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USS Estrella

Estrella was a paddle steamship built by Samuda Brothers in London in 1853 for the Magdalena Steam Navigation Company's commercial services in present-day Colombia. In 1862 she was sold to United States owners and briefly used as a Union Army transport before being acquired by the Union Navy. She served as the armed steamship USS Estrella during the remainder of the American Civil War, carrying three heavy guns as well as two howitzers for shore bombardment.

USS Estrella (1862–1867) Painting depicting Estrella off the Pensacola Navy Yard, Florida, c. 1866–1867.
History
United Kingdom
NameEstrella
OwnerMagdalena Steam Navigation Company, London
BuilderSamuda Brothers, Blackwall, London
Launched20 August 1853
CompletedOctober 1853
FateSold 1862
United States
NameUSS Estrella
Acquired1862
Commissionedc. October 1862
Decommissioned
FateSold, 9 October 1867

United States, United Kingdom
Name
  • Estrella (1867–1869)
  • Twinkling Star (1869–1873)
Port of registry
  • New York, United States (1867–1869?)
  • Kingston, Jamaica (1869–1873)
Out of service1870
FateSank in Savanna-la-Mar port, 21 May 1873
General characteristics
Typeiron steamship
Tonnage576 GRT
Displacement438 tons
Length176 ft (54 m)
Beam26 ft (8 m)
Draught5 ft (2 m)
Propulsion
Armament
  • (in Union Navy service)
  • 1 × 30-pounder rifled gun
  • 2 × 32-pounder guns
  • 2 × 24-pounder howitzers

Returning to commercial service in 1867, Estrella operated under the American flag and, later, as the British-flag Twinkling Star on services within the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico area. She was seriously damaged in 1870 in Jamaica and later sank in port.

Construction edit

The iron side-wheel paddle steamer Estrella was launched by Samuda Brothers at Blackwall, London on the River Thames on 20 August 1853 for the newly-established Magdalena Steam Navigation Company. She was designed with shallow draught of 5 ft (2 m), suitable for her intended river and coastal transport, and was approximately 176 ft (54 m) in length, with a beam of 26 ft (8 m) and tonnage of 576 GRT. In later United States Navy service she was 438 tons displacement. Estrella had capacity for 60–90 passengers[1][2][3] The ship was powered by a two-cylinder oscillating steam engine with an output of 120 nominal horse-power manufactured by Humphrys, Tennant and Dykes at their new engineworks at Deptford.[2] On her official trials on 27 October she averaged 12 miles per hour. Two smaller vessels were also built and engined for the company by the same shipbuilder and engineers, Anita and Isabel, intended for the passenger trade on the Magdalena River in the Republic of New Granada (now in Colombia).[4]

Commercial service edit

Estrella and Anita sailed from the Thames together on 20 November 1853 and the former arrived at Savanilla, then the main seaport at the mouth of the Magdalena, on 17 January 1854 (Anita a week later) to be prepared for service.[4][5] The timing was unfortunate, as revolution had broken out in Bogota, suppressing the demand for river freight.[3] Nevertheless Estrella made a profitable voyage from Santa Marta to Mompox and Magangué, and a little later was chartered to General Mosquera to carry imported munitions up river.[5][6] On 1 August 1855 she sank in the river Magdalena near Conejo en route to Honda after being holed by a rock; her passengers and crew were saved, and the ship was reported at Lloyd's of London as lost,[7] but in the event refloated and repaired.

In May 1856, the Magdalena Steam Navigation Company concluded that the venture was not sufficiently profitable and should be wound up, for which they intended their three vessels, Estrella, Anita and Isabel, which had been operating under the British flag, should be returned to England for sale.[8][9] However, the company first sought purchasers at Barranquilla in September, with bids to be received by 15 November.[10] Remaining unsold, Estrella and Anita sailed for England on 23 December, but after only two hours steaming Anita developed a serious leak and began sinking in an increasing gale. Some three hours later the boiler of Anita exploded and she sank in deep water, with the loss of half of her crew of 24. Estrella, also hampered by the conditions, was unable to assist the other ship and decided to put back to Santa Marta where she was surveyed at the British Vice-Consul's behest. It was found that Estrella's deck was hogged, probably as a result the earlier sinking and numerous groundings in the Magdalena, and that she was not seaworthy; in addition, the ship's boats were condemned as "entirely worthless". The surveyors advised that she should not leave the coast before the end of May 1857, when weather could be expected to have improved, and that she should carry additional engineers.[9]

In December 1861 Estrella was still in New Granada and provided safe haven for some residents of Santa Marta during the Colombian Civil War.[11] In 1862 the ship was purchased at Savanilla by the firm McLean & Lintz of New York, where she arrived on 28 May after a nine-day voyage in ballast via Kingston, Jamaica; during the voyage she struck a wreck which damaged the starboard paddle wheel and she completed the voyage using only one.[12][13][a] She was then documented at New York as an American ship and chartered by McLean & Lintz to the US Army Quartermaster Department as United States Transport Estrella from 7 July 1862 at US$400 per day.[15][16]

United States Navy service edit

 
Destruction of the CSS Queen of the West by USS Estrella (left), USS Arizona (center) and USS Calhoun (right) on April 11, 1863

Estrella was transferred from the Army to the Navy late in 1862, and commissioned before the end of October, Lieutenant Commander A. P. Cooke in command. She was armed with three heavy guns – two 32-pounders and one 30-pounder with rifled barrel – and with two 24-pounder howitzers, proving versatile and useful in both stopping blockade runners at sea and at bombarding shore positions.

Assigned to the West Gulf Blockading Squadron, Estrella served throughout the war off Mobile, Alabama, and New Orleans, Louisiana, along the Texas coast, and up the rivers flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. During the first 13 days of November 1862 she took part in a series of engagements with CSS J. A. Cotton and Confederate shore batteries along the Atchafalaya River and Bayou Teche. With her captain serving as commander of the flotilla maintained in Berwick Bay, Estrella led the attack on CSS Queen of the West 14 April 1863. The Confederate ship was set afire by Union gunfire and, after 90 of her crew had been rescued, exploded.

Four days later, Cooke led his flotilla up the Atchafalaya once more, to attack the batteries at Butte-a-la-Rose, Louisiana. The batteries were captured intact, with their garrison of 60 men and large supplies of ammunition and commissary stores. A Union Army garrison was at once sent up to hold the town, another key point won by the Union Navy in its continuing campaign to take complete control of coastal areas. From 3 to 6 May 1863, Estrella sailed up the Red River to join in the attack on Fort De Russy, and during June and July participated in the attacks on Port Hudson, Louisiana which led to its fall on 9 July. Many, if not most, of the Estrella sailors who perished during these attacks, including an Acting Master transferred from the Kensington, were later interred at Chalmette National Cemetery. Union naval veterans who lost fathers, brothers, and even fathers-in-law aboard Estrella, frequently returned to Chalmette in denominational rituals of remembrance. Widows, sisters, and daughters completed physical and psychological family sojourns, capitalized on gilded pensions, and corresponded on the cultural memory of corpses, death, and life aboard Estrella. These women most forcefully invoked religiosity in enacting the limits of reconciliation.[17] Other events in her active service included the capture of schooner Julia A. Hodges in Matagorda Bay, Texas, on 6 April 1864 and a leading role in the attacks on Fort Powell in Mobile Bay on 5 August 1864. These attacks were made in coordination with the battle of Mobile Bay.

After being repaired at New Orleans in the first 4 months of 1865, Estrella served as flagship of the West Gulf Blockading Squadron, continuing to cruise in the Gulf of Mexico and its tributary waters until 30 June 1867, when she sailed for New York Navy Yard. Estrella was decommissioned there on 16 July 1867, and sold 9 October 1867.

Return to commercial service edit

According to American Lloyd's Register of 1868, Estrella was re-purchased from the Navy, as the entry is based on a December 1867 survey in New York,[14] and in 1868 she was transferred to Henry Winn, secretary of the Intertropical Company, New York.[18][19][20] In March 1868 Estrella was described as an "American" steamer when reported condemned at Kingston, Jamaica,[21] but in the same year was owned by Lamb & Co of Saint Thomas, then part of the Danish West Indies, when seeking parity of treatment in Venezuelan ports with British ships.[22] On 21 December 1868 the "intercolonial packet sateamer" Estrella was reported wrecked in the Los Roques archipelago on a voyage from Saint Thomas to La Guaira, Puerto Cabello and Curacao, with passengers, mail and general cargo. The passengers and crew survived for five days on an uninhabited island and were rescued on 27 December by the Venezuelan war steamer Bolivar.[23]

After being salved she was taken to Jamaica and was registered on 4 October 1869 as a British ship at the port of Kingston under the ownership of a local, Ralph Nirnes. Renamed Twinkling Star, she was given Official Number 61881, and remeasured at 492 GRT, 334 NRT and dimensions 179.7 ft (54.8 m) in length, beam 25.2 ft (7.7 m) and depth 11.1 ft (3.4 m).[24] Soon afterwards, on 27 November, on voyage from Cap-Haïtien to Port au Prince, Twinkling Star developed an underwater crack below the waterline and began to take water; amid general panic, five passengers, including the American Consul in Jamaica, took to a boat and reached Môle-Saint-Nicolas, Haiti. The ship was later also safely brought to port[25]

A year later, on 30 November 1870, Twinkling Star sailed from Kingston for New Orleans but met very bad weather and was forced to put in to Savanna-la-Mar with boiler damage, leaking hull, sails blown away and a ship's boat stove in; and then in arriving went aground, requiring some of the cargo to be jettisoned.[26][27][28] By 24 December she had been surveyed, condemned and ordered to be sold [29] She remained on moorings at Savanna-la-Mar until 21 May 1873 when she sank in 10 ft water [30]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ American Lloyd's Register describes the ship erroneously as "propeller" rather than "side-wheel", though correct in the 1868 edition.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ "Launch". The Globe. No. 17, 197. London. 23 August 1853. p. 1. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  2. ^ a b "The Magdalena Steam Navigation Company's new steam vessel". The Morning Post. No. 24, 894. London. 4 October 1853. p. 5. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Money market this day". The Globe. No. 17, 492. London. 3 August 1854. p. 3. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  4. ^ a b "Magdalena Steam Navigation Company". The Globe. No. 17, 255. London. 29 October 1853. p. 4. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  5. ^ a b "Magdalena Steam Navigation Company". London Daily News. No. 2, 561. 4 August 1854. p. 6. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  6. ^ "America". The Times. No. 21, 858. London. 28 September 1854. p. 7.
  7. ^ "Loss of the Estrella steamer". The Morning Chronicle. No. 27, 701. London. 8 October 1855. p. 5. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  8. ^ "Money-Market and City Intelligence". The Times. No. 22, 382. London. 31 May 1856. p. 10.
  9. ^ a b "Foundering of the Anita steamer – Melancholy loss of life". The Morning Chronicle. No. 28, 122. London. 9 February 1856. p. 3. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  10. ^ Finner, Josué (13 September 1856). Venta de los vapores de la Compañía de Navegación por vapor en el Magdalena... (in Spanish). Barranquilla: Compañía de Navegación por Vapor en el Magdalena. pp. 1–6. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  11. ^ "How Great Britain Interprets International Law Two Cases in Point". The New York Times. 17 January 1862. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  12. ^ "Marine Intelligence". The New York Times. 29 May 1862. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  13. ^ American Lloyd's Register of American and Foreign Shipping. New York: E & G W Blunt. 1863. pp. 576–577. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  14. ^ a b American Lloyd's Register of American and Foreign Shipping. New York: Thos. D. Taylor. 1868. p. 683. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  15. ^ Vessels bought, sold and chartered by the United States. Washington, DC: USA House of Representatives. 1868. p. 34. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  16. ^ "Marine Intelligence". The New York Times. 23 July 1862. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  17. ^ Janney, Caroline E. (2013). Remembering the Civil War: Reunion and the Limits of Reconciliation. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. pp. 232–65. ISBN 9781469607061.
  18. ^ American Lloyd's Register of American and Foreign Shipping: Steamers. New York: R T Hartshorne & J F H King/Society of American Lloyd's. 1869. p. 12. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  19. ^ Record of American and Foreign Shipping. New York: American Shipmasters' Association. 1871. p. 205. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  20. ^ "Office of the Intertropical Company". The Sun. New York. 22 August 1867. p. 4. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  21. ^ "Jamaica and Hayti News". Wheeling Daily Register. Vol. 6, no. 68. Wheeling WV. 20 March 1868. p. 4. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  22. ^ Carl, George Edmund (1980). First Among Equals: Great Britain and Venezuela, 1810–1910. Syracuse NY: Dept. of Geography, Syracuse University. p. 70. ISBN 0835705749. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  23. ^ "The West India And Pacific Mails". The Times. No. 26, 347. London. 29 January 1869. p. 5.
  24. ^ Mercantile Navy List. London. 1870. p. 387. Retrieved 17 March 2018.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  25. ^ "Haiti". New York Herald. 15 December 1869. p. 2. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  26. ^ "Shipping Intelligence". Glasgow Herald. No. 9, 655. 12 December 1870. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  27. ^ "Casualties". Lloyd's List. No. 17, 690. London. 28 December 1870. p. 9. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  28. ^ "Casualties". Lloyd's List. No. 17, 692. London. 30 December 1870. p. 8. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  29. ^ "Casualties". Lloyd's List. No. 17, 707. London. 17 January 1871. p. 10. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  30. ^ "Maritime Intelligence". Shipping & Mercantile Gazette. No. 11, 173. London. 13 June 1873. p. 8. Retrieved 17 March 2018.

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.

External links edit

  • USS Estrella (1862–1867) at Navsource

estrella, confused, with, estella, estelle, estrella, paddle, steamship, built, samuda, brothers, london, 1853, magdalena, steam, navigation, company, commercial, services, present, colombia, 1862, sold, united, states, owners, briefly, used, union, army, tran. Not to be confused with USS Estella SP 537 or USS Estelle SP 747 Estrella was a paddle steamship built by Samuda Brothers in London in 1853 for the Magdalena Steam Navigation Company s commercial services in present day Colombia In 1862 she was sold to United States owners and briefly used as a Union Army transport before being acquired by the Union Navy She served as the armed steamship USS Estrella during the remainder of the American Civil War carrying three heavy guns as well as two howitzers for shore bombardment USS Estrella 1862 1867 Painting depicting Estrella off the Pensacola Navy Yard Florida c 1866 1867 HistoryUnited KingdomNameEstrellaOwnerMagdalena Steam Navigation Company LondonBuilderSamuda Brothers Blackwall LondonLaunched20 August 1853CompletedOctober 1853FateSold 1862United StatesNameUSS EstrellaAcquired1862Commissionedc October 1862Decommissioned16 July 1867 at the New York Navy YardFateSold 9 October 1867United States United KingdomNameEstrella 1867 1869 Twinkling Star 1869 1873 Port of registryNew York United States 1867 1869 Kingston Jamaica 1869 1873 Out of service1870FateSank in Savanna la Mar port 21 May 1873General characteristicsTypeiron steamshipTonnage576 GRTDisplacement438 tonsLength176 ft 54 m Beam26 ft 8 m Draught5 ft 2 m Propulsiontwo cylinder oscillating steam engine side wheelsArmament in Union Navy service 1 30 pounder rifled gun 2 32 pounder guns 2 24 pounder howitzersReturning to commercial service in 1867 Estrella operated under the American flag and later as the British flag Twinkling Star on services within the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico area She was seriously damaged in 1870 in Jamaica and later sank in port Contents 1 Construction 2 Commercial service 3 United States Navy service 4 Return to commercial service 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksConstruction editThe iron side wheel paddle steamer Estrella was launched by Samuda Brothers at Blackwall London on the River Thames on 20 August 1853 for the newly established Magdalena Steam Navigation Company She was designed with shallow draught of 5 ft 2 m suitable for her intended river and coastal transport and was approximately 176 ft 54 m in length with a beam of 26 ft 8 m and tonnage of 576 GRT In later United States Navy service she was 438 tons displacement Estrella had capacity for 60 90 passengers 1 2 3 The ship was powered by a two cylinder oscillating steam engine with an output of 120 nominal horse power manufactured by Humphrys Tennant and Dykes at their new engineworks at Deptford 2 On her official trials on 27 October she averaged 12 miles per hour Two smaller vessels were also built and engined for the company by the same shipbuilder and engineers Anita and Isabel intended for the passenger trade on the Magdalena River in the Republic of New Granada now in Colombia 4 Commercial service editEstrella and Anita sailed from the Thames together on 20 November 1853 and the former arrived at Savanilla then the main seaport at the mouth of the Magdalena on 17 January 1854 Anita a week later to be prepared for service 4 5 The timing was unfortunate as revolution had broken out in Bogota suppressing the demand for river freight 3 Nevertheless Estrella made a profitable voyage from Santa Marta to Mompox and Magangue and a little later was chartered to General Mosquera to carry imported munitions up river 5 6 On 1 August 1855 she sank in the river Magdalena near Conejo en route to Honda after being holed by a rock her passengers and crew were saved and the ship was reported at Lloyd s of London as lost 7 but in the event refloated and repaired In May 1856 the Magdalena Steam Navigation Company concluded that the venture was not sufficiently profitable and should be wound up for which they intended their three vessels Estrella Anita and Isabel which had been operating under the British flag should be returned to England for sale 8 9 However the company first sought purchasers at Barranquilla in September with bids to be received by 15 November 10 Remaining unsold Estrella and Anita sailed for England on 23 December but after only two hours steaming Anita developed a serious leak and began sinking in an increasing gale Some three hours later the boiler of Anita exploded and she sank in deep water with the loss of half of her crew of 24 Estrella also hampered by the conditions was unable to assist the other ship and decided to put back to Santa Marta where she was surveyed at the British Vice Consul s behest It was found that Estrella s deck was hogged probably as a result the earlier sinking and numerous groundings in the Magdalena and that she was not seaworthy in addition the ship s boats were condemned as entirely worthless The surveyors advised that she should not leave the coast before the end of May 1857 when weather could be expected to have improved and that she should carry additional engineers 9 In December 1861 Estrella was still in New Granada and provided safe haven for some residents of Santa Marta during the Colombian Civil War 11 In 1862 the ship was purchased at Savanilla by the firm McLean amp Lintz of New York where she arrived on 28 May after a nine day voyage in ballast via Kingston Jamaica during the voyage she struck a wreck which damaged the starboard paddle wheel and she completed the voyage using only one 12 13 a She was then documented at New York as an American ship and chartered by McLean amp Lintz to the US Army Quartermaster Department as United States Transport Estrella from 7 July 1862 at US 400 per day 15 16 United States Navy service edit nbsp Destruction of the CSS Queen of the West by USS Estrella left USS Arizona center and USS Calhoun right on April 11 1863Estrella was transferred from the Army to the Navy late in 1862 and commissioned before the end of October Lieutenant Commander A P Cooke in command She was armed with three heavy guns two 32 pounders and one 30 pounder with rifled barrel and with two 24 pounder howitzers proving versatile and useful in both stopping blockade runners at sea and at bombarding shore positions Assigned to the West Gulf Blockading Squadron Estrella served throughout the war off Mobile Alabama and New Orleans Louisiana along the Texas coast and up the rivers flowing into the Gulf of Mexico During the first 13 days of November 1862 she took part in a series of engagements with CSS J A Cotton and Confederate shore batteries along the Atchafalaya River and Bayou Teche With her captain serving as commander of the flotilla maintained in Berwick Bay Estrella led the attack on CSS Queen of the West 14 April 1863 The Confederate ship was set afire by Union gunfire and after 90 of her crew had been rescued exploded Four days later Cooke led his flotilla up the Atchafalaya once more to attack the batteries at Butte a la Rose Louisiana The batteries were captured intact with their garrison of 60 men and large supplies of ammunition and commissary stores A Union Army garrison was at once sent up to hold the town another key point won by the Union Navy in its continuing campaign to take complete control of coastal areas From 3 to 6 May 1863 Estrella sailed up the Red River to join in the attack on Fort De Russy and during June and July participated in the attacks on Port Hudson Louisiana which led to its fall on 9 July Many if not most of the Estrella sailors who perished during these attacks including an Acting Master transferred from the Kensington were later interred at Chalmette National Cemetery Union naval veterans who lost fathers brothers and even fathers in law aboard Estrella frequently returned to Chalmette in denominational rituals of remembrance Widows sisters and daughters completed physical and psychological family sojourns capitalized on gilded pensions and corresponded on the cultural memory of corpses death and life aboard Estrella These women most forcefully invoked religiosity in enacting the limits of reconciliation 17 Other events in her active service included the capture of schooner Julia A Hodges in Matagorda Bay Texas on 6 April 1864 and a leading role in the attacks on Fort Powell in Mobile Bay on 5 August 1864 These attacks were made in coordination with the battle of Mobile Bay After being repaired at New Orleans in the first 4 months of 1865 Estrella served as flagship of the West Gulf Blockading Squadron continuing to cruise in the Gulf of Mexico and its tributary waters until 30 June 1867 when she sailed for New York Navy Yard Estrella was decommissioned there on 16 July 1867 and sold 9 October 1867 Return to commercial service editAccording to American Lloyd s Register of 1868 Estrella was re purchased from the Navy as the entry is based on a December 1867 survey in New York 14 and in 1868 she was transferred to Henry Winn secretary of the Intertropical Company New York 18 19 20 In March 1868 Estrella was described as an American steamer when reported condemned at Kingston Jamaica 21 but in the same year was owned by Lamb amp Co of Saint Thomas then part of the Danish West Indies when seeking parity of treatment in Venezuelan ports with British ships 22 On 21 December 1868 the intercolonial packet sateamer Estrella was reported wrecked in the Los Roques archipelago on a voyage from Saint Thomas to La Guaira Puerto Cabello and Curacao with passengers mail and general cargo The passengers and crew survived for five days on an uninhabited island and were rescued on 27 December by the Venezuelan war steamer Bolivar 23 After being salved she was taken to Jamaica and was registered on 4 October 1869 as a British ship at the port of Kingston under the ownership of a local Ralph Nirnes Renamed Twinkling Star she was given Official Number 61881 and remeasured at 492 GRT 334 NRT and dimensions 179 7 ft 54 8 m in length beam 25 2 ft 7 7 m and depth 11 1 ft 3 4 m 24 Soon afterwards on 27 November on voyage from Cap Haitien to Port au Prince Twinkling Star developed an underwater crack below the waterline and began to take water amid general panic five passengers including the American Consul in Jamaica took to a boat and reached Mole Saint Nicolas Haiti The ship was later also safely brought to port 25 A year later on 30 November 1870 Twinkling Star sailed from Kingston for New Orleans but met very bad weather and was forced to put in to Savanna la Mar with boiler damage leaking hull sails blown away and a ship s boat stove in and then in arriving went aground requiring some of the cargo to be jettisoned 26 27 28 By 24 December she had been surveyed condemned and ordered to be sold 29 She remained on moorings at Savanna la Mar until 21 May 1873 when she sank in 10 ft water 30 See also editConfederate States NavyNotes edit American Lloyd s Register describes the ship erroneously as propeller rather than side wheel though correct in the 1868 edition 14 References edit Launch The Globe No 17 197 London 23 August 1853 p 1 Retrieved 14 March 2018 a b The Magdalena Steam Navigation Company s new steam vessel The Morning Post No 24 894 London 4 October 1853 p 5 Retrieved 14 March 2018 a b Money market this day The Globe No 17 492 London 3 August 1854 p 3 Retrieved 14 March 2018 a b Magdalena Steam Navigation Company The Globe No 17 255 London 29 October 1853 p 4 Retrieved 14 March 2018 a b Magdalena Steam Navigation Company London Daily News No 2 561 4 August 1854 p 6 Retrieved 14 March 2018 America The Times No 21 858 London 28 September 1854 p 7 Loss of the Estrella steamer The Morning Chronicle No 27 701 London 8 October 1855 p 5 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Money Market and City Intelligence The Times No 22 382 London 31 May 1856 p 10 a b Foundering of the Anita steamer Melancholy loss of life The Morning Chronicle No 28 122 London 9 February 1856 p 3 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Finner Josue 13 September 1856 Venta de los vapores de la Compania de Navegacion por vapor en el Magdalena in Spanish Barranquilla Compania de Navegacion por Vapor en el Magdalena pp 1 6 Retrieved 15 March 2018 How Great Britain Interprets International Law Two Cases in Point The New York Times 17 January 1862 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Marine Intelligence The New York Times 29 May 1862 Retrieved 16 March 2018 American Lloyd s Register of American and Foreign Shipping New York E amp G W Blunt 1863 pp 576 577 Retrieved 16 March 2018 a b American Lloyd s Register of American and Foreign Shipping New York Thos D Taylor 1868 p 683 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Vessels bought sold and chartered by the United States Washington DC USA House of Representatives 1868 p 34 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Marine Intelligence The New York Times 23 July 1862 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Janney Caroline E 2013 Remembering the Civil War Reunion and the Limits of Reconciliation Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press pp 232 65 ISBN 9781469607061 American Lloyd s Register of American and Foreign Shipping Steamers New York R T Hartshorne amp J F H King Society of American Lloyd s 1869 p 12 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Record of American and Foreign Shipping New York American Shipmasters Association 1871 p 205 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Office of the Intertropical Company The Sun New York 22 August 1867 p 4 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Jamaica and Hayti News Wheeling Daily Register Vol 6 no 68 Wheeling WV 20 March 1868 p 4 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Carl George Edmund 1980 First Among Equals Great Britain and Venezuela 1810 1910 Syracuse NY Dept of Geography Syracuse University p 70 ISBN 0835705749 Retrieved 16 March 2018 The West India And Pacific Mails The Times No 26 347 London 29 January 1869 p 5 Mercantile Navy List London 1870 p 387 Retrieved 17 March 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Haiti New York Herald 15 December 1869 p 2 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Shipping Intelligence Glasgow Herald No 9 655 12 December 1870 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Casualties Lloyd s List No 17 690 London 28 December 1870 p 9 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Casualties Lloyd s List No 17 692 London 30 December 1870 p 8 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Casualties Lloyd s List No 17 707 London 17 January 1871 p 10 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Maritime Intelligence Shipping amp Mercantile Gazette No 11 173 London 13 June 1873 p 8 Retrieved 17 March 2018 This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here External links editUSS Estrella 1862 1867 at Navsource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USS Estrella amp oldid 1151694486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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