Ramming, surrender of Union ironclad Indianola
The USS Indianola, an ironclad
that joined the Union's Mississippi River squadron in early 1863, had
run the gauntlet of Confederate artillery at Vicksburg, Miss., on Feb.
13, 1863. But the recently built gunboat with armored plating and
11-inch Dahlgren guns would soon meet an early demise. While patrolling
the Mississippi near the mouth of the Red River, the Indianola came
under attack Feb. 24, 1863, by two enemy rams. Pursued and rammed
several times, the Union ironclad lost power and ran aground. Its crew
had no choice but to surrender. The loss of the Indianola struck a major
blow to the Union Navy in its struggle to gain supremacy over the lower
Mississippi. Days afterward, The Mobile Advertiser & Register in
Alabama reported on the Indianola's surrender in a dispatch from Port
Gibson, Miss. The report quoted Confederate Lt. Col. Fred B. Brand as
saying vessels under his control pursued the U.S. ironclad and "engaged
her for an hour." Some of the fighting was at close quarters before it
was quickly over. "We went alongside, when Commander Lieut. Brown,
U.S.N., surrendered to me. As all credit is due to (Confederate) Major
Brent, I have turned over to him, in a sinking condition, the prize
which we hope to save. Only five were hurt." Confederate forces, hoping
to claim the partially sunk river gunboat as their own, did try to
salvage the Indianola but detonated the ship's magazine when another
Union vessel approached. Badly damaged by the blast, the Indianola
would never be restored to service even after the Union took Vicksburg
in July 1863. Elsewhere this week 150 years ago in the war, Confederate
fighters seized and destroyed Union supplies being carried by mule train
through Tennessee.
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