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Sabine Pass II Print E-mail
Other Name: None
State: Texas
Location: Jefferson County
Campaign: Operations to Blockade the Texas Coast (1863)
Dates: September 8, 1863
Principal Commanders: union  Union States: Maj. Gen. William B. Franklin and Capt. Frederick Crocker, U.S.N.
confederate  Confederate States: Lt. Richard W. Dowling
Forces Engaged: union  Union States: 4 gunboats and 7 transports loaded with troops
confederate  Confederate States: Texan Davis Guards (44 men)
Estimated Casualties: union  Union States: 230
confederate  Confederate States: unknown
Results: Result(s): Confederate victory
Description:

About 6:00 am on the morning of September 8, 1863, a Union flotilla of four gunboats and seven troop transports steamed into Sabine Pass and up the Sabine River with the intention of reducing Fort Griffin and landing troops to begin occupying Texas. As the gunboats approached Fort Griffin, they came under accurate fire from six cannons. The Confederate gunners at Fort Griffin had been sent there as a punishment. To break the day-to-day monotony, the gunners practiced firing artillery at range markers placed in the river. Their practice paid off. Fort Griffin’s small force of 44 men, under command of Lt. Richard W. Dowling, forced the Union flotilla to retire and captured the gunboat Clifton and about 200 prisoners. Further Union operations in the area ceased for about a month. The heroics at Fort Griffin--44 men stopping a Union expedition--inspired other Confederate soldiers.

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