Civil War  |  Historic Site

USCTs at Sugar Loaf

North Carolina

1106 N. Lake Park Blvd
(located behind this address)
Carolina Beach, NC 28428
United States

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District of Columbia. Company E, 4th U.S. Colored Infantry, at Fort Lincoln
The 4th USCT, depicted here, deployed on the front line at Sugar Loaf.

In early 1865, the U.S. Colored Troops (USCTs) confronted a Confederate division deeply entrenched in fortifications that spanned Federal Point, stretching from Sugar Loaf to Myrtle Grove Sound. 

Wilmington remained the Union鈥檚 objective after taking Fort Fisher on January 15, 1865. The Union wanted to use the Cape Fear River and the city鈥檚 railroads to help supply Gen. Sherman鈥檚 army as it came north to join Gen. Grant鈥檚 forces. For several weeks, Union troops waited for reinforcements, scouted Confederate defenses and made plans to defeat Fort Anderson, guarding Wilmington on the Cape Fear River鈥檚 west bank and the Confederates blocking their advance up Federal Point. 

On January 19, the 3rd Division, XXV Corps, including Ames鈥 brigade (4th, 6th, 30, and 39th USCT), Wright鈥檚 brigade (1st, 5th, 10th, 27th, 37th USCT), along with Abott鈥檚 brigade of white troops, tested the Sugar Loaf line, which withstood the assault. Meanwhile, the Union warships continued regular shelling day and night. 

On February 11, these Union troops attacked the Sugar Loaf line. During a 鈥渂risk skirmish,鈥 Ames鈥 USCT brigade lost 鈥2 commissioned officers and 14 men killed, and 7 commissioned officers and 69 men wounded.鈥 Unable to overrun the Confederate defenses, the USCT brigades withdrew and dug in 800 hundred yards south, keeping the Confederates in check for the next eight days. 

During the nights of February 12th and 14th, recently arrived Federal reinforcements marched several miles up the narrow sea beach to Masonboro Sound, where the navy tried to land pontoon boats and transfer the soldiers to the mainland for a rear assault on the Sugar Loaf line. When bad weather foiled these plans, the Union transported these reinforcements across the Cape Fear River to attack Fort Anderson, which fell on February 19th. Their position now exposed to attack from the north, the Confederates abandoned the Sugar Loaf line that same day with the USCT in hot pursuit.  

Know Before You Go

Sections of the Confederate field works, constructed beginning in October 1864, using forced labor of both enslaved and free African Americans, survive remarkably intact in the  and at the local . 

USCTs at Sugar Loaf: What's Nearby

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