Posted on 04/11/2006 4:59:54 AM PDT by mainepatsfan
This Day In History | Civil War
April 11
1862 Fall of Fort Pulaski, Georgia
Fort Pulaski, guarding the mouth of the Savannah River in Georgia, surrenders after a two-day Union bombardment tears great holes in the massive fort.
Fort Pulaski was constructed in 1847 as part of the country's coastal defense network. The imposing masonry stronghold was named for Polish Count Casimir Pulaski, who was killed at Savannah by British troops during the American Revolution. The Union landed troops on Tybee Island, a mile south of Pulaski, in early 1862 and prepared for an attack. An engineering officer, Captain Quincy Gilmore, spent two months moving heavy artillery into place. These included large smoothbore cannon and smaller, rifled guns that shot conical shells at high speed and with greater accuracy than the larger pieces.
The attack began on April 10, and Gilmore's work paid off. The rifled cannon fired shots that penetrated two feet into Fort Pulaski's seven-foot-thick walls. By the morning of April 11, two huge gaps had been torn in the fort walls and a group of Federal infantry was poised for an attack. Colonel Charles Olmstead, commander of Fort Pulaski, recognized that further resistance was futile, and he surrendered the fort to Union troops.
The Savannah River was sealed and a vital Confederate port was closed, although Savannah itself would not be captured until General William T. Sherman marched across Georgia two and a half years later. The destruction of Fort Pulaski signaled an end to the era of brick fortifications, though, which had been made obsolete by the new rifled artillery.
(Excerpt) Read more at historychannel.com ...
A Virtual Tour of Fort Pulaski
http://www.quantumtour.com/entity/pulaski/tour/pulaski
Yet another site on my need to visit list.
Front view of Fort Pulaski virtual tour
http://www.quantumtour.com/entity/pulaski/tour/pulaski/scene/pulfront/#viewer
Cool. Thanks.
welcome..
The rifled cannons were just too much. I've been to Fort Macon in NC which suffered a similar fate.
It's nice to see places like these maintained.
Nice virtual tours...Georgia has beautiful scenery...
Thanks for the tid bit.
Dixieping
I took a tour there in the mid 70's. I remember the cannon balls that were still lodged in the walls of the fort.
We really need to come up with a different subject, this is not one of my favorites. Not really one of those fighting to the last man.
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