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Carte de visite photograph of Semmes in civilian clothes. Image is clear with very good contrast. Mount is in fine condition. Printed label "Semmes, Capt., "290"" pasted at bottom. Pencil name on back. Photographer's backmark, E. & H.T. Anthony, New York from Brady negative.
Raphael Semmes (September 27, 1809 – August 30, 1877) was an officer in the Confederate Navy during the Civil War.
Semmes began his military career in 1826 when he entered the United States Navy as a midshipman upon graduating from the Charlotte Hall Military Academy. Semmes served during the Mexican-American war as the commander of the USS Somers in the Gulf of Mexico. Semmes continued to serve in the United States Navy until Alabama seceded in January, 1861 at which time he resigned from the Union Navy and sought a position within the Confederate States Navy.
In April, 1861, Raphael Semmes was accepted into the Confederate Navy and was initially assigned to serve as the head of the Lighthouse Board. Semmes was very disappointed with this assignment and was able to convince the Confederate Navy to allow him to convert a merchant vessel into a commerce raider, and was named the commander of the newly converted CSS Sumter. Using his new ship, Semmes successfully breached the blockade of New Orleans and was able to outrun the USS Brooklyn, a Union steam sloop, and head for open waters. After reaching open waters, Semmes began to hunt down Union merchant vessels. The CSS Sumter, under the command of Semmes, managed to capture eight Union merchant vessels off the shores of Cuba before heading further south towards Brazil where they captured four additional Union vessels. Semmes and his ship were eventually trapped in port by Union forces in January of 1862, and in April of that year he received orders to retire the CSS Sumter and return to the Confederacy.
Semmes was assigned to oversee the construction of a British steam sloop named Enrica. Following the completion of the sloop, Semmes commissioned the ship as the CSS Alabama. Semmes began his career aboard the Alabama operating around the Azores, a chain of Islands located in the North Atlantic Ocean. Semmes continued his successes in commerce raiding and in the first two weeks of September 1862, Semmes damaged ten Union merchant vessels, including the whaling ship the Ocumglee, and inflicted $270,000 worth of damage to the United States.
Semmes continued his cruise along the coasts of South America, where he destroyed twenty-nine Union merchant vessels throughout the summer months of 1863. In February, 1864 Raphael Semmes and his crew made their sixty-fifth and final capture. In June of 1864, Semmes docked his ship in a harbor in Cherbourg, France. Unable to use the French controlled dry-docks, Semmes’ position in the harbor left him vulnerable to a Union blockade. The Union forces were informed of the Alabama’s position, and shortly after Semmes settled in Cherbourg the Union ship USS Kearsarge arrived. Faced with a difficult decision, Semmes challenged the USS Kearsarge. Semmes and his crew struggled to pierce the chain armor of the Kearsarge, and the Alabama began sinking only an hour after the battle began. While the Union forces were able to capture many members of Semmes’ crew, Semmes was able to escape aboard a British vessel. Semmes remained abroad in both England and Cuba before returning to Mobile, Alabama on November 27, 1864. Semmes returned to the Confederate states a war hero and was promoted to the position of Rear Admiral in February, 1865.
Following the Civil War, Semmes was held as Prisoner of War and eventually charged with treason on December 15, 1865. He was released from his imprisonment in the New York Navy yard three months later. He carried out the remainder of his life working as a professor at the Louisiana State University and released a memoir of his life entitled “Memoirs of Service Afloat During the War Between the States” in 1877.
He is buried in the Catholic cemetery in Mobile. [jet] [ph:L]
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