12 April 1861 A.D. FORT SUMTER, SC: Confederates Fire on Fort Sumter & America’s Very Un-Civil War Begins
12 April 1861 A.D. FORT SUMTER, SC: Confederates Fire on Fort
Sumter & America’s Very Un-Civil War Begins
1861 – The American Civil War begins when
Confederates fire on Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor. The fort had been
the source of tension between the Union and Confederacy for several months.
After South Carolina seceded, the state demanded the fort be turned over but
Union officials refused. A supply ship, the “Star of the West,” tried to reach
Fort Sumter on January 9, but the shore batteries opened fire and drove it
away. For both sides, Sumter was a symbol of sovereignty. The Union could not
allow it to fall to the Confederates, although throughout the Deep South other
federal installations had been seized. For South Carolinians, secession meant
little if the Yankees still held the stronghold. The issue hung in the air when
Abraham Lincoln took the oath of office on March 4, stating in his inauguration
address: “You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors.”
Lincoln did not try to send reinforcements but he did send in food. This way,
Lincoln could characterize the operation as a humanitarian mission, bringing,
in his words, “food for hungry men.” He sent word to the Confederates in
Charleston of his intentions on April 6. The Confederate Congress at
Montgomery, Alabama, had decided on February 15 that Sumter and other forts
must be acquired “either by negotiation or force.” Negotiation, it seemed, had
failed. The Confederates demanded surrender of the fort, but Major Robert
Anderson, commander of Fort Sumter, refused. At 4:30 a.m. on April 12, the
Confederate guns opened fire. For thirty-three hours, the shore batteries
lobbed 4,000 shells in the direction of the fort. Finally, the garrison inside
the battered fort raised the white flag. No one on either side had been killed,
although two Union soldiers died when the departing soldiers fired a gun
salute, and some cartridges exploded prematurely. It was a nearly bloodless
beginning to America’s bloodiest war.

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