Navies of the Civil War

Navies in America’s Wars

The War on the Waves

The wars that defined America were not just fought on land. In the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, wooden American and British ships engaged in some of the most dramatic and iconic battles of the Age of Sail.

In the Civil War, the North and South fought each other on the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the Gulf of Mexico, and the rivers of the mainland. The naval war shaped the strategic and economic fortunes of the United States and the Confederacy throughout the struggle. The Civil War also saw the first battle between ironclad ships, the introduction of sea mines and revolving gun turrets, and the first successful use of a submarine against an enemy ship– changing the trajectory of naval warfare around the globe.

Civil War Torpedo Boats

During the American Civil War, military innovations skyrocketed with modernization, including the use of the torpedo. One of the first recorded uses...

Isaac Hull

Born March 9, 1773, in Derby, Connecticut, Isaac Hull served for 45 years in the United States Navy, rising to the rank of commodore, in the process...

Joshua Barney

Undaunted in Battle is a 2014 bas-relief sculpture, in the heroic mold of Saint-Gaudens’ Robert Gould Shaw and the 54th Massachusetts Infantry...

James Lawrence

Many noted figures from the War of 1812 either had relatives that served in or were themselves involved with, the War for Independence. Not so with...