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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

Union opens gunboat bids; Confederate attack feared

A dispatch to The Associated Press in late June reports the U.S. Navy has opened bids for the construction of a number of “steam gun-boats” as war preparations continue.

There were 100 to 150 bidders, the dispatch states, adding, “the largest portion are from New England Shipyards and manufacturers.”

War jitters are running high. Dispatches published in the North in late June discuss speculation and rumors of a possible Confederate attack on Arlington Heights just outside the nation’s capital or possibly a Confederate push near Washington at Fairfax, northern Virginia.

“There are strong reasons to suspect a Confederate advance at Fairfax,” one report says of the speculation, adding the Federal forces defending the capital Aare “deemed impregnable.”

Accounts late in the month speak of Confederate pickets sporadically ranging up the banks of the Potomac River while firing weapons, raising alarm in the Georgetown section of Washington. Spotters for federal forces command a high hilltop near the capital and scour the surrounding countryside for any signs of Confederate movements.

– Associated Press