History | |
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United States | |
Name | Miantonomoh |
Namesake | Miantonomoh |
Builder | Brooklyn Navy Yard |
Laid down | 1862 |
Launched | 15 August 1863 |
Commissioned | 18 September 1865 |
Decommissioned | 28 July 1870 |
Fate | Scrapped, 1874 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Miantonomoh-class monitor |
Displacement | 3,401 long tons (3,456 t) |
Length | 250 ft (76.2 m) (o/a) |
Beam | 53 ft 8 in (16.4 m) |
Draft | 14 ft 9 in (4.5 m) |
Depth | 16 ft (4.9 m) |
Installed power |
|
Propulsion | 2 shafts; 2 HRCR steam engines |
Speed | 9 knots (17 km/h; 10 mph) |
Complement | 150 officers and enlisted men |
Armament | 2 × twin 15 in (381 mm) smoothbore Dahlgren guns |
Armor |
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The first USS Miantonomoh was the lead ship of her class of four ironclad monitors built for the United States Navy during the American Civil War. Completed after the war ended in May 1865, the ship made one cruise off the East Coast before she began a voyage across the North Atlantic in May 1866 to conduct a lengthy showing the flag mission in Europe. Miantonomoh was decommissioned upon her return in 1867, but was reactivated two years later and assigned to the North Atlantic Squadron before decommissioning again in 1870. The monitor was sold for scrap three years later as part of a scheme where the Navy Department evaded the Congressional refusal to order new ships by claiming that the Civil War-era ship was being repaired while building a new monitor of the same name.