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THE
BATTLE OF
CALCASIEU
PASS,
LOUISIANA
by
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
Enterprise,
May 6,
1977, p. 1d.
In
May, 1909, an
old
Confederate
veteran, J. A.
Brickhouse of
Beaumont,
Texas,
expressed a
fear that the
story of the
Battle of
Calcasieu
Pass,
Louisiana,
would
eventually be
lost to
posterity. At
that time, he
wrote one of
the three
eye-witness
accounts of
that battle
that are known
to survive. A
different
version of
that
engagement,
which appeared
in the
Centennial
Edition of the
Cameron, La.,
PILOT on March
12, 1970,
would
certainly lend
some credence
and
justification
to
Brickhouse's
fear. The
article read
as follows:
"In
1863, during
the height of
the Civil War,
two gunboats
fought a
battle in
front of
Leesburg
(which is now
the town of
Cameron). One
was a "Yankee"
ship and the
other was
Confederate.
The "Yankee"
ship won the
battle, and
the
Confederates
threw
everything
overboard."
Actually,
the true
circumstances
were almost
the opposite
of those that
appeared in
the newspaper
narrative. But
if the
residents of
Cameron, La.,
had grown
somewhat
forgetful over
the expanse of
years, their
memory loss
could
certainly be
forgiven in
light of the
fact that
Hurricane
Audrey of
June, 1957,
had entirely
washed that
seaport city
into the Gulf
of Mexico and
drowned over
500 of its
citizens. In
May, 1981,
more than a
century in
retrospect,
the people of
that rebuilt
community
dedicated the
granite
"Battle of
Calcasieu Pass
and War
memorial"
monument,
which is
erected in
front of the
Cameron Parish
courthouse,
and upon which
the names of
fourteen
Confederate
soldiers and
eight Union
sailors killed
in that battle
are forever
inscribed and
enshrined in
bronze.
Cameron,
La., is a
vibrant
seaport
community
(located about
two miles from
the mouth of
Calcasieu
River), which
is primarily a
service center
for the large
Louisiana
fishing,
shrimping, and
offshore oil
and gas
industries.
Much of the
adjoining
coastal
terrain is
marshy, rich
in wildlife
and
underground
mineral
resources,
although only
a few feet
above sea
level. An
aerial map of
the area
quickly
reveals a
horseshoe bend
of the
Calcasieu
River, no
longer a part
of the main
channel, and a
large river
island,
created by
channel-straightening
for the
deepsea
shipping lanes
to the inland
port of Lake
Charles. The
horseshoe bend
was the
location of
the Civil War
battle, and
present -day
Monkey Island
is the site
where white
pickets were
once torn from
a wooden fence
and fashioned
into crosses
to mark the
graves of the
Union and
Confederate
fighters who
are interred
there.
The
month of
April, 1864,
brought
elation to the
general staff
of the
Confederacy's
Trans-Mississippi
Department,
even if the
prosecution of
the war at all
points
elsewhere was
going badly
for the South.
During the
previous year,
four
Texas-bound
invasion
armadas, two
each by land
and sea, had
been mounted,
and only one
attempt, the
Federal
occupation of
the South
Texas coast in
Nov., 1863,
had succeeded.
In the summer
and fall of
that year, the
Bayou Teche
(La.) campaign
of Gen.
Nathaniel
Banks' army
reached a
highwater mark
near
Opelousas,
La., before
beginning an
orderly
retreat back
to Morgan
City. In
Sept., 1863, a
similar
attempt by sea
was repulsed
at Sabine
Pass, Texas,
on Louisiana's
western
boundary. The
source of
greatest
Confederate
pride had been
the rebuff of
Gen. Banks'
Red River
campaign at
the battles of
Pleasant Hill
and Sabine
Crossroads.
But
the invasion
jitters
lingered on.
Cut off as the
Trans-Mississippi
Department was
from the
remainder of
the
Confederate
States, the
Rebel armies
fighting in
Arkansas and
Lousiana were
entirely
dependent upon
the supply
lines which
transported
not only Texas
reinforcements,
corn , and
beef, but also
muskets,
gunpowder, and
lead unloaded
in Texas'
blockade-running
seaports.
Thus, any
invasion
threat was
viewed as an
attempt to
isolate Texas
from Louisiana
and Arkansas.
Although the
intent and
plans of the
Federal
gunboats which
anchored in
the Calcasieu
River in
April, 1864,
were
considerably
less sinister
than the
Confederate
authorities
believed, the
Rebel command
took no
chances,
believing
their presence
signalled
another
prelude to
invasion.
For
almost three
years, neither
the
Confederates
nor the
Union's West
Gulf
Blockading
Squadron had
expressed much
interest in
the Calcasieu
River, which
is only 38
miles from the
Texas border.
After the
outbreak of
war, Gen. M.
Lovell of New
Orleans
notified the
Confederate
Secretary of
War, Judah
Benjamin, that
"one company
with two
42-pounders"
had erected a
mud fort at
Calcasieu
"Bay" to
prevent Union
"foraging
parties from
reaching the
cattle . . ."
along the
Pass. For much
of the war,
the Calcasieu
fort was
abandoned
except during
the fall and
winter of
1863-1864.
Since about 25
miles of
marshes and
lowlands
extended
inland and on
both sides of
the Pass, it
would appear
that neither
foe regarded
the Calcasieu
River as being
worthy of
invasion or
defense. As a
result, for a
long time
there were no
Confederate
soldiers
garrisoning
the mud fort,
and only a
sporadic
blockader of
the West Gulf
Squadron ever
bothered to
check there
for Rebel
shipping.
Blockade-runners
entered and
exited the
Calcasieu
River with
almost the
clock-like
precision of
passenger
trains, and
because of
several Union
sympathizers
living along
the Calcasieu
Pass, foraging
parties from
passing
blockade ships
often rode
inland to
"gather
beeves" or
seek
information
about
Confederate
activities. In
Oct., 1862, in
a daring
example of
Union bravery
and courage, a
sloop filled
with 14
sailors and a
boat howitzer
traveled
inland 80
miles, burned
three
blockade-runners,
captured the
steamboat
"Dan," and
after six
days, escaped
downriver
without a
single
casualty or a
shot being
fired at them.
During
the month of
March, 1864,
Co. C of
Daly's Cavalry
Battalion,
based at
Sabine Pass,
Texas, had
been
patrolling
near the
mouths of the
Calcasieu and
Mermentau
Rivers for the
purpose of
engaging and
capturing as
many of the
Mermentau
"Jayhawkers"
as the
troopers could
locate and
subdue. On
March 7,
Lieutenant
Colonel W. F.
Griffin,
commanding
Sabine Post,
had been
ordered by
letter to
increase his
"reconnaissances
. . . . into
that country
and in some
force in
consequence of
the
Jayhawkers,
who are
committing all
sorts of
depredations .
. ." Later, in
response to a
countermanding
order, Col.
Griffin had to
dispatch
troops to
North
Louisiana in
consequence of
the Red River
campaign.
On
April 20,
1864, Griffin
reported that
he had "been
compelled to
evacuate the
post at
Calcasieu
Pass. I deem
it important
that a company
should be kept
at that place
to prevent the
enemy from
sending
launches up
the river . .
. and burning
any of our
vessels that
may be about
running the
blockade." On
April 21, a
letter advised
the
Confederacy's
Trans-Mississippi
Department at
Shreveport,
La., that "a
large enemy
transport with
1,000 troops
aboard passed
Galveston
yesterday
evening from
the west,
going east . .
." in the
direction of
Calcasieu.
Hence, when
the U. S. S.
"Wave" dropped
anchor,
opposite the
home of Duncan
Smith, the
arch-Unionist,
in the
Calcasieu Pass
on April 24,
Rebel
authorities
quickly
envisioned
another
invasion
attempt on the
drawing board.
About
April 1, Smith
(the writer's
great
grandfather),
his sons, and
five or six
Unionist
neighbors (who
were
identified as
"refugees" in
Union
correspondence)
rode a
blockade
vessel to New
Orleans in an
effort to
convince the
Federal navy
that it was
safe to anchor
gunboats in
the Calcasieu
River. Dunc
Smith also
agreed that he
and his men
would maintain
pickets at
several
different
locations to
guard the
ships; would
act as "go
between" with
the Mermentau
Jayhawkers
during the
process of
buying,
rounding up,
and loading
450 heads of
stolen cattle
and horses;
and would
recruit
enlistees for
the navy among
the Union
sympathizers
of Calcasieu
Parish.
On
April 15, Lt.
Benjamin
Loring, a
feisty and
courageous
commander,
sailed the
"Wave" out of
the
Mississippi
River's
Southwest Pass
in pursuit of
Smith's plan.
For a few days
the vessel
docked in
Atchafalaya
Bay while
storm damage
to the ship
was being
repaired. On
April 24, the
"Wave" arrived
off Calcasieu
Pass and fired
a number of
rounds at the
abandoned
fort.
"Receiving no
response,"
Loring sent a
launch ashore
to burn
barracks and
then steered
the ship to
its anchorage
two miles
upstream, in
front of
Duncan Smith's
home, to await
recoaling and
the loading of
the stolen
livestock.
The
"Wave," a
fairly new
steamboat
formerly known
as the
"Argosy" or
"Tinclad
Gunboat No.
45," was a
high-pressure
steamer, only
recently
released from
Mississippi
River duty
around Port
Hudson. Her
sides were of
8-inch oak
walls
reinforced by
one-half inch
boiler plate,
and her
armament
consisted of
six guns,
namely, a
20-pound
Parrott rifle;
a 32-pounder
smoothbore,
that was soon
to have its
barrel split
four feet in
length; and
four
24-pounder
Dahlgren
howitzers. On
April 28, the
low-pressure
steam gunboat
"Granite City"
arrived and
anchored about
300 yards
downstream.
Its master,
Lt. C. W.
Lamson, had
been chided
for his swift
retreat from
combat eight
months earlier
at Sabine
Pass, and for
his propensity
for "seeing
ghosts" --
that is,
ghosts of the
Confederate
States steamer
"Alabama."
Many of his
crewmen were
survivors of
the ill-fated
U. S. S.
"Hatteras,"
sunk by the
famed raider
"Alabama" in
Dec., 1862, a
few miles
south of
Galveston
Island. The
armament of
the "Granite
City"
consisted of
one 20-pounder
Parrott rifle;
a 12-pounder
Parrott; and
six 24-pound
Dahlgren guns.
The latter
vessel also
debarked one
lieutenant and
twenty-six
soldiers of
the 36th
Illinois
Infantry, who
set up their
camps on the
east side of
the river and
began picket
duties and
rounding up
cattle.
Upon
arrival, Lt.
Loring, in
conjunction
with Smith,
began the
necessary
procedures to
safeguard the
steamers. He
dispatched one
patrol to the
west to burn
bridges over
Mud and Oyster
Bayous in
order to cut
communications
along the
beach road to
Texas. At
first Duncan
Smith's party
of Unionists
totalled only
eight or ten
'refugees,'
but he
succeeded in
enlisting the
aid of about
ten neighbors
to help stand
guard as
pickets;
collect
horses,
saddles, and
arms; and
round up
cattle for
which Lt.
Loring was
paying in
gold. Smith
found enough
Northern
sympathizers
who were
willing to
help out
locally,
whereas on one
of his
missions he
failed
miserably. He
could locate
no one
sufficiently
motivated who
would enlist
in the Federal
navy. Guard
pickets were
posted at four
locations,
along the
roads to the
east and west,
at the mouth
of the river,
and a few
miles to the
north, where
the Pass
emptied into
Calcasieu
Lake. As an
added
precaution,
many local
residents
deemed loyal
to the
Confederacy
were arrested
and locked up
on the
"Granite City"
for
safekeeping.
Loring also
furnished
seven tons of
coal to the
tug "Ella
Morse," bound
for Brashear
(Morgan) City,
La., with
naval
dispatches.
With only one
ton of coal in
reserve until
a recoaling
vessel
arrived,
Loring sent
some of his
crew ashore to
collect
firewood for
boiler fuel.
Almost
as soon as the
"Wave"
anchored in
the river, a
loyal resident
rode horseback
to Fort
Griffin at
Sabine to
notify Col.
Griffin of the
gunboat's
arrival.
Another
horseman
carried the
same news to
Lake Charles
and to the
Confederate
quartermaster
depot at
Niblett's
Bluff, La.
Griffin wired
the Houston
headquarters
of Maj.
General J. B.
Magruder (then
on duty in
Louisiana),
and the terse
reply was
telegraphed by
Gen. P. O.
Hebert on
April 30 to
Cols. Griffin
and A. W.
Spaight, as
follows:
"Attack the
small force at
Calcasieu at
once, and
disperse,
defeat, and
capture the
expedition!"
In
compliance,
Col. Spaight
dispatched
four companies
of the 11th
Texas
Battalion,
then on duty
at Niblett's
Bluff, Capt.
O. M. Marsh's
Co. A; Capt.
G. W.
O'Brien's Co.
B; Capt. W. C.
Gibbs' Co. C;
and Capt. B.
E. Gentry's
Co. D, aboard
the steamboat
"Sunflower" to
Sabine Pass,
where Col.
Griffin was
assembling a
combat force
soon to begin
the long trek
overland.
Spaight then
marched the
remainder of
his battalion
to Lake
Charles,
prepared to
secure all
cotton and
shipping
there, as well
as defend that
point if the
need arose.
Meanwhile,
Col. Griffin's
Sabine Post,
comprising
Forts Griffin
and
Manhassett,
had been
stripped of
many troops,
most of them
having been
sent to North
Louisiana.
Only 58 men
and sixteen
horses of
Captain E.
Creuzbauer's
battery of
light
artillery,
composed of
two six
pounders and
two
12-pounders,
were available
for combat
duty at
Calcasieu
Pass, one-half
of its roster
being on
detached
service. The
cannoneers,
mostly German
immigrant
farmers from
Fayette
County, Texas,
had spent much
of the war on
the Mexican
border, and
had
experienced no
combat action
prior to their
transfer to
Fort
Manhassett.
About twenty
cavalrymen of
Capt. Howard's
Co. B of
Daily's
Battalion were
also available
for the
expedition. In
addition to
Spaight's
troops, Col.
Griffin had
three
companies of
his own 21st
Texas
Battalion,
Companies A,
C, and E under
Capts. Evans,
Deegan, and
Givens,
altogether
about 325 men,
assigned to
the command of
Major Felix C.
McReynolds of
Fort
Manhassett.
On
the morning of
May 4, 1864,
Col. Griffin
began
assembling his
attack force
at Fort
Griffin, being
cautious not
to betray his
plans to the
lookouts
aboard the
three Federal
Blockaders at
the mouth of
the harbor.
The Louisiana
shore opposite
Sabine Pass
being
considered as
impassable
marsh terrain,
the
infantrymen
were loaded
throughout the
day aboard the
steamboat
"Dime,"
carried into
Sabine Lake
first, and
thence up
Johnson's
Bayou to the
head of
navigation.
Griffin
ordered the
artillery,
caissons,
teams, and
wagon loads of
supplies,
pontoons, and
bridge timbers
loaded aboard
the "Dime" and
ferried to
Louisiana
after dusk to
avoid
revealing his
movements to
offshore
lookouts. On
the morning of
May 5, the
Confederates
put the
finishing
touches to
guns,
ammunition,
wagons, and
other gear at
Johnson's
Bayou, and
about noon,
fell into
columns and
began the
thirty-mile
march along
Blue Buck
Ridge and the
beach road to
Calcasieu
Pass.
Col.
Griffin
expected to
reach the
river by
midnight and
allow his
weary
travelers some
time to rest
before the
battle would
begin at
daylight.
Instead,
progress was
unbearably
slow, and upon
reaching the
burned-out Mud
Bayou bridge,
their effort
to replace it
with a pontoon
bridge
consumed two
hours longer
than expected.
As a result,
when the
troops reached
the Calcasieu
about 5:00
o'clock A. M.,
there was
barely time
for the
cannoneers to
position their
pieces at
1,000 yards
range and for
the infantry
to seek cover
along the
river banks.
As a result,
the Rebel
force fought
with only
three hours
rest during
the
eighteen-hour
march.
As
the first arc
of dawn
punctured the
horizon that
morning, the
guns of
Creuzbauer's
Battery opened
fire first to
allow the
advance of the
infantry to
the edge of
the Pass.
There was
almost no
cover there
for the
sharpshooters
except a cow
pen fence,
some scrub
mesquite
bushes, and
the marsh salt
grass, which
grows to about
one foot in
height.
Surprise was
complete, with
most of the
Bluejackets
still asleep
in their bunks
and hammocks.
Nevertheless,
Lt. Charles
Welhausen's
twelve-pounders
and Lt. J. D.
Mieksch's
six-pounders
had time to
fire only
eight or ten
shells before
the first
response from
the gunboats
arrived, both
"deadly and
accurate." The
crew of Rebel
gun No. 1, a
12-pounder
under Corporal
Walter von
Rosenberg
(whose
eye-witness
account of the
battle also
survives),
took the first
casualties
with Private
William Kneip
killed
instantly and
Private
William Guhrs
mortally
wounded.
Although
dying,
cannoneer
Guhrs stuck to
his post for
the remainder
of the battle
even though he
was confined
to a kneeling
position.
From
the beginning,
the fire of
three guns had
been
concentrated
on the
"Granite City"
because of
that gunboat's
superiority in
firepower. One
of the next
Union shells
scored a
direct hit on
Corporal
Philip Degen's
gun No. 3, at
that moment
the only gun
firing on the
"Wave,"
mortally
wounding
Private Henry
Foesterman in
the head,
Private John
Lynch through
both thighs,
as well as
Corporal
Ferdinand
Fahrenthold,
the cannoneer.
The shell
burst
completely
destroyed the
weapon,
knocking the
barrel from
the carriage
and the wheels
from the axle
shaft, and
also wounded
Degen,
Sergeant Peter
Franz, and
Corporal J.
Therriat, a
Frenchman who
had deserted
Emperor
Maxmillian's
army in
Mexico.
For
a time at the
beginning, the
outcome of the
battle was
very much in
doubt. Col.
Griffin had
assumed charge
of the
artillery
attack, while
Major
McReynolds
double-timed
the
infantrymen to
the banks of
the river. As
Griffin had
correctly
guessed, the
tinclads had
no steam up,
but puffs of
smoke
indicated that
the engineers
were stoking
the boiler
fires. Volleys
of minie balls
from the
sharpshooters
began striking
the boiler
plate on the
sides of the
vessels and
flattening
out. But the
infantry
musket fire
was
nevertheless
quite
effective
against the
navy gun
crews,
especially
those
"swabbing out"
the cannon
barrels. Every
effort by the
sailors to
raise anchors
triggered
another
torrent of
minie balls as
well, as did
the presence
of a pilot in
the wheel
house. After
steam was up,
both ships
attempted to
drag anchors,
but without
success;
hence, some
navy gunners
were wholly
dependent upon
ship movements
caused by the
river currents
for aiming
their guns.
Union
prisoners
later praised
the coolness
and courage of
a "lone
Confederate
musketeer in
the open
field" who
insisted on
loading his
musket,
ramming his
charge home,
aiming and
firing from a
standing
position only,
totally
oblivious to
the torrent of
minie balls
from the navy
marksmen, who
said of his
bravery ---
"it irritated
every man who
shot at him!"
The
unidentified
Rebel warrior
was probably
one of the six
Confederate
infantrymen
killed in the
attack.
While
the infantry
bore the brunt
of the fight,
Lieutenant
Welhausen
began moving
guns No. 1, 2,
and 4 up about
600 yards
closer to
their targets.
The new
proximity to
the gunboats
greatly
favored the
Confederate
cannoneers
thereafter.
Both wheel
houses on the
tinclads were
soon shot
away. And
moreover, in
addition to
problems of
aiming the
navy guns that
were wholly
dependent on
current
movements,
there were new
problems of
elevation
because the
barrels of
some of the
gunboats'
batteries
could not be
depressed low
enough to be
effective at
such short
range. After
only thirty
minutes of
combat, during
which his men
had fired only
thirty shells
and had
received
fifteen shell
hits in return
fire, Lt.
Lamson, having
lost all urge
to continue
his defense,
ran up a white
flag on the
"Granite
City." He soon
lowered a boat
for Col.
Griffin and
some of his
officers to
come aboard,
for the Rebel
commander had
hopes of
turning the
cannons of the
"Granite City"
against the
other gunboat.
Believing the
battle to be
near its end,
the
Confederate
infantry
cheered and
yelled, not
realizing that
the
stout-hearted
Lieutenant
Loring of the
"Wave" had no
intention of
surrendering.
Very
quickly, the
remaining
artillery of
Creuzbauer's
Battery were
moved again
and aimed at
the other
tinclad.
Loring
realized his
hopeless and
untenable
situation, but
the "Wave"
being his
first command,
he was not
about to
surrender
prematurely,
lest he be
"remembered
only as
disgraced."
Despite his
gallant
defense, which
only succeeded
in delaying
the battle for
another hour,
he was
destined to
bear the
stigma of
coward anyway,
because some
superior
officer of the
Navy
Department in
Washington
noted that
"there were no
men killed" on
the "Wave."
Even
as all the
weapons of the
Confederate
attackers were
turned on the
hapless
tinclad, the
guns aboard
the "Wave"
were rendered
virtually
useless. The
broadside
Dahlgren
cannons were
ineffective
except when
the current
shifted the
boat about,
and one of
these lost its
pivoting bolt.
The only
projectiles
for the
20-pound bow
gun were
"percussion
shells." A
Rebel 12-pound
shell, fired
from gun No. 4
by cannoneer
Joseph
Brickhouse,
struck inside
the muzzle of
the "Wave's"
other bow gun,
the 32-pound
smoothbore,
exploding it,
splitting the
barrel four
feet, and
injuring the
crew. With
steam finally
up, Loring
hoped until
the end to be
able to raise
anchor and
escape when
another
12-pound solid
shot from gun
No. 1, fired
by Corporal
von Rosenberg,
struck the
steam drum,
rendering it,
the boilers,
and the
starboard
engine
useless. With
all hope gone,
Lt. Loring
raised a white
flag, but he
delayed
lowering a
boat.
Altogether,
sixty-five
shells had
struck the
"Wave" during
the ninety
minute battle,
fifty of them
fired from
Degen's No. 4
gun, and
fifteen from
von
Rosenberg's
battery,
whereas only
fifteen shells
had exploded
on the
"Granite
City."
One
of the
highlights of
the battle
came from the
pen of Joseph
Brickhouse,
who at one
stage of the
engagement,
when the
outcome was
tilted against
the
Confederates,
described
Major
McReynolds and
Lieutenant
Welhausen as
"two of the
bravest
officers who
ever drew
sword, (who)
ralled their
men in such
terms as no
one who heard
them will ever
forget."
Across
the river
there were
twenty-seven
Union soldiers
who took no
part in the
conflict, but
who
surrendered as
soon as the
firing ceased.
Shortly after
the battle
began, Col.
Griffin had
appropriated a
nearby farm
house for use
as a hospital
for the
Confederate
wounded.
Whereas only
one major
operation was
performed on
Confederate
casualties,
there were
nine 'capital'
operations
performed on
the Union
wounded aboard
the "Granite
City" by Rebel
surgeons
Gordon,
Barton, and
Dr. George H.
Bailey as well
as Union
surgeons
Boyden and E.
C. Vermuelen.
The memoirs of
Captain Daniel
Goos, an early
Calcasieu
sawmiller,
reveal that
Dr. Vermuelen,
almost two
months after
the battle had
ended, was
still treating
the recovering
Union
casualties at
Lake Charles
and dining in
the Goos home.
On
the night of
the
engagement,
First Sergeant
H. N. Connor
of Co. A, 11th
Texas
Battalion,
wrote in his
diary:
"Surgeons
(aboard the
"Granite
City") engaged
in amputating
this evening,
which is the
worst sight of
the whole
affair." One
body lay dead
on the deck of
the "Granite
City" when the
victorious
Rebels came
aboard.
Capital
operations
performed on
the wounded
sailors
included
Quartermaster
John Jacobs,
Seamen Joseph
Johnson, John
Scott, William
H. Hayden, and
Ensign S. R.
Tyrrell, all
of whom later
died, as well
as eight
others with
lesser wounds.
As late as
June 14, five
weeks after
the battle,
Confederate
surgeons
obtained
chloroform
from an
offshore
blockader
under a flag
of truce to
amputate the
gangrenous leg
of Ensign A.
H. Berry, who
also died.
Upon
going aboard
the "Granite
City," Col.
Griffin
marveled that
the vessel was
so badly
damaged from
exploding
shells, with
large wooden
splinters and
debris
everywhere, as
well as many
severely
wounded but
only one
killed. A few
days later,
five Union
bodies were
"washed
ashore, to
which weights
had been
attached and
thrown
aboard." In
his second
report,
Griffin
observed "how
many more dead
were thrown
overboard (by
Lt. Lamson and
why) of course
will never be
known."
When
Lt. Loring
raised a white
flag on the
"Wave," Major
McRaynolds
called on the
gunboat to
lower a
whaleboat so
he could come
aboard. For
several
minutes after
the guns
ceased, all
was quiet
aboard the
"Wave,"
although Col.
Griffin could
see that the
Union sailors
were
jettisoning
"pistols,
guns, swords,
etc." as well
as an iron
safe (which
contained
$9,000 in
gold), and
even attempted
to cast
overboard two
heavy Dahlgren
howitzers
without
success. Von
Rosenberg
fired another
shell across
the bow with
no response.
After another
shell exploded
aboard, the
"white flag
came up like
lightening"
once more, and
the
Bluejackets
began lowering
a boat for
McReynolds.
Upon
reaching the
deck of the
defeated
steamer, the
sight was
perhaps even
worse than had
been expected
following the
explosion of
sixty-five
shells.
Sergeant
Connor wrote
in his diary
that ". . . .
the Wave is a
perfect wreck,
her cabin torn
to flinders,
and minie
balls have
riddled her,
and then the
shells
exploding
aboard put the
finishing
touch to her.
The deck was
strewn with
glass,
crockery,
clocks, stoves
and pipes,
wooden
splinters,
provisions,
bedding . . .
." Ironically,
it appeared
that the
"Wave,"
although it
had sustained
four-fifths of
the shell hits
and had fought
twice as long,
had suffered
the least
casualties,
with no dead
and only ten
wounded.
Confederate
casualties
were somewhat
higher, with
fourteen
soldiers
killed or
dying and nine
wounded who
survived. The
dead included
Kneip,
Fahrenthold,
Lynch, Guehrs,
and Foesterman
of the
artillery;
Aaron Russell,
J. D.
Lancaster, R.
M. Jones, A.
Sprinkle and
W. A. Jackson
of Griffin's
21st
Battalion; J.
J. Risinger of
Spaight's
Battalion; and
P.
Whittenberg,
M. Yvarro, and
W. Ingle of
Daly's
Cavalry.
At
least two or
three of
Creuzbauer or
Welhausen's
Battery
distinguished
themselves in
particular by
remaining at
their cannons
even though
they had
incurred
mortal or
serious
wounds. John
Lynch and
Ferdinand
Fahrenthold
were two of
those, and
William
Guehrs,
although he
could only
fight from a
kneeling
position, kept
on until the
battle ended.
Guehrs' wounds
were serious,
although not
considered
mortal, and he
was soon
granted a
recuperation
furlough to
his home in
Waldeck,
Texas,
accompanied by
his friend
Conrad Frosch.
Guehrs'
condition
gradually
worsened and
he died
September 3,
1864. His
valor at his
artillery post
was not
forgotten, and
today his
Confederate
Congressional
Medal of Honor
is on display
at the
Imperial
Calcasieu
Museum in Lake
Charles,
Louisiana.
Other
than two
tinclads,
Union losses
included 166
prisoners,
fourteen
contraband or
freed slaves,
14 cannons, a
large quantity
of provisions
and arms, and
450 heads of
cattle and
horses. That
night the
Confederates
feasted on
"captured
stores of
oysters,
sardines, and
hams." For
unknown
reasons, Col.
Griffin rushed
to get his
troops,
prisoners, and
booty back to
Sabine Pass as
witness the
speed with
which news of
the Rebel
victory
appeared in
the Houston
and Galveston
newspapers of
May 8 and 9.
On
the evening of
the battle, he
started half
of the walking
prisoners back
under the
guard of
Griffin's
Battalion. On
the 7th, the
remainder
(except the
wounded) and
the wagon
loads of
captured
provisions and
munitions
began the long
trek along the
beach road in
the care of
Creuzbauer's
Battery and
some of
Spaight's
troops.
Sergeant
Connor and his
company
remained on
the gunboats
at Calcasieu
Pass for two
more weeks,
and his diary
is highly
critical of
Griffin's
performance,
particularly
of the
latter's
failure to
leave any
trained
artillerymen
on the
tinclads.
Connor added
that Griffin
had "put seven
of our boys in
the guard
house for
confiscating a
captured ham."
As
it turned out,
a lack of
trained
cannoneers
could have
proved
disastrous to
the
Confederates.
By May 13,
there were
four
blockading
gunboats on
the Calcasieu
bar, and
Admiral David
Farragut's
correspondence
indicates that
he was
planning to
launch a
relief
expedition to
recapture the
two vessels.
On May 8 the
steam tug Ella
Morse returned
from Brashear
City with
dispatches and
coal, and got
within
one-half mile
of the
gunboats
before
discerning
that something
was amiss. As
the Morse
retreated
seaward, the
Granite City
fired several
shells that
fell far short
of the target.
From the banks
of the river,
Connor and
some of his
men fired
several minie
balls at the
Union steamer,
but were
unable to
prevent its
escape.
On
May 10, the
blockader New
London
anchored off
the bar and
sent Ensign
Henry Jackson
and six seamen
up the river
in a whale
boat. With
dispatches for
delivery,
Jackson soon
saw the Rebel
Stars and Bars
at the
masthead of
the Granite
City, which he
considered to
be some kind
of joke. Upon
reaching
musket range,
he fired a
shot at the
Confederate
flag, and in
an amazing
quirk of fate,
Jackson was
shot through
the head by a
single minie
ball fired
from the
"Granite
City." Others
in the whale
boat
surrendered at
once.
Connor
and Company A
of Spaight's
Battalion
remained on
the gunboats
for a total of
sixteen days,
during which
time they
kedged the
"Wave" over
the Calcasieu
Lake bar, and
sent the
tinclad and
its wounded up
the river to
Lake Charles.
Finally they
were relieved
by members of
Colonel Leon
Smith's "Texas
Marine
Department"
(the
Confederate
Navy in Texas,
of whom Connor
was equally
critical), at
which time
Company A
returned to
Texas. In
January, 1865,
both gunboats,
by then
stripped of
armament and
outfitted as
blockade-runners,
escaped to
Mexico. And
the following
June, after
the war had
ended, the
"Granite
City," by then
renamed the
"Three Marys,"
was seen at
anchor in
Tampico
harbor. After
the battle of
Calcasieu, the
feisty Lt.
Loring escaped
from prison
camp twice,
eventually
reaching the
Union lines in
Lousiana in
October.
However, his
letters of
February and
March, 1865,
from the
Washington
Navy Yard
indicate that
he was still
"disgraced"
because of his
performance at
Calcasieu
Pass, and his
naval career
was
effectively
ruined.
The
Calcasieu
engagement won
praise for
Col. Griffin
from Gen.
Magruder's
Houston
headquarters,
but there were
no lengthy
plaudits or
flowery
epithets.
Instead, the
general's
report to the
Trans-Mississippi
Department was
about as
precise and
matter-of-fact
as had been
his orders to
attack,
reading
curtly:
"Griffin
attacked the
enemy at
Calcasieu
yesterday
morning;
captured
gunboats
"Wave" and
"Granite
City."
The
Battle of
Calcasieu Pass
is interesting
if only as one
of those Civil
War battles
about which
very little
has ever been
written. In a
war that had
to be won by
large armies
on the
battlefields
of Virginia,
perhaps very
little of the
conflict in
the
Trans-Misissippi
Department can
be defined as
having been
"strategically
important." On
a lesser and
localized
scale, the
Confederate
victory
brought an end
to the
Mermentau
"Jayhawker"
depredations,
forcing them
to remain
hidden in the
marshes for
the remainder
of the war. It
came as a
'grand finale'
to the Rebel
successes of
the Red River
campaign in
North
Louisiana.
Calcasieu Pass
also proved to
be the last
action for any
of the battle
participants;
the last
encounter
fought solely
by Texas
Confederate
soldiers; the
last
"significant
defeat" of the
Union navy for
the control of
the
Texas-Louisiana
coast; and the
last of four
minor
victories
achieved by
the Sabine
Pass garrison.
And although
the war was to
last for ten
months
thereafter,
most of the
rivers and
seaports of
Western
Louisiana and
Eastern Texas,
although
blockaded,
continued to
fly the
Confederate
emblem until
the last
echoes of the
long conflict
were silenced.
Primary
and secondary
sources: H. N.
Connor, "Diary
of First
Sergeant H. N.
Connor,
1861-1865,"
unpublished,
copy owned by
the writer; C.
K. Ragan,
"Diary of
Captain George
W. O'Brien,"
Houston, No
Date; J. A.
Brickhouse,
"Battle of
Calcasieu
Pass,"
Beaumont, Tx.
ENTERPRISE,
May 9, 1909;
W. von
Rosenberg,
"Calcasieu
Pass,"
CONFEDERATE
VETERAN, XXVI,
516ff; Paul C.
Boethel, THE
BIG GUNS OF
FAYETTE
(Austin:
1965);
"History of
Spaight's 21st
Texas
Regiment," A.
W. Spaight
Papers, File
2G276, Barker
History
Center,
Austin, Tx.;
A. Barr, "The
Battle of
Calcasieu
Pass,"
SOUTHWESTERN
HISTORICAL
QUARTERLY,
LXVI (July,
1962); W. T.
Block,
"Calcasieu
Pass Victory,"
EAST TEXAS
HISTORICAL
JOURNAL, IX
(Oct., 1971);
WAR OF THE
REBELLION-OFFICIAL
RECORDS,
ARMIES, Series
1, Vol. XXXIV,
Pt. 1,
910-914; also
NAVIES, Series
I, Vol. XXI,
246-260; J. T.
Scharf,
HISTORY OF THE
CONFEDERATE
STATES NAVY,
527-528;
Galveston
WEEKLY NEWS,
May 9, 10;
June 22, 1864;
TRI-WEEKLY
NEWS, May 8,
June 20, 1864;
Houston DAILY
TELEGRAPH, May
9, 11, 1864;
see also Gregg
S. Clemmer,
Valor in Gray,
Hearthside
Pub. Co.:
Staunton, Va.,
1996, pp.
412-418,
wherein one
soldier won
the
Confederate
Congressional
Medal of Honor
at the Battle
of Calcasieu
Pass.
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