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Civil War

  • This week in the civil war
    The grind of war continues this week 150 years ago in the Civil War as a contingent of 3,000 Confederate fighters overrun a 1,000-man Union force at Front Royal in northern Virginia in a battle fought May 23, 1862.
  • This week in the civil war
    A Union warship fleet steaming up Virginia’s James River opens fire early on May 15, 1862, against Confederate fortifications on a 90-foot-high bluff several miles from the Confederate capital of Richmond, Va.
  • This week in the civil war
    The Battle of Williamsburg, Va., is the first major combat of Union Gen. George B. McClellan’s Virginia “Peninsula Campaign.
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This week in the civil war

West Virginia nears birth through secession

In a May 12, 1861, dispatch to The Associated Press from Wheeling, in the future state of West Virginia, a correspondent reports the region is stirring with calls to break away from Virginia and side with the Union.

Accounts speak of the region’s leaders arriving in Wheeling on trains from pro-Union counties all around, filling up hotels in preparation for a two- or three-week convention to consider breaking with Virginia and siding with the Union.

“The town is alive with delegates to the Convention and they are continually arriving,” the correspondent writes to AP of a gathering marked by a flurry of speeches and calls for action. “The speeches took determined grounds and favored immediate separation from the state (of Virginia). They were received with great enthusiasm.”

Reports note an overwhelming sentiment in what was then northwestern Virginia that the “only safety is in the Union.” The dispatches add that two companies have already been mustered from the area for the Union fight and more are expected later.

It is only a matter of time before West Virginia becomes the only state born of the Civil War.

– Associated Press