David Farragut led his fleet past the Fort St. Philip an Fort Jackson after a bitter fighting during the night of Apr.24,1861 without capturing them.
The two forts were encircled and surrendered to Gen. Butler's forces on Apr.28,1862 after a part of their garrison, constituted by foreign residents in New Orleans serving as gunners mutinied, deserting or consigning themselves to the Union forces.
New Orleans in April 1862.
In 1862, Officer David Farragut was able to capture the city of New Orleans without needing to take the battle into the city itself. Instead, he captured the Forts Jackson and Philip, then went unopposed in his conquest of the city. The capture of the Confederacyâ??s largest city, marked a turning point in the war.
David Farraggut led a fleet ofUnion warships to capture New Orleans.
On April 29, 1862, David Farragut began the assault that would led to the capture of New Orleans. He was able to get through the forts of Jackson and St. Philip, as well as the Chalmette batteries, in order to take the city and its port. New Orleans surrendered after a massive bombardment by the Union navy.
The Union navy fleet that forced the surrender of New Orleans in 1862 was led by David Farragut and David Dixon Porter. They commanded a fleet of seventeen warships and nineteen mortar boats. They bombarded Rebel forts guarding New Orleans and after the forts fell, the city surrendered.
Farragut's capture of New Orleans on April 25, 1862, after bypassing the forts defending the city and annihilating the weak Confederate river fleet.
The southern city captured by Admiral David Farragut was New Orleans, Louisiana. The capture took place on April 29, 1862.
It meant that the confederacy could no longer use the river to carry its goods to sea
The Union flag officer during the battle was David Farragut. General Benjamin Butler took control of New Orleans when Union forces landed in the city.
David Glasgow Farragut. Originally from Knoxville, Tennessee, but he had been in the US Navy for a great many years and did not go south when the war started. He and another Union naval commander forced the surrender of New Orleans in 1862. He receives the credit for shutting down Mobile, Alabama in August, 1864.
Union Admiral David D. Farragut looked to capture the port city of Mobile, Alabama after the fall of New Orleans. The Navy Department however delayed this move. They believed the next point of attack should be at Vicksburg.
Flag Officers David G. Farragut and David Porter ran their fleet past Forts Jackson and St. Philip on April 24, 1862, and captured New Orleans the following day. The city surrendered without a fight after its forts fell.