- Edwin M. Stanton
Edwin M. Stanton - The Fight Between The Monitor And The Merrimac
But the death of the Merrimac was to follow close upon her birth; she was the portent of a few weeks only. For, during a short time past, there had been also rapidly building in a Connecticut yard the Northern marvel, the famous Monitor. When the ingenious Swede, John Ericsson, proposed his scheme for an impregnable floating battery, his hearers were divided between distrust and hope; but fortunately the President's favorable opinion secured the trial of the experiment. The work was zealously pushed, and the artisans actually went to sea with the craft in order to finish her as she made her voyage southward. It was well that such haste was made, for she came into Hampton Roads actually by the light of the burning Congress. On the next day, being Sunday, March 9, the Southern monster again steamed forth, intending this time to make the Minnesota her prey; but a little boat, that looked like a "cheese-box" afloat, pushed forward to interfere with this plan. Then occurred a duel which, in the annals of naval science, ranks as the most important engagement which ever took place. It did not actually result in the destruction of the Merrimac then and there, for, though much battered, she was able to make her way back to the friendly shelter of the Norfolk yard. But she was more than neutralized; it was evident that the Monitor was the better craft of the two, and that in a combat à outrance she would win. The significance of this day's work on the waters of Virginia cannot be exaggerated. By the armor-clad Merrimac and the Monitor there was accomplished in the course of an hour a revolution which differentiated the naval warfare of the past from that of the future by a chasm as great as that which separated the ancient Greek trireme from the flagship of Lord Nelson. - Lt. Col. William H. Martin
Lt. Col. William H. Martin jumped from the trenches waving a white handkerchief and shouting to the Northerners to come and get the wounded men. - Trees
- Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman
Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman - Cavalry
- Maj. Gen. James B. McPherson
- A Destroyed Train
- Veterans
By 1864 most of the men in the armies that struggled for Atlanta had become veterans, inured to the hardships of military life - Four long and bloody months
For four long and bloody months, officers and men alike endured the heat and mud of what must have been one of the wettest seasons in the history of Georgia. - Supplements to the rations
Soldiers in both armies had no scruples about supplementing their rations with whatever could be taken from surrounding farms and homes. - After a council with Hood and Polk, Johnston abandoned the Cassville position
- Seven Soldiers
- Fallen Soldier
- Gen. Joseph E. Johnston
- Battles Around Atlanta
- Soldier
- Gen. John B. Hood
- Soldier with staff and pipe
- Opening Battles Of The Atlanta Campaign
- Sheridan's Horse
- Two soldiers facing off
- The crew of the Kearsarge
- Sherman's Army leaving Atlanta
- The blowing up of the 'Albemarle'
- The boat from the 'Alabama' announcing the surrender and asking for assistance
- Monitor
- The Army carries off all the horses, cattle and mules
- The Engagement between the 'Monitor' and the 'Merrimac'
- The Shell sent a column of water
- The Crops were destroyed and the mills were burned
- The Drummer Boys dream
- Sherman's headquarters
- Sinking of the Alabama
- The Drummer Boy at his post
- On Board the 'Merrimac'
- The Merrimac
- View of Vicksburg during the seige
- On the way to the Sea
- A Camp Oven
- At Close Quarters, on the first day at Gettysburg
- Marching through Georgia
- On the way to Manassas
- Major Gray, with the butt of a navy revolver, rapped vigorously upon the door
- A Glimpse of Camp Life
- Harry's Dash
- In the turret of the Monitor
- Battlefield scene
- Boy with Flag
- Face the other way, boys
- Moses arrivve in camp
- Kearsarge gun in action
- Listening for the first gun
- Cannonballs
- Divider with Cross Swords
- Close of the combat
- Discarded canteen
- Double Cave in the Rigby Hill
- Commander W.B. Cushing, U.S.N