CSS Nashville
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CSS Nashville

Steamboat


Country of Registry
Confederate States of America
Operator
United States Navy
Vessel Type
ship
Current Location
31° 53' 24", -81° 13' 6"

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

CSS Nashville was a brig-rigged, side-paddle-wheel passenger steamer constructed in 1853 at Greenpoint, Brooklyn. Originally serving as a United States Mail Service (USMS) vessel, she operated between New York City and Charleston, South Carolina, until the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861. Her design featured a traditional brig rigging complemented by side-mounted paddle wheels, making her suitable for passenger and mail transport along the Atlantic coast. During the early stages of the Civil War, Nashville played a notable role in the Battle of Fort Sumter, sailing into Charleston without flying the US national standard. She was subsequently fired upon by the USRC Harriet Lane, marking the first shot of the naval conflict in the Civil War. After Fort Sumter's surrender, she docked at Charleston and was captured by Confederate forces. The Confederates repurposed her as a cruiser, fitting her out for wartime service under the command of Lieutenant Robert B. Pegram of the Confederate Navy. As a Confederate cruiser, Nashville became the first ship of war to fly the Confederate flag in British waters when she crossed the Atlantic to Southampton in October 1861. She undertook a raid near the British Isles, where she boarded and burned the American merchant ship Harvey Birch, marking the first action by a Confederate commerce raider in the North Atlantic. Returning to North Carolina in February 1862, Nashville had captured two prizes valued at approximately US$66,000. During this period, she was sold and renamed Thomas L. Wragg to serve as a blockade runner. Later, she was commissioned as the privateer Rattlesnake in November 1862. Her service ended when she ran aground on the Ogeechee River in Georgia, and USS Montauk destroyed her with shell fire on February 28, 1863. The Nashville’s service history highlights her versatility and significance as a Confederate vessel involved in early naval engagements, blockade running, and commerce raiding during the Civil War.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

28 ship citations (3 free) in 14 resources

Nashville (Confederate steam raider, 1862)
Book Merchant Sail
Author William Armstrong Fairburn
Published Fairburn Marine Educational Foundation, Inc., Center Lovell, Maine,
Pages II: 1563; III: 1664; VI: 3710, 3711
Nashville (Confederate cruiser)
Book American Clipper Ships, 1833-1858
Author Octavius T. Howe, M.D., and Frederick C. Matthews
Published Marine Research Society, Salem, Mass.,
ISBN 0486251152
Page 260
Nashville (Confederate cruiser): destroyed Subscribe to view
Nashville (Confederate steamer, 1861) Subscribe to view
Nashville (Confederate steamer, 1862) Subscribe to view
Nashville (Confederate steamer, Capt Pegram, 1861) Subscribe to view
Nashville (pirate steamer, 1862) Subscribe to view
Nashville (privateer, burned, 1862) Subscribe to view
Nashville (sidewheel or paddle steamer; 1853-63; called Nashville, Thomas Wragge, Rattlesnake) Subscribe to view
Nashville (steamer, arrived at Beaufort, NC, 1862) Subscribe to view
Nashville (steamer, for Charleston, 1861) Subscribe to view
Nashville (steamship, 1862) Subscribe to view
Nashville, Confederate privateer Subscribe to view
Nashville, Confederate raider: historical references Subscribe to view
Nashville, Confederate raider: mentioned Subscribe to view
Nashville, Confederate raider: query Subscribe to view
Nashville, CSS Subscribe to view
Rattlesnake (ex-Nashville) Subscribe to view
Rattlesnake (ex-Nashville) (CSN) Subscribe to view
Rattlesnake (sidewheel or paddle steamer; See Nashville (sidewheel or paddle steamer)) Subscribe to view
Rattlesnake, ex-Thomas L. Wragg, Confederate cruiser: mentioned Subscribe to view
Rattlesnake, privateer Subscribe to view
Thomas L. Wragg (ex-Nashville) Subscribe to view
Thomas L. Wragg, ex-Nashville, Confederate raider: mentioned Subscribe to view
Thos. L. Wragg (steamship, formerly Nashville, 1862) Subscribe to view