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View of Fort Hindman, Arkansas Post. [January 11, 1863]

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View of Fort Hindman, Arkansas Post. [January 11, 1863]

description

Summary

Small drawing of the fort showing the location and size of guns, casemates, powder magazine, and other buildings.
Scale ca. 1:2,450.
LC Civil War Maps (2nd ed.), 115.2
From Report of the Secretary of the Navy, with an appendix, containing reports from officers. December, 1863 (Washington, Government Printing Office, 1863). fol. p. 414.
Inset: Appearance of IX-gun silenced by the "Cincinnati."
Description derived from published bibliography.
Available also through the Library of Congress web site as raster image.

In the early years of the war many civilian ships were confiscated for military use, while both sides built new ships. The most popular ships were tinclads—mobile, small ships that actually contained no tin. These ships were former merchant ships, generally about 150 feet in length, with about two to six feet of draft, and about 200 tons. Shipbuilders would remove the deck and add an armored pilothouse as well as sheets of iron around the forward part of the casemate and the engines. Most of the tinclads had six guns: two or three twelve-pounder or twenty-four-pounder howitzers on each broadside, with two heavier guns, often thirty-two-pounder smoothbores or thirty-pounder rifles, in the bow. These ships proved faster than ironclads and, with such a shallow draft, worked well on the tributaries of the Mississippi.

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Date

01/01/1863
person

Contributors

United States. Navy.
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Source

Library of Congress
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

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