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Gunboat Photo Archive

Nipsic


Gunboat: Laid down, 24 December 1862 by the Portsmouth Navy Yard, Kittery, ME; Launched, 15 June 1863; Commissioned USS Nipsic, 2 September 1863; Decommissioned, 1873; Recommissioned, 11 October 1879; Decommissioned, 2 October 1890 at Mare Island Navy Yard, Vallejo, CA; Struck from the Naval Register, (date unknown); Sold, 13 February 1913. Fate unknown.

Specifications: Displacement 592 t.; Length 179' 6"; Beam 30'; Draft 11' 6"; Speed 11 kts.; Complement unknown; Armament one 50-pounder rifle, one 30-pounder rifle, two IX in. smooth bore, two 24-pounder howitzers and two italian 12-pounders; Propulsion steam, one shaft.
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Nipsic 112k Samoan Hurricane of 15-16 March 1889. Scene in Apia Harbor, Upolu, Samoa, during salvage efforts, circa late March or early April. The view looks about northwestward. In the foreground are improvised shear legs and purchase for handling guns, carriages and other heavy weights removed from the wrecks. This arrangement was used both in landing materials and later in embarking it on USS Monongahela for transit home. The bow of the German gunboat Eber is at left, by the shear legs. USS Trenton is in the center, with the sunken USS Vandalia alongside. Vandalia's smokestack has been removed to replace that of USS Nipsic, which is probably the ship in the right distance. In the left distance is the German gunboat Adler, on her side in shallow water.
US Navy Photo NH 2149
Naval Historical Center
Nipsic 97k Wrecked ships in Apia Harbor, Upolu, Samoa, soon after the storm. The view looks about northward, with USS Trenton and the sunken USS Vandalia at left, the German corvette Olga beached in the center distance and USS Nipsic beached in the right center.Samoan Hurricane of 15-16 March 1889.
US Navy Photo NH 2150
Naval Historical Center
Nipsic 130k Scene in Apia Harbor, Upolu, Samoa, soon after the storm. The view looks about southwestward, with USS Nipsic beached in the foreground. Beyond her stern is USS Trenton (in the right center) and the sunken USS Vandalia (in the center, alongside Trenton).
US Navy Photo NH 2151
Naval Historical Center
Nipsic 77k Scene in Apia Harbor, Upolu, Samoa, circa late March or early April 1889, during salvage efforts. View looks westerly, with USS Nipsic undergoing repairs in the center. The upturned hull of German gunboat Adler is in shallow water beyond Nipsic.
Courtesy of the Naval Historical Foundation. Collection of Rear Admiral Richard G. Davenport, USN, who was an officer of USS Nipsic during this time.

US Navy Photo NH 97925
Naval Historical Center
Nipsic 93k Arriving at Honolulu, Hawaii, with a jury rudder, circa August 1889. She had come up from Samoa for repair of damage received during the 15-16 March 1889 Apia hurricane.
US Navy Photo NH 63404
Naval Historical Center
Nipsic 86k View of the ship's starboard quarter, showing the jury rudder fitted after she had lost her rudder post and rudder in the 15-16 March 1889 hurricane at Apia, Samoa. This view shows the rudder topped after backing. Probably taken at Honolulu, Hawaii, after Nipsic had arrived from Samoa, circa August 1889.
US Navy Photo NH 63081
Naval Historical Center
Nipsic 85k View of the ship's starboard quarter, showing the jury rudder fitted after she had lost her rudder post and rudder in the 15-16 March 1889 hurricane at Apia, Samoa. This view shows the rudder lowered for use. Probably taken at Honolulu, Hawaii, after Nipsic had arrived from Samoa, circa August 1889.
US Navy Photo NH 44707
Naval Historical Center

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships: Nipsic was laid down 24 December 1862 by Portsmouth Navy Yard; launched 15 June 1863; sponsored by. Miss Rebecca Scott; and commissioned 2 September 1863, Lt. Comdr. George Bacon in command.

Nipsic arrived off Morris Island, S.C., 5 November 1863 to join in the blockade of Charleston, where she served until the end of the Civil War. On 27 June 1864, she took schooner Julia as the blockade-runner attempted to enter port. Such service contributed largely to Confederate defeat by closing the South's economy to all foreign contact.

Until 1873, when she was placed out of commission, Nipsic served primarily with the South Atlantic Squadron off the coast of Brazil, and in the West Indies, protecting American commerce and interests. Recommissioned 11 October 1879, she served again in the West Indies until March 1880 when she sailed for the European Station.

After three years service in the Mediterranean and along the north and west coasts of Africa, Nipsic returned to the South Atlantic Squadron in June 1883. She served there until March 1886 when she sailed to Washington for overhaul. In January 1888 she sailed for Cape Horn and Callao, Peru, whence she departed 23 September for duty as station ship in Apia Harbor, Samoa.

On 15 March 1889, Nipsic rode at anchor in Apia Harbor with Vandalia, Trenton, HMS Calliope, and three German naval vessels, Adler, Olga, and Eber, along with six merchantman. Gale-Force winds arose, and preparations for leaving harbor were begun, but departure was delayed in the hope that conditions next morning would be more favorable for the sortie. However, by early morning 16 March the harbor was a mass of foam and spray as hurricane-Force winds battered the ships. Only Calliope, larger and more strongly powered than the others, was able to leave the harbor. Vandalia, Trenton, the three German ships, and the merchantmen were all sunk; Nipsic's captain, Comdr. D. W. Mullin, was able by superb seamanship to beach his ship. While severely damaged by the pounding she received on the beach, Nipsic's hull was intact, although much of her topside structure was battered, all of her propeller blades damaged, two boilers spread and useless, and eight of her crew lost. Refloated and her engines repaired, Nipsic cleared Apia 9 May for Auckland, but was turned back by heavy seas. On 15 May she again sailed, for Pago Pago, Fanning Island, and Honolulu, arriving 2 August.

Nipsic was completely rebuilt in Hawaii, her length and beam extended and her tonnage increased. From 3 January 1890 she cruised in the Hawaiian Islands guarding American interests. She arrived in San Francisco Bay 30 September, and decommissioned at Mare Island Navy Yard 2 October. In 1892 she sailed to Puget Sound Navy Yard to serve as receiving ship and prison. On 13 February 1913 she was sold.

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