Ironclads
In 1861 the Merrimack was captured by the Confederates. They turned it into an ironclad by placing iron on it. To counter it the Union created its own ironclad. The Monitor was born. Here are some of the ways ironclads impacted the navel warfare in the Civil War. Ironclads were ships built in a new technological way. They were platted with iron. The iron was placed in a way so that cannon balls were
These new ships made wooden ships inferior. The only thing that stopped them was a storm and a side that was afraid of their ironclad being captured. In May 1862 the Confederates scuttled and burned the Merrimack so that the Union could not capture it. The Battle of the Ironclads between the Monitor and the Merrimack lasted around four hours. Ironclads were not effective fighting other ironclads. They are like the great grandparents of today's iron warships. The Monitor sank in a storm as it traveled from Hampton Roads, were the battle took place. Ironclads could also attack forts and land forces. The ironclads led up to the warships of today. At times they were so close the bumped into each other. The wooden ships couldn't harm the ironclads because of the cannon balls would bounce off them. The Merrimack tried to ram the Monitor, but failed. This is how ironclads impacted navel warfare in the Civil War. Ironclads were never used again in the Civil War after that battle.
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