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Monitor vs. Merrimack

Monitor vs. Merrimack. The Civil War at Sea. Anaconda at Sea. Directly after shells were first fired at Fort Sumpter , President Lincoln ordered the navy to blockade southern ports. Civil War Naval Strength - North. The United States Navy had approximately 90 ships

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Monitor vs. Merrimack

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  1. Monitor vs. Merrimack The Civil War at Sea

  2. Anaconda at Sea • Directly after shells were first fired at Fort Sumpter, President Lincoln ordered the navy to blockade southern ports

  3. Civil War Naval Strength - North • The United States Navy had approximately 90 ships • By the end of the war the North had approximately 600 ships in service

  4. Civil War Naval Strength - South • The Confederates knew they could never match the north in terms of numbers of ships • Lack of industry & manpower • At the start of the war the Confederacy had approximately 12 sea going vessels C.S.S. Governor Moore

  5. Civil War Naval Strength - South • Confederates secretly order “fast cruisers” from English shipyards • The South decided to plate some of their ships with iron • Up to that time almost all ships were made of wood Shipyard in Liverpool, England. C.S.S. Galena

  6. Naval Technology • Up until the Civil War, ironclad ships had not been tested in battle • All navies of the world still used predominantly wooden ships • Wooden ships were fast and easy to float, but they were also fragile, and flammable C.S.S. Richmond

  7. CSS Virginia • A Union ship named Merrimackwas sunk near Norfolk, Virginia • The Confederates raised the ship out of the water, and covered her with iron plating • On each side of the roof were holes for five powerful guns • The Confederate Navy renames the Merrimac the C.S.S. Virginia

  8. CSS Virginia • On March 8,1862, the Virginia slid into the water • On that same day, the Virginia fought and sunk the U.S.S Cumberland and Minnesota

  9. Battle of Hampton Roads • Three Union ships had attempted to save their two ships • But, with shells bouncing harmlessly off the Virginia’s side, the captains chose to flee • When the news of the battle reached Washington, people were in a panic. The South had unleashed a new super weapon. • U.S. Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton said the Virginia cold sink every vessel in the North, and it could steam up the Potomac River to Washington and “disperse Congress, destroy the Capitol and public buildings.”

  10. Battle of Hampton Roads

  11. Monitor • Long before the launching, spies had informed the U.S. Navy that the Virginiawas being built • The U.S. Navy decided to secretly build its own ironclad vessel

  12. A “shingle” with a “chees box” on top

  13. Monitor • Inside the pilot house of the Monitor, which revolved around, were two powerful guns • The Virginia’s guns were stationary • The Monitor was smaller than the Virginia • (Merrimack) and easier to maneuver

  14. Monitor vs. Merrimack • Sunday, March 9, 1862 • The shores of Hampton Roads were lined with people eager to see the battle

  15. Scenes from the Battle • Neither ship is able to sink the other • Cannon-fire bounces harmlessly off of the sides of the new ironclads

  16. Monitor vs. Merrimack • The two fought to a tactical draw, but again the Virginia had to withdraw to deeper waters giving the Monitor a strategic victory • The Virginia remained a threat, but fears that she would single-handedly destroy the Federal fleet were now abated

  17. Monitor vs. Merrimack • On May 3 the Confederates began to evacuate Yorktown and withdraw up the York-James Peninsula • This opened up the York and James River to Federal gunboats • It also forced the abandonment of Gosport Naval Yard and scuttling of the Virginia which opened up the James River to the Federals Currier and Ives print of the destruction of the Virginia

  18. Legacy of the Battle • The battle was a draw, although both sides claimed victory • Actually, it was iron ships that won, that battle finished wooden warships • Charles F. Adams, U.S. minister to England, wrote from England that the battle “has been the main talk of the town even in Parliament, …The impression is that it dates the commencement of a new era in warfare.” • Harpers Weekly

  19. Legacy of the Battle

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