Raphael Semmes: The Philosophical Mariner

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University of Alabama Press, Apr 30, 1997 - History - 250 pages

Naval hero for all the South, Raphael Semmes (1809-1877)
sailed two famous Confederate raiders. He outfitted CSS Sumter in 1861
and captured 18 Union merchant ships in six months before the raider was
blockaded at Gibraltar. Next he took command of CSS Alabama, an English-built
raider, and terrorized U.S. merchant vessels on the high seas from August
1862 until the raider was sunk in battle off Cherbourg in June 1864. During
that two-year period, he captured more enemy merchant ships than any other
cruiser captain in maritime history. He is considered one of the greatest
ship's commanders that America has produced.

In this first, full-scale biography that relies on Semmes's
private papers, unpublished diaries, and correspondence, Spencer has produced
a well-balanced and comprehensive account of the man, as well as the naval
officer. The biographer paints a vivid portrait of Semmes--the intellectual,
the family man, lawyer, romanticist, nationalist--providing a greater understanding
of the man behind the heroic deeds.

Semmes was born in Maryland to a slave-holding family
and entered the United States Navy in 1826. In 1849, he moved his family
to Mobile, Alabama, to be near the navy base at Pensacola, Florida, and
to practice law during leaves. Semmes was an astute student, not only of
international and maritime law but also of weather patterns; astronomy;
flora and fauna; naval, social, and cultural history; and the classics.
His study of constitutional law led him to side with his adopted state
in 1861, a move that set the stage for his place in history.

 

Contents

2
21
Light House Keeping
80
5
93
Secession War and the CSS Sumter
222

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About the author (1997)

Warren F. Spencer is professor emeritus of history at the University of Georgia. He is author of The Confederate Navy in Europe.

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