USS Lehigh (1863)
| The USS Lehigh during the Spanish-American War | The USS Lehigh during the Spanish-American War | | Career | |
|---|
| Launched: | 17 January 1863 |
| Commissioned: | 15 April 1863 |
| Decommissioned: | 8 September 1898 |
| Fate: | sold, 14 April 1904 |
| General Characteristics |
|---|
| Displacement: | 1,335 tons |
| Length: | 200 ft (61 m) |
| Beam: | 46 ft (14 m) |
| Draft: | 11 ft 6 in (3.5 m) |
| Propulsion: | Screw Steamer |
| Speed: | 7 knots (13 km/h) |
| Complement: | 88 |
| Armament: | • 1 × 15 in (380 mm), and • 1 × 11 in (280 mm) Dahlgren smoothbore guns |
| Armor: | • 11 in (28 cm) turret, • 8 in (20 cm) pilothouse, • 5 in (13 cm) hull, • 1 in (3 cm) deck |
| - | | The USS Lehigh to the right of the USS Montauk in Philadelphia Navy Yard, circa 1902. | The USS Lehigh to the right of the USS Montauk in Philadelphia Navy Yard, circa 1902. |
|---|
The first
USS Lehigh was a
Passaic-class monitor launched
17 January 1863 by Reaney, Son, & Archibold,
Chester, Penn., under a subcontract from
John Ericsson; and commissioned at
Philadelphia Navy Yard 15 April 1863,
Commander John Guest in command.
A week later the new monitor joined the
North Atlantic Blockading Squadron at
Newport News, VA. She performed
blockade duty in the
Hampton Roads-
Virginia Capes area, and on the night of
10 June joined a flotilla under
Rear Admiral Samuel Phillips Lee in an expedition up the
James River to assist
Army troops. Returning to Newport News
2 days later, she resumed blockade duty until sent back up the James with seven other
Union warships to threaten
Richmond, Va., the
Confederate capital. In the wake of the
Battle of Gettysburg, the movement was designed to divert Confederate strength from
General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia which had invaded the North and imperiled
Washington. The expedition caused the South to evacuate Fort Powhatan, leaving no defenses on the James below Chaffin's or
Drewry's Bluffs, some 8 miles from Richmond. The situation relaxed as the
southern army retreated across the
Potomac River, and the Union warships dropped down river to Hampton Roads. On the morning of
23 July,
Lehigh, towed by
Circassian, got underway north and arrived
New York City 2 days later for repairs.
In August, commanded by Commander Andrew Bryson, she headed south and joined the
South Atlantic Blockading Squadron off
Charleston, S.C.. The monitor took part in the attacks on
Fort Sumter of
1 and
2 September, being struck several times; engaged
Sullivan's Island 7 September;
Fort Moultrie 8 September, receiving 29 hits; covered a landing party attacking Fort Sumter
9 September; and from
27 October to
20 November engaged Fort Sumter almost daily, running aground
16 November off Sullivan's Island under heavy enemy fire.
After repairs at
Port Royal, S.C.,
Lehigh rejoined the fleet off Charleston
13 January 1864, was assigned to picket duty, and during the following year kept up an intermittent fire on various enemy fortfications in
Charleston Harbor. In March
1865,
Lehigh rejoined the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron and served in the James River through the end of the
Civil War. She decommissioned at
League Island Navy Yard
9 June 1865.
Laid up and under repairs at League Island for a decade,
Lehigh recommissioned
15 December 1875, Commander George A. Stevens in command, and served as practice and school ship at the
U.S. Naval Academy. In April
1876 she was assigned to the
North Atlantic Station, and operated in the vicinity of Port Royal.
From
1879 to
1895 Lehigh lay in the James River at
City Point and off Richmond. In 1895 she was taken to League Island and repaired, and
18 April 1898 recommissioned under
Lieutenant R. G. Peek for coastal defense and stationed off the
New England coast for the duration of the
Spanish-American War. She was decommissioned
8 September 1898, and remained at League Island until sold
14 April 1904.
See
USS Lehigh for other ships of this name.
This article contains text from the US Naval Historical Center.*
*
history.navy.mil: USS Lehigh*
navsource.org: USS Lehigh *
hazegray.org: USS Lehigh