February 24, 1863 Tuesday
On the Mississippi River the Federal gunboat Indianola was attacked in the evening by four Confederate vessels including Queen of the West, captured and repaired by the Confederates. Rammed repeatedly, Indianola fought at close quarters. After seven blows in all, Lieut Com George Brown surrendered Indianola, “a partially sunken vessel.” The action was a serious blow to Union river operations below Vicksburg.
http://www.historynet.com/uss-indianola ... il-war.htm The Yazoo Pass expedition, intended to move through the Yazoo, Coldwater, and Tallahatchie rivers to the rear of Vicksburg was well under way. There was a skirmish near Strasburg, Virginia.
Arizona Territory was organized by the United States as separate from New Mexico Territory.
A deserter from Confederate receiving ship Selma gave the following information about submarine experiments and operations being conducted by Horace L. Hunley, James R. McClintock, B. A. Whitney, and others, at Mobile, where the work was transferred following the fall of New Orleans to Rear Admiral Farragut: "On or about the 14th an infernal machine, consisting of a submarine boat propelled by a screw which is turned by hand, capable of holding five persons, and having a torpedo which was to be attached to the bottom of the vessel, left Fort Morgan at 8 p.m. in charge of a Frenchman who invented it. The invention was to come up at Sand Island, get the bearing and distance of the nearest vessel." He added that this failed but that other attempts would be made. This submarine went down in rough weather off Fort Morgan, but no lives were lost. Hunley and his colleagues built another in the machine shop of Park and Lyons, Mobile; this was to be the celebrated H. L. Hunley, the first submarine to sink an enemy vessel in combat.
Cutters from U.S.S. Mahaska, commanded by Lieutenant Elliot C. V. Blake, captured and destroyed sloop Mary Jane and barge Ben Bolt in Back Creek, York River, Virginia.
U.S.S. State of Georgia, under Commander James F. Armstrong, seized blockade running British schooner Annie at sea off Cape Romain, South Carolina, with cargo of salt and drugs.
Rear Admiral Theodorus Bailey, commanding the East Gulf Blockading Squadron, reported the capture of schooner Stonewall by U.S.S. Tahoma, commanded by Lieutenant Commander A. A. Semmes, near Key West.
U.S.S. Conemaugh, commanded by Lieutenant Commander Thomas H. Eastman, chased blockade running British steamer Queen of the Wave aground near the mouth of the North Santee River, South Carolina. Unable to get Queen of the Wave off the bar, he destroyed her on 7 March.