- USS Merrimack (1855)
USS "Merrimack" (sometimes spelled without the "k") was a screw
frigate of theUnited States Navy , best known as the hulk upon which CSS "Virginia" was built during theAmerican Civil War and then took part in theBattle of Hampton Roads (often called "the Battle of the "Monitor" and the "Merrimack")."Merrimack" was launched by the
Boston Navy Yard 15 June 1855 ; sponsored by Miss Mary E. Simmons; and commissioned20 February 1856 , Captain Garrett J. Pendergrast in command. She was the second ship of the Navy to be named for theMerrimack River , which is formed by the junction of the Pemigewasset andWinnipesaukee River s atFranklin, New Hampshire . The Merrimack flows south acrossNew Hampshire , and then eastward across northeasternMassachusetts before emptying in the Atlantic atNewburyport, Massachusetts .Shakedown took the new screw frigate to the Caribbean and to western
Europe . "Merrimack" visitedSouthampton , Brest,Lisbon , andToulon before returning toBoston and decommissioning22 April 1857 for repairs. Recommissioning1 September 1857 , "Merrimack" got underway fromBoston Harbor 17 October as flagship for the Pacific Squadron. She roundedCape Horn and cruised the Pacific coast of South andCentral America until heading for home14 November 1859 . Upon returning to Norfolk, she decommissioned16 February 1860 ."Merrimack" was still in ordinary during the crisis preceding Lincoln's inauguration. Soon after becoming
Secretary of the Navy ,Gideon Welles took action to prepare the frigate for sea, planning to move her to Philadelphia. The day before the firing onFort Sumter , Welles directed that "great vigilance be exercised in guarding and protecting";Norfolk Navy Yard and her ships. On the afternoon of17 April , the dayVirginia seceded, Engineer in Chief B. F. Isherwood managed to get the frigate's engines lit off; but the previous night secessionists had sunk lightboats in the channel betweenCraney Island andSewell's Point , blocking "Merrimack". On the 20th, before evacuating the Navy Yard, the U.S. Navy burned "Merrimack" to the waterline and sank her to preclude capture.The Confederates, in desperate need of ships, raised "Merrimack" and rebuilt her as an
ironclad ram, according to a design prepared by Lt. J. M. Brooke, CSN. Commissioned as CSS "Virginia"17 February 1862 , the ironclad was the hope of the Confederacy to destroy the wooden ships inHampton Roads and to end the Union blockade which had already seriously "crippled" the South.References
External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/m9/merrimack-ii.htm history.navy.mil/danfs: USS "Merrimack"]
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-m/merimak2.htm history.navy.mil/photos: USS "Merrimack"]
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