Raid on the Rebel Salt Works (1 Viewer)

Scott

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A quick set up with Replicant US Marines and Replicant/Marksman Confederates. Here's the history...

http://www.navyandmarine.org/ondeck/1862saltraids.htm

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Scott, Thanks for providing a little hidden history. I would not have guessed that Florida had that much salt. They seemed to have done better with oranges. Maybe a dumb question but I do not remember reading about any troops from Florida fighting for the South.

Steve
 
Scott, Those are NICE plastic figures. I hear Replicants makes his OWN plastic figures. Need to see about that.
I don't know if I have ever seen a Replicant figure .Are they a TRUE 54mm ?
Too small to match Conte?
I like those Marines and was thinking about getting some and adding double baggers, head swaps and such with my metal parts.

Neat stuf

Harold Scott
DER FUBar
 
I like the grey casualty fig {on his tippy toe's}..think i would hack the base off and give him a flatter base.
Im also curious how these stack up size wise next to Conte.
 
The Marines are about 25 USD a bag for 6 figures. I painted them a darker blue as there is some discoloration in the plastic. For some reason they are kept in the back at the HOBBY BUNKER and you have to ask for them. Replicant figures need a lot of cleaning of flash and mold parting lines but most of the figure poses in this set are prime poses. The Marine reaching for a cartridge looks great even though he's holding his rifle in the position to "prime". I figure he's in a hurry and keeping the rifle stock out of the water/mud/sand. All figures have fixed bayonets with is GREAT!

A winner of a set and while I bought 4, now that I have $$$ again, one set works as a display. I may have mentioned that I use the extra officers as Zouave and Confederate officers.
 
Nice photos of your figures. The CW marines look neat. Another selection of Civil War action figures. Nice work. J
 
Scot

I am researching a member of the naval crew of the USS Kingfisher who participated in the salt raid described below and thought you would find this of interest.

Randy

NOVEMBER 15, 1862
HARPER'S WEEKLY.
p. 733
SALT-WORKS IN
FLORIDA.
WE publish on page 732 a view of the DESTRUCTION OF A SALT MANUFACTORY ON THE COAST OF FLORIDA by the crew of the United States bark Kingfisher. The affair is described in the following letter from an officer engaged:
"U.S. BARK 'KINGFISHER,' ST.
JOSEPH'S BAY, FLA., Sept. 15, 1862.
"I am glad to say that, after waiting all this time, I have had a chance to see active service. You can imagine with what pleasure we received the order to up anchor, as we knew our destination was the salt-works, at the head of the bay.
"About two weeks since we had a lot of contrabands come off, who informed us that there were extensive salt-works at the town of St. Joseph, making from 100 to 150 bushels a day, and not yet completed. We sent a flag of truce, and politely informed them that they must stop, or we should destroy them. They paid no attention to us, but continued their fire day and night. "We got under way at daylight, sailed up the bay with a fair wind, and came to anchor about a quarter of a mile from the works. As we came in sight we could perceive an unusual excitement, and observed wagons driving inland at a furious pace. We gave them two hours to quit, and then fired a few shells into the works, which had the effect of bringing two contrabands to the beach with a salt-bag, which they waved most furiously. We sent a boat for them, and found out that they had removed about two hundred bags of salt and some provisions, but that every thing remained with this exception; and also the intelligence that there were about eighty guerrillas, mounted, three miles back in the country, and would probably be down to see what was going on. As soon as we obtained this information we manned all the boats, leaving enough men on board to man the battery. I had been ordered to take command of the picket-guard, and station them about a quarter of a mile inland, surrounding the works. You may imagine that was rather skittish work with twenty men to go into the woods out of sight of the ship; but we all drew up on the beach, the pickets in front (in all about fifty men), loaded muskets and fixed bayonets—the whole under command of Mr. Hallet, executive officer. We started, whistling Yankee Doodle. I advanced my men in a straight line to the other side of the works, when we entered the woods and extended our lines entirely around the place. The main body then began their work of destruction, and in less than two hours the whole place was in flames, and the machinery broken up. "I send you a sketch. The whole coast of Florida is lined with these works of a smaller size. This one, when finished, would have been capable of making five hundred bushels a day, at $10 per bushel." When the new military colony is fairly under way these salt factories will probably become of some national importance.




DESTRUCTION OF A REBEL SALT FACTORY, ON THE COAST OF FLORIDA, BY THE CREW OF THE UNITED STATES BARK "KINGFISHER."—SKETCHED BY AN OFFICER ENGAGED.
 

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Now if Replicant or Armies In Plastic would only make 1860s sailors with pistols and cutlasses. Blue, white, and gray plastic please.
 
Scott, Thanks for providing a little hidden history. I would not have guessed that Florida had that much salt. They seemed to have done better with oranges. Maybe a dumb question but I do not remember reading about any troops from Florida fighting for the South.

Steve

You don't hear a whole lot about it but Florida was most definitely a Confederate State. It was one of the early states to secede. I have seen graves of Floridians in Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond. In Winchester Va.'s Confederate Cemetery there is a small section just for the Florida boys. There was, if memory serves a Florida brigade in the Army of Northern Virginia.
From the picture provided it looks like sea water is pumped into troughs over kilns and the water is boiled away leaving the salt. That is the way it was done in Saltville Va. near where I live. Instead of seawater though they used a natural brine water that is many many times saltier than the ocean. 5 gallons of that briney water produced over 1/2 pound of salt. They also used huge brass pots called salt pots instead of those troughs. Saltville was at one time the largest producer of salt in the Confederacy and every southern state had a production facility there. For a good while J.E.B. Stuart's brother ran the Saltworks. The thing that made salt so important for the Confederacy was the preservation of food.
 
Very interesting. A lot of people don't see Florida as being part of the Deep South, even though we're "deeper" than everyone else! I've been to two unique battlefields in the panhandle - Ocean Pond (Olustee) and Natural Bridge. There's a good book called Discovering the Civil War in Florida that I believe is still in print.
 

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