Episodes Nearest to December 11, 1862 to December 15, 1862: 1 through 25 of 25
- The Irish March on Fredericksburg
December 11, 1862 to December 15, 1862
SPOTSYLVANIA, Virginia
Irish Immigration, Civil WarOn the eve of battle, war cries echoed throughout the valleys surrounding Fredericksburg Virginia in Spotsylvania County. Among the nearly 200,000 men preparing to engage in battle, just under two thousand were Irish Americans. These men, new to the land, had been conscripted into service almost as soon as setting dry-foot upon US soil. Despite the Irish immingrants' recent arrival, they were more...
- General Braggs Carries Out Execution of Kentucky Youth
December 4, 1862 to December 26, 1862
RUTHERFORD, Tennessee
Military, Civil War, ConfederacyAt eleven o’clock on the morning following Christmas Day, 1862, General Braxton Bragg of the Confederate Army forced his Company E, 6th Kentucky Infantry Regiment (part of the commonly denoted “Orphan Brigade”) to stand round their fellow soldier, Asa Lewis, who awaited execution. Exactly one hour later the firing squad of twelve men carried out the young soldier’s sentence. As...
- Burnside Rationalizes his moves at Fredericksburg
December 17, 1862
SPOTSYLVANIA, Virginia
War, Crime/Violence, PoliticsGeneral Ambrose E. Burnside, the newly appointed Commander of the Army of the Potomac, was regarded by General O. O. Howard as distrusting himself with the position, but was eventually persuaded to accept it. Along with the position came the responsibility for a plan of action that would differ from the failed plans of General George B. McLellan. It turned out that Burnside's plan of campaign...
- Call to Raise Money for Confederate Soldiers
December 12, 1862 to 1862
HALIFAX, Virginia
Economy, Government, WarJames C. Bruce paid to place an advertisement in the Richmond Whig newspaper on December 12, 1862. The advertisement was a call for people of the county of Halifax to meet for the benefit of their Confederate soldiers. The ad called for the raising of money and clothing for our soldiers in the field. James C. Bruce paid 3 for the ad.
James C. Bruce's call for war donations gives insight...
- The Court Martial of Fitz John Porter
December 4, 1862 to January 10, 1863
Washington City, District of Columbia
Fitz John Porter, Second Bull Run, Court MartialMajor General Fitz John Porter of the Volunteers of the United States received a court martial in an attempt to cover up a Union General’s mistakes at the Second Battle of Bull Run. The Second Battle of Bull Run was a devastating loss for the Union. That also led to the demotion of Major General John Pope.
Major General Pope earned criticizism for his actions and decisions at the Battle. ...
- Blocking the Altamaha River
December 2, 1862
TATTNALL, Georgia
Migration/Transportation, WarIn the autumn of 1862, in a strategic defensive move, Confederate forces in southern Georgia obstructed the Altamaha River to keep boats from passing up or down the waterway. Confederate Captain John Howard, under the instruction of Captain John McGrady completed the obstruction of the Altamaha near Lake Bluff, Georgia in late November ? successfully preventing future nautical passage in either...
- Battle of Murfreesboro
December 30, 1862 to January 3, 1863
RUTHERFORD, Tennessee
WarThe Battle of Murfreesboro, also known as the Battle of Stones River, boosted the North's morale after a decisive defeat at Fredericksburg. The Confederate army was strengthened by their recent victories. The Union army advanced towards Cumberland Gap, but the Confederates viewed the Appalachian Mountains as an insurmountable barrier for the Union army to traverse to reach Tennessee. In addition...
- Emancipation Proclamation issued
January 1, 1863
Washington City, District of Columbia
African-Americans, Race-Relations, SlaveryPresident Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation through his Secretary of State, William Seward. The proclamation decreed that slaves in the rebellious counties of Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia were to be set free. Those territories excepted were those over which the Union army had seized control during the Civil War....
- Wyatt's Imprisonment
January 5, 1863
NELSON, Virginia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, Economy, Race-Relations, SlaveryThe common practice of hiring out one's slaves ensured that even when work was less plentiful on the plantation, a master's investment in a slave would still be lucrative. A slave in this position identified only as Wyatt landed himself in jail after attempting repeatedly to be sold back to the plantation where his family resided. The current owners who had been trying to sell him wrote...
- Jefferson Davis Addresses Free States
January 5, 1863
RICHMOND, Virginia
Government, Law, Politics, Race-Relations, Slavery, WarThe people of the Union heard from a defiant Jefferson Davis on January 5, 1863. Northern leaders had degraded you and themselves, he criticized, by inviting the co-operation of the black race with Abraham Lincoln's proclamation freeing slaves in the Confederacy and inviting them into the North's army and navy. Just before, the Union had been condemning the South for seeking the intervention...
- Southern Wartime Humor Concerning President Lincoln
January 7, 1863
WAKE, North Carolina
Arts/Leisure, Government, Politics, Slavery, WarOn January 7, 1863 the Raleigh Register published a song by Smith Webb mocking President Lincoln and his ability to keep the Union together. The song contained seven verses that used sarcastic remarks and comparisons to criticize the President's actions. The song began using sarcasm after deriding the President by stating, "Fifty Yanks it is said won't make one good Confed; would a million...
- Jefferson Davis Speaks In Raleigh
January 7, 1863
WAKE, North Carolina
Government, PoliticsJefferson Davis, called "This Man of the Age, whose name will stand on the scroll of Fame as second only to that of the Father of his Country" by The Raleigh Register, had a lot of support among Confederate citizens, including the citizens of North Carolina. In January 1863, on his way from Charlotte to Richmond, Davis stopped in Raleigh to deliver a speech. In his speech, Davis mentioned...
- Courageous Irish Brigade
November 18, 1862
NEW YORK, New York
Race Relations: Irish, Civil WarTheir eager face showed no doubt or fear. Their hearts pumped full of excitement and pride. As the Irish Brigade took to the streets of New York City, the citizens of the metropolis rose up to cheer them on. The New York Times described in detail the farewell march of the 69th New York Volunteers’ otherwise known as the “Irish Brigade”. The Irish Brigade was...
- Zillah's Sacrifice
January 9, 1863
SUMTER, Alabama
Church/Religious-Activity, Health/Death, War, WomenZillah Haynie Brandon, wife of a plantation owner in Sumter, Alabama, relied on her devout Christian beliefs to see her through life's trials and tragedies. As the proud mother of two Confederate soldiers, James and Hines, Zillah found strength in her Bible. In her diary, Zillah wrote of her fear for her sons' safety and her pride in their dedication to the Confederate struggle for independence,...
- Preserving the Union
January 9, 1863 to January 14, 1863
Washington City, District of Columbia
Government, WarIn January 1863, Horatio Nelson Taft wrote in his daily diary of an increasing desire to see the terrible Civil War ended "Negro or no Negro, Slavery or no Slavery." Taft, a Unionist, felt that the underlying ideology of the preservation of the Union was the main reason to fight. He said, "we can do to hold our own and hope for success without bringing Slavery into the question." The people of...
- Remembering Our Gallant Dead
January 14, 1863
RICHLAND, South Carolina
highdeath toll, Civil WarDealing with death is as unavoidable as death itself. Grief that weighs on the hearts of those who have lost someone dear to them is a great burden to bear. Imagine then the amount of sorrow and mourning in the Confederate States at the height of the American Civil War. Ways of thinking about and dealing with the amount of loss of life during the Civil War were diverse. William C. Davis...
- Calvin Shedd Reports Confederate Lynching in Southern Florida
January 16, 1863
DADE, Florida
African-Americans, Health/Death, Education, Race-Relations, Slavery, WarCalvin Shedd struggled to make sense of his surroundings while stationed at Fort Jefferson, a Union garrison in Key West, Florida, the southernmost city in the United States. He saw little or no action in the war for his first eighteen months of service, but he heard reports from members of his regiment who scouted the movement of the Confederate army. He was taken aback when he heard that Confederates...
- One women's reaction to the Emancipation Proclamation
November 8, 1862
NEW YORK, New York
Politics, Slavery, WomenReaction to the Emancipation Proclamation, even among the common folk, was mixed and often violent. A letter to the Editor of the Harper's Weekly and published in the November 8, 1862 edition describes one reader's personal experience with such a reaction from a neighbor.
Charity Grimes writes that her neighbor, Sarah Blue, and she do not always agree but on this one occasion...
- Grant Issues Order No. 11
January 18, 1863
MC CRACKEN, Kentucky
Government, Politics, Race-Relations, Church/Religious-Activity, EconomyIn January of 1863 Union General Ulysses S. Grant issued an order that excluded anyone from the Jewish descent from his military department. Order eleven read, “The Jews, as a class, violating every trade regulation established by the Treasury Department, also Department orders, are hereby expelled from the department within twenty-four hours from the receipt of this order.” The order then...
- The Burning of Bayou Sara, LA
October 25, 1862
WEST FELICIANA, Louisiana
War, WomenOn October 25, 1862, Narcissa L. Barksdale scribbled the words, "but no lives lost," as she wrote to her friend, Alcinda "Alice" Janney, describing the tragedy of how Bayou Sara, Louisiana, "was burnt by the crews of the gunboats." Barksdale showed her discontent with the behavior of the Union soldiers in saying, "I could write pages of outrages committed in that state, but I will desist- as...
- Governor Curtin Outlines Plan for Continuing Conscription
October 25, 1862
SCHUYLKILL, Pennsylvania
Riots, Immigration, Law, Civil WarOn October 25, 1862, Pennsylvania governor A.G. Curtin submitted his views and worries on the recent riots that had occurred in Schuylkill County to Secretary of War, E.M. Stanton. He described several scenarios for upholding the draft in the wake of these rioting men without jailing or punishing them. He wrote in the letter, “I think you would get the men more easily than by the use of force....
- Samuel Langhorne Clemens adopts pseudonym Mark Twain
February 3, 1863
MARION, Missouri
Arts/LeisureIn 1863, Samuel Clemens was writing for Territorial Enterprise, when he wrote a humorous account of his travels, signing his piece with the pseudonym Mark Twain, the call he used as a riverboat pilot to signal that the water was two fathoms deep, safe for a boat's passage. This name he would continue to use when publishing in the future. At the time he was writing humorous columns reporting...
- Action on the Mississippi
January 24, 1863 to February 24, 1863
LAUDERDALE, Tennessee
African-Americans, Race-Relations, WarWalter Guion wrote a letter dated Saturday, January 24, 1863, to Miss. Bessie Guion, his sister, in Adams County, Mississippi, describing his experiences as a Confederate soldier and relaying some of his emotions about the war. In the letter, Walter spoke of a fight that broke out on the fourteenth of January against a Yankee gunboat near Lauderdale, Tennessee. The Confederate gunboat that Walter...
- Sickness In the South
February 9, 1863
ROCKBRIDGE, Virginia
Health/Death, WarIn the common way of the times during the Civil War one brother would often write to another informing him of events occurring at home while the other brother would write back with news from the battle line. This is what happened in the Bowman family. In one letter dated February 9, 186[3] one brother wrote from home telling his brother about the illness spreading through town. Andy is better but...
- Confederate Conscription Act
October 11, 1862
ORLEANS, Louisiana
Race-Relations, Slavery, WarThe Emancipation Proclamation issued by Lincoln caused great fear of slave uprisings among Southerners. The Confederate Congress responded by issuing, An act to Exempt Certain Persons from Enrollment for service in the Army of the Confederate States,' also known as the Twenty Nigger Law.' The Confederate army's demand for while males left many plantation homes very vulnerable...