WHEN the North addressed herself to her task, her own
capital was still threatened by the rebels. Two or three miles (lowil the
Potomac, and full in view of Washington, lies the old-fashioned decaying
Virginian town of Alexandria, where the unfortunate Braddock had landed his
troops a century before. The Confederate flag floated over Alexandria.. A
rebel force was marching on Harper's Ferry, forty miles from Washington; and
as the Government works there could not be defended, they were burned.
Preparations were being made to seize Arlington Heights, from which
Washington could be easily shelled. At Manassas Junction, thirty miles away,
a rebel army lay encamped. It seemed to many foreign observers that the
North might lay aside all thought of attack, and be well pleased if she
succeeded in the defence of what was still left to her.
But
the Northern people, never doubting either their right or their strength,
put their hand boldly to the work. The first thing to he done was to shut
the rebels in so that no help could reach them from the world outside. They
could grow food enough, but they were a people who could make little. They
needed from Europe supplies of arms and ammunition, of clothing, of
medicine. They needed money, which they could only get by sending away their
cotton. To stop their intercourse with Europe was to inflict a blow which
would itself prove almost fatal. Four days after the fall of Fort Sumpter,
Mr. Lincoln announced the blockade of all the rebel ports. It was a little
time after till he had ships enough to make the blockade effective. But in a
few weeks this was done, and every rebel port was closed. The grasp thus
established was never relaxed. So long as the war lasted, the South obtained
foreign supplies only from vessels which carried on the desperate trade of
blockade- running.
Virginia completed her secession on the
23rd April. Next morning Federal troops seized and fortified Alexandria and
the Arlington heights. In the western portions of Virginia the people were
so little in favour of secession that they wished to establish themselves as
a separate State—loyal to the Union. With no very serious trouble the rebel
forces were driven out of this region, and Western Virginia was restored to
the Union. Desperate attempts were made by the disloyal Governor of Missouri
to carry his State out of the Union, against the wish of a majority of the
people. It was found possible to defeat the efforts of the secessionists and
retain Missouri. Throughout the war this State was grievously wasted by
Southern raids, but she held fast her loyalty.
Thus at the
opening of the war substantial advantages had been gained by the North. They
were not, however, of a sufficiently brilliant character fully to satisfy
the expectations of the excited people. A great battle must be won.
Government, unwisely yielding to the pressure, ordered their imperfectly
disciplined troops to advance and attack the rebels in their Position at
Manassas Junction.
General Beauregard lay at Manassas with
a rebel force variously estimated at from 30,000 to 40,000 men. In front of
his position ran the little stream of Bull Run, in a narrow, wooded
valley—the ground rising on either side into "bluffs," crowned with frequent
patches of dense wood. General M'Doweil moved to attack him, with an army
about equal in strength. July 21, It was early Sunday morning when the army
set out (1861) from its quarters at Centreville. The march was not over ten
miles, but the day was hot, and the men not yet inured to hardship. It was
ten o'clock when the battle fairly opened. From the heights on the northern
bank of the stream the Federal artillery played upon the enemy. The Southern
line stretched well-nigh ten miles. M'Dowell hoped by striking with an
overwhelming force at a point on the enemy's right, to roll back his entire
line in confusion. heavy masses of infantry forded the stream and began the
attack. The Southerners fought bravely and skilfully, but at the point of
attack they were inferior in number, and they were driven back. The battle
spread away far among the woods, and soon every copse held its group of
slain and wounded men. By three o'clock the Federals reckoned the battle as
good as won. The enemy, though still lighting, was falling back. But at that
hour a railway train ran close up to the field of battle with 15,000
Southerners fresh and eager for the fray. This new force was hurried into
action. The wearied Federals could not endure the vehemence of the attack.
They broke and fled down the hill-side. With inexperienced troops a measured
and orderly retreat is impossible. Defeat is quickly followed by panic. The
men who had fought so bravely all the day now hurried in wild confusion from
the field. The road was choked with a tangled mass of baggage-waggons,
artillery, soldiers and civilians frenzied by fear, and cavalry riding
wildly through the quaking mob. But the Southerners attempted no pursuit,
and the panic passed away. Scarcely an attempt, however, was made to stop
the flight. Order was not restored till the worn-out men made their way back
to Washington.
This was the first great battle of the war,
and its results were of prodigious importance. By the sanguine men of the
South it was hailed as decisive of their final success. President Davis
counted upon the immediate recognition of the Confederacy by the great
powers of Europe as now certain. The newspapers accepted it as a settled
truth that "one Southerner was equal to ve Yankees." Intrigues began for the
succession to the presidential chair—six years hence. A controversy arose
among the States as to the location of the Capital. The success of the
Confederacy was regarded as a thing beyond doubt. Enlistment languished. It
was scarcely worth while to undergo the inconvenience of fighting for a
cause which was already triumphant.
The defeat at Manassas
taught the people of the North that the task they had undertaken was a
heavier task than they supposed. But it did not shake their steady purpose
to perform it. On the day after the battle—while the routed army was
swarming into Washington—Congress voted five hundred millions of dollars,
and called for half a million of volunteers. A few (lays later, Congress
unanimously resolved that the suppression of the rebellion was a sacred
duty, from the performance of which no disaster should discourage; to which
they pledged the employment of every resource, national and individual.
"Having chosen our course" said Mr. Lincoln, "without guile, and with pure
purpose, let us renew our trust in God, and go forward without fear and with
manly hearts." The spirit of the North rose as the greatness of the
enterprise became apparent. No thought was there of any other issue from the
national agony than the overthrow of the national foe. The youth of the
country crowded into the ranks. The patriotic impulse possessed rich and
poor alike. The sons of wealthy men shouldered a musket side by side -with
the penniless children of toil. Once, by some accident, the money which
should have paid a New England regiment failed to arrive in time. A private
in the regiment gave his cheque for a hundred thousand dollars, and the men
were paid. The Christian churches yielded an earnest support to the war. In
some western churches the men enlisted almost without exception.
Occasionally their ministers accompanied them. Sabbath-school teachers and
members of young men's Christian associations were remarkable for the
eagerness with which they obeyed the call of their country. It was no longer
a short war and an easy victory which the North anticipated. The gigantic
character of the struggle was at length recognized; and the North,
chastened, but undismayed, made preparations for a contest on the issue of
which her existence depended. |