The USS Monitor Center Blog

Author Archives: will.hoffman

INTO THE BREECH!!!!!!!

After many months of work, treatment has been completed on a grouping of four rimfire cartridges recovered from the interior of the turret in 2006 (see blog post from February 18, 2010). Of the four cartridges, two are relatively complete while the others have fragmented. The image below shows a view of the interior of [...]

2010: A Monitor Oddity Continues…….

Much work has been carried out on the object along with several interesting discoveries since the initial blog post about the artifact on March 15, 2010. The best thought at the current time is that the artifact is some kind of swing valve. After several weeks of the object having gone through electrolytic reduction, the [...]

From the Foundry: Carbon and X-rays

Cast iron, like steel and wrought iron, is an alloy consisting primarily of iron and carbon but has a carbon content usually in the range of 2- 4%, which appears as flakes of graphite intermixed within the material. Commonly, when cast iron is submerged in a marine environment, the iron component corrodes away, leaving behind [...]

One Oil Cup Down

   This oil cup was discovered in 2001 in a mass of concretion withother various tools. These tools are most likely the spilled contents of a tool box and included different sized hammer heads, a small oil can, a lead ingot, and glass from a lantern. The mass was concreted to a large copper alloy [...]

2001: a Monitor Oddity

This object was recovered in 2001 from the Monitor’s wreck site. Since its recovery, there has been much speculation as to the function of the artifact. It has been suggested that this object served as some kind of valve, possibly within a radiator-like system. It is also thought that it may be a component of [...]

Treatment Continues on Cartridges Recovered from Turret

In 2006, several complete rimfire cartridges along with fragments were discovered above nutguard 23 embedded within concretion. The discovery of these cartridges has proved quite exciting for the conservation department, and has caused much discussion over the origins of the ammunition. In the early 1860’s a wide variety of rimfire cartridges were used with individual types [...]