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Battle of Fort Bowyer - Mobile Point, Alabama
Battle of Fort Bowyer
A little known fort of the War of
1812, Fort Bowyer stood at
the site of today's Fort Morgan
near Gulf Shores, Alabama.
Hero of Fort Bowyer
A portrait of Major Lawrence
hangs in the museum at Fort
Morgan. He waged a fierce
defense of his post and gave
the British a bloody repluse.
Fort Bowyer, Alabama
This 19th century plan shows
the outline of Fort Bowyer. The
semi-circular design of the
fort was common for the time.
Carronade on Display
Carronades were short but
often heavy cannon used by
both sides in the War of 1812.
A number were taken from the
wreck of HMS Hermes.
The Battle of Fort Bowyer, one of the fiercest
actions of the War of 1812, was fought at the
entrance to Mobile Bay, Alabama.
The action took place at virtually the same
spot where fifty years later Admiral David G.
Farragut would give his famous battle cry of
"Damn the torpedoes. Full speed ahead!"
during the Battle of Mobile Bay. While the
earlier fight is seldom remembered today,
both battles were of enormous importance.
Begun in 1813 at the western tip of Mobile
Point, Fort Bowyer was a log and sand work
designed to sweep the channel leading into
Mobile Bay with artillery fire. Its channel face
was built in the form of a semi-circle to allow
its cannon as large of a field of fire as
possible. Its land face was bastioned as a
defense against an infantry assault.
By the end of the summer of 1814, the little
fort was still not finished yet it was all that
stood in the way of the initial British plan to
take New Orleans. If the British navy could
bombard Fort Bowyer into submission, it
would be easy to take Mobile as well. Mobile
Bay could then be used as a base for land
operations against both Baton Rouge and
New Orleans.
To put this plan into motion, Captain William
Henry Percy of the Royal Navy set sail from
Pensacola in early September 1814 with a
squadron of four warships and several
tenders. The lead vessel and flagship was
HMS Hermes.
The ships landed a force of around 80 Royal
Colonial Marines and 120 trained Creek and
Seminole Indians east of Fort Bowyer. About
twenty of the Marines took up a position to
block the passage from Bon Secour while
the others, along with their Native American
allies, marched west and placed a battery in
the sand dunes just east of the fort.
The land force was commanded by Lt. Col.
Edward Nicolls, but he became severely ill
with dysentery and turned over his command
to Captain George Woodbine. Nicolls, one of
the most battle-scarred heroes of the Royal
Marines, was taken aboard the Hermes for
treatment.
On September 15, 1814, Percy cleared for
battle, formed his ships in line and closed on
Fort Bowyer. The fort was then held by an
effective force of 120 men from the 2nd U.S.
Infantry under Major William Lawrence. He
and his men stood by their guns as the
British ships drew closer:...[A[t 4 P.M. we opened our battery, which
was returned from two ships, and two brigs,
as they approached. The action became
general at about 20 minutes past 4, and was
continued without intermission on either side
until 7, and was continued without
intermission on either side until 7...At the same time, the British land battery
opened with a howitzer, but its fire was soon
silenced by return fire from the fort.
The battle raged with great intensity for over
two and one-half hours. The thunder of the
cannon could be heard far up the bay in
Mobile and the American forces there waited
with great apprehension. Few believed the
little fort could hold out.
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