Isaac D. Seyburn

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Isaac D. Seyburn (March 1824 - March 6, 1895) was a Welsh-American merchant captain who served as an officer in the United States Navy during the Civil War, with the rank of Acting Master. He was wounded in action during the 1861 Battle of Port Royal. During 1863 he commanded the schooner USS Kittatinny as part of the West Gulf Blockading Squadron under Rear Admiral David Farragut. Seyburn resigned his commission in 1864 due to war injuries and initially settled in Maine. He later moved to Louisiana, where he operated a sugar plantation.

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[edit] Background and Personal Life

Isaac D. Seyburn was born in Wales in March 1824. He was 5 ft 6 in, 135 lb. had blue eyes and dark hair. By profession, he was a "Master Mariner."

On March 15, 1848, he was married in Pittston, Maine, to Mary Ann Rogers who was born in New York City on November 20, 1828. She was a daughter of John Rogers (1800-1863) and Elizabeth Carroll Reynolds (1806-1871). Elizabeth C. Reynolds’ family is descended from Christopher Reynolds who settled in what is now Isle of Wight County, Virginia (on the south shore of the James River about 10 miles west of Newport News), before 1630 and received a land grant of 450 acres in 1636. Her grandfather, Bernard Reynolds (1763-1833), served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.

Isaac and Mary Ann Seyburn had five children, Emily Williamson Seyburn (1853-1934), Mary Catharine Seyburn (1854-1893), Stephen Young Seyburn (1856-1923), Edward Isaac Seyburn (1860-1931) and John Rogers Seyburn (1867-1905) who were all born in Maine.

[edit] Seafaring Life

In 1854, Seyburn acquired a brig, a two-masted, square-rigged merchant ship of about 100 feet that he named the Emily W. Seyburn after his first child who had been born the year before. The brig was registered in Pittston, Maine. There are records of its periodic arrival in New York between 1854 and 1860 carrying cargo under charter, e.g., coal from Newcastle, England, flour from New Orleans, nickel and hides from Montevideo, Uruguay. By 1857, the trade was successful enough to have allowed Seyburn to hire a master to sail the ship for him.

[edit] Civil War Naval Service

On August 29, 1861, Isaac D. Seyburn volunteered for service in the U.S. Navy and was awarded a temporary commission as an Acting Master, a volunteer officer whose term of service was until the end of the Civil War. The naval rank of "Master" was later replaced by that of "Lieutenant (Junior Grade)." He reported for service in New York on September 10, 1861.

Acting Master Seyburn was seriously wounded in action aboard the U.S. Steam Sloop of War USS Mohican during the Battle of Port Royal on November 7, 1861. The battle was a major Union victory and up until then the largest naval and amphibious force ever assembled by the United States. Seyburn was wounded when a 32-pound solid mini-ball from defending shore batteries shattered the bones of his lower left leg just above the ankle. Seyburn was treated at the Naval Hospital, Brooklyn, NY, between November 14, 1861 and March 1, 1862. He never regained use of the leg, but was confined to crutches and endured pain for the rest of his life.

Despite his injuries, Acting Master Seyburn continued with his naval service. He was serving on the U.S. Ironclad Steamer USS Galena when the ship arrived in Philadelphia for repairs on May 21, 1863 at the end of a deployment. Galena, commissioned on April 21, 1862, was one of the first three ironclads, each of a different design, built by the U.S. Navy during the Civil War; it was also the second, after the USS Monitor, to be put under fire.

On June 10, 1863, Acting Master Seyburn was given command of the USS Kittatinny, a three-masted fore-and-aft schooner. While under his command, the Kittatinny was assigned to the West Gulf Blockading Squadron under the overall command of Rear-Admiral David Farragut. The ship is credited with having chased an unidentified schooner ashore on September 22, 1863 where that vessel was burned by her crew and with having captured the three-masted schooner, Reserve, on October 25, 1863 off Pass Cavallo, Texas.

On December 23, 1863, while on deployment off the coast of Texas, Acting Master Seyburn was ordered to proceed with the USS Kittatinny to New Orleans. Shortly after his arrival, Seyburn submitted his resignation. In his letter, dated February 18, 1864, from the station ship USS Portsmouth, Seyburn indicated that he wanted to resign because he had been crippled by his wound and because "the high handed injustice practiced on me by the Commanding officers of the first division of this Squadron is to me insufferable." His resignation was accepted and Acting Master Seyburn was honorably discharged on March 24, 1864 in Gardiner, ME.

[edit] Post-War Life

Following his discharge, Seyburn remained in Maine until sometime between July 1869 and March 1870 when he moved his family to Louisiana, principally due to the warmer climate, where he had acquired the Idlewild Plantation in Patterson, St. Mary Parish (some 80 miles southwest of New Orleans). Idlewild was a sugar cane plantation and Isaac D. Seyburn earned his livelihood as a planter. His wife, Mary Ann, died on March 19, 1880 and Isaac D. Seyburn died on March 6, 1895.

[edit] Postscript

Isaac D. Seyburn was of the Episcopal faith and attended services at the Holy Trinity Church in Patterson, Louisiana. When the church was deconsecrated in 1940, the stained glass window over the altar, known as the Seyburn Memorial, was acquired by St. Mary’s Episcopal Church in nearby Franklin, Louisiana, where it remains today.

Idlewild Plantation remained in the family at least until Edward Isaac Seyburn’s son, Edward Reynolds Seyburn, died in 1996. Idlewild Plantation is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places (Designation No. 82000459 of November 2, 1982).

One of the eight Flying Junior dinghies in the Vanderbilt Sailing Club fleet was named for Isaac D. Seyburn, who was the great great great grandfather of a former Commodore of the Club.

[edit] External links

  • Sarah Gates Sully, History of St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, Franklin, Louisiana,

(http://www.rootsweb.com/~lastmary/sully/stmaryhistory.htm)

[edit] References

[edit] Articles

  • The New York Times, "Marine Intelligence," October 23, 1854, March 25, 1857, March 22, 1858, September 18, 1858, February 8, 1860 (all on page 8)
  • The New York Times, "Local Intelligence," May 24, 1863, page 6.

[edit] Genealogical Records

  • U.S. Federal Census, 1850, 1860, 1870, 1880, 1900, 1910.
  • The Compendium of American Genealogy, 1600s-1800s, Volume VI, Lineage Records, page 660.
  • The New England Historic Genealogical Society, The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1847-1994, Volume 90, page 358, Boston, 1936
  • The New England Historic Genealogical Society, Vital Records of Pittston, Maine, to the Year 1892
  • Office of the Secretary of State, Louisiana, New Orleans, Louisiana Death Records Index, 1804-1949.
  • Stephanie J. Richmond, National Archives and Records Administration, Old Military and Civil Records Branch, Textual Archives Services Division, Letter dated March 10, 2005, ref. 2503577/sr.
  • National Archives and Records Administration, Union Pension Applications, 1861-1938, Invalid Pension Application No. 943, Certificate No. 3369, the "Pension File" of Seyburn, Isaac D., U.S. Navy, Acting Master.

[edit] Naval Records

  • Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion, Series I, Volume 12, South Atlantic Blockading Squadron from October 29, 1861 to May 13, 1862, pages 265- 266, U.S. Government Printing Office (USGPO), Washington, D.C., 1901.
  • Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion, Series I, Volume 20, West Gulf Blockading Squadron from March 15 to December 31, 1863, pages 434, 596, 641, 732, U.S. Government Printing Office (USGPO), Washington, D.C., 1905.