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It will take months for archaeologiststo finish the excavation of the turret anddiscern its secrets. And it will be years—an estimated 12 to 15—before the metal ofthe turret will be stable enough to beremoved from the conservation tank soit can be displayed for public viewing atthe soon-to-be-built USS Monitor Centerat the museum.
Meantime, Broadwater and his teamwill try to find a way to return to theship. They want to stabilize what remainsof the hull and perhaps exploresome of its forward sections, whereWilliam Keeler wrote his long lettersand the officers of the Monitor raisedtoasts to their doughty little ship. Now on the ocean floor, what’s left of theMonitor rests quietly, perhaps withmore stories yet to tell.
Excerpt from The Atlantic Monthly, July 1862by Nathaniel Hawthorne
At no great distance from theMinnesota lay the strangestlookingcraft I ever saw. It was aplatform of iron, so nearly on a levelwith the water that the swash of thewaves broke over it, under the impulseof a very moderate breeze; and on thisplatform was raised a circular structure,likewise of iron, and rather broad andcapacious, but of no great height. Itcould not be called a vessel at all; it wasa machine,—and I have seen one ofsomewhat similar appearance employedin cleaning out the docks; or, for lack ofa better similitude, it looked like a giganticrat-trap. It was ugly, questionable,suspicious, evidently mischievous,—nay,I will allow myself to call it devilish; forthis was the new war-fiend, destined,along with others of the same breed, toannihilate whole navies and batter downold supremacies. The wooden walls ofOld England cease to exist, and a wholehistory of naval renown reaches its period,now that the Monitor comes smokinginto view; while the billows dashover what seems her deck, and stormsbury even her turret in green water, asshe burrows and snorts along, oftenerunder the surface than above.The singularityof the object has betrayed me intoa more ambitious vein of descriptionthan I often indulge. . .
Going on board, we were surprisedat the extent and convenience of her interioraccommodations. There is a spaciousward-room, nine or ten feet inheight, besides a private cabin for thecommander, and sleeping accommodationson an ample scale; the whole welllighted and ventilated, though beneaththe surface of the water. Forward, or aft,(for it is impossible to tell stem fromstern,) the crew are relatively quite aswell provided for as the officers. It waslike finding a palace, with all its conveniences,under the sea. The inaccessibility,the apparent impregnability, of this submerged iron fortress are most satisfactory;the officers and crew get downthrough a little hole in the deck, hermeticallyseal themselves, and go below; anduntil they see fit to reappear, therewould seem to be no power given toman whereby they can be brought tolight. A storm of cannon-shot damagesthem no more than a handful of driedpeas. We saw the shot-marks made bythe great artillery of the Merrimack onthe outer casing of the iron tower; theywere about the breadth and depth ofshallow saucers, almost imperceptibledents, with no corresponding bulge onthe interior surface. In fact, the thinglooked altogether too safe; though it maynot prove quite an agreeable predicamentto be thus boxed up in impenetrableiron, with the possibility, one wouldimagine, of being sent to the bottom ofthe sea, and, even there, not drowned,but stifled. Nothing, however, can exceedthe confidence of the officers in thisnew craft. It was pleasant to see their benignexultation in her powers of mischief,and the delight with which theyexhibited the circumvolutory movementof the tower, the quick thrusting forth ofthe immense guns to deliver their ponderousmissiles, and then the immediaterecoil, and the security behind the closedport-holes. Yet even this will not long bethe last and most terrible improvementin the science of war. Already we hear ofvessels the armament of which is to actentirely beneath the surface of the water;so that, with no other external symptomsthan a great bubbling and foaming,and gush of smoke, and belch of smotheredthunder out of the yeasty waves,there shall be a deadly fight going on below,—and, by-and-by, a sucking whirlpool,as one of the ships goes down.


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