Browsing named entities in Daniel Ammen, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 7.2, The Atlantic Coast (ed. Clement Anselm Evans). You can also browse the collection for Roanoke Island (North Carolina, United States) or search for Roanoke Island (North Carolina, United States) in all documents.

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Daniel Ammen, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 7.2, The Atlantic Coast (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter VIII Hatteras InletRoanoke Island. (search)
Chapter VIII Hatteras Inlet—Roanoke Island. the reader who has examined the coast charts or maps of the t a contest; we failed to put a proper force on Roanoke Island, and thus lost the key to our interior coast; ale quantity of army stores. The proximity of Roanoke Island and the presence of a large number of Confederaans, after the capture of the inlet, to fortify Roanoke Island, which was still a key to the greater part of td. At 5 P. M., the batteries and the enemy's Roanoke Island. steamers again opened fire. In forty minutes h blew up in the early part of the evening, and Roanoke Island was then in the undisputed possession of the Nays previous to the attack, that the defence for Roanoke Island was forty 32-pounders, seven rifled guns, and f war vessels that had escaped after the fall of Roanoke Island. His pennant was on board the Dela ware, Commat, which had been disabled in the engagement at Roanoke Island on the 7th, a gunboat on the stocks, and anothe
Daniel Ammen, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 7.2, The Atlantic Coast (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter 9: reduction of Newbern—the Albemarle. (search)
A. Hopkins; Commodore Barney, Lieutenant-Commanding R. T. Renshaw; Hunchback, LieutenantCom-manding E. R. Colhoun; Southfield, Lieutenant-Commanding C. F. Behm; Morse, Acting-Master Peter Hayes; Brincker, Acting-Master J. E. Giddings; and Lockwood, Acting-Master G. W. Graves. The reader will find the armaments of these vessels in the Appendix, and has doubtless already perceived that they are generally the same vessels that five weeks earlier had acted so effectively in the capture of Roanoke Island. At 8.30 A. M. on the 13th the vessels shelled the woods near the proposed place of landing, under cover of which part of the troops were disembarked and moved up the beach at 11.30 A. M., and in the meantime the remainder were landed as rapidly as possible. Six navy howitzers with crews, under command of Lieutenant R. S. McCook, were also landed. As the troops marched the gunboats moved parallel, throwing shells into the woods in advance of them. No Confederate force opposed the
81812,0162,26214,278 July 30, 186411,22111,8222,15713,979 August 31, 186411,12412,2221,66013,882 September 30, 186410,99311,9211,94013,861 October 1, 1864, at Augusta, Ga.1,695 October 31, 186411,98813,4221,61315,035Lieut.-Gen. W. J. Hardee, from Oct. 5, 1864, to Feb. 16, 1865. November 20 186412,05513,83913,839 January 20, 186525,29029,86329,863 January 31, 186524,95630,06230,062 IX.—names of vessels, officers commanding them, and armaments in the attack of the Defences on Roanoke Island, February 7 and 8, 1860, and operations following at Elizabeth City and Newbern in which many of these vessels were engaged. Name of vessel.Commanders of vessels.Armament. Stars and StripesLieut.-Commanding Reed Werden4 Viii-in., 1 30-pdr. rifle. LouisianaLieut.-Commanding Alex. Murray1 Viii-in., 3 32-pdrs., 1 12-pdr., rifled. HetzelLieut.-Commanding H. K. Davenport1 IX-in., 1 80-pdr., rifled. DelawareLieut.-Commanding L. P. Quackenbush1 IX-in., 1 32.pdr., 1 12-pdr., rifled.
daigua, the, U. S. vessel, 74, 131, 156 Canonicus, the, U. S. monitor, 156, 221, 229 Case, Commander, 178; at Roanoke Island, 182 Catskill the, 90 et seq., 96 et seq., 125 et seq., 131 et seq., 146 Cavendy of the Gemsbok, 194 Cere 131, 146 et seq. Mahopac, the, 221, 229 Malvern, the, 231 Maple Leaf, the, U. S. transport, 146 Maps: Roanoke Island, 180; Newbern, 191 Maratanza, the, 218, 228, 242 Marblehead, the, U. S. vessel, 71, 129 et seq., 145 Marc the, U. S. vessel, 7 Ringgold, Captain, Cadwalader, 17 Ripley, General, 16 (note), 132 et seq., 135 et seq. Roanoke Island, 171, 173, 175; map of, 180 et seq. Roanoke, the U. S. frigate, 7, 33 Robertson, Master, conduct commended, 62ssaw Sound, 117, 122, 162 (note) Rogers, Ensign, 150 Rowan, Captain S. C., 128, 137, 146, 165, 172, 177, 179; at Roanoke Island, 182 et seq., 185 et seq.; at Newbern, 189 et seq. S. Sabine, the, U. S. frigate, 6, 17 St. Andrew's Inlet,