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Showing posts with label capture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label capture. Show all posts

Thursday, September 5, 2019

Eyewitness remembers capture of U.S. Arsenal at Chattahoochee, Florida

Participant recalls incident after 50 years

by Dale Cox

The Commanding Officer's Quarters of the U.S. Arsenal now
serve as the Administration Building of Florida State Hospital.
The seizure of the U.S. or Apalachicola Arsenal at Chattahoochee was Florida's first hostile act of the War Between the States or Civil War. The incident took place on the morning of January 6, 1861.

An inaccurate account of the act appeared in the Ocala Banner on January 27, 1905, prompting one of the actual participants to recount his own memories in a letter to the newspaper.

While many local residents refer to the gunpowder magazine preserved at the Apalachicola Arsenal Museum as the "arsenal" today, the historic brick structure was a small part of a much larger complex and was actually outside the walls of the central installation. The post as known to the soldiers of 1861 was a complex of brick buildings arranged around a 4-acre parade ground and connected by a sturdy brick wall. Two external magazines - of which today's museum is one - and a sutler's store stood away from the central complex.

The commanding officer's quarters and an adjoining guard room survive and form the Administration Building of today's Florida State Hospital. The open oak tree-shaded square behind the beautiful antebellum buildings was the original parade ground. Other structures lost to time include workshops, an armory, a shot tower, barracks, and storage buildings.

Interior of the gunpowder magazine, now the Apalachicola
Arsenal Museum on the grounds of Florida State Hospital.
Governor Madison S. Perry, recognizing the likelihood that Florida would secede from the Union, ordered the seizure of the arsenal, sending out instructions by telegraph on the evening of January 5, 1861. The task fell to Capt. William Gunn and the Young Guard, a militia company from Quincy, and they compelled the surrender of the facility from its small garrison on the morning of January 6, 1861.

A one-time Quincy resident gave a somewhat fanciful version of the story to the Ocala newspaper as part of a series that detailed his recollections of life in Florida during the 19th-century. Identifying himself only as an "Old Timer," he was too young to serve at the time of the seizure but witnessed the departure of Gunn and his men for Chattahoochee:

     Here, indeed, was the appearance of “red-handed war” and a scene, entirely different from the joyful demonstration of the week before, ensued. 
     Mothers, wives and sisters flocked to the churches and held public prayers and the night is remembered int hat little city as one of lamentations.
     A military company had already been organized, which was composed of the flower, manhood and chivalry of the little community, and this company was placed by orders from the “seat of government” under the command of the brigadier-general.
     All the vehicles of every description in the little city were pressed into service and in that way the first Florida troops marched forth to war!

     The company reached its point of destination just before day and at this supreme moment a “consultation of war” was held. [Ocala Banner, January 27, 1905]

A surviving section of the original arsenal wall can still
be seen near the site of the west gate.
The writer went on to describe the arsenal as a rectangular complex surrounded by a substantial brick wall but incorrectly remembered that four gates - one at the middle of each wall - provided access. The arsenal actually had two entrances, one adjacent to the Commanding Officer's Quarters and Guard Room in the west wall, and one near the barracks at the center of the east wall.

He told of how the company divided into four squads that used rockets to signal each other that they were in position near the gates. Also, he claimed that the complex was garrisoned only by one soldier. He identified the man as "Corporal Carpenter," who was supported only by his young son and a personal servant or slave:

He received the messenger with the flag of truce with soldierly dignity and asked for an "hour in which to take the matter under consideration." During this time, with his little army (son and servant) he placed a big brass cannon at each of the four closed gates and when he opened them in a show of hostile demonstration, things began to look like actual war had begin and some of the attacking force, it was told, had sudden and severe attacks of "ague!" [Ibid.]

The story caught the attention of William S. Wilson of Quincy, a one-time member of the Young Guard. He was among the citizen-soldiers who took the arsenal on the morning of January 6, 1861, and responded to the article with an account of his own:

 
The site of the west gate, where the confrontation took place
on January 6, 1861. The pretty area of trees and grass is the
original parade ground of the arsenal.
   Some one was kind enough to send me a copy of the Ocala Banner of January [27], and I read with much interest the account of the capture of the United States arsenal at Chattahoochee by the “Young Guard” of Quincy, Fla., in which company I was a member.
      According to my recollection, the account is true in the main, but not entirely devoid of error. I do not think the company was divided, but marched up to the gate in a body; and there was no display of sky rockets. No one was frightened, as no danger was anticipated. When we came in front of a large brass cannon with its ugly mouth pointing toward us, Henry Zeigler, one of the company, commonly known as “Dutch,” pretended to be badly scared, but subsequent events during the war proved that fear was not a part of his anatomy.
      According to my recollection the garrison consisted of Ordinance Sergeant Powell and three men, and maybe the sergeant’s son and servant. The man Carpenter may have been one of the men. [Ocala Banner, February 9, 1905]

The memory of a "brass cannon" was somewhat inaccurate in both accounts. An inventory of the arsenal prepared one-month earlier listed its single artillery piece as a 6-pound "iron gun." The "6-pound" description means that it fired iron cannonballs weighing six pounds.

The taking of the Apalachicola Arsenal - named for the Apalachicola River and not the city of Apalachicola - was accomplished without violence and no shots were fired. 

A second incident on the same day resulted in Florida's first gunfire of the war. Union soldiers fired a bloodless volley at a handful of state militiamen on the drawbridge of Fort Barrancas near Pensacola.

The arsenal complex served Florida and the Confederacy for the duration of the war. It later became the state's first penitentiary before taking on a new role as the ancestor of today's Florida State Hospital.



Monday, July 23, 2012

Update on the Wild Man of Ocheesee Pond

Swamps of Ocheesee Pond
I'll resume with my postings about Reconstruction in Jackson County soon, but I am taking a break today to tell you more about a story I first posted here on August 26, 2011 (See The Wild Man of Ocheesee Pond - A 19th Century Bigfoot Capture in Jackson County?)
To refresh your memory, in August of 1884 a party of men living around Ocheesee Pond in Jackson County took up arms and went into the swamp in search of a "wild man" that had been terrorizing the neighborhood. "Wild Man" was a common 19th century term used to refer to the creature we know of today as Bigfoot or Sasquatch.

Somewhere in the roughly nine square mile swamp, the search party came up with the Wild Man and managed to surround and capture him. Eyewitness accounts at the time described him as "entirely destitute of clothing, emaciated, and covered with a phenomenal growth of hair."

Open Water Section of Ocheesee Pond
Thinking that perhaps he was a mental patient who had escaped from the State Hospital in Chattahoochee, they took him there but found that no one was missing from that institution. Unsure of what else to do with their strange prisoners, the Jackson County men loaded him on a train and took him to Tallahassee.

When I wrote the original story last year, I was unable to learn anything more about the Wild Man and the story ended with many unanswered questions. I've continued to look for more references and finally, this weekend, found another.

Florida State Hospital
As it appeared in 1884.
The story was datelined Columbus, Georgia, on August 23, 1884, one week after the original report. The steamboat Amos Hayes, which brought the first news of the capture, had made its way back down the Chattahoochee River and returned to Columbus, bringing back fresh news on the Wild Man.

While the story still leaves many unanswered questions, it reveals that at least one week after his capture, authorities in Florida still had no idea of what to do with the Wild Man. All efforts to identify the prisoner had still proved unavailable and state authorities were operating under the assumption that he must have been an insane individual who had escaped from a mental facility in a different state.

The second report confirmed the first as to the man's or creature's appearance, he was "emaciated" and covered with hair.

I still have not been able to learn the fate of the Wild Man of Ocheesee Pond, but the search will go on! To learn more about the capture of the creature, please visit www.exploresouthernhistory.com/ocheeseewildman.

Friday, August 26, 2011

The Wild Man of Ocheesee Pond - A 19th Century Bigfoot Capture in Jackson County?

Ocheesee Pond
One of the most startling yet least known Bigfoot stories in American history originated in the cypress swamps of Ocheesee Pond in 1883-1884. It also has the potential to be one of the most important in the long story of the legendary creature.
If the stories that went up the Chattahoochee River by steamboat from Jackson County in August of 1884 are true, then the county was the scene of one of the only documented captures of a Bigfoot in American history.

For those who don't keep up with such things, Bigfoot (or Sasquatch, as he is sometimes known) is said to be a gigantic, hair-covered creature that roams the remote woods, swamps and forests of North America. He is traditionally associated with the Pacific Northwest, but every part of the country has a Bigfoot of its own. The area around Two Egg and Parramore in eastern Jackson County, for example, has its Stump Jumper, while the South Florida version is usually called the Skunk Ape.

Swamps of Ocheesee Pond
Most fans of the creature do not realize that it was actually well known in the South decades before its first documented appearance in Washington and Oregon. In the 19th century, sightings of large hairy creatures were often reported as the frontiers of the United States rapidly spread out from the Atlantic seaboard. People of that day and age, however, called him the "Wild Man."

In the winter of 1883-1884, a Wild Man appeared at Ocheesee Pond, a large wetland covering nearly 9 square miles in southeastern Jackson County. Most of the pond is covered by a vast cypress swamp, although there are some stretches of open water - most notably its southern arm, and the human-like creature was often spotted roaming the swamps or swimming from place to place.

As eyewitness accounts of his presence increased, local residents - many of them former Confederate soldiers - met and launched an expedition to capture the Wild Man of Ocheesee Pond. In August of 1884, they succeeded!

To read the complete story of the Wild Man of Ocheesee Pond, please visit www.exploresouthernhistory.com/ocheeseewildman.