COMMANDER THOMAS WILLIAM BRENT - MANUSCRIPT LETTER SIGNED 07/23/1862 - HFSID 283738
Price: $1,400.00
THOMAS WILLIAM BRENT
As Commander of the Confederate Naval Station at Savannah (1862), he signs a
manuscript letter ordering Lt. John Rutledge, in command of the defensive
battery and gunboats, to submit a small arms inventory, determining what if any
weapons he can spare.
Manuscript Letter signed: "Thos. W. Brent" as Station Commandant,
1 page, 8¼x10½. Savannah, Georgia, 1862 July 23. On Confederate
States Navy Station letterhead to Lieut. J. Rutledge, Commander, Steamer
Savannah & Savannah River. In full: "To enable
me to answer immediately a call from the office of Ordnance &c, you will
inform me as soon as possible, how many Muskets, Rifles, and Pistols with
ammunition, and Cutlasses, you have on board the Steamer Savannah and Naval
Battery under your command, and a list also of such of those articles, if any,
that you can spare. Respectfully, Your Obt Svt". Thomas William Brent
(1808-1875) was appointed a US Navy Acting Midshipman in 1825. In
1857 Brent, by now a Commander, received his first command: the USS
Marion, a 16-gun sloop of war. In January 1861, he resigned his USN
commission, and in March 1861 - now a Commander in the Confederate Navy, he
took command of the Pensacola Navy Yard. One year later (March 8, 1862), he
obeyed an order to evacuate the base, torching the Navy Yard and defending
fortifications. He subsequently commanded the Savannah Station
(1862-1863), and was then promoted to Commander of Naval Forces West of
the Mississippi. In 1864, he received command of the ironclad CSS
Savannah, but the ship hit mines while attempting to escape from a Savannah
under assault by Sherman's army, and had to be scuttled on December 21.
Brent was reassigned to Charleston Station until war's end. After the war, Brent
returned to Pensacola, working in the fire/casualty insurance business until his
death. The CSS Savannah mentioned here is a steam gunboat used for harbor
defense and re-supply missions. Having run the Union blockade successfully,
it sank in a storm en route to England with cotton to pay for Confederate
munitions and other supplies, in August 1863. It should not be confused with
the Confederate ironclad ram Savannah, built in June 1863 and used in
defense of Savannah harbor. Thomas Brent was its last commander, as noted
above. The letter's recipient, John Rutledge (1820-1894), grandson of South
Carolina Governor and US Supreme Court Justice John Rutledge, Jr., commanded
several Confederate naval vessels, including later the ironclad ram Palmetto
State. Normal horizontal mailing folds. Right edge lightly chipped at lower
corner and lower fold. Minor ink burns. Otherwise, fine
condition.
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