As this is Thursday, which is to say “Throwback Thursday“, as well as the anniversary of the sinking of the USS Monitor, which sank off Cape Hatteras 153 years ago tonight, it seems a good time to repost our review of John Broadwater’s excellent book, USS Monitor – A Historic Ship Completes Its Final Voyage.
On December 31, 1862, while under tow in a gale off Cape Hatteras, USS Monitor sank. The Monitor had been in service for only ten months and yet in that brief time had revolutionized naval warfare. The wreck of the Monitor was finally located in August of 1973. In his book, USS Monitor – A Historic Ship Completes Its Final Voyage, John Broadwater tells the remarkable story of the ship and of the dedicated teams of archeologists, historians, divers and engineers who worked over the last forty years to preserve the ship and to rescue what could be saved from the wreck.
Broadwater is uniquely qualified to tell the story of the “ship that changed everything.” He was the only person involved in the Monitor from the discovery of the wreck in 1973 through preservation, management and the recovery of the portions of the ship being preserved ashore today. He recently retired from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration’s Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, where he served as chief archeologist.
It is difficult to overstate the importance of the USS Monitor. Continue reading
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Happy Boxing Day and with it a wild beginning to this year’s
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What should a sailor carry with him or her when clambering around a boat or sailing ship? A rigging knife and marlinspike are common. Some prefer a sheath knife, whereas I am happy with a folding knife and marlinspike that I carry in my pocket on a lanyard clipped to a belt loop. A multi-tool of some sort can also be useful. I have two different sized “Leatherman” tools that I can also slip into my pocket on a lanyard. Of course, too much in your pockets or a sheath on your belt can cause your pants to sag. And then there is managing the lanyards which are easy to catch on most anything that one passes by.
The nuclear submarine