Blockade Running
By: Wendy • Essay • 955 Words • November 10, 2009 • 1,519 Views
Essay title: Blockade Running
Blockade Running
Cotton, Cotton, everywhere! This was the seen of ports in Nassau, Bermuda and Havana, Cuba. On April 19, Lincoln issued his proclamation blockading Southern ports. It provided that "a competent force will be posted so as to prevent entrance and exit of vessels" from the ports of the states in rebellion. Then, to make the proclamation official, he signed a document, authorizing "the Secretary of State to affix the Seal of the United States to a Proclamation setting on foot a Blockade of the ports of the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas." (The Raab Collection/ This is an actual copy of the document) The seal was affixed to the blockade proclamation, which was announced that day. It was a de facto declaration of war by the Union against the Confederacy.
The US Navy was nearly non existent. There were 90 vessels, 24 of them active steamers. They had some sailing sloops but they were useless unless the blockade runners were sailing vessels themselves. By the end of 1861 the blockading fleet had grown quickly, but they were still inadequate. Their task seemed impossible, the blockaded coast spanned 3600 miles and has about 200 river mouths and inlets, bays and harbors. This gave blockade runners infinite ways to escape from the blockading fleet. Despite the Navy's inadequacy Lincoln's choice to blockade the ports was wise. The blockade reduced the South's seaborne trade to less than a third of the peacetime normal; in the time of war. The confederate's lifeline was the imports and exports from England. They imported ammunition and necessities for the war and they exported cotton the lifeblood of their commerce. In the last six months of 1864, through the ports of Wilmington and Charleston alone came 500,000 pairs of shoes, 1.5 million pounds of lead, 3.5 million pounds of meat, 2 million pounds of saltpeter, 43 cannon, and 50,000 rifles, along with clothes, blankets, and medicine. It was largely because of these imports that Lee's 72,000-man Army of Northern Virginia, fighting in the trenches at Petersburg, was able to receive 150,000 shirts, 167,000 pairs of shoes, 140,000 pairs of pants, and 100,000 jackets during the last months of the war(Running of the Blockade). Lincoln knew that the confederate army needed these imports; however his plan was very ineffective during the fist few years. Ships came in and out of the blockaded ports illegally. This was called running the blockade.
Bermuda, Havana, Nassau and Matamoras served as the main intermediary ports for the blockade runners. Of all the intermediary ports, Nassau was the most prominent. The first blockade runner arrived in Nassau on December 1861 with 144 bales. Between the beginning and the ending of the war 397 vessel entered Nassau from Southern ports, and 588 sailed from Southern ports to Nassau (Cochran pg. 62). It had advantages that the other ports lacked. Nassau is on the island of the New Providence in the Bahamas. It is 180 miles from the Floridian coast. However Florida didn't have suitable harbors or inland connection to be a good port to smuggle into. Savannah, Charleston, and Wilmington were the main ports on the east coast for blockade runners. Nassau was five to six hundred miles away from the main ports. This was great distance because little coal was need for fuel. This increased space for cargo. Nassau was also a well