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The CSS
ALBEMARLE was designed by Chief Constructor John L Porter, CSN, and
built in the spring of 1864 by Gilbert Elliott at Edward`s Ferry on the
Roanoke River. She was 122 feet long, 45 feet beam and her draft 8 feet.
Her planking was 4 inches thick over 8x10 inch frames. The central
shield was 60 feet long and covered by two layers of 2 inch iron
plating. Her armament consisted of two 8 inch guns, one forward, the
other aft, behind iron shutters. She had two engines of 200hp each.

In
April 1864 the newly constructed Albemarle, under the command of
Capt. J.S. Cooke, was ordered to proceed down river from Hamilton to
Plymouth to clear the river of federal vessels so that General Hoke`s
troops could storm the forts. She anchored about three miles above the
town and the pilot, John Lock, set off with two seamen in a small boat
to take soundings. They found that the river was high and that there was
10 feet of water over the obstructions that the federal forces had
placed in the Thoroughfare Gap. On hearing the news Capt. Cooke
immediately ordered steam and, by keeping in the middle of the stream,
they passed safely over the obstructions. Their armour protected them
from the guns of two forts, Warren`s Neck and Boyle`s Mill, but then
they discovered a new hazard coming up the river towards them. Two
federal steamers, the Miami and the Southfield, lashed
together with spars and chains were in the middle of the river,
intending to pass on either side of Albemarle which would put her
at their mercy. Capt. Cooke ran close in to the southern shore then
turned to ram the Southfield amidships. Albemarle was
going at full speed with the assistance of the current and she drove the
federal ship straight to the bottom, taking part of her crew with her.
The bow of Albemarle was pulled under water and she too would
have sunk if Southfield had not rolled over when she hit the
bottom and released the ram. Captain Flusser of Miami was killed
when a shell he fired at point-blank range rebounded off Albemarle`s
armour and exploded on Miami. Despite the death of their captain,
Miami`s crew tried to board the Confederate ship but were driven
back by musket fire and then used her speed to avoid the ram and escaped
into Albemarle Sound.
Now
that the river was clear of federal ships General Hoke attacked and
carried, with heavy losses to the confederate troops, the defences of
the town, assisted by Albermarle who fired her two guns into the
forts all day.
On 5 May battle was joined
between Albemarle and a captured steamer, Bombshell, which
were escorting the steamer Cotton Plant, laden with troops, down
the Roanoke, and four federal side-paddlers Mattabesett, Sassacus,
Wyalusing and Miami coming up Albemarle Sound. Albemarle
opened fire first from her bow gun, the shells wounding six men on one
of the two 100-pounder Parrott rifles on the Mattabesett, then
attempted to ram her. The paddler managed to round the ram`s bow,
closely followed by the Sassacus which opened up a broadside of
solid 9" and 100-pound shot, all of which bounced off the sloping
armour of the confederate ship. The Bombshell was a softer target
and was hulled by each shot from Sassucus`s broadside. She
surrendered, and was ordered to pull out of the action and anchor. When
he found that he had Albemarle broadside on at a range of about
400 yards, Lieut. Cdr. Roe of Sassucus decided to ram her and
called for all the steam that could be raised. The paddler struck the
iron hull full and square ripping away the timbers off her own bow and
twisting off the bronze beak with which she was shod. The two ships
remained entangled together but the crew of Albemarle recovered
quickly and fired two shells into the enemy hull which was almost
touching the end of the gun barrel. One punctured the boilers, still
full of steam, sending jets of steam and boiling water through the ship,
scalding 13 of her crew. The other federal ships remained stopped while Sassucis
broke away and drifted out of range. Miami attempted to use her
torpedo and enmesh the ram`s propellor with a seine net but without
success and Albemarle steamed back into the Roanoke where she was
moored at Plymouth.
By the autumn the Federal
Government decided something must be done about the situation in North
Carolina and the navy discussed a number of plans for destroying Albemarle.
Commander William Cushing USN was authorized to find two small steam
launches to be fitted out as spar-torpedo-boats. He found two suitable
30 foot picket boats building in New York; and he fitted them with a
torpedo, invented by Engineer Lay of the USN, which was mounted at the
end of a fourteen foot spar. A 12-pounder howitzer was mounted in the
bow. One of the boats was lost on the way to Norfolk, but he took the
other, with a crew of seven officers and men, to the federal ships
waiting in the Sound off the mouth of the Roanoke.

The torpedo contained an air chamber which
allowed it to float in a vertical position. Pulling out the pin let a
grape ball fall on a percussion cap which ignited the powder charge in
the lower chamber. The device, at the end of a 14 ft. spar was released
by pulling a lanyard when it was under the enemy hull.
On
the night of 27 October they entered the river with a small cutter in
tow. The men in this had the job of surprising the picket which had been
placed on a schooner alongside the wreck of the Southfield, a
mile below Plymouth, and prevent them firing warning rockets. In the
event they went past unchallenged and Cdr. Cushing decided to use his 22
men to board the ram and try and take her out into the stream, but as
they approached the wharf they were hailed and this was quickly followed
by heavy fire from the ship and the shore. By the light of a fire on the
bank Cushing now discovered that Albemarle was protected against
torpedo attack by a boom of floating logs; however the logs, after long
immersion in the water, were covered in slime and the picket boat easily
rode over them. Cushing stood in the bow and pulled the detaching and
firing lines to explode the torpedo under the ram`s hull at the same
time as a canister of grape struck the boat throwing them all into the
freezing water. He called on his men to save themselves, stripped off
his uniform, and swam out into the stream while boats searched for
survivors. He was not seen and eventually, finding mud beneath his feet,
he lay exhausted, half out of the water until daylight. The sun brought
welcome warmth and he found that he was on the outskirts of Plymouth
under the parapet of a fort. In the afternoon he managed to board a
small skiff and paddled down the river until he reached the safety of a
federal picket vessel. His attack had been successful. Albemarle
had "a hole in her bottom big enough to drive a wagon in." She
was resting in eight feet of water with her upper works above the
surface. Her captain, Alexander Wharley CSN, who had been appointed to
her about a month earlier, salvaged the guns and shells and used them to
defend the town against the subsequent federal attack until he could see
further resistance was fruitless.
© 1996 Michael Phillips
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