CSS Missouri

Confederate States Navy casemate ironclad paddle steamer


title: "CSS Missouri" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["ironclad-warships-of-the-confederate-states-navy", "1863-ships", "ships-built-in-louisiana", "paddle-steamers-of-the-united-states"] description: "Confederate States Navy casemate ironclad paddle steamer" topic_path: "history/military" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSS_Missouri" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Confederate States Navy casemate ironclad paddle steamer ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox ship"]

FieldValue
section1{{Infobox ship/image
imageC.S. Ram MISSOURI.jpg
image_captionWatercolor of Missouri
section2{{Infobox ship/career
flag
nameMissouri
namesakeMissouri
countryConfederate States
ordered1 November 1862
laid_downDecember 1862
launched14 April 1863
commissioned19 September 1863
fate*Surrendered, 3 June 1865
section3{{Infobox ship/characteristics
typeCasemate ironclad
length183 ft (o/a)
beam53 ft
draft8 ft
propulsion*Stern paddle wheel
speed10 mph
power4 × return-flue boilers
armament*1 × 11 in (281 mm) smoothbore Dahlgren gun
armor*Casemate: 4.5 in
*Deck: {{convert4.5
::

|section1={{Infobox ship/image | image = C.S. Ram MISSOURI.jpg | image_caption =Watercolor of Missouri

|section2={{Infobox ship/career | flag = |name=Missouri |namesake =Missouri | country = Confederate States | ordered = 1 November 1862 | laid_down = December 1862 | builder = | launched = 14 April 1863 | commissioned = 19 September 1863 | fate = *Surrendered, 3 June 1865

  • Sold, 29 November 1865

|section3={{Infobox ship/characteristics | type = Casemate ironclad | displacement = | length = 183 ft (o/a) | beam = 53 ft | draft = 8 ft | propulsion = *Stern paddle wheel

'*CSS *Missouri''''' was a casemate ironclad built by the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. Her propulsion machinery was taken from an existing steamboat, her armor was railroad T-rails, and she was armed with three captured cannon. She was difficult to steer and leaked badly. Additional equipment had to be added to allow her to reach her intended speed. Completed during 1863 on the Red River, she was trapped in the Shreveport, Louisiana, area by low water and never saw combat. The vessel's crew had desertion issues and some of her crewmen were pulled from the army. After traveling downriver for the first time, the ship was surrendered in June 1865 to the United States Navy—the last Confederate ironclad to be handed over—and sold in November.

Description

Missouri was 183 ft long overall, had a beam of 53 ft and a draft of 8 ft. Her casemate extended for most of the length of the ship and was 130 ft long. It partially enclosed her 22 ft diameter stern paddle wheel in a recess at the aft end of the casemate; the upper 8 ft of the paddle wheel protruded above the casemate and was totally unprotected.

The ship's propulsion machinery was taken from either the steamboats Grand Era or T. W. Roberts. It consisted of two single-cylinder, poppet valve steam engines with a bore of 24 in and a 7 ft stroke. These used steam provided by four horizontal return-flue boilers that were 26 ft long and 40 in in diameter that were connected to a single funnel. Other machinery was taken from the supply vessel CSS Paul Jones. During her initial sea trials on 17 June 1863, she had a maximum speed of 6 mph going upstream only half the speed as had been promised. After the installation of a donkey engine to power a 3 ft fan, the bilge pumps and a capstan a few months later, she reached a speed of 10 mph against a 2 - current.

Missouris armor consisted of 4.5 in railroad T-rails, laid alternately with the crowns up and down. They were spiked to the backing of 23 in of yellow pine, but not closely together enough to give them a solid surface. On the sides of the ship, they were laid diagonally, but were vertical on the bow and stern faces of the casemate. The armor extended approximately 6 ft below the waterline. The casemate was sloped at an angle of 30°. The deck fore and aft of the casemate was also protected by T-rails. At the forward end of the casemate was a pilothouse that was raised 19 in above the deck. She was built of green timber, caulked with cotton and was riddled with leaks; the leaking was largely due to the use of the green timber. Despite her three rudders, her stern wheel made her difficult to steer.

The casemate had eight gun ports, two in the bow face and three on each side, although only three guns were mounted in the ship. A smoothbore 11 in Dahlgren pivot gun was mounted in the starboard forward position. It could fire out of the starboard bow port or the forward starboard broadside port. It weighed approximately 16000 lb and could fire a 136 lb shell up to a range of 3650 yd at an elevation of 15°. An old 32-pounder (14.5 kg) siege gun was in the equivalent position on the port side of the ship. The third gun was a smoothbore 9 in Dahlgren pivot gun that could fire out of either of the two aft broadside gun ports. It weighed approximately 9200 lb and could fire a 72.5 lb shell up to a range of 3357 yd at an elevation of 15°. The two Dahlgren guns had been salvaged from the wreck of the Union ironclad USS Indianola and the 32-pounder piece was likely captured from the Gosport Navy Yard. No guns were provided for the two center broadside gun ports.

Construction and service

The Confederate Navy Department authorized the construction of one or more ironclad warships at Shreveport on 3 October 1862 and Lieutenant Jonathan H. Carter contracted for two ships on 1 November. One contract was placed with riverboat captains Thomas Moore and John Smoker for one ironclad, with the other being awarded to George Fitch; the Fitch ironclad project was postponed in favor of the other and was eventually canceled. No complete blueprint of the ship is known to survive, but it is believed that she was designed by Chief Naval Constructor John L. Porter. The contract with Moore and Smoker specified a cost of $336,500 to be paid in installments. The keel of the first ship was laid in December and she was launched on 14 April 1863. By June, she was complete enough for a trial run. The ship was turned over to the Confederate Navy on 12 September 1863 after the high-water season on the Red River had ended, although she did not receive her guns until between November 1863 and March 1864. First Lieutenant Charles Fauntleroy was appointed as her captain, although he told Carter that "he hoped the damned boat would sink" and that he "never intended to serve on her if he could help it". He desired a command on an ocean-going vessel, rather than his assignment to the inland ironclad. Fauntleroy was transferred in July to command a blockade runner, and Carter, who had previously commanded the gunboat CSS General Polk and was in Shreveport on direct orders from Confederate States Secretary of the Navy Stephen R. Mallory, was placed in command. Much of Missouri crew was transferred from CSS Harriet Lane, while others were taken from the army. In mid-December 1863, Carter requested 72 crewmen, a blacksmith, and a carpenter for Missouri. Crew conditions on the ironclad were unpleasant, and the ship's crew was plagued by desertions among the army men. Low water prevented Missouri from playing any part in the Red River Campaign of early 1864. Her movements were also hampered by a lack of fuel. In September, Carter commanded an unsuccessful attempt to seize the Federal gunboat using men from the crews of Missouri and CSS Webb.

In March 1865, the river began to rise and Missouri was able to leave the Shreveport area for the first time. She reached Alexandria, Louisiana, on 8 April and anchored where she could defend the town. In order to travel to Alexandria, fuel for the vessel had to be requisitioned from plantations along the way. Part of her crew was then transferred to Webb, which made an unsuccessful attempt to escape into the Gulf of Mexico on April 23. Carter surrendered the ship to Union forces on 3 June, the last Confederate ironclad to surrender. After her armor was removed, Missouri was sold at public auction on 29 November at Mound City, Illinois

Notes

Citations

Bibliography

References

  1. Silverstone, p. xviii
  2. Official Records, pp. 241–242
  3. Bisbee, pp. 163–164, 167
  4. Canney, p. 65
  5. Still, p. 148
  6. Chatelain, p. 261
  7. Bisbee, p. 165
  8. Chatelain, p. 262
  9. Bisbee, p. 166
  10. Official Records, p. 241
  11. Still, pp. 148–149
  12. Bisbee, p. 167
  13. Still, pp. 148–149
  14. Official Records, p. 242
  15. Olmsted, et al., p. 90
  16. The characteristics of this gun cannot be reliably determined because the United States produced a multitude of 32-pounder guns before the Civil War, but none of them were designated as siege guns.Olmsted, et al., pp. 7–59
  17. Olmsted, et al., p. 87
  18. Chatelain, pp. 263, 294
  19. Koehler & Stehman, p. 211
  20. Chatelain, p. 260
  21. Jeter, pp. 267–268
  22. Quoted in Still, p. 148
  23. Quoted in Still, p. 148
  24. Chatelain, p. 262
  25. Chatelain, pp. 262–263
  26. Jeter, p. 279
  27. Jeter, pp. 279–280
  28. Still, p. 149
  29. Bisbee, p. 166–167
  30. Official Records, Vol. 26, p. 540
  31. Still, p. 265
  32. Chatelain, p. 280
  33. Chatelain, p. 282
  34. Chatelain, pp. 283–286
  35. Still, p. 265
  36. to be [[ship breaking. scrapped]].Bisbee, p. 168

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ironclad-warships-of-the-confederate-states-navy1863-shipsships-built-in-louisianapaddle-steamers-of-the-united-states