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Independently Published

The Bombardment of Fort Sumter: The History of the Civil War's First Battle

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Product Code: 9798883386144
ISBN13: 9798883386144
Condition: New
$12.33

The Bombardment of Fort Sumter: The History of the Civil War's First Battle

$12.33
 
At 4:30 a.m. on the morning of April 12, 1861, Confederate Brigadier-General P.G.T. Beauregard ordered the first shots to be fired at the federal garrison defending Fort Sumter in the Charleston Harbor, effectively igniting the Civil War. For nearly 36 hours, Beauregard's Confederates unleashed a general bombardment from 43 guns and mortars positioned at various points across the Harbor, including at Fort Moultrie on Sullivan Island, Fort Johnson off James Island, Cummings Point on Morrison Island, and a specially designed floating battery.

Almost immediately, the inherent weakness of Fort Sumter became apparent to its defenders. The fort had been designed to withstand a naval assault, and naval warships of that time did not mount guns capable of elevating high enough to shoot over the walls of forts, but the Confederates' land-based cannons could lob artillery shells and mortar directly inside Fort Sumter. Though the defenders managed to protect themselves inside the fort, their return fire was completely ineffective, and by the morning of April 13 the fort was on fire, threatening the garrison.

Unable to effectively reply or defend themselves, Major Robert Anderson raised the white flag early in the afternoon of April 13, bringing the first battle of the Civil War to a close. No casualties were suffered on either side during the dueling bombardments across Charleston Harbor, but ironically, two U.S. Army soldiers were killed by an accidental explosion during the surrender ceremonies.

Fort Sumter is popularly remembered today as the first fighting of the Civil War, and a relatively painless battle at that, but much of the history before April 12 that led to the shelling of the fort is often overlooked. The federal garrison had been stationed there months before the fight, carefully watching the secession of South Carolina, the buildup of Confederate forces in the region, and the actions of the Buchanan administration and incoming Lincoln administration in the weeks leading up to the bombardment.


Author: Charles River
Publisher: Independently Published
Publication Date: Mar 01, 2024
Number of Pages: 30 pages
Binding: Paperback or Softback
ISBN-10: NA
ISBN-13: 9798883386144
 

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