05/07/2026
OTD, May 7, 1862, President Abraham Lincoln, while at Fort Monroe to oversee military operations, visited USS Monitor. Lincoln had approved the construction of the vessel in 1861, and was extremely invested in this new technology. In the ship’s log, Acting Volunteer Lieutenant William Flye recorded the visit, writing “1 P.M. President Lincoln & suite came on board.” He would again visit the ship in July of the same year.
The previous day, the president, along with Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton and Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase, had arrived at Fort Monroe in Hampton, VA. Tired of the hesitancy of George McClellan in his Peninsula Campaign, Lincoln decided to personally take command of the military operations in and around the fort, hoping to reclaim Norfolk and its naval yard.
Eventually, the operation to drive the opposing force out of Norfolk would be successful, as the Confederates surrendered the city on May 10, 1862. Unfortunately for federal forces, the southern soldiers destroyed the Gosport Navy Yard as they retreated.
Image: turret of the USS Monitor from July, 1862
Image Credit: Library of Congress