of the supplies were then shipped by rail to Augusta the main depot for the Western armies or to Richmond the main eastern depot Imports shipped to Galveston were also sent by rail to Houston By 1863 Union attacks along the Confederate coast made running the blockade more difficult forcing blockade runners to use other ports besides those at Wilmington Charleston and Savannah After the capture of New Orleans in 1862 the ports in Mobile and Galveston were the next choice used in conjunction with Havana as a transfer point 29 66 Unlike Charleston and Savannah Wilmington was the central depot for blockade runners throughout most of the Civil War Between October 1864 and January 1865 8 632 000 pounds of meat 1 507 000 pounds of lead 1 933 000 pounds of saltpeter 546 000 pairs of shoes 316 000 pairs of blankets half a million pounds of coffee 69 000 rifles and 43 cannon reached the Confederates through the port of Wilmington alone while cotton sufficient to pay for these purchases was exported When Wilmington fell in February 1865 the Confederacy s major supply line was cut and Union victory was assured 67 The Union made several attempts to stop the ships coming and going but it proved to be a futile effort as the blockade runners were built for speed This was made plainly evident on December 23 1864 when the largest Union fleet ever to assemble in the Atlantic attacked Fort Fisher a massive fortification protecting the Cape Fear River entrance and Wilmington While the fleet of 125 Men of war and transports were blockading the harbor an incoming blockade runner passed through the fleet and took refuge upriver The last blockade runner to make its way into Wilmington s port was the SS Wild Rover on January 5 1865 The fort was attacked a second time on January 13 and after a two day siege it was captured on January 15 by the Union Army and Navy 68 Several blockade runners previously docked upriver managed to escape in the midst of the battle Prior to the capture of the fort Rear Admiral Porter in command of the eastern flotilla wrote to the war department Blockade running seems almost as brisk as ever the new class of blockade runners are very fast and sometimes come in and play around our vessels they are built entirely for speed 69 dd dd Eventually Union attacks were also being made along the Bermuda coast where Union man of war ships often seized neutral vessels and their cargoes This outraged Lewis Heyliger who was appointed by the Treasury of the Confederacy as head of the depository of Confederate funds in Nassau Bahamas Among his chief duties was to coordinate shipments of cotton and tobacco to England and to organize and conduct the purchase of incoming cargoes 70 71 The first blockade runners Edit Soon after Lincoln s proclamation lighter vessels specifically designed to evade and outrun Union ships on blockade patrol called blockade runners were being produced Many of the vessels were built in English shipyards and were designed to be used as fast transports for dispatch purposes carrying important often business correspondence and light cargoes Inbound vessels carried general mail and other correspondence and typically imported firearms military ordnance and paper a simple commodity that was scarce throughout the agrarian south and badly needed by the Confederate government and general population 72 One use of paper was for an 1862 postage stamp Scott catalogue CSA 6 Both the paper and printing plates were brought through the blockade and enough were printed to make this a very common issue 73 The Confederate Navy had a small number of its own seagoing ships used in blockade running efforts but most of the ships employed were privately owned vessels Many of these ships were built and designed in England by various shipping companies and other interested parties for the express purpose of getting through the blockades quickly The ships that emerged from this enterprise were all side wheel steamers long and narrow vessels with a shallow draft allowing them to cut through the water more efficiently Many were painted a dark gray color so they would blend in better with the backdrop of the night sea A few ships were painted white to help obscure their profile against the daytime horizon While crossing great expanses of ocean the steamers would burn normal coal that produced a dark smoke but when they were about to approach land they would often switch to burning a smokeless anthracite coal which greatly reduced their profile along the horizon Sometimes these ships would use cotton soaked in turpentine as fuel as it gave off little smoke and produced intense heat that resulted in a marked increase in ship s speed 74 75 The first vessel to run the blockade from England was the SS Fingal Commanded by James D Bulloch 76 The first Confederate blockade runner from America bound for England left Charleston and arrived at Nassau on December 5 1861 with 144 bales of cotton The trip between Charleston and Nassau took a first class steamer approximately 48 hours to complete taking another three days to unload and load again and to recoal 69 Notable blockade runners Edit CSS Robert E Lee The first Confederate ship to put to sea was the CSS Sumter a former Spanish screw steamer of 500 tons that was outfitted with cannons and other provisions for war time use On April 18 1861 Commander Raphael Semmes took command of the vessel and a dozen officers and crew c On June 30 1861 the Sumter sailed from the mouth of the Mississippi River and was promptly chased by a Union steamer USS Brooklyn but managed to get out to sea and make her way to Cuba where it engaged other merchant ships and took them as prizes 5 Among the notable blockade runners were privately owned vessels like the SS Syren a 169 foot 52 m steel hulled sidewheel steamer that made a record 33 successful runs through the Union blockade 59 60 and the CSS Advance that completed more than 20 successful runs before being captured After its capture it was renamed USS Advance in 1864 and USS Frolic in 1865 77 The first ship to evade the Union blockade was the A and A a bark from Belfast making its way from Charleston harbor The General Parkhill a British ship built in Liverpool England was the first blockade runner to be captured by the USS Niagara also at Charleston harbor 78 Clyde steamers were particularly suitable and many were sold to Confederate agents Screw driven steamers SS Fingal 1861 d CSS Atlanta ironclad 1862 63 An iron merchant screw steamer of 462 tons built by J amp G Thomson at Govan Scotland 1861 Sold to John Low for the Confederate States Navy Fingal was the last blockade runner to enter Savannah GA November 1861 with a large cargo of Enfield rifles cannon and military supplies After two unsuccessful attempts to break out of the blockade she was converted into the ironclad CSS Atlanta 1862 1863 On its second sortie she was out dueled by two Union monitors captured and put into service on the James River as the ironclad USS Atlanta 79 80 81 82 CSS Florida 1862 cruiser 1862 64 Commissioned August 17 1862 at Green Cay Bahamas Commanded by Capt John Newland Maffitt Sailed to Cardenas and Havana Cuba before making the famous run into Mobile Bay Alabama on September 4 1862 83 84 SS Laurel 1864 A 207 foot iron hull single screw steamer commanded by Lt John F Ramsey CSN made 1 successful blockade run as CSS vessel owned by the CSA renamed Confederate States and survived the war 85 CSS Sumter 1861 cruiser 1861 62 A 437 ton screw steamer cruiser was built at Philadelphia as the merchant steamship Habana Purchased by the Confederate Government at New Orleans in April 1861 she was converted to a cruiser and placed under the command of Raphael Semmes While coaling and getting supplies at Martinique she was blockaded by Federal sloop of war USS Iroquois but ran the blockade and made her way out to sea Sumter captured another six ships from late November into January 1862 while cruising in European waters 86 In January 1862 the Sumter was sent to Gibraltar but was unexpectedly captured by Federal men of war ships and was later sold thus ending her career as a blockade runner 87 CSS Sumter is not the CSS General Sumter cottonclad river gunboat 1861 1862 then named USS Sumter on capture and deployed in the Gulf blockade Side wheel steamers CSS Advance 1863 64 also A D Vance A side wheel steamer built at Greenock Scotland in 1862 purchased by the CSA North Carolina 88 under the name Lord Clyde in 1863 renamed Advance for running Union blockade Vessel made 20 blockade runs before its capture on September 10 1864 by USS Santiago de Cuba off Wilmington North Carolina Renamed USS Frolic in 1865 89 CS Eagle a Spofford amp Tileston steamship 90 CSS Flamingo three stacked sloop rigged steamer Confederate Navy owned One of the largest types of blockade running vessels operating out of ports in England that carried high priority cargoes 48 CSS Kate 1861 1862 A 165 foot wooden sidewheel steamer of 477 tons made 20 successful blockade runs Built in New York and purchased by John Fraser amp Co it eventually ran aground at Cape Fear November 18 1862 91 92 SS Lynx 1861 1864 a 220 foot steel hull sidewheel steamer made 9 successful blockade runs owned by Fraser Trenholm amp Co destroyed trying to leave Wilmington September 25 1864 23 CSS Robert E Lee 1862 1863 A schooner rigged iron hulled paddle steamer of the Confederate Navy used as a blockade runner commanded by Lieutenant Richard H Gayle Captured November 9 1863 off the coast of North Carolina by USS James Adger and USS Iron Age 93 94 Scottish Chief 1861 1864 a steamer owned and captained by Tampa Florida mayor James McKay which made several runs carrying Florida cattle and cotton from Tampa to Spanish Cuba through the Union blockade of Tampa Bay Burned at its moorings on the Hillsborough River during the Battle of Fort Brooke a Union raid with the primary objective of destroying the Chief 95 SS Syren 1863 1865 a privately owned iron hulled sidewheel steamer built at Greenwich Kent England in 1863 for a blockade runner Owned by the Charleston Importing and Exporting Company she made her first run on November 5 1863 running supplies from Nassau to Wilmington The Syren completed a record 33 runs through the blockade the most of any blockade runner 59 96 Her career as a blockade runner came to an end when the Syren along with the other steamers Celt Deer and Lady Davis were captured in Charleston harbor at the Ashley River where she had successfully run in through the blockade the night before on February 18 1865 97 SS Tristram Shandy 1864 an iron hulled sidewheel steamer completed in 1864 at Greenock Scotland used as a blockade runner captured May 15 1864 by the USS Kansas 98 Less notable Blockade RunnersCSS Lady Sterling was a Confederate blockade runner built by James Ash at Cubitt Town London in 1864 She was captured by Union forces of Wilmington on October 28 1864 She was badly damaged and captured by the United States Navy on October 28 1864 off Wilmington North Carolina 99 Denbigh 90 SS West Indian 100 Schooner Break O Day 83 Wild Rover 68 SS Will of the Wisp Ran ashore on February 3 1865 while trying to get into Galveston 101 102 CS Lilian captured by USS Keystone State and USS Gettysburg Aug 24 1864 103 Fannie brought yellow fever to St George from June to October 1864 104 Leopard 8 successful runs 105 CS Julia 106 Flora 107 CSS Cornubia 108 City of Petersburg 104 Old Daminion 109 Herald 110 SS Princess Royal A 774 gross ton screw steam gunboat was built at Glasgow Scotland in 1861 ran aground and captured entering Charleston January 29 1863 111 General Beauregard owned by Fraser Trenholm amp Co 111 Nuestra Senora del Reglo re flagged as USS Commodore Hull 112 Lightening schooner captured off Georgia March 9 1863 113 Volant schooner captured July 2 1862 113 SS Amelia captured by USS Union June 1861 114 CSS Calhoun captured January 23 1862 114 SS Theodora 115 Agnes E Fry The Agnes E Fry was a US Confederate blockade runner built on the River Clyde in Scotland in 1864 She was scuttled near the mouth of the Cape Fear River Oak Island North Carolina sometime around January 1865 The ship s wreckage may have been found by sonar on February 27 2016 This list is by no means complete Hundreds of ships attempted to run the blockade throughout most of the Civil War See also Edit American Civil War portalBahamas in the American Civil War Bibliography of early American naval history American Civil War Bibliography of the American Civil War Naval history Postage stamps and postal history of the Confederate States Blockade mail List of ships captured in the 19th century American Civil War List of ships of the Confederate States Navy Prize law Wilmington North Carolina in the American Civil WarNotes Edit Some historians spell it as Semins 5 Though the Union Navy was slow to meet the needs of the blockade it is generally accepted that if it was not for its presence at various battles along with the blockade it had imposed on the Confederacy the Union would have lost the war 22 When Union troops were not coordinated with the Union Navy they often had to retreat from engagements i e George McClellan was forced to retreat from Richmond and seek protection along the James River under the guns of the naval vessels stationed there Without support of a naval presence on the Rappahannock and Rapidan rivers Union General John Pope s flanks were pushed back by Stonewall Jackson as Confederate troop movement went unabated at the Battle of Cedar Mountain Officers of CSS Sumter first Confederate ship put to sea Lieuts John M Kell Robert T Chapman John M Stribling William E Evans paymaster Henry Myers Suergon Francis L Galt Midshipman William A Hicks Richard F Armstrong Albert G Hudgins John F Holden and Joseph D Wilson Lieut of Marines B K Howell Engineers Miles J Freeman William P Brooks Matthew O Brian and Simeon W Cummings Boatswain Benjamin P McCaskey Gunner J O Cuddly Sailmaker W P Beaufort Carpenter William Robinson and Captain s clerk Breedlove Smith 5 Not to be confused with SS Fingal 1923 References Edit Tans 1995 p 24 Homser 1913 pp 163 165 Bulloch 1884 p 2 Calore 2002 p 60 a b c d Evans 1899 p 100 Cooper 2001 p 366 Scharf 1894 pp 53 54 Boyd 2010 p 48 Bostick 2010 p 11 Richter 2004 p 228 Sandburg 1954 p 234 a b Merli 1970 p 236 Merli 1970 p 48 Jones 1992 p 22 Semmes 1869 p 83 Donald 1996 pp 302 303 Tans 1995 p 18 Frajola 2012 p 2 Walske 2011 p 1 Shingleton 1994 p 39 Tans 1995 p 1 Bennett 1897 p 196 a b Frajola 2012 p 12 Jones 1992 p 47 Scharf 1894 p v vi Tans 1995 p 26 Merli 1970 p 246 Bulloch 1884 p 57 a b Tans 1995 p 13 Carr 1988 pp 15 101 166 Soley 1885 p 182 Konstam Bryan 2004 p 11 Wise 1991 pp 46 47 Spencer p 6 Wise 1991 p 47 Scharf 1894 pp 49 51 Thomas Lamar Coughlin Those Southern Lamars ISBN 0 7388 2410 0 Coulter 1950 p 290 Nelson amp Sheriff 2007 p 166 Wise 1991 p 48 a b c d Konstam Bryan 2004 p 8 Mendelsohn 2012 p 41 Spencer p 20 Katcherl 2003 p 54 Wise 1991 pp 48 50 Wise 1991 p 49 Bulloch 1884 p 53 a b Wyllie 2007 p 51 Bulloch 1884 pp 51 52 Merli 1970 p 62 Scharf 1894 p 468 Richter 2004 pp 143 144 Scharf 1894 p 783 Heidler 2004 p 1881 Soley pp 183 184 Shingleton 1994 p 41 Browning 1993 p 112 Tans 1995 p 25 a b c Wise 1991 p 163 a b Heidler 2002 p 245 U S Congress 1893 1894 p 581 Wyllie 2007 p 184 Stark 1891 p 93 Stern 1962 p 225 McPherson 1988 p 380 Wagner Gallagher McPherson 2006 p 236 Fuller 1929 p 33 a b Walske 2011 p 8 a b Stark 1891 pp 97 98 Wise 1991 p 133 Peters 1939 p 16 Herbert 1894 p 53 Confederate Stamp Primer Online Archived from the original on October 5 2017 Retrieved October 5 2017 Tans 1995 p 19 Herbert 1894 p 46 Huse 1904 p 32 Wyllie 2007 p 22 Bostick 2010 pp 11 12 Merli 1970 p 244 Soley 1885 p 116 Wise 1991 pp 53 54 Spencer 1997 pp 24 87 a b Walske 2011 p 4 Ellis Article Frajola 2012 p 8 U S Navy DANFS CSS General Sumter page article Homser 1913 p 109 Coulter 1950 p 292 U S Navy DANFS Advance page article a b Walske 2011 p 2 Walske 2011 p 17 Frajola 2012 p 4 Wyllie 2007 p 196 Wilkinson 1877 p 65 Bair Cinnamon April 13 2012 Scottish Chief the Pride of Tampa Bay The Lakeland Ledger Retrieved January 5 2021 Frajola 2012 p 6 Civil War Naval History History Central Retrieved May 17 2012 U S Navy DANFS Tristram Shandy page article U S Navy DANFS USS Hornet page article Walske 2011 p 3 Walske 2011 p 9 Scharf 1894 p 532 Walske 2011 p x a b Walske 2011 p 21 Walske 2011 p 14 Walske 2011 p 16 Walske 2011 p 18 Walske 2011 p 19 Walske 2011 p 22 Walske 2011 p 24 a b Walske 2011 p 25 Walske 2011 p 29 a b Walske 2011 p 30 a b Walske 2011 p 31 Bennett 1897 p 251Works cited EditSecondary sources Edit Bennett Frank M 1897 The Steam Navy of the United States PDF Warren amp Company Publishers Philadelphia 979 pages Bostick Douglas W 2010 Charleston Under Siege The Impregnable City The History Press Charleston South Carolina 158 pages ISBN 978 1 5962 9757 9 Boyd Steven R 2010 Patriotic Envelopes of the Civil War The Iconography of Union and Confederate Covers LSU Press p 169 ISBN 978 0 8071 3796 3 Browning Robert M Jr 1993 From Cape Charles to Cape Fear The North Atlantic Blockading Squadron during the Civil War University of Alabama Press 472 pages ISBN 978 0 8173 0679 3 Cochran Hamilton 1958 Blockade Runners of the Confederacy Bobbs Merrill Original Univ California 350 pages Dept U S Navy Ships of the Confederate States Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Department Of The Navy Naval Historical Center Calore Paul 2002 Naval Campaigns of the Civil War McFarland 232 pages ISBN 978 0 7864 8032 6 Canney Donald L 1998 Lincoln s Navy The Ships Men and Organization 1861 65 Naval Institute Press pp 232 ISBN 978 1 5575 0519 4 screw steamer Carr Dawson 1988 Gray Phantoms of the Cape Fear Running the Civil War Blockade John F Blair Publisher 227 pages ISBN 978 0 8958 7552 5 Confederate Congress 1861 1865 1905 Journal of the Congress of the Confederate States of America 1861 1865 U S Government Printing Office 917 pages Washington Cooper William J 2001 Jefferson Davis American Random House Digital Inc 848 pages ISBN 0 394 56916 4 Coulter Ellis Merton 1950 1994 reprint The Confederate States of America 1861 1865 7th printing ed Louisiana State University Press p 644 ISBN 0 8071 0007 2 Donald David Herbert 1996 Lincoln Simon and Schuster New York ISBN 978 0 6848 2535 9 714 pages Ellis John E Confederate States Navy Museum Library amp Research Institute Confederate States Navy Research Library Mobile Alabama Retrieved April 10 2012 Evans Clement Anselm 1899 Confederate military history a library of Confederate States history Volume 12 Confederate publishing company 403 pages Frajola Richard 2011 Tales from the Blockade PDF Richard Frajola p 16 Archived from the original PDF on March 16 2012 Retrieved May 5 2012 Heidler David Stephen amp Jeanne T Coles David J 2002 Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History W W Norton amp Company New York p 2733 ISBN 978 0 3930 4758 5 Hosmer James Kendall 1913 The American civil war Volume 2 Harper amp Brothers Publishers New York London pp 351 Jones Howard 1992 Union in Peril The Crisis Over British Intervention in the Civil War University of North Carolina Press Press p 300 ISBN 9780807820483 Katcher Philip R N 2003 The Army of Northern Virginia Lee s Army in the American Civil War 1861 1865 Fitzroy Dearborn New York p 352 ISBN 1 57958 331 8 Konstam Angus Bryan Tony 2004 Confederate Blockade Runner 1861 65 Osprey Publishing Wisconsin p 48 ISBN 978 1 8417 6636 2 MacDonald John 2009 The Historical Atlas of the Civil War Chartwell Books New York p 400 ISBN 9780785827030 McNeil Jim 2003 Masters of the Shoals Tales of the Cape Fear Pilots Who Ran the Union Blockade Da Capo Press p 188 ISBN 0 306 81280 0 McPherson James M 1988 Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 503863 0 McPherson James M War on the Waters The Union amp Confederate Navies 1861 1865 University of North Carolina Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 8078 3588 3 Mendelsohn Adam 2012 Mark K Bauman ed Samuel and Saul Isaac International Jewish Arms Dealers Blockade Runners and Civil War Profiteers Southern Jewish Historical Society Academia edu 15 41 79 Merli Frank J 1970 Great Britain and the Confederate Navy 1861 1865 Indiana University Press Indiana p 342 ISBN 0 253 21735 0 Nelson Scott Reynolds Sheriff Carol 2007 A People at War Civilians and Soldiers in America s Civil War Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 1997 2597 7 Peters Thelma Peterson 1939 The Bahamas and Blockade running During the American Civil War Duke University North Carolina p 145 ISBN 1 57958 331 8 Richter William L 2004 Historical Dictionary of the Civil War and Reconstruction Scarecrow Press Maryland p 968 ISBN 9780810865631 Sandburg Carl 1954 Abraham Lincoln Galahad Books New York pp 762 ISBN 0 88365 832 1 Shingleton Royce 1994 High Seas Confederate The Life and Times of John Newland Maffitt University of South Carolina Press pp 160 ISBN 0 87249 986 3 Soley James Russell 1885 The Blockade And The Cruisers Digital Scanning Inc p 276 ISBN 1 58218 556 5 Spencer Warren F 1997 The Confederate Navy in Europe University of Alabama Press Press p 288 ISBN 0 87249 986 3 Stark James H 1891 Stark s history and guide to the Bahama Islands Duke University North Carolina p 243 Stern Phillip Van Doren 1962 The Confederate Navy Doubleday amp Company Inc Tans Jochem H 1995 The Hapless Anaconda Union Blockade 1861 1865 PDF The Concord Review Inc p 30 Archived from the original PDF on July 16 2010 Retrieved April 29 2012 U S Congress 1893 1894 1895 Congressional edition Volume 3267 Issue 1 U S Government Printing Office Washington p 989 Wagner Margaret E Gallagher Gary W McPherson James M 2006 The Library of Congress Civil War Desk Reference Simon and Schuster Inc New York 2006 p 976 ISBN 9785878530880 Walske Steven 2011 Civil War Blockade Mail 1861 1865 PDF Steve Walske Exhibition at WESTPEX 2011 p 32 Wilson Walter E McKay Gary L 2012 James D Bulloch Secret Agent and Mastermind of the Confederate Navy McFarland North Carolina p 362 ISBN 978 0786466597 Wise Stephen R 1991 Lifeline of the Confederacy Blockade Running During the Civil War Univ of South Carolina Press pp 403 ISBN 0 87249 554 X 1994 Gate of Hell Campaign for Charleston 1863 Univ of South Carolina Press p 312 ISBN 9780872499850 Wyllie Arthur 2007 The Union Navy Lulu com p 668 ISBN 978 1 4303 2117 0 self published source 2007 Confederate Officers Lulu com p 580 ISBN 978 0 615 17222 4 2007 The Confederate States Navy Lulu com p 466 ISBN 978 0 615 17222 4 self published source Primary sources Edit Bulloch James Dunwody 1884 The secret service of the Confederate States in Europe or How the Confederate cruisers were equipped G P Putnam s Sons New York 460 pages Huse Caleb 1904 The supplies for the Confederate Army how they were obtained in Europe and how paid for Boston Press of T R Marvin amp son Gorgas Josiah 1995 Wiggins Sarah Woolfolk ed The Journals of Josiah Gorgas 1857 1878 University of Alabama Press 305 pages ISBN 0 8071 0007 2 Scharf John Thomas 1894 History of the Confederate States navy from its organization to the surrender of its last vessel Joseph McDonough Albany N Y pp 824 ISBN 1 58544 152 X Semmes Raphael 1864 The Cruise of the Alabama and the Sumter Massachusetts Digital Scanning Inc p 348 ISBN 1 58218 355 4 1869 Memoirs of service afloat during the war between the states Kelly Piet amp Co Baltimore pp 833 ISBN 1 58218 556 5 Wilkinson John 1877 The Narrative of a Blockade Runner Sheldon amp Company New York p 252 ISBN 978 1287791980 Woods Robert H Rush Richard 1896 Official records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion Government Printing Office United States Naval War Records Office United States p 276 ISBN 1 58218 556 5 under the direction of Hon H A Herbert Secretary of the Navy Office of Naval Records and LibraryFurther reading EditAbbot Willis J 1890 The Naval History Of The United States New York Peter Fenelon Collier pp 438 decatur Bennett Michael J 2004 Union Jacks Yankee Sailors in the Civil War Univ of North Carolina Press pp 337 ISBN 978 0 8078 2870 0 Bigelow John 1888 France and the Confederate navy 1862 1868 New York Harper amp brothers Buker George E 1993 Blockaders Refugees amp Contrabands Civil War on Florida s Gulf Coast 1861 1865 Tuscaloosa Alabama University of Alabama Press p 235 ISBN 978 0 8173 0682 3 Durham Roger S 2005 High Seas and Yankee Gunboats A Blockade Running Adventure from the Diary of James Dickson Univ of South Carolina Press p 185 ISBN 978 1 57003 572 2 Graham Eric J 2006 Clyde Built Blockade Runners Cruisers And Armoured Rams of the American Civil War Birlinn UK p 238 ISBN 978 1 84158 584 0 Hearn Chester G 1992 Gray raiders of the sea How eight Confederate warships destroyed the Union s high seas commerce International Marine Pub 351 pages ISBN 978 0 393 04758 5 Jones Llewellyn Archer 1907 Commerce in war London Methuen amp co Jones Virgil Carrington 1960 The Blockaders January 1861 March 1862 Holt Rinehart Winston p 483 Rhodes James Ford 1917 History of the Civil War New York Boston London Macmillan amp Co p 467 Awarded the Pulitzer Prize in History in 1918 Extensive coverage of Naval theater blockade runners David Farragut David Dixon Porter etc Scharf John Thomas 1894 History of the Confederate States Navy from Its Organization to the Surrender of Its Last Vessel J McDonough Tucker Spencer 2010 The Civil War Naval Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO 829 pages ISBN 978 1 59884 338 5 Still William N Jr Taylor John M Delaney Norman C 1998 Raiders amp Blockaders The American Civil War Afloat Washington D C Brassey s Inc p 263 ISBN 978 1 57488 164 6 Watson William 1893 The Adventures of a Blockade Runner Or Trade in Time of War T F Unwin Woodworth Steven E 1996 The American Civil War A Handbook of Literature and Research Greenwood Publishing Group 754 pages ISBN 978 1 57958 331 6 External links EditBermuda National Trust Museum Historic Naval Ships Association Listing of business records of Fraser Trenholm amp Company 1860 1877 Selection of Public Domain books about the Confederate Navy Smithsonian Institution Blockade mail US Naval Historical Center Ships of the Confederate States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blockade runners of the American Civil War amp oldid 1135905490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.