Interpretive panels explaining the role of the USS Montauk and other innovative Federal monitors in the siege of Confederate outposts on the Atlantic Ocean are expected to formally debut next month at a Georgia park.
Fort McAllister State Historic Park manager Jason Carter in May said the site near Savannah
might reopen an exhibit detailing the vessels and the Rebel raider CSS Nashville (Rattlesnake) on July 4. The CSS Nashville was destroyed by USS Montauk near
the fort in February 1863. Park officials on July 2 said the panels were not yet up, and a date would be announced.
Students at
the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) produced the panels and a 3D
model of the USS Montauk. The model is expected to be put on display later this
year. There’s also hope for an accompanying film, though that would be down the
road.
The five new
wall panels in the museum will cover these topics: Civil War monitors, the
Passaic class of monitors, armament, ironclads versus an earthen fort, and what
happened to the USS Montauk and the others at Fort McAllister after the
fighting. The panels will feature photographs, drawings and illustrations.
The Union
navy, as it continued its chokehold on Southern ports and readied for offensive
operations, sent the Montauk and fellow monitors Seneca, Dawn and Wissahickon
to bombard and capture Fort McAllister in January 1863. It was considered a trial run
of sorts for the armored vessels, which effectively brought to an end the day
of the wooden fighting ship. (Fort McAllister thwarted the attacks and held on until December 1864.)
The skipper
of the Montauk was John Worden, the USS Monitor’s captain when
it clashed with the CSS Virginia in 1862.
Capable
Confederate gunners at Fort McAllister hit the USS Montauk 13 times in its first
action, but caused little damage. A second attack on Feb. 1 found the ironclad,
according to histories, pounded by 48 shells.
USS Montauk receives fire from Fort McAllister as it pounds CSS Nashville, upper right. |
The 215-foot
ship commanded by Lt. Thomas Harrison Baker became a sitting duck after it ran
aground near the fort.
“During the February 28, 1863 attack, Montauk’s XV- and 11-inch
Dahlgrens were able to destroy the former commerce raider CSS Nashville. Worden was
pleased with his destruction of ‘this troublesome pest’” wrote John V.
Quarstein, director emeritus of the USS Monitor Center in a blog post.
“However, Montauk suffered
a huge jolt when it struck a Confederate torpedo en route down the Ogeechee
River. Worden’s quick thinking saved his ironclad and he, the hero of USS Monitor, received
even greater laurels for his newest decisive actions.”
CSS Nashville artifacts in the museum (Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources) |
Carter said the current exhibit on the CSS Nashville will remain the same. “We are going to create a ‘loading dock’ scene in the corner once we have the panels up. There will be boxes of rifles, munitions, etc, stacked up.”
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