Capture of New Orleans |
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Location: |
Orleans St. Bernard Parishes, Louisiana
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Theater: |
Lower Seaboard Theater
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Campaign: |
Expedition to and Capture of New Orleans
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Following the passage of forts Jackson and St. Philip, near the mouth of the Mississippi River, on April 24, 1862, the Union occupation of New Orleans was inevitable. Union Flag-Officer David G. Farragut, with his squadron, continued up the Mississippi River and demanded the surrender of the City of New Orleans the next day. The city surrendered on April 28. On May 1, Maj. Gen. Benjamin Franklin Butler�s army began landing at New Orleans and occupying the city. New Orleans, considered an international city and the largest city in the Confederacy, had fallen. The Union occupation of New Orleans was an event that had major international significance. (NPS summary)
Flag Officer David Farragut's Expedition to New Orleans, April-May. 1862 |
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Battles of the American Civil War: 1862 |
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| Eastern Theater | | | Western Theater | | | Trans-Mississippi Theater | | | Lower Seaboard Theater | |
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