A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 13 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels
Saturday, March 30th, 1861. Washington awoke to a
city buzzing with rumors after yesterday’s Cabinet meeting. Word had
leaked—though nothing official was said—that Lincoln had moved closer to a
decision on Fort Sumter. The President remained silent, but the political class
sensed a shift. Senators, diplomats, and newspaper correspondents spent the
morning calling on Cabinet members, hoping to extract hints about the
administration’s intentions.
But others in the administration—Chase, Welles, and
Blair—were increasingly confident that Lincoln had resolved to act. Their
allies in Congress began preparing the political ground for a firm response to
secession, framing the moment as a test of national resolve.
In Charleston, Confederate leaders sensed the change. Reports
from Washington suggested that Lincoln was no longer paralyzed by indecision.
The Confederate government in Montgomery instructed its commissioners in
Washington to press Seward for clarity, but Seward continued to stall,
unwilling to reveal the President’s hand.
The legal crisis deepened as the weekend began. The federal
government still lacked any judicial ruling on the constitutionality of
secession, leaving the entire crisis suspended in a constitutional void.
Attorney General Edward Bates, having delivered his opinion
the previous day, spent March 30 refining additional notes on federal
authority. His argument—that the Union was perpetual and that the government
had both the right and duty to hold its property—circulated quietly among key
Republican lawmakers. It provided intellectual ammunition for those urging
Lincoln to stand firm.
Meanwhile, in the Confederacy, the provisional Congress
continued drafting wartime legislation. New measures aimed at regulating
commerce and securing revenue signaled that the break with the Union was not
temporary but intended to be permanent.
The legal lines were hardening, even if no court had yet
spoken.
Though Lincoln’s decision was not yet public, preparations
were already underway. Naval officers in New York and Norfolk received discreet
instructions to ready vessels for possible deployment. Gustavus Fox, the
architect of the Sumter relief plan, spent the day reviewing charts, tides, and
harbor conditions, refining the timing of the nighttime boat insertion.
Inside Fort Sumter, Major Robert Anderson recorded in his
journal that the garrison’s food supply was nearly exhausted. He estimated they
had less than a week before starvation forced surrender.
The military clock was ticking.
Northern financial markets remained unsettled. Saturday
brought no new clarity from Washington, and uncertainty continued to drive
fluctuations in shipping insurance and commodity prices. Merchants in Boston
and New York began quietly adjusting contracts, anticipating that any conflict
at Sumter would disrupt coastal trade.
In the South, the Confederate economy showed early signs of
strain. Cotton shipments slowed further as European buyers hesitated to commit
to new purchases. Charleston merchants complained that credit was tightening,
and rumors circulated that the Confederate government might soon need to issue
additional short‑term loans to cover expenses.
Across the Atlantic, British newspapers warned that a clash
at Sumter could send cotton prices soaring and disrupt textile production in
Lancashire.
In the South, Charleston residents spent the warm Saturday
afternoon strolling along the Battery, watching the harbor fortifications. The
sight of Confederate soldiers drilling on the sandbars had become a daily
ritual. Rumors spread that a Union fleet had already sailed, though no one
could confirm it.
Churches prepared Sunday sermons addressing the crisis. In
the North, ministers urged patience and national unity. In the South, many
framed the moment as a test of Southern honor and divine favor.
Families divided between North and South exchanged
increasingly urgent letters, each side pleading with the other to avoid
war—even as events moved steadily toward it.







