<h2>THE MERRIMAC AND THE MONITOR</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="THE_MERRIMAC_AND_THE_MONITOR" id="THE_MERRIMAC_AND_THE_MONITOR"></SPAN>THE MERRIMAC AND THE MONITOR</h2>
<p class='center'>II</p>
<p class='center'><i>Told by H. Ashton Ramsay, Major C.S.A., Chief Engineer of the
"Merrimac"</i></p>
<p>The <i>Merrimac</i> was built in 1856 as a full-rigged war-frigate, of
thirty-one hundred tons' burden, with auxiliary steam power to be used
only in case of head winds. She was a hybrid from her birth, marking the
transition from sails to steam as well as from wooden ships to
ironclads.</p>
<p>I became her second assistant engineer in Panama Bay in 1859, cruising
in her around the Horn and back to Norfolk. Her chief engineer was
Alban C. Stimers. Little did we dream that he was to be the right-hand
man of Ericsson in the construction of the <i>Monitor</i>, while I was to
hold a similar post in the conversion of our own ship into an ironclad,
or that, in less than a year and a half, we would be seeking to destroy
each other, he as chief engineer of the <i>Monitor</i> and I in the
corresponding position on the <i>Merrimac</i>.</p>
<p>In the harbor of Rio on our return voyage we met the <i>Congress</i>, and as
we sailed away after coaling she fired a friendly salute and cheered us,
and we responded with a will. When the two ships next met it was in one
of the deadliest combats of naval history.</p>
<p>The machinery of the <i>Merrimac</i> was condemned, and she went out of
commission on our return. She was still at Norfolk when the war broke
out, and was set on fire by the Federals when Norfolk was evacuated.
Some of the workmen in the navy-yard scuttled and sank her, thus putting
out the flames. When she was raised by the Confederates she was nothing
but a burned and blackened hulk.</p>
<p>Her charred upper works were cut away, and in the center a casement
shield one hundred and eighty feet long was built of pitch-pine and oak,
two feet thick. This was covered with iron plates, one to two inches
thick and eight inches wide, bolted over each other and through and
through the woodwork, giving a protective armor four inches in
thickness. The shield sloped at an angle of about thirty-six degrees,
and was covered with an iron grating that served as an upper deck. For
fifty feet forward and aft her decks were submerged below the water, and
the prow was shod with an iron beak to receive the impact when ramming.</p>
<p>Even naval officers were skeptical as to the result. The plates were
rolled at the Tredegar mills at Richmond, and arrived so slowly that we
were nearly a year in finishing her. We could have rolled them at
Norfolk and built four <i>Merrimacs</i> in that time, had the South
understood the importance of a navy at the outbreak of the war.</p>
<p>I remember that my old friend and comrade, Captain Charles MacIntosh,
while awaiting orders, used to come over and stand on the granite
curbing of the dock to watch the work as it crawled along.</p>
<p>"Good-by, Ramsay," he said, sadly, on the eve of starting to command a
ram at New Orleans. "I shall never see you again. She will prove your
coffin." A short time afterward the poor fellow had both legs shot from
under him and died almost immediately.</p>
<p>Rifled guns were just coming into use, and Lieutenant Brooke, who
designed the <i>Merrimac</i>, considered the question of having some of her
guns rifled. How to procure such cannon was not easily discovered, as we
had no foundries in the South. There were many cast-iron cannon that had
fallen into our hands at Norfolk, and he conceived the idea of turning
some of this ordnance into rifles. In order to enable them to stand the
additional bursting strain we forged wrought-iron bands and shrank them
over the chambers, and we devised a special tool for rifling the bore of
the guns. They gave effective service.</p>
<p>Many details remained uncompleted when we were at last floated out of
dry-dock, but there was great pressure for us to make some demonstration
that might serve to check McClellan in his advance up the Peninsula.</p>
<p>The ship was still full of workmen hurrying her to completion when
Commodore Franklin Buchanan arrived from Richmond one March morning and
ordered every one out of the ship, except her crew of three hundred and
fifty men which had been hastily drilled on shore in the management of
the big guns, and directed Executive Officer Jones to prepare to sail at
once.</p>
<p>At that time nothing was known of our destination. All we knew was that
we were off at last. Buchanan sent for me. The veteran sailor, the beau
ideal of a naval officer of the old school, with his tall form, harsh
features, and clear, piercing eyes, was pacing the deck with a stride I
found it difficult to match, although he was then over sixty and I but
twenty-four.</p>
<p>"Ramsay," he asked, "what would happen to your engines and boilers if
there should be a collision?"</p>
<p>"They are braced tight," I assured him. "Though the boilers stand
fourteen feet, they are so securely fastened that no collision could
budge them."</p>
<p>"I am going to ram the <i>Cumberland</i>," said my commander. "I'm told she
has the new rifled guns, the only ones in their whole fleet we have
cause to fear. The moment we are in the Roads I'm going to make right
for her and ram her. How about your engines? They were in bad shape in
the old ship, I understand. Can we rely on them? Should they be tested
by a trial trip?"</p>
<p>"She will have to travel some ten miles down the river before we get to
the Roads," I said. "If any trouble develops I'll report it. I think
that will be sufficient trial trip."</p>
<p>I watched the machinery carefully as we sped down the Elizabeth River,
and soon satisfied myself that all was well. Then I went on deck.</p>
<p>"How fast is she going do you think?" I asked one of the pilots.</p>
<p>"Eight or nine knots an hour," he replied, making a rapid calculation
from objects ashore. The <i>Merrimac</i> as an ironclad was faster under
steam than she had ever been before with her top hamper of masts and
sails.</p>
<p>I presented myself to the commodore. "The machinery is all right, sir,"
I assured him.</p>
<p>Across the river at Newport News gleamed the batteries and white tents
of the Federal camp and the vessels of the fleet blockading the mouth of
the James, chief among them the <i>Congress</i> and the <i>Cumberland</i>, tall
and stately, with every line and spar clearly defined against the blue
March sky, their decks and ports bristling with guns, while the rigging
of the <i>Cumberland</i> was gay with the red, white, and blue of sailors'
garments hung out to dry.</p>
<p>As we rounded into view the white-winged sailing craft that sprinkled
the bay and long lines of tugs and small boats scurried to the far
shore like chickens on the approach of a hovering hawk. They had seen
our black hulk which looked like the roof of a barn afloat. Suddenly
huge volumes of smoke began to pour from the funnels of the frigates
<i>Minnesota</i> and <i>Roanoke</i> at Old Point. They had seen us, too, and were
getting up steam. Bright-colored signal flags were run up and down the
masts of all the ships of the Federal fleet. The <i>Congress</i> shook out
her topsails. Down came the clothes-line on the <i>Cumberland</i>, and boats
were lowered and dropped astern.</p>
<p>Our crew was summoned to the gun-deck, and Buchanan addressed us:
"Sailors, in a few minutes you will have the long-looked-for opportunity
of showing your devotion to our cause. Remember that you are about to
strike for your country and your homes. The Confederacy expects every
man to do his duty. Beat to quarters." Every terse, burning word is
engraved on my memory, though fifty years have passed since they were
spoken.</p>
<p>Just as he had finished, the mess caterer touched my elbow and
whispered: "Better get your lunch now, Mr. Ramsay. It will be your last
chance. The galley-fires must be put out when the magazines are opened."</p>
<p>On my way I saw Assistant-Surgeon Garnett at a table laying out lint and
surgical implements. I had no appetite, and merely tasted some cold
tongue and a cup of coffee. Passing along the gun-deck, I saw the pale
and determined countenances of the guns' crews, as they stood
motionless at their posts, with set lips unsmiling, contrasting with the
careless expression of sailors when practised at "fighting quarters" on
a man-of-war. This was the real thing.</p>
<p>As we approached the Federal ships we were met by a veritable storm of
shells which must have sunk any ship then afloat—except the <i>Merrimac</i>.
They struck our sloping sides, were deflected upward to burst harmlessly
in the air, or rolled down and fell hissing into the water, dashing the
spray up into our ports.</p>
<p>As we drew nearer the <i>Cumberland</i>, above the roar of battle rang the
voice of Buchanan, "Do you surrender?"</p>
<p>"Never!" retorted the gallant Morris.</p>
<p>The crux of what followed was down in the engine-room. Two gongs, the
signal to stop, were quickly followed by three, the signal to reverse.
There was an ominous pause, then a crash, shaking us all off our feet.
The engines labored. The vessel was shaken in every fiber. Our bow was
visibly depressed. We seemed to be bearing down with a weight on our
prow. Thud, thud, thud, came the rain of shot on our shield from the
double-decked battery of the <i>Congress</i>. There was a terrible crash in
the fire-room. For a moment we thought one of the boilers had burst. No,
it was the explosion of a shell in our stack. Was any one hit? No, thank
God! The firemen had been warned to keep away from the up-take, so the
fragments of shell fell harmlessly on the iron floor-plates.</p>
<p>We had rushed on the doomed ship, relentless as fate, crashing through
her barricade of heavy spars and torpedo fenders, striking her below her
starboard fore-chains, and crushing far into her. For a moment the whole
weight of her hung on our prow and threatened to carry us down with her,
the return wave of the collision curling up into our bow port.</p>
<p>The <i>Cumberland</i> began to sink slowly, bow first, but continued to fight
desperately for the forty minutes that elapsed after her doom was
sealed, while we were engaged with both the <i>Cumberland</i> and the
<i>Congress</i>, being right between them.</p>
<p>We had left our cast-iron beak in the side of the <i>Cumberland</i>. Like the
wasp, we could sting but once, leaving it in the wound.</p>
<p>Our smoke-stack was riddled, our flag was shot down several times, and
was finally secured to a rent in the stack. On our gun-deck the men were
fighting like demons. There was no thought or time for the wounded and
dying as they tugged away at their guns, training and sighting their
pieces while the orders rang out, "Sponge, load, fire!"</p>
<p>"The muzzle of our gun has been shot away," cried one of the gunners.</p>
<p>"No matter, keep on loading and firing—do the best you can with it,"
replied Lieutenant Jones.</p>
<p>"Keep away from the side ports, don't lean against the shield, look out
for the sharpshooters," rang the warnings. Some of our men who failed to
heed them and leaned against the shield were stunned and carried below,
bleeding at the ears. All were full of courage and worked with a will;
they were so begrimed with powder that they looked like negroes.</p>
<p>"Pass along the cartridges."</p>
<p>"More powder."</p>
<p>"A shell for number six."</p>
<p>"A wet wad for the hot-shot gun."</p>
<p>"Put out that pipe and don't light it again on peril of your life."</p>
<p>Such were the directions and commands, issued like clockwork amid the
confusion of battle. Our executive officer seemed to be in a dozen
places at once.</p>
<p>This gives some faint notion of the scene passing behind our grim iron
casement, which to the beholders without seemed a machine of
destruction. Human hearts were beating and bleeding there. Human lives
were being sacrificed. Pain, death, wounds, glory—that was the sum of
it.</p>
<p>On the doomed ship <i>Cumberland</i> the battle raged with equal fury. The
sanded deck was red and slippery with blood. Delirium seized the crew.
They stripped to their trousers, kicked off their shoes, tied
handkerchiefs about their heads, and fought and cheered as their ship
sank beneath their feet. Then the order came, "All save who can." There
was a scramble for the spar-deck and a rush overboard. The ship listed.
The after pivot-gun broke loose and rushed down the decline like a
furious animal, rolling over a man as it bounded overboard, leaving a
mass of mangled flesh on deck.</p>
<p>We now turned to the <i>Congress</i>, which had tried to escape but had
grounded, and the battle raged once more, broadside upon broadside,
delivered at close range, the <i>Merrimac</i> working closer all the time
with her bow pointed as if to ram the <i>Congress</i>. A shell from
Lieutenant Wood's gun sped through their line of powder-passers, not
only cutting down the men, but exploding the powder buckets in their
hands, spreading death and destruction and setting fire to the ship.</p>
<p>At last came the order, "Cease firing."</p>
<p>"The <i>Congress</i> has surrendered," some one cried. "Look out of the port.
See, she has run up white flags. The officers are waving their
handkerchiefs."</p>
<p>At this several of the officers started to leave their posts and rush on
deck, but Lieutenant Jones in his stentorian voice sang out: "Stand by
your guns, and, lieutenants, be ready to resume firing at the word. See
that your guns are well supplied with ammunition during the lull. Dr.
Garnett, see how those poor fellows yonder are coming on. Mr.
Littlepage, tell Paymaster Semple to have a care of the berth-deck and
use every precaution against fire. Mr. Hasker, call away the cutter's
crew and have them in readiness. Mr. Lindsay [to the carpenter], sound
the well, examine the forehold, and report if you find anything wrong."
Such was Catesby Ap. R. Jones, the executive officer of the <i>Merrimac</i>.</p>
<p>When it was fully evident that there was to be a suspension of
hostilities, and these details had all been attended to, several of the
officers went to stand beside Buchanan on the upper grating.</p>
<p>The whole scene was changed. A pall of black smoke hung about the ships
and obscured the clean-cut outlines of the shore. Down the river were
the three frigates <i>St. Lawrence</i>, <i>Roanoke</i>, and <i>Minnesota</i>, also
enveloped in the clouds of battle that now and then reflected the
crimson lightnings of the god of war. The masts of the <i>Cumberland</i> were
protruding above the water. The <i>Congress</i> presented a terrible scene of
carnage.</p>
<p>The gunboats <i>Beaufort</i> and <i>Raleigh</i> were signaled to take off the
wounded and fire the ship. They were driven away by sharpshooters on
shore, who suddenly turned their fire on us, notwithstanding the white
flag of the <i>Congress</i>. Buchanan fell, severely wounded in the groin.</p>
<p>As he was being carried below he said to Executive Officer Jones: "Plug
hot shot into her and don't leave her until she's afire. They must look
after their own wounded, since they won't let us"—a characteristic
command when it is remembered that his own brother, McKean Buchanan, was
paymaster of the <i>Congress</i> and might have been numbered among the
wounded.</p>
<p>We had kept two furnaces for the purpose of heating shot. They were
rolled into the flames on a grating, rolled out into iron buckets,
hoisted to the gun-deck, and rolled into the guns, which had been
prepared with wads of wet hemp. Then the gun would be touched off
quickly and the shot sent on its errand of destruction.</p>
<p>Leaving the <i>Congress</i> wrapped in sheets of flame, we made for the three
other frigates. The <i>St. Lawrence</i> and <i>Roanoke</i> had run aground, but
were pulled off by tugs and made their escape. The <span class="smcap">Minnesota</span>
was not so fortunate, but we drew twenty-three feet of water and could
not get near enough to destroy her, while our guns could not be elevated
owing to the narrow embrasures, and their range was only a mile; so we
made for our moorings at Sewall's Point.</p>
<p>All the evening we stood on deck watching the brilliant display of the
burning ship. Every part of her was on fire at the same time, the
red-tongued flames running up shrouds, masts, and stays, and extending
out to the yard-arms. She stood in bold relief against the black
background, lighting up the Roads and reflecting her lurid lights on the
bosom of the now placid and hushed waters. Every now and then the flames
would reach one of the loaded cannon and a shell would hiss at random
through the darkness. About midnight came the grand finale. The
magazines exploded, shooting up a huge column of firebrands hundreds of
feet in the air, and then the burning hulk burst asunder and melted into
the waters, while the calm night spread her sable mantle over Hampton
Roads.</p>
<p>The <i>Monitor</i> arrived during the evening and anchored under the stern of
the <i>Minnesota</i>, her lighter draught enabling her to do so without
danger. To us the ensuing engagement was in the nature of a surprise.
If we had known we were to meet her we would have at least been supplied
with solid shot for our rifled guns. We might even have thought best to
wait until our iron beak, lost in the side of the <i>Cumberland</i>, could be
replaced. Buchanan was incapacitated by his wound, and the command
devolved upon Lieutenant Jones.</p>
<p>We left our anchorage shortly before eight o'clock next morning and
steamed across and up stream toward the <i>Minnesota</i>, thinking to make
short work of her and soon return with her colors trailing under ours.
We approached her slowly, feeling our way cautiously along the edge of
the channel, when suddenly, to our astonishment, a black object that
looked like the historic description, "a barrel-head afloat with a
cheese-box on top of it," moved slowly out from under the <i>Minnesota</i>
and boldly confronted us. It must be confessed that both ships were
queer-looking craft, as grotesque to the eyes of the men of '62 as they
would appear to those of the present generation.</p>
<p>And now the great fight was on, a fight the like of which the world had
never seen. With the battle of yesterday old methods had passed away,
and with them the experience of a thousand years "of battle and of
breeze" was brought to naught.</p>
<p>We hovered about each other in spirals, gradually contracting the
circuits until we were within point-blank range, but our shell glanced
from the <i>Monitor's</i> turret just as hers did from our sloping sides. For
two hours the cannonade continued without perceptible damage to either
of the combatants.</p>
<p>On our gun-deck all was bustle, smoke, grimy figures, and stern
commands, while down in the engine and boiler rooms the sixteen furnaces
were belching out fire and smoke, and the firemen standing in front of
them, like so many gladiators, tugged away with devil's-claw and
slice-bar, inducing by their exertions more and more intense combustion
and heat. The noise of the cracking, roaring fires, escaping steam, and
the loud and labored pulsations of the engines, together with the roar
of battle above and the thud and vibration of the huge masses of iron
which were hurled against us produced a scene and sound to be compared
only with the poet's picture of the lower regions.</p>
<p>And then an accident occurred that threatened our utter destruction. We
stuck fast aground on a sand-bar.</p>
<p>Our situation was critical. The <i>Monitor</i> could, at her leisure, come
close up to us and yet be out of our reach, owing to our inability to
deflect our guns. In she came and began to sound every chink in our
armor—every one but that which was actually vulnerable, had she known
it.</p>
<p>The coal consumption of the two days' fight had lightened our prow until
our unprotected submerged deck was almost awash. The armor on our sides
below the water-line had been extended but about three feet, owing to
our hasty departure before the work was finished. Lightened as we were,
these exposed portions rendered us no longer an ironclad, and the
<i>Monitor</i> might have pierced us between wind and water had she depressed
her guns.</p>
<p>Fearing that she might discover our vulnerable "heel of Achilles" we had
to take all chances. We lashed down the safety valves, heaped
quick-burning combustibles into the already raging fires, and brought
the boilers to a pressure that would have been unsafe under ordinary
circumstances. The propeller churned the mud and water furiously, but
the ship did not stir. We piled on oiled cotton waste, splints of wood,
anything that would burn faster than coal. It seemed impossible that the
boilers could stand the pressure we were crowding upon them. Just as we
were beginning to despair there was a perceptible movement, and the
<i>Merrimac</i> slowly dragged herself off the shoal by main strength. We
were saved.</p>
<p>Before our adversary saw that we were again afloat we made a dash for
her, catching her quite unprepared, and tried to ram her, but our
commander was dubious about the result of a collision without our
iron-shod beak, and gave the signal to reverse the engines long before
we reached the <i>Monitor</i>. As a result I did not feel the slightest shock
down in the engine-room, though we struck her fairly enough.</p>
<p>The carpenter reported that the effect was to spring a leak forward.
Lieutenant Jones sent for me and asked me about it.</p>
<p>"It is impossible we can be making much water," I replied, "for the
skin of the vessel is plainly visible in the crank-pits."</p>
<p>A second time he sent for me and asked if we were making any water in
the engine-room.</p>
<p>"With the two large Worthington pumps, besides the bilge injections, we
could keep her afloat for hours, even with a ten-inch shell in her
hull," I assured him, repeating that there was no water in the engine
and boiler rooms.</p>
<p>We glided past, leaving the <i>Monitor</i> unscathed, but got between her and
the <i>Minnesota</i> and opened fire on the latter. The <i>Monitor</i> gallantly
rushed to her rescue, passing so close under our submerged stern that
she almost snapped off our propeller. As she was passing, so near that
we could have leaped aboard her, Lieutenant Wood trained the stern-gun
on her when she was only twenty yards from its muzzle and delivered a
rifle-pointed shell which dislodged the iron logs sheltering the
<i>Monitor's</i> conning-tower, carrying away the steering-gear and signal
apparatus, and blinding Captain Worden. It was a mistake to place the
conning-tower so far from the turret and the vitals of the ship. Since
that time it has been located over the turret. The <i>Monitor's</i> turret
was a death-trap. It was only twenty feet in diameter, and every shot
knocked off bolt-heads and sent them flying against the gunners. If one
of them barely touched the side of the turret he would be stunned and
momentarily paralyzed. Lieutenant Greene had been taken below in a
dazed condition and never fully recovered from the effects. One of the
port shutters had been jammed, putting a gun out of commission, and
there was nothing for the <i>Monitor</i> to do but to retreat and leave the
<i>Minnesota</i> to her fate.</p>
<p>Captain Van Brunt, of the latter vessel, thought he was now doomed and
was preparing to fire his ship when he saw the <i>Merrimac</i> also
withdrawing toward Norfolk.</p>
<p>It was at this juncture that Lieutenant Jones had sent for me and said:
"The pilots will not place us nearer to the <i>Minnesota</i>, and we cannot
afford to run the risk of getting aground again. I'm going to haul off
under the guns of Sewall's Point and renew the attack on the rise of the
tide. Bank your fires and make any necessary adjustments to the
machinery, but be prepared to start up again later in the afternoon."</p>
<p>I went below to comply with his instructions, and later was astonished
to hear cheering. Rushing on deck, I found we were passing Craney Island
on our way to Norfolk, and were being cheered by the soldiers of the
battery.</p>
<p>Our captain had consulted with some of his lieutenants. He explained
afterward that as the <i>Monitor</i> had proved herself so formidable an
adversary he had thought best to get a supply of solid shot, have the
prow replaced, the port shutters put on, the armor belt extended below
water, and the guns whose muzzles had been shot away replaced, and then
renew the engagement with every chance of victory. I remember feeling
as though a wet blanket had been thrown over me. His reasoning was
doubtless good, but it ignored the moral effect of leaving the Roads
without forcing the <i>Minnesota</i> to surrender.</p>
<p>As the <i>Merrimac</i> passed up the river, trailing the ensign of the
<i>Congress</i> under the stars and bars, she received a tremendous ovation
from the crowds that lined the shores, while hundreds of small boats,
gay with flags and bunting, converted our course into a triumphal
procession.</p>
<p>We went into dry-dock that very afternoon, and in about three weeks were
ready to renew the battle upon more advantageous terms, but the
<i>Monitor</i>, though reinforced by two other ironclads, the <i>Galena</i> and
the <i>Naugatuck</i>, and every available vessel of the United States navy,
was under orders from Washington to refuse our challenge and bottle us
up in the Roads. This strategy filled us with rage and dismay, but it
proved very effective.</p>
<p>Our new commander, Commodore Josiah Tatnall, was burning to distinguish
himself, but he was under orders not to risk the destruction or capture
of the <i>Merrimac</i> by leaving the Roads, as General Huger's division at
Norfolk would then be at the mercy of the Federal fleet. Week after week
was passing and with it his golden opportunity. At last we went to
Richmond and pressed a plan for a sortie upon the President. He returned
one afternoon and ordered every one aboard. That night we slipped down
the Roads and were soon passing Fort Monroe on our way out into the
Chesapeake.</p>
<p>Presently our army signal officer began waving his lantern communicating
with our distant batteries, and then told the result to Officer Jones,
who reported to Tatnall. "We have been ordered to return, sir," he said.</p>
<p>Tatnall was viewing the dim outlines of the fort through his glass and
pretended not to hear.</p>
<p>"The order is peremptory," repeated Jones.</p>
<p>Tatnall hesitated. He was of half a mind to disobey. "Old Huger has
outwitted me," he muttered. "Do what you please. I leave you in command.
I'm going to bed," and he went below in a high dudgeon. Tatnall was a
striking-looking man, standing over six feet, with florid complexion,
deep-sunken blue eyes, and a protruding under lip. That he did not have
a chance to fight was no fault of his.</p>
<p>Our life on board for the weeks that followed was far from comfortable.
We were within sight of the enemy, and at every movement of the opposing
fleet it was "clear away for action." Steam was kept up continually. Our
cabins were without air ports and no ray of light even penetrated the
ward-rooms. There was nowhere to walk but on the upper grating—a modern
prison is far more comfortable. Sometimes the sailors waded on the
submerged deck, giving rise to the superstition among the darkies that
they were the crew of the "debble ship" with power to walk on the
water.</p>
<p>Norfolk was now being evacuated and we were covering Huger's retreat.
When this was effected we were to receive the signal and to make our own
way up the James. Norfolk was in Federal hands, and Huger had
disappeared without signaling us, when our pilots informed us that
Harrison's Bar, which we must cross, drew only eighteen feet of water.
Under their advice, on the night of May 11th we lightened ship by
throwing overboard all our coal and ballast, thus raising our
unprotected decks above water. At last all was ready—and then we found
that the wind which had been blowing down-stream all day had swept the
water off the bar. When morning dawned the Federal fleet must discover
our defenseless condition, and defeat and capture were certain, for we
were now no longer an ironclad.</p>
<p>It was decided to abandon the vessel and set her on fire. We took the
<i>Merrimac</i> to the bight of Craney Island, and about midnight the work of
disembarking the crew began. We had but two boats, and it was sunrise
before our three hundred and fifty men were all ashore. Cotton waste and
trains of powder were strewn about the deck, and Executive Officer
Jones, who was the last to leave the ship, applied the slow match. Then
we marched silently through the woods to join Huger, fifteen miles away
at Suffolk.</p>
<p>Still unconquered, we hauled down our drooping colors, their laurels all
fresh and green, with mingled pride and grief, gave her to the flames,
and set the lambent fires roaring about the shotted guns. The slow
match, the magazine, and that last, deep, low, sullen, mournful boom
told our people, now far away on the march, that their gallant ship was
no more.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />