Title: Admiral Franklin Buchanan, CSN
1Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
Lesson 5 The Civil War, 1861-1865 Two Navies
2Learning Objectives
- Comprehend the role of the Union Navy in the
strategy for the defeat of the Confederacy. - Comprehend the role of the Confederate Navy in
the strategy for the defeat of the Union. - Know the reasons for vital importance of
acquisition of European allies in the Souths
Naval Strategy. - Know the innovations in naval weapons and
technology that emerged during the Civil War.
3Remember our Themes!
- The Navy as an Instrument of Foreign Policy
- Interaction between Congress and the Navy
- Interservice Relations
- Technology
- Leadership
- Strategy and Tactics
- Evolution of Naval Doctrine
4Background of the War
5War between the States
- Dispute between slave and free states over status
of western territories. - Missouri Compromise - 1820.
- Kansas-Nebraska Act - 1854.
- Dred Scott Decision - 1857.
- Southern states secede after Lincoln elected in
1860. - Confederate States of America established - Feb
1861. - Status of federal territory in the Confederacy in
question. - Fort Sumter, Charleston, South Carolina
- Attacked by Confederate forces on April 12, 1861.
6Fort Sumter
7Naval Comparison
8A Navy Divided
- David Glasgow Farragut
- David Dixon Porter
- John Ericcson
- John Dahlgren
- Charles Wilkes
- Samuel F. DuPont
- Franklin Buchanan
- Matthew Fontaine Maury
- Raphael Semmes
9Balance of Naval Power
- North South
- Naval Yards 4
- Ship Builders 4
- Industrial Base 4
- Number of Ships 4
- Leadership 4
10Common Operational HeritageUnion and Confederate
Navies
- War of 1812 Coastal defense and commerce
raiding - Fighting from an inferior position against an
enemy that has command of the sea. - 1815-1846 Global deployments
- Protection of American maritime commerce
overseas. - 1846-1848 Mexican-American War
- U.S. Navy controls the seas throughout the war.
- Ports established on the Pacific Coast.
11Naval Comparison
- The Confederate Navy
- Inferior naval strength.
- U.S. Navy traditions prior to the
Mexican-American War - Defensive. - Coastal defense.
- Commerce raiding (Guerre de course).
- The Union Navy
- Superior naval strength built up throughout the
war. - Royal Navy traditions and U.S. Navy traditions in
the Mexican-American War - Offensive. - Establish control of sea lines of communication.
- Blockade of enemy coast.
- Power projection through amphibious assault.
12Diplomacy
13Diplomacy for the North
- Keep Great Britain truly neutral
- Reconcile the blockade of Southern ports with
British freedom of trade. - Problem Strong pro-Confederacy sentiment in
important segments of British policy-making
elites.
14Diplomacy for the South
- Win British recognition and naval aid.
- Problems
- War is viewed as a rebellion - not a conflict
between sovereign states. - Outcome of the war is uncertain.
- Diplomatic inexperience and a weak State
Department. - Fallacy of the "King Cotton" thesis.
- Slavery
- 1861- The Trent Affair
- Union Navy violates neutral rights of British
ship.
15Outcome of Diplomacy
- Ultimately a Failure
- Naval Agent James Bulloch gets that aid
- - Commerce raiders (Alabama, Florida,
Shenandoah) - - Blockade Runners
- - Laird rams (clearly warships blockade
breakers) - Battle of Antietam (September 1862), Emancipation
Proclamation, and Charles F. Adams protests end
aid.
16Strategy
17Union Naval Strategy
- Part of General Winfield Scotts master Anaconda
Plan for victory. - Blockade the entire Confederate coast.
- Capture Southern ports for coal, water, food
bombardment and amphibious assaults. - Control of Mississippi River.
- Vital line of communication for Confederacy.
- Cut off Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana.
- Riverine operations in western areas.
- Combined Army-Navy operations against Confederate
forces. - Union Army -- Capture Confederate capital at
Richmond.
18Confederate Naval Strategy
- Part of overall strategy of Attrition Warfare.
- Army will defend territory and threaten
Washington. - Coastal defense
- Army forts and new naval weapons systems.
- Blockade-running
- Attempt to continue commercial trade with Europe.
- Operations hurt by Southerners desires for
luxury goods. - Union blockades increasing effectiveness
increases profits. - Commerce raiding
- Successful cruises divert Union ships from
blockade duty. - Privateers (1861)
- Declaration of Paris - 1856.
- Unable to secure prize courts (sovereignty
problems).
19Naval Administration in the North
- Union Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles
- Rapid and massive ship-building program.
- Only 42 ships at the beginning of the war.
- 264 commissioned by December, 1861
- Convened Ironclad Board, August 1861, to combat
Virginia
20UnionSecretaryof theNavyGideon Welles
21Naval Administration in the South
- Confederate Secretary of the Navy Stephen Mallory
- Confederacy issues letters of marque to
privateers. - Attempts to use new technology to gain advantage.
- Conversion of older ships to armored ironclads.
- Re-emergence of the ram as a naval weapon.
22Naval Administration in the South (contd)
- James Bulloch attempts to gain British aid.
- Coordinates construction of warships in Great
Britain. - Questions of legality for a neutral power (Great
Britain) - Antietam (September 1862), Emancipation
Proclamation, and Union protests end aid.
23ConfederateSecretaryof theNavyStephen Mallory
24Naval Operations and Important Battles
25Early Naval Operations
- Norfolk Navy Yard
- Largest naval base and arsenal in the United
States. - Captured by Confederate forces on 21 April.
- USS Merrimack scuttled by retreating Union
forces. - Large number of guns captured by Confederates.
- Union blockade of the Confederacy
- Paper Blockade needs to become real as soon as
possible. - Forward bases required for an effective blockade.
- Amphibious operations launched to seize bases in
the South.
26Battle of Port Royal
- Attempt to establish first Union base on
Confederate territory at Port Royal Sound -- 7
November 1861. - Commodore Stephen F. DuPont
- Superior naval gunfire
- Directed against Confederate forts defending the
Sound. - Confederates abandon forts.
- Union soldiers and Marines land unopposed.
- Other Union amphibious operations will resemble
Port Royal operation.
27USS Port Royal
28Battle of Hampton Roads
- The Monitor and the Merrimack
29CSS Virginia
- USS Merrimack raised at Norfolk.
- Iron armor and ram added by Confederate Navy.
- Renamed Virginia and commanded by Franklin
Buchanan. - Defeats conventional Union ships on 8 March 1862.
30Franklin BuchananConfederate States
NavyCommanding OfficerofCSS Virginiaat
theBattle of Hampton Roads.
31USS Monitor
- Welles Ironclad Board
- John Ericcsons Monitor
- Highly armored with low freeboard.
- Single turret mounting two Dahlgren guns.
- Moved to Norfolk area to engage Virginia.
- Pounded each other for four hours
- Tactical draw but a strategic Union victory -
Confederate Navy unable to break the blockade of
Norfolk.
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33USS Monitor versus CSS Virginia
34John Ericcson
- Monitor design is improved and used to
produce large numbers of ships for the Union Navy
necessary for the assault of Confederate coasts
and ports.
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37Three Theaters
- Great Inland Rivers
- Mississippi River Basin
- Vicksburg
- Mobile Bay
- Atlantic and Gulf Coasts
- Fort Fisher
- Blue Water
- CSS Alabama
38Inland River Campaigns
- Combined Union Army - Navy offensives
- Goal Control of the Mississippi River
- Navy gunboats and transports used to support Army
- Union forces advance down Tennessee and
Cumberland Rivers to the Mississippi
39Capture of New Orleans
- Flag Officer David G. Farragut commanding
- Commander David Dixon Porter
- Tried to mortar bomb Fort Jackson and St. Philip
into submission - knocked a whole in the wall
- Farragut charged through and took the city
- Congress makes him an Admiral
40Mortar Boats
41Siege of Vicksburg
- Vicksburg the big obstacle to dominance of the
Mississippi - Porter ferried Grants troops across to the east
bank of the river, south of the fort - Grant takes the fort from the rear
- Surrender on 4 July 1863
- Naval support gunfire, troop transport, and
logistical reinforcement
42Siege of Vicksburg
43David Dixon Porter
44Battle of Mobile Bay
- Union fleet commanded by David Glasgow Farragut.
- Confederate fleet commanded by Franklin Buchanan.
- Entrance to Mobile Bay heavily defended.
- Torpedo buoys placed in entrance to the Bay.
- Guns of Fort Morgan defend only open channel.
- Union fleet outnumbers and outguns the
Confederate fleet waiting in Mobile Bay. - Farragut positions monitors between the rest of
his fleet and Fort Morgan. - Brooklyns captain stops and blocks the channel.
- Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!
45Torpedo
- Wooden keg filled with black powder with a
contact fuse anchored in port channels.
46DavidGlasgowFarragut
- Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!
47Battle of Mobile Bay
48Fort Fisher
- The seaward protector of Wilmington, NC
- railhead to Richmond supplies Lees Army
- Highly-defended by Confederate guns.
49Fort Fisher
- Combined Union Army-Navy operation.
- Union fleet commanded by David Dixon Porter.
- First assault fails - Christmas 1864.
- Second Assault
- Sailors and Marines attack the fort with Army
forces. - Only successful amphibious assault against a
heavily defended fort. - Heavy, constant, targeted naval gunfire necessary
for success.
50Confederate Commerce Raiders
- Highly successful in the disruption of Union
maritime commerce. - Captain Raphael Semmes
- CSS Sumter
- CSS Alabama
- Captures 68 Union vessels.
- Sunk at Cherbourg, France in duel with USS
Kearsarge.
51CaptainRaphael Semmes
52CSS Alabama - Commerce Raiding Route
53CSS Alabama
54Raphael Semmes
55Tactical Trends in the Civil War
- Introduction of ironclads
- Strengths Heavily armored for coastal assault.
- Weaknesses Low mobility on the open ocean.
- Question of a fleet's ability to suppress coastal
fortifications unanswered. - Appreciation for combined (Army-Navy) operations.
- Proper planning and coordination essential for
success.
56Overall Technological Advances
57Technological Innovation
- North Monitor Class
- Combination of steam, screw, armor, and a gun
turret. - Large numbers built.
- Dahlgren Guns effective at close range.
- Gives Union Navy the advantage on coastal and
inland waterways. - South
- CSS Virginia -- Steam power and iron armor.
- The Davids
- CSS Hunley - submarine.
- Torpedoes
- Laird rams.
58CSS Hunley
59Conclusions
- Decline of U.S. Merchant Marine due in large to
the obsolescent sailing vessels used. - Northern success in application of British-like
offensive naval warfare - PLUS
- Failure of Southern commerce raiding to win the
war at sea QUESTION - Will American naval officers still regard
commerce raiding as the proper strategy in time
of war ??????? - The Alabama Claims cause a lasting diplomatic
debate with Great Britain.
60Conclusions
- Union blockade sets a precedent that that Woodrow
Wilson finds inconvenient in 1914-1917. - Joint Navy-Army Operations reach an unprecedented
level of high efficiency on the Mississippi
River. - Joint Ops reach high point in the second amphib
landing at Fort Fisher, North Carolina, closing
down the confederacys last open port supporting
R. E. Lees Army.
61Discussion
- Next Time Developments of Naval Technology and
Strategy