With the development of steam propulsion, the speed, power and maneuverability it allowed again enabled the use of the ship's hull, which could be clad in iron, as an offensive weapon. As early as 1840, the French admiral
Nicolas Hippolyte Labrousse proposed building a ram steamship, and by 1860,
Dupuy de Lôme had designed an ironclad with a ram. The quick success of
CSS Virginia's ramming attack on at the
Battle of Hampton Roads in 1862 attracted much attention and caused many navies to re-think the ram. The first coastal battleship, France's , was built in 1863, for the purpose of attacking warships at anchor or in narrow straits, and was armed with a ram. Many ironclad ships were designed specifically to ram opponents; in ships of this type, the
armour belt was extended forward to brace both sides of the ram to increase structural integrity. Several wooden steamships were purpose-built as rams, or converted from existing commercial vessels, such as . The theory behind the revival of the weapon derived from the fact that, in the period ,
armour held superiority over the
ship-mounted cannon. It was believed that an armoured warship could not be seriously damaged by the naval artillery in existence at the time, even at close range. To achieve a decisive result in a naval engagement, therefore, alternative methods of action were believed to be necessary. As it followed, from the same belief, that a ship armed with a ram could not be seriously damaged by the gunfire of its intended victim, the ram became, for a brief period, the main armament of many battleships. It was observed that the guns placed on the
Taureau were there "with the sole function of preparing the way for the ram." was created by
Charles Ellet, Jr. from nine converted commercial steamships During the
American Civil War, both Union and Confederate forces employed ram ships. In 1862,
Charles Ellet, Jr. was deployed directly by the Secretary of War,
Edwin M. Stanton, to build the
United States Ram Fleet, a fleet of ram ships to counter the Confederate
River Defense Fleet controlling the Mississippi River. Ellet purchased nine steam powered paddle boats and retrofit them for service as ram ships. The ram ships played an important part in the Union victory during the
First Battle of Memphis and helped the Union forces wrest control of the Mississippi River from the Confederate forces. , ridiculing rams. The frequent use of ramming as a tactic in the American Civil War, the
Battle of Lissa and, to a lesser extent, at the
Battle of Iquique also led to many late 19th-century naval designers equipping their warships with ram bows. According to
Geoffrey Wawro, the world navies took the wrong lessons from Lissa: most Austrian ramming attempts failed since steam propulsion allowed the Italian warships to quickly perform evasive maneuvers, while the ironclad ''
Re d'Italia'' was only rammed and sunk after her rudder was disabled by gunfire. In a 1894 essay,
William Laird Clowes criticized the use of naval rams: out of 74 ramming attempts between 1861 and 1879, 36 caused no damage at all, 18 resulted in light damage, and only 20 resulted in heavy damage or loss to either rammer or its target. Clowes also concluded that several of these sinkings happened after accidental collisions between friendly vessels during peacetime, though ram advocates used these mishaps to argue that rams could be effective in engagements. However, that death toll was dwarfed by the 562 deaths (plus two rescuers) ensuing from the sinking of the passenger liner , which accidentally collided with the ram bow of the anchored in 1891. After a Japanese fleet destroyed the
Baltic Fleet at the
Battle of Tsushima with gunfire, which used an
inverted bow (superficially resembling a ram) to improve performance. == Torpedo rams ==