Amazing. The original is larger than the replicas.
Wonder if they recovered the original rudder.
Re that `blueprint’ drawing that shows the moment of impact between the Housatonic and the Hunley & its torpedo: the depiction does nothing to show that this was a moment of white hot combat caught at a critical instant. The sailors on the ship were frantically firing at the submersible with small arms since their cannon were useless at that range.
At the same moment the Hunley crew were already furiously cranking in reverse to disengage & put distance between the Hunley and the explosion soon to follow.
And soon, both vessels would be resting on the harbor bottom.
True enough. I drew that graphic with scale, movable vector objects as an engineering study to model the likely configuration of the torpedo deployment system -- not as an artist's dramatization. One purpose was to predict what might be found when the lower bow was excavated, and what might have to be dealt with before placing the caisson immediately in front of the bow.
But believe me, all of us on the forum were in awe of the drama and bravery encapsulated in that historic moment in time. Don Dowdey did a superb job of capturing those aspects in his marvelous action paintings.
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I'm assuming here that participants on this thread are aware of how the Hunley was raised:
And, now, the Hunley has been shored up from beneath, released from the truss, righted from its initial 45 degree listing position, and the truss has now (finally) been removed -- hence these articles...
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And, no, AFAIK, the rudder was not recovered. There are signs that the Hunley may have been damaged by anchors and/or fishing trawls dragged across it.