March 13, 1863 Friday
U.S.S. Chillicothe, commanded by Lieutenant Commander P. Foster, and U.S.S. Baron De Kalb, commanded by Lieutenant Commander. G. Walker, and a mortar schooner, reengaged the Confederate works at Fort Pemberton as the Yazoo Pass expedition attempted to move down the Tallahatchie River to Greenwood, Mississippi. In action described by Walker as "severe," Chillicothe sustained 38 hits in an exchange of fire lasting about an hour and a half. Her ammunition exhausted, Chillicothe retired; De Kalb continued to engage the fort some 3 more hours before withdrawing. Lieutenant Colonel James H. Wilson, USA, remarked: "The rebel position is a strong one by virtue of the difficulties of approach. The gunboats were unable to bring their full fire power to bear on the works, and the Army was unable to render effective assistance. Thus, though the fort was damaged by the attack, the follow up operations could not be pressed to force withdrawal.
C.S.S. Florida, commanded by Lieutenant Maffitt, captured and burned ship Aldebaran, from New York, near 29º N., 51º W., with cargo of provisions and clocks.
U.S.S. Huntsville, commanded by Acting Lieutenant William C. Rogers, seized blockade running British schooner, Surprise off Charlotte Harbor, Florida, bound for Havana with cargo of cotton.
U.S.S. Octorara, under Commander Collins, seized blockade running British schooner Florence Nightingale with cargo of cotton in the North East Providence Channel, Bahama Islands.
Confederate troops launched a surprise night attack against Fort Anderson on the Neuse River, North Carolina. Union gunboats U.S.S. Hunchback, Hetzel, Ceres, and Shawsheen, supported by a revenue cutter and an armed schooner, forced the Confederates to break off their heavy assault and withdraw.
There was a skirmish at Rover and an affair near Charlotte, Tennessee. An explosion at the Confederate Ordnance Laboratory in Richmond killed or injured sixty-nine, including sixty-two women. A friction primer accidentally ignited.
President Lincoln receives Mrs Winston from Tennessee and permits her to remove her wounded son from prison in Fort McHenry, Maryland (
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/te ... oln6%3A292 ).
The following appointments were made to Brigadier General: Thomas Ewing, Jr., USA; Abner Clark Harding, USA; Robert Brown Potter, USA; and Hugh Thompson Reid, USA.