Lisbon, Portugal
28 March 1865
At 10, Rebel Ram Stonewall steamed down the harbor toward us, cleared ship for action. Stonewall steamed past, then passed down.
And so ends the battles between the USS Niagara and USS Sacramento and
CSS Stonewall. The article is very interesting, and I recommend it. It also explains why we left harbour, and then immediately turned around and anchored again. Not once, but on two successive days.
We had been near the Stonewall on a number of occasions, although this is the first entry I that I noticed it.
From Captain Page of the CSS Stonewall on 24 March:
The day was very fine, earth, sky and sea were alike beautiful, and nothing could be more lovely and picturesque than the mountains behind Ferrol and Corona [sic], alive with human beings; the whole population of Ferrol, Corona [sic] and the neighboring villages and hamlets seemed to have gathered there to witness the battle of the little “Stonewall” and the two goliaths
The people were disappointed, however, because even though the Stonewall taunted the two U.S. Navy ships all day by steaming back and forth before A Coruña, the Navy did not engage because they thought their wooden ships were inferior. Commodore Thomas T. Craven, commander of the “Niagara,” who, by his inaction on that day was court-martialed months later, said: “With feelings no one can imagine, I was obliged to undergo the deep humiliation of knowing that it (the “Stonewall”) was there, steaming back and forth, flaunting its flags, and waiting for me to go out to the attack. I dared not to do it!” And so, without even firing a shot, the “Stonewall” inflicted the greatest embarrassment on the U.S. Navy during the Civil War off the Galician coast. Captain Page never understood why the heavily armed federal ships didn’t engage.
But Commodore Craven was afraid of the “CSS Stonewall” as reflected in his reports to his superiors: “The ‘Stonewall’ is a much more formidable vessel than any of our monitors … in smooth water and open sea it would be more than a match for three such vessels as the ‘Niagara’.” (Official Records, op. cit., pp. 435-436). Stories had been circulating of the supposed capabilities of the ship, and everybody believed them.
After the non-battle at El Ferrol, the “CSS Stonewall” arrived in Lisbon on March 27 for additional supplies before it started the Atlantic crossing on March 28. It was shadowed all the while by the “Niagara” and the “Sacramento.” A few hours after the “Stonewall” left, the “Niagara” started to change its anchorage. The commander of the Belem tower mistakenly believed that the “Niagara” had resumed its pursuit in violation of the 24-hour internationally recognized window after a belligerent had left a neutral port, and opened fire on the ship. This was the only time a foreign country fired upon a U.S. warship during the Civil War.
When it was scrapped in 1908, the ship had served under six flags: French, Danish, Confederate States, Spanish, United States, and Japanese.
This article, which is about her time in Japan and her construction, is also very interesting. It says she was scrapped in 1888, not 1908 as above.