Saturday, October 3, 2015

CSS Albemarle – The Rise and Fall of one of Dixie's finest ironclad gunboats



April 16, 1862 began a chapter in the history of the Confederate States Navy that would be one of its most inspiring and one of its most devastating in the history of that magnificent fighting force. On this day, Lieutenant Gilbert Elliott of Elizabeth City, NC was ordered by naval authorities in Richmond to begin planning the construction and deployment of a powerful ironclad gunboat that could be utilized to rid the North Carolina coast of Yankee invaders. Soon, Elliott would lay the groundwork for what would become the CSS Albemarle, one of the most successful ironclad gunboats ever produced by the Confederacy.

Elliott was only 19 years of age, but was already a skilled naval architect. He was born on Milford Plantation in Camden County, NC on December 10, 1843. As a young boy, Elliott learned the art of shipbuilding from his grandfather, Charles Guice, who owned a large shipyard on the Pasquotank River near Elizabeth City. Elliott had intended to become an attorney prior to the War of Northern Aggression and had studied Admiralty Law and was working as a law clerk at the outbreak of hostilities. When the war began, he joined the 17th North Carolina Infantry as a 1st LT, but his shipbuilding experience was soon learned of in Richmond and he was transferred to the Confederate Navy. This shipbuilding experience would be put to the test in the challenges that would arise in building the CSS Albemarle.

Starting with limited resources, thanks to the Yankee blockade of North Carolina and the rest of Dixie, Elliott set up a makeshift shipyard in the cornfield of Peter Smith on the Roanoke River at Edward's Ferry near present-day Scotland Neck. This position was wisely chosen by Elliott because it would allow construction and deployment of the CSS Albemarle directly into the Roanoke River, however it was shallow enough that the invading Yankees could not reach the shipyard with their naval vessels.

Construction of the CSS Albemarle began in January of 1863 and was plagued from the start by material shortages. To combat these shortages, Elliott chose to construct the Albemarle primarily from white oak and other hardwoods common to North Carolina that he knew would be helpful in repulsing the Yankee cannonballs that would be thrown at the ship. Elliott and his able team of skilled North Carolina shipwrights and sailors further showed their ingenuity by scouring the countryside for all available iron and hardware and often converted old iron cookware into nails, hinges, iron armor plating, and other items that the Albemarle needed. Through their ingenious efforts, Elliott and his team were able to finish and launch the ship on April 17, 1864.

Elliott and his team saw that the CSS Albemarle was armed with two 6.4-inch Brooke Rifles that were mounted on 180 degree swivel carriages on the bow and stern. Because of this unique mounting of the two cannons, the ship was given the ability to fire one cannon forward and aft and both cannons could be brought to bear on either the port or starboard broadside. This gave the ship more firepower than most of its enemies on the Roanoke River.

In late April of 1864, Elliott passed command of the CSS Albemarle to Captain James W. Cooke of the Confederate Navy. Captain Cooke would command the vessel until its demise in October of 1864.

Cooke was a native of Beaufort, North Carolina. Having grown up on the coast, Cooke entered the US Navy as a midshipman in 1828. In 1861, he resigned from the United States Navy and joined the Virginia State Navy. Upon Virginia's secession, Cooke became a Confederate naval officer. Because of his knowledge of the North Carolina coast, Cooke was placed in command of the CSS Ellis and charged with the defense of Roanoke Island. In February of 1862, Cooke was wounded and captured in a hard fight with the Yankee invaders in the waters off of Roanoke. He was later paroled and given command of the Albemarle.

On April 19, 1864, Cooke took the CSS Albemarle down the Roanoke River and attacked Union positions near Plymouth, NC. In the ensuing action, the CSS Albemarle rammed and sank the USS Southfield and forced the other Union ship in the area, USS Miami, to retreat to the safety of Albemarle Sound. Having cleared the Roanoke River of any opposition by the US Navy, the CSS Albemarle assisted General Hoke and the Confederate Army units in the area with their assault and recapture of Plymouth, NC and its surrounding forts.

Following the success of the Albemarle and the recapture of Plymouth, Cooke took the ship into action on May 5, 1864. In this action the CSS Albemarle was escorting the CSS Bombshell and CSS Cotton Plant in a troop movement operation to further extend Confederate positions on the Roanoke River. In the following conflict, the Confederate squadron took on four Union ships: USS Miami, USS Mattabesett, USS Sassacus, and USS Wyalusing. Although the CSS Bombshell was captured in the fight, the CSS Albemarle was able to defeat the Yankee fleet and protect the CSS Cotton Plant. The Albemarle was rammed however and took over 500 hits against her armor. Although she was significantly damaged, the Albemarle was able to force the Yankee ships to flee the Roanoke River. Throughout the summer of 1864, the CSS Albemarle was master of the waves in the area around Plymouth.

The autumn however would see the fall of the CSS Albemarle from her perch as uncontested master of the Roanoke River. Because of the success of the Albemarle, the US Navy wanted her destroyed. They had tried numerous conventional means to attack and destroy her, but none were successful. It would finally be a commando raid conducted on the night of October 27, 1864 by US Navy Lieutenant William Cushing and a picked team of US Marines that would finally sink the CSS Albemarle. Cushing and his men sank the Albemarle by sneaking in under the cover of darkness and detonating a spar torpedo along the waterline of the ship. The CSS Albemarle suffered a hole in her size the size of a wagon and sank in 6 feet of water. Because the Confederates lacked the resources needed to repair the ship, this disaster spelled the end of the ship.

In April 1865, the US Navy raised the vessel and had her repaired at the Norfolk Navy Yard in Norfolk, VA. She was later sold to J.N. Leonard and Company and scrapped as war salvage. Today one of the Albemarle's Brooke Rifles can be seen at the Headquarters of the US Navy's Atlantic Command at the Norfolk Navy Yard and the smokestack of the CSS Albemarle is displayed in Elizabeth City, North Carolina at the Museum of the Albemarle. In April of 2002, a 3/8 scale replica of the original CSS Albemarle was launched on the Roanoke River where the ship now cruises as the unopposed master of the water.

Sources

JR Potts, “CSS Albemarle Ironclad Ram,” Military Factory

Andrew Duppstadt, “Confederate States Navy in North Carolina,” North Carolina History Project

“CSS Albemarle,” Wikiwand

“Gilbert Elliott,” Under Both Flags – Civil War in the Albemarle

“Gilbert Elliott,” Wikipedia

“James W. Cooke,” Wikiwand





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