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USS Queen City was a steamer acquired by the Union Navy during the American Civil War. She was used by the Navy as a gunboat and assigned to patrol navigable waterways of the Confederacy to prevent the South from trading with other countries.

USS Queen City
History
United States
NameQueen City
Acquired13 February 1863
Commissioned1 April 1863
Out of service24 June 1864
Stricken1864 (est.)
Captured
  • by Confederate forces
  • 24 June 1864
FateBlown up, 1864
General characteristics
Displacement212 tons
Propulsion
Armament
Armourtinclad

Service history

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Queen City, a wooden, side wheel steamer, was purchased by the Union Navy at Cincinnati, Ohio, from Samuel Wiggins, on 13 February 1863. The vessel was commissioned at Cincinnati on 1 April 1863, Acting Master Jason Goudy in command.

The "tinclad" gunboat (No. 26) operated tip the Tennessee River supporting Union Army operations in the area through the spring. In the summer she transferred to the Mississippi River and patrolled the river protecting Union lines of supply and communications. On 13 October she departed Helena, Arkansas, and carried troops to Friars Point, Mississippi, where they landed and surrounded the town. The next morning they seized a large quantity of cotton.

Capture

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In ensuing months, she continued operations along the rivers of Arkansas. Off Clarendon, Arkansas, on 24 June, two regiments of Confederate cavalry supported by artillery attacked Queen City disabling the paddle wheel steamer and forcing her commander to surrender. When USS Tyler attempted to recover the ship, the Confederates blew her up.

See also

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References

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

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34°41′36″N 91°19′02″W / 34.6934°N 91.3173°W / 34.6934; -91.3173