Iron Thunder Read online
A LETTER TO MY READERS
Dear Friends:
I love to read good, strong stories with lots of adventure, action, and emotion—and plenty of detail. No surprise it’s the kind of story I like to write, too.
That’s what this series, I Witness, is all about: exciting stories about fictional young people during real events in history. I Witness stories will make you feel as if you are right in the middle of the action. The illustrations will show you what things really looked like.
One of the most exciting stories I’ve come upon is the tale of the Monitor and the Merrimac—the Civil War moment that brought two ironclad ships to battle for the first time. Iron Thunder is as true to what really happened as I could make it. In fact, on the Monitor there really was a boy by the name of Tom Carroll.
This is Tom’s story—as I imagined it. Now it is your story.
Hang on …
Text copyright © 2007 by Avi
Illustrations on illust. 1, illust. 2, illust. 3, illust. 4, illust. 5, illust. 6, illust. 7, illust. 8, illust. 9, illust. 10, illust. 11, illust. 12, illust. 13, illust. 14 © 2007 by C. B. Mordan All rights reserved. Published by Hyperion Books for Children, an imprint of Disney Book Group. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. For information address Hyperion Books for Children, 114 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10011-5690.
Images on fig. 1, fig. 2, fig. 3, fig. 4, fig. 5, fig. 6, fig. 7, fig. 8, fig. 9, fig. 10, fig. 11, fig. 12, fig. 13, fig. 14, fig. 15, fig. 16, fig. 17, fig. 18, fig. 19, fig. 20, fig. 21, fig. 22, fig. 23, fig. 24, fig. 25, fig. 26, fig. 27, fig. 28 courtesy of the Mariners’ Museum and Library, Newport News, Virginia
Illustrations on illust. 15, illust. 16 from Harper’s New Monthly Magazine Vol. XLII Illustrations on illust. 17, illust. 18 from Harper’s New Monthly Magazine Vol. XXIX Photograph on illust. 19 courtesy of the American Numismatic Society
Printed in the United States of America
First Edition
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data on file.
Book design by Christine Kettner
This book is set in 11-point Coldstyle.
eISBN-13: 978-1-4231-4062-7
ISBN-13: 978-1-4231-0446-9
ISBN-10:1-4231-0446-3
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For Jeff Oliver
From Brooklyn to Virginia
CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
COPYRIGHT PAGE
CHAPTER ONE
How It Began
CHAPTER TWO
I Get a Job on I Don’t Know What
CHAPTER THREE
I Meet a Genius
CHAPTER FOUR
I Gaze Upon Something Strange
CHAPTER FIVE
I See Gold in the Snow
CHAPTER SIX
I Don’t Tell the Truth
CHAPTER SEVEN
I Learn Some Big Things
CHAPTER EIGHT
I Meet Mr. Ogden Quinn
CHAPTER NINE
I Learn the Ship’s Name
CHAPTER TEN
I Battle for the Monitor
CHAPTER ELEVEN
I Have a Meeting
CHAPTER TWELVE
I Go to Garrett Falloy
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
I Ride the Monitor Into the East River
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
I Escape
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
I Find a Place of Safety
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
I Get a Surprise
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
My Life Inside the Monitor
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
We’re Almost Ready
CHAPTER NINETEEN
We Make Our Final Preparations
CHAPTER TWENTY
The Night Before Departure
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
I Say Farewell to Brooklyn
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Disaster!
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Desperate
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
We Arrive at Hampton Roads
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
The Pilot’s News
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
I See a Sight I Never Wish to See Again
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
The Morning of March 9, 1862
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
The Battle Starts
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
The Battle Continues
CHAPTER THIRTY
Who Won?
GLOSSARY
AUTHOR’S NOTE
THE MONITOR TODAY
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ma and I had halted at the dim bottom steps of the shabby York Street tenement…
CHAPTER ONE
How It Began
“TOM, WE JUST NEED more money. You’re going to have to take your pa’s place.”
It was a cold early evening in January 1862, and the war had been going ten months. But only a week had passed since we’d learned that my pa had been killed fighting in some town in Maryland. We didn’t know where exactly. No more than we knew if his remains would be returned. The only thing we did know was that he was gone—forever.
Ma and I had halted at the dim bottom steps of the shabby York Street tenement, where we lived in the Vinegar Hill section of Brooklyn. I’d been carrying home one of her laundry loads. So when she sent my older sister, Dora, on up ahead, telling her to light the wood stove, I thought she just wanted to take a rest. The three flights up to our rooms always tired her.
Her words gave me two feelings: some kind of pride she’d consider me able, but upset that she’d ask me to take over from Pa. I didn’t see how I could. His dying left me sad, and angry too, at the army, at the Union, at President Lincoln for taking my pa away and altering our lives in ways I could not know. Getting a job was the first big change.
Like lots of boys, I’d been peddling newspapers—the Herald—around the neighborhood. You could pull in buyers if you called out the war headlines right. I may have been small for my thirteen years, but I was loud. Thing is, since I had to buy the papers before I sold them, I made, maybe, thirty-five cents a week. The best corner was right outside the Brooklyn Navy Yard gates. But Garrett Falloy, being the biggest newsboy around, had that one.
I was going to the local school. Well, some days, at least. Liked it fair enough. Learned to read, anyway.
“What kind of work you figure I could get?” I said, adding, “And I won’t join no army.”
She looked at me so mournful I wished I hadn’t spoken. “Tom,” she whispered, “you know I wouldn’t want that.”
We all knew what was happening with the rebellion. About ten months ago—when Mr. Lincoln became president—eleven southern states left the Union. Claimed they were an independent country. Named themselves the Confederate States of America. Rebels or “secesh” is what we called them. Back in April, they began the war by firing on Fort Sumter down in South Carolina.
When the war began, lots of neighborhood men and boys signed up for Brooklyn’s Fourteenth Regiment. My father did. Maybe they believed in the Union, like my pa. I supposed it was the pay, too. We needed money, and a private made thirteen dollars a month.
The truth is, no one thought the war was going to last so long or be so bloody. But by early winter, though newspapers said otherwise, folks knew the war wasn’t going well. Not for the Union. Lots, like my pa, had been killed.
We got along because Ma and my sister each earned about two dollars a week by taking in officers’ washin
g from the nearby Navy Yard. But my sister made less because she got sick a lot. So I knew my ma was right. We needed more money.
“What do you think I could do?” I asked.
“I spoke to the yardmaster today,” she said. “Mr. Hendricks. He might need help.”
“Doing what?”
“Not sure,” she said. “Said I should just bring you around tomorrow.”
Trudging upstairs that night, I had no idea what would happen. I felt like an ox must when a yoke is thrown over its neck for the first time. I supposed school was over. But if you’d told me then I was going to be part of the most amazing adventure of the whole war, I’d have called you a liar—flat out.
Except it was no lie—I was there—I saw it all.
CHAPTER TWO
I Get a Job on I Don’t Know What
IT WAS STILL DARK next morning when I heard, “Tom! Get up!” My sister, Dora, was standing over me with a cup of coffee in one hand, lit candle in another. “Ma’s almost ready,” she whispered.
Dora was seventeen and worried about me a lot. No more than I worried about her. Thin and pale, she coughed too much. And it was so cold that January, the East River was clogged with ice. Mostly she stayed home.
I got up, threw cold water on my face, hot coffee into my belly. As we left, Dora slipped a piece of bread and molasses into my hand.
Ma led the way to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Those days, Brooklyn was the country’s third biggest city, right behind New York and Philadelphia. But the Yard, perched on the East River opposite New York City, was a city itself. There were many huge warehouses and open workshops where cord was twined and canvas sails stitched. Cranes for lifting heavy things. Coils of rope lay everywhere. Mounds of cannonballs were set in pyramid fashion, the cannons lined up in rows like so many giant iron bottles ready to pour out fire and hot shot. The air, cold though it was, smelled of hot tar, cut wood, and brackish sea.
This is the entrance to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Usually it was very cluttered and busy.
People said the Yard had never been so busy. That was because when the war began, Mr. Lincoln told the Union navy to close down the Southern ports—a blockade. Called it the “Anaconda Plan,” after that huge snake that kills by squeezing. It’s what the Union wanted to do to the Rebels—choke the fighting out of them. But to do it, the Union needed ships. That’s why the dry docks were full of ships—sail and paddle—being refit or new-made. Mechanics, laborers, sailors, and soldiers, almost all men, but some boys, were working day and night.
Guards with rifles were on tight watch at the gates. Secessionist spies and saboteurs—I’m not saying just Southerners either—were said to be everywhere. “Copperheads,” is what we called those traitors.
Ma led me to the Yard’s central court, to the Round House. It was a big, four-story building, not really round but eight-sided with a great clock set in one wall so people could mark time. It’s where workers signed up and pay was passed out.
The Round House. The big clock is on the far side.
We slipped through the crowds to a door that was split in two, with the top half opening outward, the bottom half fitted with a shelf. Over the door was a sign:
MR. HENDRICKS
YARDMASTER
Ma knocked on the shelf. “Mr. Hendricks, sir!” she called.
An old gent with a curly gray beard appeared. He was wearing a blue navy uniform.
“Ah, Mrs. Carroll, ma’am,” said this Hendricks with a tip of his navy cap. “Morning!”
“Mr. Hendricks, sir,” said my mother, nudging me forward, “I told you I’d be bringing my son. Name’s Thomas Carroll, though most everybody calls him Tom.”
“Do they, now?” said Mr. Hendricks, fixing his eyes like he was measuring me for a Sunday suit. I don’t doubt he saw what there was: a kid with brown hair crowning a face with dark eyes, thick eyebrows, and ears to grow into, but no more blarney than most. As usual, I was wearing a checked flannel shirt, baggy trousers held up by braces, plus boots and a cloth cap.
“What kind of work would that be, now?” he asked me.
“Most anything that’s fitting, sir,” I muttered. “I’m more than willing.”
“You don’t look particular willing,” he said, laughing. “How old?”
“Thirteen,” I said.
“Small for your age, ain’t you?” said Mr. Hendricks.
“He’s very strong,” said Ma, bringing heat to my face.
Mr. Hendricks nodded. “And I suppose he’ll take anything that’s offered?”
“Yes, sir,” Ma said quickly. “We’re in sore need.”
“You and everybody else,” Hendricks muttered. All the same, he gave me another sharp look as if to pin me in place, then picked up a ledger book.
“A boy your size …” he muttered to himself, turning pages. “Here’s the ticket,” he said, jabbing a finger down. “Rowland’s Continental Iron Works. Greenpoint. About a mile or so upriver.”
“What’s there?” asked Ma.
Mr. Hendricks grinned. “They’re bolting Ericsson’s floating battery together. Need all the help they can get.”
“What’s a floating battery?” I asked.
“Something new in navy ways,” said the yard-master. “An ironclad ship.” He added a wink and said, “Useful, I suppose, if she floats.” He pushed if more than he did useful.
“What’s her name?” I asked, thinking a ship with a brave name would be worth working on. A good brag, anyway.
Mr. Hendricks laughed. “No real name yet. But folks are calling her ‘Ericsson’s Folly.’ They say she’ll have tight quarters, so you could be a help.”
I thought of a smart answer to his mocking words, but kept my mouth shut.
“Now then,” he said, “for a likely boy, they’ll pay a whole seventy-five cents a week.”
I was sure we needed more, but when I glanced at Ma she nodded.
“I’ll take it,” I said without much enthusiasm.
“Yours, then,” said Mr. Hendricks. He wrote out an order on a yellow chit of paper and handed it down. “With my compliments. Just give this to Mr. Ericsson,” he said.
“Who’s he?” I asked.
“The man building that floating pot,” he said. Then he added, “But I suppose the Union needs pots, too, right?”
I thought, but didn’t say, Don’t care beans for pots or the Union.
Not talking, Ma and I went back out through the Yard gates. Lacy snow was floating down.
When we reached the horse trolley stop, she offered me a penny for the ride, saying, “Do you know where Rowland’s Iron Works is?”
I nodded, saying, “I can walk.”
“Tom, don’t be angry. We need the money.”
“Not you I’m angry at,” I said, fighting back tears and keeping my face down.
“Who, then?”
“Doesn’t matter.”
She sighed. “You warm enough?”
“Fine.”
She touched my face. “Now, Tom,” she whispered, “honor to your father’s name.”
“I don’t see any honor in making pots.”
She stood still a moment—eyes looking I don’t know where—but then said, “Tom, best get on. I’ve got to collect my washing.”
I started off. After a few steps I turned. “Ma! What’s an … ironclad?”
“Don’t know,” she said.
I watched her walk back slowly through the snow toward the Yard. If I could have thought of something to say, I would’ve. Instead, hands in my pockets, I headed for the ironworks. All I could think was, Don’t care beans for pots or the Union.
CHAPTER THREE
I Meet a Genius
WHEN I GOT to the gates of the ironworks there was a military guard talking to a blue-frock-coated policeman. I offered my yellow slip to the guard. He glanced at it, handed it back. “Mr. Ericsson, eh?” he said, winking like it was some joke.
“Working on his iron coffin, are you?” the policeman chimed in
.
I thought of flinging back something like It’ll fit you fine!, but, not wanting to sass a policeman, I held back.
“You’ll find the genius in his shack down by the river,” said the guard, waving me through. “Straight on. Can’t miss it. ‘Less you want to!”
I hesitated. “Why would I?”
“You know what people say: not much difference ‘tween a genius and a madman!”
Lord, I’d barely heard of this Ericsson but he was being tarred with scorn: Floating pot! Iron coffin! Madman! It made me nervous. But I admit, I was curious, too. What was the man making?
When I got to the wooden shack I’d been directed to, I found the door left ajar. I peeked in. A man was bent over a table, pencil in hand, the table layered over with large sheets of paper marked up with a whirl of lines.
I knocked on the door frame. The man didn’t answer. Knocked again, louder. That time the man turned, and I got my first look at John Ericsson.
He was a stocky fellow with wide shoulders and a great dome of a forehead. Sideburns came down to his chin, which made it look like his jaw stuck out, as if he were daring you to punch it. He had a strong, almost scowling mouth. I thought, The man’s a prizefighter.
John Ericsson really liked this picture of himself because it made him appear big and strong.
“Yes?” he asked, not bothering to hide his annoyance.
“Looking for Mr. Ericsson, sir.”
“Captain Ericsson,” he said.
My thought was, Oh-oh. A corrector. “Begging pardon, sir. Captain Ericsson.”
“All right, then. What do you want?” He had a slight foreign accent.
I held out my paper. “Reporting for work, sir,” I said. “On your … your … don’t know what you call her, sir.”
“My floating battery?”
“Yes, sir,” I said, trying to be respectful. “I suppose so.”
“Do you know what she is?”
“No, sir. Don’t.”
He considered me again, took the paper, scanned it, and tossed it on his table. “Then what work do you intend to do?”