USS Ouachita was a steamer captured by the Union Navy during the American Civil War. She was used by the Navy to patrol navigable waterways of the Confederacy to prevent the South from trading with other countries.

USS Ouachita
History
Union Navy Jack United States
Acquired29 September 1863
Commissioned18 January 1864
Decommissioned3 July 1865
Captured13 July 1863
FateSold, 25 September 1865
General characteristics
Displacement720 tons
Length227 ft 6 in (69.34 m)
Beam38 ft (12 m)
Draft7 ft (2.1 m)
Depth of hold7 ft 6 in (2.29 m)
Propulsion
Armament
  • four 30-pounder Army Parrott rifles
  • one 30-pounder Navy Parrott rifles
  • eight 24-pounder guns
  • one 12 pounder rifled gun

Service history edit

 
USS Ouachita, by Samuel War Stanton
 
The tinclad Ouachita on the Western Rivers during the Civil War

Union gunboats USS Manitou and USS Rattler captured Confederate side wheel steamer Louisville in the Little Red River 13 July 1863. The Navy purchased the prize from the Prize Court at Cairo, Illinois, 29 September 1863, and commissioned her as Ouachita 18 January 1864. Lt. Comdr. Byron Wilson assumed command 1 February. During the remainder of the Civil War, the gunboat operated in the Mississippi River and its tributaries, especially the Red, Black, and Ouachita Rivers. She participated in Rear Admiral David Dixon Porter’s expedition up the Red River to Alexandria 12 March to 22 May 1864. She performed patrol duty through the end of the war, and again ascended the Red River in May and June 1865 to receive the surrender of Confederate forces. Decommissioned 3 July 1865, Ouachita was sold at auction at Mound City, Illinois, 25 September 1865 to Tait, Able, and Gill.

See also edit

References edit

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