Fort Welles: Difference between revisions
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|width="50%"|[[Image:Fort Welles Back Nov 1861.jpg|375px|thumb|right|Captured Fort Walker from the Back, November 1861]] | |width="50%"|[[Image:Fort Welles Back Nov 1861.jpg|375px|thumb|right|Captured Fort Walker from the Back, November 1861]] | ||
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|colspan="2"| | |colspan="2"|[[File:Fort Walker Plan & View.jpg|795px|thumb|center|Fort Walker Plan & View 1861]] | ||
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== [[U.S. Civil War]] (1861-1865) == | == [[U.S. Civil War]] (1861-1865) == |
Revision as of 13:49, 11 March 2018
Fort Welles (1861-1865, 1897-1902) - A U.S. Civil War Coastal Fort on Hilton Head Island, Beaufort County, South Carolina. First established as Fort Walker in May 1861 by Confederate forces and named for Confederate Secretary of War, L.P. Walker. Captured by invading Union forces on 7 Nov 1861. Renamed as Fort Welles in G.O. 29, Headquarters, Expeditionary Corps, Hilton Head, South Carolina, 15 Nov 1861 after the U.S. Secretary of the Navy, Gideon Welles. Abandoned in 1865.
U.S. Civil War (1861-1865)Part of the Harbor Defense of Port Royal Sound. ![]() Initially built in 1861 as Fort Walker, a Confederate earthworks fortification, with 16 guns, on the strategic entrance to Port Royal Sound in South Carolina. Fort Walker and Fort Beauregard on the other side of the entrance to the sound were attacked and overwhelmed by a large Union fleet of over fifty ships on 7 Nov 1861. Fort Walker was subdued by heavy bombardment from the fleet followed by the landing of 13,000 Union troops who surrounded and laid siege to the fort. Union forces occupied the fort for the remainder of the war and significantly expanded it into a system of earthworks almost two miles long. Further reading
Endicott Period (1890-1910)In 1897 Congress appropriated monies for the purchase of additional experimental compressed air Dynamite guns for emplacement at four coastal fortifications. Hilton Head was chosen to have a single gun emplaced and a concrete battery was built near the location of old Fort Welles. Battery Dynamite (2) was tested and inspected during 1901-1902 but was deactivated and scrapped when the experimental program was discontinued. Current StatusOn Hilton Head Island, Beaufort County, South Carolina.
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Visited: 7 Mar 2018
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