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United States History - 19th Century - Civil War, United States History - Southern Region, U.S. Armed Forces - Biography, Navy & Naval History, Historical Biography - United States, United States Armed Forces
Confederate Raider by John M. Taylor β€” book cover

Confederate Raider

by John M. Taylor
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Overview

Confederate Raider is the enthralling story of the Civil War as fought on the high seas by Raphael Semmes, the Confederacy's most famous and revered naval officer. Yet many of his Northern contemporaries considered the Yankee-hating Semmes nothing more than a pirate. In either guise, Semmes commanded the most successful sea raider of all time - the C.S.S. Alabama. During a two-year cruise, she took nearly a hundred Federal merchant vessels out of the war and became a household word on both sides of the Mason-Dixon Line. Her final battle, off the coast of France against the U.S.S. Kearsarge, was an epic clash befitting the last one-on-one duel of wooden ships. A commander who carried out his mission without being able to bring his ship into a Southern port and whose crew had no allegiance to the Confederacy, Semmes is a brilliant and compelling figure in American military history.

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Editorials

Booknews

The story of the Civil War as fought on the high seas by Semmes: enemy pirate to the North, courageous naval hero to the Confederacy and generally fascinating and contradictory figure. During a two-year cruise, Semmes's Alabama took nearly 100 federal merchant vessels out of the war and became a household word on both sides of the Mason- Dixon line. His biography offers a glimpse into the largely ignored maritime dimensions of the Civil War. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Roland Green

It is a minor scandal that this excellent biography is the first full-scale treatment of Raphael Semmes, the most distinguished commerce raider not only of the Confederacy but in all American naval history. Semmes, who was born in Maryland, served with distinction in the Mexican War, then went with the Confederacy over the states' rights issue and commanded both the C.S.S. "Florida" and the famous "Alabama". He emerges from these pages as an extremely able and aggressive sea warrior but in many respects not a very sympathetic human being--an unreconstructed Southerner, something of a martinet, and chivalric to the point of mismanaging his duel with the U.S.S. "Kearsarge". Taylor's writing is a model of clarity, of balance, and of filling in the background for the nonspecialist reader. His biography deserves wide readership and certainly a place in Civil War and naval history collections.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2002
Publisher
Washington : Brassey's Inc., c1994.
Pages
336
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780028810867

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