CIVIL WAR CHRONOLOGY
(Selected)
Copyright 1995 - Reprinted from April 1995 edition of Lest We
Forget and updated.
1860
November 6 - Abraham Lincoln elected President of the United
States.
December 14 - A call issued in Georgia for a convention to
deliberate on a Southern Confederacy.
December 20 - South Carolina seceded from the Union.
1861
January 9 - Mississippi seceded from the Union.
January 10 - Florida seceded from the Union.
January 11 - Alabama seceded from the Union.
January 19 - Georgia seceded from the Union.
January 21 - The legislature of New York and other free states
pledge support to the Union.
January 26 - Louisiana seceded from the Union.
January 29 - Kansas admitted to the Union.
February 1 - Texas seceded from the Union.
February 4 - Seceded states held a Convention in Montgomery,
Alabama.
February 8 - Convention being held in Montgomery adopted a
Confederate Constitution.
February 9 - Jefferson Davis elected president of the Confederate
States.
February 18 - Jefferson Davis inaugurated as President of the
Confederacy. After taking the oath of office as the Vice
President of the Confederacy, Alexander H. Stephens, a former
Congressman from Georgia, stated that: "Our new government
is founded on the opposite idea of the equality of the races . .
. Its corner stone rests upon the great truth that the Negro is
not equal to the white man. This . . . government is the first in
the history of the world, based on this great physical and moral
truth."
March 4 - Abraham Lincoln inaugurated as sixteenth President of
the United States.
April 12 - The Confederates fired upon Fort Sumter, South
Carolina.
April 15 - An announcement was made by President Abraham Lincoln
that an insurrection was in progress and the call went out to
loyal states to supply troops.
April 17 - Virginia seceded from the Union.
April 19 - A projected trip to Haiti was canceled by Frederick
Douglass and he called for the recruitment of Black troops.
May 6 - Arkansas seceded from the Union.
May 20 - North Carolina seceded from the Union.
May 24 - General Benjamin Butler coined the phrase
contraband of war and refused to surrender slaves who had
sought refuge in his command at Fort Monroe, Virginia.
July 22 - The Crittenden Resolution passes the U.S. House of
Representatives, affirming the fact that the war was being fought
to preserve the Union and not to interfere with slavery.
July 25 - Crittenden Resolution approved by the U.S. Senate on
motion by Andrew Johnson of Tennessee. He later became Governor
of Tennessee and Vice-President and President of the United
States.
August 14 - General John C. Fremont declared martial
law in St. Louis, Missouri. Confederate sentiment was
widespread in the area.
August 16 - Confederate states declared to be in a state of
insurrection by President Lincoln.
August 30 - General Fremont issued an order confiscating property
of Confederates and emancipation of their slaves. The order
caused wide protest and was disavowed by President Lincoln.
October 2 - General Fremont relieved of command by President
Lincoln.
1862
January 15 - A letter was written by General Thomas Sherman
requesting the War Department send teachers to Port Royal, South
Carolina to teach ex-slaves left on plantations under control of
Union forces. Edward L. Pierce submitted a plan which
subsequently began the Port Royal Experiment.
February 4 - The enrolling of free Blacks in the Confederate Army
was debated in the Virginia House of Delegates. No action was
taken.
April 3 - The U.S. Senate voted 29-14 to abolish slavery in the
District of Columbia.
April 11 - The U.S. House of Representatives voted 93-39 to
abolish slavery in the District of Columbia.
May 1 - General Benjamin Butler takes command of the Military
Department of the Gulf in New Orleans, Louisiana.
May 9 - General David Hunter, Commander of the Department of the
South (Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina), issued an
Emancipation Proclamation freeing all slaves in those states and
also authorized the arming of able-bodied ex-slaves. Shortly
thereafter, he organized the 1st South Carolina Colored Regiment.
The unit was subsequently disbanded except for one company.
May 13 - Robert Small sails the Confederate gunboat Planter from
Charleston and delivers it to Union Navy.
May 19 - President Lincoln repudiates General David Hunter's
Emancipation Act of May 9 and disavows his order.
July 17 - Adoption of the Second Confiscation Act and Militia Act
by the Administration which authorized emancipation and the
employment of fugitive slave labor as weapons of war. The two Act
declared forever free all captured and fugitive
slaves of the Confederates and authorized the mobilization of
Blacks in any military or naval service for which they may
be found competent.
August 11 - General Ulysses S. Grant issued an order in Corinth,
Mississippi utilizing the services of all fugitive slaves behind
his lines.
August 14 - President Lincoln advocated the colonization of
Blacks in Central America during a meeting with a delegation of
free Blacks.
August 21 - Union Generals David Hunter and John Phelps denounced
by Confederate President because of their wish to recruit slaves
for the Union Army.
September 16 - Abolitionist Frederick Douglass rejected the
proposal by President Lincoln to colonize free Blacks in Central
America.
September 22 - The first draft of Emancipation Proclamation read
to the cabinet by President Lincoln.
September 27 thru November 24 - The 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Louisiana
Native Guard Regiments (African Descent) organized and mustered
into the Union Army in New Orleans.
October 10 - Confederate President Jefferson Davis requested the
state of Virginia to draft 4500 Blacks to build fortifications
around Richmond.
October 27-28 - The 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Regiment engage
the Confederates at Island Mound, Missouri. The regiment was
organized by General Jim Lane and engaged the enemy prior to
being mustered into the Union Army.
December 23 - A proclamation issued by Confederate President
Jefferson Davis declared that General Benjamin Butlers
soldiers be considered robbers and criminals, deserving
death. The statement was interpreted by Confederate
soldiers as justifying the massacre of Black Union soldiers.
1863
January 1 - President Lincoln issues Emancipation Proclamation.
The document was directed only to the states that seceded from
the Union. Slaves states that remained with the Union was not
affected.
January 12 - The Confederate Congress approved President
Jefferson Davis proclamation of December 23, 1862.
January 20 - Governor John A. Andrew of Massachusetts was
authorized by Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton to recruit and
organize Black soldiers.
January 26 - The 1st South Carolina Volunteer Regiment (African
Descent) engage the enemy at Township, Florida, shortly after
being mustered in at Beaufort.
March 21 - Frederick Douglass issues a declaration, Men of Color,
To Arms. He began to recruit troops, including his sons Charles
and Lewis.
March 26 - The Secretary of War issued an order directing
Adjutant General Lorenzo Thomas to organize black regiments in
the Mississippi Valley.
March 30 - 54th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteers mustered in to
serve withe the Union Army.
April 2 - Confederate government disturbed by Bread
Riot in Richmond, Virginia.
May 18 - 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Regiment engage the enemy
at Sherwood, Missouri.
May 22 - The War Department established of Colored Troops to
handle the recruitment, organization, and service of the newly
organized black regiments commanded by white officers.
May 22 thru July 8 - Battle of Port Hudson, Louisiana. In the
Union forces were 2 Louisiana Native Guard and 6 Corps
DAfrique Regiments.
May 28 - Newly organized 54th Massachusetts Volunteers depart
Boston for an assignment in South Carolina.
June 7 - Battle of Millikens Bend, Louisiana. Union forces
were 1250 contrabands recently mustered in the 9th and 11th
Louisiana Colored Volunteer and the 1st Mississippi Colored
Volunteer Regiments, and 160 whites from the 23rd Iowa Regiment.
The battle fought mainly with bayonets and rifle butts was said
to have been one of the most bloodiest of the war. Hundreds were
killed on both sides.
July 13 - New York City draft riots - numerous Blacks were killed
and others fled the city.
July 17 - Battle of Honey Springs (Elk Creek), Indian Territory,
(Gettysburg of the West). 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Regiment
fought with Union forces. Indian regiments fought on both sides.
July 18 - Assault on Fort Wagner, South Carolina by the 54th
Massachusetts Volunteers in which heavy losses occurred.
1864
February 20 - Battle of Olustee (Florida). Heavy losses suffered
by the Union forces that included the 54th Massachusetts
Volunteers, the 8th and 35th United States Colored Infantry
Regiments. The Union forces were defeated.
April 8 - Thirteenth Amendment passes the U.S. Senate by a vote
of 38-6.
April 12 - Massacre of Union Soldiers, Black enlisted and White
officers, at Fort Pillow, Tennessee.
June 15 - Thirteenth Amendment falls short of the required
two-thirds majority in the U.S. House of Representatives by a
vote of 96-66.
July 8 - President Lincoln announces support of the Thirteenth
Amendment.
September 12 - A letter was written by General Robert E. Lee to
President Jefferson Davis stating that Blacks should be used in
support services in the Confederate Army.
September 29 - Battle of Chaffins Farm (New Market
Heights), Virginia. Twelve U.S. Colored Infantry Regiments and
one Cavalry Regiment charged into battle. Thirteen men serving
with the United States Colored Infantry Regiments were awarded
the Congressional Medal of Honor.
November 7 - President Jefferson Davis proposed that the
Confederate purchase slaves for army support work, and freeing
them on discharge.
November 8 - President Lincoln re-elected.
November 30 - Battle of Honey Hill, South Carolina. Participating
were the 54th and 55th Massachusetts Volunteers, the 32nd, 35th,
and 102nd U.S. Colored Infantry Regiments.
December 3 - The 25th Army Corps organized. (The first and only
army corps made up of all-Black infantry regiments.)
December 6 - President Lincoln in the Annual Message to Congress
requested reconsideration of the Thirteenth Amendment.
December 16 - General William T. Sherman departs Atlanta and
begins the March to the Sea. Two days later President Jefferson
Davis ordered the use of Blacks to build obstructions to the
advancing army.
December 21 - Second Grierson Raid launched from Memphis enroute
to Vicksburg, Mississippi with the 3rd U.S. Colored Cavalry often
leading the charge.
1865
January 1 - The U.S. House of Representatives began to debate the
Thirteenth Amendment.
January 31 - Thirteenth Amendment passes the House of
Representatives by a vote of 119-56.
March 4 - President Lincoln inaugurated.
March 13 - Recruitment of Black soldiers approved by the
Confederate Congress and signed by President Jefferson Davis.
Troops were enlisted under this act.
March 31 - April 9 - Battle of Fort Blakely, Alabama and
participating were 9 U.S. Colored Infantry Regiments plus 2 U. S. Colored Infantry Regiments serving as Engineer units.
April 2 - Confederate government abandons Richmond, Virginia and
the city is occupied by Union soldiers the next day.
April 9 - General Robert E. Lee surrenders to General Ulysses S.
Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia. Three of the 17 units
that moved toward Appomattox from the west to block General
Lees army were U.S. Colored Infantry Regiments. Three other
U. S. Colored Infantry Regiments were positioned in the rear.
Thirty-six Black Confederates were paroled at Appomattox.
April 14 - President Lincoln was shot and he died the next day.
Andrew Johnson became President.
May 12 - General O. O. Howard appointed to head the
Freedmans Bureau.
December 18 - Thirteenth Amendment ratified after approval by
twenty-seven states. (Delaware, Kentucky, New Jersey, and
Mississippi rejected the amendment.)
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