From
“Lincoln 365,” by Arnold Kunst
April 12
In the high-stakes run-up to the Civil War immediately after the
inauguration, before he knew where the White House bathrooms were, Lincoln
faced a constitutional crisis of the first order. It centered on Fort Sumter
and came in the form of a letter from the fort’s commandant who said they were
faced with dwindling supplies. The situation on the face of it looked like
heads Jefferson Davis wins, tails Abraham Lincoln loses. Lincoln had two
options, the one worse than the other. First, he could simply pull the garrison
out, but that was utterly repellant because the North would be seen to be
acceding to superior might, surrendering what was a federal installation at the
point of a gun. The other alternative was to send in reinforcements, presumably
to shoot it out. But that military solution was equally impossible. For one
thing, the U.S. Army in the spring of 1861 had no more than 16,000 troops, and
most of them had been transferred to the northwest portion of the country to
provide protection for settlers heading west [sent there by secretaries of war
in the 1850’s who were southerners anticipating the possibility of just such a
situation]. Furthermore, not only was the Charleston harbor mined but the fort
itself was surrounded by artillery manned by South Carolinians just itching to
open up.
After careful deliberation the new president arrived at a third option:
he ordered a ship fitted out with food and medicine to sail as soon as possible
for Charleston. He then notified the South Carolina governor that that was what
he was doing.
That simple decision turned the tables completely. It was now, heads
Abraham Lincoln wins, tails Jefferson Davis loses. Lincoln, given a choice
between withdrawing or reinforcing the garrison, had, by some sorcerer’s
incantation, arrived at a third alternative: send food and medicine to re-stock
the garrison. Now Jefferson Davis was presented with two choices, but for him
there was to be no third option. The South could either allow the humanitarian
ship entry to the fort and thus prolong indefinitely the unbearable sense of
crisis, or accede to the bombardment because those South Carolinian hotheads
hadn't the patience for any other course of action. So when the South did fire
on Fort Sumter, Lincoln lost a fort he couldn't maintain anyway, but gained an
enormous psychological advantage in that thousands flocked to the colors with
the following open-ended mindset: ‘they started it, and we’re going to finish
it.’ Lincoln may have been an inexperienced prairie lawyer, but proved to be a
consummate strategist. He also appeared to be remarkably cool under pressure.
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