USS Monarch

{{Short description|Sidewheel, American Civil War}}

{{Infobox ship begin}}

{{Infobox ship image

|Ship image=Image:USS Monarch CW.jpg

|Ship caption=USS Monarch and her sister ship USS Queen Of The West

}}

{{Infobox ship career

|Hide header=

|Ship country=United States

|Ship flag=Image:US Naval Jack 36 stars.svg {{USN flag|1861}}

|Ship name=Monarch

|Ship namesake=Previous name retained

|Ship owner=

|Ship operator=

|Ship registry=

|Ship route=

|Ship ordered=

|Ship awarded=

|Ship builder=

|Ship original cost=

|Ship yard number=

|Ship way number=

|Ship laid down=

|Ship launched=1853

|Ship sponsor=

|Ship christened=

|Ship completed=

|Ship acquired=April 1862

|Ship commissioned=1862

|Ship recommissioned=

|Ship decommissioned=After July 1863

|Ship maiden voyage=

|Ship in service=

|Ship out of service=

|Ship renamed=

|Ship reclassified=

|Ship refit=

|Ship struck=

|Ship reinstated=

|Ship homeport=

|Ship identification=

|Ship motto=

|Ship nickname=

|Ship honours=

|Ship honors=

|Ship captured=

|Ship fate=Scrapped July 1865

|Ship notes=

|Ship badge=

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

|Hide header=

|Header caption=

|Ship class=

|Ship type=

|Ship tonnage=

|Ship displacement=406 tons

|Ship tons burthen=

|Ship length={{convert|180|ft|m|abbr=on}}

|Ship beam={{convert|37|ft|6|in|m|abbr=on}}

|Ship draft=

|Ship depth=

|Ship hold depth=

|Ship decks=

|Ship deck clearance=

|Ship ramps=

|Ship ice class=

|Ship power=

|Ship propulsion=Side-wheel steamer

|Ship sail plan=

|Ship speed=

|Ship range=

|Ship endurance=

|Ship test depth=

|Ship boats=

|Ship capacity=

|Ship troops=

|Ship complement=120 officers and men

|Ship crew=

|Ship time to activate=

|Ship sensors=

|Ship EW=

|Ship armament=1 30-pounder cannon, 3 12-pounder howitzers

|Ship armour=

|Ship armor=

|Ship aircraft=

|Ship aircraft facilities=

|Ship notes=

}}

USS Monarch was a United States Army sidewheel ram that saw service in the American Civil War as part of the United States Ram Fleet and the Mississippi Marine Brigade. She operated on the Mississippi River and Yazoo River during 1862 and 1863.

Construction and acquisition

Monarch was built as a sidewheel towboat at Fulton, Ohio, in 1853. She sank in the Ohio River at Louisville, Kentucky, on 5 March 1861, but was refloated and repaired.[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], {{ISBN|978-0-8071-3274-6}}, p. 100. The United States Army purchased her at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in April 1862 for service in support of Union Army operations and converted her into a ram in 1862 for service in conjunction with the Western Flotilla on the Mississippi River as part of the Army′s United States Ram Fleet under Lieutenant Colonel Charles Ellet, Jr. She was commissioned at Pittsburgh with Captain R. W. Sanford in command.

Service history

=First Battle of Memphis=

{{main|First Battle of Memphis}}

After fitting out at New Albany, Indiana, Monarch began active duty with the Ram Fleet. Steaming downriver in May 1862, she scouted Fort Pillow, Tennessee, in June 1862 and joined her sister ship, the sidewheel paddle steamer {{USS|Queen of the West|1854|6}}, and the ironclad gunboats {{USS|Benton|1861|6}}, {{USS|Cairo|1861|6}}, {{USS|Carondelet|1861|6}}, {{USS|Louisville|1862|6}}, and {{USS|St. Louis|1861|6}} in the Battle of Memphis on 6 June 1862. Engaging the Confederate River Defense Fleet, the rams destroyed seven of the Confederate ships, wiping out the Defense Fleet as an effective naval force. During the battle, Monarch rammed the cottonclad rams CSS Colonel Lovell and General Beauregard. The Union forces took Memphis, Tennessee, on 6 June 1862, clearing the upper Mississippi River of Confederate forts and naval craft.

On 26 June 1862, Monarch and the ram {{USS|Lancaster|1855|6}} pursued General Earl Van Dorn down the Mississippi and up the Yazoo River, the Confederates burning General Earl Van Dorn below Yazoo City, Mississippi, to prevent her capture.

=Battle of Vicksburg=

{{main|Battle of Vicksburg}}

Beginning in June 1862, Monarch operated against Vicksburg, Mississippi. Monarch and five other ships departed Helena, Arkansas, on 16 August 1862 on a U.S. Army-U.S. Navy expedition in Mississippi up the Yazoo River with troops landing at various points along the shore and destroying Confederate artillery batteries on the river. Union ships captured the sidewheel paddle steamer CSS Fairplay above Vicksburg on 27 August 1862; Monarch then cruised the Yazoo with the sidewheel paddle steamer {{USS|General Bragg|1851|6}} to prevent Confederate use of the steamer Paul Jones and to hinder communications with Vicksburg. Later that year, Monarch swept naval mines in the Yazoo.

=Battle of Arkansas Post=

{{main|Battle of Arkansas Post (1863){{!}}Battle of Arkansas Post}}

Monarch joined 11 other ships in the expedition to capture Fort Hindman, Arkansas, 4 January 1863, a point that Rear Admiral David Dixon Porter noted as "a tough nut to crack." Joining efforts with Major General William Tecumseh Sherman's troops on 9 January 1863, the Union ships fought in the Battle of Arkansas Post and shared in the capture of Fort Hindman on 11 January.

=Later service=

In February 1863, Monarch steamed up the Yazoo to Greenville, Mississippi, to relieve Commander Prichett, controlling guerilla activity. In April 1863, she joined the rams {{USS|Fulton|ram|6}}, {{USS|Lioness|1857|6}}, and {{USS|T. D. Horner|1859|6}} in supporting Colonel Ellet's marine brigade in the Tennessee Valley.{{citation needed|date=October 2014}}

With the fall of Vicksburg in July 1863 and the collapse of Confederate naval forces on the western rivers, Monarch′s mission was accomplished. She was laid up on the Mississippi River below St. Louis, Missouri, after July 1863 and was dropped from the naval list in 1864, but remained in reserve, ready for recall to active service. She was sunk by ice in December 1864, but was refloated and taken to Mound City, Illinois, for dismantling in July 1865.

See also

{{Portal|American Civil War}}

References