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Page 5(Hatteras Inlet Batteries )Next Page


Hatteras Inlet Batteries

August 28-29, 1861
Also known as: Forts Clark and Hatteras
Dare County, NC
Campaign: Blockade and Coastal Raids

 

Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler , USA
Col. William F. Martin, CSA

Butler had the 9th and 20th New York regiments (roughly 2,000); the Confederate garrison was about 900.

US losses were 3; the Confederates lost a total of about 800.

On August 26, an amphibious expedition led by Maj. Gen. Benjamin Butler and Flag-Officer Silas Stringham, embarked from Fort Monroe to capture Hatteras Inlet, an important haven for blockade-runners. On the 28th, while the navy bombarded Forts Clark and Hatteras, Union troops came ashore and attacked the rear of the Confederate batteries. On August 29, Col. William F. Martin surrendered the Confederate garrison of 670. The Federals lost only one man. Butler returned to Fort Monroe, leaving the captured forts garrisoned. This movement was part of Union efforts to seize coastal enclaves from which to enforce the blockade.



Page 5(Hatteras Inlet Batteries )Next Page



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