American Civil War Anecdotes, Incidents, Articles, and Books |
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Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Moultrie |
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APPENDIX. ——————
List of Officers and Enlisted Men present at the Bombardment of COMMISSIONED OFFICERS. Major Robert Anderson, First United States Artillery. Captain Abner Doubleday, First United States Artillery. Captain Truman Seymour, First United States Artillery. First Lieutenant Jefferson C. Davis, First United States Artillery. Second Lieutenant Norman J. Hall, First United States Artillery. Captain J. G. Foster, United States Engineers. Lieutenant G. W. Snyder, United States Engineers. Lieutenant R. K. Meade, United States Engineers. Assistant Surgeon S. W. Crawford, United States Army. —————— ENLISTED MEN. Ordnance-sergeant James Kearney, United States Army. Quartermaster-sergeant William H. Hammer, First United States Artillery. Regimental Band, First Artillery.
Company E, First Artillery.
Company H, First Artillery.
List of Mechanics and Employés present in Fort Sumter during the Employés of the Engineer Department.
Wm. O. Lyman, overseer Laborers.
Cooks.
—————————————————— The following is taken from a South Carolina official document, but it seems somewhat defective in detail: List of Confederate Batteries constructed with a View to the Reduction of Fort Sumter. —— ON MORRIS ISLAND. Brigadier-general James W. Simons, commanding; Colonel Wilmot G. De Saussure, commanding Artillery Battalion. Lieutenant J. R. Macbeth, Captain J. Jones, and Lieutenant F. L. Childs, acting as aids to Colonel De Saussure. —— STEVENS BATTERY. (Fired 1200 shots.) Three Eight-inch columbiads. Garrisoned by the Palmetto Guard, Captain George B. Cuthbert commanding ; Lieutenant G. L. Buist. The ammunition was served out by Mr. Philips and Mr. Campbell. One gun was disabled on Friday. —— CUMMINGS POINT BATTERY. Two forty-two pounders, three ten-inch mortars, one Blakely gun. Garrisoned by a detachment of the Palmetto Guard, and by cadets from the Citadel Academy in Charleston. Captain J. P. Thomas, of the Citadel Academy, commanding Blakely gun ; Lieutenant C. R. Holmes, of the Citadel Academy, commanding mortars; Lieu-tenant W. W. Armstrong, of the Citadel Academy, at the mortars; Second Lieutenant Thomas Sumter, of the Palmetto Guard, in charge of the forty-two-pounders. —— CHANNEL BATTERY. (Did not fire.) Captain Calhoun, commanding; First Lieutenant A. M. Wagner; Lieutenant —— Sitgreaves ; Second Lieutenant M. C. Preston. —————— ON JAMES ISLAND. Major N. G. Evans, A. A. G., commanding. —— BATTERY OF TWENTY-FOUR-POUNDERS. Captain George S. James, commanding. MORTAR BATTERY. First Lieutenant W. H. Gibbes, of the Artillery ; Lieutenant H. S. Farley ; Lieutenant J. E. M`Pherson, Washington; Lieutenant T. B. Hayne ; Doctor Libby. UPPER BATTERY. (Fired 2425 shots.) Two ten-inch mortars. LOWER BATTERY. Two ten-inch mortars. Captain S. C. Thayer, of the S. C. Navy, commanding. —————— ON SULLIVAN'S ISLAND. Brigadier-general John Donovant, commanding. Lieutenant-colonel Roswell S. Ripley, commanding the Artillery ; Captain J. B. Burns, of General Dunovant's staff; Surgeons P. J. Robinson, R. F. Mitchell, and Arthur Lynch; Assistant-surgeons D. W. Taylor, Doctor F. F. Miles, Doctor F. L. Parker. —— THE IRON-CLAD FLOATING BATTERY. (At the Cove. Fired 1900 shots.) Two forty-two-pounders. Two thirty-two pounders. Garrisoned by Company D, of the Artillery. Captain James Hamilton ; First Lieutenant J. A. Yates, Second Lieutenant F. H. Harleston. THE DAHLGREN BATTERY. (Near the Floating Battery.) One nine-inch Dahlgren gun. Garrisoned by Company D, of the Artillery. Captain S. R. Hamilton; Mr. John Wells. THE ENFILADE BATTERY. (Fired 1825 shots.) Garrisoned by Company K, of the Artillery, Captain James H. Hallonquist, Company B, of the Artillery, commanding; First Lieutenant J. Valentine, B. S. Burnett. MORTAR BATTERY, NO. 1. (Between Fort Moultrie and the Cove.) Captain James H. Hallonquist, Company B, of the Artillery, commanding. Lieutenant O. Blanding, Lieutenant Fleming. —————— FORT MOULTRIE. (Fired 1825 shots.) Three eight-inch columbiads, two thirty-two-pounders, four twenty-four-pounders. Garrisoned by the Artillery Battalion under Lieutenant-colonel Ripley. Captain W. R. Calhoun, Company A, of the Artillery, executive officer. SUMTER BATTERY. (Facing south-south-west.) Lieutenant Alfred Rhett, Company B, Artillery, commanding; Second Lieutenant John Mitchell, Jun.; Mr. F. D. Blake, Volunteer Engineer. OBLIQUE BATTERY. (On the west.) Two twenty four-pounders. Lieutenant C. W. Parker, Company D, of the Artillery. MORTAR BATTERY, No. 2. (East of Fort Moultrie.) Two ten-inch mortars. Captain William Butler, of the Infantry ; Lieutenant J. A. Hugenin; E. Mowry, Mr. Blocker, Mr. Billings, and Mr. Rice assisted. This battery was joined to the Maffit Channel Battery. THE TRAPIER BATTERY. (Fired 1300 shots.) Three ten-inch mortars. Garrisoned by the Marion Artillery, J. Gadsden King, commanding. Lieutenant W. D. H. Kirkwood, J. P. Strohecker, A. M. Huger, E. L. Parker. The Marion Artillery was afterward relieved by the Sumter Guard, under Captain John Russell. —————— AT MOUNT PLEASANT. BATTERY. (Fired 2025 shots,) Two ten-inch mortars. Captain Robert Martin of the Infantry, commanding; Lieutenant G. N. Reynolds, Company B, of the Artillery; Lieutenant D. S. Calhoun, of the Infantry. THE END visits since February 20, 2005 |
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