Uss Merrimac

Two ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS ''Merrimac'', named in honor of the Merrimack River (also known as the Merrimac River), a river formed by the junction of Pemigewasset and Winnipesaukee Rivers at Franklin, New Hampshire. The Merrimack flows south across New Hampshire, and then eastward across northeastern Massachusetts before emptying in the Atlantic at Newburyport, Massachusetts. Also, three other US Navy ships have borne the name Merrimack, including the frigate USS Merrimack (1855), which was converted into CSS Virginia, one of the first ironclad warships.
  • The first Merrimac, was a sidewheel steamer purchased in England for the Confederate government in 1862 for use as a blockade runner. She was captured by USS Iroquois in 1863, and purchased by the Navy in 1864. Merrimac served from May to February 1865, when she foundered during a storm.
   

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
origami
temporal masking
high frequency limit
spectral masking
monticello
day of the dead
rafflesia
mathml
peter waldo
mood disorder
representative democracy
livable netherlands
freedom house
multichannel
cyclic group
stock market
allegany county, new york
robber baron
broome county, new york
cattaraugus county, new york
cayuga county, new york
chautauqua county, new york
idiolect
ecolect
finite language
aitutaki
brahmic family
nebuchadnezzar ii of babylon
irish election results
gaspar corte real
ogimachi
trinity college
german museum of technology (berlin)
eroticism
imaginary unit
arapaho
lincoln memorial
titanic (1997 movie)
axiom of extensionality
thermite
watergate scandal
axiom of pairing
axiom schema of specification
axiom schema of replacement