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Where Was
Fort Grigsby?
Historian May
Have Answer
By W. T.
Block
Reprint from
Midcounty
Chronicle,
Monday,
November 23,
1970.
- (ED. NOTE:
Mr. Block who
is assistant
postmaster at
Nederland and
a teaching
fellow at
Lamar
University is
a descendant
of a pioneer
family of the
area. Long
interested in
Southeast
Texas history,
Mr. Block
recently found
the remains of
Civil War Fort
Manhassett
near Sabine.
Further
research by
the historian
has resulted
in the
following
story.)
If
you were
searching in
Jefferson
County for the
site of a lost
Confederate
fortress,
would you
bother to look
within the
city limits of
Port Neches?
Probably not.
Yet somewhere
between Port
Neches Park
and the Texaco
Inc. dock, old
Fort Grigsby
once stood.
The
dock area was
its probable
location. From
that point,
the fort's
guns could
traverse over
a wider arc in
sighting upon
enemy vessels
attempting to
ascend the
river.
Its
builder, Lt.
Col. Getulius
Kellersberger,
once remarked
of it, '"This
battery, if
ably-manned
and defended,
can blow
anything out
of the water
that can cross
the bar."
Kellersberger,
Confederate
chief engineer
for East
Texas, built
no less than
20 Confederate
forts at
points between
tile Brazes
and Sabine
Rivers
(including
Forts Griffin
and
Manhassett)
and as far
west as
Austin.
Actually,
Fort Grigsby
was a
hastily-constructed
fortification
of mud and
clamshell
embankments
shored up by
upright
pointed logs.
Its main
battery was
two 24-pounder
long-iron
guns. It also
had a
"substantial"
arsenal and
bombproof.
After
the fort was
abandoned in
the summer of
1863, these
slime guns
were two of
the six used
by Lt. Dick
Dowling to
mangle two
Union warships
at the second
Battle of
Sabine Pass.
The
decision to
build Fort
Grigsby was
made on
October 2,
1862. On that
date, Col.
Ashley
Spaight, in
command at
Beaumont,
requested
guns, men, and
the services
of Col. (then
Major)
Kellersberger
to construct
new defenses
along the two
rivers. The
following day,
the engineer
left Houston
with men and
supplies to
begin
construction
at Fort
Grigsby, and
fifteen days
later, could
report that it
was nearing
completion.
Usually, from
200 to 300
slaves were
used on such
projects.
At
the same
moment, a
squadron of
three Union
ships was in
Sabine Lake,
depredating
Sabine Pass
and the
railroad along
the lake's
shores. In a
three-week
orgy of
destruction,
they burned
Sabine's
railway
station,
roundhouse,
two sawmills,
many
residences,
and set fire
to Taylor's
Bayou railroad
bridge.
Col.
Spaight
apparently
gave up hope
of holding
Sabine Pass
and Lake, and,
by fortifying
the rivers,
prepared to
defend only
Beaumont and
Orange.
Fort
Sabine, at
Sabine Pass,
had been
abandoned on
September 24,
1862; its 30
defenders
having spiked
their guns and
retreated to
Beaumont with
their supplies
and stores. At
the time, most
of Spaight's
troops were
furloughed or
convalescent
due to yellow
fever and
measles
epidemics.
Kellersberger
also built a
Sabine River
fort on a
shell bank
eight rifles
south of
Orange and
armed it with
three 32
pounder guns.
On the bars of
the two
rivers, he
scuttled
80-foot barges
loaded with
clamshell, so
designed that
the rivers
could admit
only
shallow-draft
river
steamers.
Fort
Grigsby was
apparently
abandoned
after July of
1863. It would
be pointless
for souvenir
hunters to
seek its site
because its
guns,
munitions, and
stores were
moved to the
then-unfinished
Fort Griffin.
In
its tiny, Fort
Grigsby must
have been
well-known to
the commanding
general in
Houston. On
September 9,
1863, the day
after
Dowling's
triumph, Gen.
J. B. Magruder
sent a
dispatch from
Sabine Pass to
the
Headquarters,
Trans-Mississippi
Department. In
it, he
erroneously
reported that
Dowling's
victory had
taken place at
Fort Grigsby
rather than at
Fort Griffin.
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