Which statement best explains the significance of the Battle of Sabine Pass?(1 point)

Responses

The Confederates were able to recapture Galveston.
The Confederates were able to recapture Galveston.

A nearly all-Black fighting regiment captured a Confederate camp.
A nearly all-Black fighting regiment captured a Confederate camp.

It led Texas to decide to secede

The Battle of Sabine Pass had distinct significance in the context of the American Civil War due to its strategic outcome and the seemingly disproportionate forces involved. Here is a more detailed explanation:

The Battle of Sabine Pass was a significant Confederate victory during the American Civil War. On September 8, 1863, a small Confederate force at Fort Griffin, located near the mouth of the Sabine River, repelled a much larger Union assault. The Union forces aimed to invade Texas by navigating the Sabine River and launching an attack from the Gulf of Mexico.

Led by Lieutenant Richard "" Dowling and forty-six men of the Davis Guard, mostly of Irish descent, the Confederate defenders successfully thwarted the advance of four Union gunboats and prevented Union forces from penetrating into Texas. The Confederate forces managed to disable two of the Union gunboats, capturing their crews, which effectively ended the Union's attempt to invade Texas along the Sabine River.

The significance of the Battle of Sabine Pass lies in the disproportionately small Confederate force successfully defending against a much larger Union fleet, which had about 5,000 men prepared for the subsequent land invasion that never took place. The victory bolstered Confederate morale and helped secure the Texas coastline from invasion for a period of time.

None of the responses provided above--- the Confederates recapturing Galveston, a nearly all-Black fighting regiment capturing a Confederate camp, or Texas deciding to secede because of this battle---accurately describe the significance of the Battle of Sabine Pass. Texas had already seceded from the Union on February 1, 1861, well before the Battle of Sabine Pass took place in 1863. Additionally, the recapture of Galveston by the Confederates happened on January 1, 1863, also prior to the battle, and it was a separate event. There is no record of a nearly all-Black regiment being part of this specific battle.