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Tag Archives: USS Monitor
USS Monitor restoration continues
The USS Monitor ironclad is featured in the novel in the recollections of Sergeant Timothy Chase of the 29th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment. The fictional sergeant saw the Monitor’s successful fight against the CSS Virginia ironclad in 1862 and has “dined … Continue reading
USS Monitor crew faces reconstructed
Speaking of the USS Monitor, as I was in the previous post, scientists have been busy since they discovered the revolutionary ship’s hulk on the seabed off the coast of North Carolina forty years ago in 1973. They’ve not only … Continue reading
Posted in Twenty-Ninth Massachusetts, USS Monitor
Tagged Knoxville 1863, USS Monitor
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The Monitor Boys
There’s a new book out about Twenty-Ninth Massachusetts Sergeant Timothy Chase’s “washtub on a skillet,” the U.S.S. Monitor. Seems the little ironclad’s crew called themselves “The Monitor Boys,” and Civil War historian John V. Quarstein has pulled together “the first … Continue reading
Posted in Twenty-Ninth Massachusetts, USS Monitor
Tagged "The Monitor Boys", USS Monitor
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Restoring Monitor’s turret
The inset photo shows current restoration of the Monitor’s turret which can be explored further via live Webcam here for a few more weeks—before it goes back in a chemical bath for years. Still more. The Monitor figures in the … Continue reading
USS Monitor
Twenty-Ninth Massachusetts’ Sergeant Timothy Chase’s “washtub on a skillet,” the USS Monitor. Taken some time after its fight with the Merrimac/Virginia. Note minor damage (left) on the turret.
Monitors repulsed
The novel’s Sergeant Timothy Chase of the Twenty-Ninth Massachusetts thought he’d seen the future in the 1862 Hampton Roads battle between the ironclads USS Monitor and the CSA Virginia. But the future had a good ways to go yet. Shortly … Continue reading
Posted in "Knoxville 1863", Twenty-Ninth Massachusetts, USS Monitor
Tagged Fort Sumter, USS Keokuk, USS Monitor
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USS Monitor’s skipper
John Lorimer Worden, the lieutenant-commanding of the USS Monitor, in his post-war years. Via the excellent “restoring the Monitor” blog. The fellow whose seamanship the novel’s Sergeant Timothy Chase of the Twenty-Ninth Massachusetts so admired from his perch atop a … Continue reading