|
|
COL.
JULIUS G.
KELLERSBERGER:
SWISS ENGINEER
BUILT TEXAS'
CONFEDERATE
DEFENSES
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
ENTERPRISE,
Oct. 4, 1976.
In
1896, as
wintry blasts
swept down the
valley of the
River Aare in
northern
Switzerland,
an old man
consumed
endless hours
in his
ancestral home
while laboring
to complete a
manuscript.
With head and
beard as
snow-capped as
the
neighboring
peaks, Julius
Getulius
Kellersberger,
who felt that
life was
slowing ebbing
away, wrote
and rewrote
each page with
the masterful
precision that
a civil
engineer might
express,
before
shipping the
finished
version of his
manuscript to
Juchli and
Beck, book
publishers of
Zurich.
After
49 years in
America,
Kellersberger,
former
Forty-Niner,
surveyor, town
and
railroad-builder,
and
Confederate
chief engineer
for East
Texas, bade
farewell to a
son and four
daughters, his
grandchildren,
the grave of
his wife, all
at Cypress
Mill, Blanco
County, Texas.
He then left
the state he
had grown to
love and
returned to
his Alpine
homeland for
two purposes
-- to write
his
German-language
memoirs and
die in the
huge stone
house where he
had grown up
and had
abandoned as a
youth to seek
his fortune in
America.
Although a
hundred or
more of his
descendants in
the United
States still
spell his name
with its
original Swiss
spelling, the
engineer
enlisted in
the
Confederate
Army under the
name of
'Kellersberg,'
which for
purposes of
simplication,
the writer
will adopt for
the remainder
of this
biography. And
although
Kellersberg
was promoted
to lieutenant
colonel during
the closing
days of the
war, he was a
Confederate
major of
artillery, in
the
engineering
service, for
much of the
time span of
this story.
Kellersberg,
born in the
Swiss province
of Aargau in
1820, was
educated in
the military
sciences and
engineering in
Austria, and
by age 25, was
superintendent
of an Austrian
army arsenal.
Restless for
adventure, the
youth embarked
for New York
in 1847. While
aboard ship,
he met his
future wife,
Caroline, a
German
immigrant
bound for
Texas and
daughter of a
pioneer Texas
Lutheran
pastor. For
some weeks, he
worked as a
surveyor in
New York's
Central Park,
but he soon
abandoned that
project for
Texas, where
he also
married.
In
1849, when
news of the
California
gold strike
arrived,
Julius and
Caroline
Kellersberg
embarked for
California on
a year-long
voyage around
Cape Horn.
Disliking the
gold-mining
camps (in one
of which
Kellersberg's
brother had
been
murdered), the
young
immigrant
settled at San
Francisco,
where he was
soon appointed
deputy
surveyor-general
of California
under Col.
Jack Hays.
Between
1851-1855, he
platted and
surveyed the
original
townsites of
Oakland and
Santa Barbara,
the early maps
and field
notes of which
still carry
his name. In
1856 he was a
member of the
San Francisco
vigilantes.
(The author
has
photocopies of
two articles
of this period
of his life
which have
appeared in
California
historical
publications.)
A
victim of the
political
"Spoils
System" under
the Buchanan
administration
in 1857,
Kellersberg
left
California for
a railroad
assignment in
Mexico, which
was actually
the first
transcontinental
railroad to
connect the
Gulf of Mexico
with the
Pacific Ocean,
across the
Isthmus of
Tehuantepec in
Mexico. With
the outbreak
of the
American Civil
War in 1861,
he left Mexico
to return to
his family in
Galveston,
arriving on
the last
vessel to
enter the
harbor before
the permanent
blockade began
in June.
Obtaining
a commission
as major under
Col. Valery
Sulakowski
(chief
engineer for
the District
of Texas), the
Swiss
immigrant was
soon appointed
chief military
engineer for
the
sub-district
of East Texas.
His first
assignment was
to begin
building the
artillery
defenses of
Galveston.
In
July 1862, he
was sent to
Jefferson
County to
inspect the
fortifications
of Sabine
Pass. He
reported
everything
there as being
inadequate,
the fort
(Sabine) as
built on
ground subject
to tidal
overflow, guns
too small and
short-ranged
for defense,
and a severe
shortage of
fuses, shells,
and other
necessary
equipment. He
added that
"the Pass at
Sabine is
certainly a
very important
point, and in
fact, the only
port from
where we
receive our
powder and
other
articles."
Sabine
Lake, however,
was soon
occupied by
the Federal
Navy at a time
when yellow
fever was
raging in
Sabine City.
Following an
urgent plea
from Col. A.
W. Spaight at
Beaumont, the
major returned
to Jefferson
County on Oct.
1, 1862,
bringing with
him 24 and
32-pound
pieces of
artillery and
a contingent
of engineering
troops and
slaves. At
Port Neches,
he built Fort
Grigsby (where
the asphalt
plant office
buildings now
stand) so that
its battery of
24-pound guns
could sweep
across a
horseshoe bend
in the lower
Neches River.
Near the
Sabine River
delta, he
built another
fort, where he
installed two
32-pound guns.
As a further
precaution
against the
Federals
ascending the
rivers, the
major sank
80-foot barges
of clam shell
on the bars of
both rivers.
While
Kellersberg
was in
Jefferson
County, a
Federal
squadron under
Commander W.
B. Renshaw
occupied
Galveston
Island and
Bay, and
Kellersberg
for a few
weeks was cut
off from his
wife and
children.
Since a
full-scale
invasion of
Texas appeared
imminent at
that time, the
major was sent
to the mouth
of the Brazos
River, where
he built Forts
Quintana and
Velasco,
fortifications
on Caney
Creek, and
another fort
at the mouth
of the
Trinity. On
New Year's Day
of 1863, he
participated
in the Battle
of Galveston,
where he won
commendations
for bravery.
During the wee
hours before
dawn, he help
sneak
artillery
pieces on flat
cars over the
railway
trestle to the
island, and at
dawn he took
part in the
Confederate
attack on
Kuhn's Wharf,
where the 42nd
Massachusetts
Regiment
surrendered
intact.
Kellersberg
was soon
reunited with
his family.
Given
command of the
Confederate
foundry in
Galveston,
with its staff
of
German-immigrant
machinists and
technicians,
the major was
reassigned to
the defenses
of Galveston.
With only
about
one-tenth of
the heavy guns
on hand that
were needed to
defend the
island
properly, he
set his
mechanics to
work building
200 "Quaker"
guns of logs,
a ruse which
helped stave
off invasion
for the
remainder of
the war. The
"quakers" were
milled and
bored to
precise
measurements,
polished and
painted with
such authentic
detail and
care that even
the
Confederates
had difficulty
at detecting
the fake ones
from 100 yards
away. Since
rails
connected all
of the beach
batteries, the
engineer moved
the real guns
to different
points on the
beach at night
and conducted
gunnery
practice each
morning. And
although the
Federal fleet
soon learned
that there
were 'quaker'
guns ashore,
they were
never quite
sure which
ones were real
and which one
were not.
In
March, 1863,
Gen. J. B.
Magruder sent
Kellersberg
back to Sabine
Pass with 30
engineers and
500 slaves.
His orders
were to
construct a
new Fort
Sabine (soon
to be renamed
Fort Griffin)
of sufficient
size and
armament that
it could
properly
defend the
seacoast city.
The engineer
selected a
prominent
point which
projected out
into the
channel, which
would allow
the fort's
guns to
traverse a
270-degree
arc. The site
was one mile
farther inland
from the old
fort, at a
place where
the Louisiana
and Texas
channels
exited from
the oyster
reef.
During
the next five
months, his
staff
completed six
gun
emplacements,
with five
bombproofs
beneath, in
the sawtooth
front of the
triangular
fort. The
walls and
ramparts were
constructed of
logs,
crossties,
dirt, and
oyster shell,
and the
bombproofs and
gun
emplacements
were then
"covered with
two layers of
railroad iron,
two feet of
solid timber
and logs, and
four feet of
earth on top
of that."
Kellersberg
then abandoned
the river
forts and
moved their
four guns,
ammunition,
and all stores
to Fort
Griffin. In
Aug., 1863,
whenever Lt.
Dick Dowling's
Co. F of the
First Texas
Heavy
Artillery was
detailed from
service aboard
the gunboat
"Josiah Bell"
to garrison
duty at Fort
Griffin, only
the mud fort's
north rampart,
or back wall,
was still
unfinished,
but two more
32-pound guns
were needed if
the fort were
to be
adequately
armed.
Advised
by his Houston
headquarters
that no more
guns for the
fort were
available,
Kellersberg
recalled an
old
fisherman's
tale about two
guns that had
been spiked
and buried the
previous year
when old Fort
Sabine was
abandoned to
the Federals.
After an
hour's
probing, he
and the
fisherman
located a
quantity of
solid cannon
balls and the
two 32-pound
long iron
guns, both of
which had been
severely
damaged. The
barrels had
been spiked
with round
files, a solid
shot was
jammed in one
gun, and the
four cannon
trunnions
(swivels) had
been chiseled
away.
Leaving
his
subordinate,
Lt. Nicholas
H. Smith, in
charge of the
remaining
construction,
the major took
the guns by
rail to the
Galveston
foundry. Day
and night, he
and his chief
machinist
labored to
repair them,
for it was
already
rumored that a
Texas invasion
armada was
being
outfitted in
New Orleans
for action
along the
coast.
To
dislodge the
spike files
and solid shot
was
comparatively
easy. To
replace the
trunnions,
however,
required the
moulding of
16-inch rings
and stretching
them into
place while
the barrels
and rings were
white hot and
glowing red.
They then
threaded rings
in each barrel
one-half inch
deep and one
and one-half
inches wide,
over which the
threaded
wrought iron
rings were set
in place. The
greatest
hazard lay in
boring the
grooves too
deep, which
might cause
the barrels to
burst when
fired.
Kellersberg
feared that
during a
period of
sustained
fire, the
barrels would
not even be
accorded the
minimum
precaution of
swabbing out
(which they
weren't).
About
Sept. 1, 1863,
the engineer
returned with
the guns to
Fort Griffin,
where he found
Lt. Dowling
and his men
engaging in
daily gunnery
practice. The
engineer then
mounted the
repaired guns
on carriages,
test-fired
them, and he
drove white
stakes in both
channels to
mark the
maximum
gunnery range.
With his work
completed he
returned to
Galveston.
At
5:00 A. M. on
Sept. 8, the
major received
a telegram at
his home to
the effect
that a Federal
invasion force
had arrived
offshore from
Sabine Pass.
Commandeering
a rail handcar
and four
slaves, he
raced over the
48-miles of
track to
Houston in
time to catch
the special
train with the
general and
his staff to
Beaumont. Upon
arrival at
Sabine the
following
morning, he
found the
carnage of
battle strewn
everywhere,
along with the
dead and the
dying and a
jubilant
Confederate
garrison of 47
men in the
fort, none of
whom had
received a
scratch. The
major's
subordinate
officer, Lt.
Nicholas H.
Smith, had
taken command
of one battery
of guns during
the battle and
had become one
of the
immortal
heroes.
Kellersberg's
staff began
repair work
immediately,
equipping Fort
Griffin with
longer range
Parrott rifles
removed from
the captured
ships. They
laid lines of
torpedoes,"
built wagon
supply roads
of corduroy,
breatworks,
and other
defenses, for
the general's
greatest fear
was a renewal
of the attack.
The
major was soon
ordered to
construct Fort
Manhassett, 6
1/2 miles west
of Sabine
Pass, in order
to thwart any
beach landing
up Redfish
Bayou (now
silted over)
to Knight's
Lake and a
subsequent
attack from
the rear.
Kellersberg
and his slaves
labored
feverishly
there
throughout the
month of
October,
completing
five redoubts,
where he
installed six
24 and
32-pound guns.
A small four
gun fort was
built at the
mouth of
Taylor's
Bayou, but the
feared second
attack never
materialized.
The
major spent
much of 1864
preparing the
defenses of
the city of
Austin, after
which he was
appointed
superintendent
of the Houston
foundry. In
appreciation
of his
engineering
feats among
the city's
defenses, the
city council
of Galveston
adopted a
proclamation
on March 4,
1864, which
read:
"Resolved,
that the
thanks of the
Mayor and the
Aldermen of
the City of
Galveston are
hereby
tendered to
Col. V.
Sulakowski and
to Col. J.
Kellersberg,
the two
distinguished
engineers who
have displayed
so much
scientific and
military skill
in erecting
defenses
around the
city and other
vulnerable
points on the
gulf coast,
which stand in
bold defiance,
now complete,
to resist any
force our
common enemy
can bring to
bear against
us."
A
naval
historian
wrote that,
more than a
month after
Gen. Robert E.
Lee's
surrender, of
all the
Confederate
defense
bastions,
"only the
forts at
Sabine pass
are still
defiantly
held."
During
the summer of
1865, when the
Southland was
in physical
and economic
shambles, Col.
Kellersberg
sent his
family to live
in Switzerland
so that his
children could
attend school.
In company
with Gen.
Magruder, the
engineer
returned to
Mexico, where
he helped
construct the
Vera Cruz and
Mexico City
Railroad until
1868. He then
rejoined his
family in
Aargau,
Switzerland.
Soon
homesick for
America, his
only son then
returned to
Blanco County,
Texas, and the
other family
members soon
followed. With
old age
approaching,
Kellersberg
remained in
business there
for many
years. After
his wife's
death, the old
ex-Confederate
said a final
goodbye to his
children in
1893, a
parting that
was apparently
less painful
to him than
the thought of
his death and
burial away
from the
Alpine
homeland that
he loved so
dearly. In
1897, he was
the lone
ex-Rebel at an
encampment of
seventeen
Swiss veterans
of the
American Civil
War. Although
in ill health,
Julius
Kellersberger
lingered on
for three more
years,
eventually
dying in his
ancestral
home. He is
buried nearby
in the city of
Aargau.
Kellersberger's
German-language
memoirs,
Recollections
of a Swiss
Engineer in
California,
Mexico, and
Texas During
the Time of
the American
Civil War,
were
translated
into English
by his great
granddaughter,
and hundreds
of his
descendants
still reside
in Travis,
Blanco, and
neighboring
counties.
Compiled
from the
memoirs,
family
records, and
information
furnished by
Kellersberg's
grand
daughter, now
deceased, of
Marble Falls,
Texas. The
author owns
copies of both
Kellersberg's
German
language
memoirs as
well as its
translation
into English.
|