This link has pictures of the Navy's involvement during the Civil War.
http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/v?ammem/cwar:0530-0569:T26
http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/v?ammem/cwar:0530-0569:T26
The kids today have NOTHING to bitch about ...
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Most likely a MidshipmanCoulda been a midget...
I'd also like to point out the WALL OF CUTLASSES behind the massive cannon.
Total badassery.
Farragut, David Glasgow (1801-1870): After his mother died and his father enlisted in the Army, he was taken in by the family of CMDR David Porter. At age 9, he was appointed Midshipman and later served in the War of 1812. Porter captured British prizes in the Pacific; Farragut was on his ship and Porter assigned him as prize master at age 12 to take a captured ship to Valparaiso, Chile. After the war, he served on various ships and was promoted to lieutenant in 1820. He was a southerner by birth, residence .and marriage. But when Virginia seceded from the U.S., he went to New York as chief of the Northern fleet. During the Battle of Mobile Bay he gave the famous order to defy the mined waters: "Damn the torpedoes. Steam full ahead!" Later in the Civil War he captured New Orleans, and was the first admiral ever commissioned in the U.S. Navy. He later became the first full Admiral in July 1866.
Porter, David Dixon (1813-1891): Entered the Navy in 1825 as a Midshipman. He was son of Commodore Porter, and foster-brother of Admiral Farragut. Commanded USS Spitfire in the Mexican War in 1848. Commanded the mortar flotilla under Farragut at the Battle of New Orleans. Made RADM, and became Superintendent of the Naval Academy, 1865-69. Made VADM in 1865, and ADM upon Farragut's death. He was the sec­ond Admiral in the history of the U.S. Navy.
The pic of the Marines is interesting, I've never read too much of what the Marines did in the civil war and this omission has always kind of made me wonder.
As for the powder monkeys, in the movie Master and Commander, you can see them a great deal. As I recall, the snipers in the rigging loved to pop them as to slow down the firing of the cannons.