: Abner Doubleday
: Reminicences of Forts Sumter and Moultrie in 1860-61
: Stillpoint Digital Press
: 9781582182773
: 1
: CHF 5.90
:
: Geschichte
: English
: 186
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB

Abner Doubleday was an 1842 graduate of the U. S. Military
Academy at West Point and a veteran of the Mexican war
when he was assigned to Fort Moultrie
in the summer of 1860. A Captain of Artillery, he served as second in command
of the garrison at the historic fort when the curtain rose on the dramatic
events leading to the outbreak of the War Between the States. Doubleday also
had the distinction of aiming the first cannon fired in response to the
bombardment of Fort Sumter.

CHAPTER I.FORT MOULTRIE IN 1860.


The Garrison of Fort Moultrie.—Early Indications of Secession.— Situation of the Fort.—Edmund Ruffin and Robert Barnwell Rhett. —The Secretary of War.—Arms sent to the South.—Colonel Gardner.—Captain Foster ordered to Charleston Harbor.—The Officers at Fort Moultrie.—Communications with Northern Men by Cipher.—Proscription of Antislavery Men in Charleston.—Position of Charleston Merchants.—The Secession Leaders only prepared to resist Coercion.—The Mob proves unmanageable.—General Scott’s Letter to the President, October 29.—The Situation in November. —No Instructions from Washington.—Colonel Gardner’s Report to General Wool.

 

THEsummer of 1860 found me stationed at the head-quarters of the First United States Artillery at Fort Moultrie, South Carolina. I was captain of Company E, and second in command to Brevet Colonel John L. Gardner, who was lieutenant-colonel of the regiment. The regimental band and Captain Truman Seymour’s company (H) also formed part of the garrison. The other forts were unoccupied, except by the ordnance-sergeants in charge.

Charleston, at this period, was far from being a pleasant place for a loyal man. Almost every public assemblage was tinctured with treasonable sentiments, and toasts against the flag were always warmly applauded. As early as July there was much talk of secession, accompanied with constant drilling, and threats of taking the forts as soon as a separation should occur.

To the South Carolinians Fort Moultrie was almost a sacred spot, endeared by many precious historical associations; for the ancestors of most of the principal families had fought there in the Revolutionary War behind their hastily improvised ramparts of palmetto logs, and had gained a glorious victory over the British fleet in its first attempt to enter the harbor and capture the city.

The modern fort had been built nearly on the site of the ancient one. Its walls were but twelve feet high. They were old, weak, and so full of cracks that it was quite common to see soldiers climb to the top by means of the support these crevices afforded to their hands and feet. The constant action of the sea-breeze had drifted one immense heap of sand against the shore-front of the work, and another in the immediate vicinity. These sand-hills dominated the parapet, and made the fort untenable. Indeed, it was originally built by the engineers as a mere sea-battery, with just sufficient strength to prevent it from being taken by acoup de main.As an overpowering force of militia could always be summoned for its defense, it was supposed that no foreign army would ever attempt to besiege it. The contingency that the people of Charleston themselves might attack a fort intended for their own protection had never been anticipated.

Our force was pit