Here's some more "famous paddler" trivia I dug up while looking up
something totally unrelated to paddlewheelers.
"HARRIET LANE"
Harriet Lane is famous (in the Coast Guard anyways) as the the ship
that fired the first shot at sea during the US Civil War, when she
put a round across the bows of the steamer Nashville, as it tried to
enter Charleston Harbor on the day Ft Sumter was bombarded.
Harriet Lane was a steam paddle cutter from 1858. She was named for
President Buchanan's niece, a very attractive 17 year old when he
took office in 1856. Buchanan was not married, so Harriet filled in as
"First Lady". She was a major celebrity in her day. She was
reportedly fond of the vessel, and reportedly referred to it as "my
ship".
The ship was considered to be a good sailer, and served with the US
Navy at times even before the Civil War broke out. In 1861, she
sailed with a fleet to the Hatteras Inlet and along with a combined
force of army, navy, marine and cutter personnel, took part in the
force that assaulted the confederate forts therein. She also took an
active part in the shelling that resulted in the surrender of those
forts.
After this action, she served under the US Navy as the USS Harriet
Lane, until her capture by a Confederate boarding party in Galveston
Bay. Thereafter, she flew the rebel flag until the end of the war,
refitted as a blockade runner. After the war, she ended up as a
lumber ship, and possibly lost in a storm in the 1870s.
On a modeling note, apparently her hull was very attractively painted
with a white boot topping, green hull up to the paddle wheel sponson
and white hull up to the rail.
Click the following URL for a photo and more information.
http://members.nbci.com/edwardlea/harrlane.htmPJ