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Confederate Battery State Historical Marker
Confederate Battery State
Historical Marker
Located on Horton Rd., Jekyll
Island, Ga.
(Text)
CONFEDERATE
BATTERY
In 1861, Confederate
battery positions on Jekyll Island were
equipped with
one 42-pounder gun and four 32-pounder navy
guns en barbette,
each having about 60 rounds of shot and shell.
Casemates, hot
shot furnace and magazines are recorded, also.
Of greater strength
than batteries on St. Simons Island, the
earthworks of
palmetto logs, heavy timber, sandbags, and rail-
road irons were
mounted for the protection of Brunswick.
February 10,
1862, Gen. Robert e. Lee requested permission
from Gov. Joseph
E. Brown to dismantle the stronghold as "the
inhabitants
of the island and Brunswick have removed themselves
and property"
to inland points. Maj. Edward C. Anderson re-
moved the guns,
sending them to Savannah.
March 9, 1862,
Lt. Miller of the USS Mohican landed a rifle
company and
marines, hoisting the Union flag over the island.
In January,
1863, to strengthen fortifications at Port Royal,
S.C., a Federal
force was sent by flatboat to seize the railroad
irons. Some
of the men who had helped build the defenses guided
the detachment
to them and "the men enjoyed demolishing them
far more than
they had relished their construction."
063-38 GEORGIA HISTORICAL
COMMISSION 1959
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Photo: Ed Jackson
© Carl Vinson Institute of Government,
The University of Georgia
Go to Georgia Historic Markers web site
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