During a small
action in June 1862 (which is retroactively put in the timeline long
after it has reached and passed June) we see the fate of Captain
Bythesea, VC.
In reality Bythesea
was an incisive and brave man who served both in combat and in critical roles ashore; in BROS, he dies an
incredibly silly death.
Firstly, we are told
that Bythesea is captain of the Meteor
and patrolling off Long Island Sound. This is very odd as not only
were his real orders to handle organizing the Canadian
lakes navy (a job which seems to
have been essentially left undone TTL) but the Meteor
was considered uneconomical to repair.
‘Orders have been at length
received at Portsmouth to break up and remove the ruins of the
Meteor, floating battery, from no. 2 dock at that port. The Meteor
was placed in this dock on the 19th of November, 1860. She had
afterwards her armour plates removed from her sides, and was opened
up for examination, when she was found to be in such a defective
state throughout the whole of her frame that the cost of rebuilding
her would greatly exceed any value she could represent when
complete.’ (Hampshire Telegraph, 21 October 1861; cf Times 9
January 1862)
Given
the timing, British small ironclads might be new build ones but this
one is specified to be one of the older sort. Meteor
is also a slow floating battery designed to attack fortified
anchorages; she should not be patrolling anything.
Secondly,
the Meteor rams itself
onto a rock (Race Point Ledge). This is in an attempt to intercept
the Vanderbilt which
is charging through the sound (having somehow avoided being spotted
as she approached on “a beautiful June morning” – for some
reason Bythesea (in a slow coastal attack ironclad) attempts to
intercept the Vanderbilt by sailing directly southeast within three
hundred yards of the tip of Fisher Island, instead of sailing south
or southwest on a vector which would better allow him to get in gun
range. He also does not actually see
the rock ledge below the waterline, despite how it is less than three
feet below the water.
This
grounding is based (as per TFSmith's notes) on the grounding of the
Lord Clyde in 1872 –
an ironclad of 28 feet draft, not 8'8”, and in new waters for her
instead of waters where (as Meteor
has been) she was operating for months. Bythesea also only grounded Lord Clyde because he was trying to salvage a grounded civilian ship, a motive that is entirely absent here.
Bythesea
then transfers to a gunvessel, Lily,
and efforts begin to salvage the Meteor
– the salvage efforts involving essentially the entire blockade
from Long Island to Nantucket. Why this takes so much effort is not
clear – Meteor's
maximum speed of five
knots would not do a great deal of damage to the wooden hull of the
ironclad, and the tidal sweep is two and a half feet so
unless she ran aground at high tide it would be easy to get clear.
(for comparison the tidal sweep at Pantalleria where Lord
Clyde grounded is approx. four
inches).
Meanwhile
Farragut sallies out of New York. He achieves the very impressive
feat of taking a fleet including Monitor
(6 knots) the eighty nautical miles from New York to Fishers Island
overnight in June (seven
hours) and we are told that Monitor
batters Meteor into
submission with “constant, near-point-blank fire from Monitor”.
While the effect of the guns is
not stated clearly enough to be sure, the 11 inch gun was only able
to penetrate an ironclad of Meteor's
type under ideal conditions (conditions in which Meteor
could effectively reply; indeed,
as the Aetna class
ironclads were pierced for all-around fire it may have more guns able
to bear) and to describe
Monitor's guns as
“constant” requires an effort of confabulation – each of the
two guns fired at Hampton Roads once every twelve minutes. (The
guns of Meteor would
be possible to serve once a minute at full speed; in a real action
this would be more like one every two to three minutes, depending.)
However,
this is where we come to the death of Bythesea;
Lily actually tried to come alongside Monitor to board; Bythesea, who had boasted he could take the ironclad by jamming her turret, died on her deck, killed by a shell from Cayuga.
Everything
about this is wrong.
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As we have discussed, Bythesea should not be here.
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Lily has clearly successfully boarded Monitor here.
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Bythesea is described as leading the boarding party; he is the commanding officer. While this took place in Napoleonic times, Bythesea's statement was that a boarding party of two men could jam Monitor's turret. It seems odd for him to be one of the two men.
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Bythesea did not suggest he could jam the turret of Monitor.
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Bythesea suggested he could jam the turret of Miantonomoh, an opinion formed after spending weeks on board in the mid-1860s. Not 1861.
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This was a professional naval opinion delivered to an Admiralty panel on turrets based on both close-hand experience and the actual number of real Monitor turrets which jammed in the Civil War, not an idle boast.
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The actual commander of Monitor, Worden, believed before Hampton Roads that boarding would be suicide as he could sweep the deck with canister.
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After Hampton Roads (presumably where Worden discovered the aforementioned rate of fire issue), where the Virginia nearly managed to get boarders aboard Monitor but failed, Worden's view changed to being that… boarders could jam her turret. He was so convinced of this view that he took special pains to tell the President of the United States personally.
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And the Cayuga is shelling Monitor. This is an odd way to handle the situation to say the least, especially as Union shells were time fuzed and had a minimum range of several hundred yards. One would think canister was the better remedy.
This
also adds to TFSmith's tally of killed British VC holders, i.e.
Hewett (killed by a Yankee shot on his own quarterdeck during the
Rinaldo affair) and
Dunn (killed by a barrage of Union musketry and specifically by
Calixia Lavallée with two shotgun blasts to the chest). It
seems as though TFSmith has it in for them – there
are six named men in the TL who enter it with the VC, and three of
them die in rather horrible ways.
The matter of navigation is separate, and deserves an article to itself.
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