< Sunflower ScStr

Sunflower ScStr

 

Sunflower I

(ScStr: t. 294; 1. 104'5, b. 20'9; dr. 12'; s. 10.6 k.;
a. 2 30-pdr. P.r.)

The first Sunflower—a screw gunboat purchased at Boston, Mass., on 2 May 1863—was commissioned on 29 April 1863, Acting Master Edward Sice in command.

Sunflower was assigned to the East Gulf Blockading Squadron and arrived at Key West in mid-May 1863. On the 31st, she seized schooner Echo and a cargo of cotton off the Marquesas Keys. The gunboat captured schooner Pushmatatta off Tortugas on 13 June and schooner General Worth in the straits of Florida on 27 August. Sunflower aided Beauregard in seizing sloop Last Trial on 6 October. On Christmas Eve 1863, she captured blockade runner Hancock near the lighthouse at Tampa Bay with a cargo of salt and borax.

Sunflower remained on patrol during 1864 and, on 24 March' captured sloop Josephine in Sarasota Sound. Josephine was en route from Tampa to Havana with a cargo of cotton when she was intercepted. Sunflower, with Honduras and J. L. Adams, supported the capture of Tampa, Fla., in a combined operation from 4 to 7 May. These Union ships transported Northern soldiers to Tampa and also provided naval landing parties which participated in the assault. On the 6th, the three ships captured sloop Neptune which was carrying a cargo of cotton, when she attempted to run the blockade.

On 2 June, Sunflower landed three armed boats to destroy salt works at Tampa Bay. The last ship to fall prey to Sunflower was Pickwick, captured off St. George's Sound on 6 December 1864. On 30 March 1865, she and Somerset landed an expedition at St. Joseph's Bayou and destroyed salt works.

Sunflower sailed to Philadelphia and was decommissioned there on 3 June 1865. The ship was sold at auction on 10 August 1865.