The expedition to find the Confederate Ironclads Manassas,
Louisiana, and Arkansas. November 1981.
For a shoestring operation this proved to be one of our
most successful operations. Walt Schob and I flew down
to New Orleans, picked up Erick Schonstedt's faithful
gradiometer, rented a car and drove down to Plaquemines
Parish. There, at the town of Venice, we chartered a small
fifteen foot skiff from a local Cajun fisherman and began
searching for several of the ships that sank in the Mississippi
River during the battle for Forts Jackson and St. Phillip.
I sat in the bow in a lawn chair with the cast on a broken
ankle propped on the gunwale.
The battle occurred in April of 1862 when Admiral David
Farragut ran the forts and captured New Orleans, obliterating
the small but courageous makeshift Confederate fleet
that blocked his course.
We were most interested in locating the site of the
Manassas, a Confederate ironclad ram. She was constructed
from the Boston tug, Enoch Train, having railroad iron
with heavy oak backing laid over her upper works so
that she resembled a turtle. She was the first armored
ship built in this country to see combat, predating
both the Merrimack and Monitor. After being battered
by Union naval guns, she was abandoned and allowed to
drift down river while on fire. Admiral Porter tried
to put a hawser on her as a curiosity, but she rumbled
and sank beside the bank of the river.
The Louisiana was a monstrous ironclad 264' long with
a beam of 62'. She was armed with sixteen guns. Unfinished
at the time of the battle, she had been towed downriver
and moored under Fort St. Phillip where she was used
as a floating battery.
We also searched and found two ships that fought a
famous running duel up the river; the Confederate gunboat,
Governor Moore and the Union gunboat Varuna.
The Louisiana was found the first hour, no great feat
as the famed Civil war artist Alfred Waud drew a sketch
of the huge ironclad blowing up in front of the fort.
She lies quite deep, mostly under the present shoreline
in a swampy area off the river. Her massive wreck no
doubt contributed to the build up of the silt at the
bend where she sank.
Two days later, dragging the gradiometer up and down
the river from the forts to a point three and a half
miles down river, somewhat above the present day Boothville
high school, we hit the Manassas. The following year
Tom Ryan and Bill Mueller of the Army Corp of Engineers
contracted with Texas A & M to do a magnetometer
survey. Their records reveal an anomaly in the precise
shape and mass of the Manassas. They also found a large
iron mass a hundred yards down river and forty feet
from shore. A marine archaeologist stupidly checked
out this site instead of the primary target and found
a load of pipe. Then he went on TV and declared the
Manassas wasn't there. He couldn't find any other ships
from the battle either. It never occurred to him they
are no longer under water but covered by land.
Spare me from marine archaeologists.
Schob and I then moved up the river and found the Governor
Moore and the Varuna where they grounded a few hundred
yards apart on the east bank.
This was our final day as we had to move up to Baton
Rouge and look for the Arkansas. Unfortunately the weather
kicked up and we didn't get a chance to search any further.
I would have liked to have found the Confederate gunboat
Stonewall Jackson (no relation to the blockade runner
in Charleston) and one or two others, but it was not
meant to be, at least not this trip.
Arriving at Baton Rouge, we went directly to the Sheriff's
Office of West Baton Rouge Parish. I believe his name
was Bergeron. He graciously loaned us the Sheriff's
Office boat, a fine little aluminum affair designed
and built by a prison trustee. The only problem was
we always gathered a crowd on the river. Everyone living
in the area was used to seeing the boat dragging the
river for bodies, and here we were dragging the gradiometer
cable out over the stern. No one believed us when we
claimed our search was for an old ironclad.
The Arkansas for some strange reason has been sidetracked
from the historical limelight given her sisters the
Virginia, Albemarle, Tennessee and Manassas.
She was hurriedly, crudely constructed up the Yazoo
River in May of 1862. She was armored with railroad
iron and boilerplate and mounted ten heavy guns. When
she was still incomplete, her commander, Lieutenant
Isaac Brown, took her down the river to the besieged
city of Vicksburg. The incredible battle that followed
was a classic case of an underdog pit bull charging
a large pack of wolves.
While still on the Yazoo River, the Arkansas, ran into
the Union ironclads Carondelet, Tyler, and Queen of
the West. Hull to hull the Arkansas and the Carondelet,
pounded away at each other until the guns of the Confederate
devastated the Union ship and drove her aground. The
Tyler also suffered heavy damage from the Arkansas while
the Queen of the West took off to warn the Union ships
moored above Vicksburg.
The Arkansas burst onto the Mississippi and tore through
the combined fleets of Flag Officers Farragut and Davis,
thirty in all, like a hawk through a chicken coop, firing
every gun in all four directions. Cruising right down
between the line of ships, exchanging broadsides, it
took the Arkansas a half an hour to pass from the entire
line of Union warships.
She was bashed and trashed, but she gave far better
than she got. Shattered, blood soaked and triumphant
she limped to the dock at Vicksburg. Her crew suffered
ten killed and fifteen wounded. The Union fleets lost
forty-two killed and sixty-nine wounded.
Over the next month the Arkansas was attacked at her
mooring several times, but in each instant the Union
ships failed with heavy losses.
In August the battle weary ironclad was ordered to
Baton Rouge to support an attack by General Breckinridge
on the city. Almost within sight of the city, just above
the reach and before the upper bend, the Arkansas' engines
broke down and she was run aground and burned by her
crew.
She drifted from the shore and floated downriver for
an hour, burning fiercely, her loaded guns discharging,
until she finally blew up.
Forgive me for lacking scientific credentials and not
spotting the positions with transits, but by simply
marking the wreck sites on maps anyone who follows our
trail should have little problem locating the targets.
MANASSAS
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Figure 1.
(click to enlarge) |
Her suspected hulk lies about half a mile above the
Boothville high school on the southwest bank of the
river. Note; the mag survey by Texas A & M shows
her to be almost completely under the levee. It's best
to look during low water. There is a flat reef-like
barrier edged with a small rock breakwater that extends
into the river from the base of the levee for about
fifteen feet. If you can walk this area, you can easily
detect her iron mass, but can only pick up a piece of
her from a boat running parallel to the breakwater.
She is buried nine feet under the mud and could be very
well preserved. (see Figure 1)
LOUISIANA
She lies deep under the shoreline mud a hundred yards
in front of the southeastern embankment of Fort St.
Phillip. You can easily walk the area during low water.(see
Figure 1)
VARUNA
This durable Union gunboat rests against and under
the northeast shore about a mile above Ostrica Canal.
GOVERNOR MOORE
After a courageous fight she ran aground and burned
a few hundred yards above the VARUNA. Kids used to swim
off both wrecks as late as the nineteen forties. They
can be easily located and as of this writing bits and
pieces of them still protruded from the shoreline.
ARKANSAS
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Figure 2.
(click to enlarge) |
She rests deep under the levee on a north/south heading
about a mile and four tenths south from the auto and
railroad bridge just below Free Negro Point, 230 yards
below Mile 233. There was a newspaper report that a
sand and gravel company pumped up skeletons and shells
from the Union warship, Mississippi, whose executive
officer was George Dewey. old inhabitants pointed out
the general area of our find as the same as the Thompson
Sand & Gravel Company. I can't comment on the skeletons,
but I've researched out the Mississippi, and she blew
up and sank a good ten miles up the river. The gravel
outfit most likely struck on the Arkansas as the shells
were identified as coming from known Confederate ordnance,
which strikes me as flimsy, knowing most of the guns
used by the south were of northern manufacture. The
other and very likely possibility is that the sand and
gravel company were dredging farther up the river and
indeed struck the Mississippi.
All the above mention shipwrecks are accessible to
reach by core or a casemate method of excavating. I
would especially like to see something done someday
on the Manassas and the Arkansas. I've even offered
to pay for an exploratory dig on the Manassas site but
can't get anyone interested in Louisiana to help in
arranging the operation.
This is indeed a frustrating pastime. (see Figure 2)
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