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On 20 April 1861, when Virginia authorities took over the Norfolk
Navy Yard after its evacuatuation by Federal forces, they found,
among other valuable items, the hulk of the steam frigate USS
Merrimack.
Though burned to the waterline and sunk, the big ship's lower
hull and machinery were intact. During the remainder of 1861 and
the first two months of 1862, the Confederate States Navy raised,
drydocked and converted her into a casemate ironclad ram, a new
warship type that promised to overcome the Union's great superiority
in conventional warships. Placed in commission as CSS Virginia
in mid-February 1862, the ship's iron armor made her virtually
invulnerable to contemporary gunfire. She carried ten guns of
her own, a seven-inch pivot-mounted rifle at each end and a broadside
battery of two six-inch rifles and six nine-inch smoothbores.
Affixed to her bow was an iron ram, allowing the ship herself
to be employed as a deadly weapon.
Virginia made her first combat sortie on 8 March 1862,
steaming down the Elizabeth River from Norfolk and into Hampton
Roads. In a historic action that dramatically demonstrated the
superiority of armored steam-powered warships over their wooden
sailing counterparts, she rammed and sank the big U.S. Navy sloop
of war Cumberland
and shelled the frigate Congress
into submission. In Washington, D.C., many of the Federal Government's
senior officials panicked, convinced that Virginia posed
a grave threat to Union seapower and coastal cities. They were
unaware that her serious operational limitations, caused by her
deep draft, weak powerplant and extremely poor seakeeping, essentially
restricted her use to deep channels in calm, inland waterways.
However, their worries were relieved the next day. When Virginia
returned to Hampton Roads to attack the grounded steam frigate
Minnesota, she found the Union's own pioneer ironclad,
USS Monitor,
waiting. A second historic battle ensued, with the two opponents
firing away, without mortal effect, until the action ended in
a tactical draw in the early afternoon of 9 March 1862.
Over the next two months, the two ironclads kept each other
in check. Virginia, repaired and strengthened at the Norfolk
Navy Yard, reentered the Hampton Roads area on 11 April and 8
May, but no further combat with the Monitor resulted. As
the Confederates abandoned their positions in the Norfolk area,
Virginia was threatened with the loss of her base. After
a futile effort to lighten the ship enough to allow her to move
up the James River, on 11 May the South's formidible ironclad
was destroyed by her crew off Craney Island, some six miles from
where she had electrified the World through her battles of 8 and
9 March. CSS Virginia's wreck was largely removed between
1866 and 1876.
This page features all our relatively accurate views of the
Confederate Navy ironclad ram Virginia, ex-USS Merrimack,
and provides links to other views of the ship and her actions.
For additional views of, or relating to, CSS Virginia,
see:
CSS Virginia -- Grossly Inaccurate
Views of and on board the Ship;
CSS
Virginia destroys USS Cumberland and USS Congress,
8 March 1862;
Action
between CSS Virginia and USS Monitor, 9 March 1862;
CSS Virginia -- Miscellaneous
Actions;
CSS Virginia -- Ship's Officers and other People; and
CSS Virginia -- Relics.
Photo #: NH 57830
CSS Virginia (1862-1862)
Wash drawing by Clary Ray, 1898.
Courtesy of the U.S. Navy Art Collection, Washington, D.C.
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Photo #: NH 61676
CSS Virginia (1862-1862)
Photograph of a 19th Century artwork.
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Photo #: NH 76386
CSS Virginia (1862-1862)
Colored outboard profile plan, originally in the files of the
Bureau of Construction and Repair. Its origin is unknown, but
it may be of Civil War vintage.
The original is plan # 81-12-2B in Record Group 19 at the U.S.
National Archives.
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Photo #: NH 58881
CSS Virginia (1862-1862)
Halftone reproduction of a line engraving, originally published
in "Battles and Leaders of the Civil War", Volume I,
page 695.
It is based on a drawing by Lt. B.L. Blackford, made on 7 March
1862, the day before Virginia (formerly USS Merrimack)
engaged USS Cumberland and USS Congress.
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Photo #: NH 45978
USS Monitor (1862) and
CSS Virginia (1862)
Montage drawing featuring plans of the two ships, portraits of men responsible for building and operating them, and scenes of their histories. It is inscribed: "Dedicated to the Memory of Thomas Fitch Rowland, Builder of the Original Monitor.".
Drawn by Charles H. Corbett, circa 1907 or later.
See Photo # NH 45978 (extended caption) for more extensive information.
Courtesy of Charles H. Corbett.
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Photo #: NH 314
CSS Virginia (1862-1862)
Engraving depicting the ship in drydock at the Norfolk Navy Yard,
after the installation of her armor, circa early 1862. She was
then nearing completion after conversion from the hulk of USS
Merrimack.
Courtesy of of Mrs. A.W. Hasker.
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Photo #: NH 42222
CSS Virginia (1862-1862)
Halftone of an artwork published in Fiveash, "Virginia-Monitor
Engagement", Norfolk, Va., 1907. It depicts the ship in
drydock at the Norfolk Navy Yard, circa February 1862, while
nearing completion after conversion from the hulk of USS Merrimack.
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Photo #: NH 58712
CSS Virginia (1862-1862)
Halftone reproduction of an artwork copyrighted by G.S. Richardson,
1906, depicting the ship drydocked at the Norfolk Navy Yard,
circa early 1862, while nearing completion after conversion from
the hulk of USS Merrimack.
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Photo #: NH 42223
CSS Virginia (1862-1862)
Model by Alexander Lynch, 1939, on exhibit at the Los Angeles
Museum, Los Angeles, California. Model's scale is 1/8" =
1'.
Courtesy of Arthur Woodward, Director of History and Anthropology,
Los Angeles Museum, September 1939.
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For additional views of, or relating to, CSS Virginia,
see:
CSS Virginia -- Grossly Inaccurate
Views of and on board the Ship;
CSS
Virginia destroys USS Cumberland and USS Congress,
8 March 1862;
Action
between CSS Virginia and USS Monitor, 9 March 1862;
CSS Virginia -- Miscellaneous
Actions;
CSS Virginia -- Ship's Officers and other People; and
CSS Virginia -- Relics.
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