THE NAVY IN THE CIVIL WAR
Published
1883, 1885
------------------------
VOLUME II.
THE
ATLANTIC COAST.
BY
DANIEL AMMEN
REAR-ADMIRAL, U.S. NAVY
CHAPTER
V
Naval Attack On Charleston
ON
April 2, 1863, the Rear-Admiral left Port Royal to join the “ironclads,"
as the monitors were styled, at North Edisto, and on the morning of the 5th left
for Charleston Bar with all of them in tow of suitable vessels. As previously arranged,
on arrival, the Keokuk, aided by
Captain Boutelle and Master Platt of the Coast Survey, sounded and buoyed the
bar of the main ship channel, supported by the monitors Patapsco and Catskill.
This was soon accomplished, and before dark these two monitors anchored within.
At high tide on the following morning, the Admiral came in on board of the New
Ironsides, Commodore Thomas Turner,
and was followed by the five monitors yet outside, and by the Keokuk.
He intended to proceed the same day to the attack of Fort Sumter, and thence to
the city of Charleston, but the weather became so hazy that the ranges could not
be seen and the pilots refused to go farther. The state of the atmosphere
prevented a satisfactory examination of an earthwork, known afterward as Fort
Wagner, on Morris Island, distant about two thousand five hundred yards from
Sumter, of the batteries on Cumming's Point, and of the heavy earthworks
flanking Moultrie.
The
order of battle was "line ahead" as follows: The Weehawken, Captain John Rodgers, with a raft on the bows to explode
torpedoes,[1]
led the line; the Passaic, Captain
Percival Drayton; the Montauk, Captain
John L. Worden; the Patapsco,
Commander Daniel Ammen; the New Ironsides,
Commodore Thomas Turner (as flag-ship), followed by the Catskill,
Commander George W. Rodgers; the Nantucket,
Commander D. M. Fairfax; the Nahant,
Commander John Downes, and the Keokuk,
Commander A. C. Rhind.
The
vessels were ordered to pass without returning the fire from batteries on Morris
Island; when within easy range of Fort Sumter they were to open upon it, and
take position to the north and west, at a distance of eight hundred yards,
firing low, and at the centre embrasure. The necessity for precision of fire was
enjoined. Vessels were to be prepared to render assistance to each other as far
as possible, and a special code of signals was arranged, that could be
operated on board of the ironclads.
Noon
on the following day (7th) was the earliest hour that the pilots were willing to
move. Signal was made, and the vessels got under way. The Weehawken in weighing anchor fouled the torpedo grapnels attached to
the raft before mentioned, on her bows; this delayed movement until 1:15. The
vessels then proceeded up in line ahead at distances varying a good deal, but
intended to be one hundred yards apart; they steered very badly if obliged to
stop the engines, sheering every way, and the raft on the bow of the Weehawken
delayed her, and caused wild steering along the whole line, so it was about 2.50
P.M.. when she was opened on by Moultrie, followed at once by Sumter, and all of
the batteries within effective range. The Weehawken
was then somewhat above Fort Wagner. At about 3.05 she opened fire on Fort
Sumter, followed by the other monitors, at or before they arrived at the same
point, the Patapsco at that time employing
a 150-pounder rifle, at the angle of Sumter that was in face. From Wagner up,
several buoys of different colors were seen; the vessels passed between them and
Morris Island, but nor far from them, perhaps within one hundred and fifty
yards. It was observed that the different vessels, in bringing the buoys in
range with Moultrie or batteries on that shore, received in turn a heavy fire,
and it was supposed probable that they marked torpedoes; they certainly served
to indicate. distance, and the ranges of the guns had been practically established
on them, which greatly increased the accuracy of fire from the forts as the
vessels passed. As the narrow part of the channel was approached, the flood tide
became strong, setting the vessels in, and made them additionally unmanageable.
Soon
after getting within the heavy fire of the batteries, the Weehawken signalled obstructions in her vicinity, and previous to
that a torpedo had exploded close to her. Captain Rodgers' report states:
" We approached very close to the obstructions extending from Fort Sumter
to Fort Moultrie-as near, indeed, as I could get without running upon them.
They were marked by rows of casks very near together. To the eye they appeared
almost to touch one another, and there was more than one line of them."
“The
appearance was so formidable that, upon deliberate judgment, I thought it right
not to entangle the vessel in obstructions which I did not think we could have
passed through, and in which we should have been caught. Beyond these, piles
were seen between Castle Pinckney and the middle ground.”
"A
torpedo exploded under us or very near to us; it lifted the vessel a little, but
I am unable to perceive that it has done us any damage. I have no accident to
report."
After
approaching the obstructions as above described, the Weehawken's bow was turned to seaward, in order to prevent being
swept upon the obstructions by a strong flood tide then running, and steaming a
few hundred feet to the southward enabled the Passaic to turn in her wake, the Montauk following her.
The
working of the guns of the Weehawken
was entirely satisfactory. Eleven XV-inch, and fifteen XI-inch shells were
fired; she was struck fifty-three times in forty minutes; the missiles were
formidable; two or three of them struck the side armor near the same place and
so broke the plates that they remained only in fragments, the wood backing being
exposed. The deck was pierced so as, to make a hole through which water ran
into the vessel. Thirty-six bolts were broken in the turret and many in the
pilot-house, the number not ascertained, as they were concealed by an iron
lining. At one time the turret revolved with difficulty, having been wedged by a
fragment of a shell between its top and the pilot-house.
From
the Passaic, next in line, buoys of
various descriptions were observed and also the torpedo that burst near the
bow of the Weehawken. When opposite
the centre of the northeast face of Sumter, the vessel was near some obstructions
that seemed to extend from Sumter to Moultrie. At the moment of the fourth
discharge from the XI-inch gun the Passaic
was struck by two heavy shot in the lower part of the turret, which bulged in
the plates and beams; and forced the rails together upon which the gun was
worked, disabling it for several hours. Soon after, a portion of the brass
ring surrounding the turret was broken, and temporarily impeded revolving the
turret. A very heavy rifle-shot struck the upper edge of the turret, broke all
of the plates forming it, then glancing, struck the pilot-house above, indenting
it two and a half inches nearly the whole length of the shot. It disarranged the
top of the pilot-house and lifted one side of it three inches. The vessel was
struck thirty-five times; several bolt-heads were knocked off and thrown into
the pilot-house and turret. The vessel fired four XI-inch and nine XV-inch
shells. There was great difficulty in managing the vessel and keeping clear of
her consorts, owing to the limited range of vision from the holes in the
pilot-house and to the dense smoke.
The
Montauk experienced difficulty in
maneuvering in the narrow and uncertain channel, with the limited means of
vision, under the rapid and concentrated fire of the enemy. The vessel was
struck fourteen times without receiving material injury. She fired ten XV-inch
cored shot, sixteen solid XI-inch shot, and one shell.
The
Patapsco opened fire with 150-pounder
rifle when within thirteen hundred yards of Sumter, and when within eleven
hundred yards with the XV-inch gun. On the fifth, discharge the cap-square bolts
of the rifle gave way, disabling that gun for two hours.
The
Montauk, next ahead, following the
head of the line, turned seaward. At that time several rows of buoys were observed
above and near, and further within the harbor, a row of piles. Endeavoring to
turn a step's length short of the Montauk's
wake, the headway of the Patapsco
ceased, and the vessel no longer obeyed the helm. She was backed, and got off,
having been stationary long enough to afford the enemy an excellent opportunity,
which was availed of, for delivering a heavy concentrated fire. At this time
she was supposed to be six hundred yards from Sumter and double that distance
from Moultrie. A XV-inch shell fired at Sumter was watched until it struck on
the northeast face; the fort was covered with a mass of dust from the bursting
shell, and the effect upon the masonry was plainly visible.
The
opinion was expressed by her commander that a want of vision from the
pilot-house was one of the most serious defects of that class of vessel,
making it impossible to fight them advantageously, to avoid dangers, or to make
a satisfactory reconnoissance. Owing to the breaking of the capsquare bolts
of the rifle, that gun delivered only five shells; the XV-inch fired the same
number. The vessel was struck fortyseven times. Forty bolts of the smoke-stack
were broken and a chain afterward put around it for security. The vessel was
not disabled, but injuries were received which, if multiplied, would have
disabled her.
The
Catskill reports that at 2.50 the
forts and batteries opened on the head of the line. The flag-ship (New Ironsides)
becoming unmanageable from shoal water and strong tide, the Catskill
passed her, and at 3.35 the first shot struck her. She approached within six
hundred yards of Sumter, and one of her XV-inch shells apparently dismounted a
barbette gun. The cross fire to which she was subjected was most severe. The
same obstructions reported by the four preceding vessels were observed. Surprise
was expressed that the vessel suffered so much injury in so short a time. She
was struck twenty times; one shot forward broke the deck-plates and
deck-planking, and drove down the stanchion sustaining the beam, causing the
deck to leak. She fired fifteen XI-inch and eleven XV-inch shells. No complaint
as to the working of the turret or the battery.
The
commander of the Nantucket, next in
line, made the same general observations. The New Ironsides having
signailed to "disregard motions of flag ship," he followed the Catskill.
When within seven hundred and fifty yards of Sumter he opened fire on it, and
for forty-five or fifty minutes was under the fire of three forts, which he
describes as "terrific." The effect of the fire of the vessel on the
fort was not so observable as that of the enemy on the vessel. After the third
discharge the port stopper of the XV-inch gun was jammed, several heavy shot
having driven in the plating. The XI-inch gun was fired twelve times. The vessel
was struck fifty-one times. During the action the turret was jammed; six or
seven nut-heads driven off had fallen inside and rendered it necessary to key up
the turret to enable it to revolve.
A
number of side-plates were started, so that another shot would probably have
broken them off. One rifle-shot was driven through the armor into the wood, and
one deck-plate was started from a blow on the side armor. Other serious injuries
were named.
The
Nahant reports that, following in line
of battle, the vessel became hotly engaged. She soon began to suffer from the
terrible fire to which she was subjected. At 4.30 the turret, having become
jammed from the effects of three shots, refused to turn. One of these shot broke
off a piece of iron in the interior weighing seventy-eight pounds, and throwing
it violently across the house bent and disarranged the steering gear. Bolt-heads
(nuts from the bolts) flying from the inside of the pilot-house struck down the
pilot, and fatally injured the helmsman. The commanding officer was the only
person in the pilot-house not senseless from injuries. The preventer steering
gear was got in working order, and after repeated futile efforts to train the
guns on Sumter, the vessel was headed out, the other vessels withdrawing under
signal at the same time. The vessel was struck thirty-six times, one man was
fatally injured, two others severely, and four others slightly, all by flying
bolts or other fragments inside the pilot-house and turret. Several of the
plates on the side armor were badly broken, and at one place, where two shots
had struck near each other, the plating was partly stripped from the wood, the
backing broken in, and the edging of deck-plates started up and rolled back in
places. On the port quarter and side the plating was deeply indented and started
from the side to the stern. The deck had two very damaging shots, one near the
propeller well, quite shattering the plate and starting twenty-five bolts;
another starting the plate and twenty bolts. The smoke-stack received three
shots; one, pierced the armor, making a hole fifteen inches long and nine broad,
displacing the grating inside, and breaking seven bolts. The turret received
nine shots; fifty-six bolts were perceptibly broken, the nuts stripped from
the inside, and the bolts themselves protruded almost their length; some of
them, in fact, having actually been forced out, were found lying on the deck;
doubtless many others were broken that had not then been detected, as some bolts
seemingly sound were afterward found loosened. One shot struck the upper part of
the turret, breaking through every plate, parting some of them in two, three,
and four places. The pilot-house bore marks of six shots, three of XI-inch
diameter, twenty-one bolts were broken and others started, and the plates were
much started; in the opinion of the commanding officer, a few more such shot
would have demolished it. One of the missiles at the base broke through every
plate, and evidently nearly penetrated.
During
the action the Nahant fired seven
XV-inch and eight XI-inch projectiles. It was not until 5 P.M. of the next day
that the turret was sufficiently cleared to be turned, although a corps of
skilful workmen under able supervision were engaged at it.
The
commanding officer of the Keokuk
states that at 3.20, the flag-ship having made signal to disregard her motions,
he found it necessary to run ahead of the Nahant
to avoid getting foul of her in a narrow channel and strong tide. In
consequence, he was forced to take a position slightly in advance of the
leading vessel of the line, which brought the Keokuk under a concentrated fire between Sumter and Moultrie, about
five hundred and fifty yards from the latter. This position was maintained about
thirty minutes, during which time the vessel was struck ninety times. Nineteen
shots pierced her at and just below the water-line. The turrets (casemates) were
pierced in many places and one of the forward shutters shot away; in short, the
vessel was completely riddled.
Finding
it impossible to keep her afloat many minutes more under such an extraordinary
fire, at 4.40 she was reluctantly withdrawn from action. The gun-carriage of
the forward turret was disabled, and so many of the crew of the after gun
wounded as to disable that gun. She was anchored out of range of the fire of
the enemy and kept afloat during the night, as the water was smooth. At daylight
the breeze sprung up, the leakage increased, and it was apparent the vessel
must soon go down. Signal was made, assistance arrived, and an endeavor to get
the head of the vessel around to tow her into shoaler water, but in that effort
she filled rapidly and at 7.20 A.M. Of the 8th sunk, her smokestack alone
remaining partly above water. The wounded had been put on board of a tug a few
minutes before the vessel sunk. The casualties were 16 seriously, and as many
more slightly wounded.
Commodore
Turner, commanding the flag-ship, states that the pilot-house being insufficient
to hold more persons than were required by the Admiral, he had taken personal
charge of the battery of the Ironsides.
By sounding it was found that the vessel at times was only one foot clear of the
bottom. A shot striking the forward facing of a port shutter knocked it off. The
damage done to the ship from the fire of the enemy was not material, and the
opinion was expressed that at the distance of 1,000 yards the armor plating
would prove invulnerable to such shot as were fired at the vessel. He expressed
great admiration of the conduct of officers and men, and would fall short of his
duty if he omitted to present to especial notice Lieutenant-Commander George
E. Belknap, the executive officer. It is proper to note the fact that without
exception the commanding officers of all of the vessels engaged spoke in the
highest terms of those under their command. The names, which may be seen in the
official reports, are omitted for lack of space and fear of taxing the
patience of the reader.
Rear-Admiral
Dupont, in his several reports to the Department, states that he moved in line
of battle as before given, in the New Ironsides,
with seven ironclad monitors and the iron-plated vessel Keokuk,
and attacked Fort Sumter, intending to pass it and commence action on the
northwest face, in accordance with his order of battle. The heavy fire
received from Sumter and Moultrie and the nature of the obstructions compelled
the attack from outside, which was fierce and obstinate, and the gallantry of
the officers and men was conspicuous.
The
endeavors of the Admiral in the pilot-house of the New Ironsides to bring the
vessel into such close action as he desired were not successful; in a rapid
current and narrow channel the vessel became partly unmanageable, and was
twice anchored to prevent grounding, and once on account of a collision with two
of the monitors. She did not get nearer to Fort Sumter than 1,000 yards.[2]
Owing
to the condition of the tide and unavoidable accidents, the vessels were not
engaged until late in the day, and toward evening, finding no impression made
upon the fort, signal was given for the vessels to withdraw, with the intention
of renewing the attack the following morning. The commanders of the monitors
came on board during the evening, and stated verbally the injuries the vessels
had received, when without hesitation the Admiral determined not to renew the
attack, as in his judgment it would have converted a failure into a disaster. He
stated that in his opinion Charleston could not be taken by a purely naval
attack, and the army could not give co-operation. Had he succeeded in entering
the harbor, he would have had 1,200 men, with 32 guns; but five of the seven
ironclads were wholly or partially disabled after a brief engagement. He had
alluded above only to Forts Sumter and Moultrie, but the vessels were also
exposed to the fire of the batteries on Cummings Point, Mount Pleasant, the
Redan, and Fort Beauregard.
In
a more detailed report to the Department, dated April 15th, Admiral Dupont gives
with particularity the fire delivered by the vessels engaged and the injuries
sustained by them, and adds, that in his belief any attempt to pass through the
obstructions referred to would have entangled the vessels and held them under
the most severe fire of heavy ordnance that had ever been delivered, and while
it was barely possible that some vessels might have forced their way through, it
would only have been to be again impeded by other and more formidable
obstructions and to encounter other powerful batteries with which the whole
harbor of Charleston had been lined. He says that the slowness of our fire and
our inability to occupy any batteries we might silence are disadvantages of the
gravest character, and until the outer forts shall have been taken, the army
cannot enter the harbor or afford assistance. A want of success, however, will
not prevent him from bringing to the notice of the Department the gallant
officers and men who took part in this desperate conflict.
After
naming the officers and the vessels they commanded, he says: "They did
everything that the utmost gallantry and skill could accomplish in the
management of their untried vessels." These commanding officers had long
been known to him; many of them had served in the squadron before, and were
present at the capture of the Port Royal forts; they were men of the highest
professional capacity and courage, and fully sustained their reputations, coming
up to his requirements. He commended them and their reports, which speak of
those under them, to the consideration of the Department.
He
then names in the highest terms Commander C. R. P. Rodgers, Lieutenant S. W.
Preston, Lieutenant A. S. Mackenzie, and Ensign M. L. Johnson, who were on his
staff or serving immediately under his personal observation.
The
result of the attack was mortifying to all of the officers and men engaged in
it. Had any loss of life been regarded as likely to render another attempt
successful, there would have been few indeed who would not have desired it. The
opinion before the attack was general, and was fully shared in by the writer,
that whatever might be the loss in men and vessels, blown up by torpedoes or
otherwise destroyed (and such losses were supposed probable), at all events
Fort Sumter would be reduced to a pile of ruins before the sun went down. The
damage done to the forts by the very small number of projectiles fired by the
vessels, although not known at the time to the assailants, was so considerable
as to cause the enemy to fill nearly all of the casemates with sand, and this
work was begun and carried on vigorously the very night after the bombardment.
(See Appendix A for effect of shells, as given in Confederate records.)
The
damage inflicted on the vessels shows that they were incapable of enduring heavy
blows sufficiently long to effect the destruction of Sumter, as they were
situated, or as it was supposed possible to place them. There was considerable
swell even between the forts at the time of the attack, and the flood tide ran
strong and irregularly, which added to the embarrassment. Afloat as elsewhere
leeks have to be eaten sometimes, whether liked or not, as an old proverb has
it.
An
examination of the chart of Charleston Harbor, with its batteries and
obstructions of various kinds, as shown in 1865, and the experience gained
subsequent to the attack (bearing in mind, too, the condition of the batteries
of the vessels on the 7th of April), would point rather to the probability of
disaster than to success, had an attempt been made to enter.
The
reader has been informed of the strength of the attacking force in guns and in
material resistance, and the failure of many of the guns to operate when they
were most needed. A part of the defenses at that time consisted of seventy-six
guns of large caliber, which bore over the area occupied for a time by the
vessels attacking.
H.
R. Ex. Doe. No. 69, Thirty-eighth Congress, First Session, page 85 (Report on
Armored Vessels), states: "There was a cylinder torpedo off Fort Wagner
under charge of Mr. Langdon Cheves, who endeavored to explode it for ten
minutes. He could not have placed the Ironsides
more directly over the torpedo, but the confounded thing, as is usual with
them, would not go off when it was wanted." The character of the defenses
of Charleston and the ability of the attacking force will appear more fully in
the closing pages relating to operations on that coast.
The
considerations that were operative in the mind of the flag-officer are given in
his report of April 15th. He says "I had hoped that the endurance of the
ironclads would have enabled them to have borne any weight of fire to which they
might have been exposed; but when I found that so large a portion of them were
wholly or one-half disabled by less than an hour's engagement, before attempting
to remove [overcome] the obstructions, or testing the power of the torpedoes,
I was convinced that persistence in the attack would result in the loss of the
greater portion of the ironclad fleet, and in leaving many of them inside the
harbor, to fall into the hands of the enemy."
On
the withdrawal of the ironclads at 5 P.M., April 7th, the flag-officer had not
even a suspicion that he would not resume operations the following morning. The
grave injuries sustained by the vessels in aggressive power restrained him, such
as no loss of life, had it occurred, would have done.
On
the evening of the attack the flag-officer received a letter, as follows
CONFIDENTIAL.
NAVY
DEPARTMENT, April 2, 1863.
SIR-The
exigencies of the public service are so pressing in the Gulf that the Department
directs you to send all the ironclads that are in a fit condition to move, after
your present attack upon Charleston, directly to New Orleans, reserving to
yourself only two.
Very
respectfully,
GIDEON
WELLES.
Of
the same date is the following unofficial letter from the Assistant Secretary of
the Navy: "Matters are at a standstill on the Mississippi River, and the
President was with difficulty restrained from sending off Hunter and all the
ironclads directly to New Orleans, the opening of the Mississippi being the
principal object to be obtained. It is, however, arranged, as you will see by
to-day's order, that you are to send all the ironclads that survive the attack
upon Charleston immediately to New Orleans, reserving for your squadron only
two. We must abandon all other operations on the coast where ironclads are
necessary to a future time. We cannot clear the Mississippi River without
ironclads, and as all the supplies come down the Red River, that stretch of the
river must be in our possession. This plan has been agreed upon after mature
consideration, and seems to be imperative."
On
the night after the attack officers on General Hunter's staff were on board of
the Ironsides with the proposition for
the flag-officer to co-operate with General Hunter in the reduction of Morris
Island, which, for reasons quite obvious, could not then be entertained.
In
a reply to a very complimentary letter received from General Hunter at this
time, the Admiral says: "I feel very comfortable, General, for the reason
that a merciful Providence permitted me to have a failure instead of a
disaster, and if I had ever entertained for a moment any misgiving as to my
course, the dispatches just handed me would remove it."
The
following day, in a note to General Hunter, he says °° I find the ships so
much damaged during this short engagement as to force me to the conviction
that they could not endure the fire to which they would be exposed long enough
to destroy Sumter or reach Charleston. I am now satisfied that the place cannot
be taken by a purely naval attack, and am admonished by the condition of the
ironclads that a persistence in our efforts would end in disaster, and might
cause us to leave some of our ironclads in the hands of the enemy, which would
render it difficult to hold those parts of the coast that are yet in our
possession. I have therefore determined to withdraw my vessels."
The
Department and the people of the North counted confidently on the fall of
Charleston through the monitors, as is shown by the orders of April 2d, followed
before the receipt of the news of the repulse on April 7th by a letter to the
Admiral from the Secretary of the Navy, dated April 11th, as follows: "It
has been suggested to the Department by the President, in view of operations
elsewhere, and especially by the Army of the Potomac, that you should retain a
strong force off Charleston, even should you find it impossible to carry the
place. You will continue to menace the rebels, keeping them in apprehension of a
renewed attack, in order that they may be occupied, and not come North or go
West to the aid of the rebels with whom our forces will soon be in conflict.,
Should you be successful, as we trust and believe you will be, it is expected
that General Hunter will continue to keep the rebels employed and in constant
apprehension, so that they shall not leave the vicinity of Charleston. This
detention of ironclads, should it be necessary in consequence of a repulse, can
be but for a few days. I trust your success will be such that the ironclads can
be or will have been dispatched to the Gulf when this reaches you. There is
intense interest in regard to your operations."
The
writer has italicized the sentence above, as it would exert a controlling
influence on Admiral Dupont in fitting for effective service all of the
ironclads under him with the least possible delay. Immediately following is a dispatch
from the President:
EXECUTIVE
MANSION, April 13, 1863.
Hold
your position inside the bar near Charleston; or, if you have left it, return to
it, and hold it until further orders. Do not allow the enemy to erect new
batteries or defences on Morris Island. If he has begun it, drive him out. I do
not herein order you to renew the general attack. That is to depend on your
discretion or a further order.
A.
LINCOLN.
Admiral
DUPONT.
The
following day the President issued further instructions
EXECUTIVE
MANSION, April 14, 1863.
This
is intended to clear up an apparent inconsistency between the recent order to
continue operations before Charleston, and the former one to remove to another
point in a certain contingency. No censure upon you, or either of you, is
intended; we still hope by cordial and judicious co-operation you can take the
batteries on Morris Island and Sullivan's Island and Fort Sumter. But whether
you can or not, we wish the demonstration kept up for a time, for a collateral
and very important object; we wish the attempt to be a real one (though not a
desperate one) if it affords any considerable chance of success. But if
prosecuted for a demonstration only, this must not be made public, or the whole
effect will be lost. Once again before Charleston, do not leave till further
orders from here. Of course this is not intended to force you to leave unduly
exposed Hilton Head or other near points in your charge.
Yours truly,
A.
LINCOLN.
General
HUNTER and Admiral DUPONT.
P.S.-Whoever
receives this first, please send a copy to the other immediately.
On
April 16th, Rear-Admiral Dupont wrote to the Secretary of the Navy as follows:
I
have the honor to acknowledge the receipt this morning, by the Freeborn, of your communication of the 11th inst., directing the
maintaining of a large force off Charleston, to menace the rebels and keep
them in apprehension of a renewed attack in the event of our repulse. The
Department will probably have known, on the 12th instant, the result of the
attack. In my dispatch of the 11th instant, dated off Charleston, the Department
was made aware of my withdrawal with the ironclads, from the very insecure
anchorage inside the bar, and just in time to save the monitors from an easterly
gale, in which, in my opinion and that of their commanders, they would have been
in great peril of being lost on Morris Island beach. Their ground-tackling has
been found to be insufficient, and from time to time they have dragged even in
close harbors.
I
have since been doing all in my power to push forward their repairs in order
to send them to the Gulf, as directed, but I presume that your despatch of the
11th instant, and the telegraphic message from the President, revoke your
previous order.
I
shall spare no exertions in repairing, as soon as possible, the serious
injuries sustained by the monitors in the late attack, and shall get them inside
Charleston bar with all dispatch in accordance with the order of the President.
I think it my duty, however, to state to the Department that this will be
attended with great risk to these vessels from the gales which prevail at this
season, and from the continuous fire of the enemy's batteries, which they can
neither silence, nor prevent the erection of new ones.
I
have deemed it proper and due to myself to make these statements, but I trust
I need not add that I will obey all orders with the utmost fidelity, even when
my judgment is entirely at variance with them, such as the order to re-occupy
the unsafe anchorage for the ironclads off Morris Island, and an intimation
that a renewal of the attack on Charleston may be ordered, which, in my
judgment, would be attended with disastrous results, involving the loss of
this coast.
I
am, however, painfully struck by the tenor and tone of the President's order,
which seems to imply a censure, and I have to request that the Department will
not hesitate to relieve me by an officer who, in its opinion, is more able to
execute that service in which I have had the misfortune to fail-the capture of
Charleston. No consideration for an individual officer, whatever his loyalty and
length of service, should weigh an instant if the cause of his country can be
advanced by his removal.
Chief-Engineer
Alban C. Stirrers was sent by the Department to look after and correct any
deficiencies in the monitors which might be developed in service, and for this
purpose he had under his control a number of skilled workers in iron. He was
either the designer of the raft before described, secured to the bow of the Weehawken,
or was closely connected with its construction. He witnessed the attack of the
7th of April from ,beyond the bar, and had recommended the employment of two
rafts that he had brought down, one of which was attached to the bow of the Weehawken. Each raft was designed to carry on its forward end a
submerged torpedo to destroy by explosion any obstruction met with; the torpedo
Captain Rodgers declined to carry, as he feared blowing up some of the other
monitors against which he might run by accident. Stimers, however, states that
his explanation as to the safety of the vessels carrying the torpedo was not
satisfactory, and for that reason they had rejected "this powerful weapon,
for which we have every reason to suppose the enemy was entirely unprepared, in
an attack which could have few hopes of success without it."
He
was agreeably disappointed the following morning, upon his inspection of the
monitors, to find " that there were no clear passages through the decks,
and no penetrations through the sides of the vessels or the pilot-houses."
He then institutes a comparison between the vulnerability, as he supposes, of
the plates of 4++ inches in thickness of the New Ironsides and the five
1-inch plates applied to the sides of the monitors. He says: " To the
casual observer, therefore, the solid plates will have the appearance of having
withstood the bombardment better than the laminated, but the unprejudiced
engineer will perceive the latter disposition of the metal is much the more
effective in attaining the desired end." The falsity of this presented
observation of the effect of shot on laminated plates as compared with their
effect on a solid plate of equal thickness has been established uniformly, by
very many target experiments, and afterward by the Ironsides herself.
In
his report to the Department he adds: “In consideration of the vast
importance to our country that the stronghold of rebellion should be reduced,
I take the liberty to express to the Department my firm opinion that the obstructions
can be readily passed with the means already provided, and our entire fleet of
ironclads pass up successfully to the wharves of Charleston, and that the
monitor vessels still retain sufficient enduring powers to enable them to pass
all the forts and batteries which may be reasonably expected."
The
official history of Chief-Engineer Stimers in relation to monitors closes as
follows: “Chief-Engineer Stimers is responsible for the detailed drawings of
the [21] lightdraught monitors, and for the calculations as to their displacement.
It was expected that they would not draw over six and one-half feet of water,
and be out of water amidships about fifteen inches. The contracts were made
generally in the spring of 1863, and the vessels were to be furnished in the
fall of that year. . . . The Chime, at
Boston, was the first one finished. She was under the entire direction of
Chief-Engineer Stimers. Instead of being fifteen inches out of water she was
only three inches on an average, showing a miscalculation of one foot. The
Department immediately removed Mr. Stimers from the position of general
superintendent, and placed the question of what should be done to remedy the
difficulties occasioned by his error in the hands of Rear-Admiral Gregory,
Chief-Engineer Wood, and Captain Ericsson " (letter of Assistant Secretary
of the Navy, December 15, 1864, to Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War,
vol. 3, 1865).
[1] It was formed of very heavy timbers crossing at right angles, bolted together, about fifty feet in length, shaped not unlike a boot-jack, the bows of the vessel propelling within the notch. The after-ends or jaws of the raft were secured by chains to the bow of the vessel. The wave-motion acting on this cumbrous mass was quite different from that of the monitor. It proved to be a battering ram, and loosened the armor plating on the bows of the Weehawken.
[2]
Confederate accounts state that no monitor approached nearer than 600 yards
to the rope obstructions, which is probably an error, as they turned inn
line, and at such distance as in a strong tide seemed necessary to clear
them. They estimated the nearest approach of the Ironsides
at 1,800 yards.
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