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Civil War D-Day: The Battle of Fort Fisher /// 81

 
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Manage episode 377665952 series 1414061
Content provided by Dr. Luke Wolf. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Luke Wolf or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

It was Christmas Day, 1864 when one of the largest armadas ever assembled by mankind began to deluge Fort Fisher, one of the largest forts in the world, with tens of thousands of shells. The Confederates refused to surrender and fought to the last man. Their fort guarded the last remaining port of the Confederacy, an essential lifeline of the fledgling nation. If Fort Fisher fell, so too would fall the Confederate States of America and the men on the ground knew it, felt it, and their actions demonstrated they knew it. Death rained from the sky. The earthen walls absorbed the explosive shock. Humans were split apart, their entrails ticker-taping from their split-open torsos. Terror played concertos on human visages. And you should have seen the animals – butchered by shot and shell. Fort Fisher was a milestone in the human development of killing and this episode will provide the exhaustive details, an examination of mass-produced pain. It’s all here and it’s all free on Battlecast – the world’s foremost podcast on war and its sociopolitical impact.

Download episode 81 here: download link

Maps and Images:

Extensive maps and images are posted to the definitive historical atlas of The Battle of Fort Fisher located here: Battle of Fort Fisher Atlas link

Music Source:

Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio /// website: karlcasey.bandcamp.com

References:

The Wilmington Campaign: Last rays of departing hope by Chris Fonvielle Jr.

Confederate Goliath: The Battle of Fort Fisher by Rod Gragg

The last stronghold: the campaign for Fort Fisher by Richard McClaskin

Spring 1865 : the closing campaigns of the Civil War by Perry Jamieson

The Civil War in North Carolina by Barrett, John Gilchrist

The Tar Heel State: A New History of North Carolina by Milton Ready

Faces of Fort Fisher, 1861-1864 by Chris Fonvielle

Clayton, B. (2013). Applying GIS to locate the USS Louisiana: A study of the Fort Fisher Civil War Naval Battlefield. [Master’s Thesis, East Carolina University].

Ludwick, M.P. (1995). Your most obedient son: The Civil War letters of William Tell Cobb. [Master’s Thesis, The College of WIlliam and Mary].

Longacre, E.G. (1988). The army of the James, 1863-1865: A military, political, and social

history. (Volumes I – IV) [Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University].

Washington, V.F. (1995). Eagles on their buttons: The Fifth Regiment of Infantry, United States Colored Troops in the American Civil War. [Doctoral Dissertation, Ohio State University].

McAllister, R.M. (1968). The amphibious Battles of Fort Fisher, North Carolina, December, 1864 – January, 1865; Showing the role of conflicting personalities and the chaos inevitable in the waging of war. [Master’s Thesis, University of Southern California].

Megelsh, M. (2015). A Mainer from Rockland: Adelbert Ames in the Civil War. [Master’s Thesis, Liberty University].

Henry C. Lockewood “The Capture of Fort Fisher,” The Maine Bugle, (January 1894).

Capture of Fort Fisher by Adelbert Ames

Jean Vial Pays des lions fidèles.

Anonymous. Assault on Fort Fisher. On Point Magazine, Spring 2010, Vol. 15, No. 4 , p. 48.

Black Troops in the Army of the James, 1863-65 by Edward G. Longacre. Military Affairs, Vol. 45, No. 1 (Feb., 1981), pp. 1-8.

Butler’s Folly: The First Battle of Fort Fisher, December 1864 by Taylor Hess. On Point, Vol. 16, No. 4 (Spring 2011), pp. 6-13.

Lamb, W. (1893). The defender of Fisher; Col. Lamb’s address in Wilmington, N.C..

Fleet against Fort by: John Hayes. Ordnance, Vol. 45, No. 243 (NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 1960), pp. 357-360.

Fort Fisher: Amphibious Victory in the American Civil War by: Gary J. Ohls. Naval War College Review, Vol. 59, No. 4 (Autumn 2006), pp. 81-99.

Fort Fisher (1865) by A.G. Lawrence.

Hurricane of Fire: The Union Assault on Fort Fisher by Charles Robinson

Rebel Gibraltar: Fort Fisher and Wilmington, C.S.A. by James Walker

Running the blockade. A personal narrative of adventures, risks and escapes during the American civil war by Thomas E. Taylor (1896).

Shock and Assault in the First Battle of Fort Fisher by Charles L. Price and Claude C. Sturgill. The North Carolina Historical Review, Vol. 47, No. 1 (January, 1970), pp. 24-39.

Wightman, S.K. In search of my son. American Heritage Magazine. Vol. 14, No. 2 (February 1963).

Turner, H.M. “Rocked in the cradle of consternation. American Heritage Magazine. Vol. 31, No. 6. (October/November 1980).

“Welcome Brothers!” The 1865 Union Prisoners of War Exchange in North Carolina by Chris Fonvielle Jr. The North Carolina Historical Review, Vol. 92, No. 3 (JULY 2015), pp. 278-311.

Incidents and Anecdotes of the Civil War by Admiral David Dixon Porter.

A Sailor’s Log: Recollections Of Forty Years Of Naval Life by Robley Evans

History of the 117th New York by J.A. Mowris.

The autobiography of Admiral Dewey by George Dewey.

Fonvielle, C.E. Jr. (1994). “The last rays of departing hope”: The battles of Fort Fisher,

the fall of Wilmington, North Carolina, and the end of the Confederacy. [Doctoral Dissertation, University of South Carolina].

Fort Fisher, December 1864-January 1865 by David W. Kummer, (2012).

The Fall of Fort Fisher: Contested Memories of the Civil War by Warren Ellem.The North Carolina Historical Review, Vol. 79, No. 2 (APRIL 2002), pp. 198-233.

Merrill, J.M. The Fort Fisher and Wilmington Campaign: Letters from Rear Admiral David D Porter. The North Carolina Historical Review, Vol. 35, No. 4 (OCTOBER 1958), pp. 461-475.

Ryan, J.T. (1997). On Land and Sea:The United States Marine Corps in The Civil War. [Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University].

Thompson, B. and Owsley, F.L. Jr. The War Journal of Midshipman Cary. Civil War History, Vol. 9, No. 2, June 1963, pp. 187-202.

Helsley, A.J. Vox Populi and the Fall of Fort Fisher. The South Carolina Historical Magazine, Vol. 96, No. 1 (Jan., 1995), pp. 71-73.

Wood, R.E. (1976). Port town at war: Wilmington, North Carolina 1860-1865. [Doctoral Dissertation, Florida State University].

Hoole, S.W. (1956). Vizitelley covers the Confederacy.

Freeman, D.S. (1936). R. E. Lee: A Biography

  continue reading

88 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 377665952 series 1414061
Content provided by Dr. Luke Wolf. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Luke Wolf or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

It was Christmas Day, 1864 when one of the largest armadas ever assembled by mankind began to deluge Fort Fisher, one of the largest forts in the world, with tens of thousands of shells. The Confederates refused to surrender and fought to the last man. Their fort guarded the last remaining port of the Confederacy, an essential lifeline of the fledgling nation. If Fort Fisher fell, so too would fall the Confederate States of America and the men on the ground knew it, felt it, and their actions demonstrated they knew it. Death rained from the sky. The earthen walls absorbed the explosive shock. Humans were split apart, their entrails ticker-taping from their split-open torsos. Terror played concertos on human visages. And you should have seen the animals – butchered by shot and shell. Fort Fisher was a milestone in the human development of killing and this episode will provide the exhaustive details, an examination of mass-produced pain. It’s all here and it’s all free on Battlecast – the world’s foremost podcast on war and its sociopolitical impact.

Download episode 81 here: download link

Maps and Images:

Extensive maps and images are posted to the definitive historical atlas of The Battle of Fort Fisher located here: Battle of Fort Fisher Atlas link

Music Source:

Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio /// website: karlcasey.bandcamp.com

References:

The Wilmington Campaign: Last rays of departing hope by Chris Fonvielle Jr.

Confederate Goliath: The Battle of Fort Fisher by Rod Gragg

The last stronghold: the campaign for Fort Fisher by Richard McClaskin

Spring 1865 : the closing campaigns of the Civil War by Perry Jamieson

The Civil War in North Carolina by Barrett, John Gilchrist

The Tar Heel State: A New History of North Carolina by Milton Ready

Faces of Fort Fisher, 1861-1864 by Chris Fonvielle

Clayton, B. (2013). Applying GIS to locate the USS Louisiana: A study of the Fort Fisher Civil War Naval Battlefield. [Master’s Thesis, East Carolina University].

Ludwick, M.P. (1995). Your most obedient son: The Civil War letters of William Tell Cobb. [Master’s Thesis, The College of WIlliam and Mary].

Longacre, E.G. (1988). The army of the James, 1863-1865: A military, political, and social

history. (Volumes I – IV) [Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University].

Washington, V.F. (1995). Eagles on their buttons: The Fifth Regiment of Infantry, United States Colored Troops in the American Civil War. [Doctoral Dissertation, Ohio State University].

McAllister, R.M. (1968). The amphibious Battles of Fort Fisher, North Carolina, December, 1864 – January, 1865; Showing the role of conflicting personalities and the chaos inevitable in the waging of war. [Master’s Thesis, University of Southern California].

Megelsh, M. (2015). A Mainer from Rockland: Adelbert Ames in the Civil War. [Master’s Thesis, Liberty University].

Henry C. Lockewood “The Capture of Fort Fisher,” The Maine Bugle, (January 1894).

Capture of Fort Fisher by Adelbert Ames

Jean Vial Pays des lions fidèles.

Anonymous. Assault on Fort Fisher. On Point Magazine, Spring 2010, Vol. 15, No. 4 , p. 48.

Black Troops in the Army of the James, 1863-65 by Edward G. Longacre. Military Affairs, Vol. 45, No. 1 (Feb., 1981), pp. 1-8.

Butler’s Folly: The First Battle of Fort Fisher, December 1864 by Taylor Hess. On Point, Vol. 16, No. 4 (Spring 2011), pp. 6-13.

Lamb, W. (1893). The defender of Fisher; Col. Lamb’s address in Wilmington, N.C..

Fleet against Fort by: John Hayes. Ordnance, Vol. 45, No. 243 (NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 1960), pp. 357-360.

Fort Fisher: Amphibious Victory in the American Civil War by: Gary J. Ohls. Naval War College Review, Vol. 59, No. 4 (Autumn 2006), pp. 81-99.

Fort Fisher (1865) by A.G. Lawrence.

Hurricane of Fire: The Union Assault on Fort Fisher by Charles Robinson

Rebel Gibraltar: Fort Fisher and Wilmington, C.S.A. by James Walker

Running the blockade. A personal narrative of adventures, risks and escapes during the American civil war by Thomas E. Taylor (1896).

Shock and Assault in the First Battle of Fort Fisher by Charles L. Price and Claude C. Sturgill. The North Carolina Historical Review, Vol. 47, No. 1 (January, 1970), pp. 24-39.

Wightman, S.K. In search of my son. American Heritage Magazine. Vol. 14, No. 2 (February 1963).

Turner, H.M. “Rocked in the cradle of consternation. American Heritage Magazine. Vol. 31, No. 6. (October/November 1980).

“Welcome Brothers!” The 1865 Union Prisoners of War Exchange in North Carolina by Chris Fonvielle Jr. The North Carolina Historical Review, Vol. 92, No. 3 (JULY 2015), pp. 278-311.

Incidents and Anecdotes of the Civil War by Admiral David Dixon Porter.

A Sailor’s Log: Recollections Of Forty Years Of Naval Life by Robley Evans

History of the 117th New York by J.A. Mowris.

The autobiography of Admiral Dewey by George Dewey.

Fonvielle, C.E. Jr. (1994). “The last rays of departing hope”: The battles of Fort Fisher,

the fall of Wilmington, North Carolina, and the end of the Confederacy. [Doctoral Dissertation, University of South Carolina].

Fort Fisher, December 1864-January 1865 by David W. Kummer, (2012).

The Fall of Fort Fisher: Contested Memories of the Civil War by Warren Ellem.The North Carolina Historical Review, Vol. 79, No. 2 (APRIL 2002), pp. 198-233.

Merrill, J.M. The Fort Fisher and Wilmington Campaign: Letters from Rear Admiral David D Porter. The North Carolina Historical Review, Vol. 35, No. 4 (OCTOBER 1958), pp. 461-475.

Ryan, J.T. (1997). On Land and Sea:The United States Marine Corps in The Civil War. [Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University].

Thompson, B. and Owsley, F.L. Jr. The War Journal of Midshipman Cary. Civil War History, Vol. 9, No. 2, June 1963, pp. 187-202.

Helsley, A.J. Vox Populi and the Fall of Fort Fisher. The South Carolina Historical Magazine, Vol. 96, No. 1 (Jan., 1995), pp. 71-73.

Wood, R.E. (1976). Port town at war: Wilmington, North Carolina 1860-1865. [Doctoral Dissertation, Florida State University].

Hoole, S.W. (1956). Vizitelley covers the Confederacy.

Freeman, D.S. (1936). R. E. Lee: A Biography

  continue reading

88 episodes

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