A Daily Track of the Civil War: Day 39 - Confederate Lines Strengthen in Virginia & Northern Industry Accelerates War Production
Monday, May 20th, 1861. President Lincoln begins the day with the same unease that had defined the previous day. The fate of the border states still hung in the balance, and every dispatch arriving at the Executive Mansion reminded him that Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri were not abstractions but the fragile hinge on which the Union’s survival rested. Early reports from Baltimore described simmering unrest and the persistent threat of sabotage to the rail lines that kept Washington connected to the North. Lincoln understood that the capital’s safety depended on Maryland’s loyalty—or at least its containment.
NEW‑YORK DAILY TRIBUNE
May 20, 1861
UNION STRENGTHENS IN THE BORDER STATES
Loyal Sentiment Gains in Western Virginia
Kentucky Maintains Her Neutral Attitude
Maryland Quiet Under Federal Protection
As he moved through his morning papers, Lincoln reviewed the final enrolled copy of the Homestead Act, a measure he believed would strengthen the Union’s long‑term demographic and economic position. Yet even this moment of legislative achievement was shadowed by the border crisis. Letters from Kentucky revealed the precariousness of its self‑declared neutrality, a stance that pleased neither Unionists nor secessionists. Lincoln knew that if Kentucky fell, the Ohio River would become a Confederate highway. The Homestead Act promised the future; the border states threatened the present.
General Winfield Scott’s morning briefing brought a measure of clarity. Troops continued to pour into Washington, transforming the city into a fortified camp. But Scott’s attention—and Lincoln’s—was increasingly drawn to western Virginia, where Unionist sentiment was hardening into organized resistance against Richmond. The president saw in these developments a political counterweight to Virginia’s secession: a loyalist foothold that could blunt Confederate influence and demonstrate that not all of the Old Dominion had abandoned the Union.
Late in the morning, Attorney General Edward Bates arrived with troubling news from Maryland’s courts. Judges were protesting the detention of suspected secessionists, arguing that the arrests violated civil liberties. Lincoln listened carefully but remained firm: military necessity, he insisted, must prevail until Washington was secure. The tension between constitutional principle and wartime survival—already visible on May 19—was now becoming a daily burden. Maryland’s loyalty was too fragile, its proximity too dangerous, to risk leniency.
Shortly before midday, Lincoln signed the Homestead Act, a moment of genuine satisfaction amid the war’s grim pressures. He believed deeply in the free‑labor ideal and saw the act as a democratic triumph that would populate the West with small farmers loyal to the Union. Yet even as he put pen to paper, telegrams from Missouri reminded him that the crisis there was spiraling. The Camp Jackson Affair had fractured the state’s politics, leaving Unionists and secessionists claiming rival legitimacy. Missouri, like Kentucky, was becoming a battleground for the nation’s soul.
After the signing, Lincoln stepped onto the South Grounds to watch newly arrived regiments drilling. The sight of thousands of young men—many from the Midwest—marching in formation stirred both pride and sorrow. Washington had become an armed camp, its open spaces filled with tents, horses, and the constant clatter of military life. The president’s tall figure drew salutes and whispers, but Lincoln’s thoughts were elsewhere: every regiment drilling before him represented families left behind and a war whose cost he could already sense.
While Lincoln grappled with the border states, momentous events were unfolding farther south. In Raleigh, delegates at a special convention formally seceded from the Union, unanimously passing an ordinance dissolving North Carolina’s ties to the United States. The date—May 20th—was chosen deliberately to echo the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence of May 20, 1775, a symbolic gesture linking secession to Revolutionary‑era resistance. The symbolism was powerful, and North Carolina’s leaders wielded it with precision.
Before Lincoln’s election, secessionist sentiment in North Carolina had been relatively weak. Strong Unionist pockets in the northeast, the western mountains, and parts of the Piedmont had resisted the pull of disunion. Many non‑slaveholding yeoman farmers—who formed the majority of voters—opposed leaving the Union. The 1860 presidential vote reflected this: although Lincoln was not on the ballot, the combined votes for John Bell and John Breckinridge showed a broad Unionist inclination. But the firing on Fort Sumter and Lincoln’s call for 75,000 troops transformed hesitation into resolve.
Secessionists, led by Senator Thomas L. Clingman, Governor John W. Ellis, and Congressman Thomas Ruffin, had long pushed for withdrawal, but they lacked the numbers to force action until the crisis deepened. Choosing May 20th was a deliberate political act. By tying secession to the Mecklenburg Declaration, North Carolina’s leaders framed their withdrawal as a continuation of Revolutionary‑era self‑determination rather than a radical break. This symbolism resonated deeply with state pride and helped unify wavering delegates.
North Carolina’s secession completed the Confederacy’s eleven‑state lineup. The state quickly mobilized troops, seized federal property, and aligned its military forces with Richmond. Yet Unionist resistance—especially in the mountains—remained strong and would erupt into guerrilla conflict, desertion, and internal strife throughout the war. Even as the convention celebrated its unanimous vote, the seeds of internal rebellion were already present.
Back in Washington, the afternoon brought fresh alarms from Missouri. Governor Claiborne Jackson denounced federal actions as tyranny, while Unionist leaders begged for reinforcements. Lincoln recognized the pattern: just as Maryland had nearly slipped away in April, Missouri now teetered on the edge of internal war. Losing Missouri would imperil the entire Mississippi Valley, giving the Confederacy strategic depth and control of vital river routes. The president felt the weight of every decision pressing harder.
PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER
May 20, 1861
MISSOURI IN TURMOIL AFTER THE ST. LOUIS AFFAIR
Governor Jackson Denounces Federal Authority
Union Men Rally Behind Captain Lyon
The State Divided — Civil Conflict Feared
As evening approached, Secretary Chase arrived with sobering financial updates. War expenditures were rising faster than anticipated, and customs revenue—long the backbone of federal finance—was no longer sufficient. Northern industry was accelerating production of uniforms, rifles, and artillery components, but the Treasury needed new borrowing mechanisms to sustain the effort. Lincoln approved Chase’s plan to expand federal credit, recognizing that economic strength was as essential as battlefield success.
GEORGE TEMPLETON STRONG
Diary — May 20, 1861
“News from Missouri grows darker by the hour; the nation feels stretched thin, yet the city hums with a strange, determined energy.”
Lincoln ended the day reading letters from soldiers’ families and reviewing the latest dispatches from western Virginia and Ohio. The events of May 20 reinforced what he had sensed on May 19: the war would be long, the border states would remain perilous, and every decision he made carried consequences that stretched far beyond Washington. As he retired late into the night, the president bore the weight of a nation whose future depended on his judgment, steadiness, and resolve.




