Fact #1: The CSS Virginia and USS Monitor were not the first ironclad warships, but they were the first ironclads to battle against one another
The CSS Virginia and the USS Monitor were not the first ironclad warships. In November 1859, the French navy had launched La Glorie, the first ironclad battleship. The Royal Navy, in response to the new French warship, had launched HMS Warrior, an iron-hulled frigate, in October of 1861.
Even in the American Civil War, the Virginia and Monitor were not the first ironclads. To support Union naval operations on the rivers in the western theater, ironclad river gunboats (City Class gunboats) had been built, launched, and deployed by January 1862. These gunboats played an important role in the battles for Fort Henry and Fort Donelson in February of 1862.
Fact#2: The Confederacy had great difficulty in sourcing the iron plating needed for the CSS Virginia
In October of 1861 it was determined that the CSS Virginia (the converted ex-USS Merrimack) would require two layers of two inch iron armor plate covering its entire casement. Requiring upwards of 800 tons of iron, there simply was not that much iron available. To make up for this painful shortage, the Confederacy was reduced to scavenging old scrap iron, melting down old smoothbore cannon and iron tools, and even ripping up hundreds of miles of railroad track. The delays in obtaining and shaping these iron plates gave the Union more time to construct their counters to the growing menace of the CSS Virginia...
Thanks for posting.
The account of Catesby Jones’ death.
http://alabamapioneers.com/the-story-of-this-sad-tragedy-in-selma-between-two-well-known-families-was-published-on-july-4-1877/
His home (located a block or two from that of Mary Todd Lincoln’s half sister’s home).
https://www.loc.gov/resource/hhh.al0135.photos/?sp=1
I grew up with Captain Jones’ descendants.
Some of the finest people I’ve ever known.
Hampton Roads.. my adopted home region. I cross the battle location each day to work along the Monitor-Merrimack Bridge Tunnel. For those FReepers who are interested in the battle of the ironclads, the Mariners Museum in Newport News has the turret of the Monitor on display. It’s a fascinating piece.
The American Civil War also saw the introduction of aerial surveillance, factory-produced munitions on a large scale, mass transportation of personnel and materiel, long-distance communications via electronics, more pervasive use of photography, canned rations, the origins of modern military medicine, total warfare against enemy infrastructure and support mechanisms...
The Napoleonic Wars were the zenith of thousands of years of combat procedure and its evolution. The American Civil War was the bloody birth of something altogether new. Everything since then, including arguably the use of nuclear weapons, has been refinement of what came about during those five years.
Near the Lincoln Memorial is a memorial to the designer of the Monitor John Ericsson.
There is an old public domain B&W film called “Hearts in Bondage”. It is the story of this iron-clad naval battle. The copy I watched was on the Archive.org website.
Somewhere, I’ve got a copy of the old Harper’s Weekly with the account of this battle. It’s fascinating reading the accounts of the period, as told by the storytellers of the period.
That and the advertisements are a hoot.