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Friday, March 27, 2026

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - March 27th 1861: The Other Flashpoint Fort PIckens & A Suspended Economy

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 16 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Wednesday, March 27th, 1861.  In the quiet hallway of the White House, Secretary of State William H. Seward and John Nicolay, the President’s private secretary, stood waiting outside Lincoln’s office. For a moment neither spoke. Then they saw the President emerge from his bedroom and begin moving slowly down the corridor toward them, his head bowed, deep in thought, not yet aware of their presence.

Lincoln’s mind was far from Washington. His thoughts were on Lt. Adam J. Slemmer, the isolated commander of Fort Pickens at Pensacola—the second great flashpoint of the national crisis. Across the narrow channel stood the Confederate‑held Fort McRee, its guns trained on Slemmer’s position. The standoff there was every bit as dangerous as the one in Charleston Harbor, though far less visible to the public.

Lincoln had already resolved to send a dispatch to Capt. David G. Farragut, commanding the USS Brooklyn and the naval force waiting offshore. The message would authorize Farragut to prepare to reinforce and supply Fort Pickens as soon as the administration issued its final decision. That decision, Lincoln noted, would come after the scheduled Cabinet meeting on Friday, March 29th.

As he walked, Lincoln felt a measure of relief that the press—fixated almost entirely on Fort Sumter—had not yet turned its full attention to Pensacola. The relative silence gave him room to maneuver, to weigh his options without the glare of public scrutiny. For now, at least, Fort Pickens remained the quieter crisis, though no less perilous.

The President and his administration continued to walk a tightrope between firmness and restraint. Cabinet discussions intensify around the unresolved question of Fort Sumter’s fate, with no consensus yet reached. Secretary of State William H. Seward still pushes his strategy of conciliation—hoping that time and moderation will peel the Upper South away from the Confederacy—while others in the Cabinet warn that delay only emboldens secessionists.

In Charleston, Confederate authorities grow increasingly impatient. Reports circulate that President Jefferson Davis’s government expects a decisive answer soon: either the United States will abandon Fort Sumter voluntarily, or the Confederacy will force the issue. Southern newspapers amplify this pressure, insisting that national honor requires action.

The legal landscape remains murky and contested. The Confederate government continues asserting its sovereignty over all federal installations within its claimed borders, while Washington maintains that secession is unconstitutional and therefore legally void. No court exists with the authority—or the willingness—to adjudicate the crisis.

THE DISUNION MOVEMENT.
— The New York Times, March 27th, 1861

Meanwhile, federal officials quietly debate the legality of provisioning a fort in territory claimed by another government. The Lincoln administration’s lawyers argue that supplying one’s own troops is not an act of war; Confederate legal thinkers insist that any such attempt constitutes an invasion. Both sides cling to legal interpretations that justify their next move.

Charleston and Pensacola — two harbors holding their breath.

Confederate forces under Brig. Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard continue strengthening the ring of batteries around Charleston Harbor. New guns are mounted, ammunition is stockpiled, and drills intensify. Observers note that the harbor now resembles a coiled spring—armed, ready, and waiting for the slightest provocation.

Inside Fort Sumter, Major Robert Anderson’s men continue rationing food and supplies. Their situation grows more precarious by the day. Anderson sends another quiet message northward: the garrison cannot hold indefinitely. Every hour that passes without relief narrows his options.

Rumors swirl that the Lincoln administration is preparing a relief expedition, though no official announcement has been made. The uncertainty itself becomes a weapon—each side trying to read the other’s intentions through silence.

Meanwhile, far to the south at Pensacola, another crisis simmers with equal intensity. Confederate commander Brig. Gen. Braxton Bragg oversees a rapidly expanding military complex on the mainland. His engineers and artillery officers work tirelessly to strengthen Fort McRee on Perdido Key and the inland bastion of Fort Barrancas, building new batteries, drilling volunteers, and preparing for the possibility of an assault on the Union-held position across the channel.

That position—Fort Pickens, perched on the western tip of Santa Rosa Island—is held by a small but determined U.S. garrison under Lt. Adam J. Slemmer. His men, isolated and operating under a fragile truce, watch the Confederate buildup with growing concern. Supplies are limited, reinforcements forbidden unless Washington explicitly breaks the agreement, and every day the Confederate guns creep closer.


Offshore, the U.S. Navy maintains a tense vigil. The USS Brooklyn, flagship of the relief squadron, lies just beyond the surf under the command of Capt. David G. Farragut. Farragut’s orders are clear but maddeningly constrained: hold position, land no troops, and await word from Washington. His ships are fully capable of reinforcing Fort Pickens, but the political decision has not yet been made. Like Anderson in Charleston, Slemmer can only wait.

Thus, on this day, two harbors mirror each other—Charleston and Pensacola, Sumter and Pickens, Beauregard and Bragg, Anderson and Slemmer. In both places, the guns are manned, the powder is dry, and the commanders stand ready. Yet no one moves. No one fires. No one dares to be the one who begins the war.

The nation continues to hold its breath. The question is no longer whether conflict is coming, but where the first spark will fall.

The Southern economy continues to drift in a fog of uncertainty. Charleston merchants report declining trade as Northern ships avoid the harbor, unsure whether war might erupt at any moment. Cotton prices fluctuate wildly, driven by speculation and fear.

In the North, business leaders express growing anxiety about the possibility of conflict. Railroads, shipping companies, and insurers all brace for disruption. Yet some industries—especially those tied to military supply—quietly prepare for the boom that war might bring.

The national economy, like the political situation, hangs suspended between peace and conflict.

Across the country, ordinary Americans follow the news with a mixture of dread and fascination. In Charleston, crowds gather daily along the Battery to watch the fort through spyglasses, as if expecting the first shot to come at any moment. The city hums with tension; even casual conversations turn quickly to war.

In the North, newspapers debate Lincoln’s next move, and public opinion remains divided. Some urge firmness, insisting that the Union must not yield to rebellion. Others plead for compromise, fearing that a single misstep could plunge the nation into bloodshed.

Families on both sides write anxious letters, wondering whether their sons will soon be called to fight. The sense of impending rupture grows stronger with each passing day.

Part 4: 1862 - 1865: The Emancipation Proclimation to The Ratification of the 13th Amendment

A Four Part Series On Slavery Leading Up To American History Blogmanac's Project: The Civil War - A Daily Track For 1, 458 Days.

By 1862, the Civil War had already become something far larger than a contest over secession. The conflict was transforming the very institution that had defined the American republic since its founding. Enslaved people themselves accelerated this transformation. As Union armies pushed deeper into the Confederacy, thousands fled to federal lines, forcing the Lincoln administration to confront the war’s moral center. Congress responded with the Confiscation Acts, and generals on the ground began treating freedom as a military necessity. What had begun as a war to preserve the Union was rapidly becoming a war to redefine it.

The Emancipation Proclamation of January 1, 1863, formalized this shift. It declared freedom for enslaved people in areas still in rebellion and authorized the enlistment of Black soldiers. Nearly 200,000 African American men would serve in the Union Army and Navy before the war’s end, many of them formerly enslaved. Their service reshaped Northern attitudes and struck a devastating blow to the Confederacy’s labor system. Yet even as slavery crumbled, the South remained a complex landscape: more than 250,000 free Black people lived in the Confederate states in 1860, and thousands remained free throughout the war — a reminder that Southern society, though rigidly racialized, was never monolithic.

On the ground, the Confederacy struggled to maintain control. The plantation economy faltered as enslaved laborers fled, resisted, or were conscripted into fortification work. Food shortages, inflation, and internal dissent spread. Meanwhile, Union victories at Vicksburg and Gettysburg in 1863 shattered Confederate hopes for foreign recognition. By 1864, with Sherman’s march cutting through Georgia and Grant’s relentless pressure in Virginia, the Confederacy’s ability to sustain the war was collapsing.

The final years of the conflict were marked by profound transformation. The Thirteenth Amendment, passed by Congress in 1865, aimed to abolish slavery everywhere — including loyal border states untouched by the Emancipation Proclamation. As Union troops liberated plantation districts across the South, formerly enslaved families sought to reunite, claim wages, establish schools, and test the meaning of freedom in a land that had denied it for generations.

When Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox on April 9, 1865, slavery was dying but not yet dead. Pockets of Confederate resistance remained, and emancipation would unfold unevenly for months. Yet the institution that had shaped American politics, economics, and identity for more than two centuries had finally reached its breaking point. The war had not only preserved the Union — it had remade it, forcing the nation to confront the contradiction at its core and opening the long, unfinished struggle over what freedom would truly mean.

That struggle took its first legal and irreversible step on December 6, 1865, when the Thirteenth Amendment was ratified, formally abolishing slavery throughout the United States.

United States History On This Date: March 27

1794 — U.S. Navy Reestablished
Congress authorized construction of six frigates, effectively reestablishing the U.S. Navy after years of post‑Revolution neglect. These ships, including the USS Constitution, became symbols of American resolve and maritime strength.
1860 — First Pony Express Rider Hired
Preparations for the Pony Express accelerated as the first riders were recruited. The service, though short‑lived, became an enduring symbol of frontier endurance and rapid communication across the expanding nation.
1912 — Cherry Trees Planted in Washington, D.C.
First Lady Helen Taft and Viscountess Chinda planted the first of thousands of Japanese cherry trees along the Potomac. The gesture cemented a cultural link between the United States and Japan that endures through the annual blossom festival.
1964 — Alaska Earthquake Strikes
A massive 9.2‑magnitude earthquake — the strongest recorded in North American history — devastated Alaska’s southern coast. The quake and resulting tsunamis reshaped communities and spurred major advances in seismic research and emergency planning.

Charles Hargens painting First Ride celebrates the historic day, April 5, 1860, when the Pony Express began service.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - March 26th 1861 - The Confederate Congress Takes On A Sharpened Tone

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 17 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels


March 26th, 1861. The silence from Washington grows heavier. On this bustling Tuesday morning a calendar filled with individual cabinet member meeting appointments presses on President Lincoln as he remains publicly noncommittal. Inside the Executive Mansion he sits going over Major Anderson’s latest dispatch, fretting over critical food and supply shortages.  Across from him at the cabinet conference table sits Secretary William H. Seward alternately puffing and chewing on his cigar while he pours over the dispatches from their man in Charleston Harbor reporting on Confederate artillery battery emplacements. 

Later that morning Seward will continue his campaign pressing the President for delay and diplomacy, urging him to avoid any action that might push the Upper South into secession. Lincoln will sit and listen carefully, weighing Seward’s warnings against the increasingly dire reports arriving from Charleston Harbor.

In Montgomery, the Confederate Congress reconvenes with a sharpened tone. Jefferson Davis and his advisors believe Lincoln is preparing to resupply Fort Sumter, and they begin contingency planning for a military response. The Confederate War Department quietly orders additional artillery placements around the harbor. The mood is no longer speculative, it is anticipatory.

Legally, the Union remains intact on paper, but the machinery of government continues to fragment. Southern courts begin rejecting federal authority, while Northern legal scholars debate whether Lincoln can use force without congressional approval. The Constitution is being stretched in real time, and no one agrees on where its limits lie.

Military readiness inches forward. Major Robert Anderson, still commanding Fort Sumter, continues to fret over his critically low provisions. Charleston’s batteries are fully manned, and drills continue daily. In Washington, the War Department discreetly surveys Northern arsenals and troop availability from dispatches received by Seward and the Secretary of War Simon Cameron. No orders have been issued, but the gears are turning.  Northern newspapers reflect the unease over Lincoln's position as the crisis unfolds:

THE FORT SUMTER QUESTION: CABINET DIVIDED — LINCOLN UNDECIDED.
— The New York Herald, March 26th, 1861

Economically, the rupture deepens. Northern merchants report delays and refusals at Southern ports. Insurance premiums for Southern-bound cargo spike again. In Richmond and Charleston, banks begin issuing local notes to stabilize commerce. The Confederate Treasury drafts its first bond offerings, hoping to fund a war that has not yet begun.

Mary Boykin Chesnut sits at her boudoir writing table preparing her diary for today’s entry.  She had just finished reading through her very first reflection from February 18th to remind herself how much has happened over the last 36 days.  She quietly turned to glance out of her window overlooking Charleston Harbor to collect her thoughts before putting her pen to paper. Feeling the morning’s light warm breeze flowing into the room she decided to open with her latest reflection on the widening social divide in the community. In Charleston, citizens began their morning routine of gathering at the Battery to watch the harbor, whispering rumors of imminent action. Northern newspapers continued to publish editorials ranging from calls for compromise to demands for firmness. In border states, families are torn—some sending sons to drill with local militias, others pleading for peace.

On this day the nation continued holding its breath. The question is no longer whether war is coming, but whether anyone can stop it. And with each passing day, the answer grows fainter.

United States History On This Date: March 26

1804 — Congress Organizes the Louisiana Territory
Following the Louisiana Purchase, Congress formally created the Territory of Orleans and the District of Louisiana. This administrative step laid the groundwork for American expansion, governance, and settlement across a vast region that would eventually form multiple states.
1812 — Earthquake Shakes New Madrid Region
A powerful aftershock of the New Madrid earthquakes struck the Mississippi Valley, part of one of the most intense seismic sequences in U.S. history. The quakes altered landscapes, redirected waterways, and deeply affected frontier communities.
1953 — Dr. Jonas Salk Announces Polio Vaccine Success
Medical researcher Jonas Salk reported successful trials of his inactivated polio vaccine. The breakthrough offered hope against a disease that had terrified American families for decades and marked a turning point in modern public health.
1979 — Egypt–Israel Peace Treaty Signed
At the White House, President Jimmy Carter hosted the signing of the Egypt–Israel Peace Treaty. The agreement, rooted in the Camp David Accords, reshaped Middle Eastern diplomacy and marked a major U.S. achievement in international mediation.

Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, U.S. President Jimmy Carter and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin share a laugh at the signing of the Camp David Accords on September 17, 1978.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Part 3: 1850 -1861 - From Compromise To Collapse

 A Four Part Series On Slavery Leading Up To American History Blogmanac's Project: The Civil War - A Daily Track For 1, 458 Days.

The decade after 1850 marks the moment when the nation’s long struggle to contain slavery finally broke apart. The Compromise of 1850, intended as a grand settlement, instead deepened sectional mistrust. Its most explosive element — the Fugitive Slave Act — nationalized the policing of slavery, forcing free states to participate in the capture of alleged runaways and denying the accused any legal protections. Northern resistance surged immediately. Vigilance committees formed, personal liberty laws were passed, and dramatic rescues from Boston to Milwaukee turned the issue into a moral battleground. Southerners, watching federal law defied in broad daylight, concluded that the North would never honor constitutional guarantees.

The uneasy balance shattered again in 1854 with the Kansas‑Nebraska Act. By allowing settlers to decide the fate of slavery through “popular sovereignty,” Congress effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise line that had held for more than three decades. The result was predictable chaos. Pro‑slavery and anti‑slavery settlers flooded into Kansas, each determined to control the territorial government. “Bleeding Kansas” became the nation’s first preview of civil war — with raids, massacres, and retaliatory violence that shocked the country. The political fallout was just as dramatic: the Whig Party collapsed, the Democratic Party fractured along sectional lines, and a new political force — the Republican Party — emerged with a platform explicitly opposing the expansion of slavery.

The Supreme Court’s 1857 Dred Scott decision poured fuel on the fire. By ruling that Black Americans had no rights white men were bound to respect and that Congress had no authority to restrict slavery in the territories, the Court attempted to settle the issue in favor of the slaveholding South. Instead, it convinced many Northerners that a “Slave Power” conspiracy was tightening its grip on the federal government. Abraham Lincoln’s debates with Stephen Douglas the following year sharpened the national argument: could the country endure permanently half slave and half free?

By the time John Brown struck at Harpers Ferry in 1859, the nation’s political center had collapsed. Southerners saw Brown as proof that abolitionists would stop at nothing; many Northerners viewed him as a martyr. The election of 1860 — with Lincoln winning without a single Southern electoral vote — confirmed the South’s deepest fears. Secession followed swiftly, and by April 1861, the long struggle over slavery had reached its breaking point at Fort Sumter.

This decade did not simply lead to war; it made war unavoidable. The political compromises that once held the Union together had been exhausted, and the nation entered the 1860s divided beyond repair.

American Blogmanac Civil War Project: Countdown To Fort Sumter - March 25th 1861 - The Union In Legal Limbo

A Daily Look at the Final Days Before Fort Sumter: 18 Days Remain As A Nation Unravels

Its March 25, 1861. Its a dull Monday afternoon in Lancaster, PA where a retired and a disgraced former President James Buchanan who left office only 21 days ago waits to see if the powder keg he was perched on as he left office would ignite. A nation is suspended between legality and rupture. Seven states have declared their secession, forming the Confederate States of America, but no clause in the Constitution permits such an act. The legal framework of the Union is under siege—not by armies, but by ordinances, proclamations, and silence. President Abraham Lincoln, just three weeks into office, refuses to recognize the Confederate commissioners in Washington, denying their legitimacy and reinforcing his belief that the Union is perpetual. Yet the machinery of federal law is grinding to a halt in the South, where courts, customs houses, and military posts are being seized or abandoned.

At the center of this legal standoff is Fort Sumter, still held by U.S. forces in Charleston Harbor. Major Robert Anderson’s garrison is nearly out of food. He is nervously pacing back and forth in his office waiting for the latest dispatch to inform him of what action he is expected to take. A painting of former President James Buchanan is still hanging in his office reminding him of the unresolved dynamic he is still operating under. Lincoln’s cabinet debates whether sending a relief expedition constitutes an act of war or a lawful assertion of federal authority. The question is not merely tactical—it is constitutional. Can the president resupply a federal installation in a state that claims to have left the Union? Or does doing so violate the sovereignty of a newly declared nation?

The legal ambiguity is matched by political paralysis. Congress is not in session. The executive branch is divided. Southern leaders insist they have peacefully withdrawn, while Northern voices argue that rebellion cannot be legitimized by paperwork. The Constitution itself is being pulled in opposite directions—one side invoking its permanence, the other its compact nature.

Socially, the country is tense. Newspapers speculate with urgent headlines, families worry, and rumors swirl. The public senses that something irreversible is near, but the final break has not yet come. Economically, trade is disrupted, and markets are uneasy. The Confederate government is issuing bonds and debating tariffs, while Northern merchants brace for conflict. One major newspaper headline serves the urgency of the hour:

HIGHLY IMPORTANT NEWS: The Evacuation of Fort Sumpter Ordered.
— The New York Times, March 25th, 1861
Militarily, the lines are tightening. Confederate forces under Beauregard continue their siege preparations around Fort Sumter. The garrison’s dwindling supplies make the question of relief urgent. Lincoln knows that the decision he makes in the coming days—whether to send ships or stand down—may determine whether the first shot is fired.

March 25 is not the day the war begins. But it is the day the legal foundation of the Republic begins to buckle under the weight of secession. The Constitution remains intact on paper, but its authority is fractured. The countdown to Fort Sumter is no longer theoretical. It is ticking time bomb. What will Tuesday, March 26th bring? Stay tuned....

The Forgotten Pathfinder: March 25, 1843

On March 25, 1843, Jacob Dodson—one of the most overlooked African American explorers in United States history—set out on the Northwest Passage expedition that would define his legacy. Born a free Black man in Washington, D.C., Dodson had already earned a reputation for reliability and skill in the rugged conditions of the American frontier. When John C. Frémont assembled a team to push deeper into the unmapped northern territories, Dodson was chosen not as a laborer, but as a trusted member of the exploratory corps.

The Northwest Passage expedition demanded endurance, navigation expertise, and the ability to adapt quickly to harsh and unfamiliar terrain. Dodson excelled. He scouted river crossings, managed supplies, and helped maintain the fragile lifelines that kept the party moving through snow‑choked passes and dense forests. His contributions were so significant that Frémont later praised him as one of the most capable men on the journey—yet Dodson’s name rarely appears in mainstream accounts of American exploration.

Dodson’s presence on the 1843 expedition also challenges long‑held assumptions about who shaped the early geographic understanding of the continent. At a time when African Americans faced severe legal and social restrictions, he carved out a place in one of the nation’s most ambitious exploratory efforts. His work helped expand U.S. knowledge of the northern interior and contributed to the broader mapping of western territories.

Though history has often overlooked him, Jacob Dodson’s journey on this March day stands as a testament to the essential, if underrecognized, role African Americans played in charting the

United Sates History On This Date: March 25

1789 — U.S. Marshals Service Established
Congress creates the United States Marshals Service, the nation’s oldest federal law‑enforcement agency. Tasked with supporting federal courts, serving warrants, and enforcing judicial orders, the Marshals become essential to early American governance and remain central to federal justice today.
1862 — Lincoln Signs the Compensated Emancipation Act
President Abraham Lincoln approves the Compensated Emancipation Act, freeing more than 3,000 enslaved people in Washington, D.C. by paying loyal slaveholders. The measure marks a major early step toward abolition, preceding the Emancipation Proclamation by nine months.
1911 — Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire
A fire erupts at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City, killing 146 garment workers—mostly young immigrant women. The tragedy exposes unsafe industrial conditions and sparks sweeping reforms in workplace safety, fire codes, and labor protections nationwide.
1634 — First Maryland Colonists Arrive
English settlers land at St. Clement’s Island and establish St. Mary’s City, the first settlement of the Maryland colony. Founded under Lord Baltimore’s charter, Maryland becomes a refuge for English Catholics and a key early community in colonial America.

On March 25, 1911, 146 workers perished when a fire broke out in a garment factory in New York City. For 90 years, it stood as New York's deadliest workplace disaster.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

1492: A Native American World That Already Was

On March 24, 1492, the vast interior of North America pulsed with movement, exchange, and diplomacy—worlds away from the political currents then unfolding across the Atlantic. In the Mississippi Valley, towns linked by river corridors and ancient footpaths continued to trade goods that carried both economic and ceremonial weight. Salt, copper, shell beads, finely crafted pottery, medicinal plants, and woven textiles moved between communities, sustaining relationships that had been built over centuries. These networks were not merely commercial; they were the connective tissue of Mississippian society, reinforcing alliances, obligations, and shared cosmologies.

Far to the southwest, Puebloan communities maintained their own intricate systems of exchange. Turquoise, obsidian, macaw feathers, cotton, and intricately painted ceramics traveled between villages and across cultural boundaries. Trade routes stretched deep into the deserts and plateaus, linking the Pueblos to the Hohokam, Mogollon, and even Mesoamerican spheres of influence. These exchanges carried stories, rituals, and technologies as readily as they carried goods.

Despite the geographic distance between the Mississippi Valley and the Puebloan world, the two regions were not isolated. Archaeological evidence—shared iconography, parallel architectural forms, and the movement of prestige items—suggests indirect but meaningful contact across the continent. North America in 1492 was a landscape of interconnected nations, each shaping its own history.

And crucially, no European had yet set foot in these regions. The first recorded European contact with Native Americans in what is now the United States would not occur until Ponce de León’s arrival in 1513, more than two decades later. On this March day in 1492, Indigenous North America remained wholly sovereign, vibrant, and self‑directed.

San Estévan del Rey Mission at Acoma Pueblo by Detroit Publishing, 1902