It stands for Confederate States Ship. The Federal navy used USS for United States Ship. Other countries have similar terms used to identify their military vessels.
Confederate States Ship Alabama .
Yes. That's why it was called 'USS'. Ships of the Confederate Navy were 'CSS'.
Well, I found my own answer. USS stands for United States Ship and CSS stands for Confederate States Ship.
The captain of the CSS Alabama was Raphael Semmes. After given refuge in England he returned to the South and was promoted to the rank of rear admiral.Semmes was a thirty year veteran of the US Navy. He joined the Confederate navy at the outbreak of the US Civil War.
The Confederate Secretary of the Navy, Stephen Mallory sent James D. Bulloch to Europe in 1861 to buy or have built six propeller warships. part of Bulloch's success was the building of two Confederate raiding ships, the CSS Alabama and the CSS Florida.
CSS refers to Confederate States Ship as in the name CSS Shenadoah.CSS refers to Confederate States Ship as in the name CSS Shenadoah. In computer terms CSS is a Cascading Style Sheet.
Confederate States Ship
Raphael had been with the US Navy for 30 years. He joined the Confederate Navy and as commander of the CSS Sumter, he captured or burned 18 Union ships. He then found himself in Liverpool, England, and commanded the newly acquired CSS Alabama. He made a connection with Confederate merchantmen in the Azores and armed the Alabama. Over the next two years Semmes ran rabid over Union shipping. He captured or burned 65 Union vessels said to be worth almost $7 million. The CSS Alabama was finally sunk by an old Union Navy comrade, Captain John Winslow and his USS Keararge.
Cascading Style Sheet
Confederate States Navy was created in 1861.
The USS Monitor and the USS Merrimac were both vessels in the US Navy. They did not fight. The Merrimac was sunk at the beginning of the war. The Confederate Navy took the remains of the Merrimac and used it to create the Ironclad CSS Virginia. The USS Monitor and the CSS Virginia fought a battle near Hampton Roads Virginia.
The USS Housatonic, sunk by the Confederate submarine CSS Hunley.