Battles/Soldiers |
|
In Washington, DC, the District of Columbia militia called out and sworn in for three months |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Beauregard again demands that Major Anderson surrender Fort Sumter immediately |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
Pennsylvania votes $500,000 for the expansion of its militia |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
Confederate artillery bombard Fort Sumter |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Off Pensacola, Florida, under cover of night, small boats reinforce the federal garrison at Fort Pickens |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Major Anderson accepts a ceasefire and prepares to evacuate Fort Sumter |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
The United States becomes the second nation state to recognize the new united Kingdom of Italy |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Major Anderson and his men evacuate Fort Sumter and sail for New York |
Crime/Disasters |
|
In Ireland, a deadly Dublin tenement fire kills eight children and three others |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Governor Alexander Ramsey makes Minnesota the first state to pledge its militia to the Union |
Campaigns/Elections |
|
Stephen Douglas meets with Lincoln at the White House and pledges his support |
Campaigns/Elections |
|
In Philadelphia, angry crowds threaten the offices of the city's southern-based newspaper |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
Secretary of War Cameron outlines his quotas of volunteers to state governors |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
President Lincoln calls for 75,000 troops to suppress the Rebellion and enforce United States law |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
The governor of North Carolina sends an immediate refusal to provide troops for the Union |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
President Abraham Lincoln calls a special early session of the new 37th Congress |
Crime/Disasters |
|
Atlantic packet returning from France sinks off Nova Scotia and nine seamen drown |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
In Philadelphia, Mayor Alexander proclaims both against treason and popular disorder in the city |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Reading, Pennsylvania militia artillery unit called to service arrives in Harrisburg |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
Governor Magoffin of Kentucky refuses troops for "the wicked purpose" of subduing the South |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
Confederate president invites applications for "letters of Marque and Reprisal" |
Lawmaking/Litigating |
|
At the House of Delegates in Richmond, the Virginia Convention votes for secession |
Crime/Disasters |
-
|
In Pennsylvania, the world's first oil field fire kills nineteen people and burns for three days |
Crime/Disasters |
|
New York Harbor Police break up illegal boxing match on Staten Island |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
The Sixth Massachusetts Regiment arrives in Philadelphia on its way to Washington DC, via Baltimore |
Battles/Soldiers |
|
Major Anderson and his command arrive in New York Harbor |
Carlisle/Dickinson |
|
In Carlisle, Pennsylvania, the Democratic newspaper denounces "Old Abe's War" |
Crime/Disasters |
|
In Georgia, fire burns a well-known Macon hotel |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
Union garrison at Harpers Ferry burns the Arsenal and withdraws in an overnight march to Pennsylvania |
Battles/Soldiers |
-
|
Marylanders in sympathy with the South burn railroad bridges linking Philadelphia with Washington DC |