The Planter’s Confederate officers:
Samuel Smith Hancock, first mate
Samuel Z. Pitcher, engineer
Charles Relyea, captain
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Those who escaped aboard the Planter on May 13, 1862:
Abram Allston worked as a boatman at nearby Fort Moultrie and served as the wheelman during the escape.
Samuel Chisholm is thought to have worked on the steamer Etiwan, which hid members of the party before the escape.
Alfred Gourdine was a regular member of the crew and served as an engineer.
Abraham Jackson was a regular member of the crew and served as a deckhand.
William Morrison was a tinsmith and plumber by trade and served as a deckhand during the escape.
John Small was a regular member of the crew and served as an engineer. His wife and daughter were hidden aboard the Planter during the escape.
Robert Smalls, a regular member of the crew, masterminded the escape and served as the captain that morning. Also aboard were his wife, Hannah; his daughter, Elizabeth; his infant son, Robert, Jr.; and his stepdaughter, Clara.
Gabriel Turner was a regular member of the crew and served as a deckhand.
Anna White and Lavinia Wilson were likely girlfriends, relatives, or friends of others aboard the Planter.
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Confederate Military and Political Figures:
President Jefferson Davis was inaugurated for a six-year term on February 22, 1862, after serving as the Confederacy’s provisional president.
John Ferguson was the owner of the Planter and leased the steamer to the Confederacy.
Gen. Robert E. Lee served as a military advisor to Davis until June 1862 when he replaced wounded Army of Northern Virginia commander Joseph E. Johnston.
Lt. Henry McKee was the master of Robert Smalls and his mother, Lydia Polite, and served in the 12th South Carolina Militia Regiment.
Maj. Gen. John C. Pemberton was the commander of the Confederate Department of South Carolina and Georgia and in charge of Charleston’s defenses. Pemberton replaced Gen. Robert E. Lee, under whom he had served.
Gen. Roswell Ripley was the commander of the Second Military District of Charleston under Pemberton. Ripley used the Planter as a transport and as his own personal dispatch boat for relaying military messages.
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Union Military and Political Figures:
Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase was responsible for all abandoned Confederate property, which included thousands of formerly enslaved people as well as cotton left behind by whites when they fled the area. A staunch abolitionist, Chase saw the situation at Port Royal as an opportunity to help the former slaves and perhaps advance his political career.
Cmdre. Samuel Francis Du Pont was the commander of the South Atlantic Blockade and was responsible for Union naval forces during the attack on Port Royal Sound in November 1861. After Smalls escaped from Charleston, Du Pont hired Smalls as a civilian boat pilot working for the Union. Du Pont was promoted to rear admiral in July 1862.
Rev. Mansfield French, a Methodist minister, was sent to Port Royal by the New York–based American Missionary Association to see what could be done to help the former slaves. French convinced Du Pont to let Smalls accompany him to the North in 1862 to help him raise funds for the Port Royal Experiment.
Maj. Gen. David Hunter served twice as the commander of the Department of the South, which included South Carolina, Florida, and Georgia (March 21, 1862–September 5, 1862, and January 20, 1863–June 12, 1863). Though he was not authorized to do so, Hunter, an abolitionist, declared all enslaved people in Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina free and organized a black regiment in 1862. Lincoln quickly rescinded Hunter’s proclamation.
Brig. Gen. Rufus Saxton became the military governor of the Department of the South in April 1862 under Hunter, the major general in command. Saxton was responsible for the plantations and the former slaves in the department. A devoted abolitionist, Saxton asked Smalls and French to deliver a letter to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton in August 1862 asking for permission to enlist black soldiers.
Brig. Gen. Thomas W. Sherman was in command of land forces during the attack on Port Royal Sound in November 1861. He was briefly tasked with taking care of the former slaves and the cotton left behind.
Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman led sixty thousand troops on a three-hundred-mile march from Atlanta to Savannah during his famous March to the Sea in late 1864.
Secretary of War Edwin Stanton authorized Saxton to enlist the first black soldiers in the U.S. Army.
Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles authorized Rear Adm. Samuel Francis Du Pont to have the Planter appraised and to determine how the prize money should be divided.