An Englishman's View of the Battle between the Alabama and the Kearsarge An Account of the Naval Engagement in the British Channel, on Sunday June 19th, 1864

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An Englishman's View of the Battle between the Alabama and the Kearsarge An Account of the Naval Engagement in the British Channel, on Sunday June 19th, 1864

by Frederick Milnes Edge

EN·~1 hours·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total

AN ENGLISHMAN’S VIEW

1:05:56

Description

An English gentleman, fresh from a visit to Cherbourg, offers a clear‑eyed account of the dramatic clash between the Union sloop‑of‑war Kearsarge and the Confederate cruiser Alabama. Drawing on conversations with the ship’s officers, crew members, and captured sailors, he places the June 19, 1864 engagement in the wider context of naval innovation, highlighting it as the first decisive duel between steam‑powered vessels and a testing ground for rifled versus smooth‑bore artillery.

Beyond the raw details of fire and maneuver, the narrator wades through a tangle of sensational newspaper reports, exposing exaggerations and correcting false claims about the ships’ armaments, speed, and crew bravery. His careful documentation gives listeners a glimpse of the human experience aboard both vessels and the strategic stakes that made this battle a turning point in the war at sea.

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Full title

An Englishman's View of the Battle between the Alabama and the Kearsarge An Account of the Naval Engagement in the British Channel, on Sunday June 19th, 1864 An Account of the Naval Engagement in the British Channel, on Sunday June 19th, 1864

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (63K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2011-08-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

FM

Frederick Milnes Edge

1830–1882

Best remembered for chronicling chess prodigy Paul Morphy at close range, this brisk 19th-century journalist wrote with the energy of someone who had seen events firsthand. His books move from chess salons to Civil War politics, giving modern readers a lively window into his era.

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