USS Monitor was the first ever ironclad warship of the United States Navy. She is most famous for her participation in the first-ever naval battle between two ironclad warships, the Battle of Hampton Roads on March 9, 1862 during the American Civil War, in which Monitor fought the ironclad CSS Virginia of the Confederate States Navy.
In previous decades, nearly all warships were made primarily of wood. In the decade before Hampton Roads, the design of ships and the nature of naval warfare changed dramatically with the introduction of armor.
Monitor was innovative in construction technique as well as design. Parts were forged in nine foundries and brought together to build the ship; the whole process took less than 120 days. In addition to the "cheesebox", its rotating turret, Monitor was also the first naval vessel to be fitted with Ericsson's marine screw. Ericsson anticipated some aspects of modern submarine design by placing all of Monitor's features except the turret and pilothouse underwater, making it the first semi-submersible ship. In contrast, Virginia was a conventional wooden vessel covered with iron plates and bearing fixed weapons.
Virginia attacked the Union blockading squadron in Hampton Roads, Virginia, on March 8, 1862, destroying USS Cumberland and Congress and forcing Minnesota aground before withdrawing. That night, Monitor, under command of Lt. John L. Worden, arrived under tow from Brooklyn. When Virginia returned the next day, March 9, 1862, to finish off Minnesota and the rest of the U.S. fleet, Monitor sailed forth to stop her. The ironclads fought for about four hours, neither one sinking or seriously damaging the other. Tactically, the battle was a draw--neither ironclad did significant damage to the other. However, it was a strategic victory for Monitor. Virginia
Just three months after the famous Battle of Hampton Roads, the design was offered to Sweden, and in 1865 the first Swedish monitor was being built at Motala Warf in Norrköping; she was named John Ericsson in honor of the engineer. She was followed by 14 more monitors. One of them, Sölve, is still preserved at the marine museum in Gothenburg.
The last U.S. Navy monitor-class warship was struck from the Navy List in 1937.
The name Monitor was given to the troop carrier USS Monitor (LSV-5), commissioned late in World War II. She served primarily in the Pacific theater, and was later scrapped.
The site is now under the supervision of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Many artifacts from Monitor, including her turret, propeller, anchor, engine and some personal effects of the crew, have been conserved and are on display at the Mariners' Museum of Newport News, Virginia.
In 1986, Monitor was designated a National Historic Landmark.
It is also often stated that the Monitor was the first naval vessel to be propelled via the screw propeller; this is also only partially true. The USS Princeton (1843), launched in 1843 (which Ericsson also designed), was the first US Navy warship to feature screw propellers, but it also used conventional sails as auxiliary power.
The Cleveland Civil War Roundtable is mounting a national grassroots campaign to convince Congress and the Navy to name one of the new Virginia-class submarines after the USS Monitor.
In 2003 after 41 days work the revolutionary revolving gun turret was salvaged by NOAA and a team of US Marines. Before removing the turret, divers discovered the remains of two trapped crew members. These marines, who died while serving their country, were rescued after more than a century by their fellow marines from their Atlantic grave, and given a full military funeral.
Civil War monitors of the United States | Dare County, North Carolina | Registered Historic Places in North Carolina | Shipwrecks of the Carolina coast | National Historic Landmarks of the United States | United States Navy monitors | Union Navy ships
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