Details for Titlum-Tatlum

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5039009602

Data

Marker Number 9602
Atlas Number 5039009602
Marker Title Titlum-Tatlum
Index Entry Titlum - Tatlum
Address
City Freeport vicinity
County Brazoria
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 292748
UTM Northing 3218629
Subject Codes Civil War
Marker Year 1965
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 15 miles northeast of Freeport, on San Luis Island at Balboa Blvd. and Beach, in county park
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Nearby island. Resort for fishermen, hunters, small boats. During the Civil War, 1861-65, used by such captains as H. C. Wedemeyer, a peacetime shipbuilder, as base for operations defying Federal blockade. Ships loaded with cotton entered waterways around Titlum-Tatlum and hid among willows, out of range of observers with spyglasses on the tall masts of federal blockading ships. On dark nights or in bad weather, blockade-runners would slip out of here to the open seas, hugging shores, sometimes being towed by men on land until water was reached. Cotton taken overseas by such ships would buy for the Confederacy (hampered by lack of manufacturing facilities) guns, gunpowder, medicines, coffee, cloth, hardware and shoes. Purchases came into Texas by the same route that cotton was freighted out. Aside from such havens as Titlum-Tatlum, blockade runners needed every advantage over the foe, for they supplied life-blood to the Confederacy. Texas gave them unstinted support: from her coast guard and from infantry and cavalry that would not let Federals land even to get drinking water or wood; so that blockade ships often had to drop duty and take off for New Orleans for supplies and repairs. (1965)

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