Archive for the ‘Civil War Steamers’ Category

The Destruction of the str Horizon

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Based on the readings from the National Archives, I loaded a page describing the collision of the str Horizon on the Mississippi River.  The page link is called A Case for Indemnity.

The losses of the Horizon and Clara Poe  differ in several ways.  The Horizon was definitely under contract to the US Army Quartermaster.  Yet the military Vessel File at the National Archives has more original source papers regarding the burning of the  Clara Poe

 

One interesting aside from Horizon were letters from an engineer named Kemper.  In a letter dated 4 May 1874, Kemper’s attorney requested pay for service on the str Horizon while running the batteries at Vicksburg.  As you no doubt have guessed, the response from the US Army Quartermaster was negative — stating “our records do not show that Kemper rendered the services”.  Eleven years after the event the US Army Quartermaster refused to pay the engineer Kemper’s day wages even though Kemper had an affidavit from an officer on the boat stating that Kemper served at Vicksburg.  No records – no pay – period!  You gotta admire these US Army logistics agents.

The Destruction of the Clara Poe

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Based on the records from the National Archives, I loaded a page describing the burning of the str Clara Poe on the Cumberland River.  The page link is called A Case for Indemnity.

Adam Poe River Experience

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

A wonderful account of the life and river experiences of Capt Adam Poe  has been loaded.  Full of  swash and buckle.  There is a grace and a toughness about him.  The account, written by Adam Poe in 1887, was printed in a serial form in the East Liverpool Crisis in 1889 or 1890.  I have added a few comments, mainly dates highlighted in blue print, to add perspective.  It is a wonderful read. 

Account of Adam Poe, Sr.  River Experiences

A copy of the Poe account can be found in the Poe folder at the Beaver County Genealogy and History Center in Beaver Falls, PA.

A Glance at the Compromise of 1850

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

The Compromise of 1850 did not answer the question of whether slavery would be allowed into the new western territories.  The transcontinental railroad was one of many factors to finally force the answer.  Would there be a northern route through Chicago or a southern route with New Orleans as its hub?  The northern route had the Indian problem.  The Nebraska Indian Territory was populated by native tribes who had been shoved out of the east.  To build the railroad, the land would have to be lawfully available for settlement. 

 

On 4 Jan 1854, Senator Stephen Douglas introduced a bill to seize and organize the territory into two states: Kansas and Nebraska.  The legislation also included a clause making the Missouri Compromise inoperative.  The bill passed.  The pro-slavery South won a battle.  The issue of slavery in the new territories would be voted on by the inhabitants of the states.

 

The North exploded in fury.  Once conservative businessmen became stark mad abolitionists forming companies to establish “free state” colonies in the two states.  The rough Missouri frontiersmen seethed as they watched the steamboats full of “the filth, scum, and offscourings of the East bound for Kansas”. [1]  Missouri Ruffians, as the proslavery forces were called, stole the territory’s first election. 

 

During this time, Captains Adam Poe and Thomas W Poe worked on the Missouri and Kansas Rivers.  The str Georgetown commanded by Thomas W Poe was working the Missouri in 1853 and was fatally snagged on 11 May 1855 at Bellefontaine Bluffs on the Missouri.  Capt Adam Poe on the Financier No 2 ventured to Ft Riley on the Kansas River in 1854 — one of three steamers to reach the fort.  In 1855, the Financier No 2 was one of six steamers to supply the settlements along the Kansas River Valley. [2]  The str Ella owned by Capt Adam Poe and others from Georgetown was also working on the Missouri in 1854.  Three Poe steamers on the Missouri during the same 1854 season suggest that either Jacob Poe  or George W Poe was probably commanding the third boat.

 

The Poes were devout members of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Georgetown.  In fact, it was reported that boats commanded by Adam Poe  tied up along the shore on the Sabbath.  In 1844 the Methodist Episcopal Church split into two conferences, North and South, over the issue of slavery.  Using this thin thread of conjecture as evidence, I believe that the Poes transported abolitionists with their guns to Kansas in the 1850′s.

 

 

References.

 


[1] Debby Applegate, The Most Famous Man in America, Three Leaves Press, 2006, p 278.
[2]  William E Lass, Navigating the Missouri/ Steamboating on Nature’s Highway, 1819-1935, (University of Oklahoma Press, 2007), p 142.

Steamboats, Georgetown and the Civil War

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Last week I spoke to the Beaver County Genealogy and History Center at their monthly meeting. 

BCGS Link:  http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~pabecgs/index.htm 

My topic was “Steamboats, Georgetown and the Civil War”.   The lecture was approximately 45 minutes followed by an informal question period of about 60 minutes.  I am not a historian.  But for those who only remember the Poes because of their celebrated battle with the Indian named Bigfoot, they are missing the Poes’ astonishing body of work as steamboat captains and pilots. 

 

I find it a fun and an important bit of American history.  Too important to forget.  I hope the members of the BCGS agreed.

A Glance at the Wheeling Bridge Case

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

The Wheeling Bridge Case in the US Supreme Court in 1849-52 and 1854-56 was interesting for its relationship between two rival cities and two competing industrial transportation systems.  Wheeling wanted a bridge over the Ohio River to connect  with central Ohio and Indiana.  Pittsburgh wanted free navigation of the Ohio River.  A Wheeling plan to secure US Congressional aid to build a simple span across the river was defeated because the elevation of 90 feet above low water would inhibit the passage of steamboats with tall smoke stacks.   Even the Supreme Court decided against Wheeling.  Not accepting failure, Wheeling approached the Virginia legislature where the Pittsburgh opposition could not be heard.  In 1846, the Commonwealth of Virginia granted the charter to the Bridge Company.  Also in 1846, Wheeling secured a promise from the Baltimore and Ohio RR of a western RR terminal.  [1]

 

Fearing that Wheeling would become the transportation “Gateway to the West”, PA filed suit stating the bridge obstructed passage of steamboats and threatened to injure business in Pittsburgh.  Edwin Stanton, a Pittsburgh attorney and later Sec of War in the Lincoln administration, argued the case for PA before the Supreme Court.   Of the nine regular packets of the Pittsburgh and Cincinnati Line, five would be unable to pass under the bridge.  These boats conveyed half the goods (in value) and three- fourths of the passengers between Pittsburgh and Cincinnati.  VA argued that the bridge was necessary to carry freight and passengers into the interior which would be diverted from the steamboats because of the greater safety and speed of the railroads which would soon be concentrated at Wheeling.  The bridge had first been proposed to carry the National Pike across the Ohio.  Despite an injunction the bridge was built.[2]

Although unstated directly, this national controversy was also a skirmish between free and slave states.  It was a national event drawing the attention of Henry Clay who formulated the Missouri Compromise of 1850.   The South, specifically Virginia, wanted to divert commerce from Philadelphia to Norfolk.  From there via Richmond to Wheeling, Virginia and slave holding  influence  in the Midwest and territories further west would be greatly enhanced.

Engineer Charles Ellet, Jr finished his bridge in 1849.   On 15 Sep 1849, famed statesman Henry Clay was a speaker for the dedication ceremonies.  He stated that “They might as well try to take down the rainbow.”  Clay’s “They” were Yankees, Stanton and the Pittsburgh objectors, who feared the bridge would choke river traffic.

 

The steamer Hibernia No2 on 11 Nov 1849 was delayed thirty-two hours after its stacks were damaged in a collision with the structure.  Its stacks stood 80 feet above the water; the bridge stood only 48 feet above water level.  Another boat was hired to transport the passengers of the Hibernia No2 to Pittsburgh.  Other boats were detained and at least two more accidents occurred.  The Hibernia No2 was mentioned specifically because Capt George W Ebert  of Georgetown, PA  had an interest in the packet.  Whether the Hibernia No2  intentionally rammed the bridge is still a great controversy.  [3]

 

The Virginia passing under the Wabash Bridge note the stacks (From the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County.

The Virginia passing under the Wabash Bridge note the stacks (From the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County.

In Aug 1851, a bill passed both the US Senate and House legalizing the existing conditions of the bridge and at the same time requiring steamers to regulate their chimneys so as not to interfere with the elevation and constructions of bridges.  Wheeling won.  Steamboats had to tailor their stacks.  Pittsburgh retaliated by declaring Wheeling outside of its travel line.  Pittsburgh established a station below Wheeling  to induce passengers to continue to Pittsburgh.  Pittsburgh also influenced the railway between Cleveland and the Ohio River to be terminated at Wellsville, OH which was located closer to Pittsburgh than Wheeling, VA.    [4]

 

The Wheeling bridge was blown down by a gale force wind on 18 May 1854.   Shortly thereafter in a derisive salute, the Pittsburgh and Cincinnati  Line packet, Pennsylvania, lowered her stacks approaching Wheeling with no bridge to lower them for.  Offended, a mob gathered on shore and pelted the packet with stones.  [5]

Finally, the great rivalry for the title “Gateway to the West” was settled.  Pittsburgh emerged as its keeper.

 

 

 

References.


[1] Ohio Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, Volume 22, the Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio,  April 1913, p 44.
[2]  Ohio Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, Volume 22, the Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio,  April 1913, p 45.
[3]  Ohio Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, Volume 22, the Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio,  April 1913, p 46.
[4]  Ohio Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, Volume 22, the Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio,  April 1913, p 51.
[5]  Ohio Archaeological and Historical Quarterly, Volume 22, the Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, Ohio,  April 1913, p 52

 

 

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A Civil War Letter

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

This letter, published in the S&D Reflector in Dec 1969, was written by the mayor of Pittsburgh to recognize six steamboat captains and their vessels for their service to the country. 

 

                                 Pittsburgh, PA,
                                 Feb 19th, 1862

I desire that the captains of the following
steamers be placed on record for the patriotic
and liberal (volunteering) of their services
and boats, without renumeration, to proceed
immediately to the Cumberland River to relieve
the sick and wounded soldiers:  Rocket, Capt
Wolf;
Clara Poe, Capt Poe, Horizon, Capt
Stockdale;
Emma, Capt Maratta; Westmorland,
Capt Evans; Sir William Wallace, Capt Hugh
Campbell.

                                B. C. Sawyer, Jr., Mayor.

 

 

My search for the original letter has failed to date.  To whom the letter was addressed is unknown.  What words were replaced?  The subject of the paragraph in the S&D Reflector was salaries of the captains of the steamers during the war.  Apparently, boats and crews who worked for no salary were not uncommon especially when pressed to service.

 

The letter was also interesting from the steamer point of view.  Three of the applauded boats were destroyed during the war.  While running at night without lights, the Horizon collided with the Moderator near Vicksburg on 1 May 1863.  In Jan 1865, the Emma collided with the Louisville ferry.  Both vessels were disabled and both floated helplessly over the falls.  A dramatic ending for the Emma.   The Clara Poe, bound for Nashville with supplies, was burned by rebels on 17 Apr 1865 along the Cumberland River.  That date was curious.  Hostilities in the west continued for about thirty days after Appomattox.   

All six boats were built and manned from the Pittsburgh region.  The Clara Poe and the Horizon were owned and operated by my guys from Georgetown, PA

 

Another description of the impact of the Civil War on river commerce is found in a brief editorial on the The Golden Age of Steamboating.

Where was the Civil War won?

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

I belong to a couple of Civil War discussion groups.  The question “Where was the war won?  And who won it?” was asked in my CivWar West group.  My response, copied below, caused more activity than the group had generated in months.  You be the judge — probably nutty, but possibly insightful, yet I hope interesting in either case.

 

 After considerable thought and analysis, I’ve come to my conclusion.  The Civil War was won in:

                Pittsburgh = Steeler Country

And it was won by western Pennsylvanian rivermen.

Some believe the momentum of the Civil War changed after victories in the Western Theater, whether Vicksburg or Shiloh.  If this premise is true, then what were the major enablers that differed from the east?  The major advantages of the Union Army were the tall stack steamers: civilian transports, tinclads, and gunboats, and their men: captains, pilots, engineers, and crews, who operated the transports.  The origin of these advantages, and other support goods, was Pittsburgh.

A mindful analysis of the Charles and E Kay Gibson’s “Dictionary of Transports and Combatant Vessels, Steam and Sail, Employed by the Union Army 1861-1868″, indicates that approximately 720 steamboats were employed on the western rivers during the Civil War.  The Army Quartermaster built and purchased 105 and chartered 615.  Cross referencing those steamboats by name with Capt Frederick Way’s “Way’s Packet Directory, 1848-1994″ revealed that just over 44% of the steamboats were built in Pittsburgh.  My definition of “Pittsburgh” is the region on the Ohio and Monongahela Rivers approximately 20 miles down the Ohio and 20 miles up the Mon from Pittsburgh.  That region includes boatyards in river towns such as Freedom, Shousetown (no longer exists), Elizabeth (Lewis and Clark keelboat fame), Brownsville, McKeesport, California, Belle Vernon …  That region is about 4% of the total run of the Ohio River.  

From Gibsons Dictionary I have included all the boats which means packets built as far up the Mississippi as Keokuk, IA and as far down as New Orleans, LA and in Bridgeport, AL on the Tennessee River.   So my 40 miles of water surrounding Pittsburgh is competing with all the boatyards on the rest of the Ohio plus nearly the full length of the Mississippi and the Tennessee rivers.  Gunboats also skewed the data against Pittsburgh.  Gunboats were built specifically for the Quartermaster in strange places such as Oquaka, IL, Burlington, IA, Chatanooga, TN, etc.   These sites were not commercial boatyards like those found in Cincinnati, OH, New Albany, IN, and Elizabeth, PA.  

The sources used to identify the steamers on the western rivers were the primary sources of Gibson’s Dictionary part 2 and 3 of HR-337 and one secondary source identified as Hurst which refers to a list in “The Battle of Shiloh” by TM Hurst.  The Gibsons do not list the build port for the steamers.  By cross referencing the name provided by the Gibsons with the build location in Way’s Directory, I have my data.

 

In addition to the boatyards, Pittsburgh was the major iron works center in the Union. Sixteen enormous steel works produced two-thirds of all the crucible steel.  Approximately 60% of the artillery used by the Union Army was forged in Pittsburgh.  Rails for the railroad systems were also forged in Pittsburgh, although the railroads contributed no or little advantage in the west.  Four inches thick, the iron plates for “iron clad” gunboats were made in Pittsburgh.   Theses products, artillery and iron rails and plates, provided the mortar to keep my main conclusion standing.  

Without experiencing a single warlike day, Pittsburgh, the cradle of manufacturing and industry, provided the underlying support that changed the momentum of the war.  Pittsburgh’s manufacturing base also benefited from steamboat production and their use.  Steamboats were used  not only to ship goods to market but were used to import raw materials to the local mills.

 

Note 1:  I was surprised that Pittsburgh’s steamboats did not total more than 50%.  Alas, I had spent too much time not to respond with the data at hand.    For the Missouri River commerce of the late 1860′s, Pittsburgh produced approx 70% of the packets.  I was also amazed by the number of packets built in Cincinnati.  Far more than any other single site, but far less than the Pittsburgh region according to my definition of the region.  I had no idea Cincinnati had such a river history.

Boats in the Civil War

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

The following list of steamers owned by the Georgetown captains summarizes their Civil War activity.  According to the Gibsons’ dictionary six boats were listed at Shiloh.  Two others were chartered during the correct period and were listed at Vicksburg in 1863 so I assume they were also at Pittsburg Landing.    The Neptune crashed into the Clarksville Bridge on 19 Mar 1862 so she may not have been transporting to troops and supplies to Shiloh battlefield.  I may be incorrect.   The Melnotte was not chartered until 1 Apr 1863 so I have no evidence that she participated in the movement of troops in support of Shiloh.  Gibson’s Dictionary does indicate that the Melnotte transported troops and artillery to counter Morgan’s Raiders who had crossed the Ohio River in Jul 1863.  

                          Listed in
Steamer    Gibsons   Way   Shiloh       Owner/Capt      

Argyle              Y               Y          Y             Jacob Poe
Clara Poe          Y               Y          Y             Thomas W Poe
Ella                   Y              Y        Chart          Adam Poe
Horizon             Y              Y         Y             JT Stockdale
Jacob Poe         Y              Y          Y              Jacob Poe          
Kenton              Y              Y         Chart          George W Ebert
Leonora            Y              Y         Chart           Richard Calhoon
Melnotte          Y              Y         N               Richard Calhoon 
Neptune            Y              Y           ?              Adam Poe      
Yorktown         Y             Y           Y               Jacob Poe        

The Yorktown is a mystery.  According to Way’s Directory, she was not put into service till 1863.  Gibson’s Dictionary has the Yorktown in Pittsburg Landing in 1862.  I do not know who is correct.  Maybe another source will confirm its participation?!?

 

The Georgetown captains and their crews were civilians.  Whether impressed or chartered by the Quartermaster, the subject of military transport by civilian crews generated legal problems in the area of discipline, pay, handling of prisoners, eligibility for pensions, etc.  There was discernible friction between the military and civilian regulatory agencies.   From my reading, a civilian streamer, especially if impressed, was not a good business proposition.

 

Part history, part puzzle?