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Virginia, Maryland Honor Confederate Sailors Who Died Aboard Stricken Submarine (Hunley)
AP ^
| Mar. 27, 2004
Posted on 03/27/2004 6:16:01 PM PST by nuconvert
Virginia, Maryland Honor Confederate Sailors Who Died Aboard Stricken Submarine
Mar 27, 2004
By Erik Stetson/ Associated Press Writer/
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Two sailors who died aboard a Confederate submarine were honored during elaborate ceremonies in Virginia and Maryland as officials prepared to bury the crew of the H.L. Hunley. Sediment collected from inside the submarine was carried by casket through Richmond and Libertytown, Md., Friday to honor the crew of the Hunley, which sank off the coast of South Carolina in 1864.
The sailors' remains were recovered when the Hunley was brought up from the ocean floor in 2000. Confederate groups seeking to honor the men had sought their remains, but the South Carolina Hunley Commission, citing legal reasons, would send only the sediment.
Richmond re-enactors organized the procession with all the honors of a military funeral, complete with a riderless horse, riflemen marching in formation and a bagpiper playing "Amazing Grace."
They delivered a casket containing the sediment to a Confederate color guard, which assigned soldiers to watch over it at the state Capitol.
The coffin honored Frank Collins, a Fredericksburg native who died aboard the Hunley after it rammed a torpedo spar into the wooden-hulled Union ship Housatonic.
The Housatonic also sank, securing the Hunley's place in history as the first submarine to sink an enemy warship. A funeral for the Hunley's entire eight-man crew is scheduled for April 17 in Charleston, S.C.
"I'd have much preferred the skeletal remains," said Brag Bowling, Sons of Confederate Veterans Virginia Division commander. "But I remain convinced there was a portion of Frank Collins here today."
In separate ceremonies in Libertytown, members of a color guard greeted a white hearse bearing a coffin meant to honor Joseph Ridgaway, a Maryland native who served aboard the Hunley. Seven men wearing Confederate uniforms carried the casket into a funeral home, where it was to remain until Sunday, surrounded by Civil War artifacts.
"This is a physical reminder of the heroism on both sides," Carl Berenholtz, commander of the Maryland division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, told The Frederick News-Post. "People who stepped up and did their duty for what they thought was a just cause."
The Hunley Commission declined to send remains because of concerns that if they were removed from Charleston, the descendants of a crew member could sue to take possession of them, Berenholtz said.
Commission chairman Glenn McConnell said the sediment was taken from a region of the sub where there would "not be any chance of an atom" of human remains being in it.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Maryland; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: confederate; dixie; hlhunley; housatonic; hunley; maryland; submarine; virginia
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1
posted on
03/27/2004 6:16:02 PM PST
by
nuconvert
To: nuconvert
2
posted on
03/27/2004 6:21:35 PM PST
by
mylife
To: nuconvert
The Hunley Commission declined to send remains because of concerns that if they were removed from Charleston, the descendants of a crew member could sue to take possession of them, Berenholtz said. How horrible!!!
BTW thanks for the post.
3
posted on
03/27/2004 6:28:23 PM PST
by
TXBubba
(aka TXBubbette)
To: nuconvert
4
posted on
03/27/2004 6:41:30 PM PST
by
nuconvert
("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( President Bush 3-20-04))
To: mylife
An 8 man crew?
Talk about sardines........whew!
5
posted on
03/27/2004 6:42:15 PM PST
by
nuconvert
("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( President Bush 3-20-04))
To: TXBubba
If anyone gets a couple of free hours in the Charleston area, go to the Lasch Conservation Center and see the CSS Hunley. It is an astoundingly preserved piece of history. I thoroughly enjoyed my visit last fall.
6
posted on
03/27/2004 6:42:34 PM PST
by
Riley
To: nuconvert
They have a partial mockup of the Hunley that you can get into in the Visitor Center. Very cool!
7
posted on
03/27/2004 6:43:39 PM PST
by
Riley
To: Riley
Is it really as small as it looks?
8
posted on
03/27/2004 6:45:28 PM PST
by
nuconvert
("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( President Bush 3-20-04))
To: nuconvert
I got news for ya nuconvert they All pack you like sardines.
;^)
9
posted on
03/27/2004 6:46:04 PM PST
by
mylife
To: nuconvert
Scale mock up in Chareleston
10
posted on
03/27/2004 6:48:18 PM PST
by
mylife
To: nuconvert
descendants of a crew member could sue to take possession of them ? WTF? Why on earth would they care if the families took custody of their ancestors bodies? The tone of this is creepy to me...
11
posted on
03/27/2004 6:48:34 PM PST
by
gdc314
To: mylife
WOW. Thanks. That's looks mighty uncomfortable for an overnighter.
12
posted on
03/27/2004 6:52:07 PM PST
by
nuconvert
("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( President Bush 3-20-04))
To: nuconvert
Sure seems that way inside. It's got a slightly larger vertical profile than a 55 gallon drum, so imagine you and seven of your closest friends doing heavy physical labor with no fresh air inside of a row of 55 gallon drums that are standing upright next to one another.
http://www.hunley.org/ You can only look down into a pool of water where they keep the actual Hunley. You can clearly see it, but you cannot actually touch the real one. You get a very good view though.
13
posted on
03/27/2004 6:56:19 PM PST
by
Riley
To: Riley
Wow. Hard to imagine those guys in there.
Conservation Center sounds neat.
14
posted on
03/27/2004 7:04:01 PM PST
by
nuconvert
("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( President Bush 3-20-04))
To: nuconvert
It was fascinating. As you go in, there is are kioska selling Civil War and Hunley related things, the hull mockup, a small theater continuously showing the TNT move "The Hunley", and a Confederate Color Guard that is changed every fifteen minutes to the tone of a ship's bell.
15
posted on
03/27/2004 7:09:04 PM PST
by
Riley
To: mylife
All your sardines belongs to us.
16
posted on
03/27/2004 7:13:26 PM PST
by
NCC-1701
(Support Mel Gibson and "The Passion of the Christ")
To: Riley
Thanks for the link.
17
posted on
03/27/2004 7:20:32 PM PST
by
nuconvert
("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( President Bush 3-20-04))
To: nuconvert
My First Boat
Put 100 Guys in here
18
posted on
03/27/2004 7:43:48 PM PST
by
mylife
To: mylife
wow. Looked up some info on it.
It was decommissioned in 2000.....
I really like sub movies. Don't know how guys can stand being in them for so long though.
Thanks for your service.
19
posted on
03/27/2004 8:31:41 PM PST
by
nuconvert
("America will never be intimidated by thugs and assassins." ( President Bush 3-20-04))
To: nuconvert
hehehe Its an adventure to be sure.
I was A direct support rider. We would come on (about 20 of us) in addition to the regular crew. this additional cramping of quarters did not go down well with ships company!
The didn't like us breathing their air!
There were bunking shortages which resulted in either placing some wood and a mattress atop torpedoes or "hotracking" with a shipmate. Hot racking is when you share a bunk. This isn't done at the same time, one sailor is on watch while the other sleeps then the process is reversed..the bed would still be warm hence "hotracking"
20
posted on
03/27/2004 8:52:51 PM PST
by
mylife
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