Please report any broken links or trouble you might come across to the Webmaster. Please take a moment to let us know so that we can correct any problems and make your visit as enjoyable and as informative as possible.

NavSource Online:
Revenue Cutter Photo Archive

USRM Henrietta


Revenue Cutter:

  • Built in 1861 by Henry Steers, Greenpoint, Brooklyn, NY for James Gordon Bennett, Jr. of New York, NY
  • Launched 18 May 1861
  • Acquired by the Union Navy in June 1861 and commissioned USRM Henrietta in the Revenue Marine Service
  • Decommissioned in May 1862
  • Lost off the coast of Roatán, Honduras 16 December 1872, on her return voyage to New York during a heavy gale.

    Specifications:

  • Displacement 205 t.
  • Length 107'
  • Beam 23'
  • Draft 9'
  • Complement 16
  • Speed 8 kts.
  • Armament: One 24-pounder Dahlgren gun
  • Propulsion: Schooner sail.
    Click on thumbnail
    for full size image
    Size Image Description Source
    USRM Henrietta
    Henrietta 274k c. 1 June 1861
    Photo from 10 August 1861 edition if Harper's Weekly
    Robert Hurst
    Henrietta
    Henrietta 136k c. 1867
    Painting by Charles Parsons (1821 - 1910)
    Library of Congress digital ID pga. 00980
    Robert Hurst
    Henrietta 180k The Start of the Great 1866 Transatlantic Yacht Race by James E. Buttersworth (1817 - 1894). Showing Fleetwing (at left) , Henrietta (center), and Vesta (at right)
    Courtesy of Vallejo Gallery

    View the USRM Henrietta
    Coast Guard history entry located on the USCG Historian's Office website
    History Addendum:

    Henrietta was a 19th-century wooden yacht schooner, designed and built in 1861 by Henry Steers for James Gordon Bennett Jr. She was acquired by the Union Navy during the American Civil War. She was placed into the U.S. Revenue Service assigned to support the fleet blockading the ports of the Confederate States of America. The Henrietta won the first mid-winter transatlantic yacht race across the Atlantic between three American yachts.

    Schooner Yacht Henrietta was launched from the shipyard of Henry Steers at Greenpoint, Brooklyn on May 18, 1861. She was designed and built by Henry Steers for James Gordon Bennett Jr. as a pleasure yacht. She was modeled by William Tooker as a keel yacht of 205 tons.

    In 1861, Bennett volunteered his newly built yacht Henrietta for the U.S. Revenue Marine Service during the Civil War. At the same time, Bennett was commissioned as a third lieutenant in the Revenue Marine Service and assigned to the Henrietta. She patrolled Long Island looking for rebels until February 1862 when she was sent to Port Royal, South Carolina. She carried a 24-pound Dahlgren gun with 16 men. On March 3, 1862, Bennett commanded the Henrietta as part of the fleet which captured Fernandina, Florida and raised the American flag. Bennett and the Henrietta was decommissioned and returned to civilian life in New York in May 1862.

    In September 1865, the Henrietta lost to the yacht Fleetwing in a race around Cape May Lightship by 1 hour and 19 minutes. In October 1865, she was defeated by the Vesta over the same course.

    In what was billed as the "Great Ocean Yacht Race", when three wealthy American men took their yachts on a mid-winter transatlantic race across the Atlantic in December 1866. The three yachts were the Vesta owned by Pierre Lorillard IV, the Fleetwing owned by George and Franklin Osgood and the Henrietta owned by the 21-year-old yachtsman James Gordon Bennett Jr.. Each yachtsman put up $30,000 in the winner-take-all wager. They started from Sandy Hook Light, during high westerly winds and raced to The Needles, the furthest westerly point of the Isle of Wight in the English Channel, before reaching the seaport Cowes on the Isle of Wight. Bennett's Henrietta won with a time of 13 days, 21 hours, 55 minutes, with Captain Samuel S. Samuels as the skipper. The Fleetwing and Vesta took over 14 days to reach Cowes. After his win, Bennett bought the rival yacht, the Fleetwing, for $65,000 and named her the Dauntless.

    After the race, on January 1, 1867, Commodore McVickar of the New York Yacht Club and Mr. Bennett, of the Henrietta had a personal meeting with Queen Victoria at Osborne House.

    In 1870, the Henrietta was sold for $16,000 to Captain Nickerson of Boston for fruit trade in West Indies. She was later sold again and used in the African trade and then transferred to New Orleans and the Bay Island Fruit company.

    On December 16, 1872, the Henrietta was lost off the coast of Roatán, Honduras on her return voyage to New York during a heavy gale. Her crew were saved.


    Back to the Main Photo Index Back to the Revenue Cutter Photo Index

    Comments, Suggestions, E-mail Webmaster

    This page created and maintained by Joseph M. Radigan
    All pages copyright NavSource Naval History