[Gutenberg 47217] • Fort Sumter National Monument, South Carolina

[Gutenberg 47217] • Fort Sumter National Monument, South Carolina
Authors
Barnes, Frank
Publisher
NATIONAL PARK
Tags
s.c.) , s.c.) -- history , fort sumter national monument (charleston , fort sumter (charleston
Date
2007-03-15T00:00:00+00:00
Size
2.47 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 41 times

Example in this ebook

At 4:30 A. M., April 12, 1861, a mortar battery at Fort Johnson fired a shell that burst directly over Fort Sumter. This was the signal for a general bombardment by the Confederate batteries about Charleston Harbor. For 34 hours, April 12 and 13, Fort Sumter was battered with shot and shell. Then the Federal commander, Maj. Robert Anderson, agreed to evacuate; and, on April 14, he and his small garrison departed with the full honors of war. On the following day, President Abraham Lincoln issued a call for 75,000 militia. The tragedy of the American Civil War had begun.

Two years later, Fort Sumter, now a Confederate stronghold, became the scene of a stubborn defense. From April 1863 to February 1865 its garrison withstood a series of devastating bombardments and direct attacks by Federal forces from land and sea. Fort Sumter was evacuated only when Federal forces bypassed Charleston from the rear. At the end, buttressed with sand and cotton as well as its own fallen brick and masonry, it was stronger than ever militarily. And it had become a symbol of resistance and courage for the entire South.

Both the “first shot” of April 1861 and the long siege of 1863-65 are commemorated today by Fort Sumter National Monument.

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