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By the end of the year 1864, Wilmington was the South’s last open seaport on the Atlantic coast and was protected by Fort Fisher in North Carolina. On December 24 the Union Navy and Army made a combined assault on Fort Fisher, but were turned back after two days of fighting. The combined force returned on January 12, 1865, and engaged the fort in three days of combat from sea and land. The campaign culminated in a six-hour battle on January 15 during which at least 30 men earned Medals of Honor and the important fort was captured. Brigadier General Newton Curtis was the first man to pass through the stockade and was wounded four times while personally leading each assault on the traverses. After his military service, General Curtis served in the New York state assembly from 1884 - 1890 before being elected to the U.S. Congress as the representative of New York's 22nd District from 1891 to 1897. |
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