January 1861: American Civil War | Cotton South secedes | Fort Sumter & Fort Pickney | First Action

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  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2024

Комментарии • 62

  • @brandonkoser7044
    @brandonkoser7044 Год назад +16

    This is fantastic. Would love a series of the entire war like this

  • @jonathandumigan8041
    @jonathandumigan8041 Год назад +15

    Love it!! Keep em' coming!! Btw I really like how you use maps to show us the layout of Towns and Cities and positioning of troops.

  • @shellnexus1
    @shellnexus1 Год назад +2

    I’ve started listening to a Civil War podcast a few weeks ago and one of the episodes covers this topic, so thank you for helping me visualize it!

  • @mandeepdhaliwal8607
    @mandeepdhaliwal8607 Год назад +2

    Hey very great channel, please keep up the good work on the civil war series

  • @meanstavrakas1044
    @meanstavrakas1044 Год назад +3

    Beaufort Arsenal is a Church with a Courtyard and is shaped like a fortress. I live 5 miles from it.

  • @tootle_soup
    @tootle_soup Год назад +7

    It’s always a treat when you post videos, thank you, my morning started out great! 🥰🎃

  • @AKAKiddo
    @AKAKiddo 9 месяцев назад +1

    As I'm watching this I can't help but thinking that we're getting close to this situation again.

  • @dwayne7356
    @dwayne7356 Год назад +14

    I failed to realize that James Buchanan lack of actions or what actions he did take aided in the start of the Civil War. I also didn't realize that United States didn't control the other forts in the harbor.

    • @JeffreytheLibrarian
      @JeffreytheLibrarian  Год назад +6

      In many ways, Buchanan probably responded to the crisis in the same way that many previous presidents might have. Some things that stick out though are that he was a northern that didn't stand for the union after push came to shove, he had a real crook as his secretary of war, and his administration was essentially feuding with itself over how to respond to the crisis.

    • @mrmackey8776
      @mrmackey8776 Год назад +1

      They should’ve removed the troops from the fort

    • @gumbyshrimp2606
      @gumbyshrimp2606 Месяц назад

      They should’ve removed the troops from the fort

    • @svenrio8521
      @svenrio8521 Месяц назад

      ​@@gumbyshrimp2606Double post?

  • @majorbloodnok6659
    @majorbloodnok6659 Год назад +5

    Thank you for this breakdown of the final steps to the Civil War.

  • @Jesse-cx4si
    @Jesse-cx4si Год назад +1

    Nice work, JtL!

  • @moach57
    @moach57 Год назад +3

    Great video! Love this breakdown.

  • @amotaba
    @amotaba Год назад +4

    Excellent video

  • @maryellenmeyer2702
    @maryellenmeyer2702 Год назад +2

    Another great RUclips
    Thanks, Jeff

  • @shorewall
    @shorewall Год назад +5

    I love this calm and dispassionate analysis of source documents. The Civil War is often emotionalized, but this video allows the outside observer to judge events in a more rational manner.
    I think it's easy to feel bad for the Southern underdog, and have gripes with the Federal government. But when it comes down to it, the Civil War started because Southern Elites were worried that they would lose their slave based economy, and the common southerner was roped into the conflict to fight on their behalf.
    And as easy as it is to say, just balkanize, talking about New Orleans being the mouth of the Mississippi River, and the threat of being divided against each other, like European nations are even to this day in the EU, shows why the Civil War was necessary to fight, and to win.
    Heck, even if the South won independence, that wouldn't have been the last war between North and South, and the South always had less people, and less industry. There would have been another war, and another, until the South ran out of men or capitulated.

    • @JeffreytheLibrarian
      @JeffreytheLibrarian  Год назад +2

      Thank you! A really fascinating argument against slavery at this time, made by Lincoln himself, was that if one group could be enslaved, then other groups could also be enslaved. It was a duty to eliminate all slavery to protect everyone from it. In a sense, the southern slave economy was a threat to the whole country, because it could be turned on any group at any time. Yes, it's easy to see the United States and the Confederacy having future conflicts over the continent, much like European powers.

    • @gunshotlagoon922
      @gunshotlagoon922 Год назад

      @@JeffreytheLibrarian Exactly right. Slavery was also a big overall burden on the US economy and prevented it from reaching its highest potentials of national prosperity moving forward. It's absolutely no coincidence that in 1871, just several years before abolishing the whole institution, the US finally surpassed Britain as the world's largest economy, and has remained so ever since. It was the best decision to get rid of that half free, half slave hybrid of a republic, especially with all that territory westward that hadn't been settled yet. European powers would've continued to take advantage of the divisiveness.

  • @ronaldburkett3301
    @ronaldburkett3301 Год назад +1

    Good job! Our history, although not always pretty, it is ours and can not be changed. If only we can learn.

  • @Ethan54136
    @Ethan54136 Год назад +3

    I couldn't imagine being stationed at one of those cut-off forts. For months these people stationed there had bought food from nearby markets, attended church and local events. Now they are surrounded by hostility and the people they were just interacting with are now enemies. They probably hoped it might be a short affair but as the weeks went on they would soon realize they are cut off with little hope of escape or reinforcement.

  • @Squatch_Rider66
    @Squatch_Rider66 Год назад +2

    I watch moments like this and wonder if the involved parties would do anything differently if they knew what tragedy was coming down the road

    • @JeffreytheLibrarian
      @JeffreytheLibrarian  Год назад +1

      I think some folks knew they were playing with fire. However, many were pretty sure there would be no bloodshed.

    • @johnaugsburger6192
      @johnaugsburger6192 Год назад +1

      They didn't know, and didn't care. Ignorance and arrogance. It's happening in front of our eyes at this very moment.

  • @TheEmperorsChampion964
    @TheEmperorsChampion964 Год назад

    I really enjoy how you show everything on the maps and even show the topographical maps. Seeing the terrain certainly helps me to understand why certain decisions were made

  • @robbieg416
    @robbieg416 Год назад

    This was great!

  • @taihalpern7342
    @taihalpern7342 Год назад +1

    more census videos please

  • @DoyleHargraves
    @DoyleHargraves Год назад

    I spent every summer camping at Fort Pickens for 15 years as a kid. I'm also a civil war buff.
    Why the confederates didn't take Fort Pickens in 1861, i do not understand......

  • @johnaugsburger6192
    @johnaugsburger6192 Год назад

    January 1861, was a busy month.

  • @crippledcrow2384
    @crippledcrow2384 Год назад

    The steamer Star of the West had supplies and soldiers below deck which broke the agreement South Carolina had with Lincoln to not send reinforcements to Sumter and not to transfer troops to the fort. Lincoln forced the firing on Sumter by Southern forces.

    • @JeffreytheLibrarian
      @JeffreytheLibrarian  Год назад +1

      I think a lot of folks, however, would argue that the Star of the West operation was James Buchanan actually trying to do something positive for United States soldiers who were besieged.

    • @gunshotlagoon922
      @gunshotlagoon922 Год назад

      Buchanan was still president when they fired upon the Star of the West. Rebel forces were doing everything they could to dissolve the union asap before Lincoln's inauguration.

  • @2011Matz
    @2011Matz Год назад

    Well done. My great grandfather was stationed at Fort Pickens in 1864. During the period between the secession of SC and the firing on Sumter, there was a 4 month opportunity to settle accounts. Or at least start negotiations. After all the US government funded so much in the Southern infrastructure. But the southern plantocracy was pleased with their ultimatum. Fire Eaters. They then sent delegates to all the other slave states to argue slavery was worth sucession, which kind of undercuts the often heard claim that the war wasn't about slavery.

    • @JeffreytheLibrarian
      @JeffreytheLibrarian  Год назад

      I imagine it must have been very surreal to be stationed at a place like that. I think a lot of folks were imagining (even though reality was showing otherwise) that the issue would resolve itself.

  • @amotaba
    @amotaba Год назад +2

    Like

  • @BA-gn3qb
    @BA-gn3qb Год назад +1

    If they took over the airfield, we'd all say Y'all.

    • @JeffreytheLibrarian
      @JeffreytheLibrarian  Год назад

      It's a good thing the Wright Brothers were from Ohio. That way us northerners could preserve an ambiguous "you" for both singular and plural.

    • @scottkrater2131
      @scottkrater2131 Год назад

      ​@@JeffreytheLibrarian We have our slang in the North too. Growing up in New Jersey, we didn't say y'all. In NJ, NY it's you's guys, instead of y'all. Not sure of the proper spelling of you's.

  • @bswearer
    @bswearer 10 месяцев назад

    No states were ever "out" of the USA. In reality, there were areas of the country in which open rebellion existed.

    • @JeffreytheLibrarian
      @JeffreytheLibrarian  10 месяцев назад +2

      You may be right. However, they were "out" enough that:
      A) They raised armies against the United States.
      B) They did not participate in the election of 1864.
      C) They established a separate government with a president, congress, and constitution.

    • @bswearer
      @bswearer 10 месяцев назад

      @JeffreytheLibrarian sure, they raised armies to engage in rebellion against the USA. And sure, they chose not to participate in the elections of 1862 or 1864. That violated the Constitution's requirement to provide a republican form of government for the people of the state and suppressed rights of US citizens to participate in said elections. And sure, they violated the Constitution by making treaties with other states. Again, they never "left." They never ceased being part of the USA, no matter what they delusionally believed. They were in rebellion. But we can say that these states were temporarily beyond the control of the federal government in terms of the enforcement of the Constitution. That, of course, eventually changed as the federal government put down the rebellion and restored order with governments in compliance with the Constitution. Calhounians and neo-confederates will make the "two countries" argument based on the theory that "secession" (unilateral withdrawal) was a constitutional right, which just isn't true, but such delusions shouldn't be entertained let alone given the appearance of legitimacy.

  • @kelleclark
    @kelleclark Год назад

    BS! We didn't build these....WORLDWIDE Star forts all look basically the same and are WAY older than claimed by currently 'historians'!

  • @timfify
    @timfify 4 месяца назад

    This sounds a lot like MAGA or Tea Party and or Trumpys

  • @paulrodgers252
    @paulrodgers252 Год назад

    civil War? War is not civil nor it waged by civil Forces; War is a military Act waged by military Forces;
    There is civil or military; to get to War one must go through military in the dictionary;

  • @raigarmullerson4838
    @raigarmullerson4838 Год назад +7

    "war of Northern aggression" my a..

    • @LeCharles07
      @LeCharles07 Год назад

      Robert Toombs, Secretary of State for the CSA said of attaching Fort Sumter, "Mr. President, at this time it is suicide, murder, and will lose us every friend in the North. You will wantonly strike a hornet's nest which extends from mountain to ocean, and legions now quiet will swarm out and sting us to death. It is unnecessary; it puts us in the wrong; it is fatal."
      He was right.

    • @crippledcrow2384
      @crippledcrow2384 Год назад +4

      That's exactly what it was. Don't lie to yourself.