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MYTHS
OF SABINE
PASS' FORT
GRIFFIN
EXPLODED:
SHRINE OF
IRISH
CONFEDERATE
HEROES
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Port
Arthur NEWS,
January 24,
1971, as well
as EAST TEXAS
HISTORICAL
JOURNAL, IX
(Oct., 1971),
p. 137.
In
September,
1863,
Confederate
Lt. Dick
Dowling's
Irishmen won
their battle
spurs and war
bonnets at an
unfinished
earthen
fortress known
today as Fort
Griffin. This
battle is one
of the
best-documented
events of the
Civil War,
whose details
are retold and
relived almost
every year
during the
"Dick Dowling
Days"
celebration at
Sabine Pass.
However,
Lt. Dowling'
fortress is
less
well-known,
and over the
past century
has become
clouded with
myth and
legend. With
the
possibility
that its site
someday may be
partially
restored by
the State of
Texas, it is
also
imperative
that those
myths be
replaced with
authenticity.
Since
the Civil War
Centennial in
1963, many
maps and
drawings have
appeared in
newspapers and
magazines,
purporting to
be Fort
Griffin.
Whatever may
be said for
the skillful
drawing and
artistic
quality, most
have been
four-sided
affairs, being
no more than
the artist's
conception of
what the fort
looked like.
The
listings of
The National
Archives do
not indicate
that Fort
Griffin's
battle plans
survived.
However they
do list plans
for a "Fort
Sabine,"
which, at
first glance,
one might
confuse with
an earlier
fortification
of that name
(about one
mile south of
the present
battleground),
which was
abandoned by
the
Confederates
and destroyed
by the Federal
forces in
September,
1862.
The
following
Confederate
maps in the
National
Archives, all
a part of
"Confederate
Record Group
77," shows the
site of Fort
Griffin, and
are available
at modest
prices of
about $6 .00
or more, as
follows: Map
Nos. Z-54-2,
Z-54-11,
Z-51-2, Z-298,
Z-54-6, and
Z-54-7.
Another
unnumbered map
is a redrawing
of Map
Z-54-11, and
is labeled
"Plan of
Sabine Pass,
its Defenses
and Means of
Communication,
J.
Kellersberg,
Chief
Engineer, East
Texas
District,
October 15,
1863," and it
shows the
locations and
drawings of
the
fortifications
of both Forts
Griffin and
Manhassett. A
concise copy
of it also
appears as
Plate XXXII,
Map 3, in the
"Official
Atlas of the
Civil War."
The
key to defense
of Sabine Pass
lay in its
mile-long
oyster reef in
the harbor. It
had two
passages
through it,
the Texas and
Louisiana
channels,
through which
enemy gunboats
would have to
pass. Old Fort
Sabine had
been located
on marshy
ground at the
south
entrances to
the reef,
roughly
opposite the
lighthouse.
Fort Griffin
was located on
higher land at
the present
battleground
monument, near
the two
channel exits
from the reef.
In Civil War
days, there
was a
prominent
point located
there where
the fort was
located, all
of which today
has been
eroded or
dredged away
and is now a
part of the
shipping
channel.
Construction
work at Fort
Griffin
probably began
in March,
1863, since it
was well under
way whenever
the lighthouse
skirmish took
place on April
18. The fort
was designed
by Col. Valery
Sulakowski,
chief engineer
of the
Military
District of
Texas, New
Mexico, and
Arizona.
However, its
construction
was supervised
by Major
Julius
Kellersberg,
who chose its
site and whose
German-language
memoirs,
published in
Switzerland in
1896, describe
its building.
Four
other
engineers on
Kellersberg's
staff
contributed to
its
completion.
One of them,
Lt. Nicholas
H. Smith, was
responsible
for much of
the work done
there over a
long period of
months, and he
also won
immortality
and
considerable
fame for his
gallant
command of two
of Lt. Dick
Dowling's guns
during the
Battle of
Sabine Pass.
However, fate
and
coincidence
have played a
dirty trick on
the brave
engineer.
Historians
have generally
confused him
with
Confederate
Lieutenant
Niles H.
Smith, a
native-born
Sabine Pass
artilleryman
who was not
present within
the fort, but
was aboard the
cottonclad
gunboat "Uncle
Ben" with his
company, B of
Spaight's
Battalion.
After the war,
the latter
never denied
the error
whenever he
was mistaken
for the other.
Fort
Griffin's
irregular,
sawtooth front
was purposely
designed to
afford maximum
protection to
the individual
gun crews.
Otherwise, all
of the fort's
guns and gun
crews might
have been
destroyed at
once by a
single, large
shell
exploding
within the
parapets of
the fort.
One
of the popular
myths about
Fort Griffin
was that it
was built by
Dowling and
the Davis
Guards.
Kellersberg's
memoirs record
specifically
that he was
dispatched
from Houston,
along with his
staff of
engineers and
500 slaves,
for the
purpose of
building the
fort, and two
surviving maps
indicate even
the location
of the slave
quarters and
the slave
hospital. The
slaves were
also used by
Kellersberg
and Lt.
Nicholas Smith
during the
building of
Fort
Manhassett on
the opposite
end of
Sabine's Front
Ridge in
October, 1863.
Another
myth holds
that Dowling's
battle did not
occur at the
site of the
present-day
battleground.
There is
nothing in
published
accounts of
the battle,
maps, or
anything else
to support
that opinion;
in fact, a
number of maps
verify Fort
Griffin's
exact
location.
Likewise
there is
additional
proof that
Sulakowski's
drawing of
"Fort Sabine"
is actually
the plan for
Fort Griffin.
Since the mud
fort did not
become "Fort
Griffin" until
long after
Col. W. H.
Griffin's
Battalion was
assigned there
in May, 1863,
the writer
surmises that
Col.
Sulakowski
labeled his
drawing "Fort
Sabine"
because it
would replace
a destroyed
fort of the
same name.
Also, the six
gun
emplacements
on the map
coincide
precisely with
Lt. Dowling's
report of the
battle on
September, 9,
1863.
Col.
Sulakowski
showed the
following guns
as being
mounted on
carriages at
the fort: two
32-pounder
long-iron
smoothbores;
two 24-pounder
long-iron
smoothbores;
and two
32-pounder
brass
howitzers
(short-barreled
cannons),
which were
also unrifled.
Confederate
cannons in
Southeast
Texas were
never so
numerous that
their
movements
cannot be
traced with
ease. The
24-pounders
had been
removed from
old Fort
Grigsby at
Port Neches in
July and
remounted at
Sabine Pass.
Earlier, the
two brass
howitzers had
been mounted
in a shellbank
fort on the
Sabine River
south of
Orange, Texas,
and these were
also removed
when that fort
was abandoned
in July, 1863.
The other
guns, the
long-iron
32-pounders,
had been
spiked and
buried at old
Fort Sabine
the previous
year.
Kellersberg
had dug them
up, rebuilt
them at the
Confederate
foundry in
Galveston, and
had just
returned them
to Sabine Pass
only two weeks
before the
battle.
Fort
Griffin's
battlements
had sloping,
outer walls
16-feet high.
The rampart at
the top of the
embankments
was 20 feet
wide along the
sawtooth front
and 10 feet
wide along the
west wall. The
fort was
triangular in
shape, with a
west wall; a
north wall or
"stoccado,"
which was
still
unfinished as
of the date of
the battle;
and the
sawtooth
front, with
six guns
facing toward
the south and
southeast.
The
fort was 100
yards long
along the
north and west
walls, not
including the
V-shape
protrusion on
the west wall.
No explanation
for this
projection is
offered on the
map, leaving
the reader to
assume that it
was for the
possible rear
defense of the
fort. The
sawtooth front
was probably
about 150
yards long,
being the
hypotenuse of
a right
triangle.
There were
also three
large, wooden
cisterns
installed at
Fort Griffin.
In Civil War
Days, all
drinking water
was carried
from Orange or
Johnson's
Bayou, La.,
and half of
the travel
time of the
small steamer
"Dime" was
devoted to
that activity.
The
fort's
casemates
(where the gun
carriages were
mounted)
dropped five
feet below the
level of the
ramparts,
allowing only
room for a
man's head to
see above them
and for the
gun barrels to
project
seaward
through the
embrasures.
According to
the plan, the
fortress had
spaces for six
bombproofs
(where
munitions were
stored) and
magazines, of
which only
four were to
be completed.
They were each
eight feet
high, eight
feet wide and
30 feet long,
built into the
sawtooth front
of the fort
beneath the
guns.
When
forces of the
United States
Navy occupied
Fort Griffin
on May 25,
1865, Union
Lieutenant L.
W. Pennington
reported in a
dispatch that
the roofs of
the fort and
bombproofs
consisted
first of
layers of
railroad iron,
covered by
layers of
cypress logs,
all overlaid
with dirt to a
thickness of
several feet.
A
variety of
shoring
timbers may
have been used
in the fort's
construction.
There is a
good
indication
that there was
a large supply
of saw logs
available,
even though
the sawmills
and all sawn
lumber had
been burned in
1862. Col. A.
W. Spaight
reported in a
dispatch that
ship timbers
from the
grounded and
burned Union
blockader
"Morning
Light" had
also been
used. After
September,
1862, when the
railroad
bridge over
Taylors Bayou
was burned,
the last 10
miles of
railroad iron
and crossties
were useless,
and much of
these were
also removed
and utilized
in the fort's
building. In
October, 1863,
a letter from
Col.
Sulakowski to
his engineers
at Sabine
ordered them
to cut timber
along the ship
channel for
use in the
outer
fortifications,
this at a time
when Fort
Manhassett was
also being
built. The
writer
interprets
this to mean
that by
October, all
saw logs,
crossties, and
other
available
timbers had
been used up.
Fort
Griffin
probably
remained in
some state of
construction
until the war
ended, for
Gen.
Magruder's
fears of a
second
invasion
attempt were
never stifled.
Sulakowski's
letter also
outlined
sufficient
work to keep
the engineers
and slaves
occupied for
many months to
come. The
letter ordered
Major
Kellersberg to
complete an
additional
magazine, more
embankments
and ditches,
rows of
"torpedoes"
(primitive
land mines) in
the ground,
outer
fortifications,
completion of
the five
"redoubts"
(forts) at
Fort
Manhassett, a
planked wagon
road, some
railroad
construction
(which was
never
completed),
and
construction
of a four-gun
redoubt at
Taylor's Bayou
(near Texaco
Island). This
small
Confederate
fort near Port
Arthur appears
on n 1864 map
as having been
completed,
although its
name and exact
location are
unknown.
Fort
Griffin was
used in
Reconstruction
days by the
Union troops
that occupied
Sabine Pass,
but after
1870, its
destruction
came about
rapidly.
Apparently the
railroad iron
and crossties
were returned
to the rebuilt
rail trackage.
The sawmills
were never
rebuilt, so it
is unknown
what happened
to saw logs
and other
timbers. These
were probably
utilized by
the town's
residents for
the rebuilding
of docks and
wharfage. Also
the earliest
building of
the Sabine
River jetties
began in the
late 1870's,
and some of
the fort's
timbers, etc.,
may have gone
into its
construction.
Hence, the old
fort that had
served the
Confederacy so
well in
wartime was
destroyed to
service a
peacetime
economy as
well.
Sources:
Maps in Record
Group 77, of
the National
Archives, as
well as
letters in
"War of the
Rebellion-Official
Records of the
Union and
Confederate
Armies," 128
volumes,
particularly,
Series I, Vol.
XXVI, Part 2,
pp. 298-99,
318-321.
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