Home > Back to Search Results > 1861 Port Royal, South Carolina...
Click image to enlarge 556516
Show image list »

1861 Port Royal, South Carolina...



Item # 556516

Currently Unavailable. Contact us if you would like to be placed on a want list or to be notified if a similar item is available.



November 15, 1861

NEW YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, New York, November 15, 1861

* Port Royal, South Carolina
* Piketon, Kentucky

This Genuine newspaper has a Wealth of Civil War reporting from during Abraham Lincoln's administration.

The back page has a map titled: "PORT ROYAL".

Among the one column headlines on the Civil War are:

* Another Rebel Account of the Port Royal Battle
* THE WAR FOR THE UNION
* Great Fright At Richmond
* The Piketon Victory
* The Arming Of Union Men Of Color
* The Rising In east Tennessee

and more.

Complete in eight pages. This issue is not fragile as newsprint from this era was made of cotton and linen rags, allowing them to remain very pliable and easy to handle. Little margin wear including a piece missing from the bottom of the back page. (unrelated)

wikipedia notes: The Battle of Port Royal was one of the earliest amphibious operations of the American Civil War, in which a United States Navy fleet and United States Army expeditionary force captured Port Royal Sound, South Carolina, between Savannah, Georgia and Charleston, South Carolina, on 7 November 1861. The sound was guarded by two forts on opposite sides of the entrance, Fort Walker on Hilton Head Island to the south and Fort Beauregard on Phillip's Island to the north. A small force of four gunboats supported the forts, but did not materially affect the battle.

The attacking force assembled outside of the sound beginning on 3 November after being battered by a storm during their journey down the coast. Because of losses in the storm, the army was not able to land, so the battle was reduced to a contest between ship-based guns and those on shore.

The fleet moved to the attack on 7 November, after more delays caused by the weather during which additional troops were brought into Fort Walker. Flag Officer Du Pont ordered his ships to keep moving in an elliptical path, bombarding Fort Walker on one leg and Fort Beauregard on the other; the tactic had recently been used effectively at the Battle of Hatteras Inlet. His plan soon broke down, however, and most ships took enfilading positions that exploited a weakness in Fort Walker. The Confederate gunboats put in a token appearance but fled up a nearby creek when challenged. Early in the afternoon, most of the guns in the fort were out of action, and the soldiers manning them fled to the rear. A landing party from the flagship took possession of the fort.

When Fort Walker fell, the commander of Fort Beauregard across the sound feared that his soldiers would soon be cut off with no way to escape, so he ordered them to abandon the fort. Another landing party took possession of the fort and raised the Union flag the next day.

Despite the heavy volume of fire, loss of life on both sides was low, at least by standards set later in the Civil War. Only eight were killed in the fleet and eleven on shore, with four other Southerners missing. Total casualties came to less than 100.

Category: Yankee