On April 10, 1861, Brig. Gen. Beauregard, in command of the provisional Confederate forces at Charleston, South Carolina, demanded the surrender of the Union garrison of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor.
Garrison commander Anderson refused. On April 12, Confederate batteries opened fire on the fort, which was unable to reply effectively.
At 2:30 p.m., April 13, Major Anderson surrendered
Fort Sumter, evacuating the garrison on the following day. The bombardment of
Fort Sumter was the opening engagement of the American Civil War. Although
there were no casualties during the bombardment, one Union artillerist was
killed and three wounded (one mortally) when a cannon exploded prematurely when
firing a salute during the evacuation.
The Civil
War had begun.
Repeated demands having been made upon Major Anderson, and upon the President, for the relinquishment of Fort Sumter, and these demands having been refused and the government at Washington having concluded to supply and reinforce the fort by force of arms, it was determined to summon Major Anderson to evacuate the fort, for the last time.
Accordingly,
on April 11th, General Beauregard sent him the following communication:
Headquarters
Provisional Army, C. S. A.
Charleston,
April 11, 1861.
Sir: The government of the Confederate
States has hitherto foreborne from any hostile demonstrations against Fort
Sumter, in hope that the government of the United States, with a view to the
amicable adjustment of all questions between the two governments, and to avert
the calamities of war, would voluntarily evacuate it.
There was reason at one time to believe
that such would be the course pursued by the government of the United States,
and under that impression my government has refrained from making any demand
for the surrender of the fort. But the Confederate States can no longer delay
assuming actual possession of a fortification commanding the entrance of one of
their harbors and necessary to its defense and security.
I am ordered by the government of the
Confederate States to demand the evacuation of Fort Sumter. My aides, Colonel
Chestnut and Captain Lee, are authorized to make such demand of you. All proper
facilities will be afforded for the removal of yourself and command, together
with company arms and property, and all private property, to any post in the
United States which you may select. The flag which you have upheld so long and
with so much fortitude, under the most trying circumstances, may be saluted by
you on taking it down. Colonel Chestnut and Captain Lee will, for a reasonable
time, await your answer.
I am,
very respectfully, your obedient servant,
G. T.
BEAUREGARD,
Brigadier-General
Commanding.
Major
Anderson replied as follows:
Fort
Sumter, S.C.,
April 11,
1861.
General: I have the honor to acknowledge
the receipt of your communication demanding the evacuation of this fort, and to
say, in reply thereto, that it is a demand with which I regret that my sense of
honor, and of my obligations to my government, prevent my compliance. Thanking
you for the fair, manly and courteous terms proposed, and for the high
compliment paid me,
I am,
General, very respectfully, your obedient servant,
ROBERT
ANDERSON,
Major,
First Artillery, Commanding.
Major Anderson, while conversing with the messengers of General Beauregard, having remarked that he would soon be starved into a surrender of the fort, or words to that effect, General Beauregard was induced to address him a second letter, in which he proposed that the major should fix a time at which he would agree to evacuate, and agree also not to use his guns against the Confederate forces unless they fired upon him, and so doing, he, General Beauregard, would abstain from hostilities.
To this second letter Major Anderson replied, naming noon on
the 15th, provided that no hostile act was committed by the Confederate forces,
or any part of them, and provided, further, that he should not, meanwhile,
receive from the government at Washington controlling instructions or
additional supplies.
The fleet which was to reinforce and supply him was then collecting outside the bar, and General Beauregard at once notified him, at 3:20 a. m. on the morning of the 12th of April, that he would open fire on the fort in one hour from that time.
The shell which opened the momentous
bombardment of Fort Sumter was fired from a mortar, located at Fort Johnson on
James island, at 4:30 on the morning of the 12th.
On
Cummings point, six i o-inch mortars and six guns were placed .. along with the
guns at Fort Moultire and other points in the harbor.
For
thirty-four hours they assaulted Sumter with an unceasing bombardment, before
its gallant defenders consented to give it up, and not then until the condition
of the fort made it impossible to continue the defense. Port Moultrie alone
fired 2,490 shot and shell. Gen. S. W. Crawford, in his accurate and admirable
book, previously quoted, thus describes the condition of Sumter when Anderson
agreed to its surrender:
"It
was a scene of ruin and destruction. The quarters and barracks were in ruins.
The main gates and the planking of the windows on the gorge were gone;the
magazines closed and surrounded by smouldering flames and burning ashes; the
provisions exhausted; much of the engineering work destroyed; and with only
four barrels of powder available. The command had yielded to the inevitable.
The effect of the direct shot had been to indent the walls, where the marks
could be counted by hundreds, while the shells, well directed, had crushed the
quarters, and, in connection with hot shot, setting them on fire, had destroyed
the barracks and quarters down to the gun casemates, while the enfilading fire
had prevented the service of the barbette guns, some of them comprising the
most important battery in the work. The breaching fire from the columbiads and
the rifle gun at Cummings point upon the right gorge 'angle, had progressed
sensibly and must have eventually succeeded if continued, but as yet no guns
had been disabled or injured at that point. The effect of the fire upon the
parapet was pronounced. The gorge, the right face and flank as well as the left
face, were all taken in reverse, and a destructive fire maintained until the
end, while the gun carriages on the barbette of the gorge were destroyed in the
fire of the blazing quarters."
The spirit and language of General Beauregard in communicating with Major Anderson, and the replies of the latter, were alike honorable to those distinguished soldiers.
The writer, who was on duty on Sullivan's island, as major of Pettigrew's regiment of rifles, recalls vividly the sense of admiration felt for Major Anderson and his faithful little command throughout the attack, and at the surrender of the fort.
"While the barracks in Fort Sumter were in a
blaze," wrote General Beauregard to the secretary of war at Montgomery,
"and the interior of the work appeared untenable from the heat and from
the fire of our batteries (at about which period I sent three of my aides to
offer assistance), whenever the guns of Fort Sumter would fire upon Moultrie,
the men occupying the Cummings point batteries (Palmetto Guard, Captain
Cuthbert) at each shot would cheer Anderson for his gallantry, although
themselves still firing upon him; and when on the 15th instant he left the
harbor on the steamer Isabel, the soldiers of the batteries lined the beach,
silent and uncovered, while Anderson and his command passed before them."
Thus
closed the memorable and momentous attack upon Fort Sumter by the forces of
South Carolina, and thus began the war which lasted until April, 1865, when the
Southern Confederacy, as completely ruined and exhausted by fire and sword as
Fort Sumter in April, 1861, gave up the hopeless contest and reluctantly
accepted the inevitable.