Crime/Disasters |
|
In north London, another railway excursion accident kills sixteen and injures 320 |
Crime/Disasters |
|
Southern saboteurs cause the wreck of a civilian express train in Missouri, killing twenty |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Confederate troops invade western Kentucky and bring the state's efforts to remain neutral to an end |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Union forces under Ulysses S. Grant occupy Paducah, Kentucky on the Ohio River |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
In Frankfort, the Kentucky House of Representatives votes to hoist the Union flag over the state capitol |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Near New York City, the desertion of an entire company from the New York Rifles ends in a firefight |
Education/Culture |
|
Seneca Indian and American champion runner Deerfoot makes an impressive debut on his tour of Britain |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
President Lincoln orders General John C. Fremont to modify his emancipation mandate in Missouri |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
-
|
Federal troops in Maryland swoop to arrest pro-secession legislators, officials, and newspaper editors |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
On the Florida coast, Union sailors and marines raid Pensacola and destroy a Confederate warship there |
Crime/Disasters |
|
In Britain, a nineteen year-old private murders his depot commander and his adjutant with one bullet |
Crime/Disasters |
|
Seven ballet dancers burned to death in their dressing room at the Continental Theater in Philadelphia |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Union troops push back attacking Virginia units around Harpers Ferry near Pritchard's Mill on the Potomac |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Union naval landing parties retake Chandeleur Island in Louisiana off the mouth of the Mississippi |
Crime/Disasters |
|
In England, a boiler explosion in an oil cake mill on the River Thames kills all ten men of a repair crew |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Philadelphia arms itself to resist any Confederate attack on the city |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Confederate forces evacuate Ship Island, off the coast of Mississippi |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
In New York City, prominent Catholic editor James A. McMaster arrested and his journal suspended |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
In Baltimore, federal troops begin a systematic search for arms caches in the city |
Education/Culture |
|
In Hampton, Virginia, Mary Smith Peake teaches her first classes for "contrabands" |
Crime/Disasters |
|
Troop train crashes through a bridge near Huron, Indiana, killing eighteen Illinois soldiers and injuring many more |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
Confederate troops surround and capture Lexington, Missouri after a ten day siege |
Education/Culture |
|
New York City's Bellevue Hospital Medical College opens its first term |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Robert Anderson, hero of Fort Sumter, takes command of Kentucky's military forces |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
U.S. Post Office excludes "disloyal" Louisville newspaper from its mails and post offices |
Personal |
|
Emerson Conway, second son of Moncure Conway, is born in Cincinnati, Ohio |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
At Fort Fauntleroy, New Mexico troops massacre visiting Navajo families, killing twelve and injuring forty |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
In Washington DC, two French princes join the Union Army on the staff of General McClellan |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
At Point of Rocks, Union troops on the Maryland side skirmish with Confederate units across the Potomac |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
U.S. Navy Secretary Gideon Welles authorizes the enlistment of runaway slaves into the naval service |