Dana Vacca's Blog: Freedom Calling A Civil War Slave Escapes By Sea - Posts Tagged "blockade"

US Civil War Blockade - Stone Fleet Blocking Charleston Harbor

The Union's STONE FLEET was a group of old and nearly-derilect sailing ships (merchant ships and whaling ships that were no longer of use.) They were filled full of ballast stone and sunk in Charleston Harbor to make it difficult for Confederate vessels and blockade runners to enter and exit the harbor without hitting the sunken wrecks and damaging their hulls.

The plan was only partially successful, though. Many of the small packet steamers had shallow drafts and were able to pass over the wrecks without hitting the sunken wreckage!

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Freedom Calling: A Civil War Slave Escapes by Sea
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Published on July 06, 2018 21:17 Tags: blockade, civil-war, harbor, history, ship, stone-fleet

Cotton & Tobacco and the Union Blockade

BOOK: Freedom Calling: A Civil War Slave Escapes By Sea by Dana Vacca

BOOK HIGHLIGHTS

The Pettigrew Plantation, like Shamrock Valley, had large, airy barns to store tobacco and cotton bales that were ready for shipment north. The hogshead barrels of tobacco and the bales of cotton would be loaded onto buckboard wagons, driven to the harbor and unloaded onto waiting sailing ships.
During the Civil War the Union blockade halted all Confederate trade at all ports in the South, and the loss of income was bankrupting the landed gentry. Plantation owners plotted risky, clandestine, late-night schemes to secretively transport their season's harvest on fast, discreet packet steamers that could sometimes manage to slip out of the harbor unnoticed. Because of the risk of confiscation and arrest, though, the price offered for their produce was low, and the cost of shipping, high. Even when all went well, there was little, if any, profit to be made.

Book Excerpt -
"Friday night, just before sunset, we slipped quietly away from the plantation and hurried through the forest of tall oaks in the direction of the Pettigrew plantation. We neared the edge of the small pasture that led to the farmyard. Silhouetted against the purple sky were Mr. Pettigrew's large storage barns. A thin horse stood patiently in front of the cavernous doorway of the first storehouse while a few men loaded burlap-shrouded bales of cotton onto the wagon that was hitched behind the horse. Around the far side, at the rear of the building, two more horse-and-wagon teams stood tied and unattended. These wagons were already loaded, one piled high with the big blocks of tightly bound cotton and the other with oaken barrels. Even from a distance we caught the heavy sweet scent of the cured tobacco coming from the kegs."

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Freedom Calling A Civil War Slave Escapes By Sea

Dana Vacca
FREEDOM CALLING is a page-turner packed with action, emotion, romance and adventure - vibrantly painted with powerful characters, vivid imagery and factual details of the Civil War era.

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