History | |
---|---|
Name | PS Vulture |
Operator |
|
Port of registry | |
Builder | Aitken and Mansel Whiteinch |
Yard number | 6 |
Launched | 18 August 1864 |
Out of service | 1905 |
Fate | Scrapped 1886 |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage | 800 gross register tons (GRT) |
Length | 242 feet (74 m) |
Beam | 25.7 feet (7.8 m) |
Draught | 10.6 feet (3.2 m) |
Installed power | 200 hp |
PS Vulture was a passenger vessel built in 1864. [1] She served briefly as a blockade runner during the American Civil War. She then traded in British coastal waters until she was broken up in 1886.
Aitken and Mansel Whiteinch built Vulture and launched her on 18 August 1864. [2]
She departed Glasgow for Bermuda in October 1864. [3] and served as a blockage runner in the American Civil War. [4]
In 1865 she was advertised for sale. [5] and by 1868 was operated by Thomas Brown between Glasgow and London. In 1870 Ford and Jackson acquired her and then employed her on services between Milford Haven and Waterford. In 1873 the Great Western Railway took over the route.
Vulture was broken up in 1886.
USS Advance, the second United States Navy ship to be so named, was later known as USS Frolic, and was originally the blockade runner Advance captured by the Union Navy during the latter part of the American Civil War. She was purchased by the Union Navy and outfitted as a gunboat and assigned to the blockade of the waterways of the Confederate States of America. She also served as dispatch ship and supply vessel when military action eventually slowed.
The first USS Sonoma was a sidewheel gunboat that served in the United States Navy during the American Civil War. She was named for Sonoma Creek in northern California, Sonoma County, California, and the town of Sonoma, California, that in turn were named for one of the chiefs of the Chocuyen Indians of that region.
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PS Alfred was a passenger paddle steamer that was launched in 1863. She was renamed Old Dominion in 1864, Sheffield in 1865 and Prince Arthur in 1867. The London and North Western Railway (LNWR) and the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (L&YR) acquired her in 1871 and operated her until 1877.
J & W Dudgeon was a Victorian shipbuilding and engineering company based in Cubitt Town, London, founded by John and William Dudgeon.
Throughout the American Civil War, blockade runners were seagoing steam ships that were used to get through the Union blockade that extended some 3,500 miles (5,600 km) along the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coastlines and the lower Mississippi River. The Confederate states were largely without industrial capability and could not provide the quantity of arms and other supplies needed to fight against the industrial North. To meet this need blockade runners were built in Scotland and England and were used to import the guns, ordnance and other supplies that the Confederacy desperately needed, in exchange for cotton that the British textile industry needed greatly. To penetrate the blockade, these relatively lightweight shallow draft ships, mostly built in British shipyards and specially designed for speed, but not suited for transporting large quantities of cotton, had to cruise undetected, usually at night, through the Union blockade. The typical blockade runners were privately owned vessels often operating with a letter of marque issued by the Confederate States of America. If spotted, the blockade runners would attempt to outmaneuver or simply outrun any Union ships on blockade patrol, often successfully.
PS Gael was a passenger vessel operated by the Great Western Railway from 1884 to 1891
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