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Capt.
K. D. Keith
Confederate
Hero and
Sabine Pass
Pioneer
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Port
Arthur NEWS,
January 2,
1974.
Sources: W. T.
Block
(editor), "The
Memoirs of
Captain
Kosciuszko D.
Keith," TEXAS
GULF
HISTORICAL AND
BIOGRAPHICAL
RECORD, X
(Nov., 1974),
41-64, written
by K. D.
Keith; K. D.
Keith,
"Military
Operations,
Sabine Pass,
1861-1863," in
BURKE'S TEXAS
ALMANAC AND
IMMIGRANT'S
GUIDE FOR
1883, Houston:
No Date.
There
is apparently
no end in
sight to the
great volume
of writings
that the War
Between The
States will
inspire. New
books are
printed each
month, and
some monthly
historical,
illustrated
periodicals
are devoted
entirely to
that subject.
In fact, two
of these have
devoted almost
all of one
issue to the
Battle of
Sabine Pass
alone. The
"Civil War
Times
Illustrated"
of December,
1973, devoted
two articles
and many
photographs to
that battle.
In its
September,
1986, edition,
"Blue-Gray
Magazine"
devoted five
articles and
47 photos,
maps, and
plates, almost
the entire
issue, to the
same battle.
It
is not easy to
analyze the
causes for the
continuing
interest in
that
century-old
conflict,
particularly
since all the
Civil War
veterans have
been dead for
many years.
Certainly, the
war's
fratricidal
nature, which
pitted brother
against
brother and
even father
against son,
must be
paramount
among the
causes. In
fact, the
tales of
brother
against
brother are
endless, a
dilemma which
even many
Jefferson
County
combatants
experienced.
Capt.
Charles
Fowler,
commander of
Confederate
gunboats in
Sabine lake,
was captured
by a Union
patrol near
the Sabine
lighthouse on
April 10,
1863. After
arriving at a
prison camp in
New York, he
discovered
that five of
his brothers
were in the
Union Army.
Judge Tom
Russell of
Beaumont, one
of the
defenders of
Vicksburg,
fought for six
weeks during
the siege
against one of
his five
brothers who
were in the
Federal Army.
One of the
saddest of the
fratricidal
accounts
involved Major
Albert Lea,
the
Confederate
chief engineer
for South
Texas. Lea
commanded a
section of the
Confederate
artillery at
the Battle of
Galveston on
January 1,
1863. Upon
boarding the
"Harriet
Lane," a prize
Union gunboat
disabled and
surrendered in
Galveston Bay,
Lea found his
only son
Edward, a
Union naval
lieutenant,
mortally-wounded.
The son died
in his
father's arms.
Major Lea was
a well-known
railroad
builder in the
Mid-West in
those days,
and the town
of Albert Lea,
Minnesota, is
named for him.
Many
fratricidal
cases involved
men of general
or admiral
rank. Admiral
Samuel Dupont,
who commanded
the Union
blockade fleet
off
Charleston,
fought against
his own
brother, a
Confederate
general in
charge of
harbor
defenses. Sen.
Crittenden of
Kentucky had
four sons who
were officers
of general
rank, and
three of them
were killed in
the war. Two
were Union
soldiers and
two were
Confederates.
Kosciuszko
Dewitrt Keith,
a Sabine Pass
cotton
merchant
before and
after the war,
did not share
this dilemma,
but he did
share an
unusual
experience. As
captain of
Company B,
Spaight's 11th
Texas
Battalion, he
commanded the
only company
that was
destined to
defend
Jefferson
County, Texas,
while
remaining
within its
borders
throughout the
war (although
a small
detachment of
it was sent to
Matagorda Bay
to man
artillery
aboard the
gunboat "John
Carr.") In
November,
1864, when the
21st Texas
Regiment was
organized,
Keith and his
company became
Company I of
Bates' 13th
Texas
Regiment, but
his men
remained in
garrison at
Fort
Manhassett,
Sabine Pass,
until the war
ended.
K.
D. Keith was
born at
Bainbridge,
Georgia, on
September 15,
1831, the son
of John W. and
Adeline
Reviere Keith.
While en route
to Texas, the
parents died
during a
yellow fever
epidemic at
Mobile, Ala.,
in 1853, after
which the six
children, all
but one being
minors, moved
on to Jasper
County.
Beginning in
1856, Keith
ran a store in
Beaumont for
W. A. Ferguson
of Jasper. In
Sept., 1857,
Keith bought a
half-interest
in the firm of
Otis McGaffey
and Co. of
Sabine Pass,
and after a
whirlwind
romance, he
married
McGaffey's
daughter Mary
Jane three
months later.
With
the outbreak
of war, Keith
enlisted in
the 120-man
militia
company known
as the "Sabine
Pass Guards,"
but this
company was
never mustered
into
Confederate
service in its
original form.
In July, 1861,
its members
reorganized
into two
companies of
Col. J. B.
Likens (later
Spaight's)
Texas
Battalion.
Capt. J. H.
Blair mustered
a company of
cavalry,
whereas
Captain I. R.
Burch, owner
and captain of
the steamboat
"Sabine,"
organized
artillery
company B.
When Burch
resigned his
commission
soon after,
Keith was
elected as the
company
commander.
Unlike
Galveston,
where a United
States
ordnance depot
existed,
Sabine Pass
was
ill-prepared
to defend
itself. Two
field cannons,
captured in
the Mexican
War, were on
hand, but the
citizens of
the town
needed much
larger guns if
a naval attack
were to be
repelled.
Keith was a
member of the
Committee of
Safety, which
built old Fort
Sabine, about
one mile south
of the present
state park,
and a
sawmiller,
David R.
Wingate,
donated logs
and rough
lumber to
build the fort
and adjoining
barracks.
Keith rode to
Galveston,
where he was
able to obtain
two 18-pound
cannons and a
supply of
solid shot
(cannon
balls), which
he soon
shipped to
Sabine Pass.
Later, he
obtained to
32-pound guns
in Houston to
complete the
mud fort's
armament.
Both
the Federals
and the
Confederacy
seemed to have
held Sabine
Pass in low
esteem during
the early
months of the
war, and when
the Union Navy
finally took
some note of
its importance
in Sept.,
1862, Sabine
was already
well-established
as a
blockade-running
seaport for
cotton and
munitions.
When
three Union
ships began
shelling Fort
Sabine on
Sept. 24,
1862, only
sixteen
Confederates
had recovered
enough from
their yellow
fever
illnesses to
man the guns.
However, their
return fire
from their old
smoothbore
guns fell
short, and the
Confederates
could only
mount the
parapets and
curse the
intruders who
remained at a
safe distance
out of range.
After
nightfall,
Fort Sabine's
commander,
Major Irvine,
received
orders to
spike and bury
the guns, and
to retreat
inland by
train with all
available
stores. During
the next two
months, Union
ships occupied
Sabine Lake
and Pass,
where they
destroyed the
railroad
bridge over
Taylor's
Bayou, and
they burned
the depot,
roundhouse,
sawmills, and
other
principal
buildings in
Sabine Pass.
Keith's
company then
hastily
occupied Fort
Grigsby at
Port Neches in
October, 1862.
In January,
Keith received
orders to move
his company to
Orange where
two
Confederate
steamboats
were being
converted to
cotton clad
gunboats.
Company B soon
went aboard
the "Uncle
Ben," a former
cotton boat,
to man its two
12-pounder
cannons, and
other
detachments
under Lt. R.
W. "Dick"
Dowling went
aboard the
gunboat
"Josiah Bell"
to man a
64-pounder
rifled cannon
aboard that
boat.
Early
on January 21,
1863, as
clouds of pine
knot smoke
spiraled from
the cotton
lads' stacks,
the Rebels
gunboats
steamed out to
engage the
offshore
blockaders,
the "Morning
Light" and
"Velocity,"
both of which
quickly
hoisted sails
and sought to
escape. Since
only a slight
breeze was
blowing, the
Union
Bluejackets
were unable to
fill their
sails, and
after a long
chase at sea,
the slow
steamers came
within range
and opened
fire.
Dowling's
gun crew on
the "Josiah
Bell" scored
four hits on
the "Morning
Light," and
both ships
soon
surrendered.
The
Confederates
captured, in
addition to
the ships,
twelve
cannons, 177
prisoners, and
a large
quantity of
stores. Capt.
Keith's men
doubled as
sailors to
bring the
captured
"Velocity"
into port.
Company
B remained
aboard the
"Uncle Ben"
during most of
1863. When a
Union invasion
fleet entered
the Pass on
September 8,
the cotton
clad made a
feint
southward in
the Pass to
draw their
fire, but
hastily
retreated to
Sabine Lake
when large
9-inch shells
from the
"Sachem" began
passing
overhead.
Because of its
'popgun' size
artillery, the
"Uncle Ben"
was helpless
to assist
during Lt.
Dick Dowling's
40-minute
fight to
glory. After
the battle
ended, the
Rebel cotton
clad crossed
the channel to
tow the
disabled
"Sachem" to
the Texas
shore.
After
the battle,
Company B
joined
Dowling's
Davis Guards
in garrison in
Fort Griffin,
and for
several months
they manned
the additional
guns that were
installed
there. In
1864, when
most Sabine
troops became
a part of new
21st Texas
Regiment,
Keith's men
were
transferred to
Col. Bates'
command and
transferred to
man the
artillery at
Fort
Manhassett, a
new fort built
six miles west
of Sabine
Pass. They
remained there
until the war
ended, and on
May 24, 1865,
Keith lowered
the
Confederate
flag at the
last Rebel
fort to
surrender. The
following day,
they marched
to Beaumont
and were
discharged.
Capt.
Keith
immediately
set to work to
recoup his
fortunes and
rebuild his
import-export
business,
which had been
destroyed by
the war. He
soon entered
into a
partnership
with his
brother-in-law,
A. N. Vaughn,
who was also a
discharged
ex-Confederate
from Beaumont.
One of their
first
transactions
was to buy an
old Trinity
River cotton
boat, the
"Orleans," and
for the next
five years the
steamboat made
many voyages
in the Sabine
River,
carrying
cotton to the
coast.
Although
the volume of
cotton
exported at
Sabine in 1866
(6,000 bales)
equaled only
one-third of
the pre-war
volume, both
Keith and
Vaughn and
their only
cotton
competitor, C.
H. Alexander
and Co.,
prospered, the
exports
reaching
20,000 bales
by 1870. The
"Orleans" was
bringing to
the coast
around 3,000
bales during
each shipping
season, and
Keith and
Vaughn bought
an additional
5,000 bales
annually from
other
sternwheelers
in the river
trade. Such
was Keith's
financial
stature until
September,
1871, when a
massive
hurricane blew
in from the
Gulf, sank the
"Orleans,"
destroyed the
Keith home and
business, in
fact,
everything he
owned except
his family and
the clothes on
their backs.
With
no insurance
and nothing to
rebuild with,
Keith went to
Galveston with
only $1.00 in
his jeans and
found
employment
there with D.
Theo Ayers and
Company.
During the
next eight
years, the old
Rebel lived
intermittently
at Galveston
and other
Texas towns,
before
settling
permanently at
Luling, Texas,
where he
prospered as a
hardware
merchant until
his death in
1909. He is
buried in the
Luling city
cemetery
beside the
graves of his
wife, some of
his children,
and his
parents-in-law,
the Otis
McGaffeys. At
one time in
1896, Keith
attempted to
write his
memoirs, but
he had to quit
at a point in
1863 because
of failing
eyesight. He
was blind due
to cataracts
during the
last years of
his life.
On
two or three
occasions,
Capt. Keith
was able to
reunite at
Beaumont with
some of his
old
ex-Confederate
buddies at
assemblies of
the United
Confederate
Veterans. On
those
occasions,
some of the
old veterans
of Company B,
Niles H.
Smith, Joe
Cassidy, and
others, were
on hand to
trade the
yarns of
yesteryear,
and always the
name of
Captain Keith
bore the same
luster that it
did on that
date in 1861
when he was
elected
captain.
Being
so much a part
of the old
cotton-producing
South that he
was born and
had grown up
in, the old
Rebel had cast
his lot with
the
Confederacy
until its
death at
Appomattox
Courthouse,
Va., in 1865.
And after
bowing to its
defeat, he
renewed his
allegiance to
the United
States with
the same vigor
that he once
had exercised
while fighting
against it -
once more
proud to call
himself
American.
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