When the war began, the U.S. Navy’s blockade fleet consisted of about three dozen ships to patrol more than 3,500 miles of southern coastline, and rebel merchant ships were able to slip in and out of southern ports nearly at will. Taking on cargoes in the Caribbean, sleek Confederate blockade runners brought in vital supplies—
Unable to build a conventional navy equal to the expanding U.S. fleet, the Confederates experimented with a radical new maritime design: the ironclad warship. At Norfolk, Virginia, the wooden hull of the Merrimack was layered with two-
April 12– |
Attack on Fort Sumter |
July 21, 1861 | First battle of Bull Run (Manassas) |
February 6, 1862 | Battle of Fort Henry |
February 16, 1862 | Battle of Fort Donelson |
March 6– |
Battle of Pea Ridge |
March 9, 1862 | Battle of the Merrimack (the Virginia) and the Monitor |
March 26, 1862 | Battle of Glorieta Pass |
April 6– |
Battle of Shiloh |
May– |
McClellan’s peninsula campaign |
June 6, 1862 | Fall of Memphis |
June 25– |
Seven Days Battle |
August 29– |
Second battle of Bull Run (Manassas) |
September 17, 1862 | Battle of Antietam |
December 13, 1862 | Battle of Fredericksburg |
The Confederacy never found a way to break the Union blockade despite exploring many naval innovations, including a new underwater vessel—