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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 tightens blockade; freed slave debated

Federal forces this week in 1861 continue to press their blockade of the Southern coast.

Two Union men-of-war, the USS Niagara and the USS Richmond, turn their guns on Confederate defenses rimming Florida’s northern panhandle – targeting Fort Barrancas, Fort McRae and the Pensacola Navy Yard.

After a bombardment spanning two days, there is little loss of life after an attack that will have little effect on the larger conduct of the war. Nonetheless, the bombardment has damaged Fort McRae, where many women and children took refuge, several Navy Yard buildings and a nearby village. In 1862, Pensacola will ultimately be surrendered to Union troops who will use it as a staging point for naval actions in the South the rest of the war.

The Associated Press reports, meanwhile, that wintry weather has begun nipping at the Northern cities where many are alarmed at the high wartime price of coal used to heat homes and buildings. In Philadelphia, AP reports, “The coal question has been agitating residents of this city ever since the cold weather has set in.” It adds some seek coal at lower prices directly from “Good Samaritans” at a Pennsylvania mine refusing to profit exceedingly from wartime scarcity.

This same week, AP reports from Washington that more pressing issues are emerging in Congress over how the Union should handle questions of slavery – and particularly escaped or liberated slaves known as “contrabands” who reach the federal side.

“Inasmuch as many slaveholders in Virginia and in other quarters abandon their plantations when menaced by the Federal armies, and necessarily leave their slaves behind them, a practical question is forced up on the government as to what is to be done with the “contrabands,” the AP dispatch notes.

– Associated Press