Washington D. C. July 4 – President Lincoln called Congress into special session today. In one of the most stirring speeches heard on an Independence Day, Abe Lincoln mor than sold the United States legislature on the need for immediate action in the form of appropriations and military buildup to bring the South back into the Union. He called for 400,00 troops and the staggering sum of 400 million dollars to conduct the war.
In explaining to Congress the necessity for this great sum, the President rationalized the amount this way: ” A debt of 600 million dollars now is a less sum per head than was the debt of the Revolution when we came out of that struggle.”
In calling for Congressional action, he said “this issue embraces more than the fate of these United States. It presents to the whole family of man the question, whether a constitutional democracy – a government of the people by the same people – can or cannot maintain its territorial integrity against its own domestic foes. It presents the question whether discontented individuals, too few in numbers to control administration, according to organic law, can always, upon pretenses, or arbitrarily, without any pretense, break up their government, and thus practically put an end to free government upon the earth. It forces us to ask, “Is there, in all republics this inherent and fatal weakness? Must a government of necessity be too strong for the liberties of its own people or too weak to maintain its own existence?”
The joint session and the packed galleries cheered the President for more than 20 minutes as ended his speech today. Then the legislators approved unanimously all that Lincoln had said was needed.
Victoria Says ‘Neutral’
London, England, July 5 – Her Majesty Queen Victoria proclaimed today that Great Britain is a neutral in the war in America. However, the queen qualified the neutrality by stating that Britain recognized the Confederacy as a belligerent.
Rebs Forced from W. VA.
Carricks Ford, Western Virgina, July 13 – Three days of battling here in the mountains has forced the withdrawal of all Confederate forces. Gen. George B McClellan’s Union troops routed a smaller Rebal force here this afternoon to give the Federals undisputed possession of all Western Virginia.
Confederate Gen. Robert Garnett, a West Point graduate and former U.S. Army officer, was killed in the fighting today. He is the first general officer to fall in the war.
Union troops under the field command of Gen. W.S. Rosecrans encircled Rebel entrenchments at Rich Mountain yesterday, eight miles west of Beverly. Col. John Pegram, another West Pointer fighting for the Rebel cause, was captured with more than 600 men after a sharp encounter on the steep mountain slopes in a drenching rain.
The fall of Col. Pegram’s position left Gen. Garnett’s troops open to a flank attack from the south. Fighting a rear guard action while withdrawing his Confederate force, Garnett led one of his Georgia regiments in a counter-attack here this afternoon. The attack was met and smashed by two Indiana regiments. Garnett was shot from his horse, fatally wounded.
The Rebel force has retreated towards Harrisonburg, VA and left Western Virginia in complete control of the Federals. The loss of this territory is a blow to the Confederacy. Richmond newspapers carried the story tonight as news “which stirred this community more deeply than any we have ever known.” The Richmond Dispatch said “People on every corner discussed the bad news from Western Virginia.”
Gen Garnett, an army friend of Gen. McClellan’s was given full military honors by the Federals. His body was escorted under a flag of truce to the Confederate lines. McClellan, who reached the battle scene shortly after the fighting, knelt beside the body of his old friend, Garnett. As he laid his coat over the dead Rebel general he said, “Has it come to this?”
Gen. Jackson Earns ‘Stonewall’ Title
Manassas, VA July 21 – Reports from today’s battlefield reflect high praise for one Confederate officer. Gen Thomas J Jackson, whose troops held against the vicious Federal attacks this afternoon, has been mentioned in nearly every dispatch from the field.
Jackson’s Virginia brigades arrived on the field as other Confederate units were streaming to rear before the Union assault on the Henry House Hill.
Gen. Bernard Bee, trying to rally his routed troops shouted “There stands Jackson like a stone wall! Rally behind the Virginians.”
Jackson’s brigade halted the Union advance and turned the tide of battle. Gen. Jackson is being referred to tonight as “Stonewall”, Jackson and his brigade as the “Stonewall Brigade”.
Beauregard, Johnston Combo Halts Union Army at Bull Run
Manassas, VA, July 21 – The Confederacy is aglow with victory tonight as the remnants of Gen. Irvin McDowell’s Union army stream towards Washington. In the first big battle of the war, Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard’s Confederate troops have routed the Federal force sent against them, and Washington itself fears invasion by the Southern army.
The Federal high command attributes the Rebel victory to the arrival of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston’s Confederate army from Winchester, VA. These troops arrived at mid-afternoon as the Confederate lines were breaking under the Yankee assault. Their counterattacks staggered the Federal lines, which wavered, broke and fled under the relentless attack.
Crowds of Washington spectators who had followed the Union army to the front to see the battle that was to “end the war” were caught in the panic of the Union rout late this afternoon.
Casualty lists from both armies are growing by the hour. First reports indicate that more than 2800 Union troops fell in the fighting while the Confederate losses were nearly 2000. Col J.E.B. Stuart, commander of the Rebel calvary on the field, has urged an immediate advance on Washington. However, a late staff meeting in the Confederate camp has overruled the aggressive horseman.
President Davis and his advisor, Gen. Robert E. Lee, were present for today’s battle and have issued special orders of congratulations to the army tonight.
Fighting opened early this morning when McDowell’s leading units advanced from Centerville to Bull Run. Heavy shelling broke out near Blackburn’s Ford as the Union commander attempted a feint near the center of the Rebel line. While this raged, the main Federal force of 13,000 men moved by a circuitous back road to the right, crossed Bull Run at Sudley Ford and prepared to hit the Confederate left flank. Howver, the noonday sun shining on the Federal bayonets gave the move away.
There was little time for a change of troop positions, but Rebel Generals Bee and Bartow moved their North Carolina brigades to meet the attack. The blue Yankee lines formed and went forward. The two Confederate brigades seemed to melt under the advance of the Union force. The Federal lines swept down the Sudley-Manassas Road, across Warrenton Turnpike, sweeping all before them. Gen. W.T. Sherman advanced his troops across the Stone Bridge at Bull Run to join the attack. As the Union force waded across Young’s Branch and ascended the Henry hill, a second Rebel line under the command of Gen. T.J. Jackson appeared on the crest of the hill and opened fire. The Federal line was halted. Artillery came forward. At ranges less than 200 yards batteries dueled in the brutal July sun.
For more than three hours attacks and counterattacks streamed up and down the hillside. Green, untrained troops on both sides fought and died as veterans.
At one point this afternoon a Rebel regiment outfitted in blue uniforms was mistaken by Ricketts’s and Griffin’s Union batteries for Federals. At 70 yards the regiment fired on the Union gunners, killing 54 men and 104 horses. The Union line sagged, but reformed and advanced to recapture its lost guns.
But time was on the side of the Confederacy today. As Beauregard rushed his last reserves forward, the remaining units of Johnston’s army arrived. The Confederate line was extended until it overlapped the Yankee right flank. As a regiment of Federal Fire Zouaves moved forward, Stuart’s calvary charged. Teh Zouave regiment was mangled by the flying hooves and cutlasses of the Rebel horsemen. The unit broke and Beauregard ordered the entire Rebel line foward.
The Union brigades of Sherman, Porter, and Franklin were shattered from their attacks on Henry hill. Unprepared for the counterattack, the broke and fled. The entire union line disintegrated. Except for Sykes’ battalion of regulars which covered the retreat, McDowell’s Union army was routed. Efforts by officers to halt the troops were futile. Rebel artillery shelled the roads and bridges taken by the fleeing Federals. All organization was lost in most units.
Horseless artillery pieces, caissons, wagons, guns, knapsacks, coats and blankets mark the path tonight of the Federal army.
Many society people from Washington who had journeyed forth this morning to see the battle were caught in the rout. One congressman, Alfred Ely of New York, was taken prisoner by the Confederates.
Casualties were high among senior officers on both sides today. To keep their green troops up to the bloody work, the highest officers of both armies exposed themselves recklessly. Generals Hunter and Heintzelman were among the Union wounded. Gen. Wilcox was wounded and captured. Both Gen. Bee and Gen. Bartow, whose troops met the initial Federal advance were killed.
The news of the victory has brought great rejoicing in the South. Many here believe that the war is now over, and the Lincoln government will acknowledge the secession. In the North a stunned, unbelieving silence has fallen.
The torn and beaten Union Army is slowly gathering tonight in the fortifications along the Potomac.
General McClellan Brings New Hope to Federal Army
Washington, D.C. July 27 – The badly defeated Federal army is talking shape again in the fortifications around Washington. The Confederates have not followed up their victory at Bull Run as so many had expected they would after routing the Union army there last week. The Rebel advance has been limited to calvary reconnaissance.
The arrival today of Gen. George B. McClellan seems to have brought new hope to the Union troops stationed here. Although McClellan has never commanded in this area, his victoried in western Virginia have brough him some fame in the North. President Lincoln has given the 35-year-0ld former railroad President “full authority” i the reorganization of the Union army. “little Mac,” as he is already being called by the troops, replaces Gen. Irvin McDowell.
The losses in equipment in last week’s battle have staggered the North. More than 40 artillery pieces fell to the Rebels along with a hundred wagons and more than 2000 stacks of small arms. This, plus vast quantities of food and supplies at Centerville and Fairfax Courthouse, has fallen to the Confederate army.
Enlistments of many of the 90-day volunteers are running out. In some cases, whole Union regiments have left the army as terms expire. Lincoln himself was confronted personally this week by an outraged officer from the brigade of Gen. W. T. Sherman. The officer told Lincoln that when he advised Sherman that he was going home because his enlistment was up, Sherman had threatened to shoot him. The President confided in the young man with: “Sir, if I were you and Gen. Sherman threatened to shoot, I would not trust him, for by Heaven, I believe he’d do it.”