Monitor crew in July 1862 on James River in Va. (Library of Congress) |
Robert Williams (right) |
None of them
looked more intensely at the photographer than Robert Williams, a fireman first
class from Wales. His sleeves were rolled up, exposing his brawny, crossed
forearms.
“There is a
cockiness,” said David Alberg, superintendent of the Monitor National Marine Sanctuary, which protects the remnants of the Monitor. “That is the look of the
hero.”
But that air
of confidence couldn’t have been predicted just a few months before.
On March 6,
1862, the new Union ironclad – its radical design dubbed “Ericsson’s folly” by
its doubters -- steamed down New York City’s East River for the short journey
to Virginia. There were doubts about whether the Monitor could withstand the
seas and intense enemy firepower; it fired only two cannons from the revolving
turret.
“People
thought these 70 men were going to their deaths,” Alberg told the Picket. “The
crew was unconvinced. Many were seasick.”
But the small
ship quickly challenged the heavily armored CSS Virginia upon arrival and ended
the latter’s rampage against Federal ships. The stalemate at Hampton Road
changed naval warfare and foreshadowed the end of wooden warships.
Harper's Weekly rendering of Monitor sinking (public domain) |
An exhibit that opened last year features personal items – including shoes, a comb,
buttons and pocket knives -- found near or with the remains of two sailors
found in the turret when it was recovered in 2002. Sixteen men, including four
officers, perished when the Monitor went down.
Despite advanced forensics testing and physical descriptions of sailors
noted during their Civil War service, the identities of the two crew members
remain unknown.
Sailor 1 is believed to be William H. Eagan, 21, or Jacob Nicklis
(Nickles), 21. Sailor 2 is likely either William Bryan, 31, or Williams, 30,
who worked in the engine room. A spoon on display has the initials “J.N.” and
is believed to have belonged to Nicklis. In the top photo in this post, Bryan may be the kneeling man to Williams' right.
Judging from
contemporary accounts and what was found in the turret (discarded footwear,
silverware and clothing), there was a mad rush to escape through the turret
when it became clear the Monitor was going to sink.
David Alberg |
It’s unclear
why the two men found in the turret remained on board. “They probably said,
‘Maybe the storm will lie down and they will send another boat back,’” said
Alberg.
In the
minds of the crew, he said, the ironclad had gone from an “iron coffin” on
March 6 to an icon in December. “And it had served them well.” Amid the storm,
their confidence “kept them on that boat.”
USS
Monitor was 'a strange ship'
Like much of
the US Navy, the Monitor’s crew was a cross-section of 19th century
America. A few, including Williams and Eagan, were born in Europe. Three
African-Americans were lost with the vessel off Hatteras.
The crew
lived below the waterline, and oil lamps burned to make up for the lack of
natural light in the iron vessel. Officers had better food and quarters while
the enlisted men slept on hammocks in a common room behind the wardroom.
The USS
Monitor is a “strange ship” for those accustomed to canal boats and
traditional wooden vessels, said John Quarstein, director emeritus of the USS
Monitor Center at the museum. For example, it had pressurized commodes. “Half
of those people had never seen a commode.”
As one can
imagine, life on the boat was almost unbearable during the summer months. A
photo taken after the CSS Virginia clash shows a shade awning above the turret.
The crew did
a fair bit of drilling, said Quarstein, and their work was subject to weekly
inspections.
Panels in crew exhibit at Mariners' Museum (Picket photos) |
Bryan, like
Williams, served on the ironclad during the battle with the Virginia. The New
York native was an experienced yeoman.
Nicklis and
Eagan, a relatively inexperienced landsman born in Ireland, were replacements
brought on at the Washington Navy Yard while the boat was undergoing repairs in
the autumn of 1862. By then, crowds cheered the Monitor and its occupants.
A good bit is
known about Nicklis because of surviving letters in the museum’s collection,
written to his father from Oct. 27, 1862, to Dec. 28, 1862. The young seaman
from Buffalo, New York, stood 5 feet 7 inches and had a ruddy complexion.
Nicklis had
enlisted in the Navy at age 16, but re-enlisted in 1862 for a one-year term.
Officers on the deck in July 1862 (Library of Congress) |
The USS
Monitor returned to Hampton Roads in November after it was repaired, and then
it was ordered on Christmas Eve to steam to Beaufort.
Terrifying
storm put it under
The pride of
the US Navy left on Dec. 29, 1862. Two days later, it encountered a strong
storm that had it floundering in the Atlantic waves. Not built to withstand the
forces of the open seas, the ironclad bounced up and down, resulting in
loosened bolts that allowed water to come in.
Landsman Francis Butts, standing atop the structure, later wrote that
the waves “would leap upon us and break far above the turret” with “a shock
that would sometimes take us off our feet.”
Commander John Bankhead ordered a red lantern (right) be hoisted to signal
distress to the Rhode Island. The line between the two vessels was cut to
minimize the chance of them colliding. The flooding continued during the
rescues by leaky and overloaded lifeboats. Eventually, Bankhead ordered the crew to abandon ship.
Quarstein, author of “The Monitor Boys,” called the rescue of 47 USS
Monitor crew members “a tremendous story of heroism” by the crew of the Rhode
Island’s commander, Stephen Decatur Trenchard.
There was no
requirement at the time of being a proficient swimmer, and most of the men knew
if they fell into the water they were lost. A few slipped off the deck to their
deaths, while others missed lifeboats.
“The people
who are left in the turret when the second boat goes back, they are called to
get into the boat by Bankhead. They are either too afraid or they think the
boat is so overloaded.”
Rhode Island Acting Master’s Mate
D. Rodney Browne and members of his crew rowed back for them (at least one
member of the USS Monitor crew was below deck). The USS Monitor was gone.
Quarstein
estimates about half of the 16 who died drowned, while the remaining went down
when the USS Monitor capsized, turned over and hit the bottom.
The USS Monitor retains its special place in US naval history. While it
never engaged with the CSS Virginia again (the latter was destroyed to avoid
capture after it was bottled up by the Monitor), the boat took part in the
Battle of Drewry’s Bluff, firing on a Confederate fort on Virginia’s James
River.
But it’s best remembered for its heroics on March 9, 1862, a day after
the Virginia sank the USS Cumberland and pulverized the USS Congress, which was
set afire after capture.
The Monitor’s skipper at the time, Lt. John Worden, was ordered to protect the steam
frigate USS Minnesota. The Virginia plowed toward the Minnesota but the Monitor
interceded and the two circled for hours, firing broadsides and looking for
weakness in the other’s armor. Both sides claimed victory.
The Minnesota was saved outright by the Monitor. According to the USS
Monitor Center, “One Minnesota crew member had his tombstone
designed to look like the Monitor -- the ship that saved his
life.”
Fast forward to March 2013, when the remains of the two unidentified men
found in the turret were buried with full military honors at Arlington National
Cemetery. (The bodies of the other 14 have not been recovered)
Reverse of coin has image of old USS Minnesota (NOAA) |
Front of coin (NOAA) |
The gift was a token of appreciation – 151 years
later – for the Monitor’s saving of the Minnesota.
“That short
10-second exchange will stick with me forever,” said Alberg. “It really showed
… the power of the Monitor story."
• Part 1: These two sailors went down with the USS Monitor. Now you can see items they carried or were found near them.
• Part 1: These two sailors went down with the USS Monitor. Now you can see items they carried or were found near them.
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