Settlers/Immigrants |
|
In Idaho, the future territorial and state capital city of Boise is founded |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
Mission of Confederate Vice-President Stephens seeks negotiations on prisoners |
Personal |
|
Jennie Wade, killed the morning before, is buried in a temporary grave in Gettysburg |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
At the port town of Helena, Arkansas, defenders inflict heavy losses on a Confederate assault |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
President Lincoln rejects Confederate Vice-President Stephens' offer to negotiate on prisoners |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
Confederate authorities select two Union officer prisoners for a retaliatory execution at Libby Prison |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
The retreating Army of Virginia reaches the Potomac and finds it flooded and impassable |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
Union forces pursue Lee's into Maryland and Stuart's covering Confederates clash with Union cavalry |
Business/Industry |
|
With the Mississippi River open again to traffic, the steamboat Imperial departs St Louis for New Orleans |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
In Louisiana, General N.P. Banks accepts the surrender of Port Hudson after a seven week siege |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
Union troops land on Morris Island and fail in a dawn attack on Fort Wagner |
US/the World |
|
In Mexico, a French-appointed Assembly declares an empire and offers the throne to Archduke Maximillian |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
In Indiana, Confederate cavalry under John Hunt Morgan sack the towns of Salem and Vienna |
Business/Industry |
|
Diminutive Norwegian cargo vessel crosses the stormy North Atlantic to deliver goods to Chicago |
US/the World |
|
Off the island of Honshu, Japanese anti-Western factions fire on a visiting Dutch warship |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
In Virginia, Jack Skelly, soldier fiance of the late Jennie Wade, dies of his wounds |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Union troops occupy Natchez, Mississippi, further ensuring the opening of the Mississippi River |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Confederate raider John Hunt Morgan leaves Indiana and crosses into Ohio |
Crime/Disasters |
-
|
In New York City, violent protests against the Draft Lottery develop swiftly into four days of deadly rioting |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
The Confederate invasion of Pennsylvania ends when Lee's troops slip away across the Potomac in the night |
Crime/Disasters |
|
Rioters in New York City loot and burn the Colored Orphans' Asylum on Fifth Avenue |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Federal cavalry defeat the rearguard of Lee's army at Falling Waters but the main force escapes |
Crime/Disasters |
|
Rioters brutally beat, torture, and kill Colonel Henry F. O'Brian, commander of the 11th New York Volunteers |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
Washington D.C. suspends the draft in the riot-stricken city of New York |
US/the World |
|
In the Shimoneseki Straights, the U.S.S. Wyoming attacks Japanese anti-western naval units |
Business/Industry |
|
The steamboat Imperial arrives in New Orleans from St. Louis, the first since early 1861 |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
In Indian Territory, Native American and African-American troops attack overrun Confederate supply base |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
On Morris Island, South Carolina, Confederate defenders of Fort Wagner beat back a second heavy attack |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
The African-American 54th Massachusetts earns fame across the North with its brave attempt to storm Fort Wagner |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Sergeant William H. Carney becomes the first African-American to win the Congressional Medal of Honor |