<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">THE FIRST IRONCLADS (1862)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">Will they sink or swim?—Captain Ericsson, the Swede—The <i>Merrimac</i>
raised and armoured—The <i>Monitor</i> built by private venture—<i>Merrimac</i>
surprises Fort Monroe—The <i>Cumberland</i> attacked—The
silent monster comes on—Her ram makes an impression—Morris
refuses to strike his flag—The <i>Cumberland</i> goes down—The
<i>Congress</i> is next for attention—On fire and forced to surrender—Blows
up at midnight—The <i>Minnesota</i> aground shows she can
bite—General panic—Was it Providence?—A light at sea—Only
a cheese-box on a raft—Sunday’s fight between two monsters—The
<i>Merrimac</i> finds she is deeply hurt, wounded to death—The
four long hours—Worden and Buchanan both do their best—Signals
for help—The fiery end of the <i>Whitehall</i> gunboat.</p>
<p>The War of Secession between the Federals and Confederate
States gave rise to a new kind of warship—the
ironclad. The <i>Merrimac</i> was converted into such a
vessel by the South, and the <i>Monitor</i> was built by the
North, or Federals, in the space of 100 days.</p>
<p>Most people, experts and others, predicted a watery
grave for a ship cased in iron. Very few ventured on
board at the launching of the <i>Monitor</i>, and even the
builders provided a steam-tug to save the passengers
in case she went to the bottom. But the <i>Monitor</i>, after
the first graceful dip, sat like a wild duck on a mere, being
flat-bottomed, having a turret 9 feet high, capable of
revolving, with two circular portholes to fire from.
Captain Ericsson, a Swede, was her architect.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The South had seized all the forts and dockyards below
Chesapeake Bay, and had struck great consternation into
the Federal hearts. When the Federals burnt and
evacuated the Norfolk Navy Yard they scuttled the
steam frigate <i>Merrimac</i>; but the Confederates raised her,
plated her with railroad iron, and fitted her with a slanting
roof to serve as a shield. The <i>Merrimac</i>, when
finished, did not take the water so gracefully as the
<i>Monitor</i>, for her weight was so enormous that she nearly
broke her back in launching. It was known that both
sides were at work upon some monster of the deep, but
which would be ready first no one could predict.</p>
<p>However, on the 8th of March the <i>Merrimac</i> left Norfolk,
accompanied by two other war vessels—the <i>Jamestown</i>
and <i>Yorktown</i>—and followed by a little fleet of
armed tugs. She was heading for Newport News,
where there was a Federal garrison, guarded by the
sailing frigates the <i>Cumberland</i> and the <i>Congress</i>, which
rode at anchor within half a mile of the shore battery.
Their boats were hanging at the booms, and the week’s
washing fluttered in the rigging—as peaceful a scene as
could be imagined.</p>
<p>But the look-out on Fortress Monroe caught sight of a
monster vessel ploughing the waves, and signalled to
the war-ships to get under way. The <i>Minnesota</i> had
her steam up and soon went off towards Newport News,
where the <i>Cumberland</i> and <i>Congress</i> lay on blockading
duty. The crew of the <i>Cumberland</i>, seeing a strange ship
come round Craney Island, recognized her as the expected
ironclad. All hands were beat to quarters, and
the <i>Cumberland</i> swung across the channel in order to
bring her broadside to bear. The slanting roof of the
<i>Merrimac</i> puzzled them, and the long iron ram churned
up the water as she advanced relentlessly and in silence.
At the distance of a mile the <i>Cumberland</i> began to use<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</SPAN></span>
her pivot guns, but the <i>Merrimac</i> made no reply, only
steamed majestically on, though broadside after broadside
was poured upon her like hail; but the heavy shot
glanced off harmlessly, and ever the <i>Merrimac</i> came
closer and closer.</p>
<p>As she passed the <i>Congress</i> the <i>Merrimac</i> fired one broadside,
and then, leaving her to the tender mercies of the
<i>Jamestown</i> and the <i>Yorktown</i>, made straight for the
<i>Cumberland</i>. Both the Federal ships discharged their
broadsides against the armoured monster. She just
quivered under the blow and came on in silence. The
National battery at Newport News opened upon her at
point-blank range, and every man on board the <i>Cumberland</i>
drew a breath of relief. “Now,” they thought, “our
massive guns will teach her a lesson.” But it seemed as
if the <i>Merrimac</i> had received no damage. Not a soul
could be seen on her decks, not a splinter on her sides;
but she was coming towards them—coming madly, as it
seemed, to destruction.</p>
<p>What did the <i>Merrimac</i> mean? Why did she not fire
her guns? The crew on the <i>Cumberland</i> soon found out,
when the great ram struck their frigate amidships with
a shock that threw every man down on the deck, crushed
in the ribs, and heeled the ship over till her topsail yards
almost splashed the water. The <i>Merrimac</i> reversed her
engines and backed away under a murderous broadside,
replying as she too turned her broadside with a deadly
volley of shot and shell, which swept her enemy’s decks
of guns and men. Meanwhile the water was pouring into
the terrible gaping wound in the side of the <i>Cumberland</i>;
but Lieutenant Morris, who was in command, fought her
to the last with unflinching courage. Yet once again the
<i>Merrimac</i> turned her prow and crushed in close upon the
old wound, and the great oak ribs snapped like twigs
under the weight of iron. The <i>Cumberland</i> began to ride<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</SPAN></span>
lower in the water, but still aimed with calm accuracy at
the <i>Merrimac</i>, riddling her smoke-stack and bending her
anchor. But the <i>Merrimac</i> lay off a little and poured a
storm of shot into the sinking frigate, dealing death and
mutilation. Yet Morris refused to yield, and the whole
crew in their desperate plight thought of nothing but
saving the honour of the flag. One sailor, with both his
legs shot off, hobbled up to his gun on bleeding stumps
and pulled the lanyard, then fell in a swoon by the gun.</p>
<p>“She is sinking!” was the cry; but they still fought on,
though the frigate was settling deeper every minute.
Then the water came gurgling into the portholes, and
choked the guns and drowned the gunners. The last
gunner was knee-deep in water when he fired the last
shot, and then the <i>Cumberland</i> careened over on her side.
Down she sank amid a whirl of circling waters, a caldron
of wave and air—caught in one, and vomiting steam all
around and over the dying vessel, and in a moment
400 men were on the verge of death, some being carried
down into the revolving vortex, some being cast up on
the outside, some swimming frantically towards the
shore, or reaching desperately for fragments of wreck.
About 100 went down with the ship. The chaplain went
down with the wounded who were below deck.</p>
<p>It took forty-five minutes for the <i>Merrimac</i> to finish
off the <i>Cumberland</i>, and she now turned her ram towards
the <i>Congress</i>, which spread all sail and endeavoured to get
clear away.</p>
<p>But at this moment the <i>Congress</i> grounded and became
helpless. The gunboats of the Confederates were still
firing heavily at her from a respectful distance, but as
they saw the <i>Merrimac</i> approaching they too drew near
under her protection.</p>
<p>The <i>Merrimac</i> chose her position at about 100 yards’
range, despising the guns of the <i>Congress</i>, and raked her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</SPAN></span>
fore and aft, dismounting guns and covering her deck
with mangled limbs. In three places the <i>Congress</i> burst
into flames, and the dry timber crackled and blazed and
smoked like a volcano. The men could not stand by the
guns for the fervent heat. The wounded were slowly
burned alive. The officers could not bear this sight, and
hauled down the flag.</p>
<p>A tug was sent by the Confederates to take off the
prisoners from the burning wreck, but, unfortunately,
some sharpshooters from the shore still kept up a hot fire
upon the Southern vessels. In consequence of this the
<i>Merrimac</i> fired another broadside into the sinking <i>Congress</i>,
and killed many more of her crew. The <i>Congress</i>,
being deserted, still burned on till darkness fell, and the
ruddy glare lit up the moving waters as if they had been
a sea of blood. At midnight the fire reached her magazine,
and with a thunder of explosion the <i>Congress</i> blew
up into a myriad fragments. The Northern warship
<i>Minnesota</i> had also grounded, so had the frigate <i>St. Lawrence</i>,
and the <i>Merrimac</i>, while it was still light enough to
aim a gun, steamed towards them to see what little
attention she could bestow upon them. The <i>Merrimac</i>
was, perhaps, a little overconfident in her coat of mail.
Anyhow, she risked receiving a broadside at very short
range from the heavy guns of the <i>Minnesota</i>.</p>
<p>A shot seems to have entered her porthole and damaged
her machinery, for she hesitated, put about, and returned
to safe anchorage behind Craney Island.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, a very natural terror was gnawing at the
hearts of the Federal crews and garrison in Hampton
Roads.</p>
<p>They had listened to the sounds of the conflict and seen
the dire results in wonder, almost in despair. The
<i>Merrimac</i>, they said, was invulnerable. Not a shot could
pierce her. On Sunday morning she would return and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</SPAN></span>
destroy the whole Federal fleet at her leisure. She would
shell Newport News Point and Fortress Monroe, at the
entrance of Hampton Roads, set everything on fire, and
drive the garrisons from their guns. Nay, as the telegraph
wires flashed the news to Washington, it was
foreseen with an agony of horror that the <i>Merrimac</i> might
ascend the Potomac and lay the capital in ashes. Baltimore,
Philadelphia, New York, Boston, were in a state of
panic. No one knew what might not follow. It was a
blind horror of a new and unknown danger. For the
experience of one hour had rendered the shipbuilding of
the past a scorn and a laughing-stock. Wooden frigates
might go to the scrap-heap now. With the <i>Cumberland</i>
had gone down morally all the great navies of Europe. A
new order had to be found for ship and battery, and steel
must take the place of planks of oak.</p>
<p>Such a night of anxiety and alarm the Northern States
had never experienced. It was ten o’clock at night when
the look-out in the garrison thought he saw lights out at
sea in Chesapeake Bay. He called his mate. By-and-by
they made them out to be two small steamers heading
for Old Point Comfort. An eye-witness from Fort
Monroe thus describes what happened:</p>
<p>“Oh, what a night that was! I can never forget it.
There was no fear during the long hours—danger, I find,
does not bring that—but there was a longing for some
interposition of God and waiting upon Him, from whom
we felt our help must come, in earnest, fervent prayer,
while not neglecting all the means of martial defence.
Fugitives from Newport News kept arriving. Ladies
and children had walked the long ten miles from Newport
News, feeling that their presence only embarrassed their
brave husbands. Sailors from the <i>Congress</i> and <i>Cumberland</i>
came, one of them with his ship’s flag bound about
his waist, as he had swum with it ashore. Dusky fugitives<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</SPAN></span>
came mournfully fleeing from a fate worse than death—slavery.
These entered my cabin hungry and weary.
The heavens were aflame with the burning <i>Congress</i>. But
there were no soldiers among the flying host. The
sailors came only to seek another chance at the enemy,
since the <i>Cumberland</i> had gone down in deep waters, and
the <i>Congress</i> had gone upward, as if a chariot of fire, to
convey the manly souls whose bodies had perished in that
conflict upward to heaven.</p>
<div class="center"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<div class="i0">“The heavy night hung dark the hills and waters o’er,”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>but the night was not half so heavy as our hearts, nor so
dark as our prospects. All at once a speck of light
gleamed on the distant wave. It moved; it came nearer
and nearer, and at ten o’clock at night the <i>Monitor</i>
appeared.</p>
<p>“‘When the tale of bricks is doubled, Moses comes!’</p>
<p>“I never more firmly believed in special Providence
than at that hour. Even sceptics for the moment were
converted, and said: ‘God has sent her!’ But how
insignificant she looked! She was but a speck on the
dark blue sea at night, almost a laughable object by
day. The enemy call her ‘a cheese-box on a raft,’ and
the comparison is a good one. Could she meet the
<i>Merrimac</i>? The morrow must determine, for, under
God, the <i>Monitor</i> is our only hope now.”</p>
<p>Lieutenant Worden, the Commander of the <i>Monitor</i>, on
arriving at Fort Monroe was instructed to lie alongside
the <i>Minnesota</i>, to guard her in case of a night attack.
At eleven o’clock she set out, and her arrival was hailed
with delight by the men on board the frigate, though
some shook their heads at the strange unshapely toy
which a private individual had constructed to save the
Federal fleet. But few slept that night. The odds
against the <i>Monitor</i> seemed too great. She mounted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</SPAN></span>
but two guns, while the <i>Merrimac</i> carried ten. Sunday
morning broke sunny and beautiful, and the sea was
peaceful and calm. Near Sewell’s Point, opposite Hampton
Roads, three vessels were at anchor, one of them the
<i>Merrimac</i>.</p>
<p>About nine o’clock glasses showed a stir amongst them,
and instantly the <i>Monitor</i> awoke to life and action,
closing her iron hatches and putting on the dead-light
covers. The <i>Monitor</i>, like a great girdle-cake, only stood
2 feet out of the water; her smooth surface was broken
only by the turret and pilot-house.</p>
<p>Then they saw the <i>Merrimac</i> coming, looking like a
submerged house, with roof only out of the water. After
her came the <i>Jamestown</i> and <i>Yorktown</i>, and a fleet of tug-boats
crowded with ladies and gentlemen from Norfolk
eager to see the fun.</p>
<p>The <i>Merrimac</i>, entirely unconscious of the new enemy
she had to encounter, steamed slowly along and fired
upon the <i>Minnesota</i>, which was still aground. The
<i>Minnesota</i> replied with a broadside and the usual result;
but the <i>Monitor</i> steamed out from behind and boldly
advanced to meet her antagonist, and when at a distance
of half a mile Lieutenant Worden from the pilot-house
gave the order to fire. The ball, weighing 170 pounds,
rattled against the mailed side of the <i>Merrimac</i>. She
staggered under the force of the concussion, and at once
seemed to realize that in this floating turret she had no
mean antagonist. At the range of only a few yards she
poured in a terrible broadside. To her disgust, the shots
seemed to have glided off and done no harm. Then the
two vessels closed and poured a hail of heavy metal
upon each other. The <i>Monitor</i> being the quicker, would
circle round the <i>Merrimac</i>, while the turret, turning with
ease, always presented the guns to the foe.</p>
<p>Worden in his pilot-house could speak through tubes to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</SPAN></span>
Lieutenant Green, who commanded the gunners in the
tower. Once Green trained his guns on the <i>Merrimac’s</i>
water-line, and the shot penetrated.</p>
<p>“Splendid, sir! splendid!” roared Worden. “You
have made the iron fly.”</p>
<p>But the spectators who lined the ramparts of Fort
Monroe could not see what was happening for the clouds
of smoke, and they stood, silent and wretched, almost
afraid to look.</p>
<p>But at last the veil parted, and they saw the little
<i>Monitor</i> lying alongside the <i>Merrimac</i>, trim and spiteful,
with the Stars and Stripes flying proudly from her stern,
and a great cheer arose from every throat. Then they
saw the <i>Merrimac</i> bear down upon the little flat cheese, as
if to sink her. She struck fair and square, but the iron
ram glided up on her low-sheathed deck and simply
careened her over; but in so doing the <i>Merrimac</i> showed
her unarmed hull below the iron coat of mail, and the
<i>Monitor</i> planted one of her shots in a vital place.</p>
<p>For four long hours had this strange duel lasted, the
<i>Merrimac</i> firing heavily, the <i>Monitor</i> steaming round and
choosing her place and time, with careful aim at rudder,
screw, and water-line. At last Buchanan, the Commander
of the <i>Merrimac</i>, was severely wounded, and as
his ship began to take in water through three gaping
wounds, the helm was put over and the conqueror of
yesterday limped away. But her last shot struck point-blank
upon the iron grating of the pilot-house just where
Lieutenant Worden was looking out. The concussion
threw him down senseless, and minute pieces of iron and
powder were driven into his eyes, so that he was blinded.
When after a time he recovered his consciousness he asked:</p>
<p>“Have I saved the <i>Minnesota</i>?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, and whipped the <i>Merrimac</i>,” was the
reply.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Then I care not what becomes of me,” murmured the
Lieutenant.</p>
<p>The <i>Merrimac</i> slowly made her way to a safe anchorage
under the batteries at Sewell’s Point. Here she signalled
for help, and tugs came up, took her in tow, and escorted
her to Norfolk. Her injuries were so severe that after
months of work upon her she never ventured to quit
her retreat, whereas the <i>Monitor</i> seemed but slightly
damaged. She had been hit twenty-two times, and only
showed slight indentations, but a ball striking full on
the pilot-house had bent a huge iron beam. The ram of
the <i>Merrimac</i> had torn off some of the plating from the
side of the <i>Monitor</i>. The latter drew only 10 feet of
water, and could go where the <i>Merrimac</i> could not
venture.</p>
<p>But though the <i>Merrimac</i> had fired her last shot, she
gave the North a great fright in the night which followed
the battle. At midnight thousands of people along the
coast were roused from their sleep by cries that came over
the water: “Fire! fire! For God’s sake, save us!”</p>
<p>The shore was soon lined by spectators, who stood
unable to get a boat to put out or help in any way. There
was the gunboat <i>Whitehall</i> roaring with flames, and the
dark figures of the crew were plainly visible on her deck,
either wrapped in red fire or jumping into the deep water
beneath.</p>
<p>The <i>Whitehall’s</i> shotted guns were going off here and
there through the thick crowds or clustering houses, and
one shell struck the hospital, making the inmates believe
that the <i>Merrimac</i> had returned. It transpired that a
red-hot shot had been thrown from the <i>Merrimac</i> during
the day and had lodged between the <i>Whitehall’s</i> timbers,
where the fire smouldered until late at night.</p>
<p>The general conclusion from this momentous fight
between the first ironclads was that “England’s naval<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</SPAN></span>
supremacy is gone for ever.” But men are more potent
than masses of metal. America and England have navies
now in comparison with which the <i>Merrimac</i> and <i>Monitor</i>
are but tin kettles. Yet we must remember that Russia,
too, a few months ago possessed a strong navy as far as
metal goes. But once again the Japanese proved to the
world that it is in the hearts of brave men, the science of
clever men, and the enduring patience of patriotic men,
that the issues of victory or defeat are mainly determined.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />