Stephen Wise's Gate of Hell is a detailed assessment of the Union's combined arms campaign to capture the seedbed of secession, Charleston, in the summer of 1863. It is well-written, informative and accompanied by a fine selection of photographs, superior hand-drawn maps and schematic plans of key fortifications important during the fighting. Dr. Wise also appended tables with full ground and naval orders of battle for both Confederate and Federal units at differing junctures throughout the fighting.
The campaign was not decisive. The Union forces ultimately failed to take Charleston – and as with so many other such operations, the army blamed the navy and the navy the army. The failure provided an uplifting victory for the South in the aftermath of Vicksburg and Gettysburg. The Federal focus on coastal South Carolina did prevent Union naval units from conducting operations against Mobile and Wilmington until 1864. The navy's single complete squadron of ironclad monitors was occupied for almost one year off Charleston, but in being so it effectively ended the city's preeminence as a Southern blockade-running port. Perhaps the most important impact of the campaign was in providing a theater for the first extensive use of black and white Union troops together in combat. African-American soldiers won the endorsements of many skeptical officers by their performance on James and Morris Islands. The assault of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry on Battery Wagner on 18 July was a shining moment in the history of American arms.
The 1863 campaign against Charleston saw a number of tactical and technological innovations in warfare: employment of an armada of ironclad monitors, combined naval and ground artillery bombardments coordinated by signals, sophisticated use of three types of landmines (torpedoes, as they were known then), employment of searchlights (Union calcium lights, called “limelights”), use of observation balloons, a shift from masonry to earthwork fortifications, and long-range artillery fire using compass sightings and timed-fire techniques. Dr. Wise explored all these developments and others too. Gate of Hell is worthy of a strong Three Stars, but it is slightly undermined by too many typographical errors and misspellings.