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THE
TALE OF TWO
OLD CANNONS:
SABINE HISTORY
WRITTEN IN
GUNSMOKE
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Port
Arthur NEWS,
August 29,
1970,
as well as
EAST TEXAS
HISTORICAL
JOURNAL, IX
(Oct. 1971),
p. 147.
Source:
Kellersberg's
German
language
memoirs
published in
Zurich,
Switzerland in
1896 and
translated
into English
by his great
granddaughter
of Austin.
Quite
often,
Jefferson
County joins
the citizenry
of Sabine
Pass, Texas,
during their
annual
celebration of
"Dick Dowling
Days" around
the Labor Day
weekend. Amid
the shrimp
fries and
pageantry, the
legends that
surround the
old
Confederate
heroes are
often
recirculated.
One of them,
the legend of
two old
cannons that
wrote half of
that Civil War
chapter in
gunsmoke, is
virtually
unknown and
may be of
interest to
the reader.
In
the spring of
1863, the
Confederate
chief engineer
for East
Texas, Major
Julius
Kellersberg,
arrived at the
seaport city
with orders to
construct Fort
Griffin. Upon
arrival, he
found the
village
largely
deserted, its
two sawmill
industries,
railway
station,
roundhouse,
many
residences and
supply of
sawed lumber
having been
burned the
previous
October by the
Federal naval
forces.
For
a new fortress
site,
Kellersberg
chose a point
where the ship
channel made a
near right
angle turn.
This location
would permit
the new mud
fort's guns to
traverse
across a
broader arc of
about 270
degrees. He
brought with
him from
Houston a work
force of about
500
conscripted
slaves and a
staff of
Confederate
engineers. For
construction
material,
there was a
supply of saw
logs,
crossties,
railroad iron,
and oyster
shell
available, but
no armament or
munitions. The
site of old
destroyed Fort
Sabine had
been at that
point where
the Sabine
channel split
into the Texas
and Louisiana
channels,
divided as it
was by the
shallow oyster
shell reef,
but the new
fortress site
would be where
the channels
exited a mile
farther
inland.
All
that were
available were
two old field
guns, of
6-pound and
12-pound size,
left over from
the Mexican
War and much
too small for
coastal
defense
against
invading Union
warships.
Kellersberg
was aware that
two 24-pound
long iron guns
were mounted
at Fort
Grigsby at
Port Neches,
Tx., and
another pair
of 32-pound
brass
howitzers were
available at
the shellbank
fort on the
Sabine River,
12 miles south
of Orange; the
engineer
arranged for
their transfer
to Sabine
Pass.
An
old fisherman
told
Kellersberg
about two
32-pound long
iron guns that
had been
buried a year
earlier when
Fort Sabine
had been
abandoned. The
engineer had
seen these
cannons during
an inspection
the previous
year, but knew
as well that
they had been
spiked before
the fort was
abandoned. He
feared that
they had been
damaged beyond
repair, and
was also aware
that if his
new
installation
were to be
defended
properly, he
must acquire
larger
weapons,
although he
knew that none
were available
at that
moment.
Together
the fisherman
and
Kellersberg
went to the
site of the
old fort,
where the
former showed
the engineer
the place
where the
cannons were
buried. After
some probing,
they located
the buried
weapons as
well as a
large supply
of 32-pound
solid shot
cannon balls.
As he had
feared, the
damage to the
guns was
considerable.
Each had been
spiked with
round files;
the trunnions
(swivels) had
been cut away,
and one barrel
had been
wedged with a
cannon ball.
As one who had
interspersed
wooden dummies
('quakers')
with real
artillery
among
Galveston's
beach
defenses,
Kellersberg
was reluctant
to throw them
away, and at
the first
opportunity he
took them to
the
Confederate
foundry in
that city.
At
home in
Galveston, his
chief, Col.
Valery
Sulakowski,
advised
strongly
against trying
to repair the
rusted
weapons. Still
reluctant to
dispose of
them, the
engineer
consulted with
the foundry's
chief
machinist. The
foundryman
attacked the
problem with
tremendous
vigor. Day and
night, he and
Kellersberg
hurried to
complete the
repairs for
reports had
already
reached Gen.
Magruder's
headquarters
that the
Federals were
expected to
turn their
attention to
the Texas
coast.
Repairs
to the big
guns required
molding
special
16-inch iron
rings and
stretching
them over the
barrels while
they were
heated and
still glowing
red. Then a
groove
one-half inch
deep and one
and one-half
inches wide
was twisted
into each
barrel over
which each of
the threaded
wrought iron
rings was
stretched. The
greatest
hazard lay in
boring the
grooves too
deep, which
might weaken
the barrels'
ability to
withstand the
concussion,
causing them
to explode
when fired.
Shortly
afterward,
Major
Kellersberg
loaded the
repaired
cannons along
with a supply
of shells and
solid shot on
the train
bound for
Beaumont.
While en route
to Sabine, he
gave each gun
two coats of
paint in order
to save time.
Two days
later, the
smoothbore
weapons were
mounted on gun
carriages in
Fort Griffin
and placed in
firing
position on
the fort's
parapets along
its sawtooth
front. The
cannons
survived the
test firings,
and
Kellersberg
drove white
markers near
the end of the
Texas and
Louisiana
channels on
each side of
the oyster
reef to
indicate the
guns' maximum
range.
When
the engineer
returned to
Galveston, his
fears were not
dimmed
completely,
and he
recorded in
his
German-language
memoirs that
he spent many
sleepless
nights
afterward. He
knew that, in
the din and
heat of
battle, the
cannons
probably would
not be
accorded even
the minimum
precaution of
swabbing out
to dampen any
surviving
sparks (which
proved to be
true). When
the U. S. S.
"Sachem"
steamed up the
Louisiana
channel on
September 8,
1863, the fire
of the
repaired
weapons was
concentrated
on the gunboat
because of
their greater
range and
accuracy.
These
guns were
commanded by
Lt. R. W.
Dowling
personally,
and on one
occasion he
narrowly
missed death
when a Union
cannon ball
knocked the
elevating
screw from one
of them. From
one of them,
gunner Michael
McKernan fired
the well-aimed
round that
exploded the
"Sachem's"
steam drum. At
the end of 40
minutes, both
the "Sachem"
and the
"Clifton" lay
helpless
wrecks,
aground and
engulfed in
steam from
their ruptured
boilers.
At
5 o'clock A.
M. on the
morning of
September 8,
Maj.
Kellersberg
received a
telegram at
his Galveston
home that the
Federal fleet
had attacked
Sabine Pass,
and that he
should report
immediately to
Houston. He
commandeered a
hand car, and
with the aid
of four
slaves, he
covered the 48
miles of
trackage to
Houston in
time to leave
with
Magruder's
staff on the
train for
Sabine.
En
route, his
fears remained
that the
repaired gun
barrels may
have exploded
in the ensuing
battle.
However, his
fears proved
to be
groundless.
Upon arrival,
he found two
mangled
gunboats,
captured
cannons and
stores, and
about 320
Federal
prisoners,
ample
testimony
indeed to the
quality of his
and his
foundryman's
craftsmanship
as well as to
the Irish
gunners'
marksmanship.
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