Marker: Beaufort: Union occupation and Confederate spies |
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BEAUFORT ★ ★ ★ Union Occupation and Confederate Spies Before the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, local citizens formed the Beaufort Harbor Guards. These Confederate sympathizers, led by Capt. Josiah Pender, occupied Fort Macon when the sole guard, U.S. Army Ord-nance Sgt. William Alexander, quietly surrendered. During the siege of Fort Macon (Mar. 23–Apr. 25, 1862), Union sig-nalmen on the porch of the Atlantic Hotel directed the Federal artillery in the dunes so that the shells fell accurately on the fort. Afterward, the hotel served U.S. forces as Hammond Hospital until the war ended, when it reopened as the Atlantic Hotel. The Sisters of Mercy, Roman Catholic nuns from New York, cared for the wounded and sick of Beaufort between July 1862 and May 1863. Josiah Fisher Bell, whose house stands on the grounds of the Beaufort Historic Site, served as a Confederate secret agent and helped coordinate the movement of Southern troops into and out of the area. In April 1864, he planned and executed a mission to destroy the Cape Lookout lighthouses. His group succeed-ed in destroying one lighthouse and severely damaging the other. The Old Burying Ground here contains the burial markers of both Confederate and Union soldiers as well as the graves of slaves and free blacks. Broad Street (to the north) became a major center for black refugees, and the area was known as Union City. During the Federal occu-pation of Beaufort, the deep-water port became an important coaling and repair station for the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron. ORANGE STREET MOORE STREET TURNER STREET CRAVEN STREET QUEEN STREET POLLOCK STREET ANN STREET FRONT STREET Union City MIDDLE LANE General Burnside Headquarters Site of Atlantic Hotel Josiah Bell House Leecraft Old Burying Ground Houses Hatsell House Easton House You Are Here Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 28, 1862, View of Fort Macon and Beaufort Harbor. Josiah Fisher Bell Below are a few points of interest. A more detailed walking tour brochure is available inside the Historic Site Welcome Center.
Object Description
Title | Beaufort: Union occupation and Confederate spies |
Creator |
Civil War Trails, Inc. North Carolina Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped. |
Date | 2004 |
Subjects |
North Carolina--History--Civil War, 1861-1865 |
Place |
Carteret County, North Carolina, United States Beaufort, Carteret County, North Carolina, United States |
Time Period |
(1860-1876) Civil War and Reconstruction |
Publisher | Civil War Trails, Inc. |
Rights | May be copyrighted. Submit permissions requests for further use to Civil War Trails, Inc http://www.civilwartrails.org/; |
Type |
Text Sound |
Language |
English |
Format |
Information signs |
Digital Collection |
Civil War Collection |
Digital Format |
application/pdf audio/mp3 |
Audience |
All |
Pres File Name-M | gen_cw_beaufortunionoccupation |
Full Text | BEAUFORT ★ ★ ★ Union Occupation and Confederate Spies Before the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, local citizens formed the Beaufort Harbor Guards. These Confederate sympathizers, led by Capt. Josiah Pender, occupied Fort Macon when the sole guard, U.S. Army Ord-nance Sgt. William Alexander, quietly surrendered. During the siege of Fort Macon (Mar. 23–Apr. 25, 1862), Union sig-nalmen on the porch of the Atlantic Hotel directed the Federal artillery in the dunes so that the shells fell accurately on the fort. Afterward, the hotel served U.S. forces as Hammond Hospital until the war ended, when it reopened as the Atlantic Hotel. The Sisters of Mercy, Roman Catholic nuns from New York, cared for the wounded and sick of Beaufort between July 1862 and May 1863. Josiah Fisher Bell, whose house stands on the grounds of the Beaufort Historic Site, served as a Confederate secret agent and helped coordinate the movement of Southern troops into and out of the area. In April 1864, he planned and executed a mission to destroy the Cape Lookout lighthouses. His group succeed-ed in destroying one lighthouse and severely damaging the other. The Old Burying Ground here contains the burial markers of both Confederate and Union soldiers as well as the graves of slaves and free blacks. Broad Street (to the north) became a major center for black refugees, and the area was known as Union City. During the Federal occu-pation of Beaufort, the deep-water port became an important coaling and repair station for the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron. ORANGE STREET MOORE STREET TURNER STREET CRAVEN STREET QUEEN STREET POLLOCK STREET ANN STREET FRONT STREET Union City MIDDLE LANE General Burnside Headquarters Site of Atlantic Hotel Josiah Bell House Leecraft Old Burying Ground Houses Hatsell House Easton House You Are Here Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 28, 1862, View of Fort Macon and Beaufort Harbor. Josiah Fisher Bell Below are a few points of interest. A more detailed walking tour brochure is available inside the Historic Site Welcome Center. |
Description
Title | Marker: Beaufort: Union occupation and Confederate spies |
Creator |
Civil War Trails, Inc. |
Date | 2004 |
Subjects |
North Carolina--History--Civil War, 1861-1865 |
Place |
Carteret County, North Carolina, United States Beaufort, Carteret County, North Carolina, United States |
Time Period |
(1860-1876) Civil War and Reconstruction |
Publisher | Civil War Trails, Inc. |
Rights | May be copyrighted. Submit permissions requests for further use to Civil War Trails, Inc http://www.civilwartrails.org/; |
Type |
Text |
Language |
English |
Format |
Information signs |
Digital Characteristics-A | 73 KB; |
Digital Collection |
Civil War Collection |
Digital Format | application/pdf |
Audience |
All |
Pres File Name-M | gen_cw_beaufortunionoccupation.pdf |
Full Text | BEAUFORT ★ ★ ★ Union Occupation and Confederate Spies Before the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, local citizens formed the Beaufort Harbor Guards. These Confederate sympathizers, led by Capt. Josiah Pender, occupied Fort Macon when the sole guard, U.S. Army Ord-nance Sgt. William Alexander, quietly surrendered. During the siege of Fort Macon (Mar. 23–Apr. 25, 1862), Union sig-nalmen on the porch of the Atlantic Hotel directed the Federal artillery in the dunes so that the shells fell accurately on the fort. Afterward, the hotel served U.S. forces as Hammond Hospital until the war ended, when it reopened as the Atlantic Hotel. The Sisters of Mercy, Roman Catholic nuns from New York, cared for the wounded and sick of Beaufort between July 1862 and May 1863. Josiah Fisher Bell, whose house stands on the grounds of the Beaufort Historic Site, served as a Confederate secret agent and helped coordinate the movement of Southern troops into and out of the area. In April 1864, he planned and executed a mission to destroy the Cape Lookout lighthouses. His group succeed-ed in destroying one lighthouse and severely damaging the other. The Old Burying Ground here contains the burial markers of both Confederate and Union soldiers as well as the graves of slaves and free blacks. Broad Street (to the north) became a major center for black refugees, and the area was known as Union City. During the Federal occu-pation of Beaufort, the deep-water port became an important coaling and repair station for the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron. ORANGE STREET MOORE STREET TURNER STREET CRAVEN STREET QUEEN STREET POLLOCK STREET ANN STREET FRONT STREET Union City MIDDLE LANE General Burnside Headquarters Site of Atlantic Hotel Josiah Bell House Leecraft Old Burying Ground Houses Hatsell House Easton House You Are Here Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 28, 1862, View of Fort Macon and Beaufort Harbor. Josiah Fisher Bell Below are a few points of interest. A more detailed walking tour brochure is available inside the Historic Site Welcome Center. |