The history of slavery in Missouri began in 1720, when a man named Philippe  Francois Renault brought some 500 slaves from Santo Domingo to work in lead  mines in the River des Peres area, located in the present-day St. Louis and  Jefferson counties.
 The institution only became prominent in the area following two major  events: the Louisiana Purchase (1803) and the invention of the cotton gin by Eli  Whitney (1793). This led to a mass movement of slave-owning proprietors to the  area of present-day Missouri and Arkansas, then known as Upper Louisiana.  However, the spread of major cotton growth was limited to the more southerly  area, near the border with present-day Arkansas. Instead, slavery in the other  areas of Missouri was concentrated into other major crops, such as tobacco,  hemp, grain and livestock. A number of slaves was hired out as stevedores, cabin  boys, or deck hands for the ferries of the Mississippi River.
 The majority of slaveowners in Missouri came from the worn-out agricultural  lands of North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky and Virginia/West Virginia. By  1860, only 36 counties in Missouri had 1,000 or more slaves; top male slaves  fetched a price of $1,300, and top female slaves fetched around $1,000. The  value of all the slaves in Missouri was estimated by the State Auditor's 1860  report at around US$44,181,912.
 The territorial slave code was enacted in 1804, a year after the purchase  of the Louisiana Territory, under which slaves were banned from the use of  firearms, participation in unlawful assemblies, or selling alcohol to other  slaves. It also severely punished slaves for participating in riots,  insurrections, or offering resistance to their masters. It also provided for the  mutilation of slaves for sexual assault upon a white woman; a white man who  saxually assaulted a slave woman was charged with trespassing upon her owner's  property. The code was retained by the State Constitution of 1820.
 An 1825 law, passed by the Missouri State Legislature, declared Blacks as  incompetent as witnesses in cases which involved Whites, and testimonies by  black witnesses were automatically considered invalid.
 In 1847, an ordinance banning the education of Blacks and mulattoes was  enacted. Anyone caught teaching a black or mulatto person, slave or free, was to  be fined $500 and serve six months in jail.
 The history of slavery in Kentucky dates from the earliest permanent  European settlements in the state until the end of the Civil War. Although  Kentucky was generally classified as the Upper South or a Border state,rather  than the Deep South, enslaved African Americans made up a substantial percentage  of the population. Early Kentucky history was built on the labor of slavery, and  it was an integral part of the state. From 1790 to 1860 the slave population of  Kentucky was never more than one quarter of the total population, with lower  percentages after 1830 as planters sold slaves to the Deep South. Slave  populations were greatest in the central "bluegrass" region of the state, which  was rich in farmland. In 1850, 23 percent of Kentucky's white males held  enslaved African Americans.
 Early travelers to Kentucky in the 1750s and 1760s brought their slaves  with them. As permanent settlers started arriving in the late 1770s, they held  slaves in the station-based settlements, organized around forts. Settlers,  chiefly migrants from Virginia, continued to rely on slave labor as they  established more permanent farms.
 Planters who grew hemp and tobacco made the greatest use of slave labor, as  these were labor-intensive crops. Subsistence farming could be done without  slave labor. Some owners also used enslaved African Americans in mining and  manufacturing operations.
 Farms in Kentucky tended to be smaller than the plantations of the Deep  South, so ownership of large numbers of slaves was uncommon. Many slaves had to  find spouses on a neighboring farm, and often fathers did not get to live with  their wives and families.
 Kentucky exported more slaves than did most states. From 1850 to 1860, 16  percent of enslaved African Americans were sold out of state. Many African  Americans were sold directly to plantations in the Deep South, or transported by  traders along the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to slave markets in New Orleans  (hence the later euphemism for any sort of betrayal, to be "sold down the  river"). The sales were the result of reduced labor needs due to changes in  local agriculture, as well as substantial out-migration by white families from  Kentucky. In the 1840s and 1850s, white families migrated west to Missouri and  Tennessee, even southwest to Texas. The larger slaveholding families took slaves  with them on forced migration to Tennessee and Missouri. These factors combined  to create greater instability for enslaved families in Kentucky than in some of  the Deep South states.
 Because of Kentucky's proximity to free states, separated by just the Ohio  River, it was relatively easier for a slave from Kentucky to escape to freedom.  Notable fugitive slaves from Kentucky included Henry Bibb, Lewis Clarke,  Margaret Garner, Lewis Hayden, and Josiah Henson. A mass escape attempt occurred  in August 1848 when 55 to 75 armed slaves fled from several counties,  representing one of the largest coordinated escape attempts in American history.  They were captured by the state militia several days later after a  shootout.
 The abolition movement had existed in the state since at least the 1790s,  when Presbyterian minister David Rice unsuccessfully lobbied to include slavery  prohibition in each of the state's first two constitutions, created in 1792 and  1799. Baptist ministers David Barrow and Carter Tarrant formed the Kentucky  Abolition Society in 1808. By 1822 it began publishing one of America's first  anti-slavery periodicals.
 Conservative emancipation, which argued for gradually freeing the slaves  and assisting them in a return to Africa, gained substantial support in the  state from the 1820s onward. Cassius Marcellus Clay was a vocal advocate of this  position. His newspaper was shut down by mob action in 1845. The anti-slavery  Louisville Examiner was published successfully from 1847 to 1849.
 In Kentucky, slavery was not so widely considered an economic necessity as  it was in most other slave states. The small-farm nature of Kentucky meant that  slave labor was not so critical to profits as it was for the labor-intensive  crops of the Deep South, such as cotton, sugar, and rice farming.
 Controversial laws in 1815 and 1833 limited the importation of slaves into  Kentucky, which created the strictest rules of any slave states. The  Nonimportation Act of 1833 banned any importation of slaves for commercial or  personal purpose. The ban was widely violated, especially in counties near the  Tennessee border. In 1849 the writing of the state's pro-slavery constitution  meant repeal of the ban against importing.
 Slavery was the principal issue of the third constitutional convention held  in 1849. While the convention was convened by anti-slavery advocates who hoped  to amend the constitution to prohibit slavery, they greatly underestimated  pro-slavery support. The convention became packed with pro-slavery delegates,  who drafted what some historians consider the most pro-slavery constitution in  United States history.
 After the embarrassing defeat, abolitionists lost political power during  the 1850s. Nonetheless, anti-slavery newspapers were still published in  Louisville and Newport. More than half the residents of Louisville owned slaves,  and the city had the largest slave population in the state. In addition, for  years the slave trade from the Upper South had contributed to its prosperity and  growth. Through the 1850s, the city exported 2500-4000 slaves a year in sales to  the Deep South. The trading city had grown rapidly and had 70,000 residents by  1860.
 John Gregg Fee established a network of abolitionist schools, communities  and churches in Eastern Kentucky, where slaveholders were the fewest in number.  In the turmoil following John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry, Fee and his  supporters were driven from the state by a mob in 1859.
 Kentucky did not outlaw slavery during the Civil War, as Maryland and  Missouri did. Nevertheless, about 75% of slaves in Kentucky were freed or  escaped to Union lines during the war. Slavery finally ended with ratification  of the Thirteenth Amendment in 1865. However, Kentucky would not ratify it until  1976.
 The Act Prohibiting the Return of Slaves was a law passed by the United  States Congress during the American Civil War forbidding the military to return  escaped slaves to their owners. As Union armies entered Southern territory  during the early years of the War, emboldened slaves began fleeing behind Union  lines to secure their freedom. Some commanders put the slaves to work digging  entrenchments, building fortifications, and performing other camp work. Such  slaves came to be called "contraband," a term emphasizing their status as  captured enemy property. Other Army commanders—particularly Democrats—returned  the slaves to their owners. Congress reacted by approving on March 13, 1862 an  act prohibiting the military from sending escaped slaves back into  slavery.
 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United  States of America in Congress assembled, That hereafter the following shall be  promulgated as an additional article of war for the government of the army of  the United States, and shall be obeyed and observed as such:
 Article —. All officers or persons in the military or naval service of the  United States are prohibited from employing any of the forces under their  respective commands for the purpose of returning fugitives from service or  labor, who may have escaped from any persons to whom such service or labor is  claimed to be due, and any officer who shall be found guilty by a court-martial  of violating this article shall be dismissed from the service.
 SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That this act shall take effect from and  after its passage.
 APPROVED, March 13, 1862.
 The Thirty-ninth United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative  branch of the United States federal government, consisting of the United States  Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington,  D.C. from March 4, 1865 to March 4, 1867, during the second administration of  U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, and the first two years of the administration of  his successor, U.S. President Andrew Johnson.
 The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on  the Eighth Census of the United States in 1860. Both chambers had a Republican  majority.
 The Copperheads were a vocal group of Democrats in the Northern United  States (see also Union (American Civil War)) who opposed the American Civil War,  wanting an immediate peace settlement with the Confederates. Republicans started  calling anti-war Democrats "copperheads", likening them to the poisonous snake.  The Peace Democrats accepted the label, but for them the copper "head" was the  likeness of Liberty, which they cut from copper pennies and proudly wore as  badges. 
 They were also called "Peace Democrats" (although the 13th Edition of The  American Pageant makes a distinction between the two, as those termed  Copperheads were at the extreme end of the Peace Democrats) and "Butternuts"  (for the color of the Confederate uniforms). Perhaps the most famous Copperhead  was Ohio's Clement L. Vallandigham.
 During the American Civil War (1861-1865), the Copperheads nominally  favored the Union and strongly opposed the war, for which they blamed  abolitionists, and they demanded immediate peace and resisted draft laws. They  wanted President Lincoln and the Republicans ousted from power, seeing the  president as a tyrant who was destroying American republican values with his  despotic and arbitrary actions.
 Some Copperheads tried to persuade Union soldiers to desert. They talked of  helping Confederate prisoners of war seize their camps and escape. They  sometimes met with Confederate agents and took money. The Confederacy encouraged  their activities whenever possible.
 The Copperheads had numerous important newspapers, but the editors never  formed an alliance. In Chicago, Wilbur F. Storey made the Chicago Times into  Lincoln's most vituperative enemy. The New York Journal of Commerce, originally  abolitionist, was sold to owners who became Copperheads, giving them an  important voice in the largest city. A typical editor was Edward G. Roddy, owner  of the Uniontown, Pennsylvania Genius of Liberty. He was an intensely partisan  Democrat who saw black people as an inferior race and Abraham Lincoln as a  despot and dunce. Although he supported the war effort in 1861, he blamed  abolitionists for prolonging the war and denounced the government as  increasingly despotic. By 1864 he was calling for peace at any price.
 John Mullaly's Metropolitan Record was the official Catholic paper in New  York City. Reflecting Irish opinion, it supported the war until 1863 before  becoming a Copperhead organ; the editor was then arrested for draft resistance.  Even in an era of extremely partisan journalism, Copperhead newspapers were  remarkable for their angry rhetoric. Wisconsin newspaper editor Marcus M.  Pomeroy called Lincoln "fungus from the corrupt womb of bigotry and fanaticism"  and a "worse tyrant and more inhuman butcher than has existed since the days of  Nero... The man who votes for Lincoln now is a traitor and murderer... And if he  is elected to misgovern for another four years, we trust some bold hand will  pierce his heart with dagger point for the public good".
 The Copperheads sometimes talked of violent resistance, and in some cases  started to organize. They never actually made an organized attack, though. As  war opponents, Copperheads were suspected of disloyalty, and their leaders were  sometimes arrested and held for months in military prisons without trial — one  famous example was General Ambrose Burnside's 1863 General Order Number 38,  issued in Ohio, which made it an offence (to be tried in military court) to  criticize the war in any way: the order was used to arrest Ohio congressman  Clement L. Vallandigham when he criticized the order itself. However, Lincoln  commuted his sentence while requiring his banishment to the Confederate  states.
 Probably the largest Copperhead group was the Knights of the Golden Circle;  formed in Ohio in the 1850s, it became politicized in 1861. It reorganized as  the Order of American Knights in 1863, and again, early in 1864, as the Order of  the Sons of Liberty, with Vallandigham as its commander. One leader, Harrison H.  Dodd, advocated violent overthrow of the governments of Indiana, Illinois,  Kentucky, and Missouri in 1864. Democratic party leaders, and a Federal  investigation, thwarted his conspiracy. In spite of this Copperhead setback,  tensions remained high. The Charleston Riot took place in Illinois in March  1864. Indiana Republicans then used the sensational revelation of an antiwar  Copperhead conspiracy by elements of the Sons of Liberty to discredit Democrats  in the 1864 House elections. The military trial of Lambdin P. Milligan and other  Sons of Liberty revealed plans to set free the Confederate prisoners held in the  state. The culprits were sentenced to hang but the Supreme Court intervened in  Ex parte Milligan, saying they should have received civilian trials.
 Most Copperheads actively participated in politics. On May 1, 1863, former  Congressman Vallandigham declared that the war was being fought not to save the  Union but to free the blacks and enslave Southern whites. The Army then arrested  him for declaring sympathy for the enemy. He was court-martialed and sentenced  to imprisonment, but Lincoln commuted the sentence to banishment behind  Confederate lines. The Democrats nevertheless nominated him for governor of Ohio  in 1863; he campaigned from Canada but was defeated after an intense battle. He  operated behind-the-scenes at the 1864 Democratic convention in Chicago; this  convention adopted a largely Copperhead platform, but chose a pro-war  presidential candidate, George B. McClellan. The contradiction severely weakened  the chances to defeat Lincoln's reelection.
 The sentiments of Copperheads attracted Southerners who had settled north  of the Ohio River, the poor, and merchants who had lost profitable Southern  trade. Copperheads did well in local and state elections in 1862, especially in  New York, and won majorities in the legislatures of Illinois and Indiana.  Copperheads were most numerous in border areas, including southern parts of  Ohio, Illinois, and Indiana (in Missouri, comparable groups were avowed  Confederates). The Copperhead coalition included many Irish American Catholics  in eastern cities, mill towns and mining camps (especially in the Pennsylvania  coal fields). They were also numerous in German Catholic areas of the Midwest,  especially Wisconsin.
 Historian Kenneth Stampp has captured the Copperhead spirit in his  depiction of Congressman Daniel W. Voorhees of Indiana:
 “ There was an earthy quality in Voorhees, "the tall sycamore of the  Wabash." On the stump his hot temper, passionate partisanship, and stirring  eloquence made an irresistible appeal to the western Democracy [i.e., the  Democratic Party]. His bitter cries against protective tariffs and national  banks, his intense race prejudice, his suspicion of the eastern Yankee, his  devotion to personal liberty, his defense of the Constitution and State's rights  faithfully reflected the views of his constituents. Like other Jacksonian  agrarians, he resented the political and economic revolution then in progress.  Voorhees idealized a way of life which he thought was being destroyed by the  current rulers of his country. His bold protests against these dangerous trends  made him the idol of the Democracy of the Wabash Valley.  
 War Democrats in American politics of the 1860s were adherents of the  Democratic Party who opposed the majority of that party to support the military  policies of President Abraham Lincoln in the American Civil War. In the 1864  presidential election, War Democrats and the Republicans jointly nominated  Lincoln, a Republican, for president and nominated Andrew Johnson, a Democrat,  for vice president in what was called the "Union Party" ticket.
 To court Democrats, Lincoln appointed many to high civil and military  offices to win over some Democratic votes. Some joined the Republican Party,  while others remained Democrats. Their opponents in the Democratic party  included Peace Democrats, widely called Copperheads, Democrats who remained  loyal to the concept of Union but either advocated negotiated settlement with  the Confederacy or openly supported the "state's rights" underpinnings of the  Confederate policy.
 Prominent War Democrats included:
 Andrew Johnson, the U.S. senator, then military governor of Tennessee who  was elected Vice President in 1864 on a ticket with Lincoln, and President after  Lincoln's assassination 
 John Brough, Governor of Ohio 
 Benjamin F. Butler, Congressman from Massachusetts; general 
 John Adams Dix, of New York, Buchanan's Secretary of the Treasury, general  
 Stephen A. Douglas, Senator from Illinois; Democratic Party's northern  candidate in the presidential election of 1860, who died a few weeks into the  war 
 Ulysses S. Grant, storekeeper in Illinois; general 
 Joseph Holt, Kentucky; Buchanan's Secretary of War; Lincoln's  Judge-Advocate General of the Army 
 Francis Kernan, Congressman from New York 
 John A. Logan, Congressman from Illinois; general 
 George B. McClellan, railroad president; general; Democratic presidential  nominee in 1864 
 Joel Parker, Governor of New Jersey 
 David Tod, Governor of Ohio 
 Edwin M. Stanton, Ohio; Buchanan's Attorney General and Lincoln's Secretary  of War 
 CSS Alabama was a screw sloop-of-war built for the Confederate States Navy  at Birkenhead, United Kingdom, in 1862 by John Laird Sons and Company. Alabama  served as a commerce raider, attacking Union merchant and naval ships over the  course of her two-year career, during which she never laid anchor in a Southern  port.
 Alabama was built in secrecy in 1862 by British shipbuilders John Laird  Sons and Company in North West England at their shipyards at Birkenhead,  Merseyside. This was arranged by the Confederate agent James Dunwoody Bulloch,  who was leading the procurement of sorely needed ships for the fledgling  Confederate States Navy. He arranged the contract through Fraser, Trenholm  Company, a cotton broker in Liverpool with ties to the Confederacy.
 Initially known as hull number 290, the ship was launched without fanfare  on 29 July 1862 as Enrica. Agent Bulloch arranged for a civilian crew and  captain to sail Enrica to Terceira Island in the Azores. With Bulloch staying  aboard to witness her recommissioning, the new ship's captain, Raphael Semmes,  left Liverpool on 5 August 1862 aboard the steamer Bahama to take command of the  new cruiser. Semmes arrived at Terceira Island on 20 August 1862 and began  overseeing the refitting of the new vessel with various provisions, including  armaments, and 350 tons of coal, brought there by Agrippina, his new ship's  supply vessel. After three days of back-breaking work by the three ship's crews,  the new ship was transformed into a naval cruiser, designated a commerce raider,  for the Confederate States of America.
 Alabama's British-made ordnance was composed of six broadside, 32-pounder,  naval smoothbores and two larger and more powerful pivot cannons. Both pivot  cannons were positioned roughly amidships along the deck's centerline, fore and  aft of the main mast. The fore pivot was a heavy, long-range 100-pounder 7-inch  (178 mm) Blakely rifle, the aft pivot a heavy, 8-inch (203 mm) smoothbore.
 The new Confederate cruiser was powered by both sail and by two John Laird  Sons and Company 300 horsepower (220 kW) horizontal steam engines, driving a  single, Griffiths-type, twin-bladed brass screw. With the screw retracted using  the stern's brass lifting gear mechanism, Alabama could make up to ten knots  under sail alone and 13.25 knots (24.54 km/h) when her sail and steam power were  used together.
 The ship was purposely commissioned about a mile off Terceira Island in  international waters on 24 August 1862: All the men from Agripinna and Bahama  had been transferred to the quarter deck of Enrica, where her 24 officers, some  of them Southerners, stood in full dress uniform. Captain Raphael Semmes mounted  a gun-carriage and read his commission from President Jefferson Davis,  authorizing him to take command of the new cruiser. Upon completion of the  reading, musicians that had been assembled from among the three ships' crews  began to play the tune "Dixie" just as the quartermaster finished hauling down  Enrica's British colors. A signal cannon boomed and the stops to the halliards  at the peaks of the mizzen gaf and mainmast were broken and the ship's new  battle ensign and commissioning pennant floated free on the breeze. With that  the cruiser became Confederate States Steamer Alabama.
 Captain Semmes then made a speech about the Southern cause to the assembled  seamen, asking them to sign on for a voyage of unknown length and destiny.  Semmes had only his 24 officers and no crew to man his new command. When this  did not succeed, Semmes changed his tack. It should be noted here that engraved  in the bronze of the great double ship's wheel was Alabama's motto: "Aide-toi et  Dieu t'aidera" (God helps those who help themselves). Semmes then offered  signing money and double wages, paid in gold, and additional prize money to be  paid by the Confederate congress for all destroyed Union ships. When the men  began to shout "Hear! Hear!" Semmes knew he had closed the deal: 83 seamen, many  of them British, signed on for service in the Confederate Navy. Confederate  agent Bulloch and the remaining seamen then returned to their respective ships  for their return voyage to England. Semmes still needed another 20 or so men for  a full crew complement, but enough had signed on to at least handle the new  commerce raider. The rest would be recruited from among captured crews of raided  ships or from friendly ports-of-call. Of the original 83 crewmen that signed on  that day, many completed the full voyage.
 Under Captain Semmes, Alabama spent her first two months in the Eastern  Atlantic, ranging southwest of the Azores and then redoubling east, capturing  and burning northern merchant ships. After a difficult crossing, she then  continued her path of destruction and devastation in the greater New England  region. She then sailed south, arriving in the West Indies where she raised more  havoc before finally cruising west into the Gulf of Mexico. There, in January  1863, Alabama had her first military engagement. She came upon and quickly sank  the Union side-wheeler USS Hatteras just off the Texas coast, near Galveston,  capturing that warship's crew. She then continued further south, eventually  crossing the equator, where she took the most prizes of her raiding career while  cruising off the coast of Brazil. After a second Atlantic crossing, Alabama  sailed down the southwestern African coast where she continued her war against  northern commerce. After stopping in Saldanha Bay on 29 July 1863 in order to  verify that no enemy ships were in Table Bay,she finally made a much-needed  refitting and reprovisioning visit to Cape Town, South Africa. She then sailed  for the East Indies, where she spent six months destroying seven more ships  before finally redoubling the Cape of Good Hope en route to France. Union  warships hunted frequently for the elusive and by now famous Confederate raider,  but the few times Alabama was spotted, she quickly outwitted her pursuers and  vanished beyond the horizon.
 All together, she burned 65 Union vessels of various types, most of them  merchant ships. During all of Alabama's raiding ventures, captured ships' crews  and passengers were never harmed, only detained until they could be placed  aboard a neutral ship or placed ashore in a friendly or neutral port.
 All together, Alabama conducted a total of seven expeditionary raids,  spanning the globe, before heading back to France for refit and repairs and a  date with destiny:
 The CSS Alabama's Eastern Atlantic Expeditionary Raid (August–September,  1862) commenced immediately after she was commissioned. She immediately set sail  for the shipping lanes southwest and then east of the Azores, where she captured  and burned ten prizes, mostly whalers. 
 The CSS Alabama's New England Expeditionary Raid (October–November, 1862)  began after Captain Semmes and his crew departed for the northeastern seaboard  of North America, along Newfoundland and New England, where she ranged as far  south as Bermuda and the coast of Virginia, burning ten prizes while capturing  and releasing three others. 
 The CSS Alabama's Gulf of Mexico Expeditionary Raid (December, 1862 –  January, 1863) was centered around a needed rendezvous with her supply vessel,  CSS Agrippina. After that, she rendered aid to Texas during Major General Banks  invasion near Galveston, Texas. There, she quickly sank the Union side-wheeler  USS Hatteras. 
 The CSS Alabama's South Atlantic Expeditionary Raid (February–July, 1863)  was her most successful raiding venture, taking 29 prizes while raiding off the  coast of Brazil. Here, she recommissioned the bark Conrad as the CSS Tuscaloosa.  
 The CSS Alabama's South African Expeditionary Raid (August–September, 1863)  occurred primarily while ranging off the coast of South Africa, as she worked  together the CSS Tuscaloosa. 
 The CSS Alabama's Indian Ocean Expeditionary Raid (September–November,  1863) was composed of a long trek across the Indian Ocean. The few prizes she  gathered were in the East Indies. 
 The CSS Alabama's South Pacific Expeditionary Raid (December, 1863) was her  final raiding venture. She took a few prizes in the Strait of Malacca before  finally turning back toward France for a much needed refit and long overdue  repairs. 
 Upon the completion of her seven expeditionary raids, Alabama had been at  sea for 534 days out of 657, never visiting a single Confederate port. She  boarded nearly 450 vessels, captured or burned 65 Union merchant ships, and took  more than 2,000 prisoners without a single loss of life from either prisoners or  her own crew.
 On 11 June 1864, Alabama arrived in port at Cherbourg, France. Captain  Semmes soon requested permission to dry dock and overhaul his ship, much needed  after so long a time at sea and so many naval actions. Pursuing the raider, the  American sloop-of-war, USS Kearsarge, under the command of Captain John Ancrum  Winslow, arrived three days later and took up station just outside the harbor.  While at his previous port-of-call, Winslow had telegraphed Gibraltar to send  the old man-o-war USS St. Louis with provisions and to provide blockading  assistance. Kearsarge now had Alabama boxed-in with no place left to run.
 Having no desire to see his worn-out ship rot away at a French dock while  quarantined by Union warships, and given his instinctive aggressiveness and a  long-held desire once again to engage his enemy, Captain Semmes chose to fight.  After preparing his ship and drilling the crew for the coming battle during the  next several days, Semmes issued, through diplomatic channels, a bold challenge  to the Kearsarge's commander,"my intention is to fight the Kearsarge as soon as  I can make the necessary arrangements. I hope these will not detain me more than  until to-morrow or the morrow morning at farthest. I beg she will not depart  until I am ready to go out. I have the honor to be Your obedient servant, R.  SEMMES, Captain."
 On 19 June, Alabama sailed out to meet the Union cruiser. As Kearsarge  turned to meet her opponent, Alabama opened fire. Kearsarge waited patiently  until the range had closed to less than 1,000 yards (900 m). According to  survivors, the two ships steamed on opposite courses in seven spiraling circles,  moving southwesterly with the 3-knot current, each commander trying to cross the  bow of his opponent to deliver a heavy raking fire. The battle quickly turned  against Alabama due to the superior gunnery displayed by Kearsarge and the  deteriorated state of Alabama's contaminated powder and fuses. Her most  important shot, fired from the forward 7-inch (178 mm) Blakely pivot rifle, hit  very near Kearsarge's vulnerable stern post, the impact binding the ship's  rudder badly. That rifled shell, however, failed to explode. If it had done so,  it would have seriously disabled Kearsarge's steering, possibly sinking the  warship, and ending the contest. In addition, Alabama's too rapid rate-of-fire  resulted in frequent poor gunnery, with many of her shots going too high, thus  sealing the fate of the Confederate raider. As a result, Kearsarge benefited  little that day from the protection of her outboard chain armor, whose presence  Semmes later said was unknown to him at the time of his decision to issue the  challenge to fight. In fact, in the years that followed, Semmes steadfastly  claimed he would have never fought Kearsarge if he had known she was  armor-clad.
 This hull armor had been installed in just three days, more than a year  before, while Kearsarge was in port at the Azores. It was made using 120 fathoms  (720 feet) of 1.7-inch (43 mm) single link iron chain and covered hull spaces 49  feet (15 m), six-inches (152 mm) long by 6-feet, 2-inches deep. It was stopped  up and down to eye-bolts with marlines and secured by iron dogs. It was  concealed behind 1-inch deal-boards painted black to match the upper hull's  color. This chaincladding was placed along Kearsarge's port and starboard  midsection down to the waterline, for additional protection of her engines and  boilers when the upper portion of her coal bunkers were empty. This armor belt  was hit twice during the fight: First in the starboard gangway by one of  Alabama's 32-pounder shells that cut the chain armor, denting the hull planking  underneath, then again by a second 32-pounder shell that exploded and broke a  link of the chain armor, tearing away a portion of the deal-board covering. If  those rounds had come from Alabama's more powerful 100-pounder Blakely pivot  rifle, the likely result would not have been too serious, as both struck the  chain armor a little more than five feet above the waterline. Even if both shots  had penetrated Kearsarge's side, they would have completely missed her vital  machinery.
 A little more than an hour after the first shot was fired, Alabama was  reduced to a sinking wreck by Kearsarge's powerful 11-inch (280 mm) Dahlgrens,  forcing Captain Semmes to strike his colors and to send one of his two surviving  boats to Kearsarge to ask for assistance.
 According to witnesses, Alabama fired 370 rounds at her adversary,  averaging one round per minute per gun, while Kearsarge's gun crews fired less  than half that many, taking more careful aim. During the confusion of battle,  five more rounds were fired at Alabama after her colors were struck. (Her gun  ports had been left open and the broadside cannon were still run out, appearing  to come to bear on Kearsarge.) Then a hand-held white flag came fluttering from  Alabama's stern spanker boom, finally halting the engagement. Prior to this, she  had her steering gear compromised by shell hits, but the fatal shot came later  when one of Kearsarge's 11-inch (280 mm) shells tore open a mid-section of  Alabama's starboard waterline. Water quickly rushed through the defeated  cruiser, eventually drowning her boilers and forcing her down by the stern to  the bottom. Kearsarge rescued the majority of the survivors, but 41 of Alabama's  officers and crew, including Semmes, were rescued by the Deerhound, a private  yacht, while the Kearsarge stood off to recover her rescue boats while waiting  for Alabama to sink. Captain Winslow was forced to stand by helplessly and watch  Deerhound spirit away to England his much sought after adversary, Captain Semmes  and his surviving shipmates.
 The battle between the Alabama and Kearsarge is honored by the United  States Navy with a battle star on the Civil War campaign streamer.
 Perhaps the most courageous and selfless act during the Alabama's last  moments involved the ship's assistant surgeon, Dr. David Herbert Llewellyn. Dr.  Llewellyn, a Briton, was much loved and respected by the entire crew. During the  battle, he steadfastly remained at his post in the wardroom tending the wounded  until the order to abandon ship was finally given. As he helped wounded men into  the Alabama's only two functional lifeboats, an able bodied sailor attempted to  enter one, which was already full. Llewellyn, understanding that the man risked  capsizing the craft, grabbed and pulled him back, saying "See, I want to save my  life as much as you do; but let the wounded men be saved first." An officer in  the boat, seeing that Llewellyn was about to be left aboard the stricken  Alabama, shouted "Doctor, we can make room for you." Llewellyn shook his head  and replied, "I will not peril the wounded." Tragically, and unknown to the  crew, Llewellyn had never learned to swim, and he drowned when the ship went  down.
 His sacrifice did not go unrecognized. The Confederacy awarded him  posthumously the Southern Cross of Honor . In his native Wiltshire, a memorial  window and tablet were placed at Easton Royal Church. Another tablet was placed  in Charing Cross Hospital, where he attended medical school.
 During her two-year career as a commerce raider, Alabama caused disorder  and devastation across the globe for Union merchant shipping. The Confederate  cruiser claimed 65 prizes valued at nearly $6,000,000 (approximately  $123,000,000 in today's dollars). In an important development in international  law, the U. S. Government pursued the "Alabama Claims" against the British  Government for the devastation caused, and following a court of arbitration, won  heavy damages.
 Ironically, a decade before the beginning of the Civil War, Captain Semmes  had observed:
 "(Commerce raiders) are little better than licensed pirates; and it  behooves all civilized nations to suppress the practice altogether." --Raphael  Semmes, 1851
 In November 1984, the French Navy mine hunter CircĂ© discovered a wreck  under nearly 60 m (200 ft) of water off Cherbourg at 49°45′9″N  1°41′42″W / 49.7525°N 1.695°W / 49.7525; -1.695 [14]. Captain  Max Guerout later confirmed the wreck to be the Alabama's remains.
 In 1988, a non-profit organization the Association CSS Alabama was founded  to conduct scientific exploration of the shipwreck. Although the wreck resides  within French territorial waters, the U. S. government, as the successor to the  former Confederate States of America, is the owner. On October 3, 1989, the  United States and France signed an agreement recognizing this wreck as an  important heritage resource of both nations and establishing a Joint  French-American Scientific Committee for archaeological exploration. This  agreement established a precedent for international cooperation in  archaeological research and in the protection of a unique historic shipwreck.  This agreement will be in effect for five years and is renewable by mutual  consent.
 The Association CSS Alabama and the U.S. Navy/Naval Historical Center  signed on March 23, 1995 an official agreement accrediting Association CSS  Alabama as operator of the archaeological investigation of the remains of the  ship. Association CSS Alabama, which is funded solely from private donations, is  continuing to make this an international project through its fund raising in  France and in the United States, thanks to its sister organization, the CSS  Alabama Association, incorporated in the State of Delaware.
 In 2002, a diving expedition raised the ship's bell along with more than  300 other artifacts, including cannons, structural samples, tableware, ornate  commodes, and numerous other items that reveal much about life aboard the  Confederate warship.
 The Alabama is the subject of a well known sea shanty, '"Roll Alabama,  roll'":
 When the Alabama's Keel was Laid, (Roll Alabama, roll!), 'Twas laid in the  yard of Jonathan Laird (Roll, roll Alabama, roll!) 
 'Twas Laid in the yard of Jonathan Laird, 'twas laid in the town of  Birkenhead. 
 Down the Mersey way she rolled then, and Liverpool fitted her with guns and  men. 
 From the western isle she sailed forth, to destroy the commerce of the  north. 
 To Cherbourg port she sailed one day, for to take her count of prize money.  
 Many a sailor laddie saw his doom, when the Kearsarge it hove in view.  
 When a ball from the forward pivot that day, shot the Alabama's stern away.  
 Off the three-mile limit in '64, the Alabama was seen no more. 
 The Alabama's visit to Cape Town in 1863 has passed (with a slight spelling  change) into South African folklore in the Afrikaans song, '"Daar Kom die  Alibama'":
 Daar kom die Alibama, 
 Die Alibama, die kom oor die see, 
 Daar kom die Alibama, 
 Die Alibama, die kom oor die see... 
 Nooi, nooi die rietkooi nooi, 
 Die rietkooi is gemaak, 
 Die rietkooi is vir my gemaak, 
 Om daarop te slaap... 
 O Alibama, die Alibama, 
 O Alibama, die kom oor die see, 
 O Alibama, die Alibama, 
 O Alibama, die kom oor die see... 
 There comes the Alabama, 
 The Alabama, it comes o'er the sea, 
 There comes the Alabama, 
 The Alabama, it comes o'er the sea... 
 Lass, lass, the reed bed calls, 
 The reed bed it is made, 
 The reed bed it is made for me, 
 To sleep upon... 
 Oh Alabama, the Alabama, 
 Oh Alabama, it comes o'er the sea, 
 Oh Alabama, the Alabama, 
 Oh Alabama, it comes o'er the sea...
 

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