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USS Ceres, an 144-ton (burden) side-wheel gunboat, was
built in 1856 at New York City as a civilian steamer. She was
purchased by the Navy in September 1861 and served for the remainder
of the Civil War in the waters of North Carolina and southern
Virginia. While enforcing the blockade of the Confederacy, Ceres
took or destroyed two sailing vessels and two steamers, three
in 1862 and one in 1864. She also participated in several combat
actions, among them the captures of Roanoke Island and Elizabeth
City, N.C., in February 1862, and the defense of Federal positions
around the North Carolina Sounds in 1863 and 1864. In April and
May 1864 she was involved in two fights with the Confederate ironclad
Albemarle.
Sent north after the war's end, USS Ceres was decommissioned
at New York in July 1865 and sold in October. Returning to commercial
employment under the same name, she lasted at least until 1887,
when she was removed from shipping registers.
This page features the only view we have related to USS
Ceres (1861-1865).
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If you want higher resolution reproductions than the digital
images presented here, see: "How
to Obtain Photographic Reproductions." |
Photo #: NH 95121
"The Battle at Newbern -- Repulse of the Rebels, March 14,
1863"
Line engraving, published in "Harper's Weekly", 11
April 1863, depicting the action at Fort Anderson, Neuse River,
North Carolina. U.S. Navy gunboats Hunchback, Hetzel,
Ceres and Shawsheen are firing from the river at
Confederate forces, as Union artillery and infantry move into
position on the near shore.
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If you want higher resolution reproductions than the digital
images presented here, see: "How
to Obtain Photographic Reproductions." |
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