USS Farragut DDG 99 / Admiral David Glasgow
Farragut / Arleigh Burke class Guided Missile Destroyer – US Navy
|
|
s e a f o r c e s – online
|
Naval Forces
Technology, History & Information
|
|||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|||||||||
Guided Missile Destroyer
|
|||||||||
DDG 99 -
USS Farragut
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||
USS Farragut (DDG 99)
|
US Navy photo
|
||||||||
Type,
Class:
|
|
Guided Missile Destroyer; Arleigh Burke – class / Flight
IIA;
planned and built as DDG
99; |
|||||||
Builder:
|
|
Bath Iron Works, Bath,
Maine, USA |
|||||||
STATUS:
|
|
Awarded: March 6, 1998; Laid down: January 9, 2004; Launched: July 23, 2005; Commissioned: June 10, 2006; ACTIVE UNIT/ in
commission (Atlantic Fleet) |
|||||||
Homeport:
|
|
Mayport, Florida, USA
|
|||||||
Namesake:
|
|
Named after and in honor of
Admiral David Glasgow Farragut (1801
– 1870); > see history, below;
|
|||||||
Ship's
Motto:
|
|
> PREPARED FOR BATTLE <
|
|||||||
Technical Data:
(Measures, Propulsion, Armament,
Aviation, etc.)
|
|
see: INFO > Guided
Missile Destroyer / Arleigh Burke - class. … see also: USS
Farragut (DDG 37); |
|||||||
|
|
|||||||||
Pictures,
photos & more ...
|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
|
David
Glasgow Farragut |
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
Photo credits: US Navy, US Naval
Historical Center |
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
|
Namesake
& History: |
|||||||||
|
Admiral David Glasgow Farragut
(July 5, 1801 – August 14, 1870); |
|||||||||
|
A significant contributing
factor to the Union success at Vicksburg was the skill of the North's naval
commanders. One of the most colorful naval commanders of the Civil War was
David Glasgow Farragut. Though he was unsuccessful in early naval operations
against Vicksburg, Farragut's success at New Orleans and Mobile Bay secured
his place in history as one of America's most celebrated heroes. The man who
would become the first Admiral of the United States Navy was born James
Glasgow Farragut near Knoxville, Tennessee on July 6, 1801. His father, Jorge
Farragut, hailed from a seafaring family and emigrated to this country in
1776 from the island of Minorca, off the east coast of Spain. Before his
death in 1817, Jorge Farragut would serve his country gallantly in the revolutionary
War and the War of 1812. Young James would soon follow in his father's
footsteps. David Porter,
one of the Navy's finest officers, befriended the Farragut family through an
unusual chain of events in which the Farraguts rescued Porter's unconscious
father from the deck of a drifting boat. When the elder Porter passes away,
David was grateful to the family for taking care of his father and offered to
take young James and train him as a naval officer. Since it was not uncommon
then for parents to have a child adopted by someone who could train them in a
career, James Glasgow Farragut became the adopted son of David Porter and
changed his name to David G. Farragut. David followed his adopted father to
the sea at the tender ago of eight and received his first naval appointment
as midshipman at large at the age of nine and a half. At age eleven he saw
his first combat and even commanded a vessel at age twelve! The young sailor
had seen a lot during his four years at sea, but his greatest achievement was
yet to come. "I am to
have a Flag in the Gulf, and the rest depends on me." Fifty years
later at the outbreak of the Civil War, David Farragut had a difficult
decision to make. He was born in Tennessee, raised in Louisiana, and lived in
Virginia, yet he felt more devoted to the country he had served for more than
five decades. He decided to join the Union and moved his family north. In
January 1862, Farragut was named Flag Officer in command of the West Gulf
Blockading Squadron with instructions to enter the Mississippi and capture
New Orleans. He was placed in command of eighteen wooden vessels including
his flagship HARTFORD, a fleet of mortar boats, and 700 men. To the
objection of his stepbrother David Dixon Porter, who was in charge of the
mortar boat flotilla, Flag Officer Farragut made the decision to run past
Forts Jackson and St. Philip to take the city of New Orleans. To prepare the
ships to run past the forts, the crews crisscrossed the hulls with great
chains until they were almost as well protected as the ironclads. Further,
since he planned to pass the forts at night, Farragut had the hulls covered
with mud from the Mississippi to make them less visible from the shore and
had the decks painted white so that needed objects would stand out clearly.
He even had tall trees lashed to the masts of his vessels so that the enemy
would think they were trees on the opposite bank! Farragut's
strategy worked. The commander described the intense passage: "The smoke
was so dense that it was only now and then we could see anything but the
flash of the cannon ... The passing of Forts Jackson and St. Philip was one
of the most awful sights I ever saw." His own vessel, the HARTFORD, was
disabled when a raft set afire rammed the flagship and flames damaged the
masts and rigging. Nevertheless, the fleet safely reached New Orleans and
took possession of the city on April 28, 1862. "I mean to
be whipped or to whip my enemy, and not be scared to death" In May of 1862,
Farragut attempted to subdue the city of Vicksburg, located about 400 river
miles above New Orleans but his bombardment was unsuccessful. He did not have
enough guns in his fleet to overwhelm the city. Plus, Vicksburg's 200-foot
river bluffs were so high that many of his guns could not get sufficient
elevation to hit the Confederate defenses. Fearing the receding waters of the
Mississippi might strand his oceangoing warships in the summer months,
Farragut reluctantly decided to withdraw from the river city. He left six
gunboats below Vicksburg and returned to New Orleans. Upon his return
to the Crescent City, Farragut began organizing a second, stronger expedition
against the "Gibraltar of the West." His fleet arrived below the Vicksburg
bluffs once again on June 25, 1862 and began preparations for a second
bombardment. Farragut then received news that Charles H. Davis, commander of
the Western Flotilla, had finally captured Fort Pillow and Memphis and was
now only 20 miles north of Vicksburg. Consequently, Farragut decided to run
his fleet north past Vicksburg, just as he had done at Forts Jackson and St.
Philip, and rendezvous with Davis. At the
appointed hour of 0200 on June 28, 1862, Farragut raised two red lanterns on
the mast of the HARTFORD as a signal for the fleet to proceed. The ships were
spotted at 0400 and Vicksburg's 29 heavy guns were answered by the guns of
Farragut's fleet. All of Farragut's ships but three made it through and none
were sunk; however, some were badly hit, including the HARTFORD. The
captain's cabin was blown apart by a shell just seconds after Farragut had
moved to another part of the ship! Although
running the batteries was a gallant act, Farrgut's juncture with Davis did
little to bring about the subjugation of Vicksburg. It was clear a combined
naval and land attack would be necessary to subdue the "Gibralter of the
West." Before Farragut
withdrew his fleet from Vicksburg a second time, he had an encounter with the
Confederate ironclad ARKANSAS. Launched at Yazoo City and commanded by Isaac
Brown, the ARKANSAS bravely plunged into the midst of the thirty-eight Union
warships anchored above Vicksburg in mid-July 1862. Brown's attack was aided
by an element of surprise, and the fact there were so many Union ships they
had very little room in which to maneuver. As a result, Farragut's warships
were only able to bring a few guns to bear at a time against the formidable
ironclad. During the fighting, the ARKANSAS caused serious damage to the HARTFORD
and Farragut was furious that a makeshift enemy ironclad had steamed right
through his fleet. He had enough of the pesky ironclad. Fearing once again
his vessels would be stranded due to dropping river levels, Farragut decided
to withdraw from Vicksburg and sailed south. The withdrawal of the Union
fleet from Vicksburg in July of 1862 closed the first phase of Union naval
operations against the city. "Damn the
torpedoes! Full speed ahead!" Two years later
In 1864, Rear Admiral Farragut was summoned from his Now York home to serve
his country once more in leading an attack on Mobile Bay, the last
Confederate stronghold in the Gulf of Mexico. Mobile Bay was not only
protected by Fort Morgan and a fleet of wooden vessels, but also by the
formidable Confederate Ram TENNESSEE and a field of explosive mines called
torpedoes. Undaunted, Farragut readied his fleet for battle. Using a strategy
that had worked before, he ordered his wooden ships lashed together in pairs,
one large and one small. In this manner, if the larger frigate was disabled
in battle, the smaller vessel could tow it into safety. Farragut's
fleet of wooden ships, along with four small ironclad monitors, began the
attack on Mobile Bay early in the morning of August 5, 1864. When the smoke
of battle became so thick that he couldn't see, Farragut climbed the rigging
of the HARTFORD and lashed himself near the top of the mainsail to get a
better view. It wasn't long before the TECUMSEH, one of the monitors leading
the way, struck a torpedo and sank in a matter minutes. In a state of
confusion, the fleet came to a halt in front of the powerful guns of Fort
Morgan. Realizing the fleet was reluctant to move forward due to the
"infernal machines," Rear Admiral Farragut rallied his men to victory,
shouting: "Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!" The Union fleet
steamed ahead through the minefield, blasted Fort Morgan, and captured the
Confederate ironclad TENNESSEE. Thus, Mobile Bay fell into Union hands in one
of the most decisive naval victories of the Civil War. The Battle of
Mobile Bay would be Farragut's last. Overcome with fatigue he returned to New
York in December 1864 a national hero. In 1866, Farragut became the first
person in the history of the United States Navy to be awarded the rank of
Admiral. Two years later In 1868, he was even asked run for the office of
President of the United States, but replied, "I hasten to assure you
that I have never for one moment entertained the idea of political
life." Farragut would have only two years to live. The first Admiral of
the Navy died on August 14, 1870 it the age of 69. His funeral procession in
New York City included 10,000 soldiers and sailors and was headed by
President Ulysses S. Grant. A statue of Admiral Farragut was erected in the
heart of our nation's capital known as Farragut Square. It remains a lasting
tribute to the most distinguished naval officer of the Civil War. |
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
|
USS Farragut
(DDG 99): |
|||||||||
|
… DDG 99 history
wanted … |
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
|
… and patches … |
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||
|
|
|||||||||