Drewry's Bluff (Ft. Darling) Battlefield
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
Artillery piece that helped repel the Union forces steaming up the James.
It still keeps a silent vigil...
Confederate solider, bunker and big gun.
Historical marker that recounts the 1864 battle at Drewry's Bluff.
Rendition of Marine Corporal John Mackie firing on Confederate positions while his fellow marines took command of the Galena's guns.
Confederate Battery Dantzler on Drewry's Bluff. Taken between 1862-1864
The Galena after the Drewry's Bluff. Here the ship had new guns fitted in and located just about the waterline, a hole that was patched up; a hole from a shell from Drewry's Bluff
A post-battle rendition of the Union naval attack on Drewry's Bluff
Another post-battle rendition. This of the Galena under heavy fire
This painting depicts a Confederate Battery firing on the Union ships in the 1862 battle
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
In 1862, as part of the Union’s Peninsula Campaign, a small flotilla of Union ships, to include the ironclads Naugatuck, Galena and the famous Monitor, steamed up the James in an attempt to reach Richmond. However, their efforts were thwarted when they encountered sunken debris and took heavy fire from Ft. Darling, which severely damaged the Galena. After three hours of exchanging fire, the Union ships, low on ammunition, were forced to retreat.
During the shelling, the Galena suffered many casualties among her gun-crew. In order to get her guns back in operation, Marine Corporal, John F. Mackie, led a group of marines onboard to serve as gun-crews. While the marines served the guns, Mackie (in-between giving orders) took a rifle and would fire on the men stationed in Fort Darling. Although the Union forces had to retreat, Mackie's actions won him the Congressional Medal of Honor, the first American marine to win such a medal.
The fort was then expanded in the years 1862-1864 under the command of CPT Sydney Smith Lee, brother of the more famous Robert E., and it became a training center for the Confederate Naval Academy. It again came under attack in May of 1864 when Union forces once again tried to reach Richmond, by land this time. They managed to capture some of the fort’s outer defenses but were pushed back by a Confederate counterattack on May 16, 1864.
Members of the garrison then took part in the evacuation of Richmond on 2-3 April, 1864 and many of them were with General Lee when he surrendered at Appomattox Courthouse later that month. President Lincoln then sailed past Drewry’s Bluff on his way to Richmond on April 4th, 1864. The park is open daily from sunrise to sunset and admission is free.