Her keel of white oak was laid in January, 1858. Under the direction
of naval constructor Edward H. Delano, 350 shipyard workers had
her ready for launching by November of that year. She was 265 feet
long and 44 feet wide, with a depth below waterline of only 13 feet.
With sails set on her three masts she would be a beauty.
Her
two steam engines were built in the South Boston shop of Harrison
Loring, under the supervision of Jesse Gray, chief engineer in
the US Navy. Her tall smokestack was of a unique type which could
be partially telescoped when the ship was not using her engines.
The Hartford was ready to be commissioned. She had cost
the government just over half a million dollars, a lot of money
for that time.
After her sea trials in 1859, the Hartford left for her
first tour of duty as flagship in the fleet known as the East
Indies Squadron. In April 1861, the Confederates attacked Fort
Sumter. President Lincoln declared war and proclaimed a blockade
of the southern ports from South Carolina to Texas. Later that
year the Hartford sailed to the Philadelphia Navy Yard
to be dry-docked for minor adjustments and for the addition of
more guns.
In Washington a plan was brewing with the goal of capturing New
Orleans, ninety miles up the Mississippi River from the Gulf of
Mexico. If the North controlled the Mississippi, the Confederacy
would be split in two. The plan required a man who was loyal to
the Union, acquainted with the Mississippi River, and who had
years of experience at sea. That man was Captain Farragut.
James
Glasgow Farragut was born on July 5, 1801, at Campbell's Station,
Tennessee. When a friend of the family, David Porter, Sr.,
became ill, he was cared for by Farragut's mother, Elizabeth.
She died in 1808 in the Asiatic cholera epidemic in New Orleans,
while caring for Porter. Farragut's father, a sea captain,
and his older brother, a midshipman, were leaving to go off
to sea. The three remaining children, two girls and Glasgow,
would be looked after by a nanny. In appreciation of what
the Farragut had done for his father, Captain David Porter,
Jr. offered to take one of the three children.
"Who
wants to go live with the Porter's?" their father asked.
"I do!" seven-year-old Glasgow shouted. Bursting with
confidence, the boy had an inherited love of the sea. He sailed
with Captain Porter and at an early age he received his midshipman's
commission. Captain David Porter gave him a gold watch inscribed,
DP to DGF. James Glasgow Farragut had a new name: David Glasgow
Farragut.
After more than fifty years at sea, at the age of 61, Captain
Farragut was chosen to command the West Gulf Blockading Squadron.
The USS Hartford would be his flagship. The Hartford
left Philadelphia where she had been dry-docked and took on final
provisions in New Castle, DE. On January 26, 1862, Flag Officer
Farragut boarded. The one-starred blue flag of flag officer, a
rank newly created by Congress, was waived on the mizzenmast.
In April 1862, Captain Farragut began his campaign against New
Orleans. He assembled eight ships, nine gunboats, and a group
of mortar schooners, but no ironclads. Both the North and the
South were racing to build these warships, having sides armed
with metal plates. The mortar schooners were towed up the Mississippi,
where they bombed Fort Jackson and Fort. St. Philip, the two main
defenses between the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans. Passing the
forts, the Hartford's rigging was damaged by shells from
Fort Jackson. The river's swift current swept her across to Fort
St. Philip, where a fire raft forced her inshore. Her bow stuck
in the mud. Flames from the fire raft rushed through her gun ports
and up the rigging. Crew members rolled three twenty-pound shells
off of the Hartford's deck onto the raft. The shells exploded
and the fire raft sank.
The Hartford backed out of the mud and escaped up the river.
She had been hit badly by the guns of Fort St. Philip. Two of
her men were killed, six were wounded. But the Confederate ships,
except for two of them, had been destroyed or had retreated. Writing
to General Butler, who planned to attack Fort St. Philip from
the rear, Captain Farragut stated, "We have had a rough time
of it. But as soon as we have captured New Orleans, we will return
and take care of the forts."
Seventy-five miles up the river, New Orleans was in a state of
alarm and turmoil, knowing that Union gunboats had passed the
forts. Some of their ships left to escape up the river. Some of
their ships they set afire. They took cotton bales from the warehouses
and burned them on the wharves. Union ships on their way upriver
had to dodge the burning debris. The fleet proceeded, destroying
the Confederates' fortifications. They continued on in two columns,
now in full view of New Orleans, greatest prize so far, of the
Civil War.
Union officers went ashore to carry the demand for surrender to
the mayor. They were told that the Common Council would have to
meet to discuss the matter! Finally, after meetings of the two
councils, after communications between the mayor and Captain Farragut,
after a mob had been controlled by martial law, finally the Union
flag flew over New Orleans on April 28, 1862. To the relief of
Flag Officer Farragut and his men, General Butler took possession
of New Orleans on May 1. Hasty repairs were made to the Hartford.
The next objective was Vicksburg, up the river.
Captain Farragut was ordered to go three hundred miles up the
shallow Mississippi River with his oceangoing ships, then get
back down before the higher water of spring receded Baton Rouge
had surrendered Threatened by the Union fleet, Natchez surrendered.
The defenses of Vicksburg were up on bluffs so high that the guns
of the fleet could not be elevated enough to do damage. Farragut
hoped the Union troops could overcome these defenses while his
fleet attacked the city. This was impossible. The Northern troops
under General Williams could not land from their transports in
the fact of what amounted to 38,000 Confederates. The fleet turned
around and headed down river.
By the end of May, 1862, the Hartford was anchored off
of New Orleans. Captain Farragut read his many messages and letters.
He wrote to his wife saving, "The Government thinks we can
do anything ... expects me to navigate the Mississippi nine hundred
miles, face batteries, ironclad rams ... run aground until next
year, or more likely, be burned by the enemy." But Captain
Farragut followed his orders. In June he started up the river,
against the current, bound for Vicksburg. The Hartford
ran aground again and again on shifting sandbars, and was damaged
by Confederate bombardments.
That August, in 1862, Captain Farragut was notified of his promotion
to Rear Admiral. The Hartford's one-starred blue flag was
replaced with a flag having two stars.
For an entire year the fighting continued up and down the Mississippi.
Union men on ships and in the troops suffered and fought, destroying
Confederate boats and supplies. Not until May, 1863, did the North
have the upper hand. Rear Admiral Farragut was able to turn over
command of his fleet to fellow officers. He went back to New Orleans.
The Hartford followed, after the fall of Vicksburg and
the surrender of Port Hudson in July. The second great Civil War
campaign of the USS Hartford was finished.
She left for New York. When she entered New York harbor she was given a thirteen-gun salute from the ports and salutes from all of the foreign ships in port. Now the Hartford was dry-docked
for repairs to her hull, spars and rigging. She got a new bowsprit
and masts, and additional guns. And was painted gray to make her
less visible at sea.
Under the command of Captain James Palmer, the Hartford sailed
from New York on January 5, 1864 to take her place as flagship
of the West Coast Blockading Squadron. Rear Admiral Farragut,
rested after five months in the North, arrived at the naval base
in Pensacola, FL on January 17.
The Army had decided they must capture Mobile. Farragut studied
the defenses of Mobile Bay. At the entrance to the bay only a
few hundred feet of deep channel remained open, directly under
the guns of Fort Morgan on the east side. Fast little Confederate
steamers were passing through this narrow channel with exports
of cotton and imports of supplies. Farragut intended to control
this passage, enter the broad waters of Mobile Bay, and destroy
the Confederate squadron. Fort Gains, on the west side of the
channel, would be attacked by the Union army. The Confederates
had anchored rows of mines across the channel from the west side,
in a minefield extending close to Fort Morgan. These so-called
torpedoes, kegs filled with powder, were supposed to explode on
contact.
By May, 1864, Farragut had assembled a Union fleet of fourteen
wooden ships. Two ironclads, the Manhattan and the Tecumseh,
joined him from New York. Two monitors, ironclad warships with
low, flat decks and gun turrets, came
down the Mississippi. Then followed confederates with commanders
of the troops that would support the fleet's entry into the bay,
then reports, more reports, with estimates of Confederate strength.
A first lieutenant, John C. Kinney of the 19th Connecticut Infantry,
was assigned to the Hartford as signal officers, with other
signal officers assigned to the other ships. Also on board the
Hartford was Acting Ensign Henry Howard Brownell of East
Hartford, CT. Brownell has been called the Poet Laureate of the
Battlefield. "Old John Brown lies a-mouldering in the grave;
Glory, glory, hallelujah!" is one of his verse poems. The
East Hartford public library, Raymond Library, owns a copy of
one of the Brownell's works autographed by Admiral Farragut.
Mr. Brownell had written a verse transcription of one of Farragut's
first general orders. Brownell began a correspondence with Farragut
which resulted in his appointment as Acting Ensign and private
secretary to Admiral Farragut on board the USS Hartford.
What he saw in the Battle of Mobile Bay he described with the
words, "Dreadful gobbet and shred that a minute ago were
men."
On July 12, 1864, Admiral Farragut distributed General Order No.
10 to his captains. It describes in detail the battle procedures
of 19th century warships. There is a copy of General Order No.
10 in the University of Hartford Archives, along with official
US Navy photographs of the Hartford and her crew.
At
6am on August 5 the fleet headed toward Fort Morgan, under cloudy
skies with a westerly wind. Conditions were ideal.The
breeze would blow the dense smoke of battle directly into the
Confederate gunners' eyes. The ironclads led the way, followed
by the ship Brooklyn with her heavy guns and a torpedo
ram on her bow to pick up any torpedoes in her path.
Fort Morgan fired its cannons at 7:06am. The Brooklyn
and the Hartford returned fire. Farragut climbed into the
rigging to watch his fleet over the gunsmoke, and to better communicate
with the pilot. Three seamen manned the wheel, protected by stacks
of sandbags and hammocks. Cannonballs were crashing into sides
and onto the decks of the Hartford. She rolled side to
side from the recoil of her big guns.
Just above the mine field the largest of all the Confederate ironclads,
the formidable Tennessee, steamed toward a the union ships.
The leader of Farragut's ironclads, the Tecumseh, suddenly
veered left in front of the Brooklyn and headed straight for the
Tennessee. The Brooklyn's captain signaled to the
USS Hartford that the ironclads were in his way. Now the
Tecumseh and the Brooklyn were both turning into
the Hartford's path.
Suddenly the Tecumseh hit a mine. She sank immediately,
bow first. The Brooklyn began backing. Her lookouts had spotted the torpedoes ahead. Other ironclads blocked the course. The only way was through the mine field. Ships were piling up, in danger of being swept over to Fort Morgan by the incoming tide.
Already the Hartford was being pounded by the guns of the
fort. One seaman as decapitated. Another's legs were shot off.
When he fell with his hands in the air, both arms were shot off.
Admiral Farragut signaled to the Brooklyn to go ahead.
But she hesitated. Her captain answered, "Torpedoes ahead!"
Farragut called to his engine room, "Damn the torpedoes!
Four bells!" -- the command for full speed ahead. Two heels
struck the Hartford, sweeping away most of two gun crews.
Torpedoes were bumping and thudding against her hull. But they
did not explode. They had leaked. Their powder as wet and useless.
Admiral Farragut sent a boat to rescue the Tecumseh's twenty-one survivors. Ninety-three men had gone down with her. A shell ripped a hole in the Hartford just above the waterline as she continued northward. After fierce fighting, a Confederate ship was captured, one beached itself to avoid deadly ram against the Hartford, returned to the fort. Now the Union fleet anchored in the open waters of Mobile Bay.
Within minutes, lookouts on the Hartford spotted the mighty
Tennessee steaming toward them. Her commander, Admiral
Buchanan, was using what little coat he had left in a last attempt
to save Mobile Bay for the South.
Two Union ships rammed the Tennessee with no effect on
her ironclad sides. She headed for the Hartford. Farragut
hoped only that the ironclad's bow would bite into the Hartford so deeply it could not back off and both ships would sink.
At the last moment the Tennessee swerved, hitting one of
the Hartford's anchors, bending it out of shape. The ships
passed just a few feet apart. The Hartford blasted away
with heavy charges, severely damaging the Tennessee. The
Tennessee kept firing, resulting in man casualties on the
Hartford. Backing off to attack again, the Hartford
collided with one of her own ships. Now the Union monitors arrived.
At a range of thirty feet these agile, flatdecked ironclad warships
hammered at the Tennessee's armor plate, crushing the timbers
underneath. They destroyed the huge ship's steering chain, knocked
over the smokestack, and jammed the gunport shutters. The Tennessee
could not longer steer, could not fire her guns, her power plant
was useless, her hull was losing chunks of iron plates, and she
was leaking.
A white flag appeared from the grating of a gun battery. All firing ceased. However, one Union ship, the Ossipee, set
for another ramming attempt, could not stop in time. She struck
one final blow. It was 10am, August 5, 1864. The Battle of Mobile
Bay was over.
With failing health, Rear Admiral Farragut turned the squadron
over to his next in command. In November he took the USS Hartford
to New York where he was greeted with a reception, celebrations,
and a gift from the merchants of the city of over $51,000 in government
bonds. On December 20, 1864, the Hartford arrived at the
New York Navy Yard for repairs. On that day Rear Admiral Farragut
walked off her deck for the last time.
In July, 1866, David Glasgow Farragut was commissioned the first
full admiral in the US Navy. On the same day, Ulysses S. Grant
was made full general. Admiral Farragut's final navy command was
that of the European Squadron with the Franklin as his flagship. fom 1867 to 1887, the USS Hartford continued
as a fighting ship in the US Navy. She sailed to the Far East,
to the East Indies, and to the West Indies, protecting American
interests. For three years she served as flagship of the South
Atlantic Station.
In December, 1879, she was in Boston for repairs, with new engines
and new guns and cannons. By July, 1882, she was back in commission
to become flagship of the US Asiatic Squadron. While here, she
carried members of an expedition to the Caroline Islands to view
a solar eclipse.
In 1887, the Hartford was dry-docked at the Mare Island Navy Yard
in San Francisco to be rebuilt as a training ship at a cost of
$600,000, $100,000 more than her original cost. In 1901 she cruised
to Scotland, Sweden, Norway, and Belgium. Then for five years
she took enlisted personnel on training cruises, covering the
seven seas. After that she became a practice ship for the midshipmen
at the US Naval Academy. From 1916 to 1926 she served as station
ship at Charleston, SC. In 1926 she was taken out of commission
and laid up in the Navy Yard.
The USS Hartford's final port, in 1945, was the Norfolk Naval
Shipyard. Here she was shuttled from pier to pier and finally
moved across the Elizabeth River to the Helena Annex. By 1948
her decks were rotten and her hull was leaking.
In 1954 the city of Mobile would have accepted her as a national monument. But the estimated cost of putting her in condition was two million dollars. Although this passed the House of Representatives, Congress adjourned before the Senate acted. After that, Congress procrastinated on spending anything on her restoration. She had lost her masts, spars, and rigging. Her guns had been melted down for scrap metal. The Navy Department requested permission to scrap the ship.
In June 1956, the House Armed Services Committee introduced a
bill providing one and a quarter million dollars to restore the
USS Hartford. On November 20, 1956, while this bill was waiting
consideration, the pumps on the Hartford failed. She sank into
twenty-seven feet of water and mud.
The Hartford was towed out to an abandoned wharf and ripped to
pieces. By November, 1957, only her lower holds and keel remained.
They were soaked with inflammables and burned. On that day, November
6, 1957, the USS Hartford, a proud, beautiful ship, met her shameful
death.
In the same year the University was established. On February 21,
1957, Governor Ribicoff signed the charter creating the University
of Hartford. Its three founding schools are the Hartford Art School,
Hillyer College, and the Hartt College of Music. The Hartford
Art School first held classes in 1877. Hillyer College traces
its history back to 1879 when the YMCA was holding classes in
various locations in Hartford. In 1888 Charles Tudor Hillyer,
a Civil War general, purchased land in Hartford and gave it to
the YMCA for a building of their own. When General Hillyer died,
his children gave the YMCA a $50,000 endowment to establish Hillyer
Institute, which became Hillyer Junior College in 1937 and Hillyer
College in 1947. The Hartt College of Music dates back to 1920.
Also in 1957, a Civil War buff from West Hartford, Robert L. McGovern,
was visiting the Navy Shipyard in Portsmouth, VA. The USS Hartford
had been classified as a relic, with various items from the ship
distributed to museums. On behalf of Hartford's Historical Landmarks
Committee, Mr. McGovern requested the ship's bell and a bow anchor.
They were both secured with the help of Senator William A. Purtell
and Representative Edwin H. May. The bell went to the city of
Hartford. The anchor, to the University of Hartford, approved
for the gift because alumni had found in World Wars I and II.
Its arrival was assured after communications between Naval personnel
and Alan S. Wilson, the University's Vice-president of Academic
Affairs.
The three-ton anchor arrived at the University's new campus in
March, 1958. At a dedication ceremony Representative Ed May said
"Many historians now claim that the USS Hartford was the
salvation of the nation during the Civil War."
The anchor, thirteen feet tall with en-foot-wide flukes, has become
an artistic outlet for students who delight in painting it, marking
special events or just making a statement of their own.
The memory of this old warship has been preserved. An attack submarine,
built by Connecticut workers and stationed in Groton, was christened
the USS Hartford in 1993. US Navy Commander George Kasten's wish
is that his sub become a symbol of Hartford, and that the Greater
Hartford Chamber of Commerce adopt as the city's slogan, "Full
speed ahead!"