The commanders of these two ironclads were actually lieutenant's. Lieutenant John Worden, US Navy, commanded the Monitor. The Confederate Merrimack was a captured and refurbished Union ship that was christened the CSS Virginia. She was commanded by Lieutenant Catesby Jones. Lieutenant Jones had just taken command of the Merrimack after the wounding of his commander, Commodore Franklin Buchanan on March 8, 1862.
There was none. On the first day before the Monitor arrived, the Merrimack was commanded by Captain Franklin Buchanan who was wounded and later became a Confederate admiral. The Merrimack was then taken over by Commander Catesby Jones who also fought against the Monitor on the next day. The Monitor was commanded by Lieutenant John Worden who was wounded during the battle, and Lieutenant Samuel Greene then assumed command of the Monitor. A captain, a commander, and two lieutenants, but there was no general. * Union shore batteries fired shots against the Merrimack, under the command of a Union general, but otherwise it was a battle fought on the water. * For you particular people out there, the battle was called the Battle of Hampton Roads, and the USS Merrimack was renamed CSS Virginia in Confederate service.
somebody in the civil war!
The USS Merrimack had been burned and scuttled when Union forces abandoned Norfolk, Virginia. When the Confederates raised it and made it an ironclad, it was renamed the CSS Virginia. The "Monitor" was the US ironclad and it monitored possible reef or torpedo damage. The name was also thought to infer that this warship would "monitor" the seas and be vigilante for threats.
The Merrimack, later the CSS Virginia and the USS Monitor were the first ironclads in history to fight each other. Their commonality was the iron protective plates that cannon fire could not penetrate. The historic battle was at Hampton Roads on April 9, 1862.
The United States Ship Merrimack was converted to the CSS Virginia. The confederates destroyed the boat so that the Yankees could not get to it.
The Battle of Hampton Roads (Battle of the Monitor and Merrimack ) .
The Monitor and the Merrimack fought the first ever battle between two ironclads.
The Commander of Virginia (the former Merrimack) was CSA Admiral Franklin Buchanan. The Commander of Monitor was USN Captain L. Worden.
261 people died at the Battle of the Monitor and Merrimack (renamed the CSS Virginia).
The monitor vs. Merrimack took place in 1862.
Lieutenant John Worden, USN on the Monitor. Captain Franklin Buchanan, CSN on the Virginia (previously the Merrimack).
1862
Ironclads.
The Monitor and the Merrimack
If the question asks only about the crews of the two ships, the Monitor had a crew of 59, and the Merrimack had 320, but the entire two-day Battle of Hampton Roads involved thousands more. The Merrimack was joined by five CSN gunboats, and there were five USN warships at Hampton Roads. [The Merrimack sank two of them before the Monitor arrived.]
monitor,merrimack
merrimack monitor
Monitor
The Merrimac,