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Battle of Hatteras Inlet Batteries

Battle of Hatteras Inlet Batteries
Part of the American Civil War

Capture of the Forts at Cape Hatteras inlet
Alfred Waud, artist, August 28, 1861
DateAugust 28–29, 1861
Location
Outer Banks off North Carolina, near Cape Hatteras
35°11′N 75°44′W / 35.183°N 75.733°W / 35.183; -75.733
Result Union victory
Belligerents
United States (Union) CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
Silas H. Stringham
Benjamin F. Butler
Samuel Barron 
William F. Martin
Units involved
9th New York Infantry
20th New York Infantry
Atlantic Blockading Squadron
17th North Carolina Infantry Regiment
Hatteras Island Garrison
Unspecified naval volunteers
Strength
7 warships
935 men[1]
900 men
Casualties and losses
1 killed
2 wounded
4 killed
20 wounded
691 captured

The Battle of Hatteras Inlet Batteries (August 28–29, 1861) was the first combined operation of the Union Army and Navy in the American Civil War, resulting in Union domination of the strategically important North Carolina Sounds.

Two forts on the Outer Banks, Fort Clark and Fort Hatteras, had been built by the Confederates to protect their commerce-raiding activity. These were lightly defended, however, and their artillery could not engage the bombarding fleet under Flag Officer Silas H. Stringham, commandant of the Atlantic Blockading Squadron, which had been ordered to keep moving, to avoid presenting a static target. Although held up by bad weather, the fleet was able to land troops under General Benjamin Butler, who took the surrender of Flag Officer Samuel Barron.

This battle represented the first application of the naval blockading strategy. The Union retained both forts, providing valuable access to the sounds, and commerce raiding was much reduced. The victory was welcomed by a demoralized Northern public after the humiliating First Battle of Bull Run. The engagement is sometimes known as the Battle of Forts Hatteras and Clark.

Hatteras Inlet in Confederate hands Edit

The North Carolina Sounds occupy most of the coast from Cape Lookout (North Carolina) to the Virginia border. With their eastern borders marked by the Outer Banks, they were almost ideally located for raiding Northern maritime commerce. Cape Hatteras, the easternmost point in the Confederacy, is within sight of the Gulf Stream, which moves at a speed of about 3 knots (1.5 m/s) at this latitude.[2] Ships in the Caribbean trade would reduce the time of their homeward journeys to New York, Philadelphia, or Boston by riding the stream to the north. Raiders, either privateers or state-owned vessels, could lie inside, protected from both the weather and from Yankee blockaders, until an undefended victim appeared. Watchers stationed at the Hatteras lighthouse would then signal a raider, which would dash out and make a capture, often being able to return the same day.[3]

 
Fort Hatteras (top) and Fort Clark, from wartime sketches

To protect the raiders from Federal reprisal, the state of North Carolina immediately after seceding from the Union established forts at the inlets, waterways that allowed entrance to and egress from the sounds. In 1861, only four inlets were deep enough for ocean-going vessels to pass: Beaufort,[4] Ocracoke, Hatteras, and Oregon Inlets. Hatteras Inlet was the most important of these, so it was given two forts, named Fort Hatteras and Fort Clark[5] Fort Hatteras was sited adjacent to the inlet, on the sound side of Hatteras Island. Fort Clark was about half a mile (800 m) to the southeast, closer to the Atlantic Ocean. The forts were not very strong; Fort Hatteras had only ten guns mounted by the end of August, with another five guns in the fort but not mounted. Fort Clark had only five.[6] Furthermore, most of the guns were rather light 32-pounders or smaller, of limited range and inadequate for coastal defense.

The personnel problem was even worse. North Carolina had raised and equipped 22 infantry regiments to serve in the war, but 16 of these had been drawn off for the campaigns in Virginia. The six regiments remaining were responsible for the defense of the entire North Carolina coastline. Only a fraction of one regiment, the 7th North Carolina Volunteers, occupied the two forts at Hatteras Inlet. The other forts were likewise only weakly held. Fewer than a thousand men garrisoned Forts Ocracoke, Hatteras, Clark, and Oregon. Reinforcements, if needed, would have to come from as far away as Beaufort.[7]

Strangely, the military authorities in North Carolina did little to keep the poor state of their defenses secret. Several Yankee captains, victims of either capture or shipwreck, were loosely detained at or near Hatteras Island while awaiting return to their homes. They were allowed virtually free access to the forts, and made mental notes of everything. When they returned to the North, at least two of them gave full and valuable descriptions to the Navy Department.[8]

Northern reaction Edit

The depredations on Northern commerce emanating from Hatteras Inlet could not pass unnoticed. Insurance underwriters pressured Union Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles for remedy.[9] Welles needed no prodding. He already had on his desk a report from the Blockade Strategy Board suggesting a way to perfect the blockade of the North Carolina coast. The board recommended that the coast be rendered useless to the South by sinking old, useless, ballast-laden ships in the inlets to block them.[10][a]

Soon after he received the board's report, Secretary Welles began to implement its recommendation. He ordered Commander H. S. Stellwagen to go to the Chesapeake Bay to buy some suitable old hulks. At the same time, he was told to report his activities to Flag Officer Silas H. Stringham, commandant of the Atlantic Blockading Squadron. As such, he was the naval officer in charge of the blockade of the North Carolina coast. This was the first involvement of Stringham with what was to become the attack at Hatteras Inlet. In time, he would become the most important person in the expedition.

Stringham opposed the plan to block the inlets from the beginning. He believed that the tidal currents would either sweep the impediments away or would rapidly scour new channels. As he saw it, the Rebels could not be denied access to the sounds unless the inlets were actually held by the Union. In other words, in order to establish an effective blockade in this part of North Carolina, the forts that the state had set up would have to be captured. Since the Navy could not do it alone, the cooperation of the Army would be needed.

As it happened, the Army was willing to cooperate. Its willingness had something to do with the political general Benjamin F. Butler, who was a political force that had to be dealt with, but was already emerging [b] as militarily incompetent. Butler was ordered to assemble a force of some 800 men for the expedition. He soon had 880: 500 from the German-speaking 20th New York Volunteers, 220 from the 9th New York Volunteers, 100 from the Union Coast Guard (an Army unit, actually the 99th New York Volunteers;[11] the U.S. Coast Guard as we know it did not exist in 1861), and 20 army regulars from the 2nd U.S. Artillery.[12] The men were put aboard two of the vessels that Commander Stellwagen had purchased, Adelaide and George Peabody. When objection was made that the two ships would not be able to survive a Hatteras storm, Stellwagen pointed out that the expedition could proceed only in fair weather anyway, as a storm would prevent landings.[13]

While Butler was gathering his forces, Flag Officer Stringham was also making preparations. Somehow he learned that the War Department orders to Butler's superior, Major General John E. Wool, had contained the statement, "The expedition originated in the Navy Department, and is under its control."[14] Reasoning that he would be blamed if anything went wrong, he decided to follow his own plans. He selected seven warships for the expedition: USS Minnesota, Cumberland, Susquehanna, Wabash, Pawnee, Monticello, and Harriet Lane. All but the last were ships of the U.S. Navy; Harriet Lane was a revenue cutter, part of the US Revenue Cutter Service.[15] He also included in his force the armed steam tug Fanny, needed to tow some of the surf boats that would be used for the landing.[16]

On August 26, the flotilla, less Susquehanna and Cumberland, departed Hampton Roads and moved down the coast to the vicinity of Cape Hatteras. On the way, they were joined by Cumberland. They swung around the Cape on 27 August and anchored near the inlet, in full view of the defenders there. Colonel William F. Martin of the 17th North Carolina Infantry, commanding at Forts Hatteras and Clark, knew that his 580 or so men would need help, so he called for reinforcements from Forts Ocracoke and Oregon. Unfortunately for him and his garrison, communication among the forts was slow, and the first reinforcements did not arrive until late the next day, when it was too late.

Opposing forces Edit

Union Edit

Department of Virginia – MG. Benjamin F. Butler

Atlantic Blockading Squadron – Flag Officer Silas H. Stringham

Confederate Edit

  • 17th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, – Col. William F. Martin
  • Fort Hatteras Garrison – Col. Andrews
  • Unspecified naval volunteers, including Flag Officer Samuel Barron

Battle Edit

First day, to sunset Edit

Early on the morning of 28 August, USS Minnesota, USS Wabash, and USS Cumberland began to bombard Fort Clark, while the lighter warships accompanied the transports to a point about three miles (5 km) to the east, where the troops began disembarking. Stringham kept his ships moving in a loop, with Wabash towing Cumberland. About 11:00 a.m., USS Susquehanna "made her number" and joined in. The ships would deliver their broadsides against the fort, move back out of range to reload, and then come back in to fire again. By remaining in motion, they did not let the artillerymen in the fort correct their aim between shots, and thereby negated much of the traditional advantage of shore-based guns over those on ships. This tactic had been used previously by the British and French at the siege of Sevastopol in the Crimean War, but this was the first time it was used by the US Navy.[17]

The return fire from Fort Clark was ineffectual, either falling short or passing overhead, and no hits were made on the bombarding ships. Shortly after noon, the defenders ran low on ammunition, and about 12:25 p.m. they ran out completely. At this point, they abandoned the fort, some fleeing to Fort Hatteras, while others took to boats. Col. Max Weber, commanding the Federal troops already on shore, noted this and put some men in to take possession, but the fleet did not know this and continued firing for another five minutes. It was during this interval of confusion that the landing force suffered its only casualty, one of the soldiers being seriously wounded in the hand by a shell fragment. Fortunately, some of the troops were able to get the attention of the gunners on the ships by waving a large American flag, and the bombardment stopped with no further harm done.[18] Stringham and his captains then turned their attention to Fort Hatteras.

 
The Union fleet bombards Fort Hatteras

Meanwhile, the landings were not going well. Only about a third of the troops were ashore when rising winds produced surf that swamped and overturned the landing boats, and General Butler had to suspend further attempts to land. Colonel Weber found that he had only 318 men with him. The number included 102 from his own regiment, the 20th New York, but also 68 from the 9th New York, 28 from the Union Coast Guard, 45 artillerymen, 45 marines, and 28 sailors who could man heavy guns. With several field pieces that they had managed to wrestle ashore through the surf, they could reasonably well defend themselves against a Confederate counterattack, but they were too weak to mount an attack on Fort Hatteras.[18]

At Fort Hatteras, Stringham kept his ships moving as he had done at Fort Clark. The defenders tried to conserve their ammunition by firing only sporadically, so Stringham thought that perhaps the fort had been abandoned. (No flag was flying. Before the battle, the old flag had been reduced to tatters, and was never replaced.) He sent Monticello into the inlet to sound it out, but then the fort came again to life. The ship grounded while trying to extricate herself, and in this condition she was struck by five shots. None of these did any permanent damage, although several sailors received minor wounds.[19]

As the day came to a close, the fleet drew off in the face of threatening weather, the exhausted defenders looked for reinforcements, and the Federal troops ashore went to sleep supperless, with water running low, and dreading the reinforcements that their opponents hoped for.

After sunset, and second day Edit

Sometime after dark, reinforcements began to arrive at the fort. The gunboat CSS Warren Winslow brought in some of the garrison from Fort Ocracoke, and some of the sailors also stayed to help man the guns. This brought the number of men in the fort up to more than 700, with more expected from New Bern. Accompanying the additional troops was Flag Officer Samuel Barron, commanding the coast defenses of North Carolina and Virginia. Colonel Martin, pleading exhaustion, requested Barron to assume command. He did so, still believing that with the additional troops from New Bern they would be able to retake Fort Clark.

 
Fort Hatteras surrenders

Dawn of the second day blasted the hopes of the defenders. The weather moderated enough that the Union fleet could return and resume its bombardment; they were also able to drive off the transport bringing reinforcements. (Somehow a ship was able to get in, but rather than bringing in more troops she carried away some of the wounded.) The fleet initially kept in motion, but they soon found that they were out of range of the guns in the fort. After that, the ships did not alter their positions, but poured their fire into the fort with no danger of reply. There was nothing the men in the forts could do except endure. After about three hours, Barron called a council of the officers, and they decided to seek terms, even though casualties had been quite light. (The actual numbers of dead and wounded are known only very imprecisely. Various reports give the number of dead as from four to seven, and the wounded as from 20 to 45)[20] At a little after 11:00 a.m., the white flag was shown. Butler insisted upon surrender, which Barron agreed to. The battle came to a close, and the survivors went into prisoner-of-war camps. The list of prisoners had 691 names, including those wounded but not evacuated.[21]

Aftermath Edit

Butler and Stringham left immediately after the battle, the former to Washington and the latter accompanying the prisoners to New York. Critics argued that each was trying to gather credit for the victory to himself. The pair contended, however, that they were trying to persuade the administration to abandon the original plan to block up Hatteras Inlet. In Federal hands it was no longer useful to the Confederacy, and in fact now allowed Union forces to pursue raiders into the sounds. Although they and their supporters continued to press the case for several weeks, it seems to have been unnecessary. The War and Navy Departments had already decided to retain possession of the inlet, which would be used as the entry point of an amphibious expedition against the North Carolina mainland early the next year. This campaign, known as Burnside's North Carolina Expedition for its senior Army commander Ambrose E. Burnside, completely removed the sounds as sources of commerce-raiding activity.

Continued Federal possession of Hatteras Inlet was considerably aided by the Confederate authorities, who early decided that the Ocracoke and Oregon batteries were indefensible, so they were abandoned.[22]

Stringham's tactic of keeping his ships in motion while bombarding forts was used later by Flag Officer Samuel Francis Du Pont at Port Royal, South Carolina. The effectiveness of the practice led to a reconsideration of the value of fixed forts against naval gunnery.

No physical evidence of the battle remains; however, the battlefield is preserved within Cape Hatteras National Seashore.[23]

Notes Edit

Abbreviations used in these notes:

ORA (Official records, armies): War of the Rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate Armies.
ORN (Official records, navies): Official records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion.
  1. ^ Their reports also contained a statement that is easily overlooked: "These plans may undergo some modification in the hands of the person to whom their execution shall be intrusted."[10]
  2. ^ According to the virtually unanimous consensus of historians[according to whom?]
  1. ^ CWSAC Report Update
  2. ^ Maury, The physical geography of the sea, p. 27.
  3. ^ Trotter, Ironclads and Columbiads, pp. 21–24.
  4. ^ Pronounced BOW-fort in North Carolina; the name of the town in South Carolina is pronounced BYOO-fort.
  5. ^ Henry T. Clark was Governor of North Carolina; see Trotter, Ironclads and Columbiads, p. 16.
  6. ^ ORA I, v. 4, p. 584. But see p. 591, where the number of mounted guns in Fort Hatteras is stated to be 12.
  7. ^ Trotter, Ironclads and Columbiads, p. 19.
  8. ^ ORN I, v. 6, pp. 78–80.
  9. ^ ORN I, v. 6, pp. 77–78.
  10. ^ a b ORN I, v. 12, pp. 198–201.
  11. ^ ORA III, v. 1, p. 961.
  12. ^ ORA I, v. 4, p. 581.
  13. ^ ORN I, v. 6, p.109.
  14. ^ ORA I, v. 4, p. 580.
  15. ^ A predecessor of the US Coast Guard.
  16. ^ ORN I, v. 6, p. 120.
  17. ^ ORN I, v. 6, p. 121.
  18. ^ a b ORA I, v. 4, p. 589.
  19. ^ ORN I, v. 6, p. 123.
  20. ^ Trotter, Ironclads and Columbiads, p. 38.
  21. ^ ORA I, v. 4, pp. 592–594.
  22. ^ Trotter, Ironclads and Columbiads, p. 40.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-02-21. Retrieved 2009-03-18.

References Edit

  • Official records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion. Series I: 27 volumes. Series II: 3 volumes. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1894–1922.
  • The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Series I: 53 volumes. Series II: 8 volumes. Series III: 5 volumes. Series IV: 4 volumes. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1886–1901.
  • Maury, Matthew F., The physical geography of the sea. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1855.
  • Simson, Jay W., Naval Strategies of the Civil War: Confederate Innovations and Federal Opportunism. Nashville: Cumberland House Publishing, 2001.
  • Stick, David, The Outer Banks of North Carolina, 1584–1958. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1958.
  • Trotter, William R., Ironclads and Columbiads: the Civil War in North Carolina: The Coast. Winston-Salem: John F. Blair, 1989.
  • CWSAC Report Update
  • National Park Service Battle Summary

External links Edit

  • Contemporary map: [1]
  • Long, Bruce (2012-07-30). . Civil War Brownwater Navies Blog. Archived from the original on 2014-03-14. Retrieved 2014-03-14.
  • "1861 September 4: Account of the Battle of Hatteras Inlet Batteries". The Civil War & Northwest Wisconsin Blog. 5 September 2011. Retrieved 2014-03-14.

battle, hatteras, inlet, batteries, part, american, civil, warcapture, forts, cape, hatteras, inletalfred, waud, artist, august, 1861dateaugust, 1861locationouter, banks, north, carolina, near, cape, hatteras35, 733resultunion, victorybelligerentsunited, state. Battle of Hatteras Inlet BatteriesPart of the American Civil WarCapture of the Forts at Cape Hatteras inletAlfred Waud artist August 28 1861DateAugust 28 29 1861LocationOuter Banks off North Carolina near Cape Hatteras35 11 N 75 44 W 35 183 N 75 733 W 35 183 75 733ResultUnion victoryBelligerentsUnited States Union CSA Confederacy Commanders and leadersSilas H StringhamBenjamin F ButlerSamuel Barron William F MartinUnits involved9th New York Infantry20th New York InfantryAtlantic Blockading Squadron17th North Carolina Infantry RegimentHatteras Island GarrisonUnspecified naval volunteersStrength7 warships935 men 1 900 menCasualties and losses1 killed2 wounded4 killed20 wounded691 captured The Battle of Hatteras Inlet Batteries August 28 29 1861 was the first combined operation of the Union Army and Navy in the American Civil War resulting in Union domination of the strategically important North Carolina Sounds Two forts on the Outer Banks Fort Clark and Fort Hatteras had been built by the Confederates to protect their commerce raiding activity These were lightly defended however and their artillery could not engage the bombarding fleet under Flag Officer Silas H Stringham commandant of the Atlantic Blockading Squadron which had been ordered to keep moving to avoid presenting a static target Although held up by bad weather the fleet was able to land troops under General Benjamin Butler who took the surrender of Flag Officer Samuel Barron This battle represented the first application of the naval blockading strategy The Union retained both forts providing valuable access to the sounds and commerce raiding was much reduced The victory was welcomed by a demoralized Northern public after the humiliating First Battle of Bull Run The engagement is sometimes known as the Battle of Forts Hatteras and Clark Contents 1 Hatteras Inlet in Confederate hands 2 Northern reaction 3 Opposing forces 3 1 Union 3 2 Confederate 4 Battle 4 1 First day to sunset 4 2 After sunset and second day 5 Aftermath 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHatteras Inlet in Confederate hands EditThe North Carolina Sounds occupy most of the coast from Cape Lookout North Carolina to the Virginia border With their eastern borders marked by the Outer Banks they were almost ideally located for raiding Northern maritime commerce Cape Hatteras the easternmost point in the Confederacy is within sight of the Gulf Stream which moves at a speed of about 3 knots 1 5 m s at this latitude 2 Ships in the Caribbean trade would reduce the time of their homeward journeys to New York Philadelphia or Boston by riding the stream to the north Raiders either privateers or state owned vessels could lie inside protected from both the weather and from Yankee blockaders until an undefended victim appeared Watchers stationed at the Hatteras lighthouse would then signal a raider which would dash out and make a capture often being able to return the same day 3 nbsp Fort Hatteras top and Fort Clark from wartime sketchesTo protect the raiders from Federal reprisal the state of North Carolina immediately after seceding from the Union established forts at the inlets waterways that allowed entrance to and egress from the sounds In 1861 only four inlets were deep enough for ocean going vessels to pass Beaufort 4 Ocracoke Hatteras and Oregon Inlets Hatteras Inlet was the most important of these so it was given two forts named Fort Hatteras and Fort Clark 5 Fort Hatteras was sited adjacent to the inlet on the sound side of Hatteras Island Fort Clark was about half a mile 800 m to the southeast closer to the Atlantic Ocean The forts were not very strong Fort Hatteras had only ten guns mounted by the end of August with another five guns in the fort but not mounted Fort Clark had only five 6 Furthermore most of the guns were rather light 32 pounders or smaller of limited range and inadequate for coastal defense The personnel problem was even worse North Carolina had raised and equipped 22 infantry regiments to serve in the war but 16 of these had been drawn off for the campaigns in Virginia The six regiments remaining were responsible for the defense of the entire North Carolina coastline Only a fraction of one regiment the 7th North Carolina Volunteers occupied the two forts at Hatteras Inlet The other forts were likewise only weakly held Fewer than a thousand men garrisoned Forts Ocracoke Hatteras Clark and Oregon Reinforcements if needed would have to come from as far away as Beaufort 7 Strangely the military authorities in North Carolina did little to keep the poor state of their defenses secret Several Yankee captains victims of either capture or shipwreck were loosely detained at or near Hatteras Island while awaiting return to their homes They were allowed virtually free access to the forts and made mental notes of everything When they returned to the North at least two of them gave full and valuable descriptions to the Navy Department 8 Northern reaction EditThe depredations on Northern commerce emanating from Hatteras Inlet could not pass unnoticed Insurance underwriters pressured Union Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles for remedy 9 Welles needed no prodding He already had on his desk a report from the Blockade Strategy Board suggesting a way to perfect the blockade of the North Carolina coast The board recommended that the coast be rendered useless to the South by sinking old useless ballast laden ships in the inlets to block them 10 a Soon after he received the board s report Secretary Welles began to implement its recommendation He ordered Commander H S Stellwagen to go to the Chesapeake Bay to buy some suitable old hulks At the same time he was told to report his activities to Flag Officer Silas H Stringham commandant of the Atlantic Blockading Squadron As such he was the naval officer in charge of the blockade of the North Carolina coast This was the first involvement of Stringham with what was to become the attack at Hatteras Inlet In time he would become the most important person in the expedition Stringham opposed the plan to block the inlets from the beginning He believed that the tidal currents would either sweep the impediments away or would rapidly scour new channels As he saw it the Rebels could not be denied access to the sounds unless the inlets were actually held by the Union In other words in order to establish an effective blockade in this part of North Carolina the forts that the state had set up would have to be captured Since the Navy could not do it alone the cooperation of the Army would be needed As it happened the Army was willing to cooperate Its willingness had something to do with the political general Benjamin F Butler who was a political force that had to be dealt with but was already emerging b as militarily incompetent Butler was ordered to assemble a force of some 800 men for the expedition He soon had 880 500 from the German speaking 20th New York Volunteers 220 from the 9th New York Volunteers 100 from the Union Coast Guard an Army unit actually the 99th New York Volunteers 11 the U S Coast Guard as we know it did not exist in 1861 and 20 army regulars from the 2nd U S Artillery 12 The men were put aboard two of the vessels that Commander Stellwagen had purchased Adelaide and George Peabody When objection was made that the two ships would not be able to survive a Hatteras storm Stellwagen pointed out that the expedition could proceed only in fair weather anyway as a storm would prevent landings 13 While Butler was gathering his forces Flag Officer Stringham was also making preparations Somehow he learned that the War Department orders to Butler s superior Major General John E Wool had contained the statement The expedition originated in the Navy Department and is under its control 14 Reasoning that he would be blamed if anything went wrong he decided to follow his own plans He selected seven warships for the expedition USS Minnesota Cumberland Susquehanna Wabash Pawnee Monticello and Harriet Lane All but the last were ships of the U S Navy Harriet Lane was a revenue cutter part of the US Revenue Cutter Service 15 He also included in his force the armed steam tug Fanny needed to tow some of the surf boats that would be used for the landing 16 On August 26 the flotilla less Susquehanna and Cumberland departed Hampton Roads and moved down the coast to the vicinity of Cape Hatteras On the way they were joined by Cumberland They swung around the Cape on 27 August and anchored near the inlet in full view of the defenders there Colonel William F Martin of the 17th North Carolina Infantry commanding at Forts Hatteras and Clark knew that his 580 or so men would need help so he called for reinforcements from Forts Ocracoke and Oregon Unfortunately for him and his garrison communication among the forts was slow and the first reinforcements did not arrive until late the next day when it was too late Opposing forces EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Union Edit Department of Virginia MG Benjamin F Butler 9th New York Infantry Regiment Col Rush Hawkins 220 men 20th New York Infantry Regiment Col Max Weber 500 men 99th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment Union Coast Guard Cpt William Nixon 100 men Detachment 2nd US Artillery Regiment Lt Frank H Larned 60 men Detachments of sailors and marines from the fleetAtlantic Blockading Squadron Flag Officer Silas H Stringham USS Monticello 1859 USS Harriet Lane USS Minnesota 1855 USS Wabash 1855 USS Susquehanna 1850 USS Cumberland 1842 USS Pawnee 1859 Confederate Edit 17th North Carolina Infantry Regiment Col William F Martin Fort Hatteras Garrison Col Andrews Unspecified naval volunteers including Flag Officer Samuel BarronBattle EditFirst day to sunset Edit Early on the morning of 28 August USS Minnesota USS Wabash and USS Cumberland began to bombard Fort Clark while the lighter warships accompanied the transports to a point about three miles 5 km to the east where the troops began disembarking Stringham kept his ships moving in a loop with Wabash towing Cumberland About 11 00 a m USS Susquehanna made her number and joined in The ships would deliver their broadsides against the fort move back out of range to reload and then come back in to fire again By remaining in motion they did not let the artillerymen in the fort correct their aim between shots and thereby negated much of the traditional advantage of shore based guns over those on ships This tactic had been used previously by the British and French at the siege of Sevastopol in the Crimean War but this was the first time it was used by the US Navy 17 The return fire from Fort Clark was ineffectual either falling short or passing overhead and no hits were made on the bombarding ships Shortly after noon the defenders ran low on ammunition and about 12 25 p m they ran out completely At this point they abandoned the fort some fleeing to Fort Hatteras while others took to boats Col Max Weber commanding the Federal troops already on shore noted this and put some men in to take possession but the fleet did not know this and continued firing for another five minutes It was during this interval of confusion that the landing force suffered its only casualty one of the soldiers being seriously wounded in the hand by a shell fragment Fortunately some of the troops were able to get the attention of the gunners on the ships by waving a large American flag and the bombardment stopped with no further harm done 18 Stringham and his captains then turned their attention to Fort Hatteras nbsp The Union fleet bombards Fort HatterasMeanwhile the landings were not going well Only about a third of the troops were ashore when rising winds produced surf that swamped and overturned the landing boats and General Butler had to suspend further attempts to land Colonel Weber found that he had only 318 men with him The number included 102 from his own regiment the 20th New York but also 68 from the 9th New York 28 from the Union Coast Guard 45 artillerymen 45 marines and 28 sailors who could man heavy guns With several field pieces that they had managed to wrestle ashore through the surf they could reasonably well defend themselves against a Confederate counterattack but they were too weak to mount an attack on Fort Hatteras 18 At Fort Hatteras Stringham kept his ships moving as he had done at Fort Clark The defenders tried to conserve their ammunition by firing only sporadically so Stringham thought that perhaps the fort had been abandoned No flag was flying Before the battle the old flag had been reduced to tatters and was never replaced He sent Monticello into the inlet to sound it out but then the fort came again to life The ship grounded while trying to extricate herself and in this condition she was struck by five shots None of these did any permanent damage although several sailors received minor wounds 19 As the day came to a close the fleet drew off in the face of threatening weather the exhausted defenders looked for reinforcements and the Federal troops ashore went to sleep supperless with water running low and dreading the reinforcements that their opponents hoped for After sunset and second day Edit Sometime after dark reinforcements began to arrive at the fort The gunboat CSS Warren Winslow brought in some of the garrison from Fort Ocracoke and some of the sailors also stayed to help man the guns This brought the number of men in the fort up to more than 700 with more expected from New Bern Accompanying the additional troops was Flag Officer Samuel Barron commanding the coast defenses of North Carolina and Virginia Colonel Martin pleading exhaustion requested Barron to assume command He did so still believing that with the additional troops from New Bern they would be able to retake Fort Clark nbsp Fort Hatteras surrendersDawn of the second day blasted the hopes of the defenders The weather moderated enough that the Union fleet could return and resume its bombardment they were also able to drive off the transport bringing reinforcements Somehow a ship was able to get in but rather than bringing in more troops she carried away some of the wounded The fleet initially kept in motion but they soon found that they were out of range of the guns in the fort After that the ships did not alter their positions but poured their fire into the fort with no danger of reply There was nothing the men in the forts could do except endure After about three hours Barron called a council of the officers and they decided to seek terms even though casualties had been quite light The actual numbers of dead and wounded are known only very imprecisely Various reports give the number of dead as from four to seven and the wounded as from 20 to 45 20 At a little after 11 00 a m the white flag was shown Butler insisted upon surrender which Barron agreed to The battle came to a close and the survivors went into prisoner of war camps The list of prisoners had 691 names including those wounded but not evacuated 21 Aftermath EditButler and Stringham left immediately after the battle the former to Washington and the latter accompanying the prisoners to New York Critics argued that each was trying to gather credit for the victory to himself The pair contended however that they were trying to persuade the administration to abandon the original plan to block up Hatteras Inlet In Federal hands it was no longer useful to the Confederacy and in fact now allowed Union forces to pursue raiders into the sounds Although they and their supporters continued to press the case for several weeks it seems to have been unnecessary The War and Navy Departments had already decided to retain possession of the inlet which would be used as the entry point of an amphibious expedition against the North Carolina mainland early the next year This campaign known as Burnside s North Carolina Expedition for its senior Army commander Ambrose E Burnside completely removed the sounds as sources of commerce raiding activity Continued Federal possession of Hatteras Inlet was considerably aided by the Confederate authorities who early decided that the Ocracoke and Oregon batteries were indefensible so they were abandoned 22 Stringham s tactic of keeping his ships in motion while bombarding forts was used later by Flag Officer Samuel Francis Du Pont at Port Royal South Carolina The effectiveness of the practice led to a reconsideration of the value of fixed forts against naval gunnery No physical evidence of the battle remains however the battlefield is preserved within Cape Hatteras National Seashore 23 Notes EditAbbreviations used in these notes ORA Official records armies War of the Rebellion a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate Armies ORN Official records navies Official records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion Their reports also contained a statement that is easily overlooked These plans may undergo some modification in the hands of the person to whom their execution shall be intrusted 10 According to the virtually unanimous consensus of historians according to whom CWSAC Report Update Maury The physical geography of the sea p 27 Trotter Ironclads and Columbiads pp 21 24 Pronounced BOW fort in North Carolina the name of the town in South Carolina is pronounced BYOO fort Henry T Clark was Governor of North Carolina see Trotter Ironclads and Columbiads p 16 ORA I v 4 p 584 But see p 591 where the number of mounted guns in Fort Hatteras is stated to be 12 Trotter Ironclads and Columbiads p 19 ORN I v 6 pp 78 80 ORN I v 6 pp 77 78 a b ORN I v 12 pp 198 201 ORA III v 1 p 961 ORA I v 4 p 581 ORN I v 6 p 109 ORA I v 4 p 580 A predecessor of the US Coast Guard ORN I v 6 p 120 ORN I v 6 p 121 a b ORA I v 4 p 589 ORN I v 6 p 123 Trotter Ironclads and Columbiads p 38 ORA I v 4 pp 592 594 Trotter Ironclads and Columbiads p 40 National Park Service The American Civil War Archived from the original on 2009 02 21 Retrieved 2009 03 18 References Edit nbsp American Civil War portalOfficial records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion Series I 27 volumes Series II 3 volumes Washington Government Printing Office 1894 1922 The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I 53 volumes Series II 8 volumes Series III 5 volumes Series IV 4 volumes Washington Government Printing Office 1886 1901 Maury Matthew F The physical geography of the sea New York Harper and Brothers 1855 Simson Jay W Naval Strategies of the Civil War Confederate Innovations and Federal Opportunism Nashville Cumberland House Publishing 2001 Stick David The Outer Banks of North Carolina 1584 1958 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1958 Trotter William R Ironclads and Columbiads the Civil War in North Carolina The Coast Winston Salem John F Blair 1989 CWSAC Report Update National Park Service Battle SummaryExternal links EditContemporary map 1 Long Bruce 2012 07 30 The Civil War expedition no one knows about Civil War Brownwater Navies Blog Archived from the original on 2014 03 14 Retrieved 2014 03 14 1861 September 4 Account of the Battle of Hatteras Inlet Batteries The Civil War amp Northwest Wisconsin Blog 5 September 2011 Retrieved 2014 03 14 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Hatteras Inlet Batteries amp oldid 1172660061, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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