Number of Days Until The 2026 Midterm Electons

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

United States History On This Date: April 8th

1864 — Senate Passes the 13th Amendment
The U.S. Senate votes to abolish slavery, sending the 13th Amendment 
to the House for final approval. The moment marks a moral turning 
point in the Civil War, as the nation begins to confront its deepest 
contradiction and redefine freedom for millions enslaved Americans.
1913 — The 17th Amendment Is Ratified
Ratification of the 17th Amendment grants citizens the right to elect U.S. Senators 
directly, ending legislative appointments and ushering in a new era of progressive 
reform that strengthens popular representation and reduces corruption in state 
politics and federal governance.
1974 — Hank Aaron Breaks Babe Ruth’s Record
Before a roaring Atlanta crowd, Hank Aaron hits his 715th home run, surpassing Babe 
Ruth and cementing his place in baseball history as a symbol of grace, endurance, and 
quiet defiance amid the racial hostility thatshadowed his pursuit.
1990 — Ryan White Dies at Age 18
Ryan White, the Indiana teen whose battle with AIDS transformed public perception of 
the disease, dies at home surrounded by family. His courage and advocacy helped 
humanize the epidemic and inspire national compassion, research, and education 
reform


Tuesday, April 7, 2026

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - April 7th, 1861: The Union Prepares To Act & The Confederacy Prepares To Respond

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 5 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Sunday, April 7th, 1861Washington spent this day in a state of controlled tension as President Lincoln’s administration moved from debate to execution on the Fort Sumter question. The President had already approved the provisioning mission, and this day was devoted to monitoring readiness, receiving intelligence from Charleston, and reinforcing the political framing that the United States was acting with restraint. Lincoln held informal consultations rather than a formal Cabinet meeting, checking in individually with key secretaries to ensure that the mission would be understood as humanitarian rather than aggressive.

Secretary of State William H. Seward played a central role in shaping the political atmosphere of the day. He turned his attention to managing the diplomatic and political fallout. He spent April 7 at the State Department preparing communications for foreign ministers — especially Britain and France — emphasizing that the United States was not initiating hostilities but merely supplying a federal garrison. Seward also continued his quiet effort to keep channels open with Southern Unionists, signaling that reconciliation was still possible even as events moved toward confrontation. His work helped ensure that, when the relief fleet sailed, the administration could credibly claim that the Confederacy — not the Union — would bear responsibility for firing the first shot.

Boston Daily Advertiser — April 7, 1861
The Administration Resolute — Fort Sumter Will Not Be Abandoned

Together, Lincoln’s steady oversight and Seward’s diplomatic maneuvering defined the political landscape of April 7: a day when the administration sought to hold the moral high ground, maintain international confidence, and prepare the nation for the consequences of a decision that now seemed irreversible.

The legal question of sovereignty sharpened as the crisis deepened. Confederate leaders insisted that any federal action within their claimed territory violated what they believed to be their constitutional right to self‑government. In the North, legal scholars countered that secession itself had no standing under the Constitution — that rebellion could not dissolve a lawful union. Within the Attorney General’s office, officials quietly prepared opinions supporting Lincoln’s authority to maintain federal property, anticipating that the first shots would test constitutional boundaries more severely than any court ever had.

Charleston Harbor bristled with readiness as military preparations intensified. Beauregard’s engineers completed the final alignments of the harbor batteries, while sentries scanned the waters for the expected Union fleet. Inside Fort Sumter, Major Robert Anderson’s garrison, short on food and supplies, maintained discipline but understood that relief must come soon or surrender would be unavoidable. Far to the north, the Navy Department readied the relief expedition under Gustavus V. Fox — a small flotilla of steamers and warships gathering at Hampton Roads, poised to sail south within hours.

Diarist — Gideon Welles
April 7, 1861

“Orders are issued, countermanded, and reissued. The President is calm, but all around him is confusion.”

Economic life across the divided nation reflected the growing uncertainty. Southern commerce slowed as tension mounted, and Charleston merchants hesitated to ship cotton, fearing blockade or bombardment. Northern markets mirrored the anxiety: insurance rates on coastal shipping rose, and investors watched war risk ripple through trade networks. While the Treasury Department continued routine operations, the Confederate government in Montgomery began issuing its first bonds, wagering that independence would stabilize Southern credit once hostilities began.

Across the country, ordinary citizens felt the strain of waiting. In Charleston, crowds gathered daily along the Battery to scan the horizon for any sign of Union sails. In Northern cities, church sermons and newspaper editorials blended prayer with defiance. Families with kin on both sides exchanged anxious letters, uncertain which flag their loved ones would ultimately serve. The sense of suspended breath — of a nation holding still before the storm — defined the day more than any single act.

United States History On This Date: April 7th

1788 — Maryland Ratifies the U.S. Constitution
Maryland becomes the seventh state to ratify the Constitution, strengthening national momentum toward replacing the Articles of Confederation and helping solidify support for the stronger federal framework envisioned by the Philadelphia Convention.
1805 — Lewis and Clark Push West from Fort Mandan
The Corps of Discovery departs its winter quarters at Fort Mandan and begins the difficult ascent up the Missouri River, entering the most uncertain phase of their journey toward the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific.
1927 — First Long‑Distance Television Transmission
Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover appears in the nation’s first successful long‑distance television broadcast, demonstrating a technology that would soon transform communication, politics, entertainment, and the pace of American public life.
1948 — World Health Organization Established
The United States joins sixty other nations in founding the World Health Organization, marking a major postwar commitment to coordinated global health efforts and the prevention of future pandemics and medical crises.



Monday, April 6, 2026

A Primer For Our Civil War Daily Tracker On The Secession of Southern States Up To April 12th, 1861

From the winter of 1860 through the spring of 1861, the American Union unraveled with a speed that stunned even its most ardent secessionists. The election of Abraham Lincoln in November had been the spark, but the deeper fuel was decades of sectional grievance and the conviction, in the Deep South, that the balance of power had shifted irreversibly against slavery.

South Carolina led the break. On December 20, 1860, its convention voted unanimously to leave the Union, declaring that the compact of states had been violated and that the state was “released from her obligations.” Within weeks, the movement spread like wildfire. Mississippi followed on January 9, 1861; Florida on January 10; Alabama on January 11; Georgia on January 19; Louisiana on January 26; and Texas on February 1. These seven formed the nucleus of a new nation—the Confederate States of America—meeting in Montgomery, Alabama, to draft a provisional constitution and elect Jefferson Davis as president.

The Montgomery convention moved with remarkable efficiency. By mid‑February, the delegates had adopted a constitution modeled closely on that of the United States but with explicit protections for slavery and limits on tariffs and internal improvements. Davis and Vice President Alexander H. Stephens were inaugurated on February 18, 1861, beneath a bright Alabama sky. The new government began organizing departments, appointing cabinet officers, and dispatching commissioners to the remaining slave states, urging them to join the Confederacy before Lincoln’s inauguration.

Yet the Upper South hesitated. Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas still clung to the hope of compromise. Their leaders watched the crisis at Fort Sumter with dread, knowing that the first shot would force a choice between Union and South. In border states like Kentucky and Missouri, loyalties were divided, families split, and militias drilled in uneasy silence.

Charleston Mercury
December 20, 1861

The Union Is Dissolved!

Through March and early April, the Confederate provisional government solidified its authority. It established a War Department under Leroy Pope Walker, began raising troops, and transferred its capital’s attention to Charleston, where Major Robert Anderson’s garrison at Fort Sumter stood as a defiant symbol of federal power. Governor Francis W. Pickens of South Carolina coordinated with General P. G. T. Beauregard as the harbor bristled with batteries.

By April 12, 1861, the provisional Confederacy was no longer a theory but a functioning government commanding armies and territory. Seven states had formally seceded, four more teetered on the brink, and the guns of Charleston Harbor were about to speak for them all. The fragile Union that had endured for seventy‑two years was poised to fracture irrevocably—its fate sealed in the dawn light over Fort Sumter.

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - April 6th, 1861: Virginia Unionists & An Emergency Late Night Meeting

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 6 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Saturday, April 6, 1861 becomes one of the most politically charged days of Lincoln’s young presidency. From morning until nearly midnight, he works to steady a Union on the brink. He begins by meeting with four Northern governors — from Indiana, Ohio, Maine, and Pennsylvania — to assess militia readiness should the crisis escalate. Their presence underscores the growing expectation that federal authority may soon require force.

Lincoln then turns to the volatile situation in Virginia. A delegation of Virginia Unionists arrives seeking assurances that Forts Sumter and Pickens will be evacuated. Lincoln listens but refuses to promise withdrawal, signaling that federal property will not be surrendered under pressure. He also summons John Minor Botts, a prominent pro‑Union Virginian, to discuss the administration’s peaceful intentions, hoping to keep Virginia from sliding into secession.

The most consequential political act of the day comes when Lincoln dispatches Robert S. Chew and Captain Theodore Talbot to Charleston with a formal notice to Governor Pickens. The message states that the United States will attempt only to provision Fort Sumter — not reinforce it — unless the fort is attacked. This carefully crafted communication is Lincoln’s final diplomatic effort to avoid appearing as the aggressor while still asserting federal authority.

Complicating matters, Lincoln learns that earlier orders to reinforce Fort Pickens in Florida were ignored by the naval commander on site. This revelation forces him to intervene directly, sending a special messenger to ensure compliance. He briefly attends Mary Lincoln’s afternoon reception, a symbolic nod to normalcy amid crisis, before visiting the Washington Navy Yard to inspect preparations firsthand.

The day ends with an emergency late‑night meeting at the White House. Conflicting orders regarding the USS Powhatan threaten to derail the Sumter relief mission. Lincoln resolves the confusion decisively: the Powhatan must support the Sumter expedition.

By day’s end, Lincoln has navigated diplomacy, state relations, military logistics, and political brinkmanship — all while steering the nation toward an unavoidable reckoning.

As the political crisis intensifies, the legal foundations of the nation continue to erode. The Constitution offers no guidance for a Union splitting in two, and both governments now claim authority over the same forts, harbors, and customs houses. Washington insists that secession is void and that federal property must remain federal; Montgomery asserts its sovereignty and demands recognition. With no court capable of arbitrating between them, the law becomes a battlefield of competing interpretations. What once served as the nation’s stabilizing framework now stands paralyzed, unable to contain the centrifugal forces pulling the country apart.

The Administration Firm — Fort Sumter to Be Supplied
The New York Times, April 6, 1861
On the ground, the military situation grows more precarious by the hour. In Charleston Harbor, Confederate forces under General Beauregard continue to strengthen their ring of batteries, drilling constantly and preparing for the moment when diplomacy gives way to force. Inside Fort Sumter, Major Anderson’s men face dwindling supplies and the grim knowledge that relief may not arrive in time. Naval officers in Washington debate the feasibility of a provisioning expedition, but confusion over orders — especially regarding the USS Powhatan — threatens to derail the effort. Every signal flag in the harbor, every movement of a gun crew, carries the weight of impending conflict. The standoff is no longer theoretical; it is a fuse waiting to be lit.

The economic atmosphere mirrors the tension. Northern merchants worry that a fractured Union will disrupt trade routes, unsettle credit markets, and undermine the commercial networks that bind the states together. Southern ports, now under Confederate control, face uncertainty as foreign governments hesitate to recognize the new nation or commit to long‑term trade. The costs of mobilization — uniforms, arms, provisions — begin to rise, and both sides quietly brace for the financial burdens of war. The economy, like the nation itself, waits in uneasy suspension.

Diarist — Gideon Welles
April 6, 1861

“The day has been one of embarrassment and perplexity.”

Across the country, the social mood grows increasingly anxious. Crowds gather around telegraph offices, scanning for the latest rumors from Charleston. Newspapers speculate with growing urgency, and conversations in parlors, taverns, and churchyards return again and again to the same question: Will there be war? Families with sons in uniform feel the tension most acutely, while communities divided in loyalty brace for the strain that conflict will bring. The nation senses that the moment of decision is near. On April 6, 1861, Americans live in a state of collective breath‑holding, aware that the fragile peace may shatter at any moment.

United States History On This Day: April 6

1862 — Civil War: Battle of Shiloh Begins

Union forces under Gen. Ulysses S. Grant are surprised by Confederate troops led by Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston near Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee. The battle erupts with ferocious intensity, marking one of the bloodiest engagements of the war. Johnston is mortally wounded on the first day, and Union reinforcements under Gen. Don Carlos Buell arrive overnight. By April 7, Grant regains the field. The staggering casualties — over 23,000 — shock both North and South, revealing the brutal scale of the conflict to come.
1841 — John Tyler Becomes President
Following the death of President William Henry Harrison just 31 days into his term, Vice President John Tyler is sworn in as the 10th President of the United States. His succession sets a precedent for presidential continuity that will later be codified in the Constitution.
1917 — U.S. Enters World War I
After years of neutrality, the United States declares war on Germany. President Woodrow Wilson cites unrestricted submarine warfare and the Zimmermann Telegram as key provocations. The move marks a turning point in the war and ends American isolationism.
1830 — Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Founded
Joseph Smith formally organizes the Church of Christ (later known as the LDS Church) in Fayette, New York, with a small group of believers. The event marks the beginning of one of America’s most influential religious movements.

Battle of Shiloh At Pittsburgh Landing, Tennessee April 6, 1862


Sunday, April 5, 2026

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - April 5th, 1861: South Carolina Commissioners Denied & A Resolute President Lincoln

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 7 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Friday, April 5th, 1861.  The political atmosphere in Washington on this day carried a taut, almost brittle tension. South Carolina’s commissioners — Robert W. Barnwell, James H. Adams, and James L. Orr — had been in the capital since December 1860, arriving first to negotiate with President Buchanan, who refused to recognize them in any diplomatic capacity. They remained in Washington through the winter, waiting for the new administration and hoping for a different outcome. Now, more than three months later, they again pressed their case, warning that any attempt to relieve Fort Sumter would be treated as an act of war. Although they sought a personal interview with Lincoln, he

declined to meet them face‑to‑face, unwilling to grant them the status of foreign envoys. Instead, his response came only through a written note delivered by Secretary of State William H. Seward — a firm statement that he could not recognize them as official representatives of a sovereign government, that he would not negotiate over federal property, and that he intended to carry out his constitutional obligations without interference from unauthorized agents. Inside the Cabinet, the divide that had plagued Lincoln for weeks remained as sharp as ever. Seward continued to argue for withdrawal from Sumter as a gesture of conciliation, while Chase, Blair, and Bates insisted that surrendering the fort would destroy the Union’s credibility. Lincoln listened to all sides, revealing little, but the direction of his thinking was becoming clearer. The President was no longer debating whether to act, but how to act without appearing the aggressor.
🗞️ New York Daily Tribune — April 5, 1861
“Southern Commissioners Press Their Case — Lincoln Firm”
No recognition granted; the President’s reply delivered through Secretary Seward.

The legal debates inside the administration were equally intense. Attorney General Edward Bates continued refining the constitutional arguments that would justify any move Lincoln made. His position was unequivocal: secession was legally void, federal property could not be surrendered, and the President had both the authority and the obligation to “hold, occupy, and possess” installations belonging to the United States. These arguments were not merely academic; they were forming the backbone of the administration’s public justification for the relief expedition. Meanwhile, in Montgomery, Confederate legal thinkers were crafting the opposite narrative — that any reinforcement of Sumter constituted a violation of their sovereignty and a legitimate cause for war. Two incompatible legal worlds were taking shape, and April 5 made clear that they could not coexist much longer.

🗞️ Richmond Daily Dispatch — April 5, 1861
“No Audience Granted: Washington Rejects Southern Envoys”
Lincoln’s written reply confirms hostile intent toward the Confederacy.

The military dimension of the crisis shifted decisively on this day. At the Washington Navy Yard, the USS Pawnee lay moored along the wharf, her decks alive with the movement of sailors loading coal, provisions, and ammunition. She had been preparing quietly all week, but on April 5 the purpose of that preparation became unmistakable. Lincoln issued the sealed order authorizing Gustavus Fox to proceed with the Sumter relief expedition, and the Pawnee was now part of the naval force that would carry it out. Though she would not depart until the following day, the ship’s readiness signaled that the administration had crossed a threshold. In Charleston, Confederate observers were already watching northern ports with growing suspicion, convinced that a fleet was forming. Their own batteries were nearly complete, their ammunition stores rising, and their commanders increasingly certain that the moment of decision was close.

Economic anxieties rippled through both North and South as the day unfolded. In Northern cities, merchants and financiers watched the political signals with growing unease. Any clash at Sumter threatened to freeze credit, disrupt shipping, and send insurance rates soaring. Railroads and shipping companies began drafting contingency plans, unsure whether the coming week would bring war or a last‑minute compromise. In the South, cotton brokers in Charleston and Savannah were caught between hope and dread. Some believed that a conflict might force Britain and France to intervene diplomatically, while others feared that war would close ports and devastate the region’s fragile economy. Planters held back shipments, waiting to see whether the crisis would raise prices or choke off trade entirely.

📜 William Howard Russell — Diary, April 5, 1861
“All is uncertainty here. Men speak in whispers of Sumter…”

The London Times correspondent spent the day moving through Washington’s anxious circles, noting that the city seemed suspended between rumor and inevitability. He observed that officials and citizens alike spoke cautiously, as though any word might hasten the crisis. Russell wrote that the government appeared to be nearing a decisive moment, and that the tension surrounding Fort Sumter had become the unspoken measure of every conversation in the capital.

Socially, April 5 felt like a day suspended between dread and inevitability. In Charleston, crowds gathered along the Battery each evening, scanning the horizon for any sign of approaching sails. The city hummed with rumor — some insisting the Union fleet was already on its way, others claiming Lincoln had backed down. In Washington, boardinghouses and hotel lobbies buzzed with speculation about the President’s intentions. Northern newspapers printed wildly conflicting predictions, while Southern communities continued militia drills with a mixture of pride and apprehension. Diaries from the period capture the mood with striking consistency: a sense that the country was holding its breath, waiting for something that everyone felt but no one could yet name.


April 5, 1861, was not a day of dramatic announcements or sudden explosions. It was a day when the machinery of conflict moved quietly but unmistakably into place — the President’s sealed orders issued, the Pawnee taking on her final stores, the Confederacy watching the northern ports, and the nation sensing that the long‑feared break was now only days away.

United States History On This Date: April 5

1614 — Pocahontas Marries John Rolfe
Pocahontas, daughter of Powhatan chief Wahunsenacawh, married English tobacco planter John Rolfe in Jamestown, Virginia. Their union helped establish a brief peace between settlers and Native tribes, shaping early colonial diplomacy in the Chesapeake region.
1792 — Washington Issues First Presidential Veto
President George Washington vetoed a congressional bill on legislative apportionment, marking the first use of executive veto power. His decision helped define the balance between the presidency and Congress in the young republic.
1945 — Sadao Munemori Sacrifices Himself in Combat
Private First Class Sadao Munemori became the first Japanese American awarded the Medal of Honor, posthumously, after falling on a grenade to save fellow soldiers in Italy. His heroism challenged wartime prejudice and honored the Nisei legacy.
1933 — FDR Ends Bank Holiday
President Franklin D. Roosevelt reopened banks after a nationwide “bank holiday” aimed at halting the financial panic. The move restored public confidence and became a cornerstone of the New Deal’s early success.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Notable American Innovation: April - Compact, Hight Speed Gasoline Engine

Another notable April milestone in American innovation occurred on April 3, 1885, when a U.S. patent was issued for a compact, high‑speed gasoline engine whose design would influence the earliest generation of automotive engineering. A

rriving at a moment when inventors on both sides of the Atlantic were racing to refine lightweight, efficient power sources, this engine represented a significant step toward the machines that would eventually define the 20th century.

Unlike the large, heavy stationary engines common in workshops and factories, the 1885 design emphasized compactness, speed, and adaptability. Its smaller size and improved fuel‑air mixing made it suitable for mobile applications — including the experimental vehicles that would soon appear in American barns, machine shops, and engineering schools. While the automobile was still years away from mass production, the principles embodied in this patent helped shape the mechanical vocabulary of early car builders: lighter frames, higher revolutions, and engines capable of sustained, portable power.

The 1885 patent to Gottlieb Daimler is often viewed as part of a broader wave of late‑19th‑century innovation that transformed gasoline from a byproduct of kerosene refining into the fuel of a new transportation era. It also reflects the growing American appetite for mechanical experimentation, as inventors sought to solve the challenges of speed, efficiency, and reliability.

In the context of April’s notable inventions, this compact gasoline engine stands as a reminder that the automobile did not emerge fully formed. It evolved through a series of incremental advances — each one expanding the realm of what seemed mechanically possible. The April 1885 patent marks one of those quiet but consequential steps toward a technology that would reshape American mobility, industry, and culture.

Notable American Innovations: Internal Combustion Engine 1826

Among the notable American innovations tied to the month of April is the little‑remembered but historically significant achievement of Samuel Morey, who on April 1, 1826, received a U.S. patent for an early form of the internal combustion engine. Morey, a New England inventor with a restless mechanical imagination, had spent years experimenting with vaporized fuels and controlled ignition. His 1826 design used a mixture of air and turpentine vapor, ignited within a cylinder to produce rotary motion — a concept that placed him decades ahead of the automobile age.

Morey’s engine was not commercially adopted, and his name faded from public memory, overshadowed by later inventors who refined and industrialized the technology. Yet his work stands as one of the earliest American attempts to harness controlled combustion as a source of mechanical power. In an era dominated by steam, Morey’s experiments pointed toward a different future — one in which compact, fuel‑driven engines would reshape transportation, manufacturing, and daily life.

Today, Morey’s 1826 patent is often cited by historians as a reminder that technological revolutions rarely begin with a single breakthrough. They emerge instead from long chains of experimentation, trial, and incremental insight. Morey’s engine may not have launched the automotive era, but it helped lay the conceptual groundwork for it. His April patent remains a notable milestone in the broader story of American innovation, illustrating how ideas that seem premature in their own time can become foundational in the decades that follow.