Fort
Manhassett was
located six
miles west of
Sabine Pass
near State
Highway 87 in
southeastern
Jefferson
County. After
the battle of
Sabine Passqv
Confederate
authorities
feared that
another Union
invasion force
might strike
the upper
Texas Gulf
Coast near
Sabine Pass.
To block this
threat, a
series of five
earthen
redoubts was
built on the
ridges west of
the city, thus
preventing
either a Union
attack on the
rear of Fort
Griffin or a
flanking
movement aimed
at Beaumont.
The defenses
were named
Fort
Manhassett
after the
Union coal
schooner
Manhassett,
which was
beached nearby
during a storm
on September
29, 1863.
Seven
companies,
commanded by
Maj. Felix
McReynolds,
held Fort
Manhassett in
October 1863;
the force had
been reduced
to 266 men by
January 1,
1864. As late
as March 1865
the post still
had six heavy
guns and two
field pieces.
Forts Griffin
and Manhassett
were both
abandoned
shortly before
May 24.
Excavations at
the latter
reveal that
the
Confederates
buried their
shells and
gunpowder
before the
evacuation. A
plaque now
marks the
location of
the abandoned
fort.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
W. T. Block, A
History of
Jefferson
County, Texas,
from
Wilderness to
Reconstruction
(M.A. thesis,
Lamar
University,
1974;
Nederland,
Texas:
Nederland
Publishing,
1976).
Robert
Wooster
-
Handbook of
Texas Online,
s.v. ","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/FF/qcf24.html (accessed
March 4,
2008).
(NOTE: "s.v."
stands for sub
verbo, "under
the word.")
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