A Daily Track of the Civil War: Day 9 - Washington Under Threat & An Uncertain Future For The Union
Monday, April 20th, 1861. Lincoln began the morning in a state of deep alarm. News of the Baltimore riot had reached the White House the previous afternoon, but the full extent of the crisis — the severing of rail lines, the deaths of Massachusetts soldiers, and the possibility that Washington might be isolated — became clearer overnight. Lincoln rose early, pacing the second‑floor corridor of the Executive Mansion, waiting for dispatches from Maryland and for confirmation that the 6th Massachusetts had reached the capital safely. The city was tense, with rumors circulating that secessionists might attempt to cut telegraph lines or even march on Washington. Politically, the shockwaves were immediate: Maryland’s loyalty, already precarious, had become the central crisis of the government, and Lincoln understood that the fate of the capital now depended on the choices of a border state whose sympathies were deeply divided.
“The Baltimore Outrage — The Union Must Be Maintained — Washington Safe.”
In the afternoon, Lincoln turned his attention to the legal crisis unfolding in Maryland. He consulted Attorney General Edward Bates about the possibility of suspending habeas corpus along the rail corridor — a step he had not yet taken but was clearly considering. The president was torn: he believed deeply in constitutional restraint, yet he also knew that without troops, Washington could fall. Bates advised caution but acknowledged that extraordinary circumstances might justify extraordinary measures. As evening approached, the arrival of the battered 6th Massachusetts and the 7th New York brought a measure of relief. Lincoln reportedly went to the window to watch the New Yorkers march up Pennsylvania Avenue, their immaculate uniforms and confident bearing a stark contrast to the bloodied Massachusetts men who had limped into the city earlier. For the first time in 48 hours, Lincoln allowed himself a moment of hope. But the day ended as it began — with uncertainty, and with the president still wrestling with the question that would define the coming week: how far could he go to save the Union without breaking the Constitution he had sworn to uphold.
The federal government begins weighing extraordinary measures to maintain control of Maryland and protect the capital. The legal debate over habeas corpus intensifies: can the president suspend it along the rail corridor to ensure troop passage? Lincoln has not yet acted, but the pressure is mounting. Meanwhile, Virginia’s seizure of federal installations — including the Gosport Navy Yard — raises urgent questions about the legal status of property, loyalty, and treason. The boundary between civil authority and military necessity grows thinner as the government confronts the reality that ordinary legal processes may not be sufficient to preserve the Union.
“The War Movement — Troops Gathering — The North Checked at Baltimore.”
This is the day the Union loses the Gosport (Norfolk) Navy Yard, one of the most valuable naval facilities in the country. Federal officers, unable to defend it against overwhelming Virginia militia, attempt to destroy the yard and scuttle the ships — but the effort is only partially successful. The Confederacy gains dry docks, heavy guns, and the hull of the USS Merrimack, which will later be transformed into the ironclad CSS Virginia. In Washington, the arrival of the battered 6th Massachusetts and the 7th New York provides desperately needed reinforcements, but rail lines remain severed. The capital is still vulnerable, and the War Department scrambles to establish new routes through Annapolis and the Chesapeake.
The fall of the Gosport Navy Yard is an economic blow as well as a military one. Millions of dollars in federal property are lost or captured, and the Confederacy gains industrial capacity it desperately needs. Northern markets react sharply to the Baltimore riot: insurance rates spike, shipping schedules are disrupted, and merchants fear that the mid‑Atlantic corridor — the artery connecting New England to Washington — may remain closed. In the South, Virginia’s alignment with the Confederacy promises new access to skilled labor, machinery, and coastal infrastructure. The economic geography of the nation is beginning to fracture along the same lines as its politics.
“We are all in a tremor for fear the North will be too slow to strike.”
The country wakes to the news of the Baltimore bloodshed, and the social mood hardens instantly. In Northern cities, crowds gather to cheer departing regiments, and newspapers call for unity and resolve. The deaths of the Massachusetts soldiers become symbols of sacrifice, galvanizing public opinion. In Baltimore, tension remains high; citizens fear federal retaliation, and rumors swirl through the streets. Across the South, the riot is celebrated as proof that the North cannot march unopposed through a slaveholding state. Families in border regions feel the strain most acutely, as loyalties divide households and communities. The sense that the war has moved from political crisis to social rupture becomes unmistakable on this day.





