Battle_of_Mobile_Bay Battle_of_Mobile_Bay

Battle of Mobile Bay - Definition and Overview

Related Words: Adrianople, Aegospotami, Agincourt, Antietam, Anzio, Ardennes, Austerlitz, Ayacucho, Balaclava, Bannockburn, Blenheim, Boyne, Cannae, Caporetto, Chancellorsville, Crecy, Dunkirk, Flodden

Battle_of_Mobile_Bay.png


Great naval victory in Mobile Bay, Aug. 5th 1864, by Currier and Ives.
Battle of Mobile Bay
ConflictAmerican Civil War (Anaconda Plan)
DateAugust 5, 1864
PlaceMouth of Mobile Bay
Off the coast of Alabama
ResultConfederate surrender
Combatants
United States of America
(U.S. Navy)
Confederate States
of America
(Confederate States Navy)
Commanders
David Farragut Franklin Buchanan
Strength
14 wooden ships
Four ironclad monitors
Several gunboats
Three gunboats
One ironclad
Casualties
USS Tecumseh
322 men
1500 men, USS Tennessee captured
Operations in Mobile Bay
Mobile Bay


The Battle of Mobile Bay was a naval battle of the American Civil War that occurred on 5 August 1864. Commanding the Union forces was Admiral David Farragut, while Admiral Franklin Buchanan led the Confederate fleet. The battle took place at the mouth of Mobile Bay on the coast of Alabama.

The entrance to the bay was guarded by two confederate forts, Fort Morgan and Fort Gaines, and by a torpedo field (in modern terms, a minefield), creating a single narrow channel for blockade runners to enter and exit the bay.

The biggest challenge for Farragut was entering the bay. With eighteen vessels, he commanded far greater firepower than the Confederate fleet of four. The Union fleet suffered the first major loss when the USS Tecumseh was critically damaged by an exploding torpedo after it wandered into the field. Within three minutes, the vessel was completely submerged. Ninety-four men went down with the ship. Under fire from both the Confederate fleet and Fort Morgan, Farragut had to choose between risking the mine field or retreat. This is the point when Farragut allegedly shouted, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead."

The Union won the battle. Buchanan surrendered to Farragut aboard his ship. In addition to shutting down one of the two remaining Confederate ports, this battle (together with the battle of Atlanta) is thought to have boosted Abraham Lincoln's bid for reelection.

Ships

The Union Navy had 14 wooden ships:

  • USS Brooklyn (screw sloop)
  • USS Octorora (981-ton "double-ender" side-wheel gunboat)
  • USS Hartford (2900-ton screw sloop; Farragut's flagship)
  • USS Metacomet (1173-ton Sassacus-class "double-ender" steam gunboat)
  • USS Richmond (screw sloop)
  • USS Port Royal (sidewheel steamer gunboat "double-ender")
  • USS Lackawanna (1240-ton steam screw sloop-of-war)
  • USS Seminole (screw sloop)
  • USS Monongahela (screw sloop)
  • USS Kennebec (gunboat)
  • USS Ossipee (1240-ton steam screw sloop)
  • USS Itasca (gunboat)
  • USS Oneida (screw sloop)
  • USS Galena (950-ton ironclad gunboat/screw steamer)

The Union Navy also had 4 ironclad monitors:

  • USS Tecumseh sunk by torpedo (iron-hulled, single-turret monitor)
  • USS Manhattan (2100-ton Canonicus-class monitor)
  • USS Winnebago (1300-ton Milwaukee-class ironclad river monitor, twin-turrets)
  • USS Chickasaw (1300-ton Milwaukee-class ironclad river monitor, twin-turrets)

The Confederate Navy had four ships:

Pictures of the battle: [1] (http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-us-cs/csa-sh/csash-sz/tenn-k2.htm)

Map of Mobile Bay, 1861.

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