Decrease Font Size Increase Font Size
Login

Military Photos



Online
There are 608 users online

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

Military Quotes

Generals speak often of their military duty to their superiors, but never of their duty to their soldiers.

-- Helmut Lindmann

USS C.P. Williams (1862-1865)

(193 total words in this text)
(1543 Reads)  Printer-friendly page
USS C.P. Williams, a 210-ton mortar schooner, was built in 1851 at Hoboken, New Jersey, for commercial use. She was purchased by the Navy in September 1861, outfitted for combat employment and commissioned in January 1862. Assigned to the Mortar Flotilla then preparing for operations on the lower Mississippi River, C.P. Williams took part in the bombardments of Forts Jackson and St. Philip in April 1862 and of Vicksburg, Mississippi, in June and July of that year. She also carried out routine patrol duties in the vicinity before returning to the Atlantic coast for repairs in mid-summer 1862.

C.P. Williams joined the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron in November 1862 and served for the rest of the Civil War along the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia. Among her activities were bombardments of Fort McAllister, Georgia, in November 1862 and January-March 1863, an engagement with Confederate batteries on the Stono River, S.C., in December 1863 and operations up the Stono and Folly Rivers in February 1865. USS C.P. Williams was sent north in June 1865 and decommissioned. She was sold in August 1865 and later became the merchant vessel Sarah Purves.

Military History
Forum Posts

Military Polls

Is America's military (1.4 million active and 1.3 million Guard/Reserve) too big or too small?

[ Results | Polls ]

Votes: 1241

This Day in History
1775: In Massachusetts, British troops march out of Boston on a mission to confiscate the Patriot arsenal at Concord and to capture Patriot leaders Samuel Adams and John Hancock, known to be hiding at Lexington. As the British departed, Boston Patriots Paul Revere and William Dawes set out on horseback from the city to warn Adams and Hancock and rouse the Patriot minutemen.

1847: U.S. forces defeat Mexicans at Cerro Gordo in one of the bloodiest battle of the war.

1864: At Poison Springs, Arkansas, Confederate soldiers under the command of General Samuel Maxey capture a Union forage train and slaughter black troops escorting the expedition.

1885: The Sino-Japanese war ends.

1943: Traveling in a bomber, Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, the mastermind of the attack on Pearl Harbor, is shot down by American P-38 fighters.

1983: A suicide bomber kills U.S. Marines at the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon.