CSS General Sumter was originally a 524-ton side-wheel
river towboat built at Algiers, Louisiana, in 1853. In 1861, while
named Junius Beebe, she was in the service of the State
of Louisiana. The steamer was converted at New Orleans in early
1862 to a River Defense Fleet "cottonclad" ram and renamed
General Sumter. She went up the Mississippi River to Fort
Pillow, Tennessee, in April 1862 and played a prominent role in
the naval action there on 10 May. When Fort Pillow was evacuated
on 1 June, the River Defense Fleet retreated to Memphis, where
it fought a final battle on 6 June. General Sumter rammed
the Union ship Queen of the West at that time, but was
herself badly damaged, run aground and captured. Placed in Federal
service under the name Sumter, she stranded off Bayou Sara,
Louisiana, in August 1862 and was abandoned.
This page features our only views of CSS General Sumter.
Photo #: NH 2049
"Battle of Fort Pillow, First position"
Engraving published in Rear Admiral Henry Walke's "Naval
Scenes and Reminiscences of the Civil War in the United States
..." (1877), depicting the action between the Confederate
River Defense Fleet and Federal ironclads near Fort Pillow, Tennessee,
10 May 1862.
Confederate ships, seen at right, include (from left to right):
General Earl Van Dorn, General Sterling Price,
General Bragg, General Sumter and Little Rebel.
The Federal ironclads, in the center and left, are (from left
to right): Mound City, Carondelet and Cincinnati.
A Federal mortar boat is by the river bank in the lower right.
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Photo #: NH 42755
"Battle of Fort Pillow, 3rd Position"
Engraving published in Rear Admiral Henry Walke's "Naval
Scenes and Reminiscences of the Civil War in the United States
..." (1877), depicting the action between the Confederate
River Defense Fleet and Federal ironclads near Fort Pillow, Tennessee,
10 May 1862.
Confederate ships, seen at left, include: Colonel Lovell,
General Beauregard, General M. Jeff Thompson, General
Bragg, General Sumter, Little Rebel and General
Earl van Dorn.
The Federal ironclads, in the center and right, are: Carondelet,
Cincinnati, Mound City, Benton, Saint
Louis, Cairo and Pittsburg. A tug is seen in
the right foreground.
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Photo #: NH 59053
"Closing-Scene of the Naval Engagement Before Memphis, Tennessee.",
6 June 1862
Line engraving published in "Harper's Weekly", 1862.
Ships shown are (from left to right): CSS General Earl Van
Dorn (escaping, with the Federal fleet in pursuit); General
Sumter (captured); General Beauregard (sinking) and
General M. Jeff Thompson (blowing up).
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