Battery Robinett: Difference between revisions

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|colspan="2"|[[File:Corinth-Battery Robinett.jpeg|795px|thumb|center|Partially Reconstructed Battery/Fort Robinett at the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center,]]
|colspan="2"|[[File:Corinth-Battery Robinett.jpeg|795px|thumb|center|Partially Reconstructed Battery/Fort Robinett at the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center.]]
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== History ==
== History ==
Battery Robinett was triangular lunette (three-sided field fort) with a double level of gabions topped with fascines. The approach to the battery was blocked by an obstructive Abattis and finally a ditch. A line of earthenworks extended to the south of the battery to the railroad. Battery Robinett was armed with three 20-pounder cannon and manned by Company “C” of the 1st U.S. Infantry led by Lieutenant [[Henry C. Robinett]].  
Battery Robinett was a triangular lunette (three-sided field fort) with a double level of gabions topped with fascines. The approach to the battery was blocked by an obstructive Abattis and finally a ditch. A line of earthworks extended to the south of the battery to the railroad. Battery Robinett was armed with three 20-pounder cannon and manned by Company “C” of the 1st U.S. Infantry led by Lieutenant [[Henry C. Robinett]].  


During the [[Battle of Corinth]] on 4 Oct 1862 three brigades of Confederate Brigadier General [[Dabney H. Maury|Dabney H. Maury’s]] division attacked Battery Robinett in four columns. The Confederate attackers stormed the battery under heavy fire and when they had penetrated half-way through the abattis the battery gunners changed to grape and canister shot increasing the carnage but the attackers still reached open ground in front of the battery. At this point the battery gunners double charged the guns and the redoubt became enveloped in smoke and flame. Confederates seized the parapet at great cost and drove the defenders from their guns. Lt. Robinett and 13 of his 26 men were casualties in the battery. In desperation, Union Captain [[George Williams]] fired two shells from nearby [[Battery Williams]] into the Confederates overrunning Battery Robinett, stalling their attack long enough to allow Union reinforcements to make their way to the battery.
[[File:Defense of Battery Robinett.jpeg|thumb|center|800px|This Engraving appears to depict the point in the battle where the Union Gunners have been driven from their guns. It may also depict a wounded Lt. Robinett being helped off the field by two soldiers while his riderless horse bolts away.]]


Confederate Colonel [[William P. Rogers]], commanding the 2nd Texas Infantry, and a small group of some sixteen men including Captain Foster survived the initial assault and briefly occupied the battery just as some 1500 Union reinforcements came into view. Colonel Rogers and Captain Foster attempted to signal their surrender with white handkerchiefs but the firing had begun and it was too late. Of that small group only one survived, J.A. McKinstry, who was a private in Company D, Forty-second Alabama regiment and it is from his account that the above was gleaned. Photographs of the small Confederate group were made the following morning where they fell and in the background can be seen the colonel's dead battle charger on which he led the charge on the battery.  
During the [[Battle of Corinth]] on 4 Oct 1862 three brigades of Confederate Brigadier General [[Dabney H. Maury|Dabney H. Maury’s]] division attacked Battery Robinett in four columns. The Confederate attackers stormed the battery under heavy fire and when they had penetrated half-way through the abattis the battery gunners changed to grape and canister shot increasing the carnage but the attackers still reached the open ground in front of the battery. At this point, the battery gunners double charged the guns and the redoubt became enveloped in smoke and flame. Confederates seized the parapet at great cost and drove the defenders from their guns. Lt. Robinett and 13 of his 26 men were casualties in the battery. In desperation, Union Captain [[George Williams]] fired two shells from nearby [[Battery Williams]] into the Confederates overrunning Battery Robinett, stalling their attack long enough to allow Union reinforcements to make their way to the battery. {{BatteryRobinett-BatteryWilliams}}


After the battle it was said that the Confederate dead lay piled from three to seven deep in front of the battery and that for a hundred feet the bodies lay so close it was almost impossible to walk between them.
[[File:Col Rogers Group Dead at Battery Robinett.jpeg|thumb|center|800px|Colonel Rogers and a group of Dead at Battery Robinett. Colonel Rogers is at the left facing up with possibly Captain Foster by his side.]]
 
Confederate Colonel [[William P. Rogers]], commanding the 2nd Texas Infantry, and a small group of some sixteen men including Captain Foster survived the initial assault and briefly occupied the battery just as some 1500 Union reinforcements came into view.  Colonel Rogers and Captain Foster attempted to signal their surrender with white handkerchiefs but the firing had begun and it was too late. Of that small group, only one survived, J.A. McKinstry, who was a private in Company D, Forty-second Alabama regiment, and it is from his account that the above was gleaned. Photographs of the small Confederate group were made the following morning where they fell. One account says that "An artist was there taking a picture of the scene, while over a thousand persons had gathered there to witness the sight."
 
[[File:Col Rogers and His Battle Charger.jpeg|thumb|center|800px|In the center, back from the stump, the Colonel's body can be seen outside the Battery ready for Burial. The colonel's dead battle charger on which he led the charge is to the right of the stump. An unknown Confederate casualty is seen in the foreground.]]
 
After the battle, it was said that the Confederate dead lay piled from three to seven deep in front of the battery and that for a hundred feet the bodies lay so close it was almost impossible to walk between them. The Confederate dead were buried in a common grave except for Colonel Rogers who was buried in a separate grave with military honors at the direction of the Union General [[William S. Rosecrans]] {{Cullum|1115}}. General Rosecrans said of Colonel Rogers at the scene of his death that:
<blockquote>"He was one of the bravest men that ever led a charge. Bury him with military honors and mark his grave so that his friends may claim him."</blockquote>


Some elements of the Confederate attack penetrated into the town of Corinth but became disorganized and the attack ultimately failed.  
Some elements of the Confederate attack penetrated into the town of Corinth but became disorganized and the attack ultimately failed.  


The battery commander Lt. Robinett survived the battle and the war and remained in the Army after the war as a Brevet Major. He and his men were widely acclaimed for their actions at Corinth. He had sustained a serious head wound during the war that gave him much pain and after his fiance died he committed suicide in 1868.  
The battery commander Lt. Robinett survived the battle and the war and remained in the Army after the war as a Brevet Major. He and his men were widely acclaimed for their actions at Corinth. He had sustained a serious head wound during the defense of Battery Robinett that gave him much pain. He had a troubled career after briefly serving on General Grant's staff he was twice court-martialed and removed from the service but the decisions were reversed by authorities in the War Department. After his fiance died he took his own life at [[Jackson Barracks]], New Orleans on 22 Apr 1868.  
{{Clr}}
== Current Status ==
== Current Status ==
<!-- Replace this line-->
The Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center is a unit of the Shilo national Military Park and it includes some of the important sites of the Corinth battlefield including a partial replica of Battery Robinett attached to the Interpretive Center. A tall white marble shaft near the Interpretive Center is a monument to Confederate Colonel [[William P. Rogers]] who led the attack on Battery Robinett. The monument was unveiled in Corinth on 15 Aug 1912 along with markers to the unknown dead of Colonel Rogers’s charge.
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{|
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</googlemap>
</googlemap>
|valign="top"|
|valign="top"|
'''Location:''' Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi.
'''Location:''' 501 W Linden St, Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi.


{{Mapit-US-cityscale|34.93780|-88.52980}}
{{Mapit-US-cityscale|34.93780|-88.52980}}
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<br>
<br>
'''GPS Locations:'''
'''GPS Locations:'''
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=34.93780|Lon=-88.52980}} Site of Battery
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=34.93780|Lon=-88.52980}} Site of Battery Replica
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=34.93762|Lon=-88.52892}} Col Rogers Monument
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=34.93750|Lon=-88.53083}} GNIS Coordinates
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=34.93750|Lon=-88.53083}} GNIS Coordinates
|}
|}


'''See Also:'''
'''See Also:'''
* [[Battery Powell (2)]]
* [[Battle of Corinth]]
* [[Battle of Corinth]]
* [[:Category:Civil War Defenses of Corinth|Civil War Defenses of Corinth]]
* [[:Category:Civil War Defenses of Corinth|Civil War Defenses of Corinth]]
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* [https://www.nps.gov/shil/learn/historyculture/corinth.htm NPS - Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center]
* [https://www.nps.gov/shil/learn/historyculture/corinth.htm NPS - Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center]
* Obit Brevet Major Henry C. Robinett, New York Times, 1 May 1868.
* Obit Brevet Major Henry C. Robinett, New York Times, 1 May 1868.
* [https://ehistory.osu.edu/books/official-records/024/0248 eHistory - War of the Rebellion: Serial 024 Page 0248 WEST TENN. AND NORTHERN MISS. Chapter XXIX.]


'''Links:'''  
'''Links:'''  
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* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_and_Battle_of_Corinth_Sites Wikipedia - Corinth Civil War Defense Sites]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_and_Battle_of_Corinth_Sites Wikipedia - Corinth Civil War Defense Sites]
* [http://www.battleofcorinth.com/wp_rogers.htm Battle of Corinth - Col. W.P. Rogers Story]
* [http://www.battleofcorinth.com/wp_rogers.htm Battle of Corinth - Col. W.P. Rogers Story]
* [https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/32794482/henry-clay-robinette Find A Grave - Major Henry Clay Robinett]


{{Visited|14 Sep 2020}}
{{Visited|14 Sep 2020}}
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[[Category:U.S. Civil War Battery]]
[[Category:U.S. Civil War Battery]]
[[Category:Civil War Defenses of Corinth]]
[[Category:Civil War Defenses of Corinth]]
<!--107 times 25 oct 2020==>

Latest revision as of 06:22, 26 October 2020


Battery Robinett (1862-1865) - A U.S. Civil War Battery established in 1862 near Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi. Named Battery Robinett after Lieutenant Henry C. Robinett, 1st U.S. Infantry (Regulars) who was the battery commander. Abandoned at the end of the war in 1865. Also known as Fort Robinett.

Partially Reconstructed Battery/Fort Robinett at the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center.

History

Battery Robinett was a triangular lunette (three-sided field fort) with a double level of gabions topped with fascines. The approach to the battery was blocked by an obstructive Abattis and finally a ditch. A line of earthworks extended to the south of the battery to the railroad. Battery Robinett was armed with three 20-pounder cannon and manned by Company “C” of the 1st U.S. Infantry led by Lieutenant Henry C. Robinett.

This Engraving appears to depict the point in the battle where the Union Gunners have been driven from their guns. It may also depict a wounded Lt. Robinett being helped off the field by two soldiers while his riderless horse bolts away.

During the Battle of Corinth on 4 Oct 1862 three brigades of Confederate Brigadier General Dabney H. Maury’s division attacked Battery Robinett in four columns. The Confederate attackers stormed the battery under heavy fire and when they had penetrated half-way through the abattis the battery gunners changed to grape and canister shot increasing the carnage but the attackers still reached the open ground in front of the battery. At this point, the battery gunners double charged the guns and the redoubt became enveloped in smoke and flame. Confederates seized the parapet at great cost and drove the defenders from their guns. Lt. Robinett and 13 of his 26 men were casualties in the battery. In desperation, Union Captain George Williams fired two shells from nearby Battery Williams into the Confederates overrunning Battery Robinett, stalling their attack long enough to allow Union reinforcements to make their way to the battery. In his official report Capt. Williams described the attack on Battery Robinett:

"The men of the First U. S. Infantry (at Battery Robinett), after having been driven from their guns (they manned the siege guns), restored to their muskets, and were firing from the inside of the embrasures at the enemy on the outside, a distance of about 10 feet intervening; but the rebels, having gained the top of the work, our men feel(fell) back into the angle of the fort, as they had been directed to do in such an emergency. Two shells were thrown from Battery Williams into Battery Robinatt, one bursting on top of it and the other near the right edge. In the mean while the Eleventh Missouri Volunteers (in reserve) changed front, and, aided by the Forty-third and Sixty-third Ohio Volunteers, with the Twenty-seventh Ohio Volunteers on their right, gallantly stormed up to the right and left of the battery, driving the enemy before them. The battery could not open on the retreating enemy, for its commander, Lieutenant Robinett, was wounded, and 13 of the 26 men that manned it were either killed or wounded."

Colonel Rogers and a group of Dead at Battery Robinett. Colonel Rogers is at the left facing up with possibly Captain Foster by his side.

Confederate Colonel William P. Rogers, commanding the 2nd Texas Infantry, and a small group of some sixteen men including Captain Foster survived the initial assault and briefly occupied the battery just as some 1500 Union reinforcements came into view. Colonel Rogers and Captain Foster attempted to signal their surrender with white handkerchiefs but the firing had begun and it was too late. Of that small group, only one survived, J.A. McKinstry, who was a private in Company D, Forty-second Alabama regiment, and it is from his account that the above was gleaned. Photographs of the small Confederate group were made the following morning where they fell. One account says that "An artist was there taking a picture of the scene, while over a thousand persons had gathered there to witness the sight."

In the center, back from the stump, the Colonel's body can be seen outside the Battery ready for Burial. The colonel's dead battle charger on which he led the charge is to the right of the stump. An unknown Confederate casualty is seen in the foreground.

After the battle, it was said that the Confederate dead lay piled from three to seven deep in front of the battery and that for a hundred feet the bodies lay so close it was almost impossible to walk between them. The Confederate dead were buried in a common grave except for Colonel Rogers who was buried in a separate grave with military honors at the direction of the Union General William S. Rosecrans (Cullum 1115). General Rosecrans said of Colonel Rogers at the scene of his death that:

"He was one of the bravest men that ever led a charge. Bury him with military honors and mark his grave so that his friends may claim him."

Some elements of the Confederate attack penetrated into the town of Corinth but became disorganized and the attack ultimately failed.

The battery commander Lt. Robinett survived the battle and the war and remained in the Army after the war as a Brevet Major. He and his men were widely acclaimed for their actions at Corinth. He had sustained a serious head wound during the defense of Battery Robinett that gave him much pain. He had a troubled career after briefly serving on General Grant's staff he was twice court-martialed and removed from the service but the decisions were reversed by authorities in the War Department. After his fiance died he took his own life at Jackson Barracks, New Orleans on 22 Apr 1868.

Current Status

The Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center is a unit of the Shilo national Military Park and it includes some of the important sites of the Corinth battlefield including a partial replica of Battery Robinett attached to the Interpretive Center. A tall white marble shaft near the Interpretive Center is a monument to Confederate Colonel William P. Rogers who led the attack on Battery Robinett. The monument was unveiled in Corinth on 15 Aug 1912 along with markers to the unknown dead of Colonel Rogers’s charge.


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Location: 501 W Linden St, Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi.

Maps & Images

Lat: 34.93780 Long: -88.52980


GPS Locations:

See Also:

Sources:

Links:

Visited: 14 Sep 2020