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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

Troops equip for epic battle in Virginia

The Associated Press reports as July dawns that the nation appears to be building inexorably for major combat as a contingent of federal troops crosses the Potomac River from Maryland into Virginia in sight of Confederate forces.

“The reporter from the Associated Press went down yesterday to see the expected move of the (federal) troops across the river … The stars and stripes were hoisted on the south side of the river to-day by a Marylander named Saunders, in full view of the rebels, who did not fire on him … The enemy are observed to be busily engaged in erecting outworks … it is thought they design putting guns in a position to obstruct the march of our troops.”

Other dispatches in early July report about 5,000 rebels are within an hour’s march of Fairfax in northern Virginia including “large bodies of horsemen” and adds that four rebels were killed by the Pennsylvania pickets on July 4, 1861.

President Abraham Lincoln, who had called a special session of Congress for July 4, uses the occasion to declare that the war is a struggle for maintaining a form of government whose object is to preserve national unity and “elevate the condition of men.”

Lincoln tells Congress that 500,000 more men are needed for the Union forces in the war between the states. Congress authorizes the large-scale troop mobilization.

– Associated Press