Oliver Spencer Glisson (January 18, 1809 – November 20, 1890), was a rear admiral of the United States Navy. After commanding a schooner in the Mexican–American War, he was posted to the East India Squadron and took part in the Japan Expedition when the first treaty with the Japanese was signed by Commodore Matthew Perry in 1853. Throughout the American Civil War, Glisson served in the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron, intercepting illegal trade across the Potomac, and patrolling the mouth of the Rappahannock. Early in the war, Glisson rescued a group of slaves who were being used by the Confederates as a human shield. Although this rescue contravened the Fugitive Slave Act, it was authorised by Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles on humanitarian grounds.
Childhood
Glisson was born to Thomas Glisson [(1783-03-08)March 8, 1783 – October 17, 1849(1849-10-17) (aged 66)] and Rebecca Runyan Glisson [(1785-04-24)April 24, 1785 – October 21, 1843(1843-10-21) (aged 58)] near Mount Pleasant, Ohio, (Mount Healthy since 1850) in Hamilton County, the second of ten children.[1]
The family relocated to a farm east of Brookville, Indiana, in neighboring Franklin county around 1817. To attend school, Glisson lived at the Brookville home of Dr. David Oliver. After Glisson entered the U.S. Navy, his family moved back to Hamilton County on a farm located in Colerain Township around 1828.[2]: 556
In 1836 while performing land duty in the Norfolk Navy Yard, Glisson married Pamela Parker and took up residence. On February 9, 1837, he was promoted to lieutenant and served as a recruiter during the Norfolk Rendezvous 1837–38.[8]: 30
Glisson was sent to the Brazil Squadron aboard the sloop-of-war USS Fairfield 1839–42. Returned to the West India Squadron, he sailed on the sloop-of-war USS Marion 1843–44.[4]: 3–4 [9]: 466
The sloop-of-war USS Saratoga carried him during patrol of the South American coast for another tour in the Brazil Squadron 1845–46.[10]: (3)
Naval career (1845–1860)
During the Mexican–American War he was given his first command, the pilotschoonerUSS Reefer in the Home Squadron. For the duration of the war, Glisson sailed the Gulf of Mexico off Mexico's east coast. At the end of naval fighting in June 1847, Reefer and her sister ships settled down to blockade duty and maintained both water lines of supply and communication for the Army.[11]: 58 [12]: 7–
After the war from 1848 through 1850, he served in the Norfolk Navy Yard again and then was granted permission to take special duty between 1851 and 1852.[4]: 4
On July 15, 1861, Glisson rescued six refugee slaves found hiding on Stingray Point Light. The slaves had escaped the Confederate Army which was forcing them to the front as human shields during battles. Glisson requested authorization from Silas Stringham, the commander of the Atlantic Blocking Squadron, who in turn relayed the request to Secretary of the NavyGideon Welles. Even before Stringham wrote Welles, Glisson reported on July 17 he had picked up three more slaves, claiming they would be killed if they were returned. Welles responded July 22 "It is not the policy of the Government to invite or encourage this class of desertions, and yet, under the circumstances, no other course than that pursued by Commander Glisson could be adopted without violating every principle of humanity."[15]: 7–10 [16]: 7–8
Under the cover of night on December 31, 1861, Glisson approached an unmanned light-boat, which had previously been stationed as a beacon off of Frying Pan Shoals. It was anchored under the guns of Fort Caswell to be outfitted with armaments for its new function to defend the fort. A detachment of volunteers from the crew set the light-boat afire and suffered no casualties despite heavy gunfire from the fort during their withdrawal.[17]: 249–250 [18]: 175
The transport USS Mississippi, which was bound for the offensive to capture New Orleans with General Benjamin Butler's expedition of 1,500 men, was run up onto the Frying Pan Shoals the morning of February 26, 1862. Dropping achor confirmed the Mississippi, with a draft of 18 feet (5.5 m), was in 14 feet (4.3 m) of water. Meanwhile, the ship forged onto a fluke of the anchor punching a hole through the hull about 5 inches (0.13 m) square. Although the sea was calm and the fore compartment was sealed, danger of break up or capsize was imminent. It would have taken days to land the troops using the ship's boats and the shore was hostile territory. Glisson, in the Mount Vernon, happened upon the ship and began rescue operations by tying off a hawser to pull the ship free. 300 troops were offloaded onto the Mount Vernon, munitions and food were thrown overboard, pumps were manned, the engines worked at full speed and troops ran back and forth between stern and bow to rock the boat free. But the Mississippi remained fast until just after sundown as the high tide finally lifted the ship enough to pull free, preventing a catastrophe and allowing the Mississippi to resume its course after repairs to the hull.[4]: 4–5 [19]: 337–351
Glisson took command of steam sloops of war, the USS Iroquois in the West Gulf Blockading Squadron and then the USS Mohican from the latter part of 1862 through 1864. He was promoted to captain December 26, 1862. The Mohican, stationed at the Cape de Verde Islands for six months, took part in the chase of the CSS Alabama. Relocating to Bahia, Glisson learned they had just missed the Alabama by twenty–four hours. While at the island of Fernando de Noronha Glisson saved the crew of a French vessel, for which he received the thanks of the French government.[4]: 6
After repairs were completed, the Franklin set course to Lisbon, Portugal for coal. While there, Glisson was asked to participate in the wedding of Charles Allen Perkins, attaché for the American Legation. The bride was the Princess Dona Maria Isabella Francoise de Bourbon, granddaughter of King Charles IV of Spain and exiled in Portugal. Glisson escorted the bride and gave her away instead of her father, diplomat Ignacio Gurowski, who was unable to attend. The wedding was performed twice: once in the Church of St. Louis of the French and again on board the Franklin.[2]: 144–45
Leaving Lisbon, the Franklin next dropped anchor in Naples, Italy and then at Nice, France. After slightly over seven months in Europe, Glisson was placed on the retired list January 18, 1871 as he approached the mandatory age of 62. He relinquished squadron command to Rear Admiral Charles S. Boggs and returned with his wife to the United States.[23]: 692
Marriage and family
Glisson married Pamela A. Parker [c. 1816 – June 5, 1890(1890-06-05) (aged 73)] in Norfolk, Virginia April 24, 1835. She was the daughter of Copeland Parker [1777 – 1830 (aged 50)] and his second wife Diana Robinson Hall [1780 – 1856 (aged 75)]. The Glissons had four sons.
After the Civil War, Glisson moved his family to 1630 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He spent the rest of his life there with a vacation home in Long Branch, New Jersey.[24]: 136 [25]: 77
Legacy
The biography To the Loving Memory of Rear Admiral Oliver S. Glisson, U.S.N. was published by Glisson's sons, Oliver Jr. and Jacob, in 1891. Most of the 146 page book is devoted to Glisson's Civil War engagements via contemporary first-hand newspaper accounts written by A.F. and C.C. Fulton, editors and proprietors of the Baltimore American.
In 1850, Glisson retained attorney Thomas S. Yeatman to map plats on the farm of his recently deceased father, Thomas Glisson. Glisson Subdivision is situated south of the village of Dunlap, Ohio which had formed in 1849.[28]: 384
A storm near Smithfield, Virginia, in 1884 caused the roof of the Old Brick Church to fall, collapsing a portion of the eastern wall also. Glisson contributed to the restoration effort, sponsoring the pulpit and sounding board. The relatives of Glisson's wife Pamela dwelt in the Smithfield area and the donation was made in her name.[29]: 50–53
^ abcdefFulton, C.C. and A.F. (1891). To the Loving Memory of Rear Admiral Oliver S. Glisson. Baltimore, Maryland: The American Book and Job Printing Office.
^Stewart, Reverend O.S. (1836). The Naval Magazine, Volume 1, Number 1. New York, New York: John S. Taylor.
^Israel, John and Henry Lundt (1835). Journal of a Cruize in the U.S. Ship Delaware 74, in the Mediterranean, in the years 1833 and 1834. Port Mahon, Spain: The Widow Serra and Son, Printers.
^Homans, Benjamin (1834). The Military and Naval Magazine of the United States, Volume II. Washington, District of Columbia: William Greer, Printer.
^ abHamersly, Lewis R. (1870). The Records of Living Officers of the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: J.B. Lippincott & Company.
^The National Cyclopædia of American Biography, Volume XIII. New York, New York: James T. White & Company. 1906.
^McKinley Jr., William, Samuel Taylor and James C. Howe (1893). Official Roster of the Soldiers of the State of Ohio in the War of the Rebellion, 1861–1866. Akron, Ohio: The Werner Company.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Moody, James L. (1976). Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Volume VI. Defense Dept., Navy, Naval History Division.
^Conner, Philip Syng Physick (1896). The Home Squadron under Commodore Conner in the War with Mexico. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (?): Privately Published.
^Johnson, Rossiter (1904). The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Volume IV. Boston, Massachusetts: The Biographical Society.
^ abEicher, John and David (2001). Civil War High Commands. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
^United States Naval War Records Office (1897). Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion, Series I – Volume 6: North Atlantic Blockading Squadron. Washington, District of Columbia: Government Printing Office.
^Tomblin, Barbara Brooks (2009). Bluejackets and Contrabands: African Americans and the Union Navy. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN978-0-8131-2554-1.
^Maclay, Edgar Stanton (1894). A History of the United States Navy from 1775 to 1894, Volume II. New York, New York: D. Appleton and Company.
^Ammen, Daniel (1883). The Navy in The Civil War, Volume II – The Atlantic Coast. New York, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
^Butler, Benjamin F. (1892). Butler's Book. Boston, Massachusetts: A.M. Thayer and Company.
^Barnes, James (1911). The Photographic History of the Civil War, Volume 6: The Navies. New York, New York: The Review of Reviews.
^Still, William N. (1980). American Sea Power in the Old World. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press.
^Wilson, James Grant and Fiske, John (1887). Appletons' Clopædia of American Biography. New York, New York: D. Appleton and Company.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Register of the Commissioned and Warrant Officers of the Navy of the United States. Washington, District of Columbia: Government Printing Office. 1891.
^Boyd, Sibbald Fred (1890). Boyd's Philadelphia Blue Book. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: C.E. Howe Company.
^Thomas, R.S.; et al. (1907). Colonial Churches: A Series of Sketches of Churches in the Original Colony of Virginia. Richmond, Virginia: Southern Churchman Company.