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CSS Jackson in the Chattahoochee River late in the Civil War (U.S. Navy photo) |
Logan
Barrett, director of history and collections at the National Civil War Naval Museum, on Friday afternoon (April 11) will present “The Chattahoochee River Squadron:
Wartime Ending, New South Beginning” at the Georgia Archives in Morrow.
“I will be arguing that although these ships had almost no
military success during the Civil War, their historical significance rests as
precursors to New South industry,” Barrett (below) told the Picket in an email.
Popularized by Atlanta newspaper editor Henry Grady, the term “New South” signified the move from a largely agrarian society to one with more industry. Much of this occurred in the late 19th century following Reconstruction. But the economic modernization largely failed to benefit poor whites and blacks and kept intact the Jim Crow system.
Columbus was a critically important industrial center for
the Confederacy, making a wide range of weapons and equipment.
Today, the stars of the naval museum are the remains of the ironclad CSS Jackson and twin-screw wooden ship CSS Chattahoochee.
The Jackson (originally named the Muscogee) was designed to protect Columbus from Union navy marauders and blockaders. Construction began in early 1863 but there were numerous problems, including coming up with a worthy power system. It was built entirely in Columbus.
When it was finally launched in December 1864, the local newspaper said: “This splendid ram was successfully launched yesterday at about 11 o’clock and now sits as calmly upon the Chattahoochee as a duck upon a pond."
Engines for the Chattahoochee
were made in Columbus and shipped downstream to Saffold, about 10 miles north of the
Florida border, where the wooden boat was built. The ship sank after a boiler
explosion, was raised and moved to Columbus, where it was being refitted at war’s
end.
Both were lost in April 1865 at war’s end -- the Jackson set afire by Federal captors and the Chattahoochee scuttled by its own crew. Neither vessel fired upon the enemy in their relatively short histories.
They were recovered from the Chattahoochee River in the 1960s.
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Postcard showing the Eagle and Phenix Mills in Columbus early in the 20th century |
Barrett is working on a larger research
project for the museum's planned exhibition “Columbus: A Civil War City.” Topics will include Horace King, a
remarkable bridge builder born into slavery.
“During the Civil War, Columbus supplied the Confederacy with textile products, gun carriages, cannon and shot, Indian rubber cloth, tents, military caps and uniforms, steam engines, and gun boats,” according to Historic Columbus.The Chattahoochee River city near doubled in wartime population to 17,000.
The city fell to Union
troops near the end of the war.
Much of Columbus’ heavy industry declined after the war, but it remained strong in textiles and mill products for decades. Utilizing cheap labor, industrialists made capital investments and built textile mills across town.
“Both small
and large entrepreneurs immediately rebuilt their enterprises. Foundries
started producing by June, and textile mills were in back in operation by
December 1865. By 1870 more than 100 manufacturers operated within the city, but
the small nontextile companies languished in that decade,” says the New Georgia Encyclopedia.
Crucial to the New South was a diversified economy, including tobacco, and the growth of railroads and transportation systems. But the good times didn’t last forever. Mills shuttered as international competitors grew.
Revitalization in the 1990s and Fort Benning’s strength turned things around in the core of the city. Columbus State University lofts filled vacant buildings and taverns and shops replaced wig shops.
Other talks at the free Friday-Saturday symposium include environmental protection of the Chattahoochee River, recycling of treated wastewater in Clayton County, water and wildlife diversity on the Georgia coast, maritime archaeological sites and the journeys of those using various water craft.
Barrett will speak around 2:35
p.m. Friday for about an hour. The symposium is free and open to the
public, with no registration required. It will take place at the Georgia
Archives, 5800 Jonesboro Road, Morrow. Details are here
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