The
Battle of Fort Myers was fought on February 25, 1865, in
Lee County, Florida during the last months of the
American Civil War. This small engagement is known as the "southernmost land battle of the Civil War." (However, see
Battle of Palmito Ranch.)
Background
Fort Myers had been abandoned after the
Seminole Indian Wars and was reoccupied by
Union soldiers in December 1863. It was the only federally occupied fort in South Florida. Union commanders planned to send horse soldiers into the area north of the
Caloosahatchee River to confiscate livestock from area cattle ranches, thereby preventing shipment of beef to the
Confederate Army of the Tennessee in
Georgia. By 1865, it was estimated that more than 4,000 head of cattle had been taken from cattle farms by the Union cavalry units from similar raids.
Fort Myers was used as a refugee center for escaped slaves and also for Union sympathizers who were being persecuted by the
secessionists, who were burning their homes and driving them off their farms. At one period during the Federal reoccupation, more than 400 people crowded into the fort's grounds. The fort was garrisoned primarily by the 2nd Florida Cavalry (made up mostly of refugees who had enlisted), a recently detached company of the 110th New York Infantry and a company of black soldiers of the
2nd United States Colored Infantry, both from
Fort Zachary Taylor in
Key West.
The Confederates organized a special
battalion of the state......
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