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150 Years Later, Civil War Sailors Get Arlington Burial

Navy honor guard teams participate in services to honor two sailors from the Civil War ship the USS Monitor on Friday in Arlington, Va.
Alex Brandon
/
AP
Navy honor guard teams participate in services to honor two sailors from the Civil War ship the USS Monitor on Friday in Arlington, Va.

(Updated at 7 p.m. ET.)

More than 150 years after they died when their ship sank during a storm, two Union sailors from the Civil War were buried at Arlington National Cemetery on Friday.

The sailors' remains were discovered in 2002 during efforts to recover the 150-ton gun turret of the USS Monitor — a revolutionary ironclad warship — from the site of the wreck off Cape Hatteras, N.C. The Defense Department's attempts to identify the remains over the past decade (including bone, teeth and DNA analysis) haven't been conclusive.

Still, as Navy Secretary Ray Mabus has said: "These may very well be the last Navy personnel from the Civil War to be buried at Arlington."

The Associated Press reports the burial "included a three-gun salute and a brass band playing 'America the Beautiful.'" A marker at the gravesite will memorialize all 16 sailors killed when the Monitor sank in December 1862.

"Today is a tribute to all the men and women who have gone to sea, but especially to those who made the ultimate sacrifice on our behalf," Mabus said at a ceremony before the burial, according to the AP.

Our original post continues:

The Monitor, as you may remember from your school days, was famous for its March 9, 1862, clash with the Confederate ship Virginia — the first battle between two ironclad warships. (The iron-armored Virginia was constructed using the hull of a Navy ship known as the USS Merrimack, so you may have learned about this as the Battle of the Monitor and the Merrimack. It's also referred to as the Battle of Hampton Roads.) The battle — 151 years ago Saturday — ended in a draw, but it marked the beginning of the end of what you might call the dead-tree era of naval warfare.

When the Monitor sank on Dec. 31, 1862, 16 of its crew members were killed. All of those sailors will "be memorialized on a group marker in section 46" of Arlington cemetery, the Navy says. Friday's graveside ceremony, set for 4:30 p.m. ET, is open to the public.

"The Navy expects scores of relatives of those who served on the Monitor, including 21 descendants of some lost in the storm, to attend," USA Today reports:

"A possible descendant [of one of the two unknown sailors whose remains were found] could be Jamie Nicklis, a 46-year-old construction worker from near Columbus, Ohio, who plans to attend with son Brock, 15. The Navy identifies Jamie Nicklis as the great-grandnephew of seaman Jacob Nicklis, 21.

"Forensic analysis argues intriguingly that he may be the younger sailor whose remains are being interred at Arlington. A spoon with the initials 'JN' was recovered near the remains.

" 'It's pretty neat,' says Jamie Nicklis, who feels it is likely that his relative is one of those being buried. 'It felt really good to know that part of our family ... devoted his life and gave his life to serving in our military to help better our ways.' "

The facial reconstructions of two sailors whose remains were discovered inside the gun turret of the USS Monitor after it was raised from the ocean floor in 2002 are revealed during a 2012 ceremony.
MC2 Gina K. Morrissette / U.S. Navy
/
U.S. Navy
The facial reconstructions of two sailors whose remains were discovered inside the gun turret of the USS Monitor after it was raised from the ocean floor in 2002 are revealed during a 2012 ceremony.

Update at 3:30 p.m.: An earlier version of this post called the USS Monitor the United States' "first" ironclad warship. Thanks to commenter Ken Johnston, who pointed out there were ironclad river gunboats, including the USS Cairo, commissioned earlier. And a spokesman for the Mariners' Museum in Newport News, Va., points out there was an iron-hulled ship called the USS Michigan in the 1840s.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Erica Ryan