(Photos courtesy of Town of Carolina Beach, N.C. -- click to enlarge) |
Endearingly
old school, four dioramas depicting scenes from Civil War blockade running – a
cargo auction, a daring Union raid, the boarding of a vessel and the drowning
of a Confederate spy – are on display for the first time in nearly 35 years.
The museum-quality
exhibits are back home in Carolina Beach, N.C., at the Town Hall. That building is on the site of the Blockade Runner
Museum, where the meticulously detailed dioramas first enthralled visitors.
The museum
operated from 1967 until the early 1980s. The Cape Fear Museum up
the road in Wilmington acquired the exhibits and put them in long-term storage.
Pressed for space, the Cape Fear Museum
last year asked Fort Fisher Historic Site to take them. It, too, lacked adequate display space for the dioramas.
That’s when
the nonprofit Friends of Fort Fisher
stepped in.
“It was something we felt the public
needed to see,” Friends executive director and CEO Paul Laird told the Picket. “It dawned on us to talk to the Carolina Beach
Town Council.” The dioramas went on display last month in the atrium.
Daring Confederate blockade runners usually made it through
Union naval ships meant to prevent them from bringing vital war goods to
Southern ports.
Model maker Lionel G. Forrest handcrafted
numerous dioramas in his career and several were housed at John H. Foard’s
Blockade Runner Museum. (According to the Wilmington Star News, the late John Railey assisted on ship models. Foard, a textile executive, opened the Blockade Runner Museum with private support.)
Laird knew Foard and recalls the museum being open when
he was a college student.
“I would listen to him tell stories. It
had a personal connection to me.” The museum featured other items and paintings
that focused on Wilmington’s vital role in blockade running. Fort Fisher (south
of Carolina Beach) was a key to the Cape Fear River defensive system and the port. It fell
to Federal forces in 1865.
The Friends of Fort Fisher raised
$10,000 to have five dioramas built in free-standing units featuring LED
lighting.
The fifth, depicting Confederate Pvt. Christopher Columbus Bland
reattaching a flag under heavy fire at Fort Fisher (above), is on loan
to the North Carolina National Guard Training Center at the Fort Fisher Air
Force Recreation Area.
Courtesy of John Gregory |
Forrest’s dioramas capture emotions and
movement in the scenes from blockade running. The four at the Town Hall show:
-- U.S. Navy Lt. William Cushing’s raid
on Confederate brigade headquarters at Smithville (Southport) in February 1864.
Cushing hoped to capture Brig. Gen. Louis Hebert, but bagged another officer
instead after learning the general was not at home. The raiders made off with
papers and got back on the USS Monticello before their trespass was discovered.
-- Renowned Rebel spy Rose O’Neal
Greenhow was on a North Carolina-bound blockade runner that ran aground on Oct.
1, 1864. Fearing capture, Greenhow and five men rowed a small boat toward shore
at New Inlet at the mouth of the Cape Fear River. The craft swamped and
capsized, with the spy being the only occupant to die. Her body was found on
the beach the next day and Greenhow was honored with a military funeral in
Wilmington.
-- A generic scene of a Federal boarding
party coming on to the deck of a blockade runner. Capture of such vessels
proved to be an incentive through prize money. One admiral is believed to have
earned more than $125,000 during the war.
-- A lively auction of scarce items
brought by a blockade runner. The Confederate government eventually moved to
ban the importation of luxury items and have captains instead concentrate on
bringing materiel important to the war effort. The move was only partially
successful. Blockade runners, offsetting the risks of business, insisted on
high profits. “Anything from hat pins, to cloth, fabrics, shoes and kitchen
ware,” said Laird. “Any kind of farm implements, tools. Medicine was always at
a premium.” Toothbrushes were especially in demand.
The dioramas were built into the walls
of the Blockade Runner Museum. Prerecorded audio messages ran on a loop.
The Cape Fear Museum covered the diorama
insets with protective material during their decades in storage. Two other exhibits
from the now-closed museum – including a large depiction of the Battle of Fort
Fisher – did go on display at the Cape Fear Museum.
(Courtesy of John Gregory) |
Sheila Nicholson, administrative
assistant to the town manager, said visitors often stop by to see the dioramas,
which include informational placards. “They sometimes ask about where they came
from or who made them.”
What a grand memory voyage this site offered me. I was Stanley South's assistant and we were very close to Lionel during this period in his career. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment on this! What do you recall specifically about the work?
ReplyDelete