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Author Topic: USS Monitor (1862-1862)  (Read 1413 times)
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« on: August 14, 2007, 04:22:29 pm »

USS Monitor, a 987-ton armored turret gunboat, was built at New York to the design of John Ericsson. She was the first of what became a large number of "monitors" in the United States and other navies. Commissioned on 25 February 1862, she soon was underway for Hampton Roads, Virginia. Monitor arrived there on 9 March, and was immediately sent into action against the Confederate ironclad Virginia , which had sunk two U.S. Navy ships the previous day. The resulting battle, the first between iron-armored warships, was a tactical draw. However, Monitor prevented the Virginia from gaining control of Hampton Roads and thus preserved the Federal blockade of the Norfolk area.

Following this historic action, Monitor remained in the Hampton Roads area and, in mid-1862 was actively employed along the James River in support of the Army's Peninsular Campaign. In late December 1862, Monitor was ordered south for further operations. Caught in a storm off Cape Hatteras, she foundered on 31 December. Her wreck was discovered in 1974 and is now a marine sanctuary. Work is presently underway to recover major components of her structure and machinery, to be followed by extensive preservation efforts and ultimate museum exhibition.

Do you now that John Ericsson was born in SWEDEN in a town call Filipstad


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Timotheus
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« Reply #1 on: November 22, 2007, 08:45:45 am »

Mariner's Museum in Newport News, Virginia, has expanded in a major way to accommodate the Monitor exhibits, and I highly recommend it.  Standing on the full scale mockup is a trip in itself to one who has read about it all his life.  And overlooking the recovery tanks with the original turret and machinery and guns is something else.  I had no idea the interior was decorated like something out of an architectural catalog. 
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« Reply #2 on: November 22, 2007, 01:40:39 pm »

Mariner's Museum in Newport News, Virginia, has expanded in a major way to accommodate the Monitor exhibits, and I highly recommend it.  Standing on the full scale mockup is a trip in itself to one who has read about it all his life.  And overlooking the recovery tanks with the original turret and machinery and guns is something else.  I had no idea the interior was decorated like something out of an architectural catalog. 

I will try to hear with friends if somebody nows how the Monitor was decorated inside.
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Henry Moon
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« Reply #3 on: November 22, 2007, 07:20:37 pm »

Thank you Timotheus.  That's one more reason that I have now to visit Virginia.  Didn't know they had constructed a replica of the Monitor.  Of course I'll be packin' a camera.


Terry
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