Author Topic: U.S.S. Canonicus  (Read 869 times)

Offline Arlo

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U.S.S. Canonicus
« on: June 06, 2020, 08:19:06 PM »


Incredibly sharp photo of the U.S. monitor "Canonicus" at Hampton Roads, Virginia, when she was shown at the Naval Review during the Jamestown Exposition in 1907. The lead ship of her class, "Canonicus" and her sisters were improved "Passaics", and had better protection and higher speed than their predecessors. 224 feet long and displacing 2,100 tons, the "Canonicus" was armed with two 15" Dahlgren smoothbores and protected by iron armor up to 10" thick.

She was commissioned on April 16, 1864, and saw considerable action during the final stages of the Civil War. In 1864 she served with the James River Flotilla, and was engaged with Confederate vessels and shore batteries at Trent's Reach, Dutch Gap, and Howlett's Farm. She then joined the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron in December of that year, and participated in both attacks on Fort Fisher, North Carolina (Dec. 24-25, 1864, and Jan. 13-15, 1865).

Fort Fisher was the largest fortification on the North American continent, and "Canonicus", along with her sister ships, the "Saugus" and the "Mahopac", as well as the large double-turret monitor "Monadnock" and the massive broadside ironclad, the "New Ironsides", provided heavy fire support at close range.

The commander of the "Canonicus", Lieutenant-Commander George E. Belknap, gave a stirring description of the second attack in his post-battle report: "...during the actions of the 13th, 14th, and 15th instant, which resulted in the capture of Fort Fisher, this ship engaged that work at a distance of seven hundred (700) yards, perhaps a little closer on the 15th, as the smoothness of the sea enabled me to go into shoaler water than on the preceding days, having at one time only a foot and a half of water to spare under our keel.
...On the first day of the attack, the 13th, the enemy replied vigorously to our fire until late in the afternoon... They soon obtained our range and struck the ship frequently, while many shots fell close alongside. Upon one occasion, two shots out of three, fired simultaneously, struck the side-armor abreast the turret.

We count thirty-six (36) hits this day, and everything about the deck not shot-proof was badly cut up. Two men were knocked down and stunned at the guns by the impact of a 10-inch gun-shot upon the turret. The flag was shot away twice and gallantly replaced by Quartermaster Daniel D. Stevens [who was afterwards awarded the Medal of Honor for his bravery under fire --DM].
Not content with solid shot, the enemy fired shells occasionally, to burst over the turret, and now and then the bullet of a sharp-shooter whistled over us.

On the second and third days the fire of the enemy was comparatively feeble... At this time we also received a 10-inch shot on the side-armor, fired from the water battery on the right of the sea-face of the fort.
Our fire was slow and deliberate, and every effort was made to dismount the enemy's guns, and though almost hidden by traverses, I am happy to say we succeeded in dismounting two of them. Acting Ensign M.W. Weld knocked over a six-inch rifle on the second day, and the executive officer, Lieutenant R.S. McCook, disposed of a 10-inch columbiad on the third day of the action."

After the War, the "Canonicus" patrolled the Atlantic coast from 1872 to 1877, and was then decommissioned. She remained in the Navy's inventory until the Jamestown Exposition in 1907, and it's interesting to note that she was even caught on moving film at this event, by Thomas Edison. Unfortunately, the "Canonicus"--the very last survivor of the Civil War-era monitors--was sold for scrap the following year.

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Offline Shuffler

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Re: U.S.S. Canonicus
« Reply #1 on: June 07, 2020, 04:15:44 AM »
Wow.... that photo looks unreal. It is amazingly sharp.

When I first took up photography, I spent my first few years in black and white. I love working with black and white.
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Offline Arlo

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Re: U.S.S. Canonicus
« Reply #2 on: June 09, 2020, 10:56:58 AM »


The double-turret monitor USS 'Miantonomoh' at Malaga, Spain, in 1867. At left is the sidewheel steamer 'Augusta', which, along with the 'Ashuelot', escorted the monitor during her famous transatlantic cruise in 1866-67. Note the light hurricane deck rigged between the turrets, and the rifle screens on the turret tops.

Named after a 17th century Native American chief of the Narragansett tribe, the 'Miantonomoh' was a little over 258 feet long, just under 54 feet in beam, and displaced 3400 tons. She was armed with four 15-inch Dahlgren smoothbore guns, and was protected by iron armor up to 10 inches thick. Her tour of European ports in 1866-67 caused other naval powers to rethink the design of turret ships; the 'Miantonomoh' and her sisters differed from European types, in that they had turrets with uninterrupted arcs of fire. The Royal Navy took the next logical step, when Sir Edward Reed designed the first "breastwork" monitors, 'Cerberus' and 'Magdala', which were completed in 1870. Reed then expanded on the concept with the 'Devastation' of 1873, which was the first practical sea-going turret ship (although, significantly, Reed himself still described the 'Devastation' as a monitor). This progession continued through the rest of the 19th century and reached its peak in the early 20th, with the advent of the dreadnought battleship.

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Offline Arlo

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Re: U.S.S. Canonicus
« Reply #3 on: June 09, 2020, 02:39:31 PM »


The USS "Puritan", c. 1898. The first of the "New Navy" monitors, "Puritan" was 296 feet long and displaced 6060 tons. She was armed with four 12" breech-loading rifles, six 4" rifles, and six 6-pdrs. Her armor was composed of Harvey and nickel steel, and was up to 14" in thickness. The "Puritan" fought in several engagements during the Spanish-American War. On the Cuban coast, she bombarded the city of Mantanzas, where she scored a direct hit on a Spanish cannon (a British observer declared that this shot was "the most marvelous exhibition of accurate gunnery in the history of gun fighting.") Later, she steamed to Puerto Rico, where she fought at the Battle of Fajardo, shelling Spanish positions and landing a party of marines there. After the war, the "Puritan" served as a training ship at Annapolis, before being decommissioned in 1903. She was recommissioned and used for various roles until 1910, and was finally sold in 1922.

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