Fort Sumter: The Civil War Begins
Nearly a century of discord between North and South finally exploded in April 1861 with the bombardment of Fort Sumter
- By Fergus M. Bordewich
- Photographs by Vincent Musi
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
While Buchanan dithered, six more states seceded: Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas. On February 4, the Confederate States of America declared its independence in Montgomery, Alabama, and named Mexican War hero, former Secretary of War and senator from Mississippi Jefferson Davis, its president. “The radicals felt they were making a revolution, like Tom Paine and Samuel Adams,” says Emory Thomas. Although Davis had long argued for the right of secession, when it finally came he was one of few Confederate leaders who recognized that it would probably mean a long and bloody war. Southern senators and congressmen resigned and headed south.
Secessionists occupied federal forts, arsenals and customhouses from Charleston to Galveston, while in Texas, David Twiggs, commander of federal forces there, surrendered his troops to the state militia and joined the Confederate Army. Soon the only significant Southern posts that remained in federal hands were Fort Sumter and Florida’s Fort Pickens, at the entrance to Pensacola Harbor. “The tide of secession was overpowering,” says Thomas. “It was like the moment after Pearl Harbor—people were ready to go to war.” Buchanan now wanted nothing more than to dump the whole mess in Lincoln’s lap and retire to the quietude of his estate in Pennsylvania. But Lincoln would not take office until March 4. (Not until 1933 was Inauguration Day moved up to January 20.)
The new president who slipped quietly into Washington on February 23, forced to keep a low profile because of credible death threats, was convinced that war could still be avoided. “Lincoln had been a compromiser his whole life,” says Orville Vernon Burton. “He was naturally flexible: as a lawyer, he had always invited people to settle out of court. He was willing to live with slavery where it already was. But when it came to the honor of the United States, there was a point beyond which he wouldn’t go.”
Once in office, Lincoln entered into a high-stakes strategic gamble that was all but invisible to the isolated garrison at Fort Sumter. It was in the Confederacy’s interest to provoke a confrontation that made Lincoln appear the aggressor. Lincoln and his advisers believed, however, that secessionist sentiment, red-hot in the Deep South, was only lukewarm in the Upper South states of Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas, and weaker yet in the four slaveholding border states of Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri. Conservatives, including Secretary of State William H. Seward, urged the president to appease the Deep South and evacuate the fort, in hopes of keeping the remaining slave states in the Union. But Lincoln knew that if he did so, he would lose the confidence of both the Republican Party and most of the North.
“He had such faith in the idea of Union that he hoped that [moderates] in the Upper South would never let their states secede,” says Harold Holzer. “He was also one of the great brinksmen of all time.” Although Lincoln was committed to retaking federal forts occupied by the rebels and to defending those still in government hands, he indicated to a delegation from Richmond that if they kept Virginia in the Union, he would consider relinquishing Sumter to South Carolina. At the same time, he reasoned that the longer the standoff over Fort Sumter continued, the weaker the secessionists—and the stronger the federal government—would look.
Lincoln initially “believed that if he didn’t allow the South to provoke him, war could be avoided,” says Burton. “He also thought they wouldn’t really fire on Fort Sumter.” Because negotiating directly with Jefferson Davis would have implied recognition of the Confederacy, Lincoln communicated only with South Carolina’s secessionist—but nonetheless duly elected—governor, Francis Pickens. Lincoln made clear that he intended to dispatch vessels carrying supplies and reinforcements to Fort Sumter: if the rebels fired on them, he warned, he was prepared to land troops to enforce the federal government’s authority.
Rumors flew in every direction: a federal army was set to invade Texas...the British and French would intervene...Northern businessmen would come out en masse against war. In Charleston, the mood fluctuated between overwrought excitement and dread. By the end of March, after three cold, damp months camped on the sand dunes and snake-infested islands around Charleston Harbor, Fort Sumter’s attackers were growing feverishly impatient. “It requires all the wisdom of their superiors to keep them cool,” wrote Caroline Gilman, a transplanted Northerner who had embraced the secessionist cause.
For a month after his inauguration, Lincoln weighed the political cost of relieving Fort Sumter. On April 4, he came to a decision. He ordered a small flotilla of vessels, led by Navy Capt. Gustavus Vasa Fox, to sail from New York, carrying supplies and 200 reinforcements to the fort. He refrained from sending a full-scale fleet of warships. Lincoln may have concluded that war was inevitable, and it would serve the federal government’s interest to cause the rebels to fire the first shot.
The South Carolinians had made clear that any attempt to reinforce Sumter would mean war. “Now the issue of battle is to be forced upon us,” declared the Charleston Mercury. “We will meet the invader, and the God of Battles must decide the issue between the hostile hirelings of Abolition hate and Northern tyranny.”
“How can one settle down to anything? One’s heart is in one’s mouth all the time,” Mary Chesnut wrote in her diary. “The air is red-hot with rumors.” To break the tension on occasion, Chesnut crept to her room and wept. Her friend Charlotte Wigfall warned, “The slave-owners must expect a servile insurrection.”
In the early hours of April 12, approximately nine hours after the Confederates had first asked Anderson to evacuate Fort Sumter, the envoys were again rowed out to the garrison. They made an offer: if Anderson would state when he and his men intended to quit the fort, the Confederates would hold their fire. Anderson called a council of his officers: How long could they hold out? Five days at most, he was told, which meant three days with virtually no food. Although the men had managed to mount about 45 cannon, in addition to the original 15, not all of those could be trained on Confederate positions. Even so, every man at the table voted to reject immediate surrender to the Confederates.
Anderson sent back a message to the Confederate authorities, informing them that he would evacuate the fort, but not until noon on the 15th, adding, “I will not in the meantime open my fire upon your forces unless compelled to do so by some hostile act against this fort or the flag of my Government.”
But the Confederacy would tolerate no further delay. The envoys immediately handed Anderson a statement: “Sir: By authority of Brigadier-General Beauregard, commanding the provisional forces of the Confederate States, we have the honor to notify you that he will open the fire of his batteries on Fort Sumter in one hour from this time.”
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Comments (28)
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i think this article is well written and it gives alot info:) like i said love hstory so much;0
Posted by cakita feliz on January 29,2013 | 02:32 PM
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Posted by cakita feliz on January 29,2013 | 02:28 PM
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Posted by sierra cleveland on October 15,2012 | 05:22 PM
Thank you soo much for the help. This information helped me on my 8th grade honors NHD Project!:))
Posted by Caitlin on October 9,2012 | 10:06 PM
this is to long can you just make it like to where it is not so long because it is to long i almost went to sleep! but it is enteresting.
Posted by taniyah on September 19,2012 | 11:41 AM
THIS HELP MY 10th GRADE CIVIL WAR PROJECT SOOOOOOOO MUCH!Big big thanks to you!!!
Posted by Edna DoVuage on May 28,2012 | 09:33 PM
I love history.Its knowledge to your mind.
Posted by lild on October 13,2011 | 09:51 PM
For sure slavery was the cause of the Civil War, and the philosophy of labor at essentially its lowest cost continues to drive policies of the south today, to the point that it is a major factor in current national politics. Some historians and sociologists point to the "southernization" of the United States that grips our nation, as they address the future.
Posted by GLI on May 27,2011 | 01:57 PM
By February 1861 seven states had seceded from the Union. Five of them appointed commissioners whose mission it was to spread the gospel of secession to the other slave states. Regarding the election of Abraham Lincoln, the commissioner S. F. Hale from Alabama in a letter to the Governor of Kentucky wrote “He stands forth as the representative of the fanaticism of the North, which, for the last quarter of a century, has been making war upon the South, her property, her civilization, her institutions and her interests; as the representative of that party which overrides all constitutional barriers, ignores the obligation of official oaths, and acknowledges allegiance to a higher law than the Constitution, striking down sovereignty and equality of the states, and resting its claims to popular favor upon the one dogma—the equality of the races white and black."
A higher law is natural law as expounded upon in The Declaration of Independence and is the principle upon which this nation was founded. "When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the LAWS OF NATURE and of NATURE'S GOD entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of Happiness"
Slavery in the “Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave” was a gross contradiction and great injustice. It’s clear to me that only way it would end was the American Civil War. Perhaps it was God’s judgment for violating higher law.
For those interested I recommend reading Secession Commissioners and the Causes of the Civil War by Charles B. Dew
SNW
Posted by SNW on May 24,2011 | 04:04 AM
It is unfortunate that myths surrounding the origin of hostilities in 1861 are endorsed in the article “Opening Salvo.” There is no justification for the use of uninformed phrases like “clash between founding ideals and slavery” or the leitmotif that war between the states was inevitable. The taking of Fort Sumter, a Union bastion in a state not part of the Union, and war itself were far from inevitable, and, constitutionally, there was no clash between founding ideals and slavery. Differences between the states had always been resolved through negotiation and bargaining – the Missouri Compromise, the Kansas-Nebraska Act, etc. Sectional economics, competing interpretations of federalism and northern expansionism provided a volatile background, but only that. The war’s trigger was the election of a President incapable of personifying a national consensus – Lincoln carried only 16 northern states plus California and Oregon and not a single southern state. Even after his election with less than 40% of the popular vote, there were opportunities for compromise (an obvious one was withdrawing Union troops from Fort Sumter), but Lincoln missed them all and set in motion events that led to a war that implemented northern aggression.
Posted by Carlos Valrand on May 14,2011 | 02:39 PM
I must take issue with the statement by Mr. Bordewich that the Civil War was over slavery alone. Perhaps that is his view. The average Southerner of 1861 was a dirt farmer or merchant or both, whose only dealings with slavery would have been through his richer neighbors as a rule. This Southerner went to fight not over slavery, but because someone was taxing his land too much or inhibited his business through added taxes, or because he believed in States` Rights. The latter had a strong following in the Commonwealth of Virginia and State of Tennessee. His grievances could not or would not be heard by Congress, as the Northern states had 183 votes, the South when unanimous, 120. ( The Lost Cause, E. A. Pollard, p. 80).
Just as the American Revolution was fought for no taxation without representation, freedom from oppression, liberty, freedom from the King, or any number of other excellent reasons, to say the Civil War was fought for one reason by all Southerners is ludicrous.
Posted by John E. Truitt on May 11,2011 | 01:04 AM
Why was Ft Sumter fired on? Ft. Sunter is in the middle of Charleston Harbor. Was it because the North was blockading the South from shipping their cotton to Europe for a better price? The North had been imposing a tariff on southern cotton for years. This tariff and a blockade to prevent the shipping of cotton to a better market would affect all cotton growers, and not just the slave owning farmers. Most of the men fighting for the South did not own slaves. They would not fight about slavery but they would fight for the right to sell their cotton at the best price. This is something to think about.
Posted by Ned Russell on April 27,2011 | 01:34 AM
Another piece of the puzzle regarding Lincoln's early views on slavery comes from an early Illinois court case.
My great-great grandfather, Orlando B. Ficklin, a Democrat, had served with Lincoln in the Illinois House of Representatives in the mid 1830's. In 1847 (three years before passage of the Fugitive Slave Law), they found themselves on opposing sides in the Matson Slave Trial in Charleston, Illinois. Ironically, Lincoln represented Kentucky slave owner Robert Matson, who sued to force slaves Jane Bryant and her four children to return to Kentucky after Matson had brought them to Coles County to work temporarily on a tract of land he owned there.
Orlando B. Ficklin (whose wife, Lizzie, was a daughter of Georgia Senator, Walter T. Colquitt, and sister of future Confederate General, Alfred H. Colquitt), was retained by local abolitionists to represent Jane and her children. The case was decided in favor of the slaves and the Bryant family later emigrated to Liberia.
Posted by Deborah Parks on April 20,2011 | 06:21 PM
We both really enjoyed the depth the article went into to present the mood leading up to the war in Charleston. More specifically the quotes of then Captain Truman Seymour at Fort Sumter were a pleasant surprise. We live in the house on Broad St. in Charleston, that housed captured Genral Truman Seymour, along with four other Genrals Wessells, Scammon, Heckman, and Shaler in hopes to curtail the constant shelling on the City in the later years of the war. In retaliation, President Lincoln put 600, confederate soldiers, (the immortal 600), under their own fire.
Posted by douglas a. mayoras on April 18,2011 | 03:21 PM
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