Stone Fleet
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The Stone Fleet was used during the American Civil War by the United States Navy.
Various old ships, specifically purchased by the Navy for this purpose, were loaded with stone and sand, or filled with dirt, then towed to a designated spot and sunk as a hazard to all craft that passed.
Twenty-four whaleships were sunk in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina by Captain Charles Henry Davis, beginning on 19 December 1861. A second fleet of 12 to 20 vessels was sunk in Mafitt's Channel in 1862.
Confederate general Robert E. Lee called the measure "an abortive expression of the malice and revenge" of the North.
Historians disagree as to the success of the Stone Fleet, since other channels of the Charleston Harbor remained open and the ships broke up in a year or two. However, others note that sufficient time was given for the North to build more gunboats to patrol the harbor.
The event inspired Herman Melville to write the poem entitled, "The Stone Fleet".
This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.