All things dealing with the Civil War Navies and actions along the coasts and rivers and against forts. Emphasis will be placed on Fort Fisher and all operations around Wilmington, NC. And, of course, the Blockade and Running the Blockade.
Monday, December 9, 2019
William Henry Ward, CSN-- Part 1: Former U.S. Navy Officer, Two-Time Prisoner at Fort Warren
In my October 29 post I wrote that he was in command of the CSS Olustee (CSS Tallahassee) when he eluded blockaders off Wilmington, N.C. and went on a commerce destroying mission along the Atlantic coast.
From the North Carolina Civil War Sailors Project site.
In 1861, resided in Norfolk, Virginia. He had previous service in the U.S. Navy and was arrested for disloyalty and sent to Fort Fort Lafayette, New York August 31, 1861, and then to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, until paroled and exchanged in January 1862.
An official Navy document has him being appointed as an acting sailing master in the Confederate Navy on October 21, 1861, at Tallahassee, Florida, and was ordered to report to New Orleans and report to Captain George N. Hollins for duty.
Served aboard the CSS Louisiana and appointed lieutenant March 13, 1862. He was captured on the Mississippi River April 1862 and sent as a prisoner to Fort Warren again.
Same Old, Same Old. --Old B-R'er
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