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Showing posts with label Battle of the Ironclads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Battle of the Ironclads. Show all posts

Friday, March 9, 2018

THE ATMOSPHERE INSIDE THE TURRET WAS ONE STEP REMOVED FROM HELL

BATTLE OF IRONCLADS ENDS IN DRAW

Hampton Roads, Virginia (JFK+50) On March 9, 1862, two warships clad in iron fought each other to a draw off the coast of Hampton Roads.  The Monitor of the Union Navy and the Virginia of the Confederate Navy began their duel at 9 o'clock in the morning.

The battle, which lasted four hours, ended with neither ship gaining an advantage or sustaining serious damage.  The Virginia, originally a Union frigate called the Merrimack that had been captured and converted to an ironclad by the Confederates, was a stark contrast to the Monitor, designed by Swedish engineer John Ericsson.*

The Monitor, unlike most warships before her, had only two guns.  They were Dahlgren's mounted in a cylindrical turret covered with iron.  The turret, powered by steam, rotated 360 degrees.  A weakness, however, was that the ship's pilot house was so positioned to prevent the guns from firing directly forward.

According to Eyewitness to History...

"the atmosphere inside the...turret was only one step removed from that of Hell.  Insufferably hot, the air filled with choking smoke while the deafening sound of Confederate cannon shot...reverberated through the chamber."

The following eyewitness statement by S. Dana Green was published in Century Magazine in 1888..."The fight continued with the exchange of broadsides as fast as the guns could be served.....at very short range."  The Battle of the Ironclads, Eyewitness to History states, "rang the death-knell of wooden ships as fighting vessels."

*John Ericsson (1803-1889) was born in Langbanshytlan, Varnland (Sweden).  He moved to England in 1826 where he invented mechanisms based on steam.    JE submitted his ironclad ship design to the US Navy during the Civil War & the Monitor was turned out from plans to reality in about 3 months.  JE is regarded as one of the most influential mechanical engineers in history.

SOURCE

"The Battle of the Ironclads, 1862," Eyewitness to History, www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/



The Monitor and Merrimack
The First Fight Between Ironclads
by Jo Davidson (1886)
Louis Prang & Co., Boston
Library of Congress Image

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

A CHEESEBOX ON A RAFT

JFK+50:  Volume 6, No. 1813

UNION IRONCLAD MONITOR SANK 153 YEARS AGO 

Cape Hatteras, North Carolina (JFK+50) 153 years ago today, December 30, 1862, the Union ironclad U.S.S. Monitor* sank in a storm off the coast of Cape Hatteras.

Nine months earlier, the Monitor fought the Confederacy's Virginia in the Battle of the Ironclads off the coast of Hampton Roads, Virginia.  That battle, which lasted four hours, ended with neither ship gaining an advantage or sustaining serious damage.

The Virginia, originally a Union frigate called the Merrimack that had been captured and converted to an ironclad by the Confederates, was a stark contrast to the Monitor, designed by Swedish engineer John Ericsson, which had a flat iron deck with a cylindrical turret in the middle.  The Battle of the Ironclads ushered in a new era in naval warfare and signaled the beginning of the end of wooden warships.

Winston Churchill wrote...

"The combat of the Merrimack and the Monitor made the greatest change in the sea-fighting since cannon fire by gunpowder had been mounted on ships about 400 years before."

The Monitor had been dispatched to the coast of North Carolina to join a fleet being prepared for an attack on Charleston, South Carolina, but the vessel was not suited for duty on the open sea.  The storm caused a major leak around the gun turret which led Commander J,P. Bankhead to order "abandon ship." Sixteen of his sailors, however, perished.

*The U.S.S. Monitor was launched on January 30, 1862 from Continental Ironworks in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, NY & was fitted with 2 massive 11 inch Dahlgren guns.  Because the revolving gun turret was round sitting on a flat deck, the vessel was described as looking like a "cheesebox on a raft."

SOURCES

"On This Day In History:  December 30," www.history.com/

"U.S.S. Monitor:  A Cheesebox on a Raft," by Olav Thulesius, Civil War Magazine, November 2006, www.historynet.com/ and Civil War Trust, www.civilwar.org/


U.S.S. Monitor 
United States Navy, 1862




Sunday, March 9, 2014

IKE CRITICAL OF JOE MCCARTHY

IKE WROTE LETTER CRITICAL OF SENATOR JOE McCARTHY 60 YEARS AGO TODAY

Washington, D.C. (JFK+50) Sixty years ago today, March 9, 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower wrote a private letter to his friend, Paul Helms, critical of the methods and tactics of Senator Joseph McCarthy who was attempting to track down communists inside the federal government.

Earlier in the day, Senator Ralph Flanders* introduced a resolution to censure Senator McCarthy for "persecuting Americans".

Edward R. Murrow of CBS News warned, in his evening newscast, that Senator McCarthy was "treading a fine line" in his investigative procedures.

*Senator Flanders, Vermont Republican, was an early and strong critic of Joseph McCarthy.  He was concerned about the worldwide spread of communism and believed McCarthy's efforts to find communists within the United States to be misplaced.




Senator Joseph McCarthy

JFK ATTENDED DINNER AT THE MAYFLOWER 53 YEARS AGO

Washington, D.C. (JFK+50) This evening 53 years ago, March 9, 1961, President John F. Kennedy appeared briefly at a dinner honoring the 20th anniversary of the Truman Committee held at the Mayflower Hotel here in Washington.

The Truman Committee, created on March 1, 1941, was 1st chaired by Senator Harry S Truman of Missouri.

The Senate committee was charged with ending "waste, corruption and profiteering" in the United States defense industry. 

The committee held hundreds of hearings and saved taxpayers millions of dollars.

JFK mingled with the guests and talked with former President Truman who had met with the President in the White House earlier in the day.




Truman Committee in session


BATTLE OF THE IRONCLADS FOUGHT 152 YEARS AGO TODAY

Hampton Roads, Virginia (JFK+50) 152 years ago today, March 9, 1862, two warships clad in iron fought each other to a draw off the coast of Hampton Roads.

The Monitor of the Union Navy and the Virginia of the Confederate Navy began their duel at 9 o'clock in the morning.

The battle, which lasted four hours, ended with neither ship gaining an advantage or sustaining serious damage.

The Virginia, originally a Union frigate called the Merrimack that had been captured and converted to an ironclad by the Confederates, was a stark contrast to the Monitor, designed by Swedish engineer John Ericsson, which had a flat iron deck with a cylindrical turret in the middle.

The following eyewitness statement by S. Dana Green was published in Century Magazine in 1888...

"The fight continued with the exchange of broadsides as fast as the guns could be served.....at very short range."

The Battle of the Ironclads ushered in a new era in naval warfare and signaled the beginning of the end of wooden warships.




The Monitor 
U.S. Navy, 1862



 The Virginia
 C.S. Navy, 1862

Sunday, March 10, 2013

UNKNOWN SAILORS OF THE USS MONITOR BURIED AT ARLINGTON


March 10, 2013

UNKNOWN SAILORS OF THE USS MONITOR BURIED IN ARLINGTON

Arlington, Virginia (JFK+50) Two unknown crewmen of the Civil War ironclad USS Monitor* were buried Friday evening, March 8, 2013, at Arlington National Cemetery.

The remains of the sailors had been discovered in the Monitor's turret when it was lifted from the waters off the coast of North Carolina in 2002.

The ironclad sank less than a year after her famous battle with the Confederate ironclad CSS Virginia, aka Merrimac, which took place near Hampton Roads, Virginia in early March 1862.



             The Monitor & The Merrimac
              1st Fight Between Ironclads
                 Louis Prang & Company
                            Boston, 1886

The burial site for the 2 sailors is near the amphitheater at Arlington National Cemetery.

*The USS Monitor was the 1st ironclad commissioned by the US Navy on February 25, 1862.  The 1st Battle of the Ironclads took place on March 8 & 9, 1862 in which the Monitor & Merrimac fought to a draw.



           USS Monitor & Her Officers
                           July 1862
                  US Naval History & 
            Heritage Command Photo

The Monitor sank during a storm off of Cape Hatteras on December 31, 1862.  Sixteen of her 62 crewmen were lost.

The ironclad was designed by John Ericsson with a  large cylindrical gun turret mounted above the upper hull.




                          You Tube Video