- Battle of Honey Hill
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Honey Hill
partof=theAmerican Civil War
caption=
date=November 30 ,1864
place= nearGrahamville, South Carolina
casus=
territory=
result= Confederate victory
combatant1= flagicon|USA|1863United States (Union)
combatant2= flagicon|CSA|1863 CSA (Confederacy)
commander1=John P. Hatch
commander2=Charles J. Colcock
strength1= 5,000
strength2= 1,500
casualties1= 746 (89 killed, 629 wounded, 28 captured)
casualties2= 8
notes=The Battle of Honey Hill was the third battle ofSherman's March to the Sea , foughtNovember 30 1864 , during theAmerican Civil War . It did not involveMajor General William T. Sherman 's main force, marching fromAtlanta, Georgia , to Savannah, but was a failedUnion Army expedition under Maj. Gen.John P. Hatch that attempted to cut off the Charleston and Savannah Railroad in support of Sherman's projected arrival in Savannah.Hatch's expeditionary force left
Hilton Head, South Carolina , for Boyd’s Neck (above Beaufort) onNovember 28 . It consisted of 5,500 men—two brigades of the Coast Division of the Department of the South, one naval brigade, and portions of three batteries of light artillery. They steamed up the Broad River in transports to cut the Charleston and Savannah Railroad near Pocotaligo. Due to a heavy fog the troops were not disembarked from the transports until late the following afternoon, and Hatch immediately started forward to cut the railroad near Grahamville.The expedition maps and guides proved worthless, however, and Hatch was unable to proceed on the right road until the morning of
November 30 . At Honey Hill, a few miles from Grahamville, he encountered a Confederate force of regulars and militia, under Col.Charles J. Colcock , with a battery of seven guns across the road. Determined attacks were launched byU.S. Colored Troops (including the 54th Massachusetts), but the position of the Federal force was such that only one section of artillery could be used at a time, and the Confederates were too well entrenched to be dislodged. Fighting kept up until dark when Hatch, realizing the impossibility of successfully attacking or turning the flank of the enemy, withdrew to his transports at Boyd’s Neck, having lost 89 men killed, 629 wounded, and 28 missing. The Confederate casualties amounted to 8 killed and wounded.References
* [http://www.cr.nps.gov/hps/abpp/battles/sc010.htm National Park Service battle description]
* Eicher, David J., "The Longest Night: A Military History of the Civil War", Simon & Schuster, 2001, ISBN 0-684-84944-5.
* "The Union Army; A History of Military Affairs in the Loyal States, 1861–65 — Records of the Regiments in the Union Army — Cyclopedia of Battles — Memoirs of Commanders and Soldiers", Federal Publishing Company (Madison, Wisconsin), 1908 (reprinted by Broadfoot Publishing, 1997).External links
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