The loss of Fort Fisher seals the …
Years: 1865 - 1865
January
The loss of Fort Fisher seals the fate of the Confederacy's last remaining sea port and the South is cut off from global trade.
Also, many of the military supplies which the Army of Northern Virginia depend upon come through Wilmington; there are no remaining seaports near Virginia that the Confederates can use practically.
It also ends any chance of European recognition.
On January 16, Union celebrations are dampened when the fort's magazine explodes killing and wounding two hundred Union and Confederate soldiers that are sleeping on the roof of the magazine chamber or nearby.
U.S. Navy Ensign Alfred Stow Leighton dies in the explosion while in charge of a squad trying to recover bodies from the fort parapet.
Although several Union soldiers initially thought Confederate prisoners were responsible, an investigation opened by Terry will conclude that unknown Union soldiers (possibly drunken marines) had entered the magazine with torches and ignited the powder.
William Lamb survives the battle but will spend the next seven years on crutches.
Colonel Galusha Pennypacker's wounds are thought to be fatal and General Terry assures the young man he would receive a brevet promotion to brigadier general.
Pennypacker does receive a brevet promotion as Terry had promised, but on February 18, 1865 he will receive a full promotion to brigadier general of volunteers at age 20.
He remains the youngest person to have held the rank of general in the U.S. Army, apart from the Marquis de Lafayette.
Newton Martin Curtis also receives a full promotion to brigadier general and both he and Pennypacker receive the Medal of Honor for their part in the battle.
Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton makes an unexpected visit to Fort Fisher where General Terry presents him with garrison's flag.
General Whiting, shot in the leg with a musket ball, had been captured at Fort Fisher.
From his prison cell he will request investigation of the actions of his superior, General Bragg.
Whiting is angry that Bragg had failed to use Hoke’s division to attack the Federal rear while the fort was under assault.
Taken prisoner with the rest of fort's defenders, and weakened by war service and the leg injury suffered at Fort Fisher, Whiting will die of dysentery at the Union military hospital at Fort Columbus on Governors Island in New York City on March 10, 1865.
Locations
People
- Alfred Terry
- Benjamin Franklin Butler
- Braxton Bragg
- David Dixon Porter
- Ulysses S. Grant
- William H. C. Whiting
Groups
- North Carolina, State of (U.S.A.)
- United States of America (US, USA) (Washington DC)
- Confederate States of America (C.S.A.)
Topics
- American Civil War (War between the States, War of the Rebellion, War of Secession, War for Southern Independence)
- Western Theater of the American Civil War
- American Civil War & Reconstruction; 1864 through 1875
- Fort Fisher, Second Battle of
