Sinking of Alabama, Kearsarge sternpost, Capt. Ralphael Semmes (NHHC) |
The Union warship, protected by heavy chains, had an advantage in the epic duel off Cherbourg, France -- one that was not of its own making: The Rebel ordnance was old and at times unreliable, meaning a shell might not explode. Still, the Alabama brought its fierce reputation to the fight, having captured or burned dozens of vessels on the high seas.
About 30 minutes in, a shell struck the vital sternpost of the USS Kearsarge (photo of encased artifact in 1980, NHHC). It should have been game, set, match in favor of Capt. Raphael Semmes and his sailors. Instead, the round was mostly a dud, failing to explode. The fighting continued and before long, it was game, set and match for the Federals, who sent the CSS Alabama to the bottom.
Today, the shattered sternpost and the intact artillery shell are on display in the “Securing the Seas for Union Victory” exhibit at the National Museum of the U.S. Navy in
Washington, D.C. Visitors currently can see the items from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays.
I turned to
Andy Hall, an author, blogger and Civil War naval expert, to explain the
importance of a ship’s sternpost, which is a component at the rear (stern).
“It generally consists of a vertical (more or less), heavy component of timber, iron, or steel. It needs to be especially strong because it is the principal structural component to which many other parts of the stern are attached,” Hall wrote in an email. “Usually, the sternpost is also the attachment point for the rudder that swings left and right to steer the ship as it moves through the water.”
Example of sternpost on CSS Jackson at National Civil War Naval Museum (Picket photo) |
While the speedy Alabama’s shot on the Kearsarge sternpost did impede operations, the crew was
able to steer with extra hands at the helm, according to an Encyclopedia of Alabama article.
Hall says if
the shell had exploded, it likely would have ended the battle immediately and
quite possibly led to the sinking of the Kearsarge, which was commanded by
Capt. John Winslow. He theorizes the ordnance hit the Kearsarge around its
waterline.
The red box at left shows the location of the Kearsarge's sternpost; click to enlarge |
"I
lodged a rifled percussion shell near her stern post – where there were no
chains -- which failed to explode because of the defect of the cap. If the cap
had performed its duty, and exploded the shell, I should have been called upon
to save Captain Winslow’s crew from drowning, instead of his being called upon
to save mine. On so slight an incident the defect of a percussion cap did the
battle hinge.”
Semmes crowed
that the sternpost was the only Alabama trophy taken. While that may have been
true in 1864, the Naval History and Heritage Command and a team of experts recovered
artifacts – including the Alabama’s bell -- from the site in 2002. Semmes was rescued by a British vessel.
Hall, writer of the Dead Confederates blog and author of "Civil War Blockade Running on the Texas Coast," summarized the importance of the duel last year when Case Auctions sold items pertaining to Winslow and the Kearsarge. Among the items sold was a picture frame made from pieces of the sternpost (right, Case Auctions)
“It’s hard for most Americans to appreciate now how momentous
this battle was viewed at the time,” Hall told the Picket. “Alabama had roamed
the globe unmolested for almost two years, destroying American merchant
shipping at will. Dozens of civilian ships were seized or destroyed by Capt.
Semmes, causing insurance rates to skyrocket and wreaking financial havoc on
ships and ports never within a thousand miles of the Confederate raider.”
While a
formidable captain, Winslow thanked “the mercy of God” for his vessel’s
fortune.
Legend held
that the post was sent upon request to President Abraham Lincoln, but Grant
Walker, a curator for the U.S. Naval Academy Museum in Annapolis, Md., said he
has been unable to find any mention of Lincoln associated with the sternpost.
“The earliest
correspondence we have concerns its transfer in 1924 from the Bureau of
Ordnance Museum to the Naval Academy Museum,” says Walker. “It was part of a
large transfer of ordnance from Washington to Annapolis that took place in July
1924. I could find no records re: how, when, and from whom the Bureau of
Ordnance acquired it.”
One of the documents relating to the sternpost lists it as being among "trophies" kept at the Washington Navy Yard.
Various documents listing Kearsarge sternpost; click to enlarge (U.S. Naval Academy Museum) |
The National Museum
is undergoing an extensive renovation and movement of artifacts, so while the
sternpost is still on display and the “Securing the Seas” exhibit exists, access
to Building 76 is limited to Saturdays only.
Most of the objects from Alabama that were
considered underwater archaeological recovery pieces have been removed from
display, says Wesley Schwenk, registrar for the museum in Washington. They are retained
in storage for preservation purposes.
Capt. John Winslow, front right, with Kearsarge crew |
“Described by his fellow sailors as a
garrulous sailor, he kept the crew entertained with his humorous and
fantastical tales of past voyages when all other forms of amusement no longer
brought pleasure to the rest of the crew,” says Schwenk. “Upon the ship's famed
meeting with CSS Alabama at
the Battle of Cherbourg on 19 June 1864, he and other Marines of the crew
provided cover and assault fire from the ship’s topgallant forecastle.”
For his bravery and protection of his
fellow crew members, the Marine Corps commended Young, says the registrar. (Seventeen
members of the crew received the Medal of Honor for their valor during the
battle with Alabama.) Young was in his mid-50s, an old man by the standard of
the armed forces.
Schwenk says the museum received two
diaries, not yet transcribed, a cudgel
(it is unknown whether Young actually carried it aboard), discharge papers, a service
record, letters and a muster roll. There is no known photograph of Young.
Broadside, with detail below, includes Young's name at top right, click to enlarge (George Costopulos Auctioneers) |
A Boston Journal newspaper article posted on Findagrave.com indicates Young died in 1872, age 62, in Portsmouth, N.H. He is reportedly buried at Walnut Street Cemetery in Brookline, near his native Boston. I asked Lisa Golden with the city for a photograph of his grave, but she has been unsuccessful thus far in locating it or obtaining more information about Young.
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