FACTOID # 164: If you're looking to invade someone by sea, try Canada! Canada has only 9000 Navy personnel guarding the longest national coastline in the world.
 
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Encyclopedia > CSS Scorpion
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Career
Ordered: 1864
Laid down: ??
Fate: Abandoned
General Characteristics
Displacement:
Length: 46 ft (14.0 m)
Beam: 6 ft 3 in (1.9 m)
Draft: 3 ft 9 in (1.1 m)
Speed:
Complement: ??
Armament: 1 x 5 in (127 mm), 18 ft (5.5 m) spar with percussion torpedo
Armor: none

CSS Scorpion was a Squib-class torpedo boat procured late in 1864 by the Confederate States Navy and armed with a spar torpedo fitted to her stem. She performed picket duty in the James River under command of Lieutenant E. Lakin, CSN.


On January 23 to January 25, 1865, torpedo boats Scorpion, CSS Hornet, and CSS Wasp, under overall command of Lieutenant Charles W. Read, CSN, joined Flag Officer J.K. Mitchell's James River Squadron in the abortive attack on General Ulysses S. Grant's main supply base at City Point, Virginia. Attempting to rejoin her consort, the ironclad CSS Richmond, aground above Trent's Reach, Scorpion ended up fast ashore also and was severely damaged by the magazine explosion which destroyed nearby gunboat CSS Drewry, January 24. Abandoned, she fell into Federal hands.


See also USS Scorpion and HMS Scorpion.


  Results from FactBites:
 
USS Scorpion - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (161 words)
USS Scorpion (1812), a block sloop that was part of Joshua Barney's Chesapeake Bay flotilla in the War of 1812
USS Scorpion (1813), a schooner serving on the upper Great Lakes in the War of 1812
USS Scorpion (1847), a bark-rigged steamer of the Mexican-American War
  More results at FactBites »


 

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