ships. The
Queen of the West is second from the front with the large "Q" between the smoke stacks The
Queen of the West was built in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1854 and served as a commercial steamer. She was purchased by Charles Ellet Jr. in 1862 due to her speed and converted for usage as a ram ship. The hull was reinforced, the forward end filled with hard oak wood, the steam-engine secured and the pilot house protected by thick wooden planks. Three longitudinal bulkheads were added and supported with iron bars. A central beam was installed from bow to stern and iron peaks were installed on the bow. A large ornamental "Q" was installed in the support cables between the twin chimney stacks. She was originally not equipped with any guns. The
Queen of the West was designated as Colonel Ellet's flagship of the United States Ram Fleet. On May 25, the
Queen of the West and the ram fleet joined the Mississippi River Squadron, led by
Charles H. Davis, on the Mississippi River north of Fort Pillow. Davis had little faith in the effectiveness of the rams but allowed the fleet to accompany his gunboats down the river to Memphis.
First Battle of Memphis On June 6, Colonel Charles Ellet Jr. led the ram ships in the
First Battle of Memphis as captain of the
Queen of the West. Ellet had not coordinated a plan of attack with Davis and when the flotilla approached Confederate forces, the
Queen of the West and the
USS Monarch steamed ahead of Davis' gunboats. The
Queen of the West rammed and sank the Confederate vessel . After the collision, the
Queen of the West came under attack from the and the CSS
Beauregard. The attack sheared off one of the paddle wheels from the
Queen of the West and forced her to ground on the riverbank. Ellet was wounded in the knee by a Confederate sharpshooter during the battle. His wound was the only serious casualty received on the Union side during the battle. Ellet died 15 days from a blood infection due to the injury. Ellet's brother,
Alfred W. Ellet took command of the ram fleet and his son
Charles Rivers Ellet became captain of the
Queen of the West.
Actions near Vicksburg commanded the
Queen of the West in daring actions on the Yazoo River and on the Mississippi River south of Vicksburg On July 15, the
Queen of the West, , and engaged the Confederate ironclad ram in the
Yazoo River. The
Arkansas was heavily damaged but escaped into the Mississippi and took refuge under the Confederate batteries at
Vicksburg, Mississippi. On July 22,
Queen of the West and attacked
Arkansas, despite the batteries at Vicksburg. The
Queen of the West rammed the
Arkansas but inflicted only minor damage and rejoined the Mississippi River Squadron ships above Vicksburg. The
Queen of the West continued to support operations against Vicksburg. On September 19, while escorting two transport barges, the
Queen of the West had a short engagement with Confederate infantry and artillery on the Mississippi River above
Bolivar, Mississippi. The
Queen of the West also conducted operations in the Yazoo River clearing mines and engaging Confederate batteries. In November 1862, the
Mississippi Marine Brigade, an amphibious raiding unit, was organized by Alfred W. Ellet. The ram fleet including the
Queen of the West was incorporated as a part of the brigade. On November 5, Charles Rivers Ellet was promoted to the rank of colonel and assigned command of the ram fleet. On December 12, 1862, the
Queen of the West was one of the ships that accompanied the up the Yazoo River. The
Cairo was struck by a 'torpedo' or
naval mine and began to sink rapidly. The
Queen of the West was able to rescue part of the crew from the
Cairo before it sank. On February 2, 1863, Charles Rivers Ellet was ordered by Admiral
David Dixon Porter to run the
Queen of the West past the batteries at
Vicksburg, Mississippi to support Admiral
David Farragut below the city. The boat was equipped with a 30-pounder bow gun, three 12-pounder howitzers, cotton bales and wooden sheathing for protection. Ellet intended to "run the gauntlet" of Vicksburg by cover of night, however delays resulted in passage of the guns at daybreak. The guns at Vicksburg fired for 50 minutes straight. The
Queen of the West took 12 hits and lost a gun but made it past the batteries with minimal damage. The run provided the Union forces with insight as to where the guns at Vicksburg were positioned. Once past the batteries, the
Queen of the West found the
City of Vicksburg docked, rammed her, and set her ablaze with turpentine-soaked balls fired from the forward gun. The
City of Vicksburg was severely damaged but not destroyed. The
Queen of the West had to disengage before destroying the
City of Vicksburg due to enemy fire which set the cotton bales aboard the
Queen of the West ablaze. The Union forces supplied the
Queen of the West with fuel by floating an unmanned coal barge filled with 20,000 bushels of coal past the Vicksburg batteries at night. The barge went unnoticed by the Confederate forces and floated downriver 10 miles before being intercepted by the
Queen of the West. The barge provided the
Queen of the West with enough fuel to continue her mission. On February 3, the
Queen of the West captured three Confederate transport ships - the CSS
A.W. Baker, CSS
Moro and CSS
Berwick Bay. The
Moro was empty of cargo since it had just dropped off supplies at
Port Hudson, Louisiana. The other two ships were laden with food supplies headed toward Vicksburg. The
Queen of the West rendezvoused with the
De Soto and on February 12, both ships went down the
Atchafalaya River to
Simmesport, Louisiana in search of Confederate forces. The crew went ashore, destroyed all supplies found and looted the residential area. On the way back up the Mississippi River, the
Queen of the West received Confederate gun fire and the 1st mate was injured. In retaliation, Ellet and his crew burned three plantations that were believed to be the residences of those that injured the 1st mate.
Loss of the Queen of the West near
Fort DeRussy On February 14, the
Queen of the West and
De Soto went up the
Red River and captured the steamboat
Era No. 5 carrying 4,500 bushels of corn. The
Queen of the West continued upstream to investigate reports of steamships at Gordon's Landing near
Marksville, Louisiana. She came under heavy fire by the shore batteries of
Fort DeRussy and was run aground onto the right bank by her pilot instead of backing down river as ordered. She was directly in the sight of Confederate guns, which pounded her until Ellet ordered "abandon ship". Ellet and the crew escaped and floated downstream on bales of cotton and were rescued by the
De Soto. The
Queen of the West was not burned out of concern for the 1st mate, who was wounded and could not be moved. The USS
Queen of the West was captured, repaired and re-entered into service as the CSS
Queen of the West by the Confederate forces. ==Service as CSS
Queen of the West==