A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 12 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels
Sunday, March 31st, 1861. Washington is hushed. Sunday has brought a
pause in official business, but not in speculation. President Lincoln settled into
his reserved front row pew seat as the congregation for the New York Avenue
Presbyterian Church slowly drifted in with fewer attendees than normal. Reverend Gurley glanced at his sermon notes
before peering down from his elevated lectern at the President sitting alone
and expressionless looking very much deep in thought. With rumors and speculation swirling around Washington
in the back of his mind the Reverand opened with Psalm 25:4 — “Show me thy
ways, O Lord; teach me thy paths.” The verse echoed through the pews as Lincoln
sat in silence without looking up, his decision still unspoken.
Cabinet members kept to their homes, but political visitors
still called. Rumors swirled that Lincoln had made his decision regarding Fort
Sumter but was waiting for the right moment to announce it. Seward, still
advocating evacuation, spent the day in quiet reflection, while Chase and Blair
met privately with allies to prepare for a possible military move.
In Charleston, Confederate leaders grew restless. Telegrams from Montgomery urged Beauregard to remain alert. The Confederate commissioners in Washington sent another message to Jefferson Davis: “No answer yet. The silence is ominous.”
The legal debate over secession continued in pamphlets and
sermons. Northern clergy used the pulpit to argue that the Union was divinely
ordained and that rebellion was a sin. Southern ministers countered with
sermons on self-determination and resistance to tyranny.
Attorney General Bates spent part of the day reviewing correspondence from federal judges in the North, many of whom were preparing to issue rulings on property seizures and loyalty oaths. The legal machinery of war was beginning to stir, even if no shots had yet been fired.
In Richmond, the Confederate Congress adjourned for the
Sabbath, but legal advisors continued drafting wartime statutes. The
Confederate legal framework was evolving rapidly, with new laws on tariffs,
conscription, and foreign recognition under review.
Charleston Harbor was quiet but tense. Beauregard ordered
limited drills to avoid provoking the garrison at Fort Sumter, but his officers
remained on high alert. The batteries were fully manned, and signal flags were
kept ready in case of sudden movement.
Inside Fort Sumter, Major Anderson led a brief Sunday service for his men. The garrison was exhausted, hungry, and increasingly resigned to their fate. Anderson noted in his journal: “We are near the end. Our provisions will not last the week.”
In New York, Gustavus Fox finalized his plan for the relief
expedition. He met with naval officers and reviewed the readiness of the ships.
The operation was nearly set — awaiting only Lincoln’s final word.
Markets were closed, but anxiety simmered. Merchants in New
York and Boston spent the day reviewing contracts and preparing contingency
plans. Insurance brokers warned that any clash at Sumter would trigger
immediate rate hikes on Southern cargo.
In Charleston, port activity slowed further. British ships remained offshore, hesitant to dock amid rumors of imminent conflict. Local merchants complained that Montgomery had not provided enough clarity on Confederate trade policy, and some began hoarding goods in anticipation of blockade.
Across the Atlantic, British newspapers published editorials
warning that war in America would disrupt cotton supplies and destabilize
global markets. The economic fuse was lit.
Sunday brought a moment of spiritual reflection across the
divided nation. Churches in the North preached unity and peace. Congregations
sang hymns like “My Country, ’Tis of Thee” with renewed fervor. In the South,
sermons emphasized honor, resistance, and divine favor for the Confederate
cause.
Families gathered for quiet meals, but conversation
inevitably turned to the crisis. In Charleston, citizens walked the Battery,
watching Fort Sumter in the distance. Children played near the cannons, unaware
of the storm about to break.
In Washington, the streets were subdued. Telegraph offices
were closed, and newspaper presses slowed. But everyone knew Monday would bring
movement — and possibly, the final step toward war.



