depicted in 1858.
Sabine is front and center.
Paraguay Expedition and Home Fleet, 1858–1861 Her first cruise took the frigate to
Montevideo and
Buenos Aires in October 1858 with the
Paraguay expedition, a task force commanded by
Flag Officer William B. Shubrick, after that country's firing on . She conveyed Commissioner Bowlin and served as flagship during the voyage to South America, but was not officially considered part of the expedition fleet, as she was not designed to act against Paraguay, not being able to ascend the river. The expedition won the United States an
indemnity and a renewed treaty.
Sabine then operated out of New York with the
Home Fleet until July 1861.
Civil War, 1861–1865 Through July and August, she was out of commission at
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. Recommissioning on 30 August, she was ordered to join the
Atlantic Blockading Squadron on 9 September. During the Civil War,
Sabine was actively employed along the east coast searching for Confederate raiders. She participated in the relief and reinforcement of
Fort Pickens, Florida, in April 1861, under command of Capt. Adams; the rescue of 500 marines and the crew of chartered troop transport
Governor during a violent storm off
South Carolina on 2 and 3 November 1861; the search for in March 1862, after the
ship-of-the-line had been badly damaged by a storm while sailing to
Port Royal, South Carolina; and the hunt for
CSS Alabama in October 1862 and
CSS Tacony in June 1863.
Sabine returned to New York for blockade duty with the
North Atlantic Blockading Squadron until ordered in August 1864 to
Norfolk, Virginia as a training ship for Navy apprentices and landsmen.
Training ship, 1865–1877 After the war, she was transferred to
New London, Connecticut for the same purpose until 1868. In 1867, an apprentice on
Sabine,
Frank Du Moulin, was awarded the
Medal of Honor for rescuing a crewmate who had fallen from the rigging into the water. In 1869 and 1870, the ship conducted
midshipman training cruises to European and Mediterranean ports. In 1871
Sabine was repaired at Boston; and, from 1872 to 1876, she served as a
receiving ship at
Portsmouth, New Hampshire. In 1877, she was laid up until she was sold on 23 September 1883 at Portsmouth to J.L. Snow of
Rockland, Maine. == References ==