CSS Nashville, a 1221-ton side-wheel steamer, was originally
a passenger steamer built at Greenpoint, New York, in 1853. She
was seized by the Confederacy at Charleston, South Carolina, in
1861 and converted to a lightly-armed cruiser. Nashville
made one combat cruise under the Confederate Navy flag, starting
in October 1861. She captured and burned the sailing merchantman
Harvey Birch in the English Channel on 19 November, and
spent some time at Southampton, England. Returning to American
waters early in 1862, she captured and burned the schooner Robert
Gilfillan on 26 February. Two days later, she ran the blockade
into Beaufort, North Carolina, remaining there until mid-March,
when she went to Georgetown, South Carolina.
Sold to private interests and renamed Thomas L. Wragg,
she operated as a blockade runner, but was hindered in this employment
by her deep draft. After arrival near Savannah, Georgia, she was
sold again in November 1862, to become a privateer under the name
Rattlesnake. On 28 February 1863, while still in the Savannah
area, she was destroyed by the monitor USS Montauk.
This page features our only views of the Confederate cruiser
Nashville, including images of her as the privateer Rattlesnake.
Photo #: NH 57824
CSS Nashville (1861-1862)
Wash drawing by R.G. Skerrett, 1901, depicting her steaming away
after burning a captured schooner.
Courtesy of the Navy Art Collection, Washington, DC.
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Photo #: NH 59366
"Merchant Steamers Converted into Gun-boats."
Engraving published in "Harper's Weekly", July-December 1861 volume.
It depicts thirteen merchant steamships acquired by the U.S. Navy between April and August 1861 and subsequently converted into warships, plus the steamer Nashville (far left), which became a Confederate cruiser.
U.S. Navy ships, as identified below the image bottom, are (from left to right: Alabama, Quaker City, Santiago de Cuba (listed as "St. Jago de Cuba", Mount Vernon, Massachusetts, South Carolina, Florida, De Soto, Augusta, James Adger, Monticello, Bienville and R.R. Cuyler.
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Photo #: NH 59350
CSS Nashville (1861-1862)
Line engraving published in "The Soldier in Our Civil War",
volume I, page 215, depicting the Nashville capturing
and burning the U.S. merchantman Harvey Birch in the English
Channel, 19 November 1861.
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Photo #: NH 59348
"The 'Nashville' and 'Tuscarora' at Southampton"
Line engraving published in "Harper's Weekly", January-June
1862, page 96, depicting CSS Nashville (1861-1862) in
dock at Southampton, England, circa January 1862, with USS Tuscarora
(1861-1883) keeping watch in the right distance.
Other identified ships in the distance are Dauntless and
Moulton, which may be British warships present to protect
English neutrality.
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Photo #: NH 59291
"The Rebel Steamer 'Nashville' Running the Blockade at Beaufort,
North Carolina."
Line engraving published in "Harper's Weekly", January-June
1862, page 209, depicting CSS Nashville (1861-1862) running
into Beaufort on 28 February 1862, after her raiding cruise in
the Atlantic and European waters.
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The following images depict Nashville after she was
sold and had been renamed Rattlesnake:
Photo #: NH 58765
Confederate Privateer Rattlesnake
(ex-CSS Nashville, 1861-1862)
Line engraving published in "Harper's Weekly", 1863,
showing her lying by the railway bridge on the Ogeechee River,
Georgia, in about February 1863.
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Photo #: NH 59285
Confederate Privateer Rattlesnake
(ex-CSS Nashville, 1861-1862)
Line engraving published in "Harper's Weekly", January-June
1863, page 193, showing the monitor USS Montauk shelling
the Rattlesnake in the Ogeechee River, Georgia, 28 February
1863. Fort McAllister is in the right-center distance.
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Photo #: NH 59286
Confederate Privateer Rattlesnake
(ex-CSS Nashville, 1861-1862)
Line engraving published in "The Soldier in Our Civil War",
Volume II, page 41, showing Rattlesnake burning after
being shelled by the monitor USS Montauk, commanded by
Captain John L. Worden, USN, in the Ogeechee River, Georgia on
28 February 1863. Fort McAllister is in the right-center background,
and the U.S. Navy gunboats Wissahickon, Seneca
and Dawn are providing supporting fire in the left distance.
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Photo #: NH 58766
Confederate Privateer Rattlesnake
(ex-CSS Nashville, 1861-1862)
Line engraving published in "The Soldier in Our Civil War",
Volume II, page 39, showing her remains in the Ogeechee River,
near Fort McAllister, Georgia. She had been destroyed by gunfire
from USS Montauk on 28 February 1863.
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Photo #: NH 59278
"Map of the Environs of Savannah, on the South ..."
Engraving published in "Harper's Weekly", Volume 7,
January-June 1863, page 164.
The map shows the position of the Confederate Privateer Rattlesnake
(ex-CSS Nashville, 1861-1862), the Ogeechee River, Beulah
Battery and "the present Field of Operations of the 'Passaic'
and other Ironclads under Commodore Dupont".
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