News from Washington: How the President’s Message is Received – 2
Important from Kentucky: Great Extent of the Earthworks at Columbus – 2
Up the Tennessee River: The Late Engagement at Pittsburgh Landing – 2-3
Trouble with the Indians in Colorado – 3
From Kentucky: Kentucky Jurymen-Communication with Nashville Resumed, etc. – 3
Monthly Report of the Dispensaries of the City of New-York – 3
Clippings from Rebel Papers: Richmond Under Martial Law – 3-4
McClellan’s Generalship – 4
Editorial: The Recent Message of the President – 4
Pillow’s Programme and Its Failure – 4-5
Gen. Butler’s Expedition – 5
Ben McCulloch – 5
Richmond Markets – 5
General News – 5
"Editorial: The Recent Message of the President – 4"
The South accomplished no small portion of the task assumed.
It had at last come to be a dogma at Washington that Slavery and Freedom must proceed, pari passu, in political influence and in territorial extent.
But in securing so much the South really secured all.
Freedom, to be sure, had come to have more States, nominally, but Texas could at any day throw four additional States into the Southern scale, while party machinery had always contrived to secure from several of the Free States representatives thoroughly wedded to the Slave Power, so that while the balance between the two sections might be theoretically preserved, the South for the last thirty years held the power with an iron grasp, and administered the Government wholly in its own interests.
It could hardly be otherwise.
The South had an institution to conserve, upon which society there rested.
The North had none, except Freedom, in its more general sense.
The latter could oppose no adequate opposition or resistance to the well-matured policy of the former.
It is almost inevitable that the lowest civilization in society should exert a paramount influence on Government, as the efforts of men seeking to gain or retain place and power are nearly always in ratio to their lack of self-respect. [!!]
The Southern idea, which is one of abject despotism, rested like a pall upon the country, stifling, as far as possible, freedom of speech and action, fillin every office with the propagandists of Slavery, and representing us at foreign courts in persons, who had no more sympathy with Freedom at home, or with the struggles of the patriots and reformers in Europe, than the tools of Asiatic Absolutism.
No wonder that we had as a nation, become the scorn and bye-word among the suffering masses of Europe, with whom, long ago, the model Republic had not only ceased to be "the hope of mankind," but had become the standing argument for riveting more closely the chains of despotism.
But the South was not content with the progress it was making, but must overthrow a Government that appeared to stand in the way of its aims.
The results are before us, and one of the most remarkable is Mr. Lincoln's declaration -- that the Government should henceforth use its power to destroy the balance between Freedom and Slavery, which for a generation had been so sedulously maintained, and to render the North irresistible, by adding to it all debatable ground, by enfranchising the slaves upon it.
This is a tremendous step for the head of the nation to take.
It would have been worth the life of the President to have uttered such sentiments two years ago.
In fact, no President could have been brought up to the point, but for the events that have recently taken place.
Where two grand principles in a nation are struggling for mastery, it is a vast stretch of courage or power to say, before any outbreak has taken place, that the influence of Government shall be thrown against one or the other -- especially that the right shall be thrown against the wrong -- for in such a case the wrong must inevitably be destroyed; while the right, being in the keeping of Providence can always afford to take the humble or subordinate position.
But after long suffering, the right can now take its own ground.
From the outset, the contest has been for the Border States.
Their possession by the South would erect it into a first-class Power, and render, it was believed, its reduction by the North impossible.
But whatever may be thought of practical difficulties, the President has placed the Government on the side of Freedom.
They will recover us the respect once felt for us in the Old World.
In dealing with this vexed subject we think he has hit the happy mean, upon which all parties in the North and all loyalists in the South can unite.
The raidcal will wish he had gone further, but will be content with the National expression in favor of Freedom.
The conservative will see that no rash or ill-advised steps will be taken: while all will admit that government sould be conservative, and not accept every ebullition of passion or expression of immature sentiment as the sober sense of the nation.
Having taken one step we should see our way clear before taking another.
There can be no doubt of the correctness of that taken by Mr. Lincoln.
It looks to the end, however long the way to it.
He does not propose to subvert, but to advance -- not to destroy till something better is ready to take the place of the old.
In this he will carry the nation and the world, and achieve the greatest work possible for humanity, by acting in harmony with correct principles, guided by a common sense which, in all the mazes and entanglements of his official position, never deserts him."
"ebullition of passion"??
Arkansas 1862 Engagements
| Date | Engagement | Military Units | Losses | Victor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 17 | Little Sugar Creek, AR | Union Army of the Southwest (Curtis ~2,000) & Confederate Army of AR (McCullough ~2,000) | Union 33-total (13-killed), Confederates 250-total (23-killed) | Inconclusive |
| Mar 6-8 | Pea Ridge, AK | Union Army of Southwest (Curtis, Sigel ~10,500)& Confederate Army of the West (Van Dorn, Price, McCulloch, Pike ~16,500) | Union 1,384 total (203 killed), Confederate 2,000 total (unknown killed) | USA (Union outnumbered) |
Virginia Engagements. 1861 - 1862 to date
| Date | Engagement | Military Units | Losses | Victor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| May 18-19 | Sewell's Point, VA | Union naval squadron vs Confederate shore artillery | 10 total | inconclusive |
| May 29- June 1 | Aquila Creek, VA | Union naval squadron vs Confederate shore artillery | 10 total | inconclusive |
| June 1 | Fairfax Court House, VA | detachments from CSA & USA armies | 8 on each side, 1 each killed | inconclusive |
| June 1 | Arlington Mills, VA | detachments from USA ( ~200 McDowell) & CSA (~9 Bonham) armies | Union 2-total (1 killed); CSA 1 wounded | inconclusive |
| June 10 | Big Bethel, VA | Union (Butler) -3,500, CSA (Magruder) -1,400 | Union 71-total (18-killed); CSA: 10-total (1-killed) | CSA (CSA outnumbered) |
| June 15 | Hooe's Ferry (near Mathias Point) VA | Union schooner Christina Keen; CSA Farmer's Fork Grays | none -- Christina Keen captured and burned | CSA |
| June 17 | Vienna, VA | Detachments from both Union & CSA armies | Union: 12-total (8 killed); CSA: none reported | CSA |
| June 27 | Matthias' Point, VA | Union gunboats ~50 vs. Confed garrison ~500 | Union: 1-killed, 4-wounded; CSA none | CSA |
| July 18 | Blackburn's Ford, VA (pre-Manassas) | Union Department of NE Virginia (McDowell, Richardson) -3,000 vs. Confederate Army of VA (Beauregard, Longstreet) -5,100 | Union: 83-total; CSA 70-total | CSA |
| July 21 | Bull Run/Manassas, VA | Union Department of NE Virginia (McDowell, Patterson) -54,000 (18,000 engaged) vs. Confederate Army of VA (Beauregard, Longstreet) -34,000 (18,000 engaged) | Union: 2,708-total (481-killed); CSA 1,897-total (387-killed) | CSA |
| Aug 7 | CSA burned Hampton, VA | Union (Butler) vs. Confederate Cavalry (Magruder) | Union unknown; Confederates unknown | CSA |
| Aug 8 | skirmish at Lovettsville, VA | Union vs. Confederate | Union unknown; Confederates 6-total | USA |
| Aug 25 | Mason's Hill, VA | Union (Lowe's observation balloon) vs. Confederate Army NVA (Longstreet, Stuart) | Union unknown; Confederates unknown | USA |
| Aug 31 | Munson's Hill, VA | Union Army of the Potomac vs. Confederate Dept of Northern VA | Union 5-total; Confederates unknown | USA |
| Sep 3 | Bailey's Cross Roads, VA | Union & Confederat detachments | Union 8-total; Confederates none | CSA |
| Sep 11 | Lewinsville, VA (McLean, Fairfax County) | Union 79th NY Highlanders (Stephens ~1,800) & Confederate 1st & 13th VA (JEB Stuart ~400) | Union 12-total (3-killed); Confederates none | CSA (CSA outnumbered) |
| Oct 21 | Ball's Bluff, VA | Union MA, NY, MI, MN & CA Infantry, RI Artillery (Stone -1,720) & Confederate VA & MS Infantry, VA cavalry & artillery (Evans -1,709) | Union 1,002-total, including Lt. Oliver Wendell Holmes (223-killed including US Senator Edward Baker R-OR)), Confederates 155-total (36-killed) | CSA |
| Nov 26 | Skirmish at Hunter's Mills, VA | Union 3rd PA Cavalry (Bell ~94) & Confederate 1st NC Cavalry (Ransome ~120) | Union 33-total (1-killed), Confederates unknown 0? | CSA |
| Dec 20 | Drainsville, VA | Union Pennsylvania Volunteers (Ord ~5,000) & Confederate VA, KY & NC Volunteers (Stuart ~4,000) | Union 71-total (?-killed), Confederates 230-total (?-killed) | USA (1st larger Union victory in VA) |
| Jan 3, 1862 | Cockpit Point, VA | Union gun boats (Wyman ) & Confederate shore battery (French ~50) | none | Inconclusive |
| Mar 8-9 | Hampton Roads, VA | Union Navy (Marsten, Worden, USS Monitor +11 ships) & Confederate Navy (Buchanan, Jones CSS Virginia +5 ships) | Union 369 total (261 killed, 7 ships sunk), Confederate 24 total (7- killed) | Inconclusive (Strategic USA) |
Summary of Civil War Engagements as of March 8, 1862:
Engagements in Confederate states:
| State | Union Victories | Confederate Victories | Inconclusive | Total Engagements |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Carolina | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| Virginia | 4 | 11 | 6 | 21 |
| North Carolina | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Florida | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Louisiana | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Tennessee | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Arkansas | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Total Engagements in CSA | 11 | 13 | 8 | 32 |
Engagements in Union states/territories:
| State | Union Victories | Confederate Victories | Inconclusive | Total Engagements |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maryland | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| West Virginia | 9 | 2 | 2 | 13 |
| Missouri | 11 | 9 | 1 | 21 |
| New Mexico | 0 | 7 | 0 | 7 |
| Kentucky | 4 | 3 | 2 | 9 |
| Oklahoma | 0 | 3 | 0 | 3 |
| Total Engagements in Union | 25 | 24 | 6 | 55 |
| Total Engagements to date | 36 | 37 | 14 | 87 |
Total casualties over 45,000 including over 4,000 KIA.