Thursday, November 5, 2020

Our Confederate Ancestors: Running the Yankee Blockade: A Daring Daytime Run by the Little Hattie

 This map of the Union attack on Ft. Fisher in Jan. 1865 shows the route the Little Hattie would have taken.

Signal-Officer Daniel Shepherd Stevenson has written for the archives of the Daughters of the Confederacy at Wilmington, N. C., a sketch, from which the following is taken: In the soft, mild days of October, 1864, while we lingered at our cottage by the sea, on Confederate Point, I witnessed the most exciting and most interesting scene of my life. It was during dark nights that blockade-runners always made their trips, and the bar was shelled whenever one was expected. The "Little Hattie," a blockade-runner, on which my nephew, D. S. Stevenson, was signal-officer, was expected, and the bar was vigorously shelled each night to keep the blockading fleet at a safe distance.

More @ Charleston Athenaeum

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