An encyclopedic collection of

Sea Shanties & Maritime Music

"I sing the Chanty Man. A tremulous echo is all that is left of him upon the seas. Soon it will have escaped - fled down the winds of yesterday of which he sang so lustily..."

— William Brown Meloney IV, Everybody's Magazine, 1915

Explore the Collection

Mar
8
This Day in History · 1862

The Sinking of the Cumberland

On the morning of March 8, 1862, the Confederate ironclad CSS Virginia (rebuilt from the captured USS Merrimac) steamed into Hampton Roads, Virginia, and attacked the Union blockading fleet. The wooden frigate USS Cumberland, commanded by Lieutenant George Morris, was among her targets.

The Cumberland’s broadsides bounced harmlessly off the Virginia’s iron-plated hull. The ironclad then rammed the wooden ship, piercing her hull with her iron prow. As the Cumberland sank in the James River, her crew refused to surrender—continuing to fire even as the water rose around them. The ship went down with her flag still flying, nailed to the mast.

The engagement marked the end of wooden warships in naval warfare and set the stage for the following day’s historic duel between the Virginia and the USS Monitor—the first battle between ironclad warships.

See: The Cumberland's Crew

Song Spotlight ·