Manhassett
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FORT
MANHASSETT:
A FORGOTTEN
CHAPTER IN THE
HISTORY OF
SABINE PASS,
TEXAS
By
W. T. Block
This
is a revision
of an article
first
published in
Port Arthur
NEWS, August
2, 1970, and
later
reprinted in
EAST TEXAS
HISTORICAL
JOURNAL, IX
(Oct. 1971),
pp. 145-147.
Less than a
month after
this article
was first
published in
the NEWS, the
writer and
others dug
up about 200
six-inch
cannon balls
and shells
at Redoubt A
on August
29-31,
1970--W. T.
Block, Box 62,
Nederland, Tx.
77627.
At
a point six
and one-half
miles
southwest of
Sabine Pass,
on the beach
road to Sea
Rim State
Park, a
stretch of
salt grass
prairie
extends
northwestward
from Highway
87 to Knight's
Lake. Looking
across this
duck hunter's
paradise
today, it
would take a
super-imaginative
mind to
conjure up the
mental vision
of a bustling
Confederate
fortress on
this site,
garrisoned by
several
hundred men.
Of course,
there is today
a Texas State
Historical
Marker to mark
the site (that
is, when it
isn't being
used as a duck
hunter's
target or
stolen), but
prior to
January 8,
1972, there
was no marker
there to
assist with
that mental
illusion.
In
the fall of
1863, this was
the site of
Fort
Manhassett, or
rather the
five separate
redoubts of
the fort -- a
hurriedly and
newly-constructed
string of
fortifications,
and a key cog
in the new
Confederate
defense plan
of Sabine
Pass. One
result of the
Battle of
Sabine Pass
was that
Confederate
authorities
discovered
from a Union
prisioner that
Federal troops
had planned a
diversionary
assault to the
rear of Sabine
Pass, which
would have
landed
infantrymen at
Redfish Bayou,
connecting the
gulf with
Knight's Lake
(now silted
over). In
retrospect, it
is now an
obvious fact
that had the
Federals
bypassed Fort
Griffin,
avoiding the
frontal
assault that
failed, and
landing troops
instead at
Redfish Bayou
with the
purpose either
to attack Fort
Griffin from
the rear or
march direct
on Beaumont
over the
railroad
right-of-way,
the world
might never
have heard of
Dick Dowling.
Over
a century ago,
Lt. Dick
Dowling's
immortal
artillerymen
in 40 minutes
blazed their
way into the
hearts of all
Southerners
during the
Battle of
Sabine Pass,
and won one of
the only two
gold
medallions
authorized by
the
Confederate
Congress.[1]
They likewise
shot the
remainder of
the war, that
is, all but
that 40
minutes, at
Sabine Pass
into
historical
oblivion.
Eventually,
everything
about Fort
Manhassett had
to be
reconstructed
from the 128
volumes of
"War of the
Rebellion" and
from maps in
the National
Archives, for
the very
existence,
location, and
purpose of the
mud fort were
soon forgotten
and lay buried
in the dust
bins of
history.
After
the fall of
Vicksburg
about July 1,
1863,
Secretary of
State Seward
pressured
Union General
Benjamin
Butler of New
Orleans to
initiate
offensive
action along
the Texas
coast. One
thing he hoped
for was to
warn France
that its
invasion of
Mexico was
unacceptable
and would have
to be dealt
with
summarily.
Also, the
seizure of
Sabine Pass
and its rail
and river
routes would
choke off
blockade-running
there, drive a
wedge between
Texas and
Louisiana,
choking off
suppies to
Gen. Richard
Taylor's army;
and open a
rail route for
the invasion
of Houston and
Galveston from
the rear.
However, the
marksmanship
of Sabine's
Irish
defenders
crushed Union
hopes, and
sent Gen.
Nathaniel
Banks'
invading force
scuttling in
retreat to New
Orleans.
In
the spring of
1970, the
writer
discovered a
letter in the
128 volumes of
A Compilation
of The
Official
Records of the
Union and
Confederate
Armies in The
War of The
Rebellion
(hereinafter
cited as
"Official
Records,
Armies"), in
which his
grandfather, a
German
immigrant
named Private
Albert Block,
described
"Fort
Manchassee"
(name badly
garbled) at
Sabine Pass.[2]
However, no
one at Sabine
Pass had ever
heard of any
other
Confederate
fort there,
other than
Fort Griffin.
One senior
citizen named
Percy Toups
told the
author that
the main
Confederate
fort (as told
to him by
oldtimers of
World War I
days) there
had been
located at the
west end of
the Sabine
Ridge, but
that all
knowledge of
the fort and
its location
had
disappeared.
Only after the
writer located
Major J.
Kellersberg's
map of Sabine
Pass in "The
Official Atlas
of The Civil
War" and days
of trudging
through the
marsh and
prairie seven
miles west of
Sabine Pass
was he able to
locate all
five of Fort
Manhassett's
former
redoubts.[3]
As
far back as
March, 1863,
Major Julius
Kellersberg,
the
Confederate
chief engineer
for East
Texas, arrived
at Sabine Pass
with
equipment, a
company of
engineers, and
500 slaves to
begin
constructing a
new Fort
Griffin to
replace the
abandoned Fort
Sabine. By
September 1,
only one week
before the
battle, all
but the rear
or north side
of the fort
had been
completed. In
fact, due to a
severe
shortage of
officers
before the
battle, one of
Major
Kellersberg's
subordinates,
Lt. Nicholas
H. Smith, was
placed in
command of two
of Lt.
Dowling's
32-pound guns,
winning for
Smith a share
of the glories
that followed
that battle.
Soon
afterward,
most of
Kellersberg's
men and slaves
were put to
work building
entrenchments
and
breastworks
that were to
become Fort
Manhassett.[4]
It
seemed
apparent that
Gen. Magruder
feared a
combined land
assault on
Sabine Pass
from both the
Louisiana and
Texas coasts
as well as a
naval attack.
Whether or not
he knew that
his garrison
had just
captured two
of the only
five available
inland steam
gunboats
capable of
navigating the
Pass' shallow
channels is
not clear, but
he may have
extracted this
information
from captured
Federal
prisoners.
On
September 10,
1863, two days
after the
battle, he
advised Gen.
Richard Taylor
in Louisiana
that ". . .
the Federal
fleet has
disappeared
and is
supposed to
have gone to
the Calcasieu
River . . ,"
information
that Union
prisoners of
war had
volunteered.
He asked
Taylor to
transfer Gen.
Alfred
Mouton's
brigade from
Vermilionville
to Niblett's
Bluff, near
Lake Charles,
and in turn
Magruder sent
Colonel
Augustus
Buchel's 1,000
man Second
Texas Mounted
Rifles into
Southwest
Louisiana to
halt any
possible
Federal
encroachment
along the
coast east of
Sabine.[5]
For
the first two
years, Sabine
Pass had been
a chief target
for
Confederate
neglect. Early
in 1863,
Magruder
foresaw its
strategic
importance,
both for
blockade-running
and a possible
invasion
point, and
ordered the
construction
of Fort
Griffin there
by his chief
engineer for
East Texas,
Major Julius
Kellersberg
(whose
October, 1863,
map of
Sabine's
defenses
survives as
does his
memoirs
published in
Switzerland in
1896).
On
September 4,
1863, four
days before
the battle,
Magruder
ordered
Kellersberg to
construct Fort
Manhassett to
guard the
Pass' western
land approach.
Gen. John
Magruder's
fear of a
renewed attack
at Sabine Pass
was so
obsessive,
that he
transferred
3,600 men, 36%
of his entire
command to
Jefferson
County, Texas,
by September
30, 1863.[6]
Because of
that fear, the
adjutant
general at
Sabine wrote
to Gen. Kirby
Smith in
Shreveport on
September 22
that: ". . .we
are
anticipating a
landing of the
(Federal)
troops on the
beach, with a
view to
turning the
forts. In case
of the renewal
of the attack,
the approaches
to the town
are being
rapidly
fortified,
under the
direction of
Col. V.
Sulakowski. .
.A large force
of Negroes are
at work on the
entrenchments.
. ."[7]
Fort
Manhassett was
to consist of
five
"redoubts,
redans, and
lunettes"
(obsolete
military
vernacular for
fortifications),
facing Redfish
Bayou, and
scattered out
over a half
mile of land
between
Knights Lake
and the Gulf
of Mexico.
This site was
considered to
be the only
area west of
Sabine Pass
where the
enemy could
land troops on
the beach, and
not become
bogged down in
inpenetrable
sump or marsh
lands. On
October 5,
1863, Col.
Sulakowski
order Major
Kellersberg by
letter to
build:
-
".
. .The line of
redoubts that
at present
will be
limited to two
redoubts and
two redans.
After the
above works
are complete,
and Negroes
can be spared,
a line of
breastworks
will be thrown
up. . .6 feet
high and 8
feet across.
It is intended
to prevent the
enemy from
deploying his
forces after
landing and
keeping him
within a
narrow space
within range
of the fort. .
."[8]
Throughout
all of
October, 1863,
Major
Kellersberg
kept all his
available
engineers and
slaves at
work, building
the fort and
related
activities.
Situated as it
was in an area
of treeless
plains and
marshes, it
appears that
that locality
had no name at
first until
September 29,
when the
Federal
collier
"Manhassett,"
carrying 300
tons of coal,
ran aground in
the mouth of
Redfish Bayou
during a
storm. And it
likewise
appears that
since the site
became the
"place where
the Manhassett
wrecked," it
became equally
logical to
transfer the
name of the
ship to the
name of the
fort (writer's
supposition
only).[9]
The
first armament
of Fort
Manhassett is
unclear, but
it certainly
appears to
have been
cannons
removed from
Fort Griffin,
that had been
replaced by
heavier
weapons
captured
aboard the U.
S. S.
"Clifton" and
"Sachem."
Major Felix
McReynolds,
the executive
officer of
Griffin's
Battalion, was
placed in
command of the
fort, and the
first troops
to be
stationed
there on
October 15th
consisted of
Nichols'
Battery of
artillery, two
companies of
infantry from
Col. W. F.
Griffin's
Battalion, and
two troops of
cavalry from
Col. DeBray's
Regiment. In
the Inspector
General's
report of the
same date, he
observed
that:[10]
-
".
. . Seven
miles west (of
Sabine Pass).
. .is erected
a system of
redoubts and
redans. .
.chiefly for
field guns. .
. .They are
well-built and
evince skill
and ingenuity.
. . .Too much
reliance it
seems to me is
placed upon
the. .
.impassable
nature of the
marsh, which,
if succeeded
in passing,
the forts are
turned and
rendered
useless. . ."
At
the peak of
the invasion
scare in
October-November,
1863, Fort
Manhassett's
garrison of
mixed
artillery,
cavalry, and
infantry are
estimated to
have reached
about 500 men.
By late
November,
1863, when the
Federals
successfully
invaded South
Texas near
Brownsville,
many of Fort
Manhassett's
and Fort
Griffin's
troops were
transferred to
other points
in Texas. In
December,
1863, Fort
Manhassett
appeared for
the first time
under that
name in
Confederate
troop strength
reports. Ten
officers and
266 men,
probably about
one-third of
them from
Nichols'
Battery, were
still
stationed
there.[11]
By
March, 1864,
Nichols'
Battery had
been
transferred to
Hempstead,
Texas, and in
turn,
Creuzbauer's
Battery was
tranferred
from Virginia
Point to Fort
Manhassett to
replace it.[12]
Judge Paul C.
Boethel's
book, The Big
Guns of
Fayette,
outlines in
considerable
detail the
trials and
tribulations
of marsh
living for
Capt.
Creuzbauer's
battery of
German-speaking
immigrants
from Fayette
County, mostly
entailing
their
struggles with
the marsh
"gallinippers"
(ie: the
bat-sized
mosquitoes
with
barbed-wire
fangs,
indigenous
only to Sabine
Pass). Surely,
one equally
undesireable
assignment
came to
Creuzbauer's
Battery at
Fort
Manhassett
when Col.
Griffin
ordered them
to train one
of the
infantry
companies of
Griffin's
Battalion into
an artillery
company. The
battery, then
at only
half-strength
because of a
temporary
assignment
elsewhere, was
further
weakened due
to desertions.
In August,
1863, seven
Frenchmen,
deserters from
the Emperor
Maxmillian's
army , crossed
the Rio Grande
River and
enlisted in
Creuzbauer's
Battery. In
April, 1864,
the same seven
stole a boat,
deserted
again, and
surrendered to
the Federal
blockade fleet
off Bolivar
Point, taking
with them ten
percent of the
battery's
effective
strength.
On
May 6, 1864,
Major
McReynolds of
Fort
Manhassett led
Creuzbauer's
Battery and
several
infantry
companies in a
daylight
attack on the
United States
gunboats
"Wave" and
"Granite
City," which
were at anchor
in the
Calcasieu
River at
Leesburg (now
Cameron),
Louisiana. In
a
ninety-minute,
see-saw
battle,
Creuzbauer's
Battery fired
65 shells into
the gunboats,
and in turn.
suffered four
of their own
killed and
four more
wounded during
the affray.
Some of the
weapons
captured
aboard these
vessels were
soon to be
used to
increase Fort
Manhassett's
armament to
fourteen
carriage-mounted
and
wheel-mounted
cannons. That
was the last
battle action
that any of
the men from
Fort
Manhassett
would ever
see. One of
the battery's
last
assignments
before leaving
Fort
Manhassett in
August, 1864,
was to build
and mount
several
barbette
carriages (gun
mounts) for
some of the
24-pounder
brass Dahlgren
howitzers
captured
aboard the U.
S. S. "Granite
City" at
Calcasieu
Pass.[13]
After
August, 1864,
artillery
Company B of
Spaight's 11th
Texas
Battalion was
transferred
from Fort
Griffin to
Fort
Manhassett,
and they would
remain there
until the war
ended. Things
remained very
quiet at
Sabine Pass,
but the town
retained its
importance as
a
blockade-running
center because
of the ease
with which
skilled
mariners (that
is, pilots who
were
thoroughly
acquainted
with the
Sabine estuary
sand bars and
mud flats)
could run the
blockade. In
November,
1864,
Griffin's and
Spaight's
Battalions
were merged
into the 21st
Texas Regiment
and were soon
transferred to
Houston. Co.
B, however,
was
redesignated
at Co. I of
Bates 13th
Regiment, but
remained
assigned to
Fort
Manhassett's
guns until May
24, 1865.[14]
In
January, 1865,
the report of
Sabine Post
listed two
companies
still in
garrison at
Fort
Manhassett,
Co. I
(artillery) of
Bates Regiment
and one
company of
Ragsdale's
Battalion.[15]
In March,
1865, there
were still two
companies of
men there, as
well as six
guns on
barbette
carriages and
six wheeled
brass
howitzers and
two wheeled
field pieces
(captured
during the
Mexican War),
a total of
fourteen guns.
Fort
Manhassett
also
maintained a
beach picket
consisting of
twelve men,
whose
assignment was
to watch for
any enemy
infiltration
of the beaches
surrounding
them.[16]
On April 20,
there were
still five
companies
assigned to
Sabine Pass,
about half of
whom were
stationed at
Fort
Manhassett. On
May 5, nearly
a month after
Gen. Robert E.
Lee
surrendered,
there were
still 156 men
at Fort
Manhassett and
205 men at
Fort Griffin,
indicating
that there had
been no
wholesale
desertions at
Sabine Post
during the
closing days
of the war.[17]
On
May 24, 1865,
Fort
Manhassett's
contingent of
soldiers,
consisting
principally of
Co. I of
Bates'
Regiment,
threw all
their powder,
cannon balls,
shells, and
artillery that
could be moved
into the
entrenchments
and covered
them with
dirt. Then
disillusioned
and
embittered,
they lowered
their Rebel
emblem,
marched away
to Beaumont,
and were
discharged the
following day.
Fort
Manhassett was
to win one
final
distinction.
J. T. Scharf,
in his History
of the
Confederate
States Navy,
stated that
long after
Gen. Lee's
surrender,
"only the two
forts at
Sabine Pass
were still
defiantly
held."[18]
Despite
fourteen
Sabine Pass
Confederates
killed and
many other
wounded at the
Battle of
Calcasieu
Pass, the last
year of the
war at Sabine
Pass was easy
compared to
the blood
which flowed
on the
battlefields
of Virginia
and Georgia.
It is true
that
Confederates
at Sabine Pass
received no
pay for many
months, but
the money
would buy
nothing
anyway. About
the only
Confederate
ration
available was
inedible and
soured corn
meal. The
soldiers were
forced to
"live off the
land," which
meant killing
ducks, geese,
and edible
water fowl in
the nearby
marshes and
catching fish
with seines on
the nearby
beaches and in
Knight's Lake.
For some
reason, all
the prairie
cattle at
Sabine Pass
had been
driven inland
or killed out
during the
final months
of the war,
and in April,
1865,
Confederate
cavalry from
Sabine Pass
were hunting
cattle at
Johnson's
Bayou, across
the Pass in
Louisiana. It
is assumed
that a nominal
number of Fort
Manhassett
soldiers died
of pneumonia,
flu, typhoid,
tuberculosis,
snake bites,
and other
health hazards
during the
final months
of the war.
On
March 25,
1864, Union
naval
Lieutenant L.
W. Pennington,
a Sabine Pass
turncoat, came
ashore and
found both
forts deserted
and the guns
of Fort
Griffin
spiked.[19]
No mention was
made of the
guns of Fort
Manhassett,
some of which
weighed
between 5,700
and 10,000
pounds (the 24
and 32-pound
cannons), and
the writer
believes that
some of them,
especially the
wheeled
Dahlgren brass
howitzers, are
still buried
there. Between
August 29-31,
1970, the
author and
members of the
Sabine Pass
Lions Club dug
up about two
hundred 24 and
32-pound
shells and
cannon balls
at Redoubt A,
alongside of
Highway 87,
about 6 1/2
miles west of
Sabine Pass.
No attempt has
been made to
excavate at
the four other
forts. The
redoubts of
Fort
Manhassett lay
on private
property
belonging to
Beaumont's
Hebert Estate.
Major
Kellersberg's
"Map of Sabine
Pass" shows
Fort
Manhassett on
the south
shore of
Knight's
Lake.[20]
Fort
Manhassett's
"Redoubts A,
B, and C" were
constructed
along the
front edge of
the western
defense line,
facing Redfish
Bayou, with
"Flank
Defenses 1 and
2" built at
the rear. The
forts were
built on the
points of
equilateral
triangles,
1,200 feet
apart, across
that western
edge of Sabine
Pass' Front
Ridge. Each
was surrounded
by earth
embankments
and
entrenchments,
as well as
protective
"abatis" works
(felled
timbers with
sharpened
ends). Built
along a line
between Knight
Lake's south
prong and
Highway 87,
the
embankments
are virtually
reduced to
ground level.
Yet it is
unbelievable,
but quite
true, that the
outline of
these forts is
still quite
visible due to
a particular
type of high
weeds that
grow on them
and which
contrast
sharply with
the short,
salt grass
which covers
the prairie
surrounding
the sites. The
writer trudged
all around
them at first
without
realizing that
the WEEDS ATOP
THE FORTS bore
the exact same
outline at the
quadrangular
and triangular
sides of the
redoubts and
redans as
shown on Major
Kellersberg's
map.
In
1926, the
shelled road
to McFaddin
Beach made a
horseshoe bend
around Redoubt
A without
anyone knowing
why. In the
same year,
while road
machinery was
in the process
of
straightening
out the curve,
workers dug up
50 cannon
balls without
anyone knowing
how the
ammunition
came to be
there. And in
1970, two
hundred more
were found
there.
Today,
the batteries
of Fort
Manhassett
have been
silenced for
more than a
century, but
the area is
still as
infested with
mosuitoes,
moccasin
snakes, and
alligators,
much as it was
in Civil War
days. Somehow,
the writer can
rarely walk
around those
hallowed
mounds without
still hearing
the faint
echoes of
Rebel yells or
the
reverberations
of cannon fire
that once sent
a Federal
fleet
scurrying for
the safety of
the open sea
over a century
ago.
Endnotes
1
A Compilation
of The
Official
Records of The
Union and
Confederate
Navies in The
War of The
Rebellion,
(Washington,
D. C.: 30
Vols.,
1894-1927),
Ser. I, Vol.
XX, pp.
555-561; Frank
X. Tolbert,
Dick Dowling
at Sabine Pass
(New York:
1962), entire
book.
2
Official
Records,
Armies,
(Washington,D.
C.: 128 Vols.,
1880-1901),
Ser. I, Vol.
XLVIII, Part
2, p. 426.
3
Map 3, Plate
XXXII, in The
Official Atlas
of The Civil
War; Major J.
Kellersberg,
"Plan of
Sabine Pass,
Its Defenses,
and Means of
Communication,"
October 15,
1863, a
redrawing of
Map Z-54-11,
Record Group
77,
Confederate
Records in the
National
Archives.
4
Julius
Kellersberg(er),
Erlebnisse
Eines
Schweizerischen
Ingenieurs in
Califorien,
Mexico, und
Texas Zur Zeit
Des
Amerikanischen
Burgerkrieges,
1861-1865
(Zurich:
German
language;Juchli
and Beck,
1896), pp.
67-69, copy
owned by the
writer. The
writer also
owns an
English
translation,
translated by
Kellersberger's
great
granddaughter,
Helen
Sundstrom,
formerly of
Austin, but
now of
Minnesota.
5
Letter, Gen.
J. Magruder to
Gen. R.
Taylor,
Official
Records,
Armies, Ser.
I, Vol. XXVI,
Pt. 1, p. 218.
6
Official
Records,
Armies, Ser.I,
Vol. XXVI,
Part 2, pp.
280-281.
7
Ibid., Letter,
Yancy to
Smith, Vol.
XXVI, Part 2,
pp. 247-248.
8
Ibid., Letter,
Sulakowski to
Kellersberg,
Vol. XXVI,
Part 2, pp.
298-299.
9
Ibid., Letter,
Gen. Magruder
to Gen. Boggs,
Vol. XXVI,
Part 2, pp.
270, 289.
10
Ibid., Letter,
Inspector
General
Alston's
Report to Gen.
Kirby Smith,
Vol. XXVI,
Part 2, pp.
318-321.
11
Ibid.,
Abstract of
Fort
Manhassett,
Sabine Post,
Vol. XXVI.
Part 2, p.
563.
12
Official
Records,
Armies, Series
I, Vol. XXXIV,
Part 3, p.
800; Special
Order No. 16,
Artillery
Headquarters,
Galveston,
March 5, 1864.
13
Paul C.
Boethel, Big
Guns of
Fayette
(Austin: Von
Boeckmann-Jones,
1965), pp.
43-68.
14
"History of
Spaight's
Texas
Regiment,"
1881, File
2G276, A. W.
Spaight
Papers,
University of
Texas Library
in Austin;
Official
Records,
Armies, Series
I, Vol.
XLVIII, Part
2, pp. 1284,
1298.
15
Official
Records,
Armies, Series
I, Vol.
XLVIII, Part
1, p. 1356.
16
Ibid., Vol.
XLVIII, Part
2, p. 426.
17
Ibid., Vol.
XLVIII, Part
2, pp. 1284,
1298.
18
J. T. Scharf,
History of The
Confederate
States Navy
(New York:
Rogers and
Sherwood,
1887), p. 529.
19
W. T. Block,
"Sabine Pass
in The Civil
War," East
Texas
Historical
Journal, IX,
No. 2
(October,
1971), p. 133.
20
J.
Kellersberg,
"Military Map
of Sabine
Pass," October
15, 1863,
accompanying
the report of
Major J. P.
Johnson, in
Official
Records,
Armies, Series
I, Volume
XXVI, Part 2,
p. 1033; also
appearing as
Map 3, Plate
XXXII, in The
Official Atlas
of the Civil
War, showing
all five forts
and the
armaments of
Fort
Manhassett.
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