Document signed

Stephen Russell MALLORY

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Document signed

CIVIL WAR PRISONER EXCHANGE: SIGNED BY STEPHEN MALLORY, CONFEDERATE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY, 1864

MALLORY, Stephen Russell. Document signed. Richmond, September 3, 1864. One leaf, writing on recto and verso, measures 8 by 10 inches.

Wartime document signed by Stephen Russell Mallory, Confederate Secretary of the Navy, on official Confederate Naval stationery.

This document, written in a secretarial hand and signed by Mallory, gives the bearer authority in a prisoner exchange for 190 Union soldiers captured by the C.S.S. Tallahassee under the command of Commander John Taylor Wood (grandson of President Zachary Taylor, nephew to Jefferson Davis, and cousin of Robert E. Lee). Mallory recommends that the prisoners be exchanged for the crews of the captured confederate ships Tennessee and Selma. The Tallahassee was an extraordinarily successful ship during its brief life, destroying 26 vessels and capturing seven more from August 6 through August 26, 1864, including sinking six ships in six hours off New York Harbor. No ship had been as successful as the Tallahassee in so short a space of time. The Tennessee and the Selma were captured during the Battle of Mobile Bay, the preeminent naval battle of the Civil War, at which Admiral Farragut said “Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!” Prior to the Civil War, Stephen Mallory was a U.S. Senator from Florida who worked to greatly improve the U.S. Navy, including championing the ironclad program, screw propellers, and modern ordnance. Following the secession of the South, Mallory performed the same service for the Confederacy.

Near-fine condition.

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