The USS Monitor
and the CSS Virginia came upon the scene about the same time. They were innovative
war machines, and their famous duel in Hampton Roads in March 1862 heralded a new
mode of warfare. Their duel was the first meeting between ironclads, changing
naval history. There was a great concern that the Monitor would sail up
the James River and attack Richmond.
On March 18, 1862,
Gen. Robert E. Lee wrote to area commander Maj. Gen. John B. Magruder
concerning a possible attack by the USS Monitor. How could Magruder
defeat the seemingly undefeatable ironclad? Lee had an idea. “Should the Monitor
appear before your batteries, it has occurred to me that by reserving your fire
until she arrives near and discharging by word of command or simultaneously
your heavy guns at her turret at the time when her gun was protruded for
delivering fire, if the gun was struck it would be disabled, or if the turret
was hit by a number of shot it would be deranged or capsized from its center.”
(Official Records, Series I, Vol., 11, Part 3, page 385.)
Magruder’s best
opportunity to try Lee’s strategy would be if the USS Monitor steamed up
the York River. The distance between the batteries at Yorktown and on Gloucester
Point was only a third of a mile. Elsewhere, the distance was between one and a
half and two miles, until the town of West Point was reached. Would Lee’s plan
work? The idea of hitting the muzzle of one of the Dahlgren cannons is plausible.
Such a shot might have damaged the gun in such a way that it could not be
brought back into the turret for reloading, or it might have forced the gun off
its carriage, creating carnage in the turret. But even at the short distance
between Yorktown and Gloucester Point, hitting such a target as the muzzle of a
cannon protruding from a turret just a few feet above the water line would be
difficult, to say the least.
The USS Monitor
did steam up the James River in May 1862, but it was after the fortifications
near Yorktown, where Magruder’s command was located, had been abandoned. The Monitor
was unable to elevate its guns high enough to duel with the Confederate works
at Drewry’s Bluff. The other ships in the Federal naval flotilla were damaged
after more than three hours of battle. The ships dropped back down the James
River to refit.
Lee v. the Monitor…
who knew.
The USS Monitor is one of my favorite naval subjects. Such a wonderful little ship that changed the nature of warships forever! Everyone had ideas on how to defeat her. The armor plate was thinnest on the flat deck. Had someone had a way to do plunging shot, that could have damaged her, but that was not easily done either. Underwater explosives could have been effective. Such a short career. Defeated not by enemy fire but simply the weather.
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