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Union Order of Battle
Department of Virginia - Major General Benjamin F. Butler
9th New York Infantry Regiment - Colonel Rush Hawkins 20th New York
Infantry Regiment - Colonel Max Weber
99th New York Infantry Regiment ("Union Coast Guard") - Capt. William
Nixon Detachment, U.S. Coast Guard Detachment, U.S. Marines Detachment, U.S. 2nd Artillery
Atlantic Blockading Squadron - Flag Officer Silas H. Stringham
U.S.S. Monticello U.S.S. Harriet Lane U.S.S. Fanny U.S.S. Minnesota U.S.S. Wabash U.S.S. Susquehanna
U.S.S. Cumberland U.S.S. Pawnee
Confederate Order of Battle
17th North Carolina Infantry Regiment (1st Organization)* -
Colonel William F. Martin Forts Hatteras & Clark Garrison - Colonel Andrews
Unspecified naval volunteers, including Flag Officer Samuel Barron
*Formerly 7th North Carolina Volunteers
Source: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies
Recommended Reading: Gray Raiders of the Sea: How Eight Confederate Warships Destroyed the Union's
High Seas Commerce. Reader’s Review: This subject is one of the most fascinating in the history
of sea power, and the general public has needed a reliable single-volume reference on it for some time. The story of the eight
Confederate privateers and their attempt to bring Union trade to a halt seems to break every rule of common sense. How could
so few be so successful against so many? The United States, after Great Britain, had the most valuable and extensive import/export
trade in the world by the middle of the 19th century. The British themselves were worried since they were in danger of being
surpassed in the same manner that their own sea traders had surpassed the Dutch early in the 18th century. Continued below…
From its founding in 1861, the
Confederate States of America realized it had a huge problem since it lacked a navy. It also saw that
it couldn't build one, especially after the fall of its biggest port, New Orleans,
in 1862. The vast majority of shipbuilders and men with maritime skills lived north of the Mason-Dixon Line, in the United States, and mostly in New England. This put an incredible
burden on the Confederate Secretary of the Navy, Stephen R. Mallory. When he saw that most of the enemy navy was being used
to blockade the thousands of miles of Confederate coasts, however, he saw an opportunity for the use of privateers. Mallory
sent Archibald Bulloch, a Georgian and the future maternal grandfather of Theodore Roosevelt, to England to purchase British-made vessels that the Confederacy could send out to
prey on Union merchant ships. Bulloch's long experience with the sea enabled him to buy good ships, including the vessels
that became the most feared of the Confederate privateers - the Alabama, the Florida, and the Shenandoah. Matthew Fontaine Maury added the British-built Georgia, and the Confederacy itself launched the Sumter, the
Nashville, the Tallahassee, and the Chickamauga - though these were generally not as effective commerce raiders as the first
four. This popular history details the history of the eight vessels in question, and gives detailed biographical information
on their captains, officers, and crews. The author relates the careers of Raphael Semmes, John Newland Maffitt, Charles Manigault
Morris, James Iredell Waddell, Charles W. Read, and others with great enthusiasm. "Gray Raiders" is a great basic introduction
to the privateers of the Confederacy. More than eighty black and white illustrations help the reader to visualize their dramatic
exploits, and an appendix lists all the captured vessels. I highly recommend it to everyone interested in the Confederacy,
and also to all naval and military history lovers.
Recommended
Reading: American Civil War Fortifications (1): Coastal brick and stone forts (Fortress). Description: The 50 years before the American Civil War saw a boom in the construction
of coastal forts in the United States of America.
These stone and brick forts stretched from New England to the Florida Keys, and as far as the Mississippi
River. At the start of the war some were located in the secessionist states, and many fell into Confederate hands.
Although a handful of key sites remained in Union hands throughout the war, the remainder had to be won back through bombardment
or assault. This book examines the design, construction and operational history of those fortifications, such as Fort Sumter, Fort
Morgan and Fort Pulaski, which played a crucial part in the course of the Civil War.
Recommended
Reading: Portrait of the Past : The Civil War on Hatteras Island North Carolina (Portrait of the Past) (Hardcover). Description: Hatteras Island
has achieved a well-deserved reputation as a summer getaway and a wildlife refuge on North
Carolina's coast. However, most visitors are unaware of the crucial role that Hatteras played in the
Civil War. The book offers a new view of Hatteras's history, interweaving historical facts, archival drawings, and current
photography of how the island looks today. In addition, the book reveals the largely unknown journals of Edwin Graves Champney,
a Union soldier who was stationed on Hatteras from 1862 to 1863. Continued below…
Champney's
prose and artistic talents, along with the quotes of soldier Charles F. Johnson of the Ninth New York, shed new light on the
experiences of Civil War soldiers stationed on the Outer Banks during that time. It follows the crucial maritime battles along
the Outer Banks and the famous Burnside Expedition. This is a fascinating history of how one of America's most treasured islands played a significant part in the Civil War and
is a must for any reader. About the Author: Author:
Drew Pullen is a graduate of Houghton
College and a former history
teacher. He currently manages the Hatteras and Ocracoke offices of the East Carolina Bank. As an amateur historian, he has
written several articles on the Civil War for local newspapers. His wife Jo Anne is from a local Hatteras family and her great-great
grandfather was stationed at Fort
Hatteras during the Civil War.
Drew continues to research Civil War action in eastern North Carolina for future books.
Recommended
Reading: The
Civil War on the Outer Banks: A History of the Late Rebellion Along the Coast of North Carolina from Carteret to Currituck
With Comments on Prewar Conditions and an Account of (251 pages). Description:
The ports at Beaufort, Wilmington, New Bern and Ocracoke, part of the Outer Banks (a chain of barrier islands that sweeps
down the North Carolina coast from the Virginia Capes to Oregon Inlet), were strategically vital for the import of war
materiel and the export of cash producing crops. From official records, contemporary newspaper accounts, personal journals
of the soldiers, and many unpublished manuscripts and memoirs, this is a full
accounting of the Civil War along the North Carolina coast.
Recommended
Reading: Ironclads and Columbiads:
The Coast (The Civil War in North Carolina)
(456 pages). Description: Ironclads
and Columbiads covers some of the most important battles and campaigns in the state. In January 1862, Union forces
began in earnest to occupy crucial points on the North Carolina
coast. Within six months, Union army and naval forces effectively controlled coastal North Carolina
from the Virginia line south to present-day Morehead
City. Union setbacks in Virginia, however, led to the withdrawal of many
federal soldiers from North Carolina, leaving only enough Union troops to hold a few coastal strongholds—the vital ports
and railroad junctions. The South during the Civil War, moreover, hotly contested the North’s ability to maintain its
grip on these key coastal strongholds.
Recommended
Reading: Storm over Carolina: The Confederate Navy's Struggle for Eastern
North Carolina. Description: The struggle for control of the eastern waters of North Carolina
during the War Between the States was a bitter, painful, and sometimes humiliating one for the Confederate navy. No better
example exists of the classic adage, "Too little, too late." Burdened by the lack of adequate warships, construction
facilities, and even ammunition, the South's naval arm fought bravely and even recklessly to stem the tide of the Federal
invasion of North Carolina from the raging Atlantic. Storm Over Carolina is the account of the Southern navy's struggle in North Carolina waters and it is a saga of crushing defeats interspersed with moments of
brilliant and even spectacular victories. It is also the story of dogged Southern determination and incredible perseverance
in the face of overwhelming odds. Continued below...
For most of
the Civil War, the navigable portions of the Roanoke, Tar, Neuse, Chowan, and Pasquotank rivers were
occupied by Federal forces. The Albemarle and Pamlico sounds, as well as most of the coastal towns and counties, were also
under Union control. With the building of the river ironclads, the Confederate navy at last could strike a telling blow against
the invaders, but they were slowly overtaken by events elsewhere. With the war grinding to a close, the last Confederate vessel
in North Carolina waters was destroyed. William T. Sherman
was approaching from the south, Wilmington was lost, and the
Confederacy reeled as if from a mortal blow. For the Confederate navy, and even more so for the besieged citizens of eastern
North Carolina, these were stormy days indeed. Storm Over Carolina describes their story, their struggle, their history.
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