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Charles Cobby, whose surname is also recorded as
Cobbey, was born in England and migrated to Victoria,
Australia. Upon arriving in Australia, very likely in Melbourne,
Cobby settled down in a community on the outskirts of Melbourne. In
February Cobby became aware, as did many in Melbourne, that a
Confederate Cruiser, the famous Rebel Raider “CSS Shenandoah”, had
arrived in Port Phillip Bay, off Melbourne on January 25, 1865, to
make necessary repairs to her propeller shaft, recalk her weather
beaten hull and to resupply her store supplies before resuming
attacks on Union merchant and whaling ships at sea. Learning that
the “Shenandoah” was also looking for deck hands, though it was not
legal to do so in a neutral port, Cobby decided to take a look at
the ship for himself. It was while he was doing so that he decided
he too would like to join her crew.
Shortly before midnight on the night of February 17,
1865, Cobby made his way to the Williamstown dock where she was
berthed, and silently slipped aboard the “Shenandoah”; being
assisted by crewmembers in hiding away until the “Shenandoah” left
port. To be discovered meant removal from the ship and his arrest.
Once the “Shenandoah” was at sea and out of Australian waters, Cobby
came out of hiding and officially signed aboard the “CSS Shenandoah”
with others who had likewise stowed away. Cobby signed aboard as a
seaman, on February 18, 1865, placing his mark beside his name, for
the pay of $29.10. Later, on March 27, 1865, after proving his worth
to the Captain, Cobby’s rating was changed from that of a seaman to
that of a quarter gunner. Cobby also became one of the signatories
who expressed their confidence in the command of Lieutenant James I.
Waddell, in a petition dated September 1865.
After the surrender of the CSS Shenandoah on November
6, 1865 to British Captain Paynter, commanding her Majesty’s ship
“Donegal, at Liverpool, England, Cobby joined the rest of the crew
ashore; being paroled and given temporary quarters in Liverpool. |
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Alabama Claims, “Correspondence
Concerning Claims Against Great Britain
transmitted to the Senate of
the United States in answer to the Resolutions of
December 4, and 10, 1867, and
of May 27, 1868”, Washington; 1869
CSS Shenandoah Deck Log
Eleanor S. Brockenbrough Library, Museum of the
Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia.
Lieutenant William C. Whittle Jr., Exectuive Officer
Official Records
of the Union and
Confederate
Navies in the War of the
Rebellion
Willaim A. Temple, affidavit
History of The Confederate States
Navy, J.T. Scarf, 1996
Marauders of the Sea, Confederate
Merchant Raiders During the American Civil War, Mackenzie J Gregory
The
Cruise of the Shenandoah,
Captain William C.
Whittle, CSN |