Skip to content

Gettysburg Chronicles

History Explained

  • Home
  • Gettysburg
    • History of Adams County
    • Samuel Gettys
    • Call to Arms
    • Days Before The Battle
  • Tales to War
    • July 5th: Tillie Pierce Tale
    • 57th Pa.: Letter to Mother
    • 24th Mich.: Abel Peck
    • 24th Mich.: Charles Bellore
    • 1st Rifles: Colonel Taylor
  • Confederate
    • South Carolina
    • Mississippi Monuments
    • Florida’s Involvement
    • Spirit of Alabama
    • Georgia – The Peach State
    • Louisiana Secedes
    • Lonestar State
    • North Carolina
    • Virginia Secedes
    • Arkansas
    • Tennessee – Last to Join
    • Maryland – Border State
  • Union
    • First Shot Marker
  • Michigan
    • 24th Joins Iron Brigade
      • 24th Before Fredericksburg
      • 24th Mich. to Gettysburg
      • 24th Michigan – July 1st
      • 24th Michigan Losses
    • Farnsworth’s Cavalry
    • Michigan Cavalry
  • Artillery
    • Different Ammunition
    • Real vs. Fake Cannons
    • Six Pound Shot Cannon
    • Cannons at Devil’s Den
    • Rochester Union Grays
      • Fallen Rochester Grays
  • Civil War Locations
    • Crampton’s Gap, Md.
    • Fox’s Gap, Md.
    • Turner’s Gap, Md.
    • Andersonville, Ga.
    • Navy – Hampton Roads, Va.
  • Photographs
  • Abraham Lincoln
    • Lincoln Visits Antietam
    • Emancipation Proclamation
    • November 1863
    • Gettysburg Address
    • John Wilkes Booth
    • The Kidnapping Plan
    • Ford’s Theatre
    • Death of Abraham Lincoln
    • Death of an Actor
    • Tribunal Results
  • Lost Commanders
    • Stonewall Jackson
      • Spring of 1862
      • Fall of 1862
      • Winter of 1862
      • Family
      • Life After Stonewall
      • Descendants of Jackson
      • Stonewall’s Grandson Tree
    • John F. Reynolds
      • California Love
      • Reynolds Arrives
      • Morning of July 1st
      • July 1st to July 3rd
      • Ms. Mary “Kate” Hewitt
      • Daughters of Charity
  • Anniversaries
    • Battlefield Walks
    • 150th Anniversary – 2013
    • 152nd Anniversary – 2015
    • 157th Anniversary – 2020
    • 158th Anniversary – 2021
    • 162nd Anniversary – 2025
    • 163rd Anniversary – 2026
      • 163rd Anniversary
  • Buildings
    • Cashtown
      • July 1863 in Cashtown
      • Cashtown: Since 1863
    • Sach’s Bridge
    • The House on the Hill
      • Louisiana Tigers
    • Weikert Family Farms
    • Houses of the Wades
    • Soldier’s Orphanage
      • Brickyard Fight
      • 154th New York
      • Amos Humiston
      • Rosa Carmichael
    • Welty House
    • Farnsworth House
    • Winebrenner History
  • Field Hospitals
    • St. Francis Xavier Church
    • St. James Lutheran Church
  • Railroads
    • G&H Railroad
    • Western Maryland Railroad
    • Location of the Spur
    • Gettysburg Electric Trolley
    • Trolley South of Town
    • Railroad to Round-Tops
  • Paranormal
    • Paranormal Equipment
    • Spirits at the Cashtown Inn
    • Pictures on the Bridge
    • Live: Sachs Covered Bridge
    • Haunted Orphanage
    • McClellan’s Duplex Kitchen
    • Spirits at the Farnsworth
    • Spirits at Tillie Pierce Inn
  • Wade Family
    • Thaddeus Filby
    • Rise of the Captain
    • Trouble with the Law
    • Jennie Wade
    • Newspaper Articles
    • Gravesites of Jennie Wade
    • Samuel and Harry Wade
    • James John “Jack” Wade
  • Georgeanna McClellan
    • Extended McClellan’s
    • Iowa Family – Lewis
    • World War II POW
    • Jennie Wade McClellan
    • Nellie McClellan
    • John McClellan
  • Jim B. McClellan
    • Georgia W. McClellan
      • Dallas Schwarzenbach
        • Children of Dallas
        • Donald Schwarzenbach
    • Nellie Glady McClellan
    • Mary Wade McClellan
    • Martha B. McClellan
      • Sarah Isobel Holland
      • Martha’s Other Children
      • Glady Elizabeth Holland
    • Beese Everyln McClellan
    • Sons of Jim Britton
    • Military Ancestors
  • Families
    • Thorns
      • Evergreen Cemetery: August 1862 to June 1863
      • Gettysburg: June 26, 1863
      • Evergreen Gatehouse
      • Thorn’s Family Tree
      • Descendants of the Thorns
      • Aftermath of Battle
      • Thorn Important Locations
    • Pierce Lineage
      • McCurdy to Pierce Tree
      • James Shaw Pierce
      • William H. Pierce
        • Tillie Pierce
          • Last Week of June 1863
          • Tillie’s Accounts – July 1st
          • Wounded Everywhere
          • Hospital – Pierce House
          • Alleman’s Family
    • Garlach Family
      • Soldier Hiding with Pigs
      • Anna Garlach
    • Shriver Family
      • Weikert’s Connection
      • Union Calvary Disaster
      • Father’s Death
      • Henrietta’s New Life
    • Study Family Origins
      • Lydia Study Leister
  • Questions
  • Toggle search form

Tag: CSS Virgina

Naval Battles – March 9, 1862

Posted on March 5, 2026April 5, 2026 By BD

The Civil War was against the North and the South. Infantry walked thousand of miles from Pennsylvania to Florida and from the Atlantic Ocean to eastern Kentucky over and over again. However, it wasn’t just the infantry doing the fighting on the ground. There was also battles on the water that prevented trade routes to enforce the Confederates with goods and supplies from Britain or from other states. Naval battles occurred near the port cities near Norfolk, Baltimore, Savannah, Charleston, and New Orleans. Some cities, like Norfolk, had Union and Confederate ships fighting each other to control the waterways.

Courtesy of Battle Paintings

In the Battle of Hampton Roads, the ironclads of the CSS Virginia and the USS Monitor happened for first and only time between the two ships. The battle lasted four hours and it was a draw. It was the first fight for any ironclad to fight with a rotating turret. Luckily, the USS Monitor was able to use this advantage and shoot more often at the CSS Virginia since it also had a shallow draft, unlike the Confederate ship.

The USS Monitor had a draft of 10 feet, while the CSS Virginia had 22 feet. Both were a problem for each ship for different reasons. Two months after the Battle of Hampton Roads, Union troops and the U.S. Navy advanced on occupied Norfolk. The Virginia was steam-powered and was not able to enter into the Atlantic Ocean even though it could pass through the Union blockade. They could have escaped the enemy forces, but the James River was too shallow for it to pass. Even after dumping most of the coal and supplies into the river, it was still not enough to move northward. Therefore, the new caption of the USS Virginia ordered her destruction and was destroyed by scatting gunpowder and cotton on the ship’s deck. On May 11th, the fire reached the ironclad’s magazine and lead to a massive explosion and the ship sank in approximately 30 feet of water.

Courtesy of the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation

On December 30th-31st, 1862, the USS Monitor along with the aid of a tug, the side-wheeler frigate USS Rhode Island, was rounding Cape Hatteras in the Atlantic Ocean as a storm lashed it’s decks. The storm increased in intensity and it started to leak and take on water. It pitched and rolled in the swells and after awhile, sank to the bottom. Luckily, the USS Rhode Island was there to pick up as many survivors as they could, but sadly 16 sailors lost their lives and it sank into 230 feet of water.

When the turret was raised to the surface in 2002 and placed in a local museum to be studied and preserved, they found two of the sixteen inside the turret. Both of them along with a military honors for the others were given within Arlington National Cemetery. They are located near the gravesites for the Space Shuttle Challenger and Columbia.

President
  • Battlefield Map
  • Gettysburg Museums & Hotels
  • Union History
  • Confederate History
  • Author's History
  • July 2026
  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026

Recent Posts

  • Gettysburg Streets
  • Fourth of July
  • Heat Wave 1863 & 2026
  • June 29th, 1863
  • June 27, 1863

Recent Comments

  1. ExoWatts on Fourth of July

@ 2026 Gettysburg Chronicles

Powered by PressBook WordPress theme