Sabine Pass: The Confederacy's Thermopylae

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By (author): "Edward T. Cotham Jr."
Sabine Pass: The Confederacy's Thermopylae
ISBN0292706030
ISBN139780292706033
AsinSabine Pass: The Confederacy's Thermopylae
Original titleSabine Pass: The Confederacy's Thermopylae (Clifton and Shirley Caldwell Texas Heritage Series)
SeriesClifton and Shirley Caldwell Texas Heritage
In an 1882 speech, former Confederate president Jefferson Davis made an exuberant claim: That battle at Sabine Pass was more remarkable than the battle at Thermopylae. Indeed, Sabine Pass was the site of one of the most decisive Civil War battles fought in Texas. But unlike the Spartans, who succumbed to overwhelming Persian forces at Thermopylae more than two thousand years before, the Confederate underdogs triumphed in a battle that over time has become steeped in hyperbole. victory, Sabine Pass at last separates the legends from the evidence. In arresting prose, Edward T. Cotham, Jr., recounts the momentous hours of September 8, 1863, during which a handful of Texans--almost all of Irish descent--under the leadership of Houston saloonkeeper Richard W. Dowling, prevented a Union military force of more than 5,000 men, 22 transport vessels, and 4 gunboats from occupying Sabine Pass, the starting place for a large invasion that would soon have given the Union control of Texas. Sabine Pass sheds new light on previously overlooked details, such as the design and construction of the fort (Fort Griffin) that Dowling and his men defended, and includes the battle report prepared by Dowling himself. The result is a portrait of a mythic event that is even more provocative when stripped of embellishment.