The
battle of
Sabine Pass,
on September
8, 1863,
turned back
one of several
Union attempts
to invade and
occupy part of
Texas during
the Civil War.qv
The United
States Navy
blockaded the
Texas coast
beginning in
the summer of
1861, while
Confederates
fortified the
major ports.
Union interest
in Texas and
other parts of
the
Confederacy
west of the
Mississippi
River resulted
primarily from
the need for
cotton by
northern
textile mills
and concern
about French
intervention
in the Mexican
civil war. In
September 1863
Gen. Nathaniel
P. Banksqv
sent by
transport from
New Orleans
4,000 soldiers
under the
command of
Gen. William
B. Franklin to
gain a
foothold at
Sabine Pass,
where the
Sabine River
flows into the
Gulf of
Mexico. A
railroad ran
from that area
to Houston and
opened the way
into the
interior of
the state. The
Western Gulf
Blockading
Squadron of
the United
States Navy
sent four
gunboats
mounting
eighteen guns
to protect the
landing. At
Sabine Pass
the
Confederates
recently had
constructed
Fort Griffin,
an earthwork
that mounted
six cannon,
two
twenty-four
pounders and
four
thirty-two
pounders. The
Davis Guards,qv
Company F of
the First
Texas Heavy
Artillery
Regiment, led
by Capt.
Frederick
Odlum, had
placed stakes
along both
channels
through the
pass to mark
distances as
they sharpened
their accuracy
in early
September. The
Union forces
lost any
chance of
surprising the
garrison when
a blockader
missed its
arranged
meeting with
the ships from
New Orleans on
the evening of
September 6.
The navy
commander, Lt.
Frederick
Crocker, then
formed a plan
for the
gunboats to
enter the pass
and silence
the fort so
the troops
could land.
The Cliftonqv
shelled the
fort from long
range between
6:30 and 7:30
A.M. on the
8th, while the
Confederates
remained under
cover because
the ship
remained out
of reach for
their cannon.
Behind the
fort Odlum and
other
Confederate
officers
gathered
reinforcements,
although their
limited
numbers would
make
resistance
difficult if
the federal
troops landed.
Finally
at 3:40 P.M.
the Union
gunboats began
their advance
through the
pass, firing
on the fort as
they steamed
forward. Under
the direction
of Lt. Richard
W. Dowlingqv
the
Confederate
cannoneers
emerged to man
their guns as
the ships came
within 1,200
yards. One
cannon in the
fort ran off
its platform
after an early
shot. But the
artillerymen
fired the
remaining five
cannon with
great
accuracy. A
shot from the
third or
fourth round
hit the boiler
of the Sachem,qv
which
exploded,
killing and
wounding many
of the crew
and leaving
the gunboat
without power
in the channel
near the
Louisiana
shore. The
following
ship, the
Arizona,
backed up
because it
could not pass
the Sachem and
withdrew from
the action.
The Clifton,
which also
carried
several
sharpshooters,
pressed on up
the channel
near the Texas
shore until a
shot from the
fort cut away
its tiller
rope as the
range closed
to a quarter
of a mile.
That left the
gunboat
without the
ability to
steer and
caused it to
run aground,
where its crew
continued to
exchange fire
with the
Confederate
gunners.
Another
well-aimed
projectile
into the
boiler of the
Clifton sent
steam and
smoke through
the vessel and
forced the
sailors to
abandon ship.
The Granite
City
also turned
back rather
than face the
accurate
artillery of
the fort, thus
ending the
federal
assault. The
Davis Guards
had fired
their cannon
107 times in
thirty-five
minutes of
action, a rate
of less than
two minutes
per shot,
which ranked
as far more
rapid than the
standard for
heavy
artillery. The
Confederates
captured 300
Union
prisoners and
two gunboats.
Franklin and
the army force
turned back to
New Orleans,
although Union
troops
occupied the
Texas coast
from
Brownsville to
Matagorda Bay
later that
fall. The
Davis Guards,
who suffered
no casualties
during the
battle,
received the
thanks of the
Confederate
Congress for
their victory.
Careful
fortification,
range marking,
and artillery
practice had
produced a
successful
defense of
Sabine Pass.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Alwyn Barr,
"Sabine Pass,
September
1863," Texas
Military
History 2
(February
1962). Andrew
Forest Muir,
"Dick Dowling
and the Battle
of Sabine
Pass," Civil
War History 4
(December
1958). Frank
X. Tolbert,
Dick Dowling
at Sabine Pass
(New York:
McGraw-Hill,
1962). Jo
Young, "The
Battle of
Sabine Pass,"
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly 52
(April 1949).
Alwyn
Barr
-
Handbook of
Texas Online,
s.v. ","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/SS/qes2.html (accessed
March 4,
2008).
(NOTE: "s.v."
stands for sub
verbo, "under
the word.")
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