The Capture of Hatteras Inlet

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Map of Cape Hatteras. Courtesy of weather.com

The first combined operation of the Civil War was the capture of Hatteras Inlet. This inlet was used by Confederate gunboats and privateer merchantmen sailing around Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. These Southern commerce raiders’ depreciation was lucrative for the Carolinians; however, Northern losses became so significant that several major maritime insurance brokers demanded something be done about this situation. This prompted the development of the Union’s Hatteras Inlet operation. [1]

北卡罗来纳州的外银行

北卡罗来纳州的声音从弗吉尼亚边境到达北卡罗来纳州东部边界的Cape Lookout到达。可以使用四个主要入口来从声音中到达大西洋:哈特拉斯,俄勒冈州,奥克拉科克和博福特(旧入口)。Hatteras Inlet最适合商业突袭。哈特拉斯角(Cape Hatteras)是同盟国中最东端,俯瞰海湾流。这种电流在纽约,加勒比海和南美等北部港口之间的商船交易中非常受欢迎。使用哈特拉斯角(Cape Hatteras Lighthouse),同盟国可以向等待袭击者表示诱惑商人目标。北卡罗来纳州州长约翰·埃利斯(John Ellis)于1861年4月27日写道:“敌人的商业可能会被卡罗来纳州海岸的私人切断。”[2]阅读更多

Battle of Port Royal Sound

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Samuel Francis du Pont, ca. 1863. Carte-de-visite. Mathew B. Brady, photographer. National Library of Brazil/World Digital Library online. wdl.org. Accessed October 27, 2020.

The Civil War’s second major amphibious operation was the capture of Port Royal Sound on November 7, 1861. Flag Officer Samuel Francis Du Pont was the newly minted commander of the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron. He needed to capture Port Royal Sound, South Carolina, to use as a base for his squadron. Du Pont placed his warships on an elliptical course and forced forts Walker and Beauregard to surrender. The Sound enabled the Federals to maintain a blockade of Charleston and Savannah. The Union’s occupation of South Carolina’s Sea Islands resulted in the Port Royal Experiment. Abolitionists toiled to assist these formerly enslaved people become literate and self-reliant wage earners. Once the Emancipation Proclamation was made law, this coastal region became a recruitment center for African American soldiers.

Blockade Strategy Board

When Fort Sumter fell to the Confederates on April 14, 1861, President Abraham Lincoln declared a blockade of the southern coastline from Virginia to Texas. Winfield Scott, then general in chief of the US Army, suggested the Union’s primary war aim be a blockade of southern ports, including the capture of the Mississippi River. Scott knew that the closure of these ports would end the cotton for cannon trade which was so necessary for the South’s survival. A commission was formed known as the Blockade Strategy Board, also known as the Du Pont Board.阅读更多