Following the American Civil War Sesquicentennial with day by day writings of the time, currently 1863.

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“Servile insurrection, too, seems contemplated in Virginia.”—Diary of George Mifflin Dallas, United States Minister to England.

January 20, 2011

Diary of George Mifflin Dallas, United States Minister to England 1856 to 1861

1861. January 20.—….The news from home during this week has been deplorable. On the l0th inst. the President sent a message to Congress which depicts the state of things in the gloomiest colours. South Carolina, at Charleston, has fired repeated volleys at a United States transport carrying troops for Major Anderson at Fort Sumter, and has compelled her to retire. The Brooklyn, a second-class screw steamer of fourteen guns, and the revenue cutter Harriet Lane are about to convoy the troops back again to Charleston on board the Star of the West, and we may expect our next news to announce a bloody fight, possibly a bombardment of the city. Seward has made a speech in the Senate which the Times calls “grand and conciliatory,” but which obviously asserts a determination to enforce the laws. Servile insurrection, too, seems contemplated in Virginia, some twenty-five barrels of gunpowder having been disinterred from secret hiding-places.

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