Greensborough Patriot
Sep. 11, 1862
Page 4
From the Raleigh Standard
Fort Macon- Its Defence,
etc.
Mr. Editor: It is due to the State of N.
Carolina, whose soldiers constituted the garrison, that some authentic account
of the investment, siege, defence and surrender of
Fort Macon, should be given to the public.
Statements, prejudicial to the conduct of the garrison, have been made,
and the impression sought to be created, that no necessity existed for the
capitulation; but that the Fort could easily have been held, and the besiegers
repulsed; while Mr. Pollard, in his history of “the first Year of the War,”
thus curtly disposes of the whole subject:
“Another
Confederate disaster on the coast shortly ensued, in the surrender of Fort
Macon. This Fort, on the North Carolina
coast, was surrendered on the 25th of April, (this should be the 26th),
after the bombardment from the enemy’s land batteries of less than twelve
hours. It commanded the entrance to
Beaufort harbor, and was said to be the most formidable fortification on the
North Carolina coast.
I
have thought it my duty to give a plain statement of the facts, because the
brave Commandant (Col. White, of Mississippi) is too far removed to hear the
reflections upon his command, and because Captain Guion,
the second in command, is prevented by disease.
Newbern
was entered by the Federals under Gen. Burnside the 14th of March,
and immediate steps were taken to prevent any communication between Fort Macon
and the Confederate authorities. A
formal demand for the surrender of the Fort was made by Brig. General Parke,
and refused by Col. White on the 23rd; but it was not until the
night of the 26th, that the investment was completed, and the siege
fairly begun. Watchful eyes upon the
parapets that night beheld signal lights upon Bogue
Banks, on board steamers in Bogue Sound, at Carolina
City, Morehead and Beaufort, on steamer in Core Sound, on Shackelford’s Banks,
and in the rigging of blockading squadron upon the bosom of the Atlantic,
telling in unmistakable language that the folds of the Federal anaconda had
encircled Fort Macon, and its small, but determined garrison. From this time till the 11th of
April, our pickets were in close proximity to the enemy, but no hostile
demonstration was made.
On
the 9th of April Col. White determined to make an effort to
communicate with Confederate authorities, and the night being dark, Lieut.
Primrose of company F, was sent with a detachment of six men in open boat to
sea. The night proved stormy, and the
sea was exceedingly rough; but the boat succeeded in evading the enemy’s fleet,
reached the Confederate lines in safety.
(This we learned after surrender of the Fort.) Lieut. Primrose found it impossible to reach
the Fort on his return and the Commandant was left without the advices and
instruction so much desired.
To
show the perfidy of the enemy, the following fact is added: On the morning of the 10th of
April, the writer, to whose company the entire picket duty of the garrison had
been entrusted, found a note sticking in a plank in the vicinity of the most
distant of our picket stations. Its
orthography and punctuation are given precisely as written:
“We
[unreadable paragraph]”; Lt. O. S. Rimington, 5th
Reg. R. L. V.
Notwithstanding
this positive assurance, the very next morning two companies came down in
force, and advancing as near to us as they thought prudent, signalled
to one of the blockaders about a half mile off.
The ship immediately opened fired upon our pickets with grape shot. The Federals on the beach advanced at double
quick, and my men, four in number, as soon as they were within range fired upon
them and fell back to our next station.
After a skirmish of more than an hour our pickets were driven in, the enemy
proceeded to make a reconnaissance of the positions ultimately chosen for the
erection of their batteries. During the
afternoon of the same day, acting under orders of Col. White, thirty men of
company H, 10th Reg’t. N. C. T., in
command of Captain, occupied their old picket station- the enemy hanging back
as, our pickets advanced. During the
night all was quiet.
About
8 o’clock A. M. of the 12th April, the enemy advanced in force (five
companies) to take possession of points selected for their batteries. Their advance was resisted by our pickets,
then under command of Lieut. Jos. P. Roberson, of company H. A skirmish of four hours duration ensued, our
men stubbornly contesting every inch of ground, and only retreating when orders
from the Fort to do so were received.
Our loss was one man wounded.
Theirs was fifteen killed and twenty-five wounded. (This we learned from one of the Northern
journals after fall of the Fort.) During
the afternoon of this day, Capt. Manney, of company
G, was ordered to take fifty men of his company, reconnoiter the position of
the enemy, and if possible, occupy the old picket stations. This was impossible. The enemy were found in force behind sand hills, fourteen hundred yards from the
Fort. After a skirmish of some time, in
which every advantage of position and numbers was with the enemy, Capt. Manney and Lt. Cogdell of company
F, who had been dispatched with reinforcements to his assistance, were ordered
to return. Capt. Guion,
with a detachment of men from company B, performed picket duty during the night,
within a short distance of the company’s lines.
No further hostile demonstration was made, however, on this occasion by
the enemy.
Each
day of the succeeding twelve was passed in closely watching the movements of
the enemy; firing upon their ships; dispersing with shot and shell from time to
time, detachments of their forces who showed themselves out of cover of the
sand hills, and in strengthening , as far as the means at our command would
permit, our defences.
The nights were passed in guarding against surprise. The labor of the garrison was incessant; and
the night alarms being very frequent, it was impossible to obtain the needful
rest.
Wednesday
afternoon, the 23rd of April, Gen. Burnside sent a flag of truce
with a second demand for surrender, informing the Commandant that all his
preparations for attack were completed.
This demand was promptly refused, as was a third made the subsequent
morning in a personal interview between Col. White and Gen. Burnside.
Having
brought down the events of the siege to the morning of the bombardment it
seemed to be improper to examine the extent of the enemy’s forces, and the
means at our command to repel the impending attack. The Federals were commanded by Brig. Gen. J.
G. Parke, and consisted of four regiments, one battalion of five companies, one
company of U. S. Reg. Artillery, and a detachment of N. Y. Artillery. About 2500 of these troops were on Bogue Banks, and others at Carolina City, Morehead and
Beaufort. In the Sound were four
gunboats; outside the bar were three steamers and one sail ship. On the beach, twelve hundred yards from the
Fort, was a battery of four 8-in. mortars; fourteen hundred yards from us were
batteries of five rifled parrot guns; sixteen hundred yards another battery of
four 10-in. mortars. To oppose this
force, we had two hundred and sixty effective men and fifty one guns of calibre, varying from the 24-pounder to the 10-in. columbiad. It must
be remembered, however, the Fort had been prepared principally to resist an
attack from sea. The defences
on the land side were inefficient, and the fall of Newbern, and the early
investment of the Fort, rendered it impossible for the garrison to supply
deficiencies, or to strengthen, to any great extent our defences
on the land face. When the enemy opened
fire upon us from their land batteries we were enabled to bring to bear against
them from the lower parapet, one 8-in. columbiad; six
smooth bored 24-pounders, and one 32-pounder; and six short 32-pounders taken a
few days before from the caponiers, and hastily
mounted, at an angle of 40 degrees to supply, to some extent the want of
mortars; on the upper parapet, Capt. Guion was
enabled to use one 10-in. columbiad at highest
elevation with small charge as a mortar; besides this, only five smooth bored
32-pounders could be brought to bear, and one of these was rendered useless at
the first fire. From their land
batteries alone, the Federals were able, at each discharge, to hurl 700 pounds
of shell against us, while our weight of metal, from every gun which we could
bring to bear against them, was less than 600 pounds of shell.
At
10 minutes before six A. M. on the 26th of April the enemy ____ ____
land batteries upon the fort. ____ ____,
all was activity within the ____, and in less than one quarter of an hour every
gun which could be brought to bear against the enemy was [__unreadable
phrase__.] Company B, Capt. Guion, manned four 24-pounders on lower parapet, and 10-in.
columbiad on upper parapet. Company H, Capt. Pool, and in charge ____
____ ____ guns used as mortars and one 8-in. and one 10-in. columbiad
on lower parapet.; the battery which had been assigned to company F, Lieut. Cogdell commanding, not bearing upon enemy’s works, this
company was detailed to relieve Capt. Blount’s company of Confederate Artillery
in charge of 32-pounders on upper parapet; company G, Capt. Manney,
promptly sprang to their 24-pounders and one 32-pounder bearing upon enemy’s
batteries. It is worthy of note, as some
misapprehension seems to exist on this point, that all our guns were
“barbette,” and that one only bearing on enemy, had the slightest protection of
merlon or traverse.
The
enemy’s fire, accurate from the beginning, was soon rendered with the utmost
precision, signals having been made to them by their signal corps at Morehead
and Beaufort whenever they failed in attaining the mark. For four hours the firing was rapid and the
roar of artillery and the bursting of the enemy’s shells around us, were
deafening. Gun after gun upon the Fort
had been disabled; man after man had been conveyed to the surgery, or laid low
in death. The men of the garrison
continued to work coolly, cheerily, and without evident effect upon the rifled
battery of the enemy, the fire from which had sensibly diminished.
A
new adversary now appeared—the steamers and barque
were nearing the Fort, and their guns in
battery spoke plainly of a wish to engage in the destructive and
death-dealing sport. Capt. Guion’s men sprang to his sea-face battery; Capt. Pool’s columbiads were turned from the land batteries, and with an
additional one brought to bear upon the rapidly advancing ships. Capts. Manney, Blount and Cogdell
continued their fire upon the ____. The
scene was now exciting to the extreme.
Seven of our heaviest guns were directed against the ships—there,
skillfully manoeuvred, as one regiment approached and
delivered their broadsides, then receded to reload and escape the heavy
missiles sent from the Fort. Thus, the
fight progressed until nearly noon—the boats in the Sound adding to the noise
but doing no damage to anything except the treasury of Lincoln. The ships, all more or less damaged, now
hauled off beyond the range of our guns.
Immediately all our heavy guns, which could be, directed upon our enemy
on land. Two of Capt. Manney’s guns, and two of Capt. Blount’s had been disabled,
but coolly and deliberately their detachments were working those that remained,
regardless of the shell exploding around them, and of the rifled shot tearing
and crushing everything opposing their course.
About
two P. M., the most serious and destructive disaster of the day occurred. Parrot guns, passing under the muzzle of the
8-in. columbiad of Capt. Pool’s battery, struck the
elevating screw bed, and scattering its fragments in all directions, passed to cocentric wheel of the 10-in. columbiad,
shattered it, and entirely disabled both guns.
The “paul” of the 8-in. driven forward with
irresistible fury, mortally wounded, the gunner who was standing upon the
“chassis” in the act of giving the necessary elevation to his gun, passed on
mortally wounding a cannoneer and the gunner of the
10-in. columbiad.
A shell from mortar battery exploding in our midst, at the same moment,
wounded four more men.
At
three P. M. all the batteries on lower parapet of Fort were silenced, but the
fire from upper parapet was continued till five P. M., at which hour a white
flag was raised, a council of officers having determined that the time had
come, when, if good terms could be procured for the garrison, it should be
done.
Capts. Guion and Pool were sent
by Col. White to meet Brig. Gen. Parke, and make propositions for the surrender
of Fort Macon upon these terms:
All
the public property, arms munitions of war, provisions, etc., to be surrendered,
upon conditions that officers and men were to be paroled immediately and sent
to their homes; all private property of officers and men, side arms, and all private arms of whatever kind, all
company books and papers, to be respected and retained.
Gen.
Parke peremptorily declined to accept any other than an unconditional
surrender, but finding that we were determined, he referred our propositions
with his answer to Gen. Burnside, by whom they were accepted next day, and
after a ratification of the terms, the Fort was delivered to the Federal
forces, and the officers and men composing the garrison were paroled and sent
to their homes.
The
extent of damage done to the Fort, and to its armament and garrison, was
greater than could have been anticipated from the duration of the fight. This was owing, in part, to the character of
the missiles sent, and to the short distance of the batteries from our
walls. The enemy fired eleven hundred
shot and shell from his land batteries; five hundred and fifty-nine of these
exploded on parapets, in moat, or in parade ground, or struck such portions of
the walls of the Fort as were exposed.
About the same number of shot and shell was fired by steamers and
gunboats, but one of which was known to strike fortification. Those portions of the walls of the Fort,
which could be reached, were much damaged—fifteen of the guns were dismounted,
or disabled—seven of the garrison were killed and sixteen wounded. We have no means to accurately [__unreadable phrase__.] ____ ____ ____ were injured, the rifle gun
battery seriously damaged, three of their Parrot guns partially disabled, while
many of their men were killed and wounded.
The officers reported one killed and eleven wounded—the men stated their
loss was between four and five hundred.
During
the siege and on the day of the bombardment, the officers and men of the
garrison, with a few dishonorable exceptions, behaved admirably. There were in all, fourteen desertions (seven
from Co. H, four from Co. G, and three from Co. F), less probably than has been
anywhere during the war, under circumstances so clearly hopeless, and where it
was so easy to desert. From the first
moment of the fight, the men were cool and determined, loading and firing with
as much deliberation and precision, as though they were engaged at target
practice. This is the concurrent
testimony of the Commandant, and of every officer in command that day. Few better soldiers can be found, than those
in Fort Macon on the 25th April, 1862.
I
might, in conclusion, Mr. Editor, state some of the causes which resulted in
the fall of Fort Macon, but I shall not, my object being simply to vindicate
the garrison, placing it in position, by a statement of facts, to receive the
verdict of approval or condemnation of an enlightened
public opinion. Nor is it necessary
that I should state those causes. The
reader can surely see them, and must know why they acted so disastrously along
the entire coast of North Carolina.
STEPHEN
D. POOL, Capt. Co H
10th
Reg’t. N. C. S. Troops