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<br/>
<h2> HAMPTON ROADS </h2>
<p>Then far away to the south uprose<br/>
A little feather of snow-white smoke,<br/>
And we knew that the iron ship of our foes<br/>
Was steadily steering its course<br/>
To try the force<br/>
Of our ribs of oak.<br/>
<br/>
Down upon us heavily runs,<br/>
Silent and sullen, the floating fort;<br/>
Then comes a puff of smoke from her guns,<br/>
And leaps the terrible death, With fiery breath,<br/>
From her open port.<br/>
<br/>
* * *<br/>
<br/>
Ho! brave hearts, that went down in the seas!<br/>
Ye are at peace in the troubled stream;<br/>
Ho! brave land! with hearts like these,<br/>
Thy flag, that is rent in twain,<br/>
Shall be one again,<br/>
And without a seam!<br/>
—Longfellow<br/></p>
<p>The naval battles of the Civil War possess an immense importance, because
they mark the line of cleavage between naval warfare under the old, and
naval warfare under the new, conditions. The ships with which Hull and
Decatur and McDonough won glory in the war of 1812 were essentially like
those with which Drake and Hawkins and Frobisher had harried the Spanish
armadas two centuries and a half earlier. They were wooden
sailing-vessels, carrying many guns mounted in broadside, like those of De
Ruyter and Tromp, of Blake and Nelson. Throughout this period all the
great admirals, all the famous single-ship fighters,—whose skill
reached its highest expression in our own navy during the war of 1812,—commanded
craft built and armed in a substantially similar manner, and fought with
the same weapons and under much the same conditions. But in the Civil War
weapons and methods were introduced which caused a revolution greater even
than that which divided the sailing-ship from the galley. The use of
steam, the casing of ships in iron armor, and the employment of the
torpedo, the ram, and the gun of high power, produced such radically new
types that the old ships of the line became at one stroke as antiquated as
the galleys of Hamilcar or Alcibiades. Some of these new engines of
destruction were invented, and all were for the first time tried in actual
combat, during our own Civil War. The first occasion on which any of the
new methods were thoroughly tested was attended by incidents which made it
one of the most striking of naval battles.</p>
<p>In Chesapeake Bay, near Hampton Roads, the United States had collected a
fleet of wooden ships; some of them old-style sailing-vessels, others
steamers. The Confederates were known to be building a great iron-clad
ram, and the wooden vessels were eagerly watching for her appearance when
she should come out of Gosport Harbor. Her powers and capacity were
utterly unknown. She was made out of the former United States
steam-frigate Merrimac, cut down so as to make her fore and aft decks
nearly flat, and not much above the water, while the guns were mounted in
a covered central battery, with sloping flanks. Her sides, deck, and
battery were coated with iron, and she was armed with formidable
rifle-guns, and, most important of all, with a steel ram thrust out under
water forward from her bow. She was commanded by a gallant and efficient
officer, Captain Buchanan.</p>
<p>It was March 8, 1862, when the ram at last made her appearance within
sight of the Union fleet. The day was calm and very clear, so that the
throngs of spectators on shore could see every feature of the battle. With
the great ram came three light gunboats, all of which took part in the
action, harassing the vessels which she assailed; but they were not
factors of importance in the fight. On the Union side the vessels nearest
were the sailing-ships Cumberland and Congress, and the steam-frigate
Minnesota. The Congress and Cumberland were anchored not far from each
other; the Minnesota got aground, and was some distance off. Owing to the
currents and shoals and the lack of wind, no other vessel was able to get
up in time to take a part in the fight.</p>
<p>As soon as the ram appeared, out of the harbor, she turned and steamed
toward the Congress and the Cumberland, the black smoke rising from her
funnels, and the great ripples running from each side of her iron prow as
she drove steadily through the still waters. On board of the Congress and
Cumberland there was eager anticipation, but not a particle of fear. The
officers in command, Captain Smith and Lieutenant Morris, were two of the
most gallant men in a service where gallantry has always been too common
to need special comment. The crews were composed of veterans, well
trained, self-confident, and proud beyond measure of the flag whose honor
they upheld. The guns were run out, and the men stood at quarters, while
the officers eagerly conned the approaching ironclad. The Congress was the
first to open fire; and, as her volleys flew, the men on the Cumberland
were astounded to see the cannon-shot bound off the sloping sides of the
ram as hailstones bound from a windowpane. The ram answered, and her
rifle-shells tore the sides of the Congress; but for her first victim she
aimed at the Cumberland, and, firing her bow guns, came straight as an
arrow at the little sloop-of-war, which lay broadside to her.</p>
<p>It was an absolutely hopeless struggle. The Cumberland was a sailing-ship,
at anchor, with wooden sides, and a battery of light guns. Against the
formidable steam ironclad, with her heavy rifles and steel ram, she was as
powerless as if she had been a rowboat; and from the moment the men saw
the cannon-shot bound from the ram's sides they knew they were doomed. But
none of them flinched. Once and again they fired their guns full against
the approaching ram, and in response received a few shells from the great
bow-rifles of the latter. Then, forging ahead, the Merrimac struck her
antagonist with her steel prow, and the sloop-of-war reeled and shuddered,
and through the great rent in her side the black water rushed. She
foundered in a few minutes; but her crew fought her to the last, cheering
as they ran out the guns, and sending shot after shot against the ram as
the latter backed off after delivering her blow. The rush of the water
soon swamped the lower decks, but the men above continued to serve their
guns until the upper deck also was awash, and the vessel had not ten
seconds of life left. Then, with her flags flying, her men cheering, and
her guns firing, the Cumberland sank. It was shallow where she settled
down, so that her masts remained above the water. The glorious flag for
which the brave men aboard her had died flew proudly in the wind all that
day, while the fight went on, and throughout the night; and next morning
it was still streaming over the beautiful bay, to mark the resting-place
of as gallant a vessel as ever sailed or fought on the high seas.</p>
<p>After the Cumberland sank, the ram turned her attention to the Congress.
Finding it difficult to get to her in the shoal water, she began to knock
her to pieces with her great rifle-guns. The unequal fight between the
ironclad and the wooden ship lasted for perhaps half an hour. By that time
the commander of the Congress had been killed, and her decks looked like a
slaughterhouse. She was utterly unable to make any impression on her foe,
and finally she took fire and blew up. The Minnesota was the third victim
marked for destruction, and the Merrimac began the attack upon her at
once; but it was getting very late, and as the water was shoal and she
could not get close, the rain finally drew back to her anchorage, to wait
until next day before renewing and completing her work of destruction.</p>
<p>All that night there was the wildest exultation among the Confederates,
while the gloom and panic of the Union men cannot be described. It was
evident that the United States ships-of-war were as helpless as
cockle-shells against their iron-clad foe, and there was no question but
that she could destroy the whole fleet with ease and with absolute
impunity. This meant not only the breaking of the blockade; but the
sweeping away at one blow of the North's naval supremacy, which was
indispensable to the success of the war for the Union. It is small wonder
that during that night the wisest and bravest should have almost
despaired.</p>
<p>But in the hour of the nation's greatest need a champion suddenly
appeared, in time to play the last scene in this great drama of sea
warfare. The North, too, had been trying its hand at building ironclads.
The most successful of them was the little Monitor, a flat-decked, low,
turreted, ironclad, armed with a couple of heavy guns. She was the first
experiment of her kind, and her absolutely flat surface, nearly level with
the water, her revolving turret, and her utter unlikeness to any
pre-existing naval type, had made her an object of mirth among most
practical seamen; but her inventor, Ericsson, was not disheartened in the
least by the jeers. Under the command of a gallant naval officer, Captain
Worden, she was sent South from New York, and though she almost foundered
in a gale she managed to weather it, and reached the scene of the battle
at Hampton Roads at the moment when her presence was all-important.</p>
<p>Early the following morning the Merrimac, now under Captain Jones (for
Buchanan had been wounded), again steamed forth to take up the work she
had so well begun and to destroy the Union fleet. She steered straight for
the Minnesota; but when she was almost there, to her astonishment a
strange-looking little craft advanced from the side of the big wooden
frigate and boldly barred the Merrimac's path. For a moment the
Confederates could hardly believe their eyes. The Monitor was tiny,
compared to their ship, for she was not one fifth the size, and her queer
appearance made them look at their new foe with contempt; but the first
shock of battle did away with this feeling. The Merrimac turned on her foe
her rifleguns, intending to blow her out of the water, but the shot
glanced from the thick iron turret of the Monitor. Then the Monitors guns
opened fire, and as the great balls struck the sides of the ram her plates
started and her timbers gave. Had the Monitor been such a vessel as those
of her type produced later in the war, the ram would have been sunk then
and there; but as it was her shot were not quite heavy enough to pierce
the iron walls. Around and around the two strange combatants hovered,
their guns bellowing without cessation, while the men on the frigates and
on shore watched the result with breathless interest. Neither the Merrimac
nor the Monitor could dispose of its antagonist. The ram's guns could not
damage the turret, and the Monitor was able dexterously to avoid the
stroke of the formidable prow. On the other hand, the shot of the Monitor
could not penetrate the Merrimac's tough sides. Accordingly, fierce though
the struggle was, and much though there was that hinged on it, it was not
bloody in character. The Merrimac could neither destroy nor evade the
Monitor. She could not sink her when she tried to, and when she abandoned
her and turned to attack one of the other wooden vessels, the little
turreted ship was thrown across her path, so that the fight had to be
renewed. Both sides grew thoroughly exhausted, and finally the battle
ceased by mutual consent.</p>
<p>Nothing more could be done. The ram was badly damaged, and there was no
help for her save to put back to the port whence she had come. Twice
afterward she came out, but neither time did she come near enough to the
Monitor to attack her, and the latter could not move off where she would
cease to protect the wooden vessels. The ram was ultimately blown up by
the Confederates on the advance of the Union army.</p>
<p>Tactically, the fight was a drawn battle—neither ship being able to
damage the other, and both ships, being fought to a standstill; but the
moral and material effects were wholly in favor of the Monitor. Her
victory was hailed with exultant joy throughout the whole Union, and
exercised a correspondingly depressing effect in the Confederacy; while
every naval man throughout the world, who possessed eyes to see, saw that
the fight in Hampton Roads had inaugurated a new era in ocean warfare, and
that the Monitor and Merrimac, which had waged so gallant and so terrible
a battle, were the first ships of the new era, and that as such their
names would be forever famous.</p>
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