- CSS Texas
The CSS "Texas" (Confederate States Ship "Texas"), was a twin-screw
ironclad ram of theConfederate Navy , named for the state ofTexas . She was sister ship to CSS "Columbia".History
The keel for the CSS Texas was laid down at
Richmond, Virginia . She was launched in January1865 . At the time ofRobert E. Lee 's evacuation of Richmond on3 April 1865 , she was left unfinished but intact in an outfitting berth at the Richmond Navy Yard, one of only two vessels which escaped destruction by the departing Confederate forces. Captured when the city fell the following day, the ironclad was taken into theUnited States Navy , but saw no service. "Texas" was laid up at Norfolk until15 October 1867 when she was sold to J.N. Leonard & Co. [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=ddgCAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA383&lpg=PA383&dq=J.+N.+Leonard+%26+Co&source=web&ots=QgbTX-F-Jb&sig=lyZYy7O4CyxsZrRgxI6ep0bGUJg&hl=en#PPA1014,M1 Price & Lee Directory (1899)] ] ofNew Haven, Connecticut .Design
From a technological view, the CSS Texas was one of a series of three 'Tennessee class' ironclads. (The other two being the CSS Tennessee II and
CSS Columbia ) which embodied the latest developments in Confederate shipbuilding technology. Hercasemate was diamond-shaped rather than being a sloped box as on earlier ships and fitted snugly around the front, aft and side cannon placement. Instead of bolted on, thepilot house almost formed a seamless natural extension of the side armor. Details of her armament are sketchy, but her sister ship, the CSS Tennessee II ported four 6.4 in.Brooke rifles , two 7 in.Brooke rifles and a bolted-onspar torpedo . Also for the Tennessee II, Armor was given as 3 layers of 2 in, top speed as 5 knots and crew as 133 men. It is unclear however in how far the CSS Texas resembled the Tennessee II as other sources give her a (projected) speed of no less than 10 knots and note that both the Tennessee II and the Texas differed from the original design due to availability of key materials (in particular guns and engines) and due to improvements made during construction from lessons learned in combat [Angus Constam: The Confederate Ironclad, Osprey Publishing, 2001] .CSS Texas in fiction
In the 2005 film "Sahara" based on
Clive Cussler 's 1992 novel "Sahara", a fictional CSS "Texas" is supposed to have made the crossing toAfrica during the end of theAmerican Civil War and travelled up theNiger River before being buried in thedesert s ofMali .References
ee also
*
USS Texas External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-us-cs/csa-sh/csash-sz/texas.htm Ships of the Confederate States: CSS Texas (1865)] Webpage from the
Naval Historical Center
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