List of shipwrecks in June 1864
1 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=1 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Arthur
|flag={{flagcountry|Russian Empire}}
|desc=The full-rigged ship capsized at Lisbon, Portugal. Her crew were rescued.{{Cite news |title=Marine Intelligence |newspaper=Newcastle Courant |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |date=10 June 1864 |issue=9885 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Arthur McKenzie
| flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} South Australia
| desc=The 227-ton brig went ashore while trying to cross the bar at Port Waikato, New Zealand.Ingram & Wheatley, p. 102.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{ship||Daring|schooner|2}}
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
|desc=The schooner ran aground and sank at the mouth of the Waikato River. Subsequently refloated, repaired and returned to service.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Pocohontas
|flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
|desc=The transport ship collided with the transport ship City of Bath ({{flag|United States|1863}}) and sank off Cape May, New Jersey with the loss of 40 lives.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Latest Intelligence |date=15 June 1864 |page=14 |issue=24899 |column=A }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=William and Jane
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship sprang a leak and was beached at Lisbon, Portugal. She was on a voyage from Swansea, Glamorgan to Gibraltar. Following repairs, she was refloated on 6 June and subsequently resumed her voyage.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Unidentified wharf boat
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: The wharf boat, loaded with reserve supplies and ammunition for the fleet of Rear Admiral David Dixon Porter ({{navy|United States|1863}}) and carrying paymaster′s cash in a safe was set afire and blown up by Confederate agents on the Ohio River at Mound City, Illinois. The paymaster was burned and nearly suffocated while trying to save the cash in the safe.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
2 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=2 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Brothers
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The smack sprang a leak and sank off Strumble Head, Pembrokeshire. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage form Mochras, Caernarfonshire to Newport, Monmouthshire.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Caledonian Mercury |location=Edinburgh |date=6 June 1864 |issue=23374 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{PS|Dundalk|1844|2}}
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=American Civil War: The paddle steamer was driven ashore and wrecked at the Old Inlet, Wilmington, Delaware, United States by {{USS|Victoria|1855|6}} ({{navy|United States|1863}}).{{Cite web |url=http://clydeships.co.uk/view.php?year_built=&builder=&ref=18400&vessel=DUNDALK |title=Dundalk |publisher=Caledonian Maritime Heritage Trust |access-date=9 August 2019 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Frank Steel, or
Frank Steele
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=The 136-ton sidewheel paddle steamer exploded on the Mississippi River at La Crosse, Wisconsin, killing two people.Gaines, p. 94.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Georgiana C. McCaw
| flag={{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: Pursued by the gunboat {{USS|Victoria|1855|6}} ({{navy|United States|1863}}), the 700-ton sidewheel paddle steamer, a blockade runner carrying a large cargo of provisions, ran aground near Cape Fear, North Carolina, Confederate States of America. USS Victoria shelled her, then put a boarding party aboard her which captured all but four of her passengers and crew and set her on fire. Her wreck eventually sank in {{convert|10|ft|m|0}} of water.Gaines, p. 120.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Isabel
| flag={{flag|Confederate States of America|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: Having suffered severe damage from gunfire while being captured in the Gulf of Mexico off Galveston, Texas, by the screw steamer {{USS|Admiral|1863|6}} ({{navy|United States|1863}}) while attempting to run the Union blockade with a cargo of gunpowder and arms on 28 May, the steamer sank at Quarantine Station on the Mississippi River.Gaines, pp. 66-67.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Rose
| flag={{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: The 67-register ton sidewheel paddle steamer, a blockade runner en route from Nassau, Bahamas carrying a small cargo of liquor and other goods, was chased ashore on Pawleys Island, South Carolina, Confederate States of America by the gunboat {{USS|Wamsutta|1853|6}} ({{navy|United States|1863}}). She was burned there by Union forces.Gaines, p. 154.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Scotia
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} Victoria
|desc=The steamship ran aground and was wrecked at Bluff Harbour, New Zealand. She was on a voyage from Melbourne to Otago, New Zealand.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Caledonian Mercury |location=Edinburgh |date=9 August 1864 |issue=23428 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=William and Jane
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brigantine sprang a leak and was beached at Gibraltar.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
3 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=3 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Scotia
| flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
| desc=The steamer went ashore at Bluff Harbour, on the final stretch of a voyage from Melbourne, Victoria while trying to cross the bar at Port Waikato.Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 102–103.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
4 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=4 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Albion
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The barque was wrecked on the Lee Reef, off the coast of Jamaica.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Harmonie
|flag={{flag|Bremen}}
|desc=The ship foundered in the North Sea {{convert|10|nmi|km}} off Vlieland, Friesland, Netherlands. She was on a voyage from Alloa, Clackmannanshire, United Kingdom to Bremen.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=9 June 1864 |issue=12428 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Maid of the Mill
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked near Thisted, Denmark.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=6 June 1864 |issue=5094 }} Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Blyth, Northumberland to Cronstadt, Russia.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=6 June 1864 |issue=12425 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
5 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=5 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ellen
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Carreg Long Rock, on the cost of Anglesey and sank. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Runcorn, Cheshire to Amlwch, Anglesey.{{Cite news |title=Amlwch |newspaper=North Wales Chronicle |location=Bangor |date=11 June 1864 |issue=1914 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Nile
| flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
| desc=The schooner ran aground at Takatu Point in the Hauraki Gulfon the final stretch of a voyage from Melbourne, Victoria while trying to cross the bar at Port Waikato.Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 103.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Polly
|flag={{flag|Hamburg|admiralty}}
|desc=The barque foundered off the Shetland Islands, United Kingdom. Confirmed by a message in a bottle which washed up in early August.{{Cite news |title=Scotland |newspaper=Dundee Courier |location=Dundee |date=10 August 1864 |issue=3434 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
6 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=6 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Robert Stephenson
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brig was driven ashore at Copenhagen, Denmark. She was on a voyage from Riga, Russia to London.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Caledonian Mercury |location=Edinburgh |date=10 June 1864 |issue=23378 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Viscount Sandon
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground at Galle, Ceylon. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Galle. She was refloated and taken in to Galle in a leaky condition.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
7 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=7 June 1863|sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=CSS Etiwan
| flag={{navy|Confederate States of America|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: The 132-ton sidewheel transport ran aground in Charleston Harbor off Fort Johnson, South Carolina. One source claims she was destroyed by Union artillery emplaced on Morris Island; another claims she was raised and repaired and placed in service by Union forces.Gaines, p. 145.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Paquete de Mayari
|flag={{flagicon|Spain|civil-1785}} Cuba
|desc=The schooner was wrecked on the Caicos Reef. She was on a voyage from Havana to Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Thames
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The steamship ran aground on the Whitestone Rock, off Ryhope, County Durham. She was refloated and taken in to North Shields, Northumberland.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Two Brothers
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner was wrecked on the Berner Rock, in the Orkney Islands. She was on a voyage from Bo'ness, Lothian to Great Yarmouth, Norfolk.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
8 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=8 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Berkshire
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=The 649-ton steamer burned at Poughkeepsie, New York with the loss of 35 lives,Gaines, p. 109. there were more than 165 survivors. She was on a voyage from Hudson, New York to New York City.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Sad Calamity on the Hudson River |date=24 June 1864 |page=12 |issue=24907 |column=F }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ganjam
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was sighted whilst on a voyage from Akyab, Burma to Liverpool, Lancashire. No further trace, presumed foundered with the loss of all hands.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=6 December 1864 |issue=12582 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=John Ellis
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner was driven ashore on South Ronaldsay, Orkney Islands. She was refloated the next day and taken in to Stromness.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=14 June 1864 |issue=12432 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Orilla
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The barque ran aground at Taganrog, Russia She was on a voyage from Taganrog to South Shields, County Durham. She was refloated and resumed her voyage.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=13 July 1864 |issue=12457 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
9 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=9 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Augustus
|flag={{flag|Bremen}}
|desc=The full-rigged ship was driven ashore on North Ronaldsay, Orkney Islands, United Kingdom. All on board were rescued.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Chanaral
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The full-rigged ship was wrecked in Arica Bay.{{Cite news |title=Thursday's Telegrams |newspaper=Hull Packet |location=Hull |date=29 July 1864 |issue=4149 }} Her crew were rescued by the barque Perpetua, which lost four crew effecting the rescued.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Caledonian Mercury |location=Edinburgh |date=1 August 1864 |issue=23421 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{ship||John Bowes|steamship|2}}
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The collier, a steamship, ran aground on Heligoland. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland to Hamburg. John Bowes was refloated but had to be beached. Following repairs, she resumed her voyage.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Pevensey
| flag={{flag|Confederate States of America|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: Pursued by the gunboat {{USS|New Berne|1862|6}} ({{navy|United States|1863}}), the 483-, 500-, or 543-ton sidewheel paddle steamer, a blockade runner bound for Wilmington, North Carolina, from Bermuda with a cargo that included arms, blankets, cloth, clothing, shoes, lead, and bacon, ran aground on the coast of North Carolina about 7 miles (11 km) west of Beaufort. Pevensey{{′}}s crew blew her up and set her on fire to prevent her capture by Union forces.Gaines, p. 126.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
10 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=10 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Augusta
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground on the Cruden Scares. She was on a voyage from Inverness to Invergordon, Ross-shire. She was refloated and resumed her voyage.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Bob Chambers
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The steamship was destroyed by fire at Constantinople, Ottoman Empire.{{Cite news |title=Marine Intelligence |newspaper=Newcastle Courant |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |date=17 June 1864 |issue=9886 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
11 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=11 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Edouard and Jenny
|flag=Flag unknown
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Ordness Head, Orkney Islands, United Kingdom. She was on a voyage from Stromness, Orkney Islands to Naples, Italy. She was refloated on 13 June and beached. She was taken in to Stromness for repairs on 3 September.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=9 September 1864 |issue=12507 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Jamaica Packet
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} Jamaica
|desc=The steamship ran aground at Saint Ann's Bay. She was refloated and resumed her voyage to Kingston.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence News |newspaper=Glasgow Herald |location=Glasgow |date=18 July 1864 |issue=7652 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
12 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=12 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=I Go
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: The 104-ton sternwheel paddle steamer was burned on the Arkansas River at Arkansas Post, Arkansas.Gaines, p. 10.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Julius
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship sprang a leak and foundered in the Dogger Bank. Her crew were rescued by the steamship Luna ({{flag|Hamburg|admiralty}}).
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship={{USS|Lavender|1864|6}}
| flag={{navy|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: During a voyage from the Delaware Capes to Charleston, South Carolina, Confederate States of America, the armed tug was wrecked on the Cape Lookout Shoals off the coast of North Carolina, Confederate States of America during a severe squall. Between nine members and fourteen members of her crew died before the steamer John Farrow ({{flag|United States|1864|name=United States Army}}) rescued her fourteen survivors on 15 June.Gaines, p. 122.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Spray
| flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
| desc=The schooner hit rocks at the mouth of the Awanui River during a gale.Ingram & Wheatley, pp. 103–104.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
13 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=13 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Brilliant
|flag={{flag|Prussia|civil}}
|desc=The schooner was driven ashore on Eierland, North Holland, Netherlands. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom to Dantzic.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{SS|Newcastle|1862|2}}
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The steamship ran aground on Heligoland. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland to Hamburg.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=13 June 1864 |issue=12431 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sir George Grey
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The tug was run into by Helen Nicholson ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}) {{convert|7|nmi|km}} west north west of Great Orme Head, Caernarfonshire and was severely damaged. She was beached at Tranmere, Cheshire.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=17 June 1864 |issue=5104 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
14 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=14 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship={{USS|Courier|1861|6}}
| flag={{navy|United States|1863}}
| desc=The storeship was wrecked without loss of life on the Abaco Islands in the Bahamas about {{convert|10|nmi|km}} south of the Elbow Cay Lighthouse.Gaines, p. 19.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Home
|flag={{flag|United States|1864}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore on Crane Island, Province of Canada British North America. She was refloated.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Lord Maidstone
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore on Crane Island. She was refloated.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Sunbeam
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground at "New Liverpool", Province of Canada.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=27 June 1864 |issue=5112 }} She was on a voyage from New Liverpool to Glasgow, Renfrewshire.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
15 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=15 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=D. L. Choate
|flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
|desc=The ship foundered with the loss of all but one of her crew. The survivor was rescued on 22 June by Imogen ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}). D. L. Choate was on a voyage from Bassein, India to Falmouth, Cornwall, United Kingdom.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=27 August 1864 |issue=5171 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=J. R. Williams
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: Disabled by Confederate artillery on the Arkansas River at Pheasant Bluff in the Indian Territory near what is now Tamaha, the sternwheel paddle steamer was shelled by artillery causing her to lose steam, she ran aground and was captured. Four Union soldiers were killed and several wounded. Confederate forces burned her the next day.Gaines, p. 137. See Ambush of the steamboat J. R. Williams.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
16 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=16 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ballarat
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} Victoria
|desc=The steamship was wrecked in Poverty Bay, New Zealand, during a heavy gale, while en route from Auckland to Napier. All on board were rescued.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=8 September 1864 |issue=5181 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Landis
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: The 377-ton sidewheel transport was damaged in combat with the 1st Louisiana Cavalry Regiment ({{army|Confederate States of America|1864}}) on the Mississippi River at Magnolia Landing, Louisiana, confederate States of America about {{convert|6|nmi|km}} from Port Hudson on the night of 16 June and reportedly sank near Baton Rouge.Gaines, p. 68.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Nieuw Holland
|flag={{flag|Netherlands}}
|desc=The ship was destroyed by fire in the Atlantic Ocean. Her crew were rescued by Joan ({{flag|Netherlands}}). Nieuw Holland was on a voyage from Amsterdam, North Holland to Batavia, Netherlands East Indies.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Ship News |date=20 July 1864 |page=12 |issue=24929 |column=F }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Two unidentified schooners
| flag=Unknown
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: The schooners were burned near the mouth of the Pamlico River in North Carolina, Confederate States of America by a joint Union Army-United States Navy expedition embarked on the transport Ella May ({{flag|United States|1863|name=United States Army}}) and the sidewheel gunboat {{USS|Ceres|1856|6}} and armed screw steamer {{USS|Louisiana|1861|6}} (both {{navy|United States|1863}}).Gaines, p. 133.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
17 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=17 June 1864|sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Bushire
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI }} British North America
|desc=The ship was wrecked on the Ras Housun, near Aden. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Aden.{{Cite news |title=Local Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=23 August 1864 |issue=5194 }}{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=23 September 1864 |issue=12519 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Fanny Merriman
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New South Wales
|desc=The ship was wrecked on Christmas Island. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from San Francisco, California, United States to Sydney.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=17 November 1864 |issue=12566 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Lady of Portland
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner foundered in the Mediterranean Sea off Málaga, Spain. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Agrigento, Sicily, Italy to Falmouth, Cornwall and/or the Mumbles, Glamorgan.{{Cite news |title=Marine Intelligence |newspaper=Newcastle Courant |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |date=24 June 1864 |issue=9887 }}{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Caledonian Mercury |location=Edinburgh |date=8 July 1864 |issue=23402 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=William C. Clarke
| flag={{flag|United States|1861}}
| desc=American Civil War: The 338-ton brig, carrying a cargo of lumber from Machias, Maine, to Matanzas, Cuba, was captured and burned in the North Atlantic Ocean ({{coord|30|00|N|62|40|W|name=William C. Clarke}}) by the screw sloop-of-war CSS Florida ({{navy|Confederate States of America|1863}}).[http://www.usnlp.org/navychronology/1864a.html usnlp.org Navy Chronology of the Civil War, January-June 1864][http://ahoy.tk-jk.net/MaraudersCivilWar/CSSFlorida.html Ahoy – Mac's Web Log "Marauders of the Sea, Confederate Merchant Raiders During the American Civil War: CSS Florida. 1862–1863. Captain John Newland Maffitt. CSS Florida. 1864. Captain Charles M. Morris"]Gaines, p. 22.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
18 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=18 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{HMS|Tribune|1853|6}}
|flag={{navy|United Kingdom}}
|desc=The {{sclass|Tribune|frigate}} ran aground in the Fraser River at New Westminster, Colony of British Columbia. She was refloated on 24 June with assistance from {{HMS|Forward|1855|6}}, {{HMS|Grappler|1855|6}} and {{HMS|Otter|1837|6}} (all {{navy|United Kingdom}}).{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Her Majesty's Ship Tribune |date=9 September 1864 |page=8 |issue=24973 |column=F |author=R. O. L. }}{{Cite news |title=Her Majesty's Ship Tribune |newspaper=Glasgow Herald |location=Glasgow |date=12 August 1864 |issue=7700 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
19 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=19 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=CSS Alabama
| flag={{navy|Confederate States of America|1863}}
| desc=File:AlabamaSinkingHarpers23July1864.jpg, 23 July 1864.]] American Civil War, Battle of Cherbourg: The screw sloop-of-war was sunk in combat with the screw sloop-of-war {{USS|Kearsarge|1861|6}} ({{navy|United States|1863}}) in the English Channel off Cherbourg, Seine-Inférieure, France with the loss of about 40 members of her crew. Kearsarge rescued approximately 70 members of her crew, who became prisoners-of-war.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Alvin Clark
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=The schooner capsized and sank in a storm in Green Bay just off Chambers Island, Wisconsin, with the loss of two of her four crew.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
21 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=21 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Dniester
|flag={{navy|Russian Empire}}
|desc=The transport ship was driven ashore at the "St. Catherine Spirit Fortress", in the Black Sea. She was abandoned the next day. She was later refloated with assistance from the corvette {{ship|Russian ship|Krechet|1860|2}} ({{navy|Russian Empire}}), which towed her in to Sevastopol on 28 June.{{Cite book |title=Погибли без боя. Катастрофы русских кораблей XVIII–XX вв. |trans-title=They died without a fight. Catastrophes of Russian ships of the XVIII-XX centuries |language=Russian |first=Alexander Alekseevich |last=Chernyshev |publisher=Veche |year=2012 |url=http://www.maxima-library.org/mob/b/389880?format=read }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Mary Jane
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The full-rigged ship foundered in the Atlantic Ocean ({{coord|34|52|N|30|53|W}}). A message in a bottle washed up at Campbeltown, Argyllshire in early September giving the news.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=9 September 1864 |issue=5182 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Richard Cobden
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship capsized at Liverpool, Lancashire. She was righted.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=24 June 1864 |issue=5110 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Volunteer
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore and damaged in the River Eske. She was on a voyage from Constanţa, Ottoman Empire to Donegal. She was refloated and taken in to Donegal in a severely leaky condition.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
22 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=22 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Illawarra
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brig-rigged steamship struck a rock off Volcano Island and sank. She was on a voyage from Ningpo to Shanghai, China.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=22 August 1864 |issue=5166 }}{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=22 August 1864 |issue=12491 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Royal Sovereign
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship struck a rock and sank in the Black Sea off Cape Takle, Russia. Her crew were rescued.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
23 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=23 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Isabella Peake
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship foundered off "Fort Soroa". Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Bayonne, Loire-Inférieure, France to Jersey, Channel Islands.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=12 July 1864 |issue=12456 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
24 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=24 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Clan Gregor
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked at Bonny, Africa. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Bonny.{{Cite news |title=Loss of Three Liverpool Vessels |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=10 August 1864 |issue=5156 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eduardo
|flag={{flagcountry|Kingdom of Italy|civil}}
|desc=The brig was destroyed by fire at Baltimore, Maryland, United States.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=11 July 1864 |issue=12455 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Lady Eyre
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was destroyed by fire in the Atlantic Ocean. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Bermuda.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=26 July 1864 |issue=12468 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eleanor
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brigantine ran aground in Stokes Bay. She was on a voyage from Sunderland, County Durham to Southampton, Hampshire. She had been refloated by 6 July with the assistance of a tug and towed in to Southampton.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=8 July 1864 |issue=12453 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Isabelle
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner foundered off "Fort Swan". Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Bayonne, Loire-Inférieure to Jersey, Channel Islands.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Minister von Bowes
|flag={{flag|Hamburg|admiralty}}
|desc=The ship sprang a leak and foundered in the North Sea. Her crew were rescued by the schooner Spontea ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}). Minister von Bowes was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland, United Kingdom.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=28 June 1864 |issue=12444 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship={{USS|Queen City|1863|6}}
| flag={{navy|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: The sidewheel paddle steamer was captured by Confederate States Army cavalry and artillery while anchored on the White River off Clarendon, Arkansas. The Confederates blew her up shortly after capturing her.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Waverly
| flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand
| desc=The schooner went ashore after hitting rocks at Port Waikato. Her crew were rescued by the paddle steamer Sturt ({{Flagicon|UKGBI}} New Zealand.Ingram & Wheatley, p. 104.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
25 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=25 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Cambrian
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner foundered off the Crow Rock. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Cardiff, Glamorgan to Kinsale, County Cork.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Clangregor
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was lost at Bonny, Africa. Her crew were rescued.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Ship News |date=10 August 1864 |page=12 |issue=24947 |column=F }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
26 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=26 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Alfred
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The brig was driven ashore east of Calais, France. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland to Lisbon, Portugal.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=28 June 1864 |issue=12444 |page=7 }} She was refloated the next day and taken in to Calais.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=29 June 1864 |issue=12445 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=America
|flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
|desc=The yacht capsized in a squall and sank in the Delaware River with the loss of all eleven people on board.{{Cite news |title=General News |newspaper=Dundee Courier |location=Dundee |date=23 July 1864 |issue=3419 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
27 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=27 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Colonel Satterly
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: Loaded with gravel, sand, and stone, the schooner was scuttled as a blockship by Union Army forces in Trent's Reach on the James River in Virginia.Gaines, p. 176.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=E. W. Benton
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: Loaded with gravel, sand, and stone, the schooner was scuttled as a blockship by Union Army forces in Trent's Reach.Gaines, p. 179.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Franklin
| flag={{flag|Confederate States of America|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: The barque was scuttled as a blockship by Union Army forces in Trent's Reach.Gaines, p. 180.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Haxall
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: Loaded with gravel, sand, and stone, the schooner was scuttled as a blockship by Union Army forces in Trent's Reach.Gaines, p. 182.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Julie A. Whitford (or Julia A. Whitfield)
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: Loaded with gravel, sand, and stone, the schooner was scuttled as a blockship by Union Army forces in Trent's Reach.Gaines, p. 183.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Mary Robinson
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=The clipper was driven onto a reef at Howland Island ({{coord|01|N|176|W|name=Mary Robinson}}) in the Pacific Ocean and wrecked during a strong squall. Her wreck slid off the reef and sank the next day.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Mist
| flag={{flag|Confederate States of America|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War: Loaded with gravel, sand, and stone, the schooner was scuttled as a blockship by Union Army forces in Trent's Reach on or about 27 June.Gaines, p. 185.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship={{SS|Modern Greece|1854|2}}
| flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: After suffering nine shell hits while under fire by United States Navy ships, the 753- to 1,000-ton screw steamer was driven ashore by the armed screw steamer {{USS|Cambridge|1860|6}} and the gunboat {{USS|Stars and Stripes|1861|6}} (both {{navy|United States|1863}}) and wrecked near Federal Point while trying to reach Wilmington, North Carolina, Confederate States of America, with a cargo of brandy, liquor, rifled cannons, brass smoothbore cannons, Enfield rifle muskets, gunpowder, clothing, and assorted civilian cargo. She sank {{convert|200|yd|m}} yards offshore in {{convert|40|ft|m}} of water.Gaines, pp. 123-124.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
28 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=28 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{SS|Labuan|1855|2}}
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The steamship was wrecked on a rock off Scalpay, Outer Hebrides. Her crew survived. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Cronstadt and/or Narva, Russia.{{Cite news |title=General News |newspaper=Glasgow Herald |location=Glasgow |date=4 July 1864 |issue=7640 }}{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=4 July 1864 |issue=5124 }}{{Cite news |title=Loss of the Screwsteamer Labuan |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=28 July 1864 |issue=5144 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Mart
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was driven ashore at Culzean Castle, Ayrshire. She was on a voyage from Londonderry to Dunfanaghy, County Donegal. She was refloated on 1 July and taken in to Ayr.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Caledonian Mercury |location=Edinburgh |date=7 July 1864 |issue=23401 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ovida Helene
|flag={{flag|Norway|1844}}
|desc=The schooner was driven ashore on Læsø, Denmark. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland, United Kingdom to Aalborg, Denmark. She was refloated on 28 June and taken in to Helsingør, Denmark in a leaky condition.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=8 July 1864 |issue=12453 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Sarah Mary
| flag={{flag|United Kingdom|civil}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: Captured by the gunboat {{USS|Norfolk Packet|1848|6}} ({{navy|United States|1863}}) on 24 June in the North Atlantic Ocean off Mosquito Inlet, Florida, while trying to run the Union blockade with a cargo of cotton, the 15-ton sloop grounded on a beach on the coast of South Carolina at the mouth of Horse Island Creek while her Union prize crew was sailing her to Port Royal, South Carolina, Confederate States of America.Gaines, p. 155.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Secondo Narcisso
|flag={{flagcountry|Kingdom of Italy|civil}}
|desc=The brig collided with Fethie ({{flag|Ottoman Empire|redl}}) and was severely damaged. She was on a voyage from Constantinople, Ottoman Empire to Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France. She was towed in to Constantinople in a sinking condition by St. Giovanni Evangelista ({{flag|Kingdom of Italy|civil}}) and place under repair.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=16 July 1864 |issue=12460 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Stag
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground in the Black Sea off Point Stefano. She was on a voyage from Marianople, Russia to a British port. She was refloated and taken in to the Bosphorus.{{Cite news |title=Marine Intelligence |newspaper=Newcastle Courant |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |date=15 July 1864 |issue=9890 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
29 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=29 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Alvin Clark
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc=During a voyage in ballast to Oconto, Wisconsin, to pick up a cargo of wood, the {{convert|105|ft|9|in|adj=on|1}}, 220-gross register ton vessel – variously described as a two-masted schooner, a topsail schooner, a brig, and a brigantine – capsized and sank in {{convert|120|ft}} of water in Green Bay near Chambers Island off the coast of Wisconsin during a gale with the loss of three lives. An unidentified brig rescued her survivors. Her wreck was discovered in the 1960s, refloated in 1968–1969, and moored on the Menominee River as a tourist attraction, but deteriorated to a lack of funding to conserve her. She later was placed on a bed of pea gravel ashore but deteriorated beyond any possibility of restoration, became an eyesore, and was disassembled and trucked to a landfill in May 1994.Gaines, p. 57[https://www.wisconsinshipwrecks.org/Vessel/Details/15?region=Index Wisconsin Shipwrecks: AHNAPEE (1867) Accessed 4 July 2021]
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Fœderis Arca
|flag={{flag|France}}
|desc=The ship was scuttled in the Atlantic Ocean after four of her fifteen crew had been murdered. Survivors were rescued by a Danish brig. She was on a voyage from Havre de Grâce, Seine-Inférieure to Vera Cruz, Mexico. Her crew were later arrested on charges of murder and mutiny and tried at a court martial, the ship having been chartered by the French government. Three were convicted and sentenced to death.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Ship News |date=6 August 1864 |page=12 |issue=24944 |column=E }}{{Cite news |title=Horrible Murder and Mutiny |newspaper=Dundee Courier |location=Dundee |date=26 June 1866 |issue=4021 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Pike
| flag=Flag unknown
| desc=The wooden barge struck a snag and sank in the Sacramento River below the I Street Bridge in Sacramento, California.Gaines, p. 30
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
30 June
{{shipwreck list begin |date=30 June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Eva
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The sloop was wrecked near the Ackergill Tower, Caithness. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Stornoway, Isle of Lewis to Hamburg.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=5 July 1864 |issue=12450 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Happy Return
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner was wrecked on the Burbo Bank, in Liverpool Bay with the loss of two of her three crew. Survivors were rescued by the Liverpool Lifeboat. Five crew of the steamship British Queen ({{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}) drowned whilst attempting to rescue survivors when their boat capsized. Happy Return was on a voyage from Dublin to Liverpool, Lancashire.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Ship News |date=1 July 1864 |page=12 |issue=24913 |column=E }}{{Cite news |title=Shipwreck off Liverpool |newspaper=York Herald |location=York |date=2 July 1864 |issue=4782 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Ivanhoe
| flag={{flag|Confederate States of America|1863}}
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: While trying to enter Mobile Bay, the steamer, a blockade runner, was forced aground about 2 miles (3.2 km) east of Fort Morgan, Alabama, by the sidewheel paddle steamer {{USS|Glasgow|1863|6}} ({{navy|United States|1863}}), after which the sloop-of-war {{USS|Hartford|1858|6}}, the gunboat {{USS|Kennebec|1861|6}}, and the sidewheel paddle steamer {{USS|Metacomet|1863|6}} (all {{navy|United States|1863}}) fired between 700 and 800 shells at her. A United States Navy boat expedition burned her on 6 July.Gaines, p. 3.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Verbena
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The sloop ran aground on the Dog Head Sand, in The Wash. She was on a voyage from Goole, Yorkshire to King's Lynn, Norfolk She was refloated the next day and taken in to King's Lynn in a leaky condition.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Caledonian Mercury |location=Edinburgh |date=11 August 1864 |issue=23430 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
Unknown date
{{shipwreck list begin |date=unknown date in June 1864 |sort=}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Abby Craig
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The full-rigged ship was wrecked at Gaspé, Province of Canada, British North America. She was on a voyage from London to Quebec City, Province of Canada.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Ali
|flag={{flag|Sweden|1844}}
|desc=The ship departed from Hartlepool, County Durham, United Kingdom for Malmö. Presumed subsequently foundered with the loss of all hands; the body of her captain washed up on the coast of Jutland in September.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=22 September 1864 |issue=12518 |page=7 }}{{Cite news |title=Marine Intelligence |newspaper=Newcastle Courant |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |date=23 September 1864 |issue=9900 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Anversois
|flag={{flag|Belgium}}
|desc=The ship ran aground in the Min River. She was on a voyage from Hong Kong to Foo Chow Foo, China. She was refloated and completed her voyage, arriving on 15 June. She was consequently condemned.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Caledonian Mercury |location=Edinburgh |date=12 August 1864 |issue=23462 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Badger
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground at Wilmington, Delaware, United States.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=29 June 1864 |issue=5120 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Betsy Williams
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship ran aground off Cape Nassau before 23 June. She was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to Demerara, British Guiana. She was refloated and completed her voyage.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=16 July 1864 |issue=5135 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Gyrn Castle
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked in the Fisherman's Group. Her crew were murdered by pirates. She was on a voyage from Foochow, China to Japan.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=10 August 1864 |issue=5156 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Hydaspes
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked near Rangoon, Burma. She was on a voyage from Rangoon to Liverpool. Hydaspes was refloated in September and beached at Rangoon. She was condemned.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=16 September 1864 |issue=5188 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Joseph Holmes
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked at Bassein, India after 25 June. She was on a voyage from Bassein to a European port.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Kate
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The schooner ran aground on the Burrows Sand, in the North Sea off the coast of Essex. She was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland to London. Kate was refloated but had to be beached on the Shipwash Sand. She was refloated on 30 June and taken in to Harwich, Essex.{{Cite news |title=Marine Intelligence |newspaper=Newcastle Courant |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |date=8 July 1864 |issue=9889 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship={{HMS|Liverpool|1860|6}}
|flag={{navy|United Kingdom}}
|desc=The {{sclass|Liffey|frigate}} ran aground off the coast of Santo Domingo. She was refloated and ordered to England for repairs.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Olive
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc= After coal oil she was carrying caught fire, the 220-ton sternwheel paddle steamer was scuttled in the Ohio River at Buffington Island to extinguish the flames. She later was refloated, repaired, and returned to service.Gaines, p. 136.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Pomona
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked at Gaspé. She was on a voyage from Hull, Yorkshire to Quebec City.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Rollon
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked off Great Inagua, the Bahamas in early June. She was on a voyage from Haiti to a European port.{{Cite news |title=Mercantile Ship News |newspaper=The Standard |location=London |date=23 July 1864 |issue=12465 |page=7 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Seth
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The ship was wrecked at Landskrona, Sweden before 26 June. She was on a voyage from Liverpool to Vyborg, Grand Duchy of Finland.{{Cite news |title=Shipping Intelligence |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=6 July 1864 |issue=5126 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Star of Victoria
|flag={{flagicon|UKGBI}} Victoria
|desc=The barque was wrecked at the New River Heads, New Zealand.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Tiger
| flag={{flag|United States|1863}}
| desc= During a voyage from North Bend to Cincinnati, Ohio, towing a barge of hay, the 97.6-ton screw towboat struck Kirby Rock in the Ohio River and sank.
}}
{{shipwreck list item
|ship=Yaratilda
|flag={{flagcountry|UKGBI|civil}}
|desc=The East Indiaman foundered in the South China Sea after 8 June. She was on a voyage from Shanghai, China to London{{Cite news |title=Disasters to Liverpool Shipping |newspaper=Liverpool Mercury |location=Liverpool |date=22 August 1864 |issue=5166 }}
}}
{{shipwreck list item
| ship=Unidentified schooner
| flag=Flag unknown
| desc=American Civil War, Union blockade: Carrying a cargo of cotton and turpentine, the schooner sank in Indian River Inlet on the coast of Florida, Confederate States of America.Gaines, p. 45.
}}
{{shipwreck list end}}
References
= Citations =
{{Reflist}}
= Bibliography =
- [http://scubagonewild.com/documents/Encyclopedia%20of%20Civil%20War%20Shipwrecks%20-%20(Malestrom).pdf Gaines, W. Craig, Encyclopedia of Civil War Shipwrecks, Louisiana State University Press, 2008] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101129144606/http://scubagonewild.com/documents/Encyclopedia%20of%20Civil%20War%20Shipwrecks%20-%20(Malestrom).pdf |date=29 November 2010 }}, {{ISBN|978-0-8071-3274-6}}.
- Ingram, C. W. N., and Wheatley, P. O., (1936) Shipwrecks: New Zealand disasters 1795–1936. Dunedin, NZ: Dunedin Book Publishing Association.
{{shipevents|1864}}
{{1860s shipwrecks}}