Friday, February 9, 2024

Harper's Weekly (May 4, 1861): Belief that the U.S. Civil War "will be over by January, 1862"

  

The war has not begun in earnest. The seccession of Virgina, and the attempts of rebels to seize the Arsenal at Harper's Ferry and the Navy-yard at Norfolk; the bombardment of Fort Sumter; the investment of Fort Pickens; the seizure of the Star of the West by a Southern privateer; the threatened seizure of the Federal Capital by the rebels; the murders of Massachusetts men in Baltimore, and the refusal of Maryland to permit Northern troops to pass through that city to defend the capital—these facts explain the situation without further comment.

 

It is not now a question of slavery or anti-slavery. It is not even a question of Union or disunion. The question simply is whether Northern men will fight. Southerners have rebelled and dragged our flag in the dirt, in the belief that, because we won't fight duels or engage in street brawl, therefore we are cowards. The question now is whether or no they are right.

 

If they are wrong, and if Abraham Lincoln is equal to the position he fills, this war will be over by January, 1862. (“The War,” Harper's Weekly 5, no. 227 [May 4, 1861]: 274)

 

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