Civil War Times

QUIET DAY ON A DOUBLE ENDER

served on high-seas warships or innovative ironclads. Hundreds of tars, like these crewmen of USS , spent their enlistments on vessels that patrolled and presented a Union presence of force on the Confederacy’s twisting coastal waterways. The 205-foot-long , launched at Brooklyn, patrolled Four Mile Creek and later the James River in conjunction with the offensive to capture Petersburg, Va. The unheralded vessel didn’t last long after the war. It was decommissioned by the U.S. Navy on May 12, 1865.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Civil War Times

Civil War Times15 min read
‘Many A Campfire Brightened’
In 1911, the Wisconsin Historical Commission published Ethel Hurn’s Wisconsin Women in the War. The book was a product of her history thesis, in which she collected women’s accounts of their involvement in the Civil War. Hurn ultimately focused the b
Civil War Times6 min read
Time Warp
ON A CLOUDLESS, deep-blue sky afternoon, I drive 45 miles south of Nashville to Columbia for a visit with one of my favorite people, Campbell Ridley. He’s an 80-year-old semi-retired farmer, U.S. Army veteran, rock & roll devotee, and storyteller wit
Civil War Times12 min read
Forever Salvaged
I first visited with the two “Monitor Boys” when they were still 240 feet below me, resting in the one-mile column of water that defines the Monitor National Marine Sanctuary, which is under the auspices of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admini

Related Books & Audiobooks