In command of the West Gulf Blockading Squadron, with his flag in Hartford[?] he disproved the theory that forts ashore held superiority over naval forces, when in April 1862 he ran past Fort Jackson[?] and Fort St. Philip[?] and the Chalmette, Louisiana batteries to take the great city and port of New Orleans, Louisiana, (a decisive event in the war). Later that year passed the batteries defending Vicksburg, Mississippi. Port Hudson[?] fell to him 9 July 1863.
On 5 August 1864 he won a great victory in the Battle of Mobile Bay[?]. Mobile, Alabama at the time was the Confederacy's last major port open on the Gulf of Mexico. The bay was heavily mined (tethered naval mines were known as torpedoes at the time). Farragut ordered his fleet to charge the bay. When one ship struck a mine the others began to pull back, but then Farragut shouted out the order, "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!" The bulk of the fleet succeded in entering the bay, and the heroic quote became famous.
Farragut then triumphed over the opposition of heavy batteries in Fort Morgan[?] and Fort Gaines[?] to defeat the squadron of Admiral Franklin Buchanan[?].
His country honored its great sailor by creating for him the rank of Admiral, never before used in the United States Navy.
Admiral Farragut's last active service was in command of the European Squadron with Franklin as his flagship, and he died at the age of 69 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
Numerous destroyers have been named USS Farragut in his honor.
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