On August 30, 1861, Junaluska ferried part of the 3rd Georgia Infantry Regiment to Roanoke Island, and on September 1 made a trip to Fort Hatteras and Fort Oregon on the Outer Banks.[6] She was unarmed until September 30, when she was armed with a single 6-pounder cannon,[7] a piece so light that historian William R. Trotter referred to it metaphorically as a popgun.[4] As part of the North Carolina Squadron commanded by Flag Officer William F. Lynch, along with the gunboatsCSS Raleigh and CSS Curlew,[8]Junaluska participated in a naval expedition against the gunboat USS Fanny the next day.[2] At this time, Junaluska was commanded by Midshipman William H. Vernon.[9]Fanny arrived off of Chicamacomico, North Carolina, early in the afternoon.[10] While some of the Union ship's crew were off the vessel on a launch, the three Confederate vessels approached Fanny at about 4:00 pm. Junaluska was the trailing vessel and was unable to get within range of the Union Navy ship.[11]Fanny's path of retreat was cut off, and she surrendered after a fight of about 35 minutes.[12]
Junaluska ferried the 3rd Georgia from Roanoke Island for a raid on the Union Chicamacomico camp during the night and morning of October 3/4, and bore the body of a Confederate soldier who had died of exhaustion during the raid back to the mainland. During this raid, Junaluska was commanded by a Captain Slacum.[13] While the ship was transferred away from the North Carolina Squadron,[14]Junaluska continued to serve off the North Carolina coast,[1] although an official Confederate naval report dated May 2, 1862, placed her in the Richmond, Virginia, area.[15] Both Silverstone and the Naval History and Heritage Command state that she was eventually armed with two cannons.[1][2] In August 1862, she was sold and broken up.[1]
References
^ abcdef"Junaluska". Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
Garrison, Webb B.; Garrison, Cheryl D. (2001). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Usage: An Illustrated Compendium of the Everyday Language of Soldiers and Civilians. Nashville, Tennessee: Cumberland House. ISBN9781581821864.
Oxford, Lee Thomas (2013). The Civil War on Hatteras: The Chicamacomico Affair and the Capture of the U.S. Gunboat Fanny. Charleston, South Carolina: History Press. ISBN978-1-61423-928-4.
Quarstein, John V. (2006). A History of Ironclads: The Power of Iron Over Wood. Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press. ISBN978-1-59629-118-8.
Silverstone, Paul H. (1989). Warships of the Civil War Navies. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN0-87021-783-6.
Trotter, William R. (1989). Ironclads and Columbiads: The Civil War in North Carolina: The Coast. Winston-Salem, North Carolina: John F. Blair. ISBN0-89587-088-6.