totalnavy.com
Online Resource for all things that are Navy!
home of - navalbasehobbies.com & modelshipbuilding.com
PO Box 207    Cedarhurst, NY 11516
Phone: 718-471-5464    Email click here   Fax 718-337-7115

Ship Catalogue Paints & Displays How to Build a Ship! Navy Ball Caps
Books Decals Photo- Etching Ship Art Prints Main Website

Our Customer Service is open from 8:30 am to 9:00 pm EST time call us if you need help. 718-471-5464

If you have any questions or need help call or email us click here for HELP

Below is the only plastic model made today of this famous Civil War Ship.
CSS Alabama

Classic Revell 1/96 scale plastic model.  
33.5" long -
CW03A $Gone

Few ships in recent history have captured the imaginations of so many for so long as the CSS Alabama. Built in secrecy for the Confederacy in the Liverpool shipyards of John Laird Sons and Company, the Alabama became the subject of controversy even as her keel was laid. The Union did not take kindly to this expression of British sympathy for the cotton-producing South, and much diplomatic subterfuge was required to complete and launch "290," the Alabama's nom de guerre. Afloat on the high seas by the summer of 1862, the CSS Alabama harried Yankee traders and took nearly 60 prizes, dealing a blow to the American merchant marine from which it never truly recovered. The Alabama cruised the Atlantic, rounded Africa, and visited Southeast Asia before she was finally sunk by the USS Kearsarge off the French coast near Cherbourg in June, 1864.

The Alabama's brief but brilliant career has been well-documented for over a century. Contemporaneous news sources, the memoirs of her captain and officers, and official Confederate documents provide a chronicle of the Alabama at sea. Professional historians have ruminated at length on the vessel and her exploits. More recently both National Geographic and the Learning Channel covered the international effort to dive the wreck of the Alabama. The sheer beauty of the Alabama's bark rigging inspired artists of her era, including French painter Eduard Manet, and continues to fascinate modelers today. In the final analysis, children of all ages love to go down to the sea in ships.


This persistent interest in the CSS Alabama has created a body of knowledge in various formats that reside in discrete areas within the W.S. Hoole Special Collections Library. The formats range from published books, manuscript materials, sheet music, newspapers, maps, color prints, plans, models, and other realia. This web resource provides access to a significant portion of these materials in electronic form. View images associated with the raider in the Image Gallery. Read Documents that record the vessel's history. Take a Virtual Journey tracing the course of the Alabama and documenting its encounters with contemporary accounts. This web resource also provides a Bibliography of the Alabama-related materials held at The University of Alabama Libraries.


This resource was authored by P. Toby Graham, a Ph.D. student at the University of Alabama's School of Library and Information Studies. Andrea Watson and Clark E. Center, Jr. of the W.S. Hoole Special Collections Library created the concept for the CSS Alabama Digital Collection. Andrea Watson is also responsible for the art work associated with the "Virtual Journey" image map. Acknowledgements are in order for Alabama Power for funding not only this project, but a larger effort toward a "library without walls." The project creators would also like to thank the University of Alabama Libraries' Digital Resources Committee, Greg Goldstien, and the School of Library and Information Studies.


cssala.bmp (664146 bytes)

CSS Alabama Digital Collection
The historical site for the Ship.

For information on the USS Kearsarge kit click here!

Navy-left.gif (1396 bytes)
Back