Fort Gaines (1): Difference between revisions

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[[Image:MobileHarborMap 1862.jpg|150px|thumb|left|Mobile Harbor, 1862]]
[[Image:MobileHarborMap 1862.jpg|150px|thumb|left|Mobile Harbor, 1862]]
At the beginning of the [[U.S. Civil War]] in 1861 the Alabama State Militia seized both Fort Gaines and [[Fort Morgan]] from Federal troops. Fort Gaines remained in Confederate hands until 8 Aug 1864 when it was surrendered after the Battle of Mobile Bay to a Union fleet commanded by Adm. [[David Farragut]]. The Battle of Mobile Bay was the occasion for Adm. Farragut's famous order, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!", referring to torpedoes strung across the channel into Mobile Bay.
At the beginning of the [[U.S. Civil War]] in 1861 the Alabama State Militia seized both Fort Gaines and [[Fort Morgan]] from Federal troops. Fort Gaines remained in Confederate hands until 8 Aug 1864 when it was surrendered after the Battle of Mobile Bay to a Union fleet commanded by Adm. [[David Farragut]]. The Battle of Mobile Bay was the occasion for Adm. Farragut's famous order, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!", referring to torpedoes strung across the channel into Mobile Bay.
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==[[:Category:Endicott Period Forts|Endicott Period]]==
==[[:Category:Endicott Period Forts|Endicott Period]]==

Revision as of 19:26, 1 March 2008

Fort Gaines (1) (1821-1946) - Construction on this Third System masonry fort began in 1821 but construction and funding problems prevented completion and a redesigned fort was started in the 1850's. Designed by Joseph G. Totten and named after Gen. Edmund P. Gaines in 1853. The fort was still incomplete in 1861 when the U.S. Civil War began. The fort was occupied by Confederate forces in 1861 and they finished the fort in 1862. Abandoned after World War I and reactivated during World War II it was abandoned after the end of World War II.

Fort Gaines (1) History

Established to defend the narrow entrance to Mobile Bay, Alabama along with Fort Morgan.

Fort Gaines was designed as a regular pentagon with bastions at each corner and ten guns mounted on each of the five walls. Each bastion was to have four flank howitzers. A thirty-five foot wide dry moat surrounded the twenty-two foot high walls with a drawbridge for access.

U.S. Civil War

Mobile Harbor, 1862

At the beginning of the U.S. Civil War in 1861 the Alabama State Militia seized both Fort Gaines and Fort Morgan from Federal troops. Fort Gaines remained in Confederate hands until 8 Aug 1864 when it was surrendered after the Battle of Mobile Bay to a Union fleet commanded by Adm. David Farragut. The Battle of Mobile Bay was the occasion for Adm. Farragut's famous order, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!", referring to torpedoes strung across the channel into Mobile Bay.

Endicott Period

World War I

A Coastal Artillery unit manned the disappearing guns during World War I. An anti-aircraft gunnery school operated from Fort Gains during and following the war.

World War II

The fort was used by the Alabama National Guard and the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II.

Current Status

The United States sold Fort Gaines to the City of Mobile in 1926. The city in turn gave the property to the Alabama Department of Conservation, which deeded it to the Dauphin Island Park and Beach Board.


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Location: Dauphin Island, Alabama

Maps & Images

Lat: 30.24824 Long: -88.076870

Sources:

  • Weaver, John R. II, A Legacy in Brick and Stone: America Coastal Defense Forts of the Third System, Redoubt Press, McLean, 2001, First Printing, ISBN 1-57510-069-X, page 175-177
  • Roberts, Robert B., Encyclopedia of Historic Forts: The Military, Pioneer, and Trading Posts of the United States, Macmillan, New York, 1988, 10th printing, ISBN 0-02-926880-X, page 5

Links:

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