<h2><SPAN name="XX" id="XX"></SPAN>XX</h2>
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<p><i>The Blockade—Hatteras Inlet—Roanoke
Island—Fort Pulaski—Merrimac and Monitor—The
Cumberland Sunk—The Congress Burned—Battle of the
Ironclads—Flag-officer Farragut—Forts Jackson and St.
Philip—New Orleans Captured—Farragut at
Vicksburg—Farragut's Second Expedition to
Vicksburg—Return to New Orleans</i></p>
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<p>In addition to its heavy work of maintaining the Atlantic
blockade, the navy of the United States contributed signally toward
the suppression of the rebellion by three brilliant victories which
it gained during the first half of the year 1862. After careful
preparation during several months, a joint expedition under the
command of General Ambrose E. Burnside and Flag-Officer
Goldsborough, consisting of more than twelve thousand men and
twenty ships of war, accompanied by numerous transports, sailed
from Fort Monroe on January 11, with the object of occupying the
interior waters of the North Carolina coast. Before the larger
vessels could effect their entrance through Hatteras Inlet,
captured in the previous August, a furious storm set in, which
delayed the expedition nearly a month. By February 7, however, that
and other serious difficulties were overcome, and on the following
day the expedition captured Roanoke Island, and thus completely
opened the whole interior water-system of Albemarle and Pamlico
sounds to the easy approach of the Union fleet and
forces.<SPAN name="page278" id="page278"></SPAN></p>
<p>From Roanoke Island as a base, minor expeditions within a short
period effected the destruction of the not very formidable fleet
which the enemy had been able to organize, and the reduction of
Fort Macon and the rebel defenses of Elizabeth City, New Berne, and
other smaller places. An eventual advance upon Goldsboro' formed
part of the original plan; but, before it could be executed,
circumstances intervened effectually to thwart that object.</p>
<p>While the gradual occupation of the North Carolina coast was
going on, two other expeditions of a similar nature were making
steady progress. One of them, under the direction of General Quincy
A. Gillmore, carried on a remarkable siege operation against Fort
Pulaski, standing on an isolated sea marsh at the mouth of the
Savannah River. Here not only the difficulties of approach, but the
apparently insurmountable obstacle of making the soft, unctuous mud
sustain heavy batteries, was overcome, and the fort compelled to
surrender on April 11, after an effective bombardment. The second
was an expedition of nineteen ships, which, within a few days
during the month of March, without serious resistance, occupied the
whole remaining Atlantic coast southward as far as St.
Augustine.</p>
<p>When, at the outbreak of the rebellion, the navy-yard at
Norfolk, Virginia, had to be abandoned to the enemy, the
destruction at that time attempted by Commodore Paulding remained
very incomplete. Among the vessels set on fire, the screw-frigate
<i>Merrimac</i>, which had been scuttled, was burned only to the
water's edge, leaving her hull and machinery entirely uninjured. In
due time she was raised by the Confederates, covered with a sloping
roof of railroad iron, provided with a huge wedge-shaped prow of
cast iron, and armed with a formidable battery of ten guns. Secret
<SPAN name="page279" id="page279"></SPAN>information came to the Navy Department of
the progress of this work, and such a possibility was kept in mind
by the board of officers that decided upon the construction of the
three experimental ironclads in September, 1861.</p>
<p>The particular one of these three especially intended for this
peculiar emergency was a ship of entirely novel design, made by the
celebrated inventor John Ericsson, a Swede by birth, but American
by adoption—a man who combined great original genius with
long scientific study and experience. His invention may be most
quickly described as having a small, very low hull, covered by a
much longer and wider flat deck only a foot or two above the
water-line, upon which was placed a revolving iron turret twenty
feet in diameter, nine feet high, and eight inches thick, on the
inside of which were two eleven-inch guns trained side by side and
revolving with the turret. This unique naval structure was promptly
nicknamed "a cheese-box on a raft," and the designation was not at
all inapt. Naval experts at once recognized that her sea-going
qualities were bad; but compensation was thought to exist in the
belief that her iron turret would resist shot and shell, and that
the thin edge of her flat deck would offer only a minimum mark to
an enemy's guns: in other words, that she was no cruiser, but would
prove a formidable floating battery; and this belief she abundantly
justified.</p>
<p>The test of her fighting qualities was attended by what almost
suggested a miraculous coincidence. On Saturday, March 8, 1862,
about noon, a strange-looking craft resembling a huge turtle was
seen coming into Hampton Roads out of the mouth of Elizabeth River,
and it quickly became certain that this was the much talked of
rebel ironclad <i>Merrimac</i>, or, as the Confederates had renamed
her, the <i>Virginia</i>. She steamed <SPAN name="page280" id="page280"></SPAN>rapidly
toward Newport News, three miles to the southwest, where the Union
ships <i>Congress</i> and <i>Cumberland</i> lay at anchor. These
saw the uncouth monster coming and prepared for action. The
<i>Minnesota</i>, the <i>St. Lawrence</i>, and the <i>Roanoke</i>,
lying at Fortress Monroe also saw her and gave chase, but, the
water being low, they all soon grounded. The broadsides of the
<i>Congress</i>, as the <i>Merrimac</i> passed her at three hundred
yards' distance, seemed to produce absolutely no effect upon her
sloping iron roof. Neither did the broadsides of her intended prey,
nor the fire of the shore batteries, for even an instant arrest her
speed as, rushing on, she struck the <i>Cumberland</i>, and with
her iron prow broke a hole as large as a hogshead in her side. Then
backing away and hovering over her victim at convenient distance,
she raked her decks with shot and shell until, after three quarters
of an hour's combat, the <i>Cumberland</i> and her heroic
defenders, who had maintained the fight with unyielding
stubbornness, went to the bottom in fifty feet of water with colors
flying.</p>
<p>Having sunk the <i>Cumberland</i>, the <i>Merrimac</i> next
turned her attention to the <i>Congress</i>, which had meanwhile
run into shoal water and grounded where the rebel vessel could not
follow. But the <i>Merrimac</i>, being herself apparently proof
against shot and shell by her iron plating, took up a raking
position two cables' length away, and during an hour's firing
deliberately reduced the <i>Congress</i> to helplessness and to
surrender—her commander being killed and the vessel set on
fire. The approach, the manoeuvering, and the two successive
combats consumed the afternoon, and toward nightfall the
<i>Merrimac</i> and her three small consorts that had taken little
part in the action withdrew to the rebel batteries on the Virginia
shore: not alone because of the approaching darkness and the
fatigue of <SPAN name="page281" id="page281"></SPAN>the crew, but because the rebel ship had
really suffered considerable damage in ramming the
<i>Cumberland</i>, as well as from one or two chance shots that
entered her port-holes.</p>
<p>That same night, while the burning <i>Congress</i> yet lighted
up the waters of Hampton Roads, a little ship, as strange-looking
and as new to marine warfare as the rebel turtleback herself,
arrived by sea in tow from New York, and receiving orders to
proceed at once to the scene of conflict, stationed herself near
the grounded <i>Minnesota</i>. This was Ericsson's "cheese-box on a
raft," named by him the <i>Monitor</i>. The Union officers who had
witnessed the day's events with dismay, and were filled with gloomy
forebodings for the morrow, while welcoming this providential
reinforcement, were by no means reassured. The <i>Monitor</i> was
only half the size of her antagonist, and had only two guns to the
other's ten. But this very disparity proved an essential advantage.
With only ten feet draft to the <i>Merrimac's</i> twenty-two, she
not only possessed superior mobility, but might run where the
<i>Merrimac</i> could not follow. When, therefore, at eight o'clock
on Sunday, March 9, the <i>Merrimac</i> again came into Hampton
Roads to complete her victory, Lieutenant John L. Worden,
commanding the <i>Monitor</i>, steamed boldly out to meet her.</p>
<p>Then ensued a three hours' naval conflict which held the
breathless attention of the active participants and the spectators
on ship and shore, and for many weeks excited the wonderment of the
reading world. If the <i>Monitor's</i> solid eleven-inch balls
bounded without apparent effect from the sloping roof of the
<i>Merrimac</i>, so, in turn, the <i>Merrimac's</i> broadsides
passed harmlessly over the low deck of the <i>Monitor</i>, or
rebounded from the round sides of her iron turret. When the<SPAN name="page282" id="page282"></SPAN> unwieldy rebel turtleback, with her
slow, awkward movement, tried to ram the pointed raft that carried
the cheese-box, the little vessel, obedient to her rudder, easily
glided out of the line of direct impact.</p>
<p>Each ship passed through occasional moments of danger, but the
long three hours' encounter ended without other serious damage than
an injury to Lieutenant Worden by the explosion of a rebel shell
against a crevice of the <i>Monitor's</i> pilot-house through which
he was looking, which, temporarily blinding his eye-sight, disabled
him from command. At that point the battle ended by mutual consent.
The <i>Monitor</i>, unharmed except by a few unimportant dents in
her plating, ran into shoal water to permit surgical attendance to
her wounded officer. On her part, the <i>Merrimac</i>, abandoning
any further molestation of the other ships, steamed away at noon to
her retreat in Elizabeth River. The forty-one rounds fired from the
<i>Monitor's</i> guns had so far weakened the <i>Merrimac's</i>
armor that, added to the injuries of the previous day, it was of
the highest prudence to avoid further conflict. A tragic fate soon
ended the careers of both vessels. Owing to other military events,
the <i>Merrimac</i> was abandoned, burned, and blown up by her
officers about two months later; and in the following December, the
<i>Monitor</i> foundered in a gale off Cape Hatteras. But the types
of these pioneer ironclads, which had demonstrated such
unprecedented fighting qualities, were continued. Before the end of
the war the Union navy had more than twenty monitors in service;
and the structure of the <i>Merrimac</i> was in a number of
instances repeated by the Confederates.</p>
<p>The most brilliant of all the exploits of the navy during the
year 1862 were those carried on under the command of Flag-Officer
David G. Farragut, who, <SPAN name="page283" id="page283"></SPAN>though a born Southerner and residing in
Virginia when the rebellion broke out, remained loyal to the
government and true to the flag he had served for forty-eight
years. Various preparations had been made and various plans
discussed for an effective attempt against some prominent point on
the Gulf coast. Very naturally, all examinations of the subject
inevitably pointed to the opening of the Mississippi as the
dominant problem to be solved; and on January 9, Farragut was
appointed to the command of the western Gulf blockading squadron,
and eleven days thereafter received his confidential instructions
to attempt the capture of the city of New Orleans.</p>
<p>Thus far in the war, Farragut had been assigned to no prominent
service, but the patience with which he had awaited his opportunity
was now more than compensated by the energy and thoroughness with
which he superintended the organization of his fleet. By the middle
of April he was in the lower Mississippi with seventeen men-of-war
and one hundred and seventy-seven guns. With him were Commander
David D. Porter, in charge of a mortar flotilla of nineteen
schooners and six armed steamships, and General Benjamin F. Butler,
at the head of an army contingent of six thousand men, soon to be
followed by considerable reinforcements.</p>
<p>The first obstacle to be overcome was the fire from the twin
forts Jackson and St. Philip, situated nearly opposite each other
at a bend of the Mississippi twenty-five miles above the mouth of
the river, while the city of New Orleans itself lies seventy-five
miles farther up the stream. These were formidable forts of
masonry, with an armament together of over a hundred guns, and
garrisons of about six hundred men each. They also had auxiliary
defenses: first, of a strong river <SPAN name="page284" id="page284"></SPAN>barrier of log rafts and
other obstructions connected by powerful chains, half a mile below
the forts; second, of an improvised fleet of sixteen rebel gunboats
and a formidable floating battery. None of Farragut's ships were
ironclad. He had, from the beginning of the undertaking, maintained
the theory that a wooden fleet, properly handled, could
successfully pass the batteries of the forts. "I would as soon have
a paper ship as an ironclad; only give me <i>men</i> to fight her!"
he said. He might not come back; but New Orleans would be won. In
his hazardous undertaking his faith was based largely on the skill
and courage of his subordinate commanders of ships, and this faith
was fully sustained by their gallantry and devotion.</p>
<p>Porter's flotilla of nineteen schooners carrying two mortars
each, anchored below the forts, maintained a heavy bombardment for
five days, and then Farragut decided to try his ships. On the night
of the twentieth the daring work of two gunboats cut an opening
through the river barrier through which the vessels might pass; and
at two o'clock on the morning of April 24, Farragut gave the signal
to advance. The first division of his fleet, eight vessels, led by
Captain Bailey, successfully passed the barrier. The second
division of nine ships was not quite so fortunate. Three of them
failed to pass the barrier, but the others, led by Farragut himself
in his flag-ship, the <i>Hartford</i>, followed the advance.</p>
<p>The starlit night was quickly obscured by the smoke of the
general cannonade from both ships and forts; but the heavy
batteries of the latter had little effect on the passing fleet.
Farragut's flag-ship was for a short while in great danger. At a
moment when she slightly grounded a huge fire-raft, fully ablaze,
was pushed against her by a rebel tug, and the flames caught in the
<SPAN name="page285" id="page285"></SPAN> paint on her side, and mounted into her
rigging. But this danger had also been provided against, and by
heroic efforts the <i>Hartford</i> freed herself from her peril.
Immediately above the forts, the fleet of rebel gunboats joined in
the battle, which now resolved itself into a series of conflicts
between single vessels or small groups. But the stronger and
better-armed Union ships quickly destroyed the Confederate
flotilla, with the single exception that two of the enemy's
gunboats rammed the <i>Varuna</i> from opposite sides and sank her.
Aside from this, the Union fleet sustained much miscellaneous
damage, but no serious injury in the furious battle of an hour and
a half.</p>
<p>With but a short halt at Quarantine, six miles above the forts,
Farragut and his thirteen ships of war pushed on rapidly over the
seventy-five miles, and on the forenoon of April 25 New Orleans lay
helpless under the guns of the Union fleet. The city was promptly
evacuated by the Confederate General Lovell. Meanwhile, General
Butler was busy moving his transports and troops around outside by
sea to Quarantine; and, having occupied that point in force, Forts
Jackson and St. Philip capitulated on April 28. This last
obstruction removed, Butler, after having garrisoned the forts,
brought the bulk of his army up to New Orleans, and on May 1
Farragut turned over to him the formal possession of the city,
where Butler continued in command of the Department of the Gulf
until the following December.</p>
<p>Farragut immediately despatched an advance section of his fleet
up the Mississippi. None of the important cities on its banks below
Vicksburg had yet been fortified, and, without serious opposition,
they surrendered as the Union ships successively reached them.
Farragut himself, following with the remainder of his fleet,
<SPAN name="page286" id="page286"></SPAN> arrived at Vicksburg on May 20. This
city, by reason of the high bluffs on which it stands, was the most
defensible point on the whole length of the great river within the
Southern States; but so confidently had the Confederates trusted to
the strength of their works at Columbus, Island No. 10, Fort
Pillow, and other points, that the fortifications of Vicksburg had
thus far received comparatively little attention. The recent Union
victories, however, both to the north and south, had awakened them
to their danger; and when Lovell evacuated New Orleans, he shipped
heavy guns and sent five Confederate regiments to Vicksburg; and
during the eight days between their arrival on May 12 and the
twentieth, on which day Farragut reached the city, six rebel
batteries were put in readiness to fire on his ships.</p>
<p>General Halleck, while pushing his siege works toward Corinth,
was notified as early as April 27 that Farragut was coming, and the
logic of the situation ought to have induced him to send a
coöperating force to Farragut's assistance, or, at the very
least, to have matured plans for such coöperation. All the
events would have favored an expedition of this kind. When Corinth,
at the end of May, fell into Halleck's hands, Forts Pillow and
Randolph on the Mississippi River were hastily evacuated by the
enemy, and on June 6 the Union flotilla of river gunboats which had
rendered such signal service at Henry, Donelson, and Island No. 10,
reinforced by a hastily constructed flotilla of heavy river tugs
converted into rams, gained another brilliant victory in a most
dramatic naval battle at Memphis, during which an opposing
Confederate flotilla of similar rams and gunboats was almost
completely destroyed, and the immediate evacuation of Memphis by
the Confederates thereby forced.<SPAN name="page287" id="page287"></SPAN></p>
<p>This left Vicksburg as the single barrier to the complete
opening of the Mississippi, and that barrier was defended by only
six batteries and a garrison of six Confederate regiments at the
date of Farragut's arrival before it. But Farragut had with his
expedition only two regiments of troops, and the rebel batteries
were situated at such an elevation that the guns of the Union fleet
could not be raised sufficiently to silence them. Neither help nor
promise of help came from Halleck's army, and Farragut could
therefore do nothing but turn his vessels down stream and return to
New Orleans. There, about June 1, he received news from the Navy
Department that the administration was exceedingly anxious to have
the Mississippi opened; and this time, taking with him Porter's
mortar flotilla and three thousand troops, he again proceeded up
the river, and a second time reached Vicksburg on June 25.</p>
<p>The delay, however, had enabled the Confederates greatly to
strengthen the fortifications and the garrison of the city. Neither
a bombardment from Porter's mortar sloops, nor the running of
Farragut's ships past the batteries, where they were joined by the
Union gunboat flotilla from above, sufficed to bring the
Confederates to a surrender. Farragut estimated that a
coöperating land force of twelve to fifteen thousand would
have enabled him to take the works; and Halleck, on June 28 and
July 3, partially promised early assistance. But on July 14 he
reported definitely that it would be impossible for him to render
the expected aid. Under these circumstances, the Navy Department
ordered Farragut back to New Orleans, lest his ships of deep draft
should be detained in the river by the rapidly falling water. The
capture of Vicksburg was postponed for a whole year, and the early
transfer of Halleck to Washington changed the current of Western
campaigns.</p>
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