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On the sea bottom, saturation diverChief Petty Officer Keith Nelson, alongwith two other divers, wrestled the lastshackle into place. “That’s it!” he said.Then Nelson helped the operator of theWotan’s 500-ton crane gently pluck thedislodged turret from the sea bottom.As it began to separate, the three diversfound themselves in a total blackout assediment swirled around them. Whenthe current finally swept the bottomclear, the crane slowly moved the Spiderover the platform. Slight swells atthe surface turned the 235-ton load intoan underwater wrecking ball: slammingdownward, it left four-inch indentationsin the platform’s three-eighthsinch-thick steel plate. Finally, the crewgot the platform attached, and the liftbegan. When the Monitor’s turret brokethe water’s surface, starfish and coralfell off, and seawater sluiced out itsgunports and over the clearly visibledents that the Virginia’s cannonballshad inflicted 140 years ago. Broadwaterstood momentarily speechless beforejoining the rest of the barge in stentorianwar whoops of victory.
Two months after the battle ofthe ironclads, the Union took the portof Norfolk. The Confederates groundedthe Virginia, set her on fire and let 18tons of powder in her magazine makesure that not one rivet would go to theUnion cause. Her nemesis gone, theMonitor sailed up the James River tospend a tedious, sweltering summershadowing Union Gen. George Mc-Clellan’s abortive peninsula campaign.“I have charge of the Thurmomitor,”Geer wrote to Martha on June 13, “and found in my store room, which is farthestastern, it stood at 110; in the engineroom 127; in the galley . . . 155; on theberth deck where we sleep 85.”
For the sailors, poor ventilationranked high on a long list of complaints.In October, the Monitor arrivedin Washington, D.C. and underwentseveral weeks of refitting, but then sherushed to Hampton Roads again, thistime to join two other monitor-classironclads ordered to take Wilmington,North Carolina. On Monday, December29, the Monitor left the Chesapeakeunder tow by the side-wheel steamerRhode Island.
Tuesday morning a storm startedbrewing. By nightfall, the Monitor wastaking the rough water head-on. “Theheavy seas rolled over our bows dashingagainst the pilot house &, surgingaft, would strike the solid turret with aforce to make it tremble,” Keeler wroteto Anna. The pounding soon took a tolland waves began sweeping the turret.Water—the Monitor’s most relentless enemy—started filling the ship. “I staid bythe pump untill the water was up to myknees and the cylinders to the pump engineswere under water and stoped,”Geer wrote. “She was so full of waterand roled and pitched so bad I was fearfullshe would role under and forget tocome up again.” By the time he and thelast dozen men got to the turret—theonly way to reach the deck—the Monitorwas sinking. They saw the Rhode Island’sboats coming to take them off.
“It was a scene well calculated to appallthe boldest heart,” Keeler wrote.“Mountains of water were rushingacross our decks & foaming along oursides.” As the men climbed down theturret and crawled toward the boats,the sea snatched at least two of themand swept them to their deaths. Therescue boats smashed against the ship’s side, the wind howled and the menscreamed into the roaring blackness.“The whole scene lit up by the ghastlyglare of the blue lights burning on ourconsort, formed a panorama of horrorwhich time can never efface from mymemory,” Keeler wrote. Geer jumpedfrom the turret and made for a boat justas a wave swept the man next to himoverboard. “As soon as the Wave hadpassed over . . . this time reached theBoat and was Saved, and I can tell youI would not like to try it over again.”After shedding most of his clothes,Keeler tried to climb down the turretbut found the ladder stacked with terrifiedsailors. He slid down a line hangingfrom one of the turret awning’sstanchions, and a wave immediatelyswept him across the deck, slamming him into a lifeline stanchion. “I graspedwith all the energy of desperation,” hewrote, and he pulled himself along theship deck’s lifelines until at last hereached a boat and was hauled aboard.
Atop the turret, a single lantern burned red. Just before 1 a.m., as the last boat left the Rhode Island to retrieve the remaining men, the light went out. The Monitor, along with 16 men, was gone.
Inside the turret, the only smell is ofthe sea. Coral clings to the metal shell.The one-and-a-quarter-inch-thick boltsthat hold the iron sheets together looklike gigantic rusty polka dots. The dentsmade by the Virginia’s cannon are thediameter of a soccer ball. Woodenblocks with hanks of rope lying in theirsheaves hang as if still waiting for a handto turn them. Ramrods and other toolsused by the gunners are scattered about.As soon as the turret was raised, archaeologistsfound the second skeleton.“They were lying very close togethernear one of the hatches in the turret’sroof,” says Broadwater. Preliminary excavationalso found fragments of a woolovercoat, rubber buttons with “U.S.Navy” inscribed on them, a comb madeof India rubber and, from one of thesailors’ pockets, a silver serving spoonwith an engraved design on it.
The turret arrived August 10 at theMariners’ Museum in Newport News,Virginia, where all of the artifacts recoveredfrom the Monitor are undergoingconservation, and was immediately immersedin an 86,000-gallon conservationtank. Thermometers, bottles and lanternchimneys; gimballed lantern holdersgraced with ornate Victorian filigree;bilge pump parts and ladders; the 36-tonengine encrusted with marine life—allbathe in a variety of containers, fromsmall tubs to construction-size Dumpsters,where a cocktail of chemicalsslowly removes the corrosive salts thathave permeated the metal parts.


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