VERBATIM
'He is not impressed with the necessity of building ships.' John N. Maffit
entered those prophetic words in his diary following a meeting with Jefferson
Davis shortly after the civil war began. This future Captain of the commerce raider
CSS Florida was one of the first United States naval officers
to resign his commission and offer his services to the South; but those ten words
made a fitting epitaph for the Confederate States Navy and with it many argue, the
Southern cause.
Mallory's strong desire to see the Confederacy equipped with a substantial and 'competent' navy was at odds with many and by the end of the first year of conflict, the Secretary of the Navy was acutely aware he was competing less favourably for funding from those commanding the (many) southern armies. Army commanders remained confident the war would be short-lived and that opinion - and their expectation was shared (though not desired) by many politicians in the new government! It is not clear what Mallory's point of view in this was; but his determination to realise a susbstantial navy remained, so in an effort to bypass the usual channels; and seemingly more aware of shortfalls to come, Mallory wrote directly to President Davis, laying out in no uncertain terms what would be necessary to further the aims and ambitions of their (Navy's) cause. His letter was as follows:
Confederate States Navy Department
Richmond, March 4th 1862
Sir:
In
response to the resolution of the House of Representatives passed on
the 3rd instant, '..that the President be requested to communicate to
this body, at the earliest practicable moment, what additional means in
money, men, arms and munitions of war are, in his judegement necessary,
or may be within the present year, for the public service, including
military operations on land and water'.. i have the honor to say that
fifty light-draft and powerful steam propellors, plated with 5-inch hard
iron, armed and equipped for service in our own waters, four iron or
steel-clad single deck, ten gun frigates of about 2,000 tons, and ten
clipper propellors with superior marine engines, both classes of ships
designed for deep-sea cruising, 3,000 tons of first-class boiler-plate
iron, and 1,000 tons of rod, bolt, and bar iron are means which this
department could immediately employ with incalculable advantage to the
best interests of the country.
To
this point in his communication, Mallory was determined to point out
the resources he had to hand - but in truth his statement was somewhat
embellished in regards of readiness or quantities of materials, no doubt
based on the reports received from his immediate subordinates? Now
however, Mallory sought to alert Davis to the possibilities a more
substantial naval force would bring about. He continues:
Under
the head of arms and munitions of war, this Department could
immediately employ with equal advantage 2,000 pieces or heavy ordinance,
ranging in caliber from 6 to 11 inches, and in weight from 6,000 to
14,000 pounds, 2,000 tons of cannon powder, 1,000 tons of musket powder,
for filling projectiles and pyrotechny, 4,000 navy rifles, and 4,000
navy revolvers, and 4,000 navy cutlasses, with their equipments and
ammunition.
We could use with equal
advantage 3,000 instructed seamen, and 4,000 ordinary seament and
landsmen, and 2,000 first rate mechanics. These means and munitions of
war cannot presently be obtained within the Confederacy, and the extent
to which they may be supplied [sourced] from abroad, I cannot yet
determine.
The
crux of Mallory's problems was funding; and this letter to his
President provided him with his best opportunity to state unoquivicably
the amount he needed for European purchases:
If
five millions of dollars were immediately placed in Europe, prudent
agents might possibly obtain such means and materials to a certain
extent.
I am, respectfully, your obedient servant,
S.R. MALLORY
Secretary of the Navy
No record of any direct reply to Mallory's letter remains but Davis was obviously less than sympathetic to his demands! Through the good offices of Commodore Duncan Ingraham, commander of all naval forces and Edward M. Tidball, chief clerk, an order was constructed which, by Act of Congress on April 21st 1862, provided details for the man-powering of the navy, albeit at a level far below that which Mallory desired. None-the-less, Mallory did receive 'promise' for enough funding (directly and indirectly) to pursue a programme of equipment that enabled his department to enter into innumerable contracts for gunboats to be built on the Pamunkey, York, Tombigee, Pedee and other rivers. However, the first, major setback for Mallory's infant Confederate navy, came with this allocation. From April 1861 to August 1862, congress made-over $330M to the army but less than $15M was budgeted for the navy. To make matters worse, Mallory initially did not have direct control of his funding. After negotiating with contractors at home or agents overseas for purchases, he had to apply to the Treasury Department for payment, adding further layers of unnecessary bureaucracy. Despite these inconveniences, between April 1861 and April 1865, the South managed to launch over two-dozen Ironclads and during that same period, laid down or contracted for another thirty-six. This was in addition to numerous conventional warships, commercial ships and river steamers, blockade-runners, commerce raiders, gunboats and smaller craft. A prodigious effort considering the extremely limited shipbuilding and industrial capacity of the South in 1861. Records show many of the above were burned before their completion and payment to contractors for raw materials and manpower never paid. Throughout, there remained the problems associated with procurement of propellors, boilers and engines, as those designs to hand lacked sufficient power and endurance and would render this new fleet, inefficient at best. Mallory realised the industrial resources of the south would be directed towards supporting the army for the foreseable future, so he directed his attention to the one proven source of both ships and machinery - Great Britain!
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