Monitor – Merrimack --The Battle of the Ironclads - Newport News VA
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Don.Morfe
N 36° 58.942 W 076° 23.765
18S E 375750 N 4093827
The Monitor was a completely new concept of naval design created by Swedish inventor John Ericsson. Its revolving turret housed two 11-inch Dahlgrens.
Waymark Code: WM18A1V
Location: Virginia, United States
Date Posted: 06/25/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Turtle3863
Views: 0

Monitor – Merrimack-The Battle of the Ironclads
— 1862 Peninsula Campaign —

Lincoln viewed the March 8, 1862, sinking of the USS Congress and USS Cumberland as the greatest Union calamity since Bull Run. Union Secretary of War Edwin W. Stanton feared that “the CSS Virginia (Merrimack) would soon come up the Potomac and disperse Congress, destroy the Capitol and public buildings…” Stanton believed that “McClellan’s mistaken purpose to advance by the Peninsula must be abandoned.”

As the burning Congress set an eerie glow across the harbor the evening of March 8, the USS Monitor arrived in Hampton Roads. It had almost sank enroute from New York. Whereas the Virginia (Merrimack) was “an ingenious adaptation of materials at hand and a tribute to her builder’s skill at improvision,” the Monitor was a completely new concept of naval design created by Swedish inventor John Ericsson. Its revolving turret housed two 11-inch Dahlgrens.

On the morning of March 9, 1862, Lt. Jones was surprised to see this “cheesebox on a raft” approach the Virginia (Merrimack) from alongside of the USS Minnesota. During the next two hours the Monitor and the Virginia (Merrimack) dueled each other. The fight continued until a shell hit the Monitor’s pilothouse, blinding her commander, Lt. Lorimer Worden, and causing the Monitor to break off action temporarily. Believing that the Federal ironclad had had enough and suffering from several leaks, Jones ordered the Virginia (Merrimack) back to Norfolk with the receding tide.

The two ironclads never fought each other again. The battle, however, had more immediate implications than being a major turning point in naval warfare, as the undefeated Virginia (Merrimack) blocked the James River and closed this approach to Richmond to Federal use. McClellan was concerned that the Virginia (Merrimack) might “paralyze the movement of his army” yet decided to continue the Peninsula Campaign by way of the York River.

(captions)
Arrival of the CSS (sic) Monitor at Hampton Roads by J.O. Davidson.
Battle between the Ironclads. – Courtesy of The Mariner’s Museum
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Don.Morfe visited Monitor – Merrimack --The Battle of the Ironclads - Newport News VA 06/26/2023 Don.Morfe visited it