U.S.S. Sabine Parrott Rifle (Traverse City, Michigan)

Dublin Core

Title

U.S.S. Sabine Parrott Rifle (Traverse City, Michigan)

Source

american,unionmonument

Contributor

jcgreiner

Type

Site

Identifier

2742

Date Issued

1910-01-01

Extent

m x m x m

Medium

'U.S.S. Sabine Parrott Rifle', Historical Marker Database, last revised 4 January 2021, https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=98250.

Spatial Coverage

current,44.761591,-85.616131;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

U.S.S. Sabine Parrott Rifle (Traverse City, Michigan)

Europeana Type

TEXT

Site Item Type Metadata

Wiki

https://www.cineg.org/wiki/index.php/U.S.S._Sabine_Parrott_Rifle_(Traverse_City,_Michigan)

Monument Type

Memorial gun

Funded by

Private

Inscription

"This 6.4 inch 100 Pounder Parrot[t] Rifled Naval Cannon served on the U.S.S. Sabine during the Civil War. It is the only one from that ship that survives today. The cannon was cast in 1862 at the West Point Foundry (Registration #15 Foundry #210) in Cold Spring, New York. It weighs 9,790 pounds. The story of cannon and ship's service during the Civil War are one. U.S.S. Sabine's keel was laid in 1822 at the New York Navy Yard but final construction was not completed until February, 1855. The U.S.S. Sabine was among the last two sailing frigates commissioned by the U.S. Navy on August 23, 1858. All subsequent frigates incorporated steam powered propulsion. The Sabine had a crew of 375 officers and sailors and was armed with 49 cannon. When being refitted in the Portsmouth Navy Yard in July to August 1862, this was one of two powerful 100 pounder rifled cannon added to her armament. Mounted on swiveling carriages on the fore and aft decks, these cannon were able to fire farther and more accurately than the smoothbore cannons. Just before the outbreak of the Civil War, the U.S.S. Sabine and U.S.S. Brooklyn joined the U.S.S. St. Louis, and U.S.S. Wyandotte to reinforce the Federal garrison at Fort Pickens on Santa Rosa Island, and began to blockade Pensacola Bay, Florida. After the Fort was secured, the U.S.S. Sabine was assigned to blockade duty with the Atlantic Squadron. That November, during a hurricane off Cape Hatteras, the U.S.S. Sabine came to the rescue of the foundering transport Grovernor and saved 500 U.S. Marines and crew. In March, 1862 over 40 of the Sabine's crew transferred to the iron-clad U.S.S. Monitor and participated in the historic clash with the C.S.S. Virginia (Merrimac) at Hampton Roads. After being refitted, the U.S.S. Sabine was dispatched to hunt the Confederate commerce raider[s], C.S.S. Alabama and C.S.S. Tacony. In 1864, the U.S.S. Sabine was retired from active sea duty and served as training ship for landsmen and midshipmen until War's end. She was decommissioned in 1887 [sic 1877] and scrapped in September 1883. The cannon was donated to Grand Traverse County by Senator William Alden Smith in 1910."

State

Michigan

Affiliation

Union

City

Traverse City

Location Type

City