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- CSS_Manassas length "43586.4".
- CSS_Manassas abstract "CSS Manassas, formerly the steam icebreaker Enoch Train, was built in 1855 by James O. Curtis as a twin-screw towboat at Medford, Massachusetts. A New Orleans commission merchant, Captain John A. Stevenson, acquired her for use as a privateer after she was captured by another privateer (later gunboat) CSS Ivy. Her fitting out as Manassas was completed at Algiers, Louisiana; her conversion to a ram of a radically modern design made her the first ironclad ship built for the Confederacy.Covered with 1.25-inch iron plating, her above-water hull was reshaped into a curved "turtle-back" form; at its highest when fully loaded, the hull projected only 5 1⁄2 feet above the waterline, not counting her smokestacks (surviving accounts and period illustrations vary showing Manassas was equipped with either a single or two side-by-side smokestacks, possibly slanted back at a rakish angle). The convex shape of her iron-plated topside caused cannon shot to glance off harmlessly. She was 128 feet in length, overall, and had a 26-foot hull beam and 11-foot draught. Her bow was fitted with a pointed iron ram to stave holes in Union vessels, and she also carried a forward-firing cannon behind a single gun port with an armored shutter. Her low profile made her a difficult target, while her curved armor iron plate protected her against all but the most well-directed Union cannon fire. Fast moving, lying low in the water, she looked like a floating cigar or submerged egg shell and was described by Union intelligence as a "hellish machine."Commissioned as a Confederate privateer on 12 September 1861, Manassas was seized soon afterwards by Flag Officer G. N. Hollins, CSN, for use in the lower Mississippi River. With Lieutenant A. F. Warley, CSN, in command, she participated in Flag Officer Hollins' surprise attack on the Federal blockading squadron at Head of Passes on 12 October 1861, the action being known as the Battle of the Head of Passes. In the action Manassas rammed USS Richmond, but the impact was partly absorbed by a coal barge tied alongside. Manassas, however, suffered the loss of her iron prow and smokestack(s) and had one of her two engines unseated from its mounts, temporarily putting it out of commission. She managed to retire under heavy fire from USS Preble and Richmond, whose shells glanced off her armor. Two months after this engagement, Manassas was purchased for direct ownership and re-commissioned in the CSN by the Confederate Government.Under Lieutenant Warley, CSS Manassas joined the force of Captain John K. Mitchell, CSN, commanding Confederate naval forces in the lower Mississippi. She participated in the Battle of Forts Jackson and St. Philip, during which Commodore David Farragut, USN, on his way to New Orleans, ran his fleet past the Confederate forts of Fort Jackson and Fort St. Philip. In the action Manassas attempted to ram USS Pensacola, which turned in time to avoid the heavy blow and delivered a full broadside at close range. Manassas then ran into more murderous fire from the whole line of the Union fleet. She then charged USS Mississippi and delivered a long glancing blow to her hull, also firing her single cannon as she rammed. Next she rammed USS Brooklyn, again firing her cannon, injuring her deeply, but not fatally.After this action Manassas followed the Union fleet quietly for a while, but as she drew closer Mississippi furiously turned on her. Manassas managed to dodge the blow but ran aground in the process. Her crew managed to escape as Mississippi poured heavy broadsides into the stranded Confederate ram. Now on fire, Manassas slipped off the bank and drifted down the river past the Union mortar flotilla. Commander David Dixon Porter, USN, in command of the mortar boats, tried to save her as an engineering curiosity, but Manassas exploded and immediately plunged under water, a total loss.Years after the war, in the book "Battles and Leaders of the Civil War," there was a claim that a Manassas crewman was knocked off the ironclad by a Union sailor; however Confederate Captain Lt. A. F. Warley reported no casualties among his Manassas crew in an official report dated 13 August 1863".
- CSS_Manassas builder James_O._Curtis.
- CSS_Manassas builder Medford,_Massachusetts.
- CSS_Manassas class Ironclad_warship.
- CSS_Manassas commissioningDate "1861-09-12".
- CSS_Manassas decommissioningDate "1862-04-24".
- CSS_Manassas length "43.5864".
- CSS_Manassas shipBeam "10.0584".
- CSS_Manassas shipDraft "5.1816".
- CSS_Manassas status "Sunk in battle April 24, 1862".
- CSS_Manassas thumbnail CSS_Manassas.jpg?width=300.
- CSS_Manassas wikiPageExternalLink manassas.htm.
- CSS_Manassas wikiPageID "1170947".
- CSS_Manassas wikiPageRevisionID "605004720".
- CSS_Manassas hasPhotoCollection CSS_Manassas.
- CSS_Manassas shipArmament "164".
- CSS_Manassas shipBuilder "James. O. Curtis, Medford, MA".
- CSS_Manassas shipClass "Steam tug, Ironclad".
- CSS_Manassas shipCommissioned "1861-09-12".
- CSS_Manassas shipComplement "36".
- CSS_Manassas shipCountry "Confederate States of America".
- CSS_Manassas shipDecommissioned "1862-04-24".
- CSS_Manassas shipDisplacement "387".
- CSS_Manassas shipFate "--04-24".
- CSS_Manassas shipLaunched "1853".
- CSS_Manassas shipName "Manassas; originally Enoch Train".
- CSS_Manassas shipOwner "Boston Steam Tow-Boat Co.".
- CSS_Manassas shipPropulsion "Steam engine".
- CSS_Manassas shipTonsBurthen "tons".
- CSS_Manassas subject Category:1855_ships.
- CSS_Manassas subject Category:Ironclad_warships_of_the_Confederate_States_Navy.
- CSS_Manassas subject Category:Louisiana_in_the_American_Civil_War.
- CSS_Manassas subject Category:Ships_built_in_Medford,_Massachusetts.
- CSS_Manassas subject Category:Shipwrecks_of_the_American_Civil_War.
- CSS_Manassas subject Category:Shipwrecks_of_the_Mississippi_River.
- CSS_Manassas subject Category:Steamboats.
- CSS_Manassas subject Category:Tugboats.
- CSS_Manassas type 1855Ships.
- CSS_Manassas type Artifact100021939.
- CSS_Manassas type Boat102858304.
- CSS_Manassas type Conveyance103100490.
- CSS_Manassas type Craft103125870.
- CSS_Manassas type Instrumentality103575240.
- CSS_Manassas type NavalShipsOfTheConfederateStatesOfAmerica.
- CSS_Manassas type Object100002684.
- CSS_Manassas type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- CSS_Manassas type Ship104194289.
- CSS_Manassas type Shipwreck104197110.
- CSS_Manassas type ShipwrecksOfTheAmericanCivilWar.
- CSS_Manassas type ShipwrecksOfTheMississippiRiver.
- CSS_Manassas type Steamboat104308807.
- CSS_Manassas type Steamboats.
- CSS_Manassas type Tugboat104495843.
- CSS_Manassas type Tugboats.
- CSS_Manassas type Vehicle104524313.
- CSS_Manassas type Vessel104530566.
- CSS_Manassas type Whole100003553.
- CSS_Manassas type MeanOfTransportation.
- CSS_Manassas type Ship.
- CSS_Manassas type Product.
- CSS_Manassas type DesignedArtifact.
- CSS_Manassas comment "CSS Manassas, formerly the steam icebreaker Enoch Train, was built in 1855 by James O. Curtis as a twin-screw towboat at Medford, Massachusetts. A New Orleans commission merchant, Captain John A. Stevenson, acquired her for use as a privateer after she was captured by another privateer (later gunboat) CSS Ivy.".
- CSS_Manassas label "CSS Manassas".
- CSS_Manassas label "CSS Manassas".
- CSS_Manassas label "CSS Manassas".
- CSS_Manassas label "マナサス (装甲艦)".
- CSS_Manassas sameAs CSS_Manassas.
- CSS_Manassas sameAs マナサス_(装甲艦).
- CSS_Manassas sameAs CSS_Manassas.
- CSS_Manassas sameAs m.04d6lg.
- CSS_Manassas sameAs Q5014316.
- CSS_Manassas sameAs Q5014316.
- CSS_Manassas sameAs CSS_Manassas.
- CSS_Manassas wasDerivedFrom CSS_Manassas?oldid=605004720.
- CSS_Manassas depiction CSS_Manassas.jpg.
- CSS_Manassas isPrimaryTopicOf CSS_Manassas.
- CSS_Manassas name "Manassas; originally Enoch Train".