Fort Fisher State Historic Site
"I heard to night [sic] by the evening paper, that Sebastopol had fallen, that the French had lost 15,000, the English 2,000, and the Russians about 15,000. What wholesale slaughter. And all for what? . . . . Sebastopol is taken. At last the press groan to day [sic] with this (to my Russian sympathising heart) bad news." Nearly seven years later, at the age of 26, William Lamb would gain inspiration for the construction of Fort Fisher from famed Russian engineer Frants E. I. Todleben's defensive works at Sebastopol. At 29, Lamb would command his fort—the South's most powerful bastion—in defense of the largest combined operation in United States military history (a distinction that would stand until World War II).
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