A Challenge to James D Keeline

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John Lamb

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Oct 21, 2025, 11:51:05 PMOct 21
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Dear James,

As promised  from our previous discussion, in a previous post you stated that the idea that Captain Nemo and the Nautilus  being based on Captain Raphael Semmes and the CSS Alabama is entirely  'coincidental' akin to the novel  'The the Wreck of the Titan'  by Morgan Robertson.

 Indeed the five or so  similarities between the 'Titan' and the Titanic (designed in Birkenhead by the way) , notwithstanding the similarities of their name  are as you say (and I agree) quite interesting.  There are thousands of coincidences based on the five or so links stated re Titan and Titanic in the vagaries of life, perhaps if I was a bookmaker I would say 2,000 to one...happily within the realms of coincidence....

It is a bit like an accumulator bet on a horse race, things go up exponentially beyond five or so links ....as it does with Semmes and the Alabama and Captain Nemo and the Nautilus...when it gets to 100 links (see attachment) it should be worthy of scrutiny by all the Jules Verne forum's members. 


Now let us look ata few of the similarities between the CSS Alabama and the Nautilus as briefly summarised in my April 2025 article in The International Review of Science Fiction. 

Both the Alabama and the Nautilus were mainly built in Birkenhead. Both Semmes and Nemo were gifted natural historians. Nemo’s motto was ‘Mobilis in Mobile’ while Semmes was from Mobile Alabama.

Semmes was branded a pirate by Abraham Lincoln, who put a bounty on Semmes’s head, and Semmes was chased around the seas by Admiral Farragut of the US Navy. Nemo, conversely, was branded a pirate by Captain Farragut of the US Navy, who put a bounty on Nemo’s head, and Nemo was chased around the seas by the ship Abraham Lincoln. Both Semmes and Nemo encounter an imaginary island, sail through a patch of white water, encounter fake Havana cigars, mention coral mausoleums, shelter in an extinct volcanic island, and have their final battle off Cherbourg. Semmes had a portrait of the Confederate President, Jefferson Davis, in his cabin while Nemo had a portrait of the Union President, Abraham Lincoln, in his. In other words, if The Great Eastern was the template for the Nautilus, then the CSS Alabama was the latter’s real-life alter-ego.


Now there are 13 links here and they are not all in the binary (one in two chance) ...take the name Farragut for example. So this sends the odds of all this being coincidence into very high odds indeed. 

Please find in the attachment of exactly 100 links between Semmes and Nemo (I can give the exact page number in Semmes' memoirs and the equivalent page number in 20,000 Leagues if desired) 

My challenge to you James is to give me a rational counter argument to this...or if maintaining your argument of coincidence, please state what the odds of these 100 coincidences are ....even if they were all binary (i.e. one in two chance) it is zillions to one....and yet no one argues against William Butcher's theory that  Flourens is Nemo..

I tried to warn William Butcher that given that Verne is giving a ridiculous amount of clues here then you will end up arguing against him with me as an innocent bystander.

I look forward to your reply.


Best wishes John
Nemo Table - James D Keeline.pdf

John Lamb

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Oct 22, 2025, 11:39:41 AMOct 22
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Apologies - the Semmes / Nemo table should have 100 ticks either side.
Hear is the amended version.
Best John

Nemo Table - James D Keeline.pdf

William Butcher

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Oct 22, 2025, 7:25:39 PMOct 22
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John Lamb,

 I haven't had time to read your messages yet but hope to be able to do so before the end of the year

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Jean-Louis Trudel

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Oct 22, 2025, 10:17:44 PMOct 22
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Greetings,

Dear John, you write: "Both Semmes and Nemo encounter an imaginary
island, sail through a patch of white water, encounter fake Havana
cigars, mention coral mausoleums, shelter in an extinct volcanic
island, and have their final battle off Cherbourg."

I'll just cherry-pick here and look at the issue of the final battle
off Cherbourg. While this is verbally correct, this is the type of
coincidence that falls apart when you look at it closely, esp. if you
want it to support an identification of Nemo with Semmes.

The most striking aspect here is that the Nemo's Nautilus was not sunk
near Cherbourg, while the Alabama did sink. As far as Aronnax was
concerned, the Nautilus might have sunk in the Maelström, but he
wasn't sure. A second point is that there is no evidence the Nautilus
battled a ship near Cherbourg. Cherbourg is not mentioned in Vingt
mille lieues sous les mers. The last definite indication is that the
Nautilus sailed between Land's End and the Scilly Islands, and did NOT
turn east into the Channel. Verne provides coordinates for the
sinking of the Vengeur, which he also wants to be the grave of the
British ship: 47 degrees 24 minutes (North), 17 degrees 28 minutes
(West). Whether Verne is using the Paris or the Greenwich meridian,
this would appear to be well to the west of France, far from land, but
closer to Brest or Cork than Cherbourg. (In fact, it looks like
Cherbourg is only marginally closer than Birkenhead.) Even if we go
by the last definite location, what is south of Land's End? Brest, if
anything.

Nor do we know that this was Nemo's last battle. Between Vingt milles
lieues sous les mers and L'Île mystérieuse, some time has passed, and
I don't believe Verne states that the Nautilus retired directly to the
island.

So, that's one coincidence that falls apart.

On the whole, I can believe Verne would have borrowed from the
adventures of the Alabama and Semmes, and was influenced by them, but
a direct one-to-one match remains unconvincing.

Jean-Louis Trudel
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John Lamb

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Oct 23, 2025, 9:17:13 AMOct 23
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Dear Jean-Louis,


Thankyou so much for your reply, please feel free to 'cherry pick' and grill me on any one of my 100 Semmes / Nemo links. You quote from my

 article in the International Review of science fiction (2025) but this is also number 84 in my 100 Semmes / Nemo links table (see the other

 thread), leading on  to 85 as both Semmes and Nemo are


84. A captain who has his final battle off Cherbourg with an enemy…

85  … a wooden ship protected by metal armour above the waterline.

 

I am so pleased you chose the issue of ‘the final battle off Cherbourg’ as this is one of the highlights of the novel and reciprocally should also be

 one of the highlights of linking Semmes and Nemo, after all Verne, asks under the guise of Aronnax.

                                                                                           

Will the waves one day wash up the manuscript containing the entire story of his life? Will I finally discover his name?

 

I, of course maintain the manuscript containing the entire story of his life has indeed washed up in the form of Semmes’s Memoirs of

 Service Afloat During the War Between the States (1869) from which the vast majority (but not all) of the 100-matching Semmes /Nemo links

 with 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas were taken. 

 

Aronnax also writes


Will the nationality of the vessel sunk tell us Captain Nemo’s own nationality?


I will answer this in due course; I might as well throw this one in as well from Aronnax regarding Nemo.


Had he been one of the heroes of that terrible American Civil War, that frightful but forever glorious battle….?

 

You say of the final battle off Cherbourg ‘this is the type of coincidence that falls apart when you look at it closely, esp. if you want it to support an

 identification of Nemo with Semmes’.


I can only quote William Butcher regarding ‘this is the type of coincidence that falls apart’ via Google translate. Bill in his French edition of 20,000

 Leagues seems quite happy that in this one case there may be a link between the CSS Alabama and the Nautilus, so out of 99 Semmes Nemo /

 links in my table you have chosen the one that is partially backed up by William Butcher!


Bill writes.

John

The Southern Alabama, which claimed to have sunk seventy-five merchant ships, was destroyed off Cherbourg on June 19, 1864. Manet's Battle of the Kearsarge and the Alabama (1865) may have inspired the final battle of Nemo, which took place nearby. This ship, built by the Laird shipyards of Birkenhead in 1862, caused a dispute between the United States and Great Britain, which was ordered to pay heavy compensation in 1872.

Bonne continuation!

bill


Now regarding the ‘coincidence’ falling apart because as you say ‘Nemo's Nautilus was not sunk near Cherbourg, while the Alabama did sink’.


This is not the point, Semmes under the guise of his alter ego Nemo, is getting revenge on the USS Kearsarge. It is all about vengeance, ably

 demonstrated in Semmes’s bitter memoirs and the sunken grave of the Vengeur in the novel representing the sunken grave of the CSS Alabama.

 You can of course only make this interpretation if you believe the other 98 Semmes / Nemo links in my table …the alternative is no explanation

 and potentially a vast amount of untapped knowledge of how Verne worked staying hidden . Hence my detailed answer to your posting and any

 other posting by forum members.  

 

Both the CSS Alabama and the Nautilus have their final battle off the coast of Cherbourg (how far off, as I think William Butcher agrees is not

 massively the point) with a warship protected by a metal covering. At Cherbourg the Alabama fought the USS Kearsarge protected above the

 waterline by 700 linear feet of anchor chain, this massively infuriated Semmes in his memoirs as his artillery just bounced off (remember this is

 the technological cusp in the change from wooden to ironclad ships).


So to Verne, if we believe the 100  Semmes / Nemo links,  the Nautilus, in an act of vengeance rams an unnamed vessel (based on the USS

Kearsarge) similarly protected by what Verne calls an ‘impenetrable cuirass’ (armour), below the waterline. In fiction at least Raphael Semmes,

 under the guise of Nemo is getting his act of revenge on the Kearsarge.  Remember also that Semmes, after the loss of the CSS Alabama did

 actually captain a futuristic  ironclad ram designed to sink wooden ships (CSS Virginia II  designed by John Mercer Brooke)  which he scuttled by

 blowing it up, so perhaps  inspiring the end of the Nautilus in The Mysterious Island (link number 4 in my table).


So, this answers Verne’s own question


Will the nationality of the vessel sunk tell us Captain Nemo’s own nationality?


The vessel sunk is symbolic of the American USS Kearsarge and it tells us that Nemo’s own nationality is half the Confederate Semmes, as also

 borne out in the 100 links in my table, and half Unionist as borne out by the portraits of Abraham Lincoln and John Brown in his cabin. It took me

 a year before I read William Butcher’s translation as my previous translation did not include the portraits and so it was massively skewed

 towards  the Confederate Semmes, so for one year I was so stressed that Verne had created a political situation far far worse than the Polish

 count... so  thanks Bill!.  

 

Nemo is a tormented metaphor for America itself, an America at war with itself for the abolition of slavery. Nemo is thus a complex manifestation

 of the political cartoons of the day which often showed the country at war with itself by depicting Jefferson Davis and Abraham Lincoln fighting

 with complex iconography, symbols and key words around them.  Look up the political cartoons of Thomas Nast to see what I mean.

  

In fact here is a great link Cartoons | Civil War | Political Cartoonist | Thomas Nast


So the whole of 20,000 Leagues and its sequel The Mysterious Island is just a grossly inflated version of the Civil War cartoons of the day centred

 around the geopolitics of Britain’s meddling in the American Civil War and then working out the peace that followed. 


The Alabama's motto is 'God Helps those who helps themselves' and this is the whole theme of the Mysterious Island, where Nemo (playing god)

 finds his  redemption in helping the castaways build a successful multiracial mini America following the end of the Civil War. 

 

The CSS Alabama was sunk by the USS Kearsarge on 19th June 1864, according to Arthur Sinclairs biography (1895)…  ‘The Alabama’s final

 plunge was a remarkable freak’ and ‘making a whirlpool of considerable size and strength’ and this (given the other 99 Semmes / Nemo links) is

 quite probably where Verne got the idea of the Norwegian Maelstrom from. Whether the Nautilus goes down it or not, again is not the point. My

 point is that the Alabama’s whirlpool meant that Verne created a note on a piece of paper that were amongst many that Verne probably threw on

 the floor and  rearranged it in to his plot line.  Like some mad chef chucking in any ingredients he could find for a risotto. 

 

You also state

 ‘Nor do we know that this was Nemo's last battle. Between Vingt milles lieues sous les mers and L'Île mystérieuse, some time has passed, and I

 don't believe Verne states that the Nautilus retired directly to the island. So, that's one coincidence that falls apart’.

It was Nemo’s last battle in 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas and according to William Butcher ‘the final battle of Nemo’ so I must disagree. This

 one ‘coincidence’ does not fall apart, in fact it neatly dovetails into everything I have said (including the other 99 Semmes / Nemo links) and far

 more importantly everything that Verne has written in 20,000 Leagues and The Mysterious Island (which thank goodness is a discussion for

 another day).


'You say 'Between Vingt milles lieues sous les mers and L'Île mystérieuse, some time has passed' ...not really as Mysterious Island starts in April

 1865 and 20,000 Leagues starts in 1866...don't you just love Jules Verne!



 I believe you have chosen what you perceive to be a weak point (perhaps what you perceive to be the weakest out of 100 Semmes / Nemo links

  in my research?)  and I have given, what I believe is very a robust defence combining the words of both Jules Verne and William Bucher with real

 historical events  and eyewitness testimonies thrown in.  I have then suggested a mechanism of how Verne worked in constructing his plot lines

 (repeated in the Mysterious Island).


I believe the 100 Semmes / Nemo links are very convincing and so I must disagree with you.

 

As I have said before people who doubt the inspiration of Semmes / The Alabama / Birkenhead / link to Verne will end up having a conversation

 with the great man himself and I believe you have done just that.

 

Please grill me on any other of the 98 points. You can see how complex this is in justifying all 100 links by quoting Semmes, Nemo and history…

 all I can say is thank goodness there is no word limit for articles in Verniana.

 

Best wishes John

Marie-Hélène Huet

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Oct 23, 2025, 11:14:18 AMOct 23
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I fully agree with Jean-Louis, though I suspect John will never be persuaded by our arguments. We should simply read the text as it is written. Jules Verne gives us what he believes we ought to know: Nemo says somewhere that he belongs to the "country of the oppressed", and supports the Crete insurrection (II, ch vi). There is a portrait of John Brown (the anti-esclavagist hero executed by the Sudists) on the walls of his cabin. 
The Mysterious Island further emphasizes Jules Verne's support of the North, starting with the name of the island.. Finally, in his correspondance with Hetzel at the time he writes MI, Verne states that he had though of making Nemo a Polish aristocrat. 

It is rather wonderful that readers are so intent on identifying a character the author had first deliberately meant to remain anonymous. It leads us much beyond the novel. I believe John's identification is erroneous, but I admire his persistence and love of Jules Verne's work.

 
Marie-Hélène 

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Jean-Louis Trudel

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Oct 23, 2025, 12:15:01 PMOct 23
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Greetings,

Dear John, you seem to have problems reading my contribution. I've
already agreed that Semmes may well have inspired Verne. (It's there.
Go back and read it.) My contention is that influence does not equate
to one-to-one equivalence.

To sum up:

i) the Nautilus battle is not anywhere near Cherbourg;
ii) the Nautilus was not sunk;
iii) there is still no evidence that this was Nemo's final battle;
iv) is Nemo closer to Semmes or to Winslow in the role of "avenger"?
Winslow is the captain of the Kearsarge and is avenging the damages
done by Semmes to Union shipping, by sinking the Alabama. What is
Semmes avenging by losing a battle, a ship, and some of his crew?
Rather a contradiction in terms, as far as that goes. (The South was
hardly a victim needing to be avenged; it started the war to defend
slavery.)

Jean-Louis Trudel
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John Lamb

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Oct 23, 2025, 12:16:23 PMOct 23
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Dear Marie-Hélène,

thankyou for your comments and great to hear from you. A few points.

'We should simply read the text as it is written'.  

Much of William Butcher's notes are describing how Verne uses metaphors (e.g. describing a place in the open air when it is under the sea) birds becoming fish and so on, in other words how it is not written,  which I agree with, we just differ on the places that inspired Verne. Most of the great academic papers in literature take the real challenge of reading the text 'as it is not written' whether it be characters, places or the politics of the time. I remember my teacher linking Arthur Miller's The Crucible to Macarthy communist witch hunts of the 1950's. I am doing the same with Verne and the American Civil War and the background of the abolition of slavery - not a comfortable subject but I did not choose that subject ... Jules Verne did. 
 
 'I believe John's identification is erroneous, but I admire his persistence and love of Jules Verne's work'.

I thank you for the compliment but please look at my list of 100 factual links between Nemo and Semmes (in French too!) in the other thread, how can all these identifications be erroneous? I respectfully ask you to have a close look at these? 

Please name any random number the 1-100 and I will quote you the passage in Semmes's memoirs, the equivalent passage in 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas and the historical context. 

I am willing to be persuaded by well researched counter arguments.

with great respect

 John

John Lamb

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Oct 23, 2025, 1:23:09 PMOct 23
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Dear Jean-Louis,

Sorry but I was only replying to what you have written on this thread re Cherbourg. I have indeed thanked you for your comments where they were written...on the other thread. 

Your conversation re Cherbourg was about  'the type of coincidence that falls apart when you look at it closely' ,and I have defended that point robustly because as you say we disagree with the

 'one on one  equivalence' and so I have to robustly defend Cherbourg and the other 99 points, to maintain that one on one equivalence. I hope you understand. 

In answer to

To sum up:

i) the Nautilus battle is not anywhere near Cherbourg;
ii) the Nautilus was not sunk;
iii) there is still no evidence that this was Nemo's final battle;

I respect your position on this.

In answering your questions 

Is Nemo closer to Semmes or to Winslow in the role of "avenger"?

Semmes was bitter to the end, Winslow was feted as a hero so I would say Semmes is closer to the avenger. 

Winslow is the captain of the Kearsarge and is avenging the damages done by Semmes to Union shipping, by sinking the Alabama.  

A possibility in this one case but Winslow can not be linked to the rest of novel like Semmes (points 1-100)


What is Semmes avenging by losing a battle, a ship, and some of his crew?

Rather a contradiction in terms, as far as that goes.  (The South was hardly a victim needing to be avenged; it started the war to defend slavery.)

Agreed here is a quote from Semmes in his memoirs that may explain, as this is about Semmes on a personal level rather than the war as a whole (in this case) . The quality of writing is as always exceptional. 


 No one who is not a seaman can realize the blow which falls upon the heart of a commander, upon the sinking of his ship. It is not merely the loss of a battle—it is the overwhelming of his household, as it were, in a great catastrophe. The Alabama had not only been my battle-field, but my home, in which I had lived two long years, and in which I had experienced many vicissitudes of pain and pleasure, sickness and health. My officers and crew formed a great military family, every face of which was familiar to me; and when I looked upon my gory deck, toward the close of the action, and saw so many manly forms stretched upon it, with the glazed eye of death, or agonizing with terrible wounds, I felt as a father feels who has lost his children—his children who had followed him to the uttermost ends of the earth, in sunshine and storm, and been always true to him.

                                                     Raphael Semmes Memoirs of Service Afloat. (1869) p763




...and why I believe the sunken ship circled by the Nautilus prior to battle is the grave of the CSS Alabama, written about by Semmes here. 



A noble Roman once stabbed his daughter, rather than she should be polluted by the foul embrace of a tyrant. It was with a similar feeling that Kell and I saw the Alabama go down. We had buried her as we had christened her, and she was safe from the polluting touch of the hated Yankee!

 

Great rejoicing was had in Yankeedom, when it was known that the Alabama had been beaten. Shouts of triumph rent the air, and bonfires lighted every hill.

                                                     Raphael Semmes Memoirs of Service Afloat. (1869) p765




I also refer you to the end of 20,000 Leagues which, given the 100 links,  is Verne's homage to Semmes.


But what became of the Nautilus? Did it resist the embrace of the Maelstroem? Is Captain Nemo still alive? Is he continuing his terrifying reprisals under the ocean, or did he stop at his last massacre? Will the waves one day wash up the manuscript containing the entire story of his life? Will I finally discover his name? Will the nationality of the vessel sunk tell us Captain Nemo’s own nationality?

 

I hope so. I also hope that his powerful vessel overcame the sea’s most terrifying deep and that the Nautilus survived where so many ships have perished!

 

If this is the case, if Captain Nemo does still inhabit his adopted homeland, may hate die down in that wild heart! May the contemplation of so many marvels extinguish his desire for revenge!

 

May the lawgiver disappear and the scientist continue his peaceful exploration of the seas! If his destiny is strange, it is also sublime. Do I not understand it myself?

 

 Have I not lived ten months of that extra-natural existence? So, to that question which the book of Ecclesiastes posed 6,000 years ago ‘hast thou walked in search of the depth?’, two men, amongst all men, now have the right to reply. Captain Nemo and I.

                                       Jules Verne Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1869) p381

 

                

The definition of The Ecclesiastian style of storytelling is of the musings of a King as he relates his experiences and draws lessons from them, often self-critical.

 

The author, who is not named anywhere in the book, does not use his own "voice" until the final verses, where in our case he gives his own thoughts and summarises.                                           

 

 Thankyou for spending the time in questioning me, it is very much appreciated. 


Best John

 

Marie-Hélène Huet

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Oct 23, 2025, 6:51:44 PMOct 23
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I fully agree with you on the question of interpretation. But interpretations start from what is written in a given text. I believe many of the discussions your theories generated have stressed issues of precision and/or plausibility. I may follow up later, though not on the forum as much has already been said on  these topics. Best,

Marie-Hélène 

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John Lamb

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Oct 23, 2025, 7:32:28 PMOct 23
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Dear Marie Helene ,

thankyou for your reply. I leave with you my very brief summary (posted at the start of this thread)  from the International Review of Science Fiction which is not an interpretation but a summary of some of the simple facts about  Semmes and Nemo akin to the fact they are both men. They are of course just 13 out of 100 factual links posted on my table. 

Admittedly a few (maybe ten out of 100) are open to interpretation as Jean-Louis suggests (and he is right to suggest it) but what about the other 90? 


The question is do the 100 common facts in my table of Semmes v Nemo have any relevance at all to Verne studies even if a few prove demonstrably wrong? 

If the 100 facts table is indeed relevant (given its sheer scale and specific content) then a potentially massive door opens into the further studies of Jules Verne potentially leading into The Mysterious Island and the geopolitical background of 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas and the American Civil War. 

If the 100 facts table is not relevant (despite its sheer scale and specific content) then that door remains firmly shut because Verne scholars maintain it never existed in the first place.

Here is the passage, I will post it on the Raphael Semmes,  Captain Nemo, CSS Alabama and Nautilus Wikipedia pages and see what A.I. subsequently throws at it. 



 Both the Alabama and the Nautilus were mainly built in Birkenhead. Both Semmes and Nemo were gifted natural historians. Nemo’s motto was ‘Mobilis in Mobile’ while Semmes was from Mobile Alabama.

Semmes was branded a pirate by Abraham Lincoln, who put a bounty on Semmes’ head, and Semmes was chased around the seas by Admiral Farragut of the US Navy. Nemo, conversely, was branded a pirate by Captain Farragut of the US Navy, who put a bounty on Nemo’s head, and Nemo was chased around the seas by the ship Abraham Lincoln. Both Semmes and Nemo encounter an imaginary island, sail through a patch of white water, encounter fake Havana cigars, mention coral mausoleums, shelter in an extinct volcanic island, and have their final battle off Cherbourg. Semmes had a portrait of the Confederate President, Jefferson Davis, in his cabin while Nemo had a portrait of the Union President, Abraham Lincoln, in his. In other words, if The Great Eastern was the template for the Nautilus, then the CSS Alabama was the latter’s real-life alter-ego.

I would be very happy to discuss this outside the forum, thanks again for getting back to me.

Best John

John Lamb

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Oct 23, 2025, 7:34:05 PMOct 23
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William Butcher.

thanks for this, much appreciated. 
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