The highlight of the museum is the hull of
C.S.S. Jackson (also known as C.S.S.
Muscogee), a revolutionary developed
ironclad warship ram put to fire in the
Chattahoochee River by the
Union Army troops of Gen.
James H. Wilson and recovered from the muddy bed of the river in the 1960s. Also on display are what's left of
C.S.S. Chattahoochee and an intact rowboat from
U.S.S. Hartford, famed flagship of Federal Admiral
David Farragut at the naval
Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864. Two models of the warships
U.S.S. Monitor and
C.S.S Virginia (the former
U.S.S. Merrimack steam frigate under construction at
Gosport Navy Yard near
Norfolk, Virginia, captured after scuttling April 1861 with the naval facilities), used in the
TNT cable TV channel's 1991 film
Ironclads, and recreated full-scale sections of three other
American Civil War-era warships are among the hundreds of Civil War artifacts located in the museum (including sections of U.S. Navy Admiral
David Farragut's
U.S.S. Hartford including the berth deck,
wardroom and captain's cabin). There is also a battle experience theater that will put visitors right in the middle of a Civil War battle and an interactive Confederate ironclad ship simulator offering visitors an opportunity to experience 19th-century naval combat at first hand. A large Civil War naval flag exhibit is the newest addition to the museum. According to executive director Bruce Smith, it is the largest display of navy-related flags from the Civil War era anywhere in the nation. Fourteen flags representing ships and forts from the entire scope of the Civil War are seen in this new exhibit, which is entitled "Ramparts to Topmast: Flags of Triumph and Despair". Thanks to a family from Ohio, visitors can see a particular flag that was in hiding for 137 years. On the night of July 22, 1862, the captain of the ironclad warship
C.S.S. Arkansas believed his ship was safe in the harbor on the
Mississippi River at
Vicksburg, Mississippi. Then in the darkness, two
Union Navy ships attacked it.
U.S.S. Queen of the West attempted to ram
Arkansas. As the two vessels lay side to side, a civilian engineer, John P. Skelton, aboard the Federal ship leaped aboard
Arkansas and tore down its flag. He reboarded to his own ship and hid the flag in a barrel of beans. After his discharge, Skelton took the flag back to
Ohio, where it remained until 1999 when his ancestors sent the flag back home again. It now rests in a place of honor on the wall of the museum. The museum also has the largest collection of surviving
Brooke rifled naval cannons made in
Confederate iron foundries at
Selma, Alabama. These four cannons are two 7-inch rifles, one 10-inch
smoothbore, and one 11-inch smoothbore. The 11-inch smoothbore is the largest surviving Brooke artillery pieces. ==U.S.S./C.S.S. Water Witch project==