What countermeasures did warships have against torpedos, other than avoidance and the torpedo defence system. Were there any doctrinal methods to deal with live fish? You mentioned that a Japanese pilot dove into the sea into the path of a torpedo headed for the Taiho, were there any other examples of this? How did rough waters and tides affect the accuracy of torpedos? Lastly, why weren't torpedos shot out of the water with secondary guns or AA?
While absorbing the lessons in this video I had this thought. What would have happened if the Union navy had decided to concede the coast to the CSS Virginia and adopted a distant blockade similar to the one used by the British in WW1? The Union ships could have intercepted any Confederate ships trying to get through and dared the Virginia to come on out and fight on the open sea. Would the CSS Virginia have been seaworthy enough to survive chasing ships at sea or remaining afloat after battle with Union steam frigates?
The Monitor was much more technologically advanced in terms of design, but I cannot imagine the terror of her crew having to operate such an unseaworthy craft. It VERY nearly sank on the way to Hampton Roads and ended up sinking that same year from the same cause (with 16 men and 4 officers still aboard). The CSS Virginia was a grossly underpowered barn-on-a-barge but when it came time for her to die, it was by logical suicide, with no losses to her crew.
@@jasoncarswell7458 To be fair, the MerriVirginiac was equally unseaworthy. It just had the good fortune of having been built in the same harbor it fought in. That's why they ended up blowing it up when they lost control of the harbor rather than sailing it to Charleston or Savannah or some other port to try and break the blockade there. They didn't think it could actually make it very far once it left gentle waters.
When looking at the designs of both _Monitor_ and _Virginia_ it's important to remember that breaking the blockade was not the only useful thing a shallow-draft ironclad could do in that area. Both Richmond and Washington DC sit on tributaries to the enormous Chesapeake Bay, which despite the name is an estuary with an average depth of just over 20 feet. So neither _Monitor_ nor _Virginia_ needed to dare even the Atlantic coast to raise absolute havoc; just gaining command of the Chesapeake would allow either side to maneuver near the other's capital with impunity.
The salvaged remains of a Merrimack style vessel are on display at Vicksburg, Mississippi... The data reads; Salvaged from the Mississippi / Yazoo Rivers... Viewing the firing distance from the top of the Confederate cannon outpost, down to the river, is amazing...
My favorite description of the start of the battle is as follows: “The Monitor sailed towards the Virginia, looking every bit like a small dog rushing to protect a tall stag from a lumbering bear.”
This is literally the most American naval battle I could ever imagine. They took the shit they had laying around and started raising hell with it. So American.
When you said, "The Congress was ineffective", for a moment I thought you were making commentary on our government. I soon realized you were talking about a ship.
Warships of this period had an effective lifespan of 5-10 years before they were rendered technologically obsolete by the rapidly expanding science of warship design, Dreadnought herself was obsolete withing 5 years of building by the super-dreadnought.
@@stacyhamilton2619 I've often said that if firearms had developed as quickly as aircraft did, the Mongol hordes would have been equipped with assault rifles. It's really shocking how quickly aircraft developed, even with two world wars to hurry them along.
@@therake8897 True; but even so, aircraft developed at a much faster rate. By the way, I imagine that the Spitfire would probably be useful in a close support/counterinsurgency role even today. Also, the B-52 and Tu-95 are only 16 years younger than the Spitfire, and are still in regular use by major militaries. The C-130 is only 18 years younger, and is not only still in use, but still in production! (obviously, the 'ages' I'm giving for these aircraft don't include things like avionics and weapons systems)
@@therake8897 I mean bolt actions are still obsolete. But semi-autos are totally not obsolete in war at all. Are assault rifles a lot better? Yeah but semi-autos are still pretty useful. But yeah the US has been using the AR-15 for almost 60 years now.
Virginia: less agile then a random glacier Also Virginia: "Dear Rose, our captain ordered us to turn the ship around and back to port, with some luck ill see you at Christmas, 2 years from now. With all my heart, your beloved sailor"
@@Cpt_Boony_Hat WOW!!! I never knew that our Republic, our Democracy, our home of the free, and the land of the brave, ever had a ship called "Dictator". If we ever have a USS Trump, we may as well call that Dictator, too.
@@michimatsch5862 if a video gets flagged for copyrighted material, you have an option to either: A) Dispute the claim (which 99% of the time never works because UA-cam is a massive pos that caters to the big companies and just get automated bot replies if you do) B) Have UA-cam cut out the section of the video which has the supposed "copyrighted material" which will removed the bit from the video entirely without deleting the entire video
"USS Galena - Possibly the single worst ironclad in history" - I am glad this already has a follow up episode, since this totally has me sold on finding out what went wrong
One of the great ironies of the period was that a Spanish inventor was attempting to sell a design for a double-hulled, dual powered wooden submarine - the Ictineo II. The vessel was designed to operate to depths of about 30 meters. It had two different kinds of engines, a regular steam powered engine for surface operations and a chemical engine that generated oxygen as a by-product of operation. The vessel could be trimmed by weights that could be run fore and aft as needed. It would great to see a discussion of this and why the US and British navies dismissed the idea,
The Americans had the Turtle during the Revolutionary War. I believe Robert Fulton designed and built a submarine in the 1820's. Southern engineers in Charleston came up with steam powered semi-submersible torpedo boats during the Civil War that were more practical than submariners. Those had a raised open superstructure that stayed above the water when the hull was submerged so the crew and firebox got plenty of air and the pilot a full view of his surroundings. It presented a small target that was difficult to see at night when those came up to spear a torpedo onto the side of a ship. Those would've been successful if the engineers had access to new steam engines since all they could find were worn out old ones discarded by industries. Those caught the attention of foreign navies since those could approach larger vessels with a small chance of being hit then being below the reach of their guns when closer to release a torpedo powered by compressed air.
I've visited The Mariner's Museum that has the Monitor replica and also has the raised Turret. I can confirm that it is open to the public (though you can't go inside), and that it's a great museum trip if you ever get the chance! They have nice mock-ups of the Virginia and the Monitor in the Museum as well, that you can actually go inside and experience for yourself.
I was stationed at the Naval Amphibous School at Little Creek, VA. in 1963-45. I worked in a building that we stated amphibious battles using models, a terrain model, slides and movie clips. We staged a recreation of the battle of Hampton roads as a special show. Models, narration , spot lights, civil war music. We had a great reception to the show. Lots of work and lots of fun.
Me and my wife watched this video and enjoyed it very much. My wife is the military history buff in our family, and she wanted me to pass on that this is the finest and most detailed depiction of this battle that she's ever seen or read.
@@kastandlee the movie "Ironclads" does a good job of describing this fight as well as the characters involved....seem to recall a earlier b&w film that also featured this fight...
Fun fact the design of the monitor was meant to present as small of a target as possible to maximize survival and when the turret is rounded to deflect shot and the pilot house is fairly small it really worked as you only had the turret as the biggest target to hit
Not entirely the same but an apt comparison is trying to shot a handgun in someones hands versus shooting a rifle in someones hands. Both tasks have challenges associated but that size difference certainly adds to the handguns favor in this thought process.
@@bagel4944 yes…but much of the European warships never saw combat, thus they’re relatively untested in battle damage.(idk much on any major naval combat between navies during the time period of the ironclads aside from Monitor vs Virginia. Correct me if I am wrong) but the fact that this being the first battle between two ironclads does warrant the saying as none of the European forces has had any chances.
My great grandfather was a chief petty officer aboard the 1880s Admiral class battleship HMS Howe. There is not a lot of information about this ship (and pre-Dreadnoughts in general) online but there were several innovations in turret / gun design and the total dependence on steam propulsion introduced around the time. I know that the Howe ran aground in Valletta Harbour and other pre-Dreadnoughts were involved in a collision during maneuvers in the Mediterranean during this period resulting in a great loss of life. The pre-Dreadnought era could be an interesting period for review from a number of perspectives.
And it's even more fitting with the Monitor basically being a littoral combat ship, since taking that thing into open water would be an...interesting proposition, as its fate showed
Jolly interesting details of the construction sequence of CSS Virginia and reasons for such a strange design. I never had any real knowledge of naval ship design, armour, armament or tactics until I subscribed to this channel. It is very educational and an eye-opener, thank you!
Ages ago I read a first hand account of a sailor abourd Virginia who claimed the gunnery officer yelled in frustration on no dammage done, "DAMN! I'D DO MORE DAMMAGE IF I SNAPPED MY FINGERS EVERY 2 MINUTES!"
I also read an account of the helmsman yelling back up to the Command Officers. When he was ordered to turn tighter. Ask the cheese box if they could tie to on to us so we can swing around. If it would help.
Wonderful as always, Uncle Drach! When you said "With that, the first ironclad against ironclad engagement in history had begun", I literally got goosebumps remembering Jutland, Guadalcanal and Leyte Gulf.
@@carmium That's about exactly it. Larson said himself he was never very good at drawing,but his off kilter images no one else thought of were just choice.
Her armor wasn't thick enough to reliably block shots, basically, so she got shot up by a shore battery. Saying she's the worst ironclad in history is a wild exaggeration. There were plenty of half-assed ironclads that were built during the war that were MUCH worse. The Monitor was even in that same battle and couldn't actually engage the battery because her guns wouldn't elevate high enough.
The full size Monitor replica is open for the public at the Mariners' Museum and Park in Newport News, VA. From what I understand, it was a graduation project for the shipyard's Apprentice School.
Excellent. Spent 4+ years of my life in Hampton Roads in the U.S. Navy. Drove across the bridge/tunnel many times, almost every day (I either lived in Hampton or Newport News as my ship was originally in Newport New shipbuilding when I first checked in). I wasn't a lifer, but I still enjoy Navy stuff. Proud of my time served.
....only bridge I ever crossed that featured a sign that said "bon voyage".....a little scary out on that sucker at night...kept worrying about a ship going off-course and looming-up out of the darkness.....
Thank You for the informative video. Seems in hindsight it would of been best if Virginia ignored the Monitor and continued to attack the blockade ships.
The suggestion that US industry was primitive misses the mark by a couple decades. By 1860 the US had laid more than half of all the railroad track in the world, and had given birth to the American System of Manufactures (a term coined in Britain). The Monitor was built in 100 days by using modularity and subcontractcing in a feat of industry that would have been difficult for any shipyard on Earth.
US industry could produce iron to certain thicknesses in vast quantities but in early 1860 was not capable of producing the full thickness single armour plate such as that used on Warrior or Gloire. It was also not capable of producing the steel shot that RN guns were being issued with. As was the nature of the Industrial Revolution the US would catch up in these regards before 1870, eventually of course it would he the US that invented Harvey steel armour. In 1860-65 the US industry could make things in bulk but was not generally on the cutting edge of tech.
Thank you for the excellent response. I see your point. But I do think you are tilting your attention too much toward naval developments. I think already by 1860 that British observers were noting how “peculiar” the American industrial revolution was compared to their own. There was much more a flavor of everyone pulling in a different direction at once. America was a leading developer of the mechanization of agriculture, the creation of labor saving devices for the home (such as the consumer-household sewing machine), and of firearms. A delegation from the US Armory displayed interchangeability of American rifles to a Parlimentary committee. After disassembling 10 rifles made in ten different years and reassembling 10 functional rifles at random, the British investigators ordered machine tools from the American supplier at once.
@@seth1422 I agree with the comparison, generally speaking (although there always exceptions) European industry of the late 19th century was generally more technically advanced, but American industry was catching up and was demonstrating increasingly the ability to mass manufacture items on a vast scale that most European powers couldn't hope to match. Eg overtaking France as a naval power within a couple of decades of starting, despite France being one of the larger European countries and a major naval power for nearly a millennium prior.
I was literally laughing out loud at the description of the monitor’s crew giving up on the turret control and just letting it spin freely while shooting 😂
Good stuff! I would love to see an animation of the Monitor turret action. Anyone know of such a thing? I've also wondered why the Virginia didn't, at some point, just ignore the Monitor and continue blowing up wooden blockaders.
the Virginia also kept firing at the Minesotta. There's one site with details on how the Minesotta captain described the battle. He almost ordered the Minesotta burned to prevent it falling to confederate hands.
When this popped up, I initially ignored it, thinking I already knew all about this battle and it would take up more time than I'd want to spend on it. Glad I changed my mind, and appreciate that this was 'more' rather than a 'less'.
Drachinifel, I loved your unbiased analysis of "The Battle of Hampton Roads." I was born in the State of Tennessee, but classify myself and "an American." This particular battle is classified from Civil War historians (and rightly so) as "a Draw." Both sides achieved their intentions and objectives, but with no clear decisive winner. I love your Channel! Keep Up The Good Work.
@CipiRipi00 The simple answer is that neither vessel had guns powerful enough to punch through the iron armor of the other. The Monitor’s guns might have been able to do so if Worden had used a full 30-pound charge. But the guns had been proofed only to take a 15-pound charge, and he did not want to risk an explosion of the breech in the confined turret. Each captain also tried to ram the other, but the Virginia had lost is ram inside the doomed Cumberland, and in any event it was too slow (top speed 5 knots) to ram the nimble Monitor. The Monitor did manage to ram the Virginia, but to no serious effect. In short, neither ship could seriously wound the other. Neither Ironclad won the battle.
@CipiRipi00 You claimed it was a Victory for the Union. Military Historians agree that The Battle of Hampton Roads was a Draw. I do believe that they're in a better position to judge that rather than you or I. I have to defer to their judgment. Not yours. If you have a problem with that, then I'd suggest that you debate them over the issue. In fact, after the Battle of Hampton Roads, both the Union and Confederacy claimed "Victory." Neither was the case. "Victory" would've come if either Ironclad had been significantly disabled or destroyed during the Battle. That didn't really occur. However, it did signal the end of wooden warships. Just as the Aircraft Carrier signaled the end of Age of Battleships.
@CipiRipi00 I'm "wrong?" I based my opinion what military historians (and you yourself pointed out earlier: "Tactically, it was a draw.") at it was "a draw." In fact, reread the your initial comment to me. Man, you can't even remember what you've written. Geeeezzzzzzz! Perhaps, you'd like to go back and re-edit your initial comment. Have Fun.
Having been on the propeller salvage team, and a history student (retired US Navy), you did a fairly good job, but it was the Navy that removed the advantages of the ship. First was the moronic stuffing of packing under the turret! In the trip past NJ, the packing was partially washed out giving horrible flooding that was only saved by the advanced steam driven bilge pump! When they lost the pump operations off NC later, they lost the ship. Second off, the turret engine was jammed into complete rotating after the battle started and that was eventually found to be a major advantage as it did pretty much spread any damage around while the Virginia did have some major damage to the support beams inside the casemate which might have eventually allowed the armor to break apart. At least one picture was out of order as the slope around the pilot house on Monitor was installed in the post battle shipyard. I do have additional details of other information if you like. (T. MacPherson, MM1(SS) Ret., Chief Eng. Merchant Marine Ret., NNSYDDCO Quality Control Coordinator)
A very informative presentation! This is the Civil War battle that first fascinated me as a young boy. Though I grew up in South Georgia, my dad was U.S. Navy from WWII, and I cheered for the cheesebox.
Nearby, in the city I was born in, is the wartime home of Raphael Semmes, as well as a late 19th century statue of him. During the Union's struggles to capture this city in 1864-1865, three Monitors were lost to Raines' keg mines and remote detonated riverine mines. USS Tecumseh in the bay, USS Osage and USS Milwaukee ( a double turret Monitor) in the rivers. Two "tin clads" , armed and converted commercial paddle wheelers, were also lost: USS Ida and USS Rodolph. CSS Hunley was built in this city also, and shipped by train to Charleston.
Excellent. Dahlgren's "bottle gun" referred to the significant increase in wall thickness (beginning near the trunnions for maximum blast protection), and tapering away toward the muzzle (where the reduced gas pressure required less material, and saved weight).
The term "Monitor" would be reused approximately 100 years later in Vietnam, when the United States would heavily modify LCMs to make them into shallow-water troop transports ("Tango" boats) and mini-battleships: Monitors of the Brown Water Navy.
Magnificent. Superbly told, thoroughly researched (no mean feat considering the volume of myth and misquoting that's dogged these ships over the past century), entirely factual, and delivered with a hilarious sardonic dry wit. This is why I love this channel. Bravo, sir. Bravo. If I may humbly slip in a possible request for a future Ship Guide, what exactly was so wrong with USS Galena to make her possibly the worst ironclad warship ever build?
I just stumbled upon your channel by virtue of UA-cam suggestions. I'm only at the 6 minute mark but you've already gotten yourself a new subscriber. :)
To fulfill her main mission, the Virginia should have just ignored the Monitor and attacked the remaining Union ships in the channel, breaking the blockade.
Wouldn't have worked that way. The Monitor was bravely bulldogging for the stricken wood-clad USS Minnesota, guarding her and daring the Virginia to attack. The Virginia was incredibly slow and poorly maneuverable. There was no question of going AROUND the Monitor; if they wanted to keep killing that day, they'd have to go through her. And that turned out to be a mutually destructive exercise in futility. Tactical victory: Monitor. Too bad her crew had so little time to appreciate the matter before they drowned horribly in their leaky prototype boat.
YES! YES! Tom. Always wondered why the confederacy didnt employ this tactic! Shoot me shoot me! cant hurt me! sez the Monitor; but I can still sink your damn wooden vessels!
Lovely job! Thank you for going through the details of CSS Virginia and USS Monitor design as so many don't really know and clearing up some of the misconceptions of the battle, there are so many sources and even books that claim that Virginia had railroad rails laid along the superstructure of the ship as armour, many other do a scant job at explaining what actually happened in the battle of Hampton Roads.
Great video! Thanks so much for the detailed descriptions of the Monitor's machinery. The Battle of Hampton Roads was one of those turning point/"What if?" moments. If CSS Virginia has broken the blockade. . .
the Union had 500 ships...plenty of replacements that would have deployed further out in rough water...the real scare was that it would sail up the Potomac...
I’m surprised you didn’t mention the battle of Drewery’s Bluff which involves the Monitor. A small fleet of ships attempting to sail up the James River in order to directly shell Richmond. The confederate shore battery, high up on Drewery’s Bluff was able to repulse all of the Union ships, including Monitor, mostly due to not being able to sufficiently depress their guns enough to return fire. Monitor having to withdraw because of the huge amount of water thrown up by near misses ended up partially flooding into the air intakes for the boiler room.
I find it funny how these are "5 minute guides (more or less)" and I haven't seen one, yet, less than 19 minutes. :) Most are a half-hour to upwards of an hour. :) (That said, amazingly well done and informative, and I'm loving watching them).
A full scale model of the Monitor, plus two hundred tons of salvaged items from the wreck of the original Monitor, can be viewed at The Mariners Museum, Newport News, VA any day of the week.
My great-great-grandfather fought against the Monitor - not on the Virginia, but at the battle of Drewry's Bluff two months later when a Union flotilla led by the Monitor (and also including the Galena) tried to force the passage of the James River to support McClellan's advance on Richmond and were stopped by the Confederate battery at Fort Darling on top of the bluff for which the battle was named. The bluff is nearly 200 feet high and the Monitor couldn't elevate her guns enough to hit the Rebel batteries from close range, so she had to stand off at a considerable distance and her fire had little effect on the Confederates, while the Confederate fire inflicted serious damage on the Galena and the other smaller Union vessels. The fort's earthworks and several of the Confederate guns (which may have been salvaged from the Virginia) are still there as part of the Richmond Battlefield National Park.
Greetings Drachinifel I have had a passionate interest in ironclads, especially the Monitor and Virginia, since my junior high school days in the mid 60s. A couple years ago, I even put together a 120-page encyclopedic book, with illustrations, listing all the major ironclads and types, with all their specs, complete with a history and chapter introductions, just because I couldn't find one comprehensive enough to purchase! I must commend you for the absolute finest presentation of the Battle of Hampton Roads I have ever heard. Accurate, informative, compelling, with a dash of droll humor. Very engaging. I only stopped to see this on a whim. Didn't intend to spare more than a minute watching, but stayed to the very end. Bravo! The graphics were also excellent. It can be very difficult to select the proper image to match what is being described, but you were spot on. Keep up the great work.
Interesting that you show the last picture as a picture of USS Cairo. Ive seen her in real life down here at her museum in vicksburg. Interesting fact that her museum is the only remaining example of an US built ironclad in the world, and one of only two remaining iron clads in the world, that I know of, the other being the Huascar in Chile. Another interesting note is that USS Cairo was the first ship in the world to be sunk by a remote detonated mine. :) Great video Drach.
@@oceanhome2023 Id assume so. USS Cairo sunk and is still somehow the only original US Ironclad haha. (There is another one thats a iron clad ram, so it doesnt really count IMO)
A Suggestion(s): the Mexican ships Guadalupe and Montezuma(spelling?) They had a rather "difficult" time with the navy of the Republic of Texas around 1840.
1843 Naval Battle Of Campeche, later engraved into the cylinders of Colt's Navy revolvers. 3.bp.blogspot.com/-4phBzAX36w0/V9p5Jc0-JlI/AAAAAAAAFJk/opMRPO8YDLUpURGVgkQzevE1iifIgbYTQCEw/s1600/Colt%2BAd%2Bfrom%2BTW%2Bmag.jpg
Heres an idea for you: take a good example of a capital ship of an era. Something that could be considered the ”peak” of development. Make a separate video for its guns, armor/hull, engine etc, (maybe 4 to 5 depends how many good subjects there are), in which you go a little bit more into techical and such stuff. For example ”heated shot”, which gave me this idea, is something i’d like to learn more about. Not like millimeters and numbers, but cool details.
I'm not complaining. I usually don't follow American stuff, so I probably wouldn't have clicked on it if I had known who was fighting the battle... but wow... I've never learnt so much in half an hour or had so much fun learning it.
You know, these videos honestly give me a better understanding and insight into the history around the colonial and civil war eras in their entirety than any proper history class I've ever taken. Understanding the "tools" (ships,etc) and infrastructure was never a major topic we had covered in any detail. It had always been a focus on politics and generals for the most part. Including the ships, how they were built, the challenges surrounding that, and all other logistics and not least the reason why the ships are even there really gives a huge amount of perspective that I hadn't considered
This might be a good time to ask you to do the _USS Princeton._ She was designed by John Ericcson in 1842 and would have been a real game-changer if it hadn't been for the accident on her maiden voyage and the finger-pointing that followed. If you want to keep doing Civil War ironclads, though, _CSS Stonewall_ has a really interesting story!
The CSS Virginia was a brilliantly improvised design which turned not only upon armour but also a sloping casemate for its protection. The USS Monitor was the apex of American steam technology for the period, with 53 patentable inventions built into her machinery. But the battle was not only between these two prototype ironclads but also of handcraft v. industrial production. The Confederacy could only build by hand a comparatively small number of Virginia-type casemate ironclads while the Union could build several dozen one- and twin-turret monitors in shipyards. By the end of the war, more than 60 monitors were on the blockade line closing off every major Confederate port, while the Confederate Navy only managed to complete 24, powered by repurposed and underpowered machinery which limited their operations.
Something not often mentioned is the Virginia's use of sloped armor. I think its odd that not many historians mention the significance of Virginia's sloped armor, even it if wasn't known at the time the advantage it gave.
Everyone else: Finds something notable and entertaining in this excellent video Me: Wonders why the hell the specific body of water is named Hampton "Roads"
I would love to see a Des Moines video some day! My grandfather served on one during the Korean War and I think they're interesting as they were the last all-gun cruisers in service and really the pinnacle of American cruiser design in WW2 (in my biased opinion)
Fun fact: In Star Trek, the starships USS Monitor and USS Merrimac(k) both belong to the Nebula-class and have rarely seen adjacent registry numbers (NCC-61826 and NCC-61827 respectively) as a sort of bringing together of the names. There is no Starfleet USS Virginia though.
The monitor replica is open to the public, but you can only walk on top of it, AFAIK it’s just a metal block with no actual inside. There are tons of pieces of the actual ship under restoration that you can see in their lab.
Pinned post for Q&A :)
Drachinifel Q&A: where was the second airplane of the Graf Spee stowed? In parts below?
How plausible is Popular Mechanics 1940 "Battleship of the Future" concept such as in terms of design and combat viability?
What countermeasures did warships have against torpedos, other than avoidance and the torpedo defence system. Were there any doctrinal methods to deal with live fish? You mentioned that a Japanese pilot dove into the sea into the path of a torpedo headed for the Taiho, were there any other examples of this? How did rough waters and tides affect the accuracy of torpedos? Lastly, why weren't torpedos shot out of the water with secondary guns or AA?
Notable actions of the Soviet Navy during WW2 since this topic isn't nearly as discussed as other navies. Same goes for the French and the Dutch.
While absorbing the lessons in this video I had this thought.
What would have happened if the Union navy had decided to concede the coast to the CSS Virginia and adopted a distant blockade similar to the one used by the British in WW1?
The Union ships could have intercepted any Confederate ships trying to get through and dared the Virginia to come on out and fight on the open sea.
Would the CSS Virginia have been seaworthy enough to survive chasing ships at sea or remaining afloat after battle with Union steam frigates?
It's like watching two alcoholics try to knock each other out using only Hulk Hands.
underrated comment xD
Alzheimer's victims in a whorehouse 😂😅
The Monitor was much more technologically advanced in terms of design, but I cannot imagine the terror of her crew having to operate such an unseaworthy craft. It VERY nearly sank on the way to Hampton Roads and ended up sinking that same year from the same cause (with 16 men and 4 officers still aboard). The CSS Virginia was a grossly underpowered barn-on-a-barge but when it came time for her to die, it was by logical suicide, with no losses to her crew.
and later by effort inventing the nuclear bomb. So it worked out good for them.
@@jasoncarswell7458 To be fair, the MerriVirginiac was equally unseaworthy. It just had the good fortune of having been built in the same harbor it fought in. That's why they ended up blowing it up when they lost control of the harbor rather than sailing it to Charleston or Savannah or some other port to try and break the blockade there. They didn't think it could actually make it very far once it left gentle waters.
When looking at the designs of both _Monitor_ and _Virginia_ it's important to remember that breaking the blockade was not the only useful thing a shallow-draft ironclad could do in that area. Both Richmond and Washington DC sit on tributaries to the enormous Chesapeake Bay, which despite the name is an estuary with an average depth of just over 20 feet. So neither _Monitor_ nor _Virginia_ needed to dare even the Atlantic coast to raise absolute havoc; just gaining command of the Chesapeake would allow either side to maneuver near the other's capital with impunity.
Right, just that influence alone could determine the outcome of the war for both sides, not just naval domination but on land as well.
Proud to call the Chesapeake my home
The salvaged remains of a Merrimack style vessel are on display at Vicksburg, Mississippi...
The data reads; Salvaged from the Mississippi / Yazoo Rivers...
Viewing the firing distance from the top of the Confederate cannon outpost, down to the river, is amazing...
@@voxxpopuli1649 The _USS Cairo_. Sunk by a sea mine, then called torpedoes. Considerably smaller than the Merrimack, I think?
Yeah at that time there was no channel to run was there. Love the Chesapeake Bay
My favorite description of the start of the battle is as follows: “The Monitor sailed towards the Virginia, looking every bit like a small dog rushing to protect a tall stag from a lumbering bear.”
I remember reading this in elementary school, in the 1970's!
24:23 so they were literally 360 no-scoping the Virginia
Does this mean the union were the first to make the 360 no-scope?
Well doctors never had scopes in those days..they used there hands clamps to scope a virginia 😂😂😂
What do you mean 360?
Except instead of bass boosted dubstep, there was a rhythmic steam engine and at least one crew member beat-boxing to it.
No because there wasnt a scope installed to even use
This is literally the most American naval battle I could ever imagine.
They took the shit they had laying around and started raising hell with it. So American.
Also a lot of ships running aground, nearly sinking, and generally being at least as dangerous to their crews as to their enemies...
🤠
*Southern
All it's missing is an angle grinder.
Sounds kind of like an episode of the A-Team.
@Charlie Sthill Hey, Aryan master race does not need safety features!
"So how'd you get tinnitus?"
"I sat in a metal box and got shot at by cannons for hours."
I suppose you could call our Eastern Seaboard the Eastern Front.
"They say you served on the Monitor?"
"What?"
"They say you served on the Monitor!"
"What?"
"THEY SAY YOU SERVED ON THE MONITOR!"
"What?"
Grandpa was said to suffer the jitters. Today it's known better as PT stress. A bit like a concussion.
@@erikjarandson5458 I CAN'T HEAR YOU I SERVED ON THE MONITOR!
WHAT!?!
Upvoted for spinning seal... and the usual outstanding quality.
What's the name of that terminally happy theme music? It's so schloppy I was laughing uncontrollably.
@@tomservo5347 just search spinning seal
That was so unexpected and went on for an unusually hilarious amount of time.
16:12 The spinning seal is no more! UA-cam perfidy I say! A foul deed that must be decried.
I mean, still a good video though.
So that's what went missing.
All hail the battle-cheese!
Waves to the ship as it passes, spontaneously sinks
" Ironclad Attack! " "..Throw the CHEESE!!!!! " "... yea...!"
@@bskorupk Best. Throwback. Ever.
Weaponized Limburger cheese
Sounds like a name a Dutch ship would proudly bear.
When you said, "The Congress was ineffective", for a moment I thought you were making commentary on our government. I soon realized you were talking about a ship.
Why can't it be both? :P
Accurate for either
Craig Dillon or both?
I mean...that wouldn't be a wrong statement.
Both fairly accurate lol
5:30 I'd be pretty salty if someone burned my top.half too
Cameron Sours p
That was terrible. Upvoted.
After hearing about the rotation in use, I want to see the turret painted as a merry go round and sent to battle.
whenever the turret spins speakers should play "you spin me right round baby right round..."
Paint wouldn't last 🤷♂️
@Herbert Norkus I got it-paint it like a shooting gallery with ducks that go round and round.
Paint fake gunports on the opposite side. Let 'em wonder.
The turret was built very much like a typical carousel, with the entire thing being suspended from a central shaft.
I never realised this was only about 40 years before HMS Dreadnought was launched!
44 years. Wait until I tell you about what Orville saw happen to airplanes in the 44 years and 1 month between Dec 1903 and his death in Jan 1948.
Warships of this period had an effective lifespan of 5-10 years before they were rendered technologically obsolete by the rapidly expanding science of warship design, Dreadnought herself was obsolete withing 5 years of building by the super-dreadnought.
@@stacyhamilton2619 I've often said that if firearms had developed as quickly as aircraft did, the Mongol hordes would have been equipped with assault rifles. It's really shocking how quickly aircraft developed, even with two world wars to hurry them along.
@@therake8897 True; but even so, aircraft developed at a much faster rate. By the way, I imagine that the Spitfire would probably be useful in a close support/counterinsurgency role even today. Also, the B-52 and Tu-95 are only 16 years younger than the Spitfire, and are still in regular use by major militaries. The C-130 is only 18 years younger, and is not only still in use, but still in production! (obviously, the 'ages' I'm giving for these aircraft don't include things like avionics and weapons systems)
@@therake8897 I mean bolt actions are still obsolete. But semi-autos are totally not obsolete in war at all. Are assault rifles a lot better? Yeah but semi-autos are still pretty useful. But yeah the US has been using the AR-15 for almost 60 years now.
that turret sounds like the most frustrating thing to operate in even the best conditions
It was.
You thought it was Merrimac, but it was I, Virginia!
Why is the Iowa posting this
Irene Rivera Wisconsin actually
Both ships upon receiving each other’s fire:
*MUDA MUDA MUDA MUDAAA*
She was originally named Merrimac but was renamed Virginia when the Confederates rebuilt her
I kept thinking it was the Merrimack that was attacking the blockade. I totally forgot the confederates renamed it.
Virginia: less agile then a random glacier
Also Virginia: "Dear Rose, our captain ordered us to turn the ship around and back to port, with some luck ill see you at Christmas, 2 years from now. With all my heart, your beloved sailor"
Beware the harbor seal! It keeps going 'round and 'round!
Wait...are you implying the Monitor was adorable?
Of course. It's cute as a button.
I'd totally buy a Monitor plushie.
You see you people are why the USS Dictator was named Dictator instead of protector like we originally wanted to call it
@@Cpt_Boony_Hat WOW!!! I never knew that our Republic, our Democracy, our home of the free, and the land of the brave, ever had a ship called "Dictator".
If we ever have a USS Trump, we may as well call that Dictator, too.
@@craigkdillon It referred to invocation of emergency powers. Hitler, Stalin, Mao, and Pol Pot were the people who attached the stigma to the title.
16:12 - 16:37 This is why I love Drachinifel: Factually accurate, great attention to detail, and an incredible sense of humor.
That section got cut! :(
@@davidanderson8989 I know! I came to comments to decry that the spinning seal is no more!
@@mrmoore2050 I'm watching this for the first time and I guessed that that's what was originally there
Why was it cut though?
I didn't even know this was possible for an uploaded video (apart from deleting it and uploading it again).
@@michimatsch5862 if a video gets flagged for copyrighted material, you have an option to either:
A) Dispute the claim (which 99% of the time never works because UA-cam is a massive pos that caters to the big companies and just get automated bot replies if you do)
B) Have UA-cam cut out the section of the video which has the supposed "copyrighted material" which will removed the bit from the video entirely without deleting the entire video
USS Monitor: the deadliest merry-go-round in history.
"USS Galena - Possibly the single worst ironclad in history" - I am glad this already has a follow up episode, since this totally has me sold on finding out what went wrong
One of the great ironies of the period was that a Spanish inventor was attempting to sell a design for a double-hulled, dual powered wooden submarine - the Ictineo II. The vessel was designed to operate to depths of about 30 meters. It had two different kinds of engines, a regular steam powered engine for surface operations and a chemical engine that generated oxygen as a by-product of operation. The vessel could be trimmed by weights that could be run fore and aft as needed. It would great to see a discussion of this and why the US and British navies dismissed the idea,
The Americans had the Turtle during the Revolutionary War. I believe Robert Fulton designed and built a submarine in the 1820's. Southern engineers in Charleston came up with steam powered semi-submersible torpedo boats during the Civil War that were more practical than submariners. Those had a raised open superstructure that stayed above the water when the hull was submerged so the crew and firebox got plenty of air and the pilot a full view of his surroundings. It presented a small target that was difficult to see at night when those came up to spear a torpedo onto the side of a ship. Those would've been successful if the engineers had access to new steam engines since all they could find were worn out old ones discarded by industries. Those caught the attention of foreign navies since those could approach larger vessels with a small chance of being hit then being below the reach of their guns when closer to release a torpedo powered by compressed air.
I've visited The Mariner's Museum that has the Monitor replica and also has the raised Turret. I can confirm that it is open to the public (though you can't go inside), and that it's a great museum trip if you ever get the chance! They have nice mock-ups of the Virginia and the Monitor in the Museum as well, that you can actually go inside and experience for yourself.
The nearby Military Aviation Museum (MAM) is a jewel in its own right, albeit about…you know, flying machines.
only the rebs called the Virginia...to the rest of the world it's still the Merrimac...
@@frankpienkosky5688 But in CSS service, it IS the Virginia.
I was stationed at the Naval Amphibous School at Little Creek, VA. in 1963-45. I worked in a building that we stated amphibious battles using models, a terrain model, slides and movie clips. We staged a recreation of the battle of Hampton roads as a special show. Models, narration , spot lights, civil war music. We had a great reception to the show. Lots of work and lots of fun.
Me and my wife watched this video and enjoyed it very much. My wife is the military history buff in our family, and she wanted me to pass on that this is the finest and most detailed depiction of this battle that she's ever seen or read.
She should watch more of drach then. Him and mhv have helped to dispell a number of misconceptions the American school system taught.
@@kane357lynch She does watch a lot of his videos.
@@kastandlee the movie "Ironclads" does a good job of describing this fight as well as the characters involved....seem to recall a earlier b&w film that also featured this fight...
Fun fact the design of the monitor was meant to present as small of a target as possible to maximize survival and when the turret is rounded to deflect shot and the pilot house is fairly small it really worked as you only had the turret as the biggest target to hit
Not entirely the same but an apt comparison is trying to shot a handgun in someones hands versus shooting a rifle in someones hands. Both tasks have challenges associated but that size difference certainly adds to the handguns favor in this thought process.
Legend says, the moment they engaged each other every wooden and sailed warship in the world became obsolete.
Arguably the moment either one of them or really any passible ironclad was finished.
It was in 1859 when Gloire was launched
@@bagel4944 yes…but much of the European warships never saw combat, thus they’re relatively untested in battle damage.(idk much on any major naval combat between navies during the time period of the ironclads aside from Monitor vs Virginia. Correct me if I am wrong) but the fact that this being the first battle between two ironclads does warrant the saying as none of the European forces has had any chances.
@keegantripp1245 1866,the battle of lissa. Just 4 years later.
That's no legend. It's fact. The day of the iron clad was that very day. Look at world navies and what they do before our civil war was over ❤❤
upvoted because..the seal sought approval
My great grandfather was a chief petty officer aboard the 1880s Admiral class battleship HMS Howe. There is not a lot of information about this ship (and pre-Dreadnoughts in general) online but there were several innovations in turret / gun design and the total dependence on steam propulsion introduced around the time.
I know that the Howe ran aground in Valletta Harbour and other pre-Dreadnoughts were involved in a collision during maneuvers in the Mediterranean during this period resulting in a great loss of life. The pre-Dreadnought era could be an interesting period for review from a number of perspectives.
Howe interesting.
I'll see myself out now.
@@Why_are_you00 lol
11:37
I saw that.
My sides are in orbit.
And it's even more fitting with the Monitor basically being a littoral combat ship, since taking that thing into open water would be an...interesting proposition, as its fate showed
Yah and the Independence class is about as useful as the Galanea
@@Cpt_Boony_Hat I'm not entirely convinced they didn't mean "Ignoramus class"
I like you. I wish I had seen this earlier
LCS are a joke and a failure. Huge waste of taxpayer money.
Jolly interesting details of the construction sequence of CSS Virginia and reasons for such a strange design.
I never had any real knowledge of naval ship design, armour, armament or tactics until I subscribed to this channel. It is very educational and an eye-opener, thank you!
How the Virginia was made helped her a lot
Ages ago I read a first hand account of a sailor abourd Virginia who claimed the gunnery officer yelled in frustration on no dammage done, "DAMN! I'D DO MORE DAMMAGE IF I SNAPPED MY FINGERS EVERY 2 MINUTES!"
I also read an account of the helmsman yelling back up to the Command Officers. When he was ordered to turn tighter.
Ask the cheese box if they could tie to on to us so we can swing around. If it would help.
Wonderful as always, Uncle Drach! When you said "With that, the first ironclad against ironclad engagement in history had begun", I literally got goosebumps remembering Jutland, Guadalcanal and Leyte Gulf.
You are one heck of a funny historian. I like this style of episodes, a good amount of info on both the ships and the battle.
And there is no end to humor
Dear Dairy, Today we encountered battle cheese.
That needs to become a caption of a Gary Larson drawing.
@@paulmanson253 With a note to the milkman or something? "Dear Dairy..?"
@@carmium That's about exactly it. Larson said himself he was never very good at drawing,but his off kilter images no one else thought of were just choice.
It was a smoking gouda.
"GORGONZOLA, Creature from the East." 🐉
The world's one and only waterborne bumper car fight
"the battle cheese". That single line earned you a subscriber.
Well now you have to talk about the Galena
Her armor wasn't thick enough to reliably block shots, basically, so she got shot up by a shore battery. Saying she's the worst ironclad in history is a wild exaggeration. There were plenty of half-assed ironclads that were built during the war that were MUCH worse. The Monitor was even in that same battle and couldn't actually engage the battery because her guns wouldn't elevate high enough.
Absolutely no one and not a single soul:
Turret of the USS Monitor: You spin me right-round, baby right-round, like a record baby.
Watch out, here I come!
You are one of the finest historical documentarians on UA-cam. Thank you very much.
Thanks for another informative video
I had read about the half charge used by Monitor's guns. Thanks for clearing up the misconception.
seems i recall the 15 inch dahlgrens were eventually deployed in some of the later monitors
....little leery of those guns since the designer of the monitor had one blow up earlier killing the sec. of the Navy....
As a young naval architect I must say your videos are great. Working while listening to these has been great.
The full size Monitor replica is open for the public at the Mariners' Museum and Park in Newport News, VA. From what I understand, it was a graduation project for the shipyard's Apprentice School.
Excellent. Spent 4+ years of my life in Hampton Roads in the U.S. Navy. Drove across the bridge/tunnel many times, almost every day (I either lived in Hampton or Newport News as my ship was originally in Newport New shipbuilding when I first checked in). I wasn't a lifer, but I still enjoy Navy stuff. Proud of my time served.
....only bridge I ever crossed that featured a sign that said "bon voyage".....a little scary out on that sucker at night...kept worrying about a ship going off-course and looming-up out of the darkness.....
...every day?...those tolls aren't cheap...
27:00
"You retreated first!"
"You retreated second!"
Thank You for the informative video. Seems in hindsight it would of been best if Virginia ignored the Monitor and continued to attack the blockade ships.
The suggestion that US industry was primitive misses the mark by a couple decades. By 1860 the US had laid more than half of all the railroad track in the world, and had given birth to the American System of Manufactures (a term coined in Britain). The Monitor was built in 100 days by using modularity and subcontractcing in a feat of industry that would have been difficult for any shipyard on Earth.
US industry could produce iron to certain thicknesses in vast quantities but in early 1860 was not capable of producing the full thickness single armour plate such as that used on Warrior or Gloire. It was also not capable of producing the steel shot that RN guns were being issued with.
As was the nature of the Industrial Revolution the US would catch up in these regards before 1870, eventually of course it would he the US that invented Harvey steel armour.
In 1860-65 the US industry could make things in bulk but was not generally on the cutting edge of tech.
Thank you for the excellent response. I see your point.
But I do think you are tilting your attention too much toward naval developments. I think already by 1860 that British observers were noting how “peculiar” the American industrial revolution was compared to their own. There was much more a flavor of everyone pulling in a different direction at once. America was a leading developer of the mechanization of agriculture, the creation of labor saving devices for the home (such as the consumer-household sewing machine), and of firearms. A delegation from the US Armory displayed interchangeability of American rifles to a Parlimentary committee. After disassembling 10 rifles made in ten different years and reassembling 10 functional rifles at random, the British investigators ordered machine tools from the American supplier at once.
@@seth1422 I agree with the comparison, generally speaking (although there always exceptions) European industry of the late 19th century was generally more technically advanced, but American industry was catching up and was demonstrating increasingly the ability to mass manufacture items on a vast scale that most European powers couldn't hope to match. Eg overtaking France as a naval power within a couple of decades of starting, despite France being one of the larger European countries and a major naval power for nearly a millennium prior.
@@seth1422 Do you know the name of the rifle they used for the demonstration? I would like to know.
It was the Springfield model 1842. The rifles in question were manufactured from 1844 to 1853.
I was literally laughing out loud at the description of the monitor’s crew giving up on the turret control and just letting it spin freely while shooting 😂
The whole battle must've been loopey. A nonstop comedy of errors.
We have cool new ships.
Oh wow cool awesome great yeah.
Do we know how to use it?
Of course, silly, gun go boom.
Good stuff! I would love to see an animation of the Monitor turret action. Anyone know of such a thing? I've also wondered why the Virginia didn't, at some point, just ignore the Monitor and continue blowing up wooden blockaders.
the Virginia also kept firing at the Minesotta. There's one site with details on how the Minesotta captain described the battle. He almost ordered the Minesotta burned to prevent it falling to confederate hands.
The mariners museum has a model of the turret and its steam propulsion drive.
Virginia: *Enters Battle*
Cumberland: "Why do I hear Boss music?"
Great video. Congrats on 30k subscribers!
RIGHT ON!! This is why i love this channel.. IRON CLADS very few surface warfare channels talk about these
16.24 -Wow, I've never seen an Icelandic warship before.
You may not believe it, but Icelandic patrol boats won the Cod Wars against the might of the Royal Navy.
16:24
That has to be the most hilarious naval battle in history.
This was March 9, 1862. I watch the video March 9, 2019.
157 years ago, to the day.
No that is not right
When this popped up, I initially ignored it, thinking I already knew all about this battle and it would take up more time than I'd want to spend on it. Glad I changed my mind, and appreciate that this was 'more' rather than a 'less'.
This was wonderfull! I learned so much I never knew I did not know. And your humor and high polish of the video made it extra enjoyable. Than you!
I also never knew i never knew this..but now im glad i know i never knew this but now i know 👍😂
Drachinifel, I loved your unbiased analysis of "The Battle of Hampton Roads." I was born in the State of Tennessee, but classify myself and "an American." This particular battle is classified from Civil War historians (and rightly so) as "a Draw." Both sides achieved their intentions and objectives, but with no clear decisive winner. I love your Channel! Keep Up The Good Work.
@CipiRipi00 The simple answer is that neither vessel had guns powerful enough to punch through the iron armor of the other. The Monitor’s guns might have been able to do so if Worden had used a full 30-pound charge. But the guns had been proofed only to take a 15-pound charge, and he did not want to risk an explosion of the breech in the confined turret. Each captain also tried to ram the other, but the Virginia had lost is ram inside the doomed Cumberland, and in any event it was too slow (top speed 5 knots) to ram the nimble Monitor. The Monitor did manage to ram the Virginia, but to no serious effect. In short, neither ship could seriously wound the other. Neither Ironclad won the battle.
@CipiRipi00 You claimed it was a Victory for the Union. Military Historians agree that The Battle of Hampton Roads was a Draw. I do believe that they're in a better position to judge that rather than you or I. I have to defer to their judgment. Not yours. If you have a problem with that, then I'd suggest that you debate them over the issue. In fact, after the Battle of Hampton Roads, both the Union and Confederacy claimed "Victory." Neither was the case. "Victory" would've come if either Ironclad had been significantly disabled or destroyed during the Battle. That didn't really occur. However, it did signal the end of wooden warships. Just as the Aircraft Carrier signaled the end of Age of Battleships.
@CipiRipi00 I'm "wrong?" I based my opinion what military historians (and you yourself pointed out earlier: "Tactically, it was a draw.") at it was "a draw." In fact, reread the your initial comment to me. Man, you can't even remember what you've written. Geeeezzzzzzz! Perhaps, you'd like to go back and re-edit your initial comment. Have Fun.
@CipiRipi00 Sorry. Did you say something????? I was watching paint dry.
Having been on the propeller salvage team, and a history student (retired US Navy), you did a fairly good job, but it was the Navy that removed the advantages of the ship. First was the moronic stuffing of packing under the turret! In the trip past NJ, the packing was partially washed out giving horrible flooding that was only saved by the advanced steam driven bilge pump! When they lost the pump operations off NC later, they lost the ship. Second off, the turret engine was jammed into complete rotating after the battle started and that was eventually found to be a major advantage as it did pretty much spread any damage around while the Virginia did have some major damage to the support beams inside the casemate which might have eventually allowed the armor to break apart. At least one picture was out of order as the slope around the pilot house on Monitor was installed in the post battle shipyard. I do have additional details of other information if you like. (T. MacPherson, MM1(SS) Ret., Chief Eng. Merchant Marine Ret., NNSYDDCO Quality Control Coordinator)
A very informative presentation! This is the Civil War battle that first fascinated me as a young boy. Though I grew up in South Georgia, my dad was U.S. Navy from WWII, and I cheered for the cheesebox.
Nearby, in the city I was born in, is the wartime home of Raphael Semmes, as well as a late 19th century statue of him. During the Union's struggles to capture this city in 1864-1865, three Monitors were lost to Raines' keg mines and remote detonated riverine mines. USS Tecumseh in the bay, USS Osage and USS Milwaukee ( a double turret Monitor) in the rivers. Two "tin clads" , armed and converted commercial paddle wheelers, were also lost: USS Ida and USS Rodolph. CSS Hunley was built in this city also, and shipped by train to Charleston.
Excellent.
Dahlgren's "bottle gun" referred to the significant increase in wall thickness (beginning near the trunnions for maximum blast protection), and tapering away toward the muzzle (where the reduced gas pressure required less material, and saved weight).
The term "Monitor" would be reused approximately 100 years later in Vietnam, when the United States would heavily modify LCMs to make them into shallow-water troop transports ("Tango" boats) and mini-battleships: Monitors of the Brown Water Navy.
Fantastic video. Drach's dry humour is on full display. My favorite Patreon :)
Magnificent. Superbly told, thoroughly researched (no mean feat considering the volume of myth and misquoting that's dogged these ships over the past century), entirely factual, and delivered with a hilarious sardonic dry wit. This is why I love this channel. Bravo, sir. Bravo.
If I may humbly slip in a possible request for a future Ship Guide, what exactly was so wrong with USS Galena to make her possibly the worst ironclad warship ever build?
She is on the list :)
@@Drachinifel at least you refer to her as 'she' now. Nice 😁
I just stumbled upon your channel by virtue of UA-cam suggestions. I'm only at the 6 minute mark but you've already gotten yourself a new subscriber. :)
To fulfill her main mission, the Virginia should have just ignored the Monitor and attacked the remaining Union ships in the channel, breaking the blockade.
@@couterei.1953 Are you a virgin?
I'm not really interested. I'm just using it as a general term of abuse.
Wouldn't have worked that way. The Monitor was bravely bulldogging for the stricken wood-clad USS Minnesota, guarding her and daring the Virginia to attack. The Virginia was incredibly slow and poorly maneuverable. There was no question of going AROUND the Monitor; if they wanted to keep killing that day, they'd have to go through her. And that turned out to be a mutually destructive exercise in futility. Tactical victory: Monitor. Too bad her crew had so little time to appreciate the matter before they drowned horribly in their leaky prototype boat.
Nikolaj Winther What the hell is that discussion here
i dont think the merrimac could have effectively ignored the monitor and survived.
YES! YES! Tom. Always wondered why the confederacy didnt employ this tactic! Shoot me shoot me! cant hurt me! sez the Monitor; but I can still sink your damn wooden vessels!
All good things, start with a questionable plan, that is actually pretty useful. Just look at the first tanks.
Intro Sequence: 5 min guide to warships ww1-ww2
Time Bar and Title: AM I A JOKE TO YOU?
Lovely job! Thank you for going through the details of CSS Virginia and USS Monitor design as so many don't really know and clearing up some of the misconceptions of the battle, there are so many sources and even books that claim that Virginia had railroad rails laid along the superstructure of the ship as armour, many other do a scant job at explaining what actually happened in the battle of Hampton Roads.
The come at me bro fight that eroded into strategies involving reach arounds and wedgies
Rather dirty and cunning.
Great video! Thanks so much for the detailed descriptions of the Monitor's machinery. The Battle of Hampton Roads was one of those turning point/"What if?" moments. If CSS Virginia has broken the blockade. . .
the Union had 500 ships...plenty of replacements that would have deployed further out in rough water...the real scare was that it would sail up the Potomac...
The joy (or sigh of relief) when you invent Ironclads in Civilization :).
They do move slower then frigates and privateers though Civ 5 stats will say
And then lose your first one attacking a phalanx along the coast.
@@kemarisite I don't let mine do such dirty work :D
Submarines vs sail ships....
Great video, very informative, the fact that Monitor was built so fast and worked at all is amazing. How bout' Css Hunley next?
Actually the Hunley was not a CSS, the ship was run by the Army and not the Navy so was not a Confederate States Ship.
word is they had trouble getting the Monitor out of New York harbor...thing was zig-zagging all over the place....
I’m surprised you didn’t mention the battle of Drewery’s Bluff which involves the Monitor.
A small fleet of ships attempting to sail up the James River in order to directly shell Richmond. The confederate shore battery, high up on Drewery’s Bluff was able to repulse all of the Union ships, including Monitor, mostly due to not being able to sufficiently depress their guns enough to return fire.
Monitor having to withdraw because of the huge amount of water thrown up by near misses ended up partially flooding into the air intakes for the boiler room.
I find it funny how these are "5 minute guides (more or less)" and I haven't seen one, yet, less than 19 minutes. :) Most are a half-hour to upwards of an hour. :) (That said, amazingly well done and informative, and I'm loving watching them).
It’s in Football Minutes.
Enjoyed this video, which equals @drachinifel's battle of Samar video for humor and historical significance for the U.S.
A full scale model of the Monitor, plus two hundred tons of salvaged items from the wreck of the original Monitor, can be viewed at The Mariners Museum, Newport News, VA any day of the week.
OwO
My great-great-grandfather fought against the Monitor - not on the Virginia, but at the battle of Drewry's Bluff two months later when a Union flotilla led by the Monitor (and also including the Galena) tried to force the passage of the James River to support McClellan's advance on Richmond and were stopped by the Confederate battery at Fort Darling on top of the bluff for which the battle was named. The bluff is nearly 200 feet high and the Monitor couldn't elevate her guns enough to hit the Rebel batteries from close range, so she had to stand off at a considerable distance and her fire had little effect on the Confederates, while the Confederate fire inflicted serious damage on the Galena and the other smaller Union vessels. The fort's earthworks and several of the Confederate guns (which may have been salvaged from the Virginia) are still there as part of the Richmond Battlefield National Park.
Thank
You so much for getting rid of the robot voice I absolutely love the voice now
Even if you’re just using new high tech robot voices
Greetings Drachinifel
I have had a passionate interest in ironclads, especially the Monitor and Virginia, since my junior high school days in the mid 60s. A couple years ago, I even put together a 120-page encyclopedic book, with illustrations, listing all the major ironclads and types, with all their specs, complete with a history and chapter introductions, just because I couldn't find one comprehensive enough to purchase!
I must commend you for the absolute finest presentation of the Battle of Hampton Roads I have ever heard. Accurate, informative, compelling, with a dash of droll humor. Very engaging. I only stopped to see this on a whim. Didn't intend to spare more than a minute watching, but stayed to the very end. Bravo!
The graphics were also excellent. It can be very difficult to select the proper image to match what is being described, but you were spot on. Keep up the great work.
Great series! This will form a great reference to people interested in this sort of thing. Well done!
Interesting that you show the last picture as a picture of USS Cairo. Ive seen her in real life down here at her museum in vicksburg. Interesting fact that her museum is the only remaining example of an US built ironclad in the world, and one of only two remaining iron clads in the world, that I know of, the other being the Huascar in Chile. Another interesting note is that USS Cairo was the first ship in the world to be sunk by a remote detonated mine. :) Great video Drach.
Very interesting! I have been on the Huascar in Chile, it was a little more successful in battle
@@oceanhome2023 Id assume so. USS Cairo sunk and is still somehow the only original US Ironclad haha. (There is another one thats a iron clad ram, so it doesnt really count IMO)
HMS Warrior is still around, although she spent over 50 years as an oil jetty before she was restored.
A Suggestion(s): the Mexican ships Guadalupe and Montezuma(spelling?) They had a rather "difficult" time with the navy of the Republic of Texas around 1840.
1843 Naval Battle Of Campeche, later engraved into the cylinders of Colt's Navy revolvers. 3.bp.blogspot.com/-4phBzAX36w0/V9p5Jc0-JlI/AAAAAAAAFJk/opMRPO8YDLUpURGVgkQzevE1iifIgbYTQCEw/s1600/Colt%2BAd%2Bfrom%2BTW%2Bmag.jpg
Prepare the battle cheese !!!!!! Love your video Drach…..you always do amazing work. Please keep it up and I look forward to always your videos.
At 16:22 I laughed so hard for almost the entirety of the rest of the video...
Heres an idea for you: take a good example of a capital ship of an era. Something that could be considered the ”peak” of development. Make a separate video for its guns, armor/hull, engine etc, (maybe 4 to 5 depends how many good subjects there are), in which you go a little bit more into techical and such stuff. For example ”heated shot”, which gave me this idea, is something i’d like to learn more about. Not like millimeters and numbers, but cool details.
I think for being one of the first Monitors, they did a ok job with the tech they had. Id like to see a episide of later ironclads
built in 100 days...something to remember
"The fact that ducks spend much of their in in the water on the sea or river bottoms escaped him.
Five minute guide*
36 minutes long
It beats missing the details.
I'm not complaining. I usually don't follow American stuff, so I probably wouldn't have clicked on it if I had known who was fighting the battle... but wow... I've never learnt so much in half an hour or had so much fun learning it.
Five minute guide (more or less)
Five minute guide to the ships of WWI and WWII, no less.
The best concise detailed description of the ships and the battle in a short vid. Well done.
You know, these videos honestly give me a better understanding and insight into the history around the colonial and civil war eras in their entirety than any proper history class I've ever taken. Understanding the "tools" (ships,etc) and infrastructure was never a major topic we had covered in any detail. It had always been a focus on politics and generals for the most part.
Including the ships, how they were built, the challenges surrounding that, and all other logistics and not least the reason why the ships are even there really gives a huge amount of perspective that I hadn't considered
This might be a good time to ask you to do the _USS Princeton._ She was designed by John Ericcson in 1842 and would have been a real game-changer if it hadn't been for the accident on her maiden voyage and the finger-pointing that followed. If you want to keep doing Civil War ironclads, though, _CSS Stonewall_ has a really interesting story!
You mean the "Stærkodder" ;-)
...first ten minutes of "Sahara" is worth a look
The CSS Virginia was a brilliantly improvised design which turned not only upon armour but also a sloping casemate for its protection. The USS Monitor was the apex of American steam technology for the period, with 53 patentable inventions built into her machinery. But the battle was not only between these two prototype ironclads but also of handcraft v. industrial production. The Confederacy could only build by hand a comparatively small number of Virginia-type casemate ironclads while the Union could build several dozen one- and twin-turret monitors in shipyards. By the end of the war, more than 60 monitors were on the blockade line closing off every major Confederate port, while the Confederate Navy only managed to complete 24, powered by repurposed and underpowered machinery which limited their operations.
Something not often mentioned is the Virginia's use of sloped armor. I think its odd that not many historians mention the significance of Virginia's sloped armor, even it if wasn't known at the time the advantage it gave.
Castles have sloped Armour. It was nothing new.
Tumblehome
Fascinating. This is the first time I have heard of this battle, and the ships involved. Truly pivotal in the development of modern naval warfare.
Everyone else: Finds something notable and entertaining in this excellent video
Me: Wonders why the hell the specific body of water is named Hampton "Roads"
I would love to see a Des Moines video some day! My grandfather served on one during the Korean War and I think they're interesting as they were the last all-gun cruisers in service and really the pinnacle of American cruiser design in WW2 (in my biased opinion)
Fun fact: In Star Trek, the starships USS Monitor and USS Merrimac(k) both belong to the Nebula-class and have rarely seen adjacent registry numbers (NCC-61826 and NCC-61827 respectively) as a sort of bringing together of the names. There is no Starfleet USS Virginia though.
The monitor replica is open to the public, but you can only walk on top of it, AFAIK it’s just a metal block with no actual inside.
There are tons of pieces of the actual ship under restoration that you can see in their lab.
Now see, this is how history should be taught.
Happy you set things straight on the first turret warship, as always I learn something new from someone who has a degree in the naval engineering