Coastal Ironclads: C.S.S. Virginia By CivilWarTalk Published: December 11, 2006 PrintEmail
Type: Casemate Ram (converted from the frigate U.S.S. Merrimack)
Commission: February 17, 1862
Cost: $110,000
Length: 275 feet
Beam (Width): 38 feet, 6 inches
Displacement: 3,500 tons
Draft: 19 1/2 to 22 feet
Speed: 6 knots
Crew: 320 officers & men
Weapons: Two 7-inch rifles, six 9-inch smoothbore guns, two 6-inch 32-pdr rifles
Engines: Horozontal, back acting; two cylinders, 72" in diameter, 3' stroke
Boilers: 4 Martin type boilers; average steam pressure, 18 lbs.
Commanders: Capt. Franklin Buchanan (Feb-Mar 62), Lt. Catesby ap R. Jones (Mar-Apr 62), Capt. Josiah Tattnall (Apr-May 62).
Built In: Boston Navy Yard, Mass, Refit Portsmouth, Va.
Current Disposition: Destroyed to prevent capture near Craney Island VA 11 May 1862. Remains removed in 1870s.
CSS Virginia was built at Boston Navy Yard as the frigate Merrimack, commissioned 20 February 1856, Capt. G. J. Pendergrast, USN, in command.
Departing Boston she cruised in West Indian and European waters in 1856- 57. Following brief repairs she sailed in October 1857 as flagship of the Pacific Squadron, cruising the Pacific coasts of South and Central America until November 1859. Returning east she decommissioned at Norfolk 16 February 1860. On 20 April 1861 retiring Union forces burned Merrimack to the water line and sank her to preclude capture.
USS Merrimack becomes CSS Virginia
When the Commonwealth of Virginia seceded from the Union in 1861, one of the important federal military bases threatened was Gosport Shipyard (now Norfolk Naval Shipyard) in Portsmouth, Virginia. Accordingly, the order was sent to destroy the base rather than allow it to fall into Confederate hands. Unfortunately for the Union, these orders were bungled. The steam frigate USS Merrimack sank before it completely burned. When the Confederates entered the yard, they raised the Merrimack and decided to use the engines and hull to build an ironclad ram.
This new ship was named Virginia. It had an iron deck and casement, four inches thick. It mounted ten cannons, one in front and rear and four on each side. Further, the designers of the Virginia had heard of plans by the North to build an ironclad. Figuring that cannons would be unable to harm such a ship, and to conserve gunpowder, they equipped the Virginia with a ram. The Merrimack's engines, now part of the Virginia, had not been in good working order, and the salty Elizabeth River water did not help it very much. The addition of a number of tons of iron did not improve the situation.
The Battle of Hampton Roads began on March 8, 1862 when Virginia set out for Hampton Roads. Despite an all-out effort to complete her, the ship still had workmen on board when she sailed. Supported by Raleigh and Beaufort, and accompanied by Patrick Henry, Jamestown, and Teaser, Virginia took on the blockading fleet.
The first ship engaged, USS Cumberland, was sunk after being rammed. However, in sinking, Cumberland broke off Virginia's ram. Seeing what happened to Cumberland, the captain of USS Congress ordered his ship grounded in shallow water. Congress and Virginia traded fire for an hour, after which the badly-damaged Congress surrendered. While the surviving crewmen of Congress were being ferried off the ship, a Union battery on the north shore opened fire on Virginia. In retaliation, the captain of Virginia ordered Congress fired upon with red-hot shot, to set her ablaze.