Here's my article about General Quincy Adams Gillmore that ran in the Summer 2013 edition of The Black Swamp Trader & Firelands Gazette. It appears here through the courtesy of that publication.
****
Lorain's General Quincy A. Gillmore Outgunned the Confederate Army
By Dan Brady
With the 150th anniversary of the Civil War in full swing,
many Ohio communities are renewing their interest in local heroes. For the city
of Lorain, that means it's time for the spotlight to shine on General Quincy A.
Gillmore. While the local newspaper has already run the expected short article
about him (minus photo), his accomplishments in the artillery services of the
Union Army are still not well known, even in his own hometown. So, at a time
when the media constantly bombards us with newly anointed “heroes,” let’s look
back at General Quincy A. Gillmore, a soldier of distinguished character who
made artillery history in the Union Army during the Civil War.
Quincy A. Gillmore was born Feb. 28, 1825 in Black River (as
Lorain was known then). His grandfather, Edmund Gillmore, was one of the
founders of Black River, having come to the area in 1811 from Chester in
Hampshire County, Massachusetts. Edmund Gillmore eventually owned nearly 1,000
acres in Amherst and Black River Township, including what is now Lakeview Park
in Lorain and extending west to the railroad undercut at W. 21st Street.
Indeed, present-day Lakeview Park on U. S. 6 in Lorain is
where Quincy A. Gillmore was born to Quartus and Elizabeth (Reid) Gillmore. He
was named after then President-elect John Quincy Adams.
Quincy A. Gillmore attended Norwalk Academy and Elyria High
School, and was recommended for West Point. But he almost missed his
opportunity to attend the prestigious military academy!
According to A Standard History of Lorain County, Ohio
(1916) by G. Frederick Wright, “He was not in the neighborhood at the time of
the messenger who sought him, who therefore passed Black River to seek other
likely young men of military ambitions. But word was brought to young Gillmore,
who promptly mounted his horse and gave chase, overtaking his man in time to
secure the appointment.”
Gillmore graduated from West Point in 1849 at the top of his
class and joined the Army Corps of Engineers. His early military career
included helping to plan the fortifications at Hampton Roads, Virginia. This
was followed by a return to West Point as assistant professor of practical
engineering. It was at West Point where Gillmore conducted his research – which
would later prove quite valuable – on the effects of cannon projectiles on
brick masonry forts.
Later, Gillmore was transferred to New York City, where he
became the Army’s chief engineer in that region. With the outbreak of the Civil
War, he requested a battlefield position, and was assigned to accompany General
Thomas W. Sherman on his expedition against the coastal areas of South
Carolina.
It was General Sherman who asked Gillmore to develop a plan
to capture Fort Pulaski, outside Savannah, Georgia, from the Confederates.
Up to that time, Fort Pulaski – surrounded by marshes and
fortified with 7-1/2-foot solid brick walls – was considered impregnable.
Military experience had held that beyond a distance of 700 yards, cannons and
mortars would have little chance of breaking through solid masonry walls.
Beyond 1,000 yards, it was accepted that they would have no chance at all.
But this was the opportunity for Gillmore to demonstrate his
brilliance at artillery work, as well as his fearless disregard for long-held
traditions.
Gillmore was familiar with the test records of a new weapon
– the rifled gun – with which the army had begun to experiment. He believed
that it would be possible to reduce Ft. Pulaski with mortars and rifled guns
from Tybee Island, a mile or more away.
Gillmore submitted his plan to Sherman, who approved it but
had his doubts that it would work. Gillmore then erected artillery batteries on
the northwest shore of Tybee Island, employing ten of the new experimental
rifled cannons.
After the Confederates refused to surrender, Gillmore opened
his bombardment of Fort Pulaski on April 10, 1862. Thanks to the rifled
cannons, projectiles broke through the fort’s walls, and by noon of the next
day, huge gaps appeared in the southeast angle. With explosive shells passing
through these holes, the main powder magazine was threatened, and the
Confederates surrendered in less than three days.
The capture of Fort Pulaski was important because it allowed
the Union Army to command the entrance to the principal port of Georgia.
Gillmore’s bold tactics revolutionized the naval gunnery of the world, and
brought him fame throughout Europe and America. For his service, he received
the brevet of lieutenant colonel and was made brigadier general of volunteers
on April 28, 1862.
Gillmore at Charleston, South Carolina |
Gillmore's next major success was with the “Swamp Angel,” a
10-ton gun that fired shells weighing 150 pounds that was used to batter
Charleston, South Carolina in August 1863 from two miles away. Gillmore
ingeniously transported the gun over a floating highway made of logs to its
position in the shallow marshes of Morris Island, catching the Confederate army
off-guard.
The “Swamp Angel” was fired only thirty-six times before it
exploded at the last discharge. Its place in history was assured, however, due
to the fact that the distance covered by its shells was farther than any
previous bombardment, and that it was the first known firing of an artillery
piece using a compass reading.
During that same month, Gillmore bombarded Fort Sumter for
seven days, reducing it to a pile of rubble.
Although the Union Army failed to capture Charleston during
that campaign, it did succeed in creating a blockade of the water approaches to
the city. Gillmore was promoted to major general for his success.
Gillmore remained in the military following the end of the
Civil War. He bought his old family farm at Black River and established a
vineyard there. His postwar work consisted of engineering work, including the
improvements of the Charleston and Savannah harbors. He also published many
engineering books, as well as treatises on Road Making and Paving.
He died at Brooklyn, New York on April 7, 1888 and is buried
at U. S. Military Academy, West Point Cemetery.
Gillmore was honored by his hometown on April 27, 1922 – the
one-hundredth-birthday anniversary of General U. S. Grant. The Nathan Perry
Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution planted a memorial tree and
dedicated a plaque in Lakeview Park in Lorain, near the site of the house in
which Gillmore was born.
The plaque, which was placed on a large boulder, read, “This
tree is planted and this boulder erected in memory of Quincy A. Gillmore, major
general in the Union army, war of 1861-65. Dedicated by Nathan Perry Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution.”
The replacement tablet in Lakeview Park |
Sadly, the original plaque was later stolen. It was replaced
in recent years with a replica plaque with slightly different wording, and the
“new” monument was relocated to a special area in the park designed for
historical markers.
Peggy Gillmore, 89, is a fifth cousin to General Gillmore
and the last of his relatives still living in Lorain. She is justifiably
proud to be a member of Lorain’s original pioneer family, and enjoys talking
about her famous cousin with anyone who is interested.
She has a philosophical attitude about the fact that her
famous relative’s military accomplishments are not so well known, even in his
own hometown.
“Gillmores are not ones to blow our own horn,” she
explained.
Here’s hoping that General Quincy A. Gillmore, the
celebrated Civil War commander from Lorain, Ohio whose contribution to military
history – the shattering not only of Confederate fortress walls but military
artillery conventions as well – is not forgotten.
Dan,
ReplyDeleteReally nice article... I'm hoping to find the memorial plaque when I'm in Lorain later this week...
Thanks, Paula! The marker is over by the Admiral King WWII monument at the west end of the park. There are several markers all together over there.
ReplyDeleteDan,
ReplyDeleteI've been to Fort Pulaski a few times, never knew that General Gillmore was a hometown boy! Also, the Swamp Angel still exists - it's on display in New Jersey : http://www.scencyclopedia.org/swamp_angel.htm
Mike
That's what we're here for, Dan. To make sure this stuff is not forgotten.
ReplyDelete