Welcome to the companion Web site to "Lincoln's Secret Weapon," originally broadcast on October 24, 2000. The film chronicles an expedition to study and retrieve parts of the USS Monitor, the famous Civil War ironclad, which sank off North Carolina only months after its famous battle with the CSS Virginia.
Here's what you'll find online:
Tour the Monitor (QTVR)
Lead yourself on a tour of the Monitor above and below decks with these striking 360° panoramas, created to show how the ironclad appeared when it first set sail a century and a half ago.
Behind the Scenes
How did the NOVA film crew go about filming the wreck of the Monitor, which lies so deep (234 feet) that to be safe, divers must breathe special mixtures of gas? In this candid piece, producer D.J. Roller divulges the the team's secrets. Plus: Saving the Monitor, by John Broadwater, Manager of the Monitor National Marine Sanctuary.
Eyewitness to the Battle
"[T]he infernal howl of the shells as they flew over our vessel was all that broke the silence & made it seem still more terrible." Read more harrowing first-person details, and see photos and illustrations, of the most famous naval skirmish of the Civil War.
Steam Machine (Hot Science)
Monitor designer John Ericsson used a piston-driven steam engine to power his iron vessel. In this interactive feature, find out how a steam engine works and try to run one for yourself.
Here's what you'll find online:
Tour the Monitor (QTVR)
Lead yourself on a tour of the Monitor above and below decks with these striking 360° panoramas, created to show how the ironclad appeared when it first set sail a century and a half ago.
Behind the Scenes
How did the NOVA film crew go about filming the wreck of the Monitor, which lies so deep (234 feet) that to be safe, divers must breathe special mixtures of gas? In this candid piece, producer D.J. Roller divulges the the team's secrets. Plus: Saving the Monitor, by John Broadwater, Manager of the Monitor National Marine Sanctuary.
Eyewitness to the Battle
"[T]he infernal howl of the shells as they flew over our vessel was all that broke the silence & made it seem still more terrible." Read more harrowing first-person details, and see photos and illustrations, of the most famous naval skirmish of the Civil War.
Steam Machine (Hot Science)
Monitor designer John Ericsson used a piston-driven steam engine to power his iron vessel. In this interactive feature, find out how a steam engine works and try to run one for yourself.
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