A Daily Track of the Civil War: Day 63 - Skirmishing Intensifies in Western Virginia as Union Forces Advance & Rail and River Security Become Federal Priorities
Wednesday, June 13th, 1861. President Lincoln started his day with a desk full of dispatches from the border states, the fragile hinge upon which the Union’s survival rested. Kentucky’s reaffirmation of “armed neutrality” dominated the early reports, a stance Lincoln found exasperating yet understood he could not challenge openly without risking the state’s defection. The president read the messages slowly, marking several with pencil notes as he prepared for a day that would revolve around the delicate balance of keeping the border states aligned.
NEW-YORK TRIBUNE — June 13, 1861
UNION ARMS ADVANCE IN WESTERN VIRGINIA
Federal Columns Secure the Mountain Passes - McClellan’s Troops Greeted by Loyal Citizens - Rebel Forces Reported in Disorderly Retreat
Through the morning hours, Lincoln met with Secretary of State William H. Seward to discuss the political chessboard stretching from Maryland to Missouri. Seward urged restraint in dealing with Kentucky, arguing that quiet influence would prove more effective than overt pressure. Lincoln agreed, recognizing that a misstep could push the state toward Richmond. Their conversation broadened to foreign affairs, where British attitudes toward the conflict remained a persistent concern.
Military matters followed quickly. General Winfield Scott briefed Lincoln on the Union’s progress in western Virginia, where George B. McClellan’s forces were pressing deeper into the mountains. The campaign’s significance extended far beyond the battlefield: securing the region would weaken Richmond’s authority and strengthen the movement for a separate, Union‑loyal state. Lincoln approved additional logistical support, encouraged by the early momentum.
By late morning, Missouri demanded the president’s attention. Telegrams from St. Louis described rising conflict between Unionist forces and Governor Claiborne Jackson’s secessionist faction. Lincoln recognized that Missouri’s fate would shape the entire western theater. He conferred with Scott about reinforcing federal positions along the Missouri River, aware that the coming days could determine whether the state remained in the Union.
At midday, Lincoln turned to the financial pressures of mobilization during a working lunch with Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase. Chase outlined the growing strain on federal resources and the need for expanded borrowing. Lincoln asked for projections on sustaining multiple active campaigns, emphasizing the importance of maintaining public confidence in federal credit. The conversation underscored how the war’s economic dimension was becoming as complex as its military one.
Later, Lincoln convened a small cabinet discussion to coordinate political, military, and legal strategies in the border states. The group debated the extent of federal authority in detaining suspected secessionists. Lincoln reiterated his guiding principle: preserve the Union first; refine the legal framework as circumstances allow. His calm but firm leadership helped unify the cabinet’s approach.
As the afternoon progressed, War Department officials briefed Lincoln on efforts to secure rail lines and river crossings. The president emphasized that the Union’s industrial advantage depended on uninterrupted transportation. He approved additional troop deployments to protect vulnerable junctions, recognizing that logistics were becoming a decisive factor in the war’s early months.
A delegation from western Virginia arrived next, expressing gratitude for federal support and discussing the region’s desire for political autonomy from Richmond. Lincoln listened attentively, encouraging continued cooperation with federal commanders while avoiding explicit promises. He understood the strategic value of their loyalty and the symbolic importance of their emerging identity as Unionists.
BOSTON DAILY JOURNAL — June 13, 1861
MISSOURI IN TURMOIL AS UNION TROOPS PRESS FORWARD
Lyon Moves to Secure the Missouri River - Secessionist Governor Jackson in Flight - Citizens Divided as Skirmishing Spreads
As evening settled over Washington, Lincoln returned to his desk to review correspondence and read late‑arriving dispatches. Reports from Missouri and western Virginia dominated his attention, each revealing how deeply the war had penetrated local communities. The president sensed that the border states were not merely military theaters but social battlegrounds where families, churches, and towns were being pulled apart by competing loyalties.
George Templeton Strong — Diary
June 13, 1861
“Western Virginia news heartens the city; McClellan seems at last to give the government a commander who knows his business.”
Lincoln ended the day with a sober awareness of the stakes. The Union’s political, legal, military, economic, and social challenges converged most sharply in the border states, where every decision carried enormous consequences. June 13th, 1861 revealed a president navigating unprecedented pressures with patience, resolve, and a clear understanding that the fate of the nation hinged on the fragile loyalties of its most divided regions.





