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1 posted on 04/12/2011 4:38:38 AM PDT by iowamark
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DECEMBER 29, 1860: South Carolina secedes

JANUARY 9, 1861: Mississippi secedes
January 10: Florida Secedes
January 11: Alabama secedes.
January 19: Georgia secedes.
January 26: Louisiana secedes.
January 29: Kansas admitted to the Union as a free state.

FEBRUARY 1, 1861: Texas convention votes for secession.
February 4: lst Session, Provisional Confederate Congress, convenes in Montgomery, Alabama.
February 9: Jefferson Davis elected provisional Confederate president.
February 18: Jefferson Davis inaugurated.
February 23: Texas voters approve secession.

MARCH 4 1861: Abraham Lincoln inaugurated 16th President
March 6: Provisional Confederate Congress establishes Army, calls for 100,000 volunteers.

APRIL 12, 1861: Bombardment of Fort Sumter begins.
April 13: Fort Sumter surrenders.
April 15: Lincoln calls for 75,000 volunteers.
April 17: Virginia secedes.
April 19: 6th Massachusetts attacked by Baltimore mob; Lincoln declares blockade of Southern coast.
April 20: Norfolk, Virginia, Navy Yard evacuated.
April 29: 2nd Session, Provisional Confederate Congress, convenes; Maryland rejects secession.


2 posted on 04/12/2011 4:42:05 AM PDT by iowamark
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To: iowamark

God Bless You Edmund Ruffin.


4 posted on 04/12/2011 4:50:52 AM PDT by BuffaloJack (Obama did not learn incompetence; he was born to it.)
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To: iowamark
it made about as much sense for SC/Confederacy to attack Fort Sumter as it would have been for Castro to attack Gitmo in 1959-60....

you make your point by secession....you can then send a message to Washington that you would need to have a discussion about the inevitability of moving your forts out of the sovereign nation of the CSA...

8 posted on 04/12/2011 5:00:34 AM PDT by Vaquero ("an armed society is a polite society" Robert A. Heinlein)
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To: iowamark

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/04/10/a-closed-book/?partner=rss&emc=rss#
“”Maj. Robert Anderson sat at his desk in Fort Sumter, composing a letter that might never be read...

Since their move to Sumter in December, the skeptical Capt. Abner Doubleday, a staunch antislavery man and uncompromising foe of secession, had done his best to get inside the commander’s head. He had observed the pious Kentuckian intently, tried to draw out his opinions, and even baited him on the subject of slavery.

Anderson confessed he was disgusted by the North’s refusal to enforce the Fugitive Slave Act, and quoted the Bible to demonstrate that God himself had ordained human bondage. Doubleday, in turn, wheeled the Bible around like a howitzer and fired it straight back at Anderson, pointing out that since the slaves in the Old Testament were white, he saw no reason why some pious Southern master should not enslave the major himself, “and read texts of Scripture to him to keep him quiet.” Anderson, Doubleday later boasted, was unable to counter this merciless logical volley. (A less tolerant superior might have clapped the captain in irons.)

On the morning of the move to Sumter in late December, when a rebel envoy had come to demand an explanation, Anderson had told the man ruefully, “In this controversy between the North and the South, my sympathies are entirely with the South. These gentlemen” – here he turned to his blue-coated officers – “know it well.”...

“The red tape of military duty,” Lincoln’s secretary John Hay would later sneer, “was all that bound his heart from its traitorous impulses.” Though it may also have reflected Lincoln’s private views, this was unfair to Anderson. His heart was bound – or perhaps more precisely, pulled upon – by forces far more powerful and complicated than red tape alone.””


9 posted on 04/12/2011 5:04:19 AM PDT by iowamark
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To: iowamark

http://pr-usa.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=687976&Itemid=29
“”Ancestry.com and the National Archives Release Millions of Civil War Records Online

Ancestry.com, the world’s largest online family history resource, and the National Archives, today launched millions of newly digitized Civil War records that are now available online for the first time. This effort is part of an ongoing partnership between Ancestry.com and the National Archives to make important historical records more easily available to the American public. Ancestry.com’s entire Civil War Collection of more than 42 million records, including 25 million records from the National Archives, will be free to access for the general public for one week beginning on April 7. Existing members will have immediate access beginning today.

Included are the entire U.S. Civil War Draft Registration Records, 1863-1865 and the complete 1860 and 1870 Censuses. These Civil War collections are in the National Archives and have been digitized by Ancestry.com to help preserve the original records and provide convenient online access. They now serve as a vital source of information for an estimated 17 million Americans(1) who have an ancestor who fought in the conflict. The entire Civil War Collection can be accessed for free at www.ancestry.com/civilwar150

The highlight of the Civil War Collection is the newly digitized Civil War Draft Registration Records, 1863-1865. These records are among the most popular in the National Archives Civil War holdings and served as a virtual male census for the northern states during the war period. Famous 19th century Americans such as Andrew Carnegie, future President Grover Cleveland, Aaron Montgomery Ward and multiple Rockefellers are all found in these records. Previously only available by request in original form in the Research Room of the National Archives, the public will now be able to easily access these records on Ancestry.com without having to travel to Washington, D.C.

“The significance of these records, which document one of the most important events in American history, cannot be overstated,” said Ken Burns, director and producer of the award-winning documentary THE CIVIL WAR and longtime board member of the Foundation for the National Archives. “I’ve been able to make multiple discoveries about my own great-great-grandfather Abraham Burns through these and other records from the National Archives. I’m excited that more people will now be able to have similar discoveries through Ancestry.com.”

Ancestry.com is providing another special experience in searching for Civil War and National Archive information through the new interactive Military Headstone Archives. Dynamic visuals and multimedia tools will enable users to ‘virtually’ explore the cemeteries of the Civil War’s most famous battlefields at Gettysburg, PA; Sharpsburg (Antietam), MD; Stones River (Murfreesboro), TN; Petersburg, VA; Shiloh, TN and Vicksburg, MS. Users can search for their family’s heroes in Ancestry.com’s unique collection of headstone photographs from 33 national cemeteries in the North and South. The new Military Headstone Archives can also be accessed by visiting: www.ancestry.com/civilwar150

Since 2008, Ancestry.com and the National Archives have worked as partners to make important historical records available to the public as part of a shared commitment to preserving America’s heritage. A key component of this collaboration includes digitizing as many of the original paper National Archives’ Civil War records as possible and publishing those records on Ancestry.com.

“The National Archives continues to be a model for preserving important U.S. history and making those records available to the public,” said Josh Hanna, Executive Vice President for Ancestry.com. “We’re honored that our partnership with the National Archives has made millions of records, including the new Civil War Collection, available to the many Americans who want to learn more about their family history.”

“We are pleased that our partnership with Ancestry.com is making these important records available outside of our research rooms,” said Susan Cummings, National Archives Director of Access Programs. “This is just the first of many series of Civil War records that will be made available online that are scanned from original records, instead of from microfilm in the years to come.”

The expanded Civil War Collection now includes new National Archives records such as:

U.S. Civil War Draft Registration Records, 1863-1865: This collection lists all Civil War Draft Registrations. There were four drafts between 1863 and 1865, which included 3,175,055 people in its rolls, although of those, just over 46,000 actually entered into service. Historically, the 1863 draft was one of the most tenuous moments in the Union outside of the battles fought on Northern soil. Most of the concern was due to the draft riots that took place in New York in 1863. These records include more than 630 volumes of registries and are lists of individuals who registered for the draft.

U.S. Soldiers Compiled Service Records, 1861-1865: This collection contains indices of compiled military service records for volunteer Union and Confederate soldiers who served with units organized in more than 20 states. The indices also include Confederate soldiers who later served with the Union Army, Union and Confederate soldiers, Generals and staff officers, and other enlisted men not associated with a regiment. Individual records contain both military and personal details useful for locating an ancestor in time and place by tracking his movements during the course of the Civil War.

Other additions to the Civil War Collection include:

Union records

New York Civil War Muster Rolls
New York Civil War City Registers
Kansas Civil War Enlistment Papers

Confederate records

Confederate Pension Applications from AL, AR, TX and VA
Georgia Civil War Correspondence
Alabama Census of Confederate Soldiers
Register of Officers of the Confederate States Navy

To begin searching The Civil War Collection, current subscribers can visit www.ancestry.com/civilwar and new users can visit www.ancestry.com/civilwar150. For further stories and updates related to Civil War family history research, please follow Ancestry.com on Facebook and Twitter.

About Ancestry.com
Ancestry.com Inc. (NASDAQ: ACOM) is the world’s largest online family history resource, with nearly 1.4 million paying subscribers. More than 6 billion records have been added to the site in the past 14 years. Ancestry users have created more than 20 million family trees containing over 2 billion profiles. Ancestry.com has local Web sites directed at nine countries that help people discover, preserve and share their family history, including its flagship Web site at www.ancestry.com.

About the National Archives
The National Archives and Records Administration, an independent federal agency, is the nation’s record keeper. Founded in 1934, its mission is unique — to serve American democracy by safeguarding and preserving the records of our Government, ensuring that the people can discover, use, and learn from this documentary heritage. The National Archives ensures continuing access to the essential documentation of the rights of American citizens and the actions of their government. It supports democracy, promotes civic education, and facilitates historical understanding of our national experience. The National Archives meets a wide range of information needs, among them helping people to trace their families’ history, making it possible for veterans to prove their entitlement to medical and other benefits, and preserving original White House records. The National Archives carries out its mission through a nationwide network of archives, records centers, and Presidential Libraries, and on the Internet at http://www.archives.gov/.”";

http://www.ancestry.com/civilwar150


10 posted on 04/12/2011 5:19:53 AM PDT by iowamark
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Lost Cause bump


11 posted on 04/12/2011 5:23:27 AM PDT by K-Stater
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To: iowamark

There is a good cautionary tale here. My best guess, which I have repeated many times, is that if the free states have to secede from a socialist United States, it will be bloodless and the thugs will let us go. I believe that Obama and his cronies are pansies who know that they don’t know how to fight. I could be wrong, in which case it could get ugly - one of the main reasons I believe we should be cautious in choosing that option and only follow that path as a last resort, when all other means have failed or cannot reasonably be employed. My first choice is to vote them out in 2012. My second choice is to go Galt even further than I already have. Secession is a last resort.


25 posted on 04/12/2011 9:52:40 AM PDT by Pollster1 (Natural born citizen of the USA, with the birth certificate to prove it)
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