CSS Wilmington
CSS Wilmington was an unnamed casemate ironclad built for the Confederate States Navy during the American Civil War. The ship was never officially named and is referred to by historians by the name of the city in which she was built. Wilmington was still under construction during the February 1865 Battle of Wilmington and was destroyed to prevent her capture by Union troops after their victory.
Background and description
Wilmington was designed by the Chief Naval Constructor, John L. Porter, as a replacement for the rotten ironclad CSS North Carolina and the wrecked ironclad CSS Raleigh for the defenses of the Cape Fear River in North Carolina in 1864. Unlike those ships, Wilmington may have been designed to force engagements on the Union blockaders as her sleek lines and powerful propulsion machinery suggest something more than a defensive role.The ship had an overall length of, a beam of and a draft of. Her depth of hold was, but no tonnage or displacement figures are available as Wilmington was destroyed before she could be launched. The ship was fitted with two small pilot houses, one each fore and aft of the casemates, that were shaped like truncated pyramids.
She was powered by a pair of high-pressure horizontal single-cylinder direct-acting steam engines that had a bore and a stroke. Each engine drove an propeller via and gears, using steam provided by four tubular boilers. The propellers were connected by an idler shaft which prevented them from rotating at different speeds, which would have significantly inhibited the ship's maneuverability. All of the propulsion machinery was built by the Columbus Naval Iron Works in Columbus, Georgia, but had not been delivered before Wilmington was destroyed.
The ship's main battery consisted of two guns of an unknown type on pivot mounts, each of which was housed in a small octagonal casemate.
Each casemate had seven Glossary of [nautical terms (A-L)#G|gun ports]. The thickness of Wilmingtons wrought-iron armor is unknown.