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USS New Ironsides was a wooden-hulled broadside ironclad built for the United States Navy during the American Civil War. The ship spent most of her career blockading the Confederate ports of Charleston, South Carolina, and Wilmington, North Carolina, in 1863–65.
10 Ιουν 2016 · The diversity of ironclad designs is shown in this engraving of USS New Ironsides (1862-1866) (left) and the double-turreted USS Monadnock (1864-1874) (right foreground) published in Harper's Weekly on February 3, 1866, as part of a larger print entitled "The Iron-clad Navy of the United States.”
Engraving of USS New Ironsides with her full sailing rig and monitor USS Monadnock. US Navy History and Heritage Command photo # NH 61431. Tommy Trampp: 321k: USS New Ironsides at anchor, sometime between 1862 and 1865, location unknown. Image by Frederick Gutekunst, (1831-1917), Philadelphia, PA.
Media in category "New Ironsides (ship, 1862)" The following 31 files are in this category, out of 31 total.
USS New Ironsides, a 4120-ton broadside ironclad, was built at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The last, and largest, of the initial group of three "salt-water" armored warships begun in 1861 in response to meet the needs of the Civil War, she was commissioned in August 1862.
Figure 6: Nineteenth century photograph of a watercolor sketch, depicting USS New Ironsides (1862-1866) off Charleston, South Carolina, in 1863, with her sides showing the effects of several engagements with Confederate artillery.
Photograph by P.F. Cooper, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, showing the ship with a full set of masts and yards. The original photographic print is mounted on a carte de visite. Courtesy of the U.S. Marine Corps Historical Center, Personal Papers Section: Collection of Henry Clay Cochrane, 1983. U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph.