FORT SUMTER
'Fort Sumter', located in Charleston, South Carolina, was named after General Thomas Sumter. However, the fort is best known as the site where the shots initiating the American Civil War were fired, at the Battle of Fort Sumter.
Fort Sumter was built after the War of 1812 as one of a series of fortifications on the southern U.S. coast. Construction began in 1829, and the structure was still unfinished in 1860, when the conflict began. Seventy thousand tons of granite were imported from New England to build up a sand bar in the entrance to Charleston harbor, which the site dominates; The fort was a five-sided brick structure, 170 to 190 feet long, with walls five feet thick, standing 50 feet over the low tide mark. It was designed to house 650 men and 135 guns in three tiers of gun emplacements, although it was never filled near capacity.
On December 26, 1860, five days after South Carolina declared its secession, U.S. Army Major Robert Anderson abandoned the indefensible Fort Moultrie and secretly relocated his two companies (127 men, 13 of them musicians) of the 1st U.S. Artillery to Fort Sumter. He thought that providing a stronger defense would delay a Rebel attack. The Fort was not yet complete at the time and fewer than half of the cannons that should have been there were available due to military downsizing by James Buchanan. Over the next few months, repeated calls for Union surrender from Confederate Brigadier General P.G.T. Beauregard were ignored, and Union attempts to resupply and reinforce the garrison were rebuffed.
1861, inside the fort flying the Confederate Flag
A special military decoration, known as the Gillmore Medal, was later issued to all Union service members who had performed duty in Fort Sumter during the opening battle of the American Civil War.
The Fort Sumter Flag became a popular patriotic symbol after Maj. Anderson returned North with it. The flag is still displayed in the fort's museum.
| Contents |
| 1863–1865 |
| After the war |
| External links |
1863–1865
With Fort Sumter in Confederate hands, the port of Charleston was a hole in the Federal naval blockade of the Atlantic coast. For the U.S. Navy to close the port, Fort Sumter would need to be retaken, and Rear Admiral Samuel F. Du Pont was ordered to take it.
On the afternoon of April 7, 1863, nine ironclads exchanged fire with Confederate batteries in the fort and around the harbor. The fort was barely damaged, but five of the ships were disabled. One, the USS ''Keokuk'', sank the next morning. After this failure, federal strategy changed. Du Pont was replaced by Rear Adm. John A. Dahlgren, who planned to combine land and sea operations to seize nearby Morris Island and from there to demolish the fort. Union troops under Brig. Gen. Quincy Adams Gillmore place rifled cannon on Morris Island. The fort's garrison consisted of five companies of the 1st South Carolina Artillery under Col. Alfred Rhett. They worked night and day to fortify the walls of Fort Sumter with dirt mounds and hay bales.
Massive Federal bombardment began on August 17, with almost 1,000 shells being fired the first day alone. Within a week, the fort's brick walls were in ruins, but the garrison refused to surrender and continued to repair and strengthen the defenses. Confederate guns at Fort Moultrie and other strongholds in the harbor returned fire .
Another U.S. Navy assault on September 9 failed again, some 400 sailors and Marines attacked the fort in row boats, after a hard fought battle the attackers were repulsed losing five ships and 124 men trying to take the fort. The bombardment continued intermittently until the end of December.
In the summer of 1864, Maj. Gen. John G. Foster replaced Gillmore as commander of land operations and attempted again to take the fort. Foster, a member of Anderson's 1861 garrison, believed that "with proper arrangements" the fort could be taken "at any time." Two months of bombardment, however, failed to dislodge the Confederate garrison and Foster abandoned the effort. Intermittent fire was maintained until Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman's troops advancing north from Savannah, Georgia, forced the evacuation of Fort Sumter on February 17, 1865.
It is estimated that seven million pounds of artillery were shot at Fort Sumter during the war, yet the Confederate losses were only 52 killed and 267 wounded.
After the war
When the Civil War ended, Fort Sumter was in ruins and the U.S. Army attempted to restore it as a useful military installation. The damaged walls were releveled to a lower height and partially rebuilt. The third tier of gun emplacements was now gone. Eleven of the original first-tier gun rooms were restored with 100-pounder Parrott rifles.
From 1876 to 1897, Fort Sumter was used only as an unmanned lighthouse station. The start of the Spanish-American War prompted renewed interest in its military use and reconstruction commenced on the facilities that had further eroded over time. A new massive concrete blockhouse-style installation was built in 1898 inside the original walls. Named "Battery Huger" in honor of Revolutionary War General Isaac Huger, it never saw combat.
During World War I, a small garrison manned the two twelve-inch rifles at Battery Huger. Until World War II, the fort was unused except as a tourist destination; two 90-mm antiaircraft guns were then installed. Fort Sumter became a U.S. National Monument in 1948.
Today, administered by the U.S. National Park Service, Fort Sumter is a popular tourist attraction, reached by a thirty-minute boat ride from Charleston.
External links
★ National Park Service's Official Website for Fort Sumter
★ Charleston website with Fort Sumter history
★ Fort Sumter Information Site
★ Timeline and narrative of the battle of Fort Sumter
★ Major Robert Anderson's telegram announcing the surrender of Fort Sumter Image of original telegram
★ Battle of Fort Sumter Historical Preservation Site
★ Crisis at Fort Sumter Multimedia teaching tool from Tulane University including text from historical documents
★ Charleston Battery Tour See Fort Sumter from Charleston Battery in 1 of 3 Quicktime Virtual Reality (QTVR) movies
★ FortSumter.com Fort Sumter and Civil War resources
★ Charleston, SC Insider's Guide Short article about Ft. Sumter for travelers
★ Extensive collection of photos and drawings from The Library of Congress
★ Fort Sumter, SC - Civil-War-Jouneys.org
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