shandy
Cadet
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2017
As I wanted to make a simple model of CSS General Polk for gaming purposes, I studied the old thread on this forum and the wonderful drawings of rebelatsea.
However, the more I tinkered with the model, the more I got sceptical of the dimensions of the ship. Silverstone states a length of 280', which would make it one of the largest ship not only on the Mississippi, but in all of the Civil War, reaching the dimensions of the monster ironclads - as long as the Eastport, longer than the Choctaw and slightly shorter than the Lafayette. Wikipedia even has 285' (Naval History and Heritage Command prudently doesn't state dimensions).
All say that Polk was converted from a steamer named Ed Howard at New Orleans, so I tried to find out more about her. I quick search found several mentions of her, among them that she was one of the largest and fastest steamers on the Mississippi and that she was involved in at least one accident (collision with another steamer).
However, the most important source was a digitized version of "Ship Reigsters and Enrollments of New Orleans, Louisiana", which includes an entry for the Ed Howard:
What do you think? Do the dimensions of 230' x 29' x 6' sound plausible?
Cheers,
Thomas
However, the more I tinkered with the model, the more I got sceptical of the dimensions of the ship. Silverstone states a length of 280', which would make it one of the largest ship not only on the Mississippi, but in all of the Civil War, reaching the dimensions of the monster ironclads - as long as the Eastport, longer than the Choctaw and slightly shorter than the Lafayette. Wikipedia even has 285' (Naval History and Heritage Command prudently doesn't state dimensions).
All say that Polk was converted from a steamer named Ed Howard at New Orleans, so I tried to find out more about her. I quick search found several mentions of her, among them that she was one of the largest and fastest steamers on the Mississippi and that she was involved in at least one accident (collision with another steamer).
However, the most important source was a digitized version of "Ship Reigsters and Enrollments of New Orleans, Louisiana", which includes an entry for the Ed Howard:
What do you think? Do the dimensions of 230' x 29' x 6' sound plausible?
Cheers,
Thomas