History
By Land or Sea, the Confederate States Marine Corp
Was a Force to Reckon With
There has been much written about the United States Marine Corps throughout
its history, yet, not much is known, let alone written, about the
Confederate States Marine Corps. Historians that research the Confederate
Marine Corps have to go back to the US Marine Corps for comparisons because
the Confederate Marine history has deep roots with the United States
Marines.
On March 16, 1861, just one month after the creation of the Confederate
Provisional Government, the Navy Department was authorized to create the
Confederate States Marine Corps. Initially intended to be a battalion of 6
companies commanded by a major, this organization benefited by "old corps"
officers who resigned their U. S. commissions and offered their services to
the South. An amendatory act was passed on May 20, 1861 to enlarge the Corps
to 10 companies commanded by a colonel with an end strength of 1,072
Marines.
This is in comparison with the size of the USMC at the opening shot of the
Civil War was 1,768, which included the President’s Own (Marine Band). The
peak strength of the US Marines would reach 3,881 in February 1865 whereas
the Confederate Marines mustered less than 600 at its zenith. Despite its
relatively small size, the CSMC distinguished itself in many ways throughout
the war by defending shore installations, embarking on ships, and engaging
in numerous battles with enemy land forces when the need arose. Due to a
lack of able-bodied seamen in the Confederate Navy, rebel Marines were
called upon to maintain discipline and man the deck guns of the ship more so
than in the US Marines. In addition, the CS Marines was seen as a unique
organization that could be relied upon to take on special assignments when
the need arose and carried out these varied duties with a high degree of
success despite its small numbers.
As an interesting note, Black Americans were also employed in the
Confederate Navy and Marines. The marines were a part of the Navy Department
and at the time, Navy regulations authorized one black for every five
whites. Dr. Edward Smith, Dean of American Studies at American University,
estimates that by February 1865, 1,150 Black Americans had served in the
Confederate States Navy. This number would equate to approximately 20
percent of this branch of the Confederate military. Smith is currently
researching the names and compiling a list of those blacks that served in
the CS Marines and is meeting with some success by looking through the
pension records.
Origins of the CSMC
The bulk of the Confederate Marines officer corps were seasoned veterans
from the USMC who tendered their resignations in order to offer their
services for the cause of the South. Fifty-six officers were appointed to
the CSMC throughout the Civil War and 19 of these were former USMC officers.
An interesting note is that the Confederate Commandant was actually a former
U.S. Army officer.
Col. Lloyd J. Beall, a West Point graduate, was a paymaster in the U.S. Army
stationed at St. Louis, MO when he tendered his resignation and headed
south. Although born at Fort Adams, RI, he was a Marylander who married the
daughter of a South Carolina senator, and his loyalties were with the South.
On May 23, 1861, Confederate Secretary of the Navy, Stephen R. Mallory,
appointed Beall a colonel in the Confederate States Marine Corps and served
in that capacity throughout the war. An administrator during the Civil War,
Beall’s military knowledge and experience remained an untapped resource.
Beall worked hard to have the Confederate Marine Corps receive the
personnel, supplies and other benefits accorded to other branches of the
military. The training of officers and enlisted Marines took place at the
Marines’ barracks named Camp Beall in honor of the Commandant just a short
distance to the south of Richmond at Drewry’s Bluff overlooking the James
River. By the end of the war, he had succeeded in helping improve the
resources available to the Confederate Marine Corps and established separate
marine training camps in Charleston, South Carolina; several permanent
stations on the Mississippi River and Atlantic Coast. Thanks, in part, to
Beall’s efforts; the Confederate Marines gained a reputation for
distinguished combat service, on the sea and land. After the Civil War,
Beall lived in Richmond, Virginia, and kept most of the Confederate States
Marine Corps records at his home. Much of this history, along with Beall’s
personal history, was destroyed in a fire. Perhaps a final irony of Beall’s
life was his death on November 10, 1887, the official birthday of the United
States Marine Corps.
The organization of the CSMC into companies under the nominal control of a
regimental headquarters was different from the organization of the USMC at
that time. The USMC was organized under Marine barracks, and ship
detachments and were sent out accordingly from those barracks near the
ship’s homeport. The intent of the CSMC was to train officers and enlisted
Marines at Drewry’s Bluff (similar to the USMC training at Marine Barracks,
Washington DC) and then send them out to man ship detachments or “barracks”
at designated ports or installations. The captains were responsible for
recruiting their own companies and not until later in the war were
recruiting offices established throughout the South. Initial enlistment’s
were for 4 years, but later changed to 3 when recruiting goals were not met.
By late April 1861, when war was declared and new states were joining the
Confederacy, Secretary of the Navy Stephen Mallory reported to President
Davis that Marine Corps recruiting stations were—“looking for a few good
Southern men” in the capital city of Montgomery, Alabama, and in the
bustling port of New Orleans, Louisiana. Most of the new detachments went
first to Pensacola, Florida, where Southern forces were besieging a Union
garrison in Fort Pickens on Santa Rosa Island. On July 26, 1861, the 300 man
Marine battalion, made up of 3 companies, was attached to the 3d Brigade of
the Army of Pensacola and a fourth company of 150 Marines was sent to New
Orleans in defense of the harbor. Upon the Federal bombardment of Pensacola,
the battalion transferred its companies piecemeal to Virginia and completed
the movement, with a small detachment remaining at Mobile, AL around
February 24,1862. Other Marine detachments served with the Naval battery
attached to General Johnston’s army at Centreville, Virginia, and scattered
stations along the coast of Georgia and South Carolina.
During the Union offensives in the spring of 1862, the Southern Marines were
involved in a battle on the Mississippi River. The Yankees sailed up the
Mississippi on April 24th to challenge Forts Jackson and St Phillip with
their ocean going warships; they ran into John Mitchell’s River Defense
Flotilla, which included the ship, McRae and her Marine detachment. During
the swirling river fight, the McRae took on four enemy vessels at once,
including the USS Iroquois which suffered twenty-six casualties among her
own Marines. This was the first face to face fight between Northern and
Southern Marines.
The bulk of the CSMC remained in the Richmond area at Camp Beall on Drewry’s
Bluff and at the Navy Shipyard, Norfolk, VA with smaller units deploying to
Wilmington, NC; Charleston, SC; and Savannah, GA. From these locations,
rebel Marines formed ship detachments and embarked on numerous vessels that
included ironclads and cruisers to prey upon northern shipping. The largest
Marine contingent that served onboard a ship was the detachment of 55
officers and men who served on the ironclad CSS Virginia. Marines served
aboard the CSS Sumter, CSS Shenandoah (recruited from Australian stowaways
while visiting Melbourne, Australia), CSS Alabama, CSS Atlanta (rechristened
the Tallahassee and also known as the Olustee), CSS Tennessee, CSS
Chickamauga, and the gunboat Gaines, to name a few.
Roles of Marines
CS Marine regulations prescribed that Marines could be employed on board
ship as gun crews under their own officers, or even as individuals assigned
to regular gun crews. But such assignments were to be made only in case of
necessity. It was pretty well understood that many Marines had been trained
as artillerists and many served in heavy fortifications manning the shore
battery guns guarding Wilmington, Charleston, Savannah, New Orleans, and
Mobile to name a few major Southern ports.
As the war progressed, another function of the Marines developed.
Confederate Marines were used as a type of Special Forces unit. Confederate
Marines were called upon many times for special missions such as the plan to
capture Federal ironclads anchored off of Charleston Harbor in 1863. This
plan called for the Marines to board the ships at night and disable the
engine by dropping sulfur, gunpowder, and wet blankets down the smokestack.
Once this was completed, the Marines would wait for the gassed victims to
emerge and surrender or die from suffocation. Training was conducted and the
Marines were ready, yet the Union armada of nine ironclads that sailed into
Charleston Harbor on April 6, 1863 received such a terrible shelling that
the fleet withdrew and the mission was scrubbed when the threat vanished.
Confederate Marines were instrumental in the special
operation to take-out the USS Underwriter from the flotilla anchored at New
Bern, NC on 2 February 1864. After a brief but violent hand-to-hand fight,
the Marines and sailors were successful in capturing and destroying the
ship. Their commander commented afterward on the bravery displayed by the
Marines that, “as a body they would be a credit to any organization, and
that I will be glad to be associated with them on duty at any time.” The
rebel Marines were also successful on June 2, 1864 in capturing the USS
Water Witch near Savannah, GA in a 10-minute bloody battle on her decks and
adding her to the Confederate Navy complement.
In July of 1864, General Robert E. Lee devised a plan where a battalion of
Marines were to slip through the Federal naval blockade and make a
amphibious landing at Point Lookout above Washington D. C. to free the
Confederate Prisoners of War there. This was to be done in support of
General Jubal Early’s raid on Washington. The force was led again by Thomas
S. Wilson and included 2nd Lt. Henry H. McCune of Missouri. But because of
fear that the plan was leaked out, the ships carrying the Marines were
called back and the mission aborted.
Exploits of the CSMC
One of the most notable events of the war involved a duel off Hampton Roads,
VA between the Union ironclad Monitor and the Confederate ironclad Virginia
on March 8-9, 1862. Marines manned several guns during the standoff and
performed well enough to be mentioned in Admiral Buchanan’s report where he
commended the coolness of the Marines that manned the guns on the Virginia.
Although the Marines were not able to perform their traditional role of
sniping and boarding enemy ships or repelling boarders, their skill and
daring behind the deck guns was exemplary and showed that the Marines were
an integral part of the ship’s complement. This type of action would be
repeated throughout the Confederate States Navy wherever Marines were
present. The Marines redeployed to Drewry’s Bluff when the Virginia was
trapped in the James River by Union forces and she was scuttled to prevent
her capture.
After the Virginia had to be destroyed on May 11, 1862, her crew transferred
to the shore defenses at Drewry’s Bluff on the James River just in time to
battle five Union warships which attempted to ascend the river to Richmond.
On May 15,1862, a Federal flotilla comprised of the ironclad USS Monitor,
the armor-plated gunboat USS Galena, and the wooden gunboats Aroostook and
Port Royal tried unsuccessfully to run the gauntlet at Drewry’s Bluff. Along
with the accurate cannon fire, Marine sharpshooters were very effective as
evidenced by wounding the commanding officer of the USS Port Royal and
trading heavy volume of fire with the U.S. Marines embarked on the ships.
The Marine battalion at Drewry’s Bluff would remain until fighting late in
the war caused them to retreat with General Robert E. Lee’s army.
Another interesting footnote of history involves Confederate Marine Sgt.
George Stephenson of the infamous commerce raider CSS Sumter. After a long
career the CSS Sumter was abandoned at Gibraltar and a small force was left
behind including a Marine Guard commanded by Sgt. Stephenson. The Commanding
officer Midshipman Williams Andrews was killed in October 1862 by a seaman
and Sgt. Stephenson became the only Marine Federal or Confederate to command
a ship of war in the War for Southern Independence.
The Eclipse of the CSMC
In December 1864, the Confederate Marines were caught up in Sherman’s
capture of Savannah, Georgia. Most of the station’s Marines went ashore to
reinforce the army and remained with the army in its retreat to the north.
With the South’s Atlantic ports now falling like dominoes, Fort Fisher was
next. After a three-day bombardment, Union Forces were landed on January 15,
1865, and grappled with the defenders at close range. They overran the main
fort, capturing Battery Buchanan and the Mound Battery. In true Marine Corps
tradition, the fifty-man company fought a bayonet last stand from gun to gun
until they were “all killed or captured.”
The Marines who came north from the fallen port cities took post in
Richmond’s shore defenses, and were overlooked during the first evacuation.
Along with displaced and shipless seamen, the Marines were organized into a
naval brigade under the overall command of Captain Tucker, CSN, and attached
to Custis Lee’s division of the Army of Northern Virginia. On April 6, 1865,
the Yankees overwhelmed the Confederate rearguard, General Ewell’s Corps, at
Sayler’s Creek, but the Marine brigade fought so hard that the enemy
bypassed them to pursue other routed army units. The core of this brigade
was a battalion of some 200 marines. It was reported that the Marine
battalion fought courageously in savage hand-to-hand combat with the 37th
Massachusetts and 121st New York Regiments in rain-swollen marshland and
repulsed the attack of the Federals. The 37th Massachusetts regimental
commander credited his unit’s use of Spencer repeating rifles as the only
reason they were able to avoid disaster at the hands of the Marines. Fifteen
minutes after General Ewell surrendered, the brigade was still firing away.
The remnants of the naval brigade were surrounded at day’s end. Only after
massed batteries were trained on the Marines did they yield forcing Capt
Tucker to surrender his forces. Their conduct in the face of disaster was
worthy of the Corp’s heritage.
The remains of the Confederate Marines withdrew to Appomattox and
surrendered with General Lee on April 9, 1865. Twenty-nine Marines were
present when General Lee surrendered Appomattox Court House. 1stLt Richard
Henderson (former USMC Commandant Gen. Archibald Henderson’s son) was the
senior Marine present on that day when the Confederate Corps capitulated
alongside the Army of Northern Virginia. The last Confederate Marines to
surrender in the war were north of at Hanna Bluff, Al, just north of Mobile
on May 10,1865.
Conclusion
By coincidence, the first recruiting for the Confederate Marine Corps in
1861 and the last surrender of an organized unit of the Corps took place in
Alabama. Based on the principle laid down by USMC Commandant Gene Archibald
Henderson prior to the Civil War, the USMC was to be ready to respond
instantly to any emergency. To the credit of Col. Beall and his experienced
officers, the CSMC abided by the same principle. With a battalion-sized unit
close to the CSMC Headquarters, the Marines were ready and capable of
responding in short notice to emerging threats and special operations.
Despite its small size, the CSMC distinguished itself numerous times and was
constantly called upon and in demand not only by the Confederate Navy, but
by the Army as well. On four separate occasions throughout the war, the CSMC
received official thanks from the Confederate Congress. Even in the
Confederacy’s waning days, the rebel Marines did not give up without a
fight. One Union soldier after the Battle of Sayler’s Creek stated; “Those
Marines fought like tigers and against odds of at least ten to one.” Whether
on land or sea, the rebel Marines fought with valor and tenacity only
expected of an elite fighting force.
The CSMC, although short lived, carried itself notably and could be seen as
an implicit extension of the principle of a force in readiness as espoused
long before the Civil War.
The Marines of the South were the foundation of the Marine Corps we know
today.
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