Alexander F. Warley


Alexander Fraser Warley was a Confederate States Navy officer during the American Civil War. He was the commander of the CSS Manassas and the CSS Albemarle.

Early life

Alexander Fraser Warley was born on July 29, 1823, in Walterboro, South Carolina, to Sophia and Jacob Warley. His grandfather Felix Warley served in the American Revolutionary War and was an original member of the Society of Cincinnati. His family moved to Pendleton in 1831. He was appointed to the United States Naval Academy by John C. Calhoun in 1840 and graduated in 1846. In 1844, while serving on the, writer John Stickney described Warley as "exceed his tolerance" of alcohol. Warley reportedly took off his clothes and challenged a shipmate to a duel. He was court martialed and found guilty following this encounter.

United States Navy

Following graduation, Warley was assigned to the razee USS Independence of the United States Navy. By 1852, he was assigned to the sloop. In the same year, he wrote a letter of compliant about his skipper on the Jamestown and Warley was subsequently court martialed and found guilty again. In 1858, while on the, he was court martialed for disobeying orders he thought were unfair. The conviction was remanded by the court. In the same year, he got into a fistfight with an officer and was again court martialed and convicted. He was then transferred. He was serving in Genoa, Italy, at the time of the start of the American Civil War.

Civil War

In 1861, Warley enlisted with the Confederate States Navy and started service in Charleston. He was appointed as first lieutenant. He was then placed in charge of a battery and saw battle at Morris Island. In July 1861, he commanded the defenses of Ship Island and fought against the Union steamer. He was then placed in New Orleans where he commanded the steamer CSS McRae.
Warley was then transferred by George N. Hollins. He took command of the ironclad ram CSS Manassas, which was being held in a private shipyard in New Orleans. He commanded the ironclad in the Battle of the Head of Passes on October 12, 1861. He was in command when it punched a hole in the steam sloop, a vessel Warley served on when he was with the U.S. Navy. He commanded the ironclad in the Capture of New Orleans in April 1862. The Manassas hit the USS Mississippi in the battle and collided with the before sinking. Following the destruction of the Manassas in the battle, he escaped and boarded the CSS Louisiana. He was then taken as prisoner to Fort Warren and was exchanged in August 1862.
Warley was ordered to the CSS Chicora in Charleston harbor. In January 1863, he was sent to Galveston, Texas, to the captured USRC Harriet Lane. At his request, he was transferred back to Charleston and served with Duncan Ingraham in his defense of that station. In 1864, he took command of the CSS Water Witch. In September 1864, he took command of the ironclad CSS Albemarle, succeeding John Newland Maffitt. A month later, the Albemarle was sunk by a torpedo during a raid in Plymouth, North Carolina. He wrote a short passage entitled "Note on the Destruction of the 'Albemarle'" in the monthly magazine The Century in 1888 describing the loss of the Albemarle. He returned to Charleston and served there the remainder of the war. Following the war, he worked for the city government of New Orleans.

Personal life

Warley married Emilie C. W. Forrest, a daughter of French Forrest around 1848. They had no children and she died in 1853. He married Isabella Johannes Middleton Huger, daughter of John M. Huger, of New Orleans on December 1, 1862. They had four children, including Sophia Maud and Allen Huger.
Following the war, Warley lived Pendleton for about four years before living the remainder of his life in New Orleans. He died on January 12, 1895, at his mansion on the corner of Julia and St. Charles streets in New Orleans. He was buried in a family vault at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Pendleton.