The Most Famous Ships of the Confederacy: The History of the Merrimac, CSS Alabama, and CSS Hunley
ISBN: 9781533677136
*Includes pictures
*Includes accounts of the ships and their histories written by crewmembers
*Includes online resources and bibliographies for further reading
*Includes a table of contents
On March 8, 1862, the newest era of naval warfare began. That day, the CSS Virginia, an ironclad created out of the hull of the scuttled USS Merrimac by the Confederates, sailed down the Elizabeth River to Hampton Roads, where a Union blockade fleet was anchored. The wooden ships of the North were no match for the ironclad, which quickly rammed and sank the USS Cumberland, and as it trained its sights on the USS Congress, one Union officer noted the former Merrimac fired "shot and shell into her with terrific effect, while the shot from the Congress glanced from her iron-plated sloping sides, without doing any apparent injury." The Merrimac had overwhelmingly demonstrated the superiority of the ironclad over the traditional frigates and gunships of the time, but it met its match the following day. On March 9, the North’s ironclad, the USS Monitor, arrived to challenge the Confederate ironclad, setting off the most famous naval battle of the war.
*Includes accounts of the ships and their histories written by crewmembers
*Includes online resources and bibliographies for further reading
*Includes a table of contents
On March 8, 1862, the newest era of naval warfare began. That day, the CSS Virginia, an ironclad created out of the hull of the scuttled USS Merrimac by the Confederates, sailed down the Elizabeth River to Hampton Roads, where a Union blockade fleet was anchored. The wooden ships of the North were no match for the ironclad, which quickly rammed and sank the USS Cumberland, and as it trained its sights on the USS Congress, one Union officer noted the former Merrimac fired "shot and shell into her with terrific effect, while the shot from the Congress glanced from her iron-plated sloping sides, without doing any apparent injury." The Merrimac had overwhelmingly demonstrated the superiority of the ironclad over the traditional frigates and gunships of the time, but it met its match the following day. On March 9, the North’s ironclad, the USS Monitor, arrived to challenge the Confederate ironclad, setting off the most famous naval battle of the war.