Sumter to Gettysburg
When, on Apr. 12, 1861, the Confederate commander P. G. T.
Beauregard , acting on instructions, ordered the firing on Fort Sumter,
hostilities officially began. Lincoln immediately called for troops to be used
against the seven seceding states, which were soon joined by Arkansas, North
Carolina, Virginia, and Tennessee, completing the 11-state Confederacy. In the
first important military campaign of the war untrained Union troops under Irvin
McDowell , advancing on Richmond, now the Confederate capital, were routed by
equally inexperienced Confederate soldiers led by Beauregard and Joseph E.
Johnston in the first battle of Bull Run (July 21, 1861). This fiasco led
Lincoln to bring up George B. McClellan (1826-85), fresh from his successes in W
Virginia (admitted as the new state of West Virginia in 1863).
After the retirement of Winfield Scott in Nov., 1861, McClellan was for a few
months the chief Northern commander. The able organizer of the Army of the
Potomac, he nevertheless failed in the Peninsular campaign (Apr.-July, 1862), in
which Robert E. Lee succeeded the wounded Johnston as commander of the
Confederate Army of Northern Virginia. Lee planned the diversion in the
Shenandoah Valley, which, brilliantly executed by Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson
, worked perfectly. Next to Lee himself Jackson, with his famous “foot cavalry,”
was the South's greatest general.
Lee then went on to save Richmond in the Seven Days battles (June 26-July 2) and
was victorious in the second battle of Bull Run (Aug. 29-30), thoroughly
trouncing John Pope . However, he also failed in his first invasion of enemy
territory. In September, McClellan, whom Lincoln had restored to command of the
defenses of Washington, checked Lee in Maryland (see Antietam campaign ). When
McClellan failed to attack the Confederates as they retreated, Lincoln removed
him again, this time permanently.
Two subsequent Union advances on Richmond, the first led by Ambrose E. Burnside
(see Fredericksburg, battle of ) and the second by Joseph Hooker (see
Chancellorsville, battle of ), ended in resounding defeats (Dec. 13, 1862, and
May 2-4, 1863). Although Lee lost Jackson at Chancellorsville, the victory
prompted him to try another invasion of the North. With his lieutenants Richard
S. Ewell , James Longstreet , A. P. Hill , and J. E. B. (Jeb) Stuart , he moved
via the Shenandoah Valley into S Pennsylvania. There the Army of the Potomac,
under still another new chief, George G. Meade , rallied to stop him again in
the greatest battle (July 1-3, 1863) of the war.
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