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  2. Battle of Fort Sumter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Fort_Sumter

    The Battle of Fort Sumter (also the Attack on Fort Sumter or the Fall of Fort Sumter) (April 12–13, 1861) was the bombardment of Fort Sumter near Charleston, South Carolina, by the South Carolina militia. It ended with the surrender of the fort by the United States Army, beginning the American Civil War.

  3. File:Fort Sumter, December 9th 1863, View of entrance to ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Fort_Sumter,_December...

    English: Title: Fort Sumter, December 9th 1863, View of entrance to Three Gun Bat'y Abstract/medium: 1 drawing on cream paper mounted on tan paper : black and brown ink ; 31.4 x 35.8 cm. (sheet). Date

  4. Fort Sumter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Sumter

    The museum at Fort Sumter focuses on the activities at the fort, including its construction and role during the Civil War. April 12, 2011, marked the 150th Anniversary of the start of the Civil War. There was a commemoration of the events by thousands of Civil War reenactors with encampments in the area.

  5. Floating Battery of Charleston Harbor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_Battery_of...

    Damage was assessed with reports and twenty-two photographs "showing the condition of Forts Sumter and Moultrie and of the floating battery after the surrender of the former fort" and sent to LeRoy Pope Walker, Secretary of War for the Confederate States of America, in Montgomery, Alabama on April 27, 1861. [19]

  6. Edmund Ruffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Ruffin

    In the three decades before the American Civil War he published polemics in support of states' rights and the protection of chattel slavery, earning notoriety as one of the so-called Fire-Eaters. Ruffin was present at the Battle of Fort Sumter in April 1861 and fired one cannon shot at the fort. This gave rise to the legend that Ruffin fired ...

  7. File:Bombardment of Fort Sumter.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bombardment_of_Fort...

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  8. Photographers of the American Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographers_of_the...

    The pair are credited with dozens of views of the activities of the Union Army in South Carolina during the Civil War, including Folly Island, Fort Sumter, Charleston Harbor, Lighthouse Inlet and Morris Island. [80] Haas resigned his commission due to ill health on May 25, 1863, but continued taking photographs for the War Department.

  9. Daniel Hough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Hough

    Daniel Hough (c. 1825 – April 14, 1861) was an Irish-born American soldier who became the first man to die in the American Civil War. His death was accidental, caused by a cannon that went off prematurely during a salute to the flag after the Battle of Fort Sumter. He was an Irish immigrant, having been born in County Tipperary. [1]