The Gun from USS SHUBRICK

                    15 FEBRUARY–16 MAY 1865

                   THE GUN FROM USS SHUBRICK

               (outside the NMCSD Command Suite)

RADM William Branford Shubrick’s Navy career was long and distinguished.  Born on 31 October 1790, Mr. Shubrick received his midshipman’s warrant in the Spring of 1806 at the age of 15.  During the Barbary Wars, he served aboard WASP, 18, and ARGUS, 16.  During the War of 1812, he served aboard the ship-sloop HORNET, 18, and CONSTELLATION, 36.  It was during this latter tour that he distinguished himself by leading a party of bluejackets in the defense of Craney Island, near Norfolk, on 22 June 1813.  Serving subsequently aboard CONSTITUTION, 44, he won a Congressional gold medal for his actions in that frigate’s engagement with HMS LEVANT and HMS CYANE.  The Mexican War found him overseeing the capture of Mazatlan, Guaymas, and San Blas and later commanding the Navy’s Pacific Squadron.  He retired in December of 1861 and was appointed to the rank of Rear Admiral (Ret) on 19 July 1862.

During Shubrick’s career he also served several tours on loan to the US Lighthouse Service, a branch of the Treasury Department whose vessels were often captained by Navy officers.  From 1859-71 he chaired this service’s governing body, the Lighthouse Board, and for this effort was honored with the naming of a Lighthouse Service wooden sidewheel frigate.  Early in the Civil War, on 23 August 1861, USLHS SHUBRICK was transferred to the US Revenue Cutter Service (now US Coast Guard) to patrol the Puget Sound area.   Confederate commerce raiders were then operating in the north Pacific, exacting a heavy toll on merchant shipping.  Indeed, when the Russian Telegraph Company planned to survey the Bering Strait, they recruited an American agent, COL Charles S. Buckley, to petition our government for an escorting warship.  USRCS SHUBRICK was re-assigned to the Navy for 90 days of special duty beginning 15 February 1865, to protect this Russian survey party.  No records of USS SHUBRICK’s brief Navy career survive.  Like many wooden steamers then in military service, she probably mounted both traditional smooth-bore naval guns as well as more advanced artillery pieces.  We know she mounted at least one of the latter, for a 30-pounder Parrott rifle from her battery is currently mounted outside the Command Suite of Naval Medical Center San Diego.

RADM Shubrick has since been honored with the nameplates of three other Navy vessels.  After WWI the Blakley-class torpedo boat SHUBRICK (TB-31) was renamed COAST TORPEDO BOAT No. 15 to allow the Clemson-class destroyer DD-268 to assume the Shubrick name.  Still later the WWII Gleaves-class destroyer DD-639, commissioned 7 February 1943, carries on the Admiral’s name.

Watch for more “Today in Naval History”  20 MAR 22

CAPT James Bloom, Ret.

Cogar, William B.  Dictionary of Admirals of the U.S. Navy, Vol 1 1862-1900.  Annapolis, MD: USNI Press, 1989, pp. 164-65.

Department of the Navy, Naval History Division.  Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Vol 6 “R-S”.  Washington, DC: GPO, 1976, p. 492.

Reynolds, Clark G.  Famous American Admirals.  New York, NY: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1978, pp. 310-11.

Tucker, Spencer.  Arming the Fleet:  U.S. Navy Ordnance in the Muzzle-Loading Era.  Annapolis, MD: USNI Press, 1989, pp. 228-30.

ADDITIONAL NOTES:  The Parrott rifle was developed in 1860 by Robert P. Parrott, a former US Army CAPT then in charge of the West Point Foundry Association.  The cast iron, muzzle-loading rifle was reliable, reasonably durable and relatively inexpensive, and thus became popular with the Navy and the Army.  By January 1864 the Navy had about 650 Parrott rifles in service, about 20% of the total that had been manufactured to that date.

The 30-pounder identifier indicated the weight of the projectile it fired.  The gun weighs about 3500 pounds and had a range of 4800 yards.  The Parrott’s characteristic feature is the reinforcing band about the breech.  The higher gas pressures in the firing chambers of rifles caused conventionally constructed cannon to burst.  Parrott’s technique strengthened the breech by pounding a red-hot band into place, then allowing it to cool and contract even more tightly around the gun.  SHUBRICK’s Parrott rifle is the most modern of the three guns currently displayed on the NMCSD compound.

In 1915, the US Coast Guard was created by combining two splintered services then in existence, the US Lifesaving Service (seaborne rescue) and the US Revenue Cutter Service (anti-smuggling and customs enforcement).  Then on 7 July 1939 the US Lighthouse Service (aids to navigation) was merged with the Coast Guard, hence their three modern missions.

30-pounder Parrott Rifle, Racine, WI, War Memorial

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