April 19, 1864 Tuesday
C.S.S. Albemarle, Commander Cooke, attacked Union warships off Plymouth, North Carolina, at 3:30 in the morning. The heralded and long-awaited ram had departed Hamilton on the evening of the 17th. While en route, "a portion of the machinery broke down" and "the rudderhead broke off," but repairs were promptly made; and, despite the navigational hazards of the crooked Roanoke River, Cooke anchored above Plymouth at 10 p.m. on the 18th. Failing to rendezvous with Confederate troops as planned, Cooke dispatched a boat to determine the position of the Union gunboats and shore batteries. Shortly after midnight, 19 April, the party returned and reported that Albemarle could pass over the Union obstructions because of the high stage of the water. Cooke weighed anchor and stood down to engage. Meanwhile, anticipating an attack by the ram, Lieutenant Commander Flusser lashed wooden double-enders U.S.S. Miami and Southfield together for mutual protection and concentration of firepower. As Albemarle appeared, he gallantly headed the two light wooden ships directly at the Southern ram, firing as they approached. Albemarle struck Southfield, commanded by Acting Lieutenant Charles A. French, a devastating blow with her ram. It was reported that she "tore a hole clear through to the boiler" and Cooke stated that his ship plunged ten feet into the side of the wooden gunboat. Though backing immediately after the impact, Albemarle could not at once wrench herself free from the sinking Southfield and thus could not reply effectively to the fire poured into her by Miami. At last her prow was freed as Southfield sank, and Cooke forced Flusser's ship to withdraw under a heavy cannonade. Small steamer U.S.S. Ceres and 105-ton tinclad Whitehead moved downriver also. The shot of the Union ships had been ineffective against the heavily plated, sloping sides of the ram. Early in the engagement, Lieutenant Commander Flusser (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_W._Flusser ) had been killed.
In other fighting there were affairs at Leesburg, Virginia; Marling’s Bottom, West Virginia; plus skirmishes at King’s River, Arkansas; Charleston, Missouri; and Waterhouse’s Mill and Boiling Springs, Tennessee. To the twenty-third a Union expedition moved up the Yazoo River, Mississippi with skirmishing and loss by capture of U.S. gunboat Petrel on April 22. Confederate troops carried out operations against pro-unionists in Marion County, Alabama.
An enabling act to permit Nebraska Territory to join the Union was approved after passage by the U.S. Congress.
A "David" torpedo boat commanded by Engineer Tomb, CSN, attempted to sink U.S.S. Wabash, commanded by Captain John De Camp, off Charleston. The "David", the same one that had been used in the attack on U.S.S. Memphis on 6 March, was sighted while still 150 yards distant from the blockader. Alertly the large steam frigate slipped her cable and rapidly got under way, pouring a hail of musket fire at the approaching "David". When only 40 yards off, Tomb was turned back by heavy swells that threatened to swamp the boat.
U.S.S. Virginia, commanded by Acting Lieutenant C. H. Brown, took blockade running Mexican schooner Alma off the coast of Texas with assorted cargo.