Tuesday, August 11, 2015

CSS Spray: The Scourge of the Florida Blockaders


CSS Spray: The Scourge of the Florida Blockaders

Operating out of the Confederate Naval Station at St. Mark's, Florida, the CSS Spray was a thorn in the side of the Yankee blockaders who operated along the west and northern Gulf Coasts of Florida. From 1863 when this valiant ship was added to the Confederate fleet, until her surrender in 1865, the CSS Spray played havoc with the East Gulf Blockading Squadron of the US Navy. The CSS Spray would serve exclusively in Florida waters during her career in the Confederate Navy, but was very ably commanded and very much up to the task of giving the Yankees pure hell when it came to disrupting their plans and keeping Florida in the war on the Confederate side.

Lt. Charles W. Hays was the first commander of this stout little vessel and he handily outfitted the ship and utilized it to keep the Yankee blockaders clear of Appalachicola Bay. Lieutenant Hays also managed to thwart an attempted sortie up the Chattahoochee River by the USS Stars and Stripes that was aimed at harassing Tallahassee and disrupting the Confederate Naval Arsenal at Columbus, Georgia. Through his capable leadership, Lt. Hays kept the Yankees at bay throughout 1863.

In 1864, Lt. Hays relinquished command of the CSS Spray and moved to another assignment within the Confederate Navy. Lt. Henry L. Lewis took command of the ship and would remain her commander until the end of hostilities in 1865. Lt. Lewis was born in Virginia and prior to the war had joined the US Navy. He had also commanded the CSS Rappahannock before being assigned to command the CSS Spray.

In February of 1864, Lt. Lewis and his brave crew aboard the CSS Spray thoroughly surprised an attempt by a Federal armada of 14 ships to destroy the ammunition foundry at Newport, Florida. The Federal armada had landed two expeditionary forces of US Marines and sailors with orders to proceed to Port Leon, Florida and capture and destroy Fort Ward there that protected the Ochlockonee Bay from Yankee invaders. In the action that ensued, Lt. Lewis and his men were able to draw most of the Yankee armada away from the Florida coast and out into the Gulf. As they did this, Confederate land forces were able to mount seriously coordinated resistance to the US Marine expeditionary forces and force the Yankees to leave the area. This coordinated effort by Confederate forces would keep St. Mark's, Florida open as a blockade running port throughout the war and would come together later in 1865 to thwart yet another Yankee invasion of the region.

In March 1865, the Yankees under Gen. John Newton would again attempt to destroy Fort Ward and would be met by a coordinated Confederate Navy and Army effort that destroyed the Yankee forces at the Battle of Natural Bridge. At the Battle of Natural Bridge, the CSS Spray would prove her worth to the Confederate cause as a river-borne attack battery of artillery. Because the Spray was able to shell the Yankees as they moved positions throughout the battle, the ragtag Confederate Army forces of invalids and local home guard militia were able to thoroughly rout the US forces trying to make their way to take Ft. Ward. Although the war was to end within just a few weeks, the CSS Spray proved itself to be a continual thorn in the side of the Yankee invaders who attempted to take Tallahassee and subjugate it under the Federal boot.

The post-war fate of the CSS Spray is rather unknown. Some stories say that Lt. Lewis and the brave crew scuttled the ship on the northern reaches of the Chattahoochee River rather than witness their brave ship be surrendered to the Yankee invaders. Other stories tell that the CSS Spray returned to civilian life after the war as an intracoastal commerce trading vessel that plied the waters of western Florida until some time in the early 20th Century. Regardless of what happened to the ship, the men who crewed her and the able commanders who led them certainly lived up to the honor of the Confederate Navy and proved to be a continual scourge to the US Navy's East Gulf Blocading Fleet throughout the war.

Sources

CSS Spray,” Wikipedia

“The Spray,” Little Town Mart

“CSS Spray,” 290 Foundation



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