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William Richardson was born in 1840 in Glasgow, Scotland and it was in Scotland that Richardson received his training to become a marine engineer. When the steamer “Flambeau” was built and commissioned at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, on November 27, 1861 Richardson was said to have been on board, serving as Acting 3rd Assistant Engineer when she went to sea. That ship, in reality, was the “Flambeau II”, built in 1861 by Lawrence and Foulks, Brooklyn, N.Y.; purchased by the Navy 14 November 1861, and commissioned November 27, 1861 with Lieutenant Commander W. G. Temple in command. The “Flambeau” was
assigned to the South Atlantic Blockading
Squadron, arriving at Nassau, New Providence on December 1, 1861,
and for a month patrolled the island because it was a key base for
Confederate blockade runners. On January 22, 1862, the “Flambeau”
arrived at Port Royal, South Carolina and was ordered to blockade
Stono Inlet, one of the strategic entrances to Charleston
Harbor. For the following year, she cruised off Charleston, sharing
in the capture of several prizes, and sending a party ashore on
December 28th to destroy an abandoned Confederate
fortification on Bull's Island. Again in Bull's Bay on January 31,
1863, she sent a foraging party ashore, all of whom were captured by
the enemy. The following day the “Flambeau” sent out a rescue party,
but it too lost one man killed and one wounded when attacked by the
Confederates. Richardson, however, was not with the “Flambeau” after
1862, being transferred to the USS “Vermont” after requesting
official permission to resign his commission. While at Port Royal in 1862, Richardson sent a dispatch to Gideon Wells, Secretary of the U.S. Navy, requesting to be allowed to resign. He stated as his reason for the decision was that his health was declining to a point he could no longer satisfactorily perform his duties and requested he be allowed to resign as Acting 3rd Assistant Engineer of the “Flambeau”. As a result of his request, he was ordered aboard the USS “Vermont” on January 7, 1863, “for residence”, and transported back to New York where his resignation was officially recorded on January 24, 1863. The “Vermont” was a 74-gun warship, but Richardson never saw action aboard her. He was only aboard for seventeen days before his resignation was officially signed. In 1863 Richardson left the U.S. for Australia and about a year later, in February 1864, he married Agnes McFarlane; who had arrived in Australia from Scotland that same year; aboard the “General Caulfield”. William and Agnes had a total of thirteen children. Richardson continued working as an engineer in Australia with the Engineering Department of the Australian Steam Navigation Company, in Brisbane, Queensland and later in Sydney, New South Wales. Richardson then joined the work force of the Sydney Department of Public Works in 1871 and remained a public works engineer there until he retired in 1904. After retirement, Richardson moved his residence to Glebe, New South Wales, where lived for the next twenty years. Of his thirteen children, seven were still living at the time of his death; Elizabeth born in 1870, David born in 1872, Jane born in 1880, Agnes born in 1883, Helen born in 1888, Lavinia born in 1890 and William born in 1892. William Richardson died in 1923 at the age of 83, still living in Glebe, and was buried in Rookwood Cemetery, Sydney New South Wales, Presbyterian Section 50, Grave number 1567. |
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Birth, Marriage and Death Records, New South Wales Birth Records, Glasgow, Scotland “Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships”, U.S. Navy Dept. “New York Daily Times”, newspaper archival records, November 29, 1861 Rookwood Cemetery Records "The War of Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies 1880-1901" U.S. Naval Archives, Washington, D.C. - U.S. Pension Records, Washington, D.C. |