Decrease Font Size Increase Font Size
Login

Military Photos



Online
There are 1521 users online

You can register for a user account here.
Library of Congress

Military Quotes

Watch what people are cynical about, and one can often discover what they lack.

-- General George Patton Jr

USS Lodona (1863-1865)

(147 total words in this text)
(1687 Reads)  Printer-friendly page
USS Lodona, a 861-ton (burden) iron screw gunboat, was originally the blockade running steamship of the same name. She was built at Hull, England, in 1862 and captured in Ossabaw Sound, South Carolina, on 4 August of that year by USS Unadilla. The Navy purchased her in September 1862 and, following conversion, placed her in commission in early January 1863.

Lodona was assigned to the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron from then until the end of the Civil War. During this time she participated in the blockade of the South Carolina and Georgia coasts, capturing three sailing vessels. In mid-1863 she also bombarded Confederate fortifications in the Charleston Harbor area. Sent north late in April 1865, the ship was decommissioned in May and sold in June. Her subsequent employment, as the merchant vessel Lodona, lasted until she was lost at the end of May 1879.

Military History
Forum Posts

Military Polls

What is the most important program of the Veterans Administration?

[ Results | Polls ]

Votes: 83

This Day in History
1865: Confederate General Joseph Johnston officially surrenders his army to General William T. Sherman at Durham Station, North Carolina.

1865: John Wilkes Booth is killed when Union soldiers track him down to a Virginia farm 12 days after he assassinated President Abraham Lincoln.

1865: Joseph E. Johnston surrenders the Army of Tennessee to Sherman.

1937: The ancient Basque town of Guernica in northern Spain is bombed by German planes.

1952: Armistice negotiations are resumed.

1971: The U.S. command in Saigon announces that the U.S. force level in Vietnam is 281,400 men, the lowest since July 1966.

1972: President Nixon, despite the ongoing communist offensive, announces that another 20,000 U.S. troops will be withdrawn from Vietnam in May and June, reducing authorized troop strength to 49,000.