The hardest cut

In the 225-year history of the United States Coast Guard and its forerunners the U.S.Lighthouse Service, U.S. Lifesaving Service and Revenue Cutter Service, the military branch has lost a total of 129 ships over 65 feet in length. Most of these have been lost in storms, accidents, or foundering.

Several have been lost in combat including six during the War of 1812, seven after May 1861 during the Civil War, five in the First World War and 15 in the Second.

However, perhaps the deepest and curious cut ever suffered by the branch occurred during a 111-day period from 27 December 1860 to 18 April 1861, when the tiny service lost no less than 7 cutters, 6 lighthouse tenders, 164 lighthouses and 10 lightships stationed or located in the former Southeastern United States to local enterprising secessionists (sometimes with the treasonous assistance of their commanders.)

This amounted to about a third of the force.

Only one Southern-based cutter, the USRC Dobbin, a 91 footer class schooner, managed to escape capture to the North, slipping her place at the federal dock in Savannah and making her way to Delaware. A second cutter, the 175-foot oceangoing USRC Harriet Lane, one of the first effective sidewheelers in the U.S. fleet, was not based in the South but was in Southern waters off Fort Sumter before the shooting started and likewise made it into U.S. Naval service on 30 March 1861.

Most of the cutters of the USRCS at the time were built direct for government use such as the 190-ton 91-foot schooner Washington shown here.

Most of the cutters of the USRCS at the time were built direct for government use such as the 190-ton 91-foot brig-rigged schooner Washington shown here. They were shallow draft coastal vessels meant to run about and snag smugglers, illegal slavers and the last of the Gulf pirates. Typically cutters were just armed with one or two older naval pieces and small arms. Lighthouse tenders and lightships on the other hand were typically just bought off the local shipping market then modified and were unarmed.

Of the 23 seized vessels, most were used in some form by the Confederate Navy but, as far as I can tell, by 1865 all were either destroyed or condemned and none rejoined federal service after the war.

While details through the U.S. Coast Guard Historians Office on these are sketchy, here is the run down.

  • USRC William Aiken; 82 ton (2 carronades) schooner, surrendered to the state authorities of South Carolina by her commanding officer, Revenue Captain N. L. Coste, on 27 December 1860.  She was the first Federal vessel of any service taken by the seceding states (South Carolina had moved to secede 20 December 1860)
  • USRC Alert; 74-foot (2 x 12-pounders); 18 January 1861; Seized in Mobile Bay and used as the CSS Alert
  • USLHT Jasper; 1861; Seized by North Carolina militia while under repair
  • USLHT Howell Cobb 1861; Seized in South Carolina
  • USLHT Helen; January 1861; Seized in South Carolina and used as a supply ship in Florida during the war
  • USRC McClelland; a 91′ Cushing-class (1 x 42-pound pivot gun) topsail schooner; Treasury Secretary John A. Dix ordered Lieutenant. S. B. Caldwell, the second in command of the cutter McClelland, “to arrest Capt. Breshwood [the cutter’s commanding officer and a Confederate sympathizer] assume command of cutter and if anyone attempts to haul down the flag, shoot him on the spot.” The message was not delivered by the telegraph office. 29 January 1861,  Breshwood and Caldwell hauled down the ensign and offered the cutter to the state of Louisiana who renamed her CSS Pickens. The northern papers reported the story though and the Secretary’s order became a rallying cry in support of the Union’s war effort.
  • USRC Washington; a 91′ Cushing-class (1 x 42-pound pivot gun) topsail schooner; 31 January 1861; Seized by Louisiana militia
  • USRC Lewis Cass; 80′ Phillip Allen-class (1 x 9-pdr.) topsail schooner; 31 January 1861; Seized in Mobile Bay after Revenue Captain J. J. Morrison offered her to the state of Alabama. Her 13-man crew however, left for points North.
  • USLHT William R. King; March 1861; Seized by Louisiana militia at New Orleans
  • USRC Henry Dodge; 80′ Phillip Allen-class (1 x 9-pdr.) topsail schooner; 2 March 1861; Seized by Texas militia at Galveston after her skipper, First Lieutenant William F. Rogers, USRM offered her to the state with the caveat that he remain in command.
  • USLHT Buchanan; 18 April 1861; Seized by Virginia militia
  • USLHT North Wind; 18 April 1861; Seized by Virginia militia
  • USRC Duane; a 102′ Campbell/Joe Lane-class (1 x 24-pounder) Topsail Schooner, 18 April 1861; Seized by an armed mob in Norfolk
USRC William Aiken depicted after her seizure by South Carolina. Note the Palmetto Flag

USRC William Aiken depicted after her seizure by South Carolina. Note the Palmetto Flag

The following lightships were seized in the first two weeks of April and either moved or sunk.

  • Frying Pan Shoals Lightship
  • York Spit Lightship
  • Wolf Trap Lightship
  • Windmill Point Lightship
  • Smith’s Point Lightship
  • Lower Cedar Point Lightship
  • Upper Cedar Point Lightship
  • Bowler’s Rock Lightship
  • Harbor Island Lightship
  • Rattlesnake Shoal Lightship

Speaking of lights, a staggering 164 manned lighthouses, property of the U.S. Lighthouse Board, were confiscated by either local, state or Confederate government agents by the end of April. These were referred to by the senior U.S. Naval officer on the USLHB, South Carolina native and War of 1812-veteran, Commodore William Branford Shubrick, as the work of “pirates.”

While many keepers, products of their local community and outnumbered even if they were disinclined to hand over property in their care, did so without a fight, they didn’t always go quietly.

The U. S. Gunboat "Mohawk" chases the Confederate Steamer "Spray" into the St Mark's River. Note the Confederate flag above the lighthouse. Built in 1828 the Florida lighthouse survived both Conderate and Union attacks in the coming conflict and is preserved today http://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=594 passing from the Coast Guard to the state Fish and Wildlife Service in 2013

The U. S. Gunboat “Mohawk” chases the Confederate Steamer “Spray” into the St Mark’s River. Note the Confederate flag above the lighthouse. Built in 1828 the Florida lighthouse survived both Confederate and Union attacks in the coming conflict and is preserved today passing from the Coast Guard to the state Fish and Wildlife Service in 2013 As for Mohawk, in April 1861 she defended the lighthouses and Forts Jefferson and Taylor at Key West, FL. from actions of “bands of lawless men”, enabling the Union to retain the forts and lights there as bases during the forthcoming Civil War

On March 31, keeper Manuel Moreno at the isolated Southwest Pass of the Mississippi River knew very well that something was going on 120 miles upriver at New Orleans. Hearing rumors from pilots on stem tugs, he complained to New Orleans collector Frank Hatch, “I am in this deserted place, ignorant of what is transpiring out of it.” The entire South was arming and he could not possibly be left out of the coming fray. “We ought to have about six muskets and a few pistols, and Powder and Balls, so as to be ready, at all times to resist any attack.”

By April 18, just 7 federal lighthouses, all in the Key West/Florida Keys area, remained in the custody of the USLHB and did so throughout the war.

The captured lightships and lighthouses remained (very) briefly in service of the CSA, who formed the Confederate Lighthouse Bureau under the command of CDR Raphael Semmes, CSN, formerly of the USN (and the USLHB). However, as Semmes left that post once the shooting started to pursue more properly piratical activities on the high seas, and keeping the lights lit were seen as helping the Union blockaders more than anyone else, the Confederate coasts went dark. Their lenses and clockwork in most cases removed and spirited away inland, their whale oil reserves either caved in or forwarded for naval use.

Many of the lighthouses, including the grand 200-foot tall brand new Sand Island house in Mobile Bay, were destroyed in the course of the conflict.

Sand Island lighthouse AL ca 1859

Sand Island lighthouse AL ca 1859

For more on the CSLHB, see, “The Confederate States Lighthouse Bureau” by David Cipra.

For more on the Revenue Marine in the Civil War, Truman Strobridge at the USCGHO has a great article here

Lawmaker seeks to open the floodgate of South Korean M1 imports

Universal Soldier by Tim Page  showing a ROK marine in vietnam after combat. Note the M1 Garand, the South Koreans have over 87,000 of these in arsenal storage that they have been trying to sell to a U.S. importer since 2009

Universal Soldier by Tim Page showing a ROK marine in Vietnam after combat. Note the M1 Garand, the South Koreans have over 87,000 of these in arsenal storage that they have been trying to sell to a U.S. importer since 2009

A measure introduced this week to the U.S. House of Representatives is looking to override the State Department-imposed blockade on thousands of M1 Carbines and Garands coming home from Korea.

The move comes as the latest installment in an effort by Republican lawmakers to force change in the administration’s 2009 decision to block the importation of no less than 87,000 rifles donated to South Korea that are now surplus to that country’s needs.

Previous attempts launched in past sessions to free-up the guns failed to gain traction, however with recent GOP gains in Congress and a seemingly lame duck president in the twilight of his term, one representative isn’t giving up.

The rest over in my column at Guns.com

Eugene Stoner may have been on to something

There are hundreds of firearms blogs out there and most of them are crap. One of the really good ones is (wait for it) The Firearms Blog. Of course I am partial to them because they have re-posted a few of my articles, which likely reduced their web traffic for those days due to the influx of shit quality work, but hey.

Anyway, this week over at TFB they have been flooded with vintage-but-still-works M16s that are in hard field service even though they are pushing a half-century.

These include a late 1960s General Motors made M16 that was restamped from an M16A1 to an A2 and still used in the U.S. Army today:

GM-AR-Lower-495x660

…and a mid-1960s era XEM16E1 in use with the Israeli Nahal infantry battalion

m16 XEM16E1 in use with the Israeli Nahal infantry battalion 2015
But my favorite was a Cambodian XM16E1 that is a half century old and still clicking. It was run upon by Steve Lee, the Aussie “I Like Guns” mate

The rifle is a mixmaster. It’s unknown if the upper is original (off-color upper receivers are common, as anodizing is difficult to match between parts ); the barrel assembly is clearly an alteration of some sort, and the handguard appears to be a local fabrication. What is clear is the full fence lower, and XM16E1 markings make the rifle at least 48 years old. It’s commonly repeated that the full fence lower was introduced with the “M16A1″ designation, but they were two separate developments. In fact, the “M16A1″ designation did not carry with it any design changes at all, and was simply a formalization of the Army’s adoption of the rifle. Incremental improvements were being made during this period, however, which is how we can date this rifle to a period of about nine months in the first half of the Vietnam War.

Which reminds me of this image below of a Philippines Special Police commando with a gently used M16A1 taken last year. It looks clean as a whistle which, in a 101% humidity area like the PI, is a testament to good maintenance.

phillipines special police with m16a1 in 2015 m-16

It seems, despite what you hear in the gun rags about how all the old 1960s and 70s gas impingement military contract M16s are just horrible weapons, they still get some love even 40-50 years later.

No.249 Squadron Typhoon

typhoon and hurricane

(Hattip Daily Mail) Flying over the green fields of England in World War Two camouflage, two fighter aircraft evoke the brave men who fought and died in the Battle of Britain. One of them, the Hurricane, was the mainstay of the RAF as it defended Britain from the might of the Luftwaffe in the summer of 1940. The other is the ultra-modern Typhoon. The jet was painted with the 249 Squadron number of the only Fighter Command pilot awarded a Victoria Cross during the battle – Flight Lieutenant James Brindley Nicolson.

typhoon and hurricane 2
No. 249, founded in 1918 as a seaplane squadron that was shuttered the next year. It was reformed 16 May 1940 with Spitfires, then quickly switched out to Hurricanes with which they became legend in the Battle of Britain. Finishing the war in Mustangs, they later transitioned to Mosquitoes then Tempests and Vampires before flying Venoms out of Kenya before their final disbanding in 1969.

We covered the Canadian CF-18 Battle of Britain tribute plane here.

Get some, and then maybe get some tea…

Click to bigum

Click to bigum

In 1939 France, a British machine-gun team. The gun, which appears to be a Vickers, is mounted on the front of a motorcycle side car. (Image via National Library of Scotland) Note the extremely over-engineered folding bipod installed around the water jacket for use dismounted. Further, dig the rider’s Webley revolver in an open-topped cross-draw holster

Of surfmen and lifesaving guns: The Lyle line throwing cannon

While today many are quick to paint guns are instruments of destruction for their own political agenda, for more than 70 years the largest cannon stationed at Coast Guard stations around the country were only trotted out to rescue those in peril on the sea.

The problem

Before what we know today as the U.S. Coast Guard was established, in 1848 the government thought it was a good idea to build and staff rescue stations along parts of the coastline that were prone to shipwrecks.

By 1915, over 270 of these stations were built on every coast and were run by the United States Life-Saving Service. Stations in many cases were ran like local volunteer fire departments with one or two full time government employees stationed there to take care of the equipment and ring the bell if a ship came to close for comfort.

When the bell rang, a crew would assemble and try to launch their small rowboat through the surf and make for the grounded or broken ship. The thing is, as many of these areas were too hazardous to begin with, or during a storm (hey, think about it, when do ships wreck anyway?), all that the intrepid lifesavers could do was sit by and watch.

So in 1875, Sumner Kimball, superintendent of the USLSS reached out to the Army to build them a special cannon.

Enter Lt. Lyle.

David_Lyle_edit

When he graduated from West Point in 1869, David A. Lyle accepted his commission in the U.S. Ordnance Department and departed for San Francisco to assume his duties at Benicia Arsenal in the San Francisco area– the main ordnance depot west of the Mississippi at the time. In 1875, thinking the recently promoted 1st Lieutenant had too much spare time on his hands; the Army assigned him the ancillary task of designing the requested cannon for the surfmen.

The 160-ish pound 2.5-inch smoothboore bronze cannon remained in active service until 1952 and the USCG, who inherited the Life-Saving Service in 1915, still keeps a couple around for special occasions.

RODANTHE, N.C. - Petty Officer 1st Class Robert Shay pulls the line on a Lyle gun, firing a metal projectile, and rope to a simulated shipwreck on the beach at the Chicamacomico Life-Saving Station during the Breeches Buoy Drill, Monday, Dec. 14, 2009. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Mark Jones) Click to big up

RODANTHE, N.C. – Petty Officer 1st Class Robert Shay pulls the line on a Lyle gun, firing a metal projectile, and rope to a simulated shipwreck on the beach at the Chicamacomico Life-Saving Station during the Breeches Buoy Drill, Monday, Dec. 14, 2009. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Mark Jones) Click to big up

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

 

‘This is my ghost gun…there are many like it, but this one is mine’

I’ve written extensively about the controversy with Cody Wilson and his Ghost Gunner device– a desktop CNC milling machine that you insert an 80 percent lower into and about four hours later have a finished lower ready to assemble. Well Wired managed to get their hands on one (I’m still on the waiting list 🙁 ) and went about crafting one. Better yet, they compared the finished result to one they tried to make on a drill press and a second 3D printed lower made on a desktop replicator and took the lowers to a gunsmith for his inspection.

This is my ghost gun. To quote the rifleman’s creed, there are many like it, but this one is mine. It’s called a “ghost gun”—a term popularized by gun control advocates but increasingly adopted by gun lovers too—because it’s an untraceable semiautomatic rifle with no serial number, existing beyond law enforcement’s knowledge and control. And if I feel a strangely personal connection to this lethal, libertarian weapon, it’s because I made it myself, in a back room of WIRED’s downtown San Francisco office on a cloudy afternoon…

GhostGun-02-1024x683

Kinda long but really neat article here

Warship Wednesday June 3, 2015 Roll Tide, Roll

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, June 3, 2015 Roll Tide

youcanrunCSS Alabama da caza al clíper Contest, Noviembre 1863, Tom FreemanHere we see “You Can Run” by naval artist Tom Freeman depicting the screw sloop-of-war Confederate States Ship Alabama chasing down the Yankee clipper Contest in November 1863. The Alabama, who captured an amazing 64 ships, of which she burned and sank 45 and paroled another ten, was the most successful surface raider in naval history.

In addition, perhaps no ship saw a greater number of ironies in her brief life (see how many you can spot).

Although the Confederate Navy picked up a few captured U.S. Naval ships (included the burned out frigate Merrimack) and Revenue Service Cutters, as well as a good number of naval officers of Southern heritage, they were short of legitimate combat ships. Further, most of the naval yards worth anything were in New England, which meant that they simply could not be built. With this, Confederate Secretary of the Navy Stephen Russell Mallory sent agents abroad looking for warships. In the end, the best bet turned out to be in Great Britain where Commander James Dunwoody Bulloch, CSN, arranged for at least three commerce raiders and a pair of ironclads to be completed.

Arguably, the most famous and successful of this handful of ships was the CSS Alabama.

Bulloch, whose primary job was turning raw Southern cotton smuggled past the Union blockade into cash for guns, munitions and other supplies for the Confederate government, which in turn would be ran back through the U.S. fleet, managed to contract with John Laird Sons & Company (today’s Cammell Laird) to construct a steamship with a sloop auxiliary rig (and weight and space reserved for naval guns) on August 1, 1861, just months after Bull Run. Constructed in Liverpool as hull number 290, and christened in 1862 with the bogus name Enrica, she ran her trials at sea in June 1862.

She was handy, at 220-feet overall and light with a 17-foot depth of hold and 1,050-ton displacement. On her twin steam engines pushing a single iron screw, she could make 13-ish knots, or hoist her extensive barkentine-rig and make close that amount in the right conditions.

sail plan

Bulloch was originally to be the commander of the ship and assisted in her fitting out, acquiring stores and arms for the new cruiser but not mounting them as he was under watch by Union agents. As U.S. Ambassador Charles Adams (son and grandson respectively of 2 presidents of the same name) pressured the Brits to seize her, Bulloch weighed anchor just ahead of customs officials, claiming to just be taking her out on a brief sunset turn around. Slipping the brand new 9-gun sloop USS Tuscarora, he put to sea.

Instead of sailing under Bulloch, 52-year-old CDR Raphael Semmes (soon to be promoted to Capt.), late of the abandoned and broken-down commerce raider CSS Sumter, was dispatched from Bermuda to Porto Praya, Azores with the former officers of the Sumter, where they met Bulloch on the Enrica, which was crewed by mildly amused British merchantmen. After arming the ship and relieving the Brits, which Bulloch returned to England with, Semmes and his crew commissioned the CSS Alabama on 24 Aug, 1862.

Deck plan of Alabama, note guns

Deck plan of Alabama, note guns

Her armament, fitted above deck, was British. It consisted of a pair of “Royal Navy-style” smoothbore 6 inch 32-pounders, 4 6-inch 32-pound Blakely patent cannon cast specifically for the CSS Alabama by Fawcett, Preston & Company in Liverpool, one 7-inch 110-pounder Blakely rifle forward on a pivoting mount and a single 68-pounder (solid shot) 8-inch smoothbore pivot aft. In all, eight guns. Added to this was a stock of British and French musket rifles, revolvers, pistols, boarding hatchets, and cutlasses. However, as she only had a single gray-coated Marine, Lt Beckett K. Howell, one of only 58 appointed officers in the Confederate States Marine Corps, (and Brother in Law to President of the Confederacy Jefferson Davis), these were to be used by the ship’s bluejackets.

Or should we say Jack Tars? You see, Semmes only arrived with a handful of officers and had to shop around among the Brits and other foreign sailors at hand to sign up, of which about 80 did. As her guns alone required that many men to crew them, she was shorthanded.

Although Alabama never saw a southern port, the British-built (and largely crewed) ship with her skipper from Maryland carved a name for herself in the hides of the U.S. Navy and merchant fleets for the next 22 months.

"The Pirate 'Alabama,' Alias '290,' Certified to be correct by Captain Hagar of the 'Brilliant'" Line engraving published in "Harper's Weekly", 1862, depicting CSS Alabama burning a prize in Harper's Weekly.US Naval History and Heritage Command photo # NH 58738

“The Pirate ‘Alabama,’ Alias ‘290,’ Certified to be correct by Captain Hagar of the ‘Brilliant'” Line engraving published in “Harper’s Weekly”, 1862, depicting CSS Alabama burning a prize in Harper’s Weekly.US Naval History and Heritage Command photo # NH 58738

Art from Harper's Weekly image

Art from Harper’s Weekly image

First, she sailed around the North Atlantic, sinking 20 Yankee ships, mainly whalers, and captured and released three others. Then, proceeding to Fort Royal, Martinique, she refueled, recruited more crew members in that colonial port, and gave the 12-gun screw frigate USS San Jacinto the slip and broke into the Gulf of Mexico. It was of note that her crew was often fleshed out by volunteers from ships she captured and sank and included men from Germany, Russia, and France.

Alabama's cruise from SCV Adm Semmes Camp

Alabama’s cruise from SCV Adm Semmes Camp

Off Texas, on 11 January 1863, she engaged the 1,126-ton paddlewheel steamer USS Hatteras off Galveston. As the Hatteras got close enough to Alabama to be sucker punched before Semmes struck her British ensign (masquerading as HMS Petrel) and raised the Confederate Stars and Bars, and the fact that the Union gunboat had less than half the armament, Alabama sent her to the bottom within 20 minutes. Ever the gentleman pirate, Semmes picked up her crew and transported them to Jamaica.

The Fatal Chase by Tom Freeman. The USS Hatteras engages the Confederate raider CSS Alabama. Hatteras was sunk in the ensuing battle

The Fatal Chase by Tom Freeman. The USS Hatteras engages the Confederate raider CSS Alabama. Hatteras was sunk in the ensuing battle

From Semmes’s postwar account:

As Captain Blake of the Hatteras (whom I had known in the old service) came on deck, he remarked upon the speed we were making, and gracefully saluted me with, “Fortune favors the brave, sir!” I wished him a pleasant voyage with us; and I am sure he, with his officers and men, received every attention while on board the Alabama.

With the Gulf too hot, she slipped into the South Atlantic and slaughtered 29 Yankee merchies in those waters, primarily off the coast of Brazil.

CSS Alabama enters Table Bay at 10:00 AM August 5, 1863. She is increasing speed in order to capture the Sea Bride before she can escape to within one league of S.African territorial waters. This painting commissioned by Ken Sheppard of South Africa. Via the CSS Alabama Assoc

CSS Alabama enters Table Bay at 10:00 AM August 5, 1863. She is increasing speed in order to capture the Sea Bride before she can escape to within one league of S.African territorial waters. This painting commissioned by Ken Sheppard of South Africa. Via the CSS Alabama Assoc

Next, she put in at Cape Town, South Africa, where most of the images of her decks were taken. It was there that she added more members to her crew to include naval adventurer and soldier of fortune Baron Maximilian von Meulnier, late of the Imperial Prussian Navy.

Captain Raphael Semmes CSN, CSS Alabama's commanding officer, standing by his ship's 110-pounder rifled gun during her visit to Capetown in August 1863. His executive officer, First Lieutenant John M. Kell CSN, is in the background, standing by the ship's wheel.US Naval History and Heritage Command photo # NH 57256 from the collection of Rear Admiral Ammen C. Farenholt, USN(MC), 1931.

Captain Raphael Semmes CSN, CSS Alabama’s commanding officer, standing by his ship’s 68-pounder smoothbore during her visit to Capetown in August 1863. His executive officer, First Lieutenant John M. Kell CSN, is in the background, standing by the ship’s wheel. US Naval History and Heritage Command photo # NH 57256 from the collection of Rear Admiral Ammen C. Farenholt, USN(MC), 1931. Via Navsource

Two of the CSS Alabama's officers on deck, during her visit to Capetown in August 1863. They are Lieutenant Arthur Sinclair IV, (left) and Lieutenant Richard F. Armstrong (USNA 1861). The gun beside them is a 32-pounder of Lt. Sinclair's Division. Halftone image, copied from Sinclair's book, "Two Years on the Alabama". US Naval History and Heritage Command photo # NH 57255. via Navsource

Two of the CSS Alabama’s officers on deck, during her visit to Capetown in August 1863. They are Lieutenant Arthur Sinclair IV, (left) and Lieutenant Richard F. Armstrong (USNA 1861). The gun beside them is a 32-pounder of Lt. Sinclair’s Division. Halftone image, copied from Sinclair’s book, “Two Years on the Alabama”. US Naval History and Heritage Command photo # NH 57255. via Navsource

Georga native Midshipman Edwin Moffat Anderson. He later went on to serve on the CSS Owl and was the next to last of Alabama’s officers to die when he passed away in 1923 in Savannah, only beaten by Sinclair who passed in 1925.

Georga native Midshipman Edwin Moffat Anderson next to an RN pattern 32 pounder which may be the one on display currently in Mobile. Note the naval cutlass and gray Army type uniform. He later went on to serve on the CSS Owl and was the next to last of Alabama’s officers to die when he passed away in 1923 in Savannah, only beaten by Sinclair who passed in 1925. The unimpressed British Jack behind him is classic.

Kell and a 32. US Naval History and Heritage Command photo # NH 57257

Kell and the 68-pounder. US Naval History and Heritage Command photo # NH 57257

Crewmen on the deck of the Confederate commerce raider CSS Alabama off the coast of Cape Town, South Africa, 1863.

Crewmen on the deck of the Confederate commerce raider CSS Alabama off the coast of Cape Town, South Africa, 1863.

Crossing into the Indian Ocean and into the Pacific, she found her hunting grounds much reduced in those far-flung waters. In Singapore, she had her picture taken (one of just two of her profile known to be in existence) and Englishman Hugh Rowland Beaver of Cumming, Beaver, and Co. who helped whistle up enough supplies to keep Alabama in the war. After coaling and dispatching a letter to Malloy back in Virginia, Semmes was off again.

Alabama in Singapore. Note instead of the Stars and Bars she is flying the Stainless Banner

Alabama in Singapore. Note instead of the Stars and Bars she is flying the Stainless Banner

Heading back to European waters where Semmes thought the pickings would be better (and Alabama could get a much-needed refit) she arrived in Cherbourg on 11 June 1864. There Semmes noted, “Our little ship was now showing signs of the active work she had been doing. Her boilers were burned out, and her machinery was sadly in want of repairs.”

She deserved a rest; after all, she had captured no less than 64 vessels in over 500 days at sea and won a naval engagement against a (weaker) adversary while slipping dozens of stronger ones. In a sign of how dignified warfare was on the high seas in this age, Alabama paroled over 2,000 merchant sailors she captured– landing them in nearby ports rather than leaving them adrift on the waves– and not a single civilian was ever killed by the raider.

But everything has to come to an end…

Just three days after she made France, the Mohican-class screw sloop of war USS Kearsarge, steamed into the harbor, alerted to the wiley raider’s presence there by telegraph while in a Spanish port. Although shorter (201-feet) the Kearsarge was built from the keel-up with combat in mind, weighing half again as much as Alabama and mounting nine guns– including a pair of very dangerous 11-inch Dahlgren smoothbore pivot cannons that fired 130-pounder shells.

Further, where Semmes had a scratch 140 man multinational crew and a ship that was falling apart, Kearsarge’s North Carolina-born Capt. John Ancrum Winslow had a pair of aces up his sleeve. These included the fact that his 160+ man crew was highly trained, and that he had secretly wrapped his ship’s critical engineering spaces in over 700-feet of anchor chain secured to the hull and bolted into place, in effect, giving him crude armor plating. His powder was fresh, his decks were clear, and he wanted to clean Semmes’s clock.

Capt. John A. Winslow (3d from left) and officers on board the U.S.S. Kearsarge after sinking the C.S.S. Alabama, 1864

Capt. John A. Winslow (3d from left) and officers on board the U.S.S. Kearsarge after sinking the C.S.S. Alabama, 1864. Note the badass 11-inch Dahlgren

(Note: The two skippers had served together earlier in their career on the old three-master USS Raritan, Semmes as the ship’s flag lieutenant and Winslow as a division officer, even sharing a cabin).

Semmes slapped Winslow across the face with an open challenge, sending the message:

“My intention is to fight the Kearsarge as soon as I can make the necessary arrangements. I hope they will not detain me more than until tomorrow evening or after the morrow morning at furthest. I beg she will not depart before I am ready to go out.”

While the locals stirred about the coming scrap between the two ships, the French forced Kearsarge out to sea, where she waited for Alabama. One of the most powerful ships in the world, the 6,500-ton 30-gun French ironclad Couronne (“Crown”) stood by as her crew anxiously waited for the bloodletting. On the afternoon of June 19, the fight was on in front of a delighted host of European spectators who were thrilled to watch a pair of American vessels locked in a knife fight–and it was a barroom brawl of naval action.

Semmes fired first, trying to get the same type of fast kill as he had achieved on USS Hatteras the year before, but his shots were ineffective, likely due to poor quality powder and stale fuses as much to Kearsarge’s chainmail.

Winslow waited until the British-built cruiser was within 1,000 yards and clobbered her.

Engineers Department USS Kearsarge 1864: The crew that wrecked the CSS Alabama

The ships locked horns in a series of seven circles, slowing trying to out-maneuver each other without success. After all, their skippers had read the same naval textbooks so why not? In all, reports estimate that while Alabama got off more than 300 shots, Kearsarge was barely damaged; suffering four casualties after just three rounds hit his vessel. Alabama, on the other hand, was a wreck after less than an hour of combat and was shipping water from the big Yankee’s 11-inchers.

7-circle The Chart of the battle off Cherbourg as recorded by American landscape painter and Union Army map-maker Robert Knox Sneden in the Library of Congress. Sneden was in Andersonville at the time of the battle after being captured by Confederate troops under John S. Mosby in 1863, but produced it from logs and charts from Kearsarge after the war. This chart was lost to history for more than a century until it popped up in 1994 in a bank vault in Connecticut and donated to the Virginia Historical Society. Click to big up

7-circle chart of the battle off Cherbourg as recorded by American landscape painter and Union Army map-maker Robert Knox Sneden in the Library of Congress. Sneden was in Andersonville at the time of the battle after being captured by Confederate troops under John S. Mosby in 1863 but produced it from logs and charts from Kearsarge after the war. This chart was lost to history for more than a century until it popped up in 1994 in a bank vault in Connecticut and donated to the Virginia Historical Society. Click to big up

The battle has been a favorite of painters and perhaps the most famous work, “Kearsarge and the Alabama” was created by one of no less skill than Édouard Manet.

The Battle of the USS Kearsarge and the CSS Alabama By Claude Monet hanging today at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

The Battle of the USS Kearsarge and the CSS Alabama By Claude Monet hanging today at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Click to big up

painting by Xanthus Smith, 1922, depicts Alabama sinking, at left, after her fight with Kearsarge (seen at right). NHHC Photo K-29827.

Painting by Xanthus Smith, 1922, depicts Alabama sinking by the stern, at left, after her fight with Kearsarge (seen at right). NHHC Photo K-29827.

CSS Alabama Sunday Showdown Archival Print.

CSS Alabama Sunday Showdown Archival Print.

Antonio Jacobsen's " ALABAMA vs KERSARGE" Click to big up

Antonio Jacobsen’s ” ALABAMA vs KEARSARGE” Click to big up

Nine Alabama crewmembers were killed during the battle, 12 drowned when the ship sank and 70 picked up by Kearsarge from the sea, while Semmes and a handful of officers and men managed to make it to the British yacht Deerhound who sped them away to England. There, they were celebrated.

Semmes, who recovered the Stainless Banner of Alabama, ran back into Hugh Beaver (the Singapore connection) and presented the flag to the Englishman with the deep pockets in appreciation.

Her Cherbourg flag.

Her Cherbourg flag.

The 69×34 inch wool bunting ensign still exists and was sold at auction in 2011. As the rest of her flags were lost at sea, this one was unique. Semmes had been given a beautiful and much larger silk battle-flag by English society women after the battle which he took back to the C.S. with him.

Semmes made his way back to Virginia where he was made an admiral and given commanded first the James River Squadron then a unit of infantry (as a Brig. Gen) late in the war. He later moved to Mobile, Alabama where he died of eating bad shrimp in 1877. Nevertheless, he had outlived Winslow who retired in 1872 and died the next year in Boston, buried draped in the Kearsarge ‘s own Cherbourg battle flag.

The National Museum of the U.S. Navy in Washington D.C. has one of her wheels as well as other artifacts to include a very nice toilet bowl.

Ships wheel CSS Alabama Exhibited in the Civil War section of Bldg. 76

English toilet from CSS Alabama Exhibited in the Civil War section of Bldg. 76

The City of Mobile has many Semmes artifacts in their museum, including the admiral’s sword presented to him after the war (he threw his own into the sea rather than let Winslow have it), his wartime 36 cal. Houllier & Blanchard Navy revolver, the silk flag given to him in England after the loss of his ship and Alabama‘s commissioning pennant.

Semme's presentation Admiral's saber in the City of Mobile collection. Chris Eger photo

Semme’s presentation Admiral’s sword, a copy of his book and a scrimshawed whale’s tooth captured from a Yankee whaler in the City of Mobile collection. Chris Eger photo. Click to bigup the scrimshaw work on the tooth.

This U.S. Navy 27-star commissioning pennant was used above CSS Alabama to bring her into service. Her 4th Lt. John Low had it in his possession from his father's term in the old Republic's fleet and offered it up. Low would later leave Alabama with it when he took command of the CSS Tuscaloosa (formerly the bark Conrad captured by the raider in 21 June 1863). The pennant along with Low’s dolphin-handled British pattern naval officer’s sword is in the City of Mobile collection. Chris Eger photo

This U.S. Navy 27-star commissioning pennant was used above CSS Alabama to bring her into service next to a model of the ship. Her 4th Lt., John Low had it in his possession from his father’s term in the old Republic’s fleet and offered it up. Low would later leave Alabama with it when he took command of the CSS Tuscaloosa (formerly the bark Conrad captured by the raider on 21 June 1863). The pennant along with Low’s dolphin-handled British pattern naval officer’s sword is in the City of Mobile collection. Chris Eger photo

Semmes LeMat grapeshot revolver at the City of Mobile Museum. Chris Eger photo. Click to big up.

Semmes rare 1862-issued 36 cal. Houllier & Blanchard Navy revolver at the City of Mobile Museum. Chris Eger photo. Click to big up. And YES, I will be covering this amazing weapon in more detail in a later article

Alabama’s wreck was discovered by the 152-foot French Navy mine hunter (chasseur de mines) Circé in November 1984 in 190-feet of water some 6 miles off the coast of Cherbourg. Between 1988 and 2008, with agreements of the U.S. government (who own the wreck as a war grave) and the French Republic (as its inside territorial waters) she has been extensively salvaged.

One of her RN-style 32 pounders, scrimshaw from ship’s Engineer William Param Brooks and other artifacts recovered from her wreck are in Mobile at the City Museum. The U.S. Navy has over 500 Alabama artifacts in its collection and many are spread over the world on loan, including her 7-inch gun, which is in France. In all, her wheel, seven out of eight guns, her bell, china, shells, small arms, and other items have been brought to the surface.

One of her RN pattern 32s. click to big up. Eger image

One of her RN pattern 32s. click to big up. Eger image

A better view. Note the recovered mast collar.

A better view. Note the recovered mast collar.

A statue to the Admiral, erected in 1900, stands in downtown Mobile on Government Street, within a block or so of the Federal Building, gazing towards the Bay that holds the battleship USS Alabama (BB-60), who was a much luckier lady than Semmes’s own warship.

semmesIn the artifacts recovered from Alabama were at least one set of human remains to include a jawbone. An exam of the teeth at the Smithsonian Institution revealed the jaw’s owner was likely between 25-40 and in good health, other than an apparent habit of chomping on a pipe stem. A ceremonial burial was held for the crewmember’s remains in Mobile, where the lost sailor was interred at Magnolia Cemetery accompanied by members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans of the Admiral Semmes Camp, who maintain a reference to the lost ship and the Admiral.

Internment at Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile. Via AL.com

Interment at Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile. Via AL.com

There is also a CSS Alabama Association and both the University of Alabama and Marshall University maintain special collections referencing the ship.

As for her adversary, 17 of Kearsarge ‘s crew received the Medal of Honor and the ship remained in hard service until wrecked on a reef off Roncador Cay on 2 February 1894 while her officers and crew made it safely ashore. A damaged section of her stern post, still with an intact 110-pound Blakely shell in it from Alabama, is also on display at the Navy Museum in Washington.

CSS Alabama fired this shell from its 110-pound rifle early in the action against USS Kearsarge, landing a critical blow into Kearsarge’ s stern post. However, it didn’t explode due to a faulty fuse, allowing Kearsarge to continue the battle, eventually defeating Alabama. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Tim Comerford/Released

CSS Alabama fired this shell from its 110-pound rifle early in the action against USS Kearsarge, landing a critical blow into Kearsarge’ s sternpost. However, it didn’t explode due to a faulty fuse, allowing Kearsarge to continue the battle, eventually defeating Alabama. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Tim Comerford/Released

The only USN battleship not named for a state, USS Kearsarge (BB-5), was christened 24 March 1898 in her honor and went on to serve the Navy in one form or another for 57 years.

Currently, the Navy maintains both an Alabama (SSBN-731) and a Kearsarge (LHD-3) on the Naval List. In a twist of fate, the ‘Bama was built in the North (Electric Boat, Groton) and the Mighty Kay in the South (Ingalls, Pascagoula), but it’s not likely that they will ever get in a scrap moving forward.

We’re better than that these days.

Specs:

2dbcd70744194b91b391226a65445c3aDisplacement 1,050 t.
Length 220′
Beam 31′ 8″
Depth of Hold 17′ 8″
Draft 14′
Installed power: 2 × 300 HP horizontal steam engines, auxiliary sails, bark rig
Propulsion: Single screw propeller, retractable
Speed 13 knots
Complement 145
Armament:
6 32-pdrs
1 110-pdr rifle
1 68-pdr

If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find
http://www.warship.org/

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

Nearing their 50th Anniversary, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Sgt Maj of the Army gives his update on the uniform phase in

As you may know, the Army is moving from UCP/ACU (and the optional OEF-CP/ACU) to the new Operational Camouflage Pattern (OCP). However, its a four year phase in and soldiers will not have to wear the new uniform until Oct 2019.

SMA Daniel Dailey is cool with that. In the meantime, its wear what you have.

Click to big up

Click to big up

“Presenting a professional appearance is very important to us as Soldiers, but we will not inconvenience or burden you during this calculated transition period. We will still be the most lethal fighting force the world has even known even if our belts or t-shirts don’t match for the next few years,” said Bailey.

19th Century gun hacks: Native peoples modified rifles

Today we think that we have the market cornered on updating, accessorizing, and otherwise personalizing our ARs, Glocks, 1911s and the like. But, in thinking we are the first clever people to figure this stuff out, we are sorely mistaken as the First Nations and Native American and indigenous peoples took traditional Western made guns and adapted them to their own specific needs and preferences.

From the time the British and French first arrived in what was then termed the New World, fur agents and military officers began to earn Native harvested animal pelts and strategic alliances with what were called Trade Muskets (or Fusil de Chasse for the French) going back to about 1660 or so. These guns were basic grade smoothbore flintlocks and doglocks that differed from military-grade arms of the time in the respect that they did not have the same fit and finish, were often a smaller caliber (so they could not use captured stocks of military ball in time of war), and had no provision to fit a bayonet. In short, since they were made to literally be given away, they were as cheap and no-frills as possible.

As young warriors and sportsmen of any culture are known to do with personal weapons, these muskets soon took on a life of their own. Often, their very long (30 inch plus) barrels were cut down to both make them easier to carry through the wilderness and along river travel and to turn surplus metal into tools and instruments. Ramrods likewise soon went the way of the dodo bird on many Native trade muskets and are rarely encountered. To enhance, reinforce and decorate the wooden furniture that often swelled and cracked in field conditions, tacks were applied, as were leather wraps.

These firearms are often called blanket guns or canoe guns, the first primarily dealing with Native peoples West of the Mississippi along the Great Plains in the late 19th century, and the latter with those East of the Mississippi in earlier periods.

And the mods ranged from practical

Mid 19th century percussion musket adapted by Native Americans

Mid 19th century percussion musket adapted by Native Americans

…to artistic

A cut down and tack decorated Sharps rifle, Native American origin, late 19th century.

A cut down and tack decorated Sharps rifle, Native American origin, late 19th century.

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

« Older Entries Recent Entries »