- Castle Pinckney
Infobox_nrhp2 | name =Castle Pinckney
nrhp_type =
caption = View on Castle Pinckney
nearest_city=Charleston, South Carolina
lat_degrees = 32
lat_minutes = 46
lat_seconds = 25
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 79
long_minutes = 54
long_seconds = 41
long_direction = W
locmapin = South Carolina
area =
built =1808
architect= Unknown
architecture= Other
added = July 16, 1970
governing_body = Private
refnum=70000574cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2008-04-15|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]Castle Pinckney was a small masonry
fort ification constructed by theUnited States government by 1810 in the harbor ofCharleston, South Carolina . It was used very briefly as aprisoner-of-war camp (six weeks) andartillery position during theAmerican Civil War .Located on Shutes' Folly Island a mile offshore from Charleston, the newer Castle fort was built over the ruins of an older fortification. Construction for the original log and earthen fort, named "Fort Pinckney" after the Revolutionary War hero
Charles Cotesworth Pinckney , began in 1797 and was meant to protect the city from a possible naval attack when war withFrance seemed imminent. It was completed in 1804 but a severe hurricane in September of that year virtually destroyed it, and a replacement brick and mortar castle structure was erected in 1809–1810 called "Castle Pinckney". It was garrisoned through theWar of 1812 , but saw no action. Afterwards, Castle Pinckney was abandoned for several years and fell into disrepair.cite web|url=http://www.port-of-charleston.com/spa/community/history_environ/history1.asp|title=History of Castle Pinckney|date=1992-07-16|author=Michael P. Higgins|publisher=SC State Ports Authority]The fort was regarrisoned and a sea wall was completed during the
Nullification Crisis of 1832, when PresidentAndrew Jackson prepared to collect a controversialtariff by military force if necessary. After that brief period of activity, the fort again fell into disuse and was primarily a storehouse forgunpowder and other military supplies. By the Civil War, Castle Pinckney was part of a network of defensive positions in the harbor, which included the larger and more strategically placedFort Sumter andFort Moultrie , and other smaller earthworks and fortifications. Castle Pinckney's armament in 1860 consisted of fourteen 24-pounders, four 42-pounders, four 8-inchhowitzer s, one 10-inch and one 8-inch mortar and four light fieldpieces to protect its flanks. OnDecember 27 ,1860 , one week after South Carolina seceded from the Union, the fort was surrendered to South Carolinamilitia by its small garrison, which retired to Fort Sumter to joinMajor Robert Anderson . Castle Pinckney became the first Federal military position seized forcefully by a Southern state government. Three days later, theCharleston Arsenal joined Castle Pinckney in falling to the militia. After the subsequent attack on Fort Sumter, the Charleston Zouave Cadets manned Castle Pinckney.One hundred and fifty-four
Union Army prisoners of war (120 enlisted, 34 officers) captured during theFirst Battle of Manassas and previously incarcerated at Ligon's Prison arrived at Charleston on September 10, 1861 and were kept at the Charleston City Jail until the lower casements of Castle Pinckney were converted into cells. According to the "Charleston Mercury", Richmond officials had selected "..chiefly from among those who have evidenced the most insolent and insubordinate disposition". On September 18, prisoners from the 11th NY Fire Zouaves, 69th NY ("Irish") Regiment, 79th NY Regiment, and 8th Michigan Infantry were transferred to Castle Pinckney. They were allowed to wander during the day and were confined to cells only at night. The Castle quickly proved to be too small and inadequate however for permanent confinement and the prisoners were transferred back to the Charleston City Jail on October 31, 1861 after only six weeks. After the prisoners were removed, the fort was strengthened with earthen embankments and additional mortars and Columbiads on thebarbette tier. On December 12, the prisoners were transferred back to the island following a fire which had burned a large section of Charleston and damaged the jail. They remained for just over a week with many sleeping on the inner parade ground before being transferred.cite web|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=mXPQ8S5_m0QC&pg=PA28&lpg=PA28&dq=Castle+Pinckney+prison&source=web&ots=aadYQFZ4qE&sig=qijjYfmTS7ZXr1eHFY6sFJTniEo&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=10&ct=result#PPA28,M1|title=Portals to Hell: Military Prisons of the Civil War|date=2006|author=Lonnie R. Speer|publisher=U of Nebraska Press|ISBN=0803293429|pages=pp. 25-30]After the Civil War, the fort was modernized for possible use during the
Spanish-American War but again was not needed. Some sources suggest that the fort never fired a single hostile shot during its lengthy existence. Parts of the old brick walls and casemates were dismantled in 1890 to make way for a harbor lighthouse, which operated into the 20th century. Castle Pinckney was declared aU.S. National Monument in 1924 by presidential proclamation. In 1951, Congress passed a bill to abolish Castle Pinckney National Monument and transferred it back to U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.A local
Sons of Confederate Veterans fraternal post took over management and care of the island in the late 1960s and attempted to preserve it and establish a museum. Castle Pinckney was listed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 1970. Eventually, unable to raise the needed funds, the SCV allowed the fort to revert to state ownership. Castle Pinckney has recently undergone some limited restoration efforts. Due its location on an isolated shoal in the middle of the harbor, access is limited, if not nonexistent, and maintenance near impossible. It is gradually being reclaimed by nature.References
External links
* [http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/charleston/S10817710018/index.htm Castle Pinckney] , at South Carolina Department of Archives and History
* [http://www.awod.com/gallery/probono/cwchas/cpfort.html Castle Pinckney restoration]
* [http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/glimpses3/glimpses3c.htm National Park Service overview of Castle Pinckney]
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