Navy charter (1861) Secessionists began bombarding Fort Sumter on 12 April 1861. The
Union Navy was largely unprepared for war and reacted by acquiring civilian ships. Acting on orders from
Commodore Hiram Paulding, the commandant of the
Philadelphia Navy Yard,
Captain Samuel F. DuPont, chartered
Keystone State for naval service on 19 April 1861. DuPont received the order in the morning and chartered the ship in three hours. Her charter rate was $600 per day. She was towed to the Navy Yard that day, and even during the tow machinists worked to convert her to a naval vessel. At 6 pm that evening DuPont began loading her with more than 50 Marines, 50 sailors, ammunition, seven days of coal, and two weeks of provisions. The ship was armed with four 24-pounder guns. She sailed at dawn on 20 April 1861, under the command of Lieutenant Maxwell Woodhull, to deliver arms and troops to
Washington, D.C. On her way to Washington,
Keystone State arrived off the
Norfolk Navy Yard on the morning of 21 April 1861, by which time it was aflame to prevent it from falling into the hands of the Confederacy. She worked with several other Navy ships to extricate
USS Cumberland from the docks through the obstacles placed by the Confederates, and helped evacuate sailors from the Navy Yard and
USS Pennsylvania. She reached Washington on 23 April 1861. On 24 April 1861, now under the command of
Lieutenant Stephen D. Trenchard, she was ordered to New York to take on supplies, and then to sail to back Washington, D.C. The ship arrived in Washington on 1 May 1861. On 3 May 1861
Keystone State embarked gun carriages and ordinance supplies from the
Washington Arsenal for delivery to Fort Washington and
Fortress Monroe. She then sailed back to New York to pick up yet more supplies to reinforce Washington, including five guns. She reached Washington on 14 May 1861. On board,
Keystone State had 115 women and children who were fleeing the conflict in the South, mostly from the Norfolk area. On that same day she was ordered to sail to Philadelphia to be returned to her owners, ending her charter. Still short of ships, the Navy purchased
Keystone State for $125,000 on June 10, 1861. Repairs began within a week of acquisition, and included dry-docking and replacing the copper sheeting on her hull. Her battery was upgraded to four 32-pounder guns. She was commissioned at the
Philadelphia Navy Yard on 19 July 1861, She sailed from Philadelphia in search of the
commerce raider CSS Sumter. The chase went from
Kingston, Jamaica to
St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. She then circumnavigated
Puerto Rico, stopping in
Martinique along the way.
Keystone State sailed to
Port of Spain, Trinidad, where she found that she had missed
Sumter by five days. She visited many other
Caribbean ports and sailed as far south as
Aspinwall, Panama before returning to the United States. While she failed in her mission to stop the
Sumter, she did capture a blockade runner. The steamer
Salvor was sailing from
Havana to
Tampa with a cargo that included 600 pistols and 500,000
percussion caps when she was captured by
Keystone State near the
Dry Tortugas on 14 October 1861. The ship returned to Philadelphia, via
Key West, with
Salvor in tow, on 25 October 1861. While Keystone State was at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, she had her armament upgraded again. She was equipped with six 8-inch guns, two 32-pounders, and a Parrott rifle. At Philadelphia, Commander
William E. Le Roy took command of the ship on 12 November 1861. She visited
Bermuda still searching for
Sumter, and arrived back at Fortress Monroe on 26 December 1861 with nothing to show for her cruise but two cases of smallpox.
South Atlantic Blockading Squadron, (1861–1863) In January 1862,
Keystone State was assigned to
South Atlantic Blockading Squadron. Her first assignment was to blockade the port of
Fernandina, Florida. In March 1862,
Keystone State was part of Flag Officer DuPont's fleet which captured Fernandina and the surrounding islands, putting an end to the need to blockade the port. On her next cruise, she was assigned to blockade the port of
Georgetown, South Carolina. On 10 April 1862, she chased schooner
Liverpool of
Nassau ashore where she was burned to the water's edge. Schooner
Dixie, bound for Nassau with a cargo of 100 bales of cotton, 234 barrels of turpentine, 40 bushels of peanuts, and 3,000 pounds of rice, was captured on 15 April 1862. After returning to port for coal and supplies,
Keystone State returned to blockade duty, this time off Charleston. On 29 May 1862 she captured the British steamer
Elizabeth, in bound from Nassau with 50 crates of Enfield rifles in cargo. The schooner
Cora was taken two days later.
Keystone State took schooner
Sarah, laden with cotton, and
Catalina, off Charleston on 20 June 1862. She captured the schooner
Fanny attempting to slip into Charleston with a cargo of salt on 22 August 1862.
Keystone State participated in the capture of schooner
Annie Dees on 17 November 1862. At dawn on 31 January 1863,
Keystone State was at anchor, part of the blockading force off Charleston Harbor. Two Confederate ironclads,
CSS Palmetto State and
CSS Chicora came out of the early morning fog to challenge the Union ships. They attacked
USS Mercedita and succeeded in ramming her, disabling her machinery, and killing several of her crew. They turned next to
Keystone State, which was hit by ten shells
. At approximately 6 am, a shot ripped into
Keystone States steam drum, killing 19 men and wounding a further 20. Since she carried a crew of 163 men, her losses were a quarter of the crew.
USS Housatanic engaged the ironclads, which retired to Charleston, but
Keystone State was on fire, leaking badly, and had two feet of water in the hold. She was taken under tow by
USS Memphis and reached
Port Royal, South Carolina, where temporary repairs were made. The ship got underway on 22 February 1863 for blockading duty off
St. Simons Sound,
Georgia. She served there until departing for Philadelphia on 2 June 1863 for permanent repairs.
Keystone State was found to be "very much out of order" on her arrival at the Navy Yard and faced months of work. She was decommissioned on 10 June 1863 and her crew given a 10-day furlough. The ship was hauled out in a floating drydock to repair hull damage from her encounter with the Confederate ironclads. Her engines were overhauled.
North Atlantic Blockading Squadron, 1863–1865 Keystone State was recommissioned on 3 October 1863, Commander
Edward Donaldson in command, and stood out to sea on 27 October. Three days later she joined the
North Atlantic Blockading Squadron at
Wilmington, North Carolina. Sometime around the turn of the year, Donaldson yielded command of the ship to
Commander Pierce Crosby. By this point in the war, Wilmington was the last major Confederate port, concentrating both blockaders are blockade runners alike.
Keystone State participated in the capture of six ships during her final year of blockade duty including the steamer
Margaret and Jessie in 1863, and
Caledonia,
Rouen,
Lilian,
Elsie, and
Siren in 1864
. In addition to participating in the capture of sixteen ships listed above,
Keystone State also plucked from the sea almost 300 bales of cotton thrown overboard by blockade runners seeking to destroy valuables that would fall into the hands of their captors. These generated almost $200,000 of prize money for
Keystone State. After Fort Fisher fell, the campaign to take Wilmington continued on the river. On 20 January 1865, Keystone State towed the
monitor Monadanock over the Cape Fear River bar. Admiral Porter requested use of the
monitor Montauk for the final assault on Wilmington, and
Keystone State was assigned to tow the ship up the Cape Fear River on 21 January 1865. She was sold at auction at Washington, D.C., on 15 September 1865 to
Marshall O. Roberts for $54,000. == Commercial service (18661872) ==