From our archives: Emancipation of slaves Lincoln’s ‘crowning act’

What we thought: 150 years ago

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A dispatch says that the official report of the foundering of the Monitor shows her loss attributable to the springing of a large leak above the line where her armor joined onto her hull, caused by the weight of her armor and the strain thus produced on her woodwork during the violent pitching of the vessel in the heavy sea.

When she rose on the swell, the flat undersurface of her projecting armor came down with a great shock to the vessel and turret, and, as supposed, increasing the leak. The pumps were entirely powerless to keep the water down in the hold, and it became necessary to transfer the crew to the ship which had the Monitor in tow.

As the waves were dashing over her whole deck, this transfer was extremely hazardous, and it was while attending to this that most of those who were lost perished.

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