transcript
Speaker 1:
[00:03] It's the early hours of April 12th, 1861, and all is quiet in Charleston Harbour, South Carolina. Under a moonless sky, the ramparts of Fort Sumter rise like a tooth in the middle of the bay's black water. Inside the fort, a Union officer walks the parapets with slow, deliberate steps, the grit of broken brick crunching beneath his boots. Lanternlight wabers along the gun embrasures, catching the dull curves of cannons that have not been fired in months. Across the water, he can make out the faint glow of Confederate signal lamps flashing between Morris Island and Fort Johnson in small, sharp pulses in the dark. The officer knows what they mean. Positions have been checked, fuses primed, orders confirmed. He also knows that the final ultimatum hour has already come and gone, meaning negotiation has failed. Now, with food inside the fort almost depleted, and the harbor too closely ringed to escape, all that remains is the wait, and the knowledge that if a single shot is fired, the division may split the country clean in two. Just before half past four, as the officer greets another soldier, a sudden bugle call shivers across the water from Charleston. Thin, but unmistakable. The officer freezes, hand on the cold stone, watching the horizon. Then, from Fort Johnson, a single shell arcs upward in a slow, eerie parabola of orange lights rising over the bay. He watches as it hangs for a moment at the top of its climb, sparks trailing behind like the tail of a comet before beginning its fall. In the quiet before the first blast lands, the officer draws one sharp breath. He understands that this shell is not meant to kill. It is a signal announcing that every Confederate battery in the harbor is now cleared to open fire. When it hits, there will be no going back, no more compromise, no more time. The shell drops towards the fort like the end of a long-held pause, and as its lights flickers out, the Civil War begins. American Civil War started with a single explosive question, that of whether a nation built on slavery could survive without it. Several southern states chose to protect the institution that underpinned their economy and social order at any cost. But when that necessitated their leaving the Union, the conflict that followed did not unfold along a single front. It tore across the continent, from dusty towns in the far west to river ports along the Mississippi, and from quiet New England villages to the cotton fields of the deep south. Millions were drawn into it and hundreds of thousands would die. In a country barely 80 years old, the scale of the bloodshed was almost beyond comprehension. But for everyone who survived the conflicts, the soldiers, families, enslaved people, and politicians, the war would leave nothing unchanged. So, how did a democratic republic fracture so completely? Why did the question of slavery push the country beyond compromise and into catastrophe? And how did a war that began over the survival of the Union become a revolution for freedom itself? I'm John Hopkins. From the Noiser Podcast Network, this is part one of a special two-part Short History Of The American Civil War. Right from the very first days of the Republic, the question of slavery has proved singularly divisive. When the Constitution is written in the late 18th century, its authors argue fiercely over the issue. They reach uneasy agreements, but they do so without ever fully resolving the problem, or even naming it directly. The word slavery itself is avoided, replaced by careful euphemisms that reflect the volatility of the subject. By the early 19th century, barely a generation after winning independence from Britain, the young nation is already pulling itself in opposing directions. The North is becoming a world of free labor, small farms and fast growing industry, while the South builds its wealth and identity on plantation slavery and the forced labor of millions. The early agreements over the issue just about hold the union together, but they also plant the seeds of future conflict. As the country expands westward, every new piece of territory forces the same bitter question back to the surface. Will slavery spread or be stopped? Caroline Janney is Professor of History of the American Civil War and Director of the John L. Nau Centre for Civil War History.
Speaker 2:
[06:03] The debates that were occurring during the Constitutional Convention about slavery and whether or not slavery would continue to exist and what the representation would look like in Congress. Those had been settled or at least compromised enough during the Constitutional Convention. But the issue comes up again in 1820. And the persistent issue for the United States is going to be westward expansion and the role that slavery will play in western expansion.
Speaker 1:
[06:35] After Alabama joins the Union in 1819, free states and slave states are carefully balanced. There are 11 of each. And the balance matters because it means slaveholding states and free states have equal power in Congress. But by now, the United States is expanding rapidly westward. New settlers are moving into territories that were once frontier lands. And when enough Americans live in one place, they can apply to become a state. In 1820, one of those territories is Missouri. And Missouri's application to join the Union brings a problem that can no longer be ignored.
Speaker 2:
[07:16] Missouri comes up and it's going to come in as a slaveholding state. It's going to tip the balance in favor of slaveholders in Congress. And this is something that the free states to the north just cannot abide.
Speaker 1:
[07:30] To prevent that imbalance, Congress reaches for compromise once again. A new free state, Maine, is carved out of Massachusetts and admitted alongside Missouri, preserving the political balance. But lawmakers go further.
Speaker 2:
[07:47] And then there's a line drawn across the country that says slavery cannot exist above this line. And that's going to hold true until we get to the war with Mexico. And the war with Mexico is going to be that precipitous moment. So this is 1846 to 1848. And when the United States takes from Mexico this huge chunk of land, now the question of whether slavery will be allowed in that territory is on the table again.
Speaker 1:
[08:22] By the 1850s, that question explodes into national crisis. When Congress passes a law allowing settlers themselves to vote on whether new territories will permit slavery. It's a principle known as popular sovereignty. On paper, it sounds democratic, but in practice, it turns the future of entire regions into a bitter competition. In Kansas, the stakes are particularly high, since the state sits directly on the fault line. It lies just west of Missouri, a slave state, and directly north of the line drawn by Congress to separate free territory from where slavery is allowed. When lawmakers open Kansas to settlement in the early 1850s, the popular sovereignty rule means that the settlers themselves will vote on whether they will be free or slaveholding. And that decision turns Kansas into a prize worth fighting for. If it enters the Union as a free state, it threatens to surround Missouri with free territory. If it enters as a slave state, it could open the door to slavery spreading further west. Understanding what is at stake, both sides rush in to claim it. Pro-slavery settlers move in from neighboring Missouri, while their anti-slavery counterparts come down from the north, all determined to shape the outcome. And they do so through violence, turning the fight over the state's future into a miniature civil war of raids, arson, and bloodshed. The conflict, known as Bleeding Kansas, does not involve formal warfare between standing armies, but is a brutal campaign of intimidation and reprisal. Armed bands and self-styled militias cross the border to stuff ballot boxes, threaten voters, burn settlements, and attack rival communities. Homes are destroyed, families driven out, and towns like Lawrence, founded by anti-slavery settlers, are looted and set alight.
Speaker 2:
[10:32] Between 1854 and 1859, out in Kansas, there's blood that's being spilled. Somewhere between 50 and 200 people are killed over the question of slavery in the territories.
Speaker 1:
[10:47] But the crisis isn't just confined to the frontier. For decades, enslaved people have been resisting their bondage in the most direct way possible, by escaping. Some flee north into free states. Others hide or move along informal networks of safe houses and sympathetic communities known as the Underground Railroad. By the mid-19th century, thousands have taken that risk. So, when Congress passes the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, it reaches deep into the streets and homes of the northern states. The new law requires citizens everywhere, even in states where slavery is illegal, to assist in the capture and return of people who have escaped enslavement. And for many northerners, this is the moment when slavery stops being a distant southern institution and becomes a personal moral test.
Speaker 2:
[11:45] The notion that the Fugitive Slave Act makes anyone who so much as gives a cup of water to an enslaved person who has managed to escape makes them culpable. This is what is going to really drive animosity and the split in the country.
Speaker 1:
[12:02] For some enslaved people, the courts seem to offer another path to freedom. One of these pioneers is Dred Scott. An enslaved man, he is taken into territories where slavery is illegal. First in the Free State of Illinois, then in the Wisconsin Territory where Congress has explicitly banned slavery. Under long-standing legal precedent, Scott believes that living on free soil should make him free. But when he sues for his freedom, his case raises a number of fundamental questions that the nation has avoided for decades. If slavery is prohibited in certain places, does residence there free an enslaved person? Does the law follow the land or the enslaver? And if Congress can ban slavery in the territories, where does federal power over the institution actually end? Those questions make their way to the highest court in the land. In 1857, the Supreme Court, dominated by a pro-slavery majority, issues its ruling.
Speaker 2:
[13:13] The Dred Scott decision is a Supreme Court decision that talks about whether or not you can take an enslaved person into a free territory, and that person would still be a slave. And the decision says that, yes, you can take your enslaved property into a free territory or state, Wisconsin in this case, and they remain enslaved.
Speaker 1:
[13:37] The decision declares that no Black American, enslaved or free, can be a citizen of the United States. And that Congress has no authority to restrict slavery's expansion into the territories at all. But it also marks the moment when many northerners cease to believe in the neutrality of the country's vital institutions. The presidency is in the hands of a party closely aligned with the slave-holding South. Congress appears dominated by southern interests, and even the Supreme Court seems sympathetic to them.
Speaker 3:
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Speaker 1:
[15:57] For some abolitionists, this sense that the political system is now permanently rigged in favor of slavery leads to a dangerous conclusion. If they can't end slavery through the law, they'll have to do it by force. No one embodies that belief more fully than John Brown. A white, itinerant abolitionist who has already been involved in violent clashes over slavery in Kansas, he is convinced that slavery is a sin that must be destroyed, even if it takes bloodshed to do it. To his supporters, he is a prophet willing to act when others only speak. But for slave-holding Southerners, Brown represents a long-standing fear that has haunted them for generations. They have seen what can happen when enslaved people rise up in large numbers. Back in the 1790s on the island of Sandamang, enslaved men and women launched a revolution that destroyed the plantation system and overthrew French rule. What is now known as the Haitian Revolution ended with the creation of the first black republic in the Americas and the violent deaths or flight of much of the white planter class. Even in the American South of the mid-1800s, these events live on as a very real warning. Any sign of resistance quickly fuels rumors of conspiracy and revolt. The paranoia is amplified by the fact that enslaved people vastly outnumber white families in many regions. And slave holding power depends on constant control, surveillance and force. John Brown appears to confirm the fear that abolition will not remain a matter of speeches or petitions. He believes that enslaved people should be armed and that it is the moral duty of their free allies to help them. And in October 1859, Brown puts that belief into action when he leads a small armed raid on a federal weapons reserve at Harpers Ferry, Virginia.
Speaker 2:
[18:07] He had this grand plan to seize the arsenal, the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, and gather a band of enslaved people and march into Virginia and be a band of liberation.
Speaker 1:
[18:20] The raid fails and Brown is captured. But the impact of his attempt is seismic. For slaveholding Southerners, Harpers Ferry feels like the most concrete warning yet that their entire society could be overthrown by violence. Worse still, they fear the federal government might stand aside while it happens. Even though Brown is swiftly tried and hanged under Virginia law, it's the reaction beyond the trial that unsettles the slaveholding South. While some in the North denounce Brown as a fanatic, he is also mourned there, and his actions defended, even openly praised. Church bells toll on the day of his execution, and prominent abolitionists portray him as a martyr. At the same time, newspapers argue over whether his actions were criminal or righteous. To Southerners, this sounds less like the universal condemnation they're after, and worryingly like sympathy for violent opposition. And since years of Northern resistance to enforcing slave laws has already weakened trust in federal authority, Harper's Ferry now exposes just how limited power in Washington may actually be. Across the South, many now believe that the institution of slavery on which their economy, social hierarchy, and political dominance depend is in real danger.
Speaker 2:
[19:52] And this is what stokes and galvanizes a lot of attention, and this is when we start hearing more war cries from the slaveholding states. Militias start drilling again, men coming together and preparing for war. So we start to see this in the fall of 1859, and certainly in 1860, when we have an impending presidential election coming up.
Speaker 1:
[20:21] When Republican candidate, Abraham Lincoln runs for president in 1860, on a platform that opposes the expansion of slavery into new Western territories, Southern politicians treat his campaign as further proof of the existential threat to their way of life. At this point, the Republican Party is a new force in American politics, united by opposition to the spread of slavery. It is ideologically distinct from the Democratic Party, which, while being known today for notably different values, in the 1860s, prioritizes state rights and the defense of slavery and the preservation of the existing order. Those in the South understand that Lincoln isn't an abolitionist, but they also believe that if slavery cannot expand, it cannot survive.
Speaker 2:
[21:12] It's only the second time that the Republicans will have run a presidential candidate. And the Republican platform says no extension of slavery into the territories. Slavery cannot extend any farther than it already exists, but we will protect slavery where it does exist already.
Speaker 1:
[21:29] When Lincoln wins the election on the 6th of November, 1860, without carrying a single Southern state, many Southerners conclude that they have lost their influence in the Union for good. Almost immediately, state governments begin to seriously discuss leaving the United States altogether and forming a new country of their own.
Speaker 2:
[21:51] Immediately following Lincoln's election, the state of South Carolina will vote to secede. They vote unanimously in December of 1860. And, you know, it's worth keeping in mind that this is the real breakdown of democracy, that one state decides it doesn't like the outcome of a presidential election, and the response is to leave the Union. And very quickly, six other states follow suit. You have seven deep South states by February of 1861, who have agreed that the Republican Party is such a threat to the institution of slavery, that they need to leave the country rather than stay in it.
Speaker 1:
[22:36] In these conventions, secession is framed as a defensive act, and a way to protect slavery, racial hierarchy, and political power from a federal government they now see as hostile. Later generations will speak in broader terms about states' rights, but in 1860 and 61, the right being defended is specific and central. It is the right to enslave people and to carry that system into the future. South Carolina moves first, voting unanimously to leave the Union on the 20th of December 1860. Just six weeks after Lincoln's election. Within weeks, other deep south states follow. Mississippi secedes in January 1861, then Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas. By early February, seven have left the United States and declare themselves a new nation. The decision to secede has immediate consequences. As southern states leave the Union, they seize federal forts, arsenals and custom houses within their own borders. They form a new government of their own, the Confederate States of America, and begin preparing to defend it.
Speaker 2:
[23:52] In 1860, there were 16 slaveholding states. And as of February of 1861, only seven of those states had left the Union. And so one thing they're envisioning is that they need to get the rest of the slaveholding states to join the fold. If they don't have Virginia, which is the largest and most populous and has the most industry of all the slaveholding states, this could be a problem for building a future nation. If they don't have Tennessee and North Carolina, similar sorts of issues. But they are also already thinking about how they situate themselves within the world. And so they're thinking about diplomatic relations with England, with Spain, with France. How do we appear legitimate? What is going to be our place on the world stage?
Speaker 1:
[24:48] Southern leaders believe they have leverage. The South supplies the majority of the world's cotton. And they assume that economic power will translate into diplomatic recognition abroad. But those expectations of international alliances and trade are never realized. Global leaders fail to recognize a breakaway nation built on the institution of slavery that many of them have already banned. And the United States government for its part maintains that secession is illegal. Back home, Lincoln's government insists that any federal property still belongs to the United States, including any of the forts, arsenals, custom houses and mints that were built, staffed and paid for before secession. Nowhere is that standoff clearer than in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina. A small United States Army garrison occupies Fort Sumter, a federal fort built to defend the harbor. Around it, newly formed Confederate forces made up of state militia and volunteers control the shoreline and have positioned artillery to command the water. For weeks, the two sides argue over what should happen next. Confederate leaders demand that the Union abandon the fort, insisting it now sits inside the territory of a foreign nation. Washington refuses, maintaining that secession is illegal and that Fort Sumter remains federal property. As negotiations stall, supplies inside the fort begin to run dangerously low, and the political crisis narrows to a single, unavoidable question. Who will give way first?
Speaker 2:
[26:32] In early April, Lincoln gets word that the men in the fort are starving, and he needs to send supplies. And so he sends a ship that has ostensibly no weapons on it. It's food and material. And the Confederate government says, this is sitting in the middle of Charleston Harbor. Charleston is in South Carolina. South Carolina is in the Confederacy. And this is an act of war if you send a warship. And Lincoln says, sorry, this is what I'm going to do. And on the night of April 12, when that ship is just off the horizon, then the batteries around Charleston open fire on the fort.
Speaker 1:
[27:13] After 34 hours of bombardment, the shelling finally stops when a white flag is raised over Fort Sumter. The Union is allowed to evacuate peacefully without a single casualty. It is a quiet beginning to what will become the bloodiest conflict on American soil.
Speaker 2:
[27:31] It's then what happens next that is the spark that ignites everything. And that is on April 15, Lincoln will call for 75,000 troops to put down the rebellion. And this is what the Confederacy sees as a declaration of war. Jefferson Davis, who is the president of the Confederacy, he points to this. He says, calling for troops to put down a rebellion is an act of war. We only wish to be let alone, but now you have started it.
Speaker 1:
[28:03] Once the call for troops is made, the scale of the crisis becomes unmistakable. Many of the southern states have not seceded, and so would be compelled to send troops from their own territories to quash the rebellion. But they're not prepared to do that, not in their own backyard. The Union and the New Confederacy have to transform themselves almost overnight from political entities into wartime nations. Within days, governors flood both Washington and Richmond, Virginia, now the political center of the Confederacy, with telegrams offering volunteer regiments. Young men pour into recruiting offices in cities and towns, even in crossroad hamlets, swept up by patriotic fervor and the expectation that the war will be short. Newspapers on both sides promise a quick victory. Communities host rallies and marching bands play in the street. But beneath that excitement lies a more sobering reality. Neither side has the infrastructure or the military bureaucracy to handle the tidal wave of untrained men suddenly under arms.
Speaker 2:
[29:17] So men are rushing to enlist. They're enlisting in state level companies, and then those companies are being turned over to the United States or to the Confederacy as the case may be. Washington, DC is absolutely abuzz with people. So many soldiers arrive in Washington, DC ready to fight on behalf of the Union that they're sleeping on the floor of the Capitol. They are being put in any room, in any building, because there aren't tents yet. They simply don't have the material to support armies of this size.
Speaker 1:
[29:54] As these armies begin to form, the unprecedented scale of the operation becomes apparent almost immediately. Volunteers turn up with mismatched weapons and homemade uniforms, drilling in fields that turn to mud beneath their boots, and sleeping in makeshift quarters with scant provisions. While northern industry gives the Union an early advantage in producing rifles, cannons, and supplies, the Confederacy quickly responds with improvisation, building arsenals from scratch, and relying on the sheer enthusiasm of its recruits. Families on both sides meanwhile watch sons and husbands march away, expecting them home by Christmas. And even before the first major battles are fought, the movement of these new armies creates an unexpected and transformative problem. As Union forces advance into slave-holding territory, enslaved people living near roads, railways, and military camps begin fleeing towards their lines. But when they arrive, they force Union commanders to confront a question Washington has not yet answered. Are these escapees still someone's property? Or are they something else now? It's late May, 1861, in Eastern Virginia. Night settles thick and airless over the mouth of the James River, its surface barely rippling beneath a sliver of moon. Three enslaved men, Shepherd Mallory, Frank Baker, and James Townsend, push a small wooden skiff away from the shore. Mallory checks over his shoulder constantly as they row. Behind him looms the silhouette of a Confederate work camp. Only hours earlier they've been laboring there. Now their tools have been abandoned, and they've begun their bold bid for escape. Each stroke of the oars is a quiet gamble with their lives, but it's a risk Mallory and his friends are willing to take, if freedom is the reward. Ahead is Fortress Monroe, a Union stronghold rising out of the water. The men row in silence, their shirts soaked, their breaths controlled, knowing that discovery will mean a return to bondage or worse. Eventually the skiff grates against the timbers of the pier. This is it. Mallory holds the boat steady as the other two climb out cautiously before joining them on the gangway. There, a pair of startled Union sentries lower their rifles. The three men stand before them, exhausted but determined. Mallory clears his throat, head slightly bowed, and asks to see the Union man in charge of the fort. For a moment the guards hesitate, staring at him. Helping these men may be against the law, but sending them back will only play into the hands of the enemy. But then one guard nods, and the men are guided towards the stone fortress. Inside, in a low lit room, every surface strewn with maps and papers, General Benjamin Butler listens as the three men explain what awaits them if they are sent back. Aside from the obvious punishments for escaping, they will be forced to labor for the Confederate Army, building batteries aimed at the Union itself. They appeal to the Union general to take them in, to protect them. Mallory holds his breath as Butler paces, considering his options. This whole war is still new enough that policy has not yet caught up with reality. Returning these men would mean strengthening the enemy. Keeping them would mean defying the laws that bind the country Butler is trying to save. Finally, Butler stops pacing and appraises the men. For Mallory, it is the first time in years, possibly in his whole adult life, that a white man has looked at him with anything like care or sympathy. He dares to hope. And then, Butler nods. What he suggests is not a perfect plan, but it is the only answer that makes sense in the messy logic of this growing conflict. Since Virginia has left the Union, he says, it is now a foreign nation. As such, the three men are property taken from a foreign enemy, and can thus be defined as contraband of war rather than fugitives. It is illegal fiction, hastily improvised, but it is potentially life-changing, and it might just work. As the reality of Butler's actions settles over them, Mallory and his comrades understand that they have just opened a floodgate that will unleash a tidal wave. Soon, more escapees will follow. And though emancipation is still a distant hope, the Union has now passed a crucial milestone in shaping the future for the enslaved people of the nation.
Speaker 2:
[35:38] Now the phrase contraband had been used since at least the War of 1812, but this is a new notion of people, of enslaved labor being claimed by the United States as a way of refusing to give back that labor force to the Confederacy. There had been other generals who tried to free enslaved people in Missouri and in South Carolina. That doesn't stick at first, but Butler's contraband policy does. And by the time we get to August of 1861, Congress has passed something called the Confiscation Act that allows the United States Army to confiscate any labor that's being used on behalf of the enemy army, which includes the labor of enslaved people.
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Speaker 1:
[37:32] As the first volunteers take the field in the summer of 1861, many Americans still believe the war will be short and settled by a single decisive clash. Politicians, newspapers, generals and even soldiers speak confidently of one great battle that will restore order and send everyone home. That illusion collapses just weeks after the war begins, when the first major battle is fought at a railroad junction just outside Washington, DC.
Speaker 2:
[38:00] The Confederates would call it Manassas. The United States would call it Bull Run.
Speaker 1:
[38:06] The battle is short, taking place on a single summer's day in July 1861. But it is anything but minor. Nearly 60,000 men are engaged, and by nightfall around 4,800 have been killed, wounded or captured. Civilians watch from nearby hills, treating the fighting as a spectacle.
Speaker 2:
[38:30] People expect that this will be a one-and-done, one big battle and the war will be over. And the Confederates win that battle. They rout the United States troops and them rushing back into Washington, DC. And it becomes clear at that point that this certainly is going to be more than one battle, and it could potentially be a longer war than anyone had imagined.
Speaker 1:
[38:59] As 1861 gives way to 1862, the war spreads far beyond the early flashpoints of Virginia and the eastern seaboard. What had begun as a sectional crisis now opens on multiple fronts across the vast interior of the country, with battles occurring in Tennessee's river valleys, along the Mississippi, through Missouri's border towns and across the contested hills of Kentucky. These early campaigns are pivotal. They determine who controls the great rivers and rail corridors that bind the continent together, and whether either side can sustain armies at the scale this war is already demanding.
Speaker 2:
[39:41] So the railroad is one of the unsung ways in which the Civil War was absolutely a modern war. In that first battle, using the railroad to get Confederate troops from the Shenandoah Valley to that junction at Manassas, the first time that a railroad had been used in a war. And this will become part and parcel of how the war is fought, of moving troops, of moving supplies. The railroad and the telegraph, more than any other technology, transformed the war and helped make the scale as large as it was.
Speaker 1:
[40:21] Armies swell into the hundreds of thousands, devouring food and demanding ammunition, horses and medical supplies at a rate no one predicted. Rail junctions become targets, and whole regions are reshaped by the movement of armies. Civilians find themselves on the front lines, as towns change hands repeatedly, and their homes are turned into hospitals, depots, camps and headquarters. By mid-1862, both sides begin to grasp that this is a sprawling national struggle stretching hundreds of miles in every direction. And as the war expands, so too do the consequences of every decision made in Washington. President Lincoln, who had promised to preserve the Union, now faces a conflict that is already reshaping the nation's laws, its economy and its moral centre, whether he is ready for it or not. Early in the war, Lincoln's goal was limited to preserving the Union. Framing the conflict as a fight for national survival rather than a crusade against slavery seemed the only way to hold together a fragile coalition of uneasy allies. Slavery, he argued, was a separate issue. As president and as a lawyer, he believed the Constitution gave him little authority to interfere with it where it already existed.
Speaker 2:
[41:51] Lincoln's views on slavery as a moral issue don't change. He always believes that slavery is wrong. But as a lawyer, as someone who believes firmly in the Constitution, he believes that he is bound to uphold the Constitution and that slavery is protected by the Constitution. So he is looking for ways around that.
Speaker 1:
[42:13] But as the war evolves, reality erodes that careful distinction. As enslaved people flee to union lines in growing numbers. With the Confederacy relying on forced labor to grow the food and build the fortifications sustaining its armies, Lincoln now sees that slavery is a question of military strategy more than it is of morals.
Speaker 2:
[42:38] The real turning point on the question of the emancipation were those seven days battles outside of the Confederate capital of Richmond in late June. And the United States Army comes within a hair of capturing the Confederate capital. They can see the spires of Richmond. They can see the bells in the churches. And they fail to take the capital city. And after this, Lincoln has a meeting with his cabinet where he says, I want to go after slavery because it is obvious that slavery is supporting the Confederate army. It's supporting the Confederate government.
Speaker 1:
[43:16] Lincoln understands that the Union cannot defeat the Confederacy while leaving slavery untouched. Striking directly at the institution will weaken the Confederacy's workforce and therefore its ability to wage war. But knowing what must be done is not the same as knowing when to do it. The North itself is still deeply divided on the issue. Many white northerners support the war to preserve the Union, but remain uneasy or even openly hostile to abolition. Some fear emancipation will upend the social order. Others worry it will prolong the war and many simply don't believe it is the federal government's role to interfere with slavery at all. Even more precarious are the border states. Until this point, slave-holding states like Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland and Delaware have remained loyal to the Union. But their allegiance is fragile. Move too quickly against slavery, especially after the defeat in Richmond, and Lincoln risks driving them into the arms of the Confederacy, handing the South more manpower, more territory and control of critical rail lines and rivers.
Speaker 2:
[44:28] His advisors, his cabinet says to him, look, we've just had a major defeat. What does it look like if you issue this now? You need to hold off until we have a battle that is enough of a victory, not to look like we're just throwing everything on the table that we can.
Speaker 1:
[44:45] So Lincoln begins searching for a moment of military strength, a victory that will give him the authority to act, even as the war itself grows larger and more destructive by the day. By late 1862, the conflict has grown into a kind of war the continent has never seen. Railroads carry entire armies across hundreds of miles in days rather than weeks, turning once distant regions into active fronts. Telegraph lines hum with constant dispatches, allowing commanders and politicians to make decisions with unprecedented efficiency. This new speed of movement and communication makes campaigns larger, more coordinated and far more deadly. Newspapers struggle to keep up with the lists of the dead, while families wait for news that may never come.
Speaker 2:
[45:42] There had been many other bloody battles. Battle of Shiloh, which had occurred only a few months earlier in April of 62, had been a two-day battle with 24,000 casualties in the Easter Theater, so Virginia and Maryland. There had been a series of battles throughout the spring and summer where the casualties had been astronomical. In late June, the Seven Days Battles in and around Richmond had been 34,000 casualties. Then in the end of August, there had been 22,000 casualties at Second Bull Run.
Speaker 1:
[46:21] As the armies move and collide, civilians are drawn even deeper into the war's path. Farms are stripped of food and horses, and whole towns become military staging grounds and supply depots. Even the roads are filled with endless columns of refugees, soldiers and supply wagons. Disease spreads rampantly through overcrowded camps. The sheer scale of mobilization forces both sides to think differently about what it means to wage war. It's become an exercise in sustaining destruction on a massive scale, rather than just defeating the enemy's armies. By September 1862, that logic brings the war north into Maryland. Confederate General Robert E. Lee has crossed the Potomac River, hoping a bold invasion will break Union morale, win foreign recognition and perhaps force the north to negotiate. Union forces move to stop him near the small town of Sharpsburg along the banks of the Antietam Creek. And on a single September morning in Western Maryland, all of that destruction converges in one field of battle. Are you really buying a car online on AutoTrader right now?
Speaker 5:
[47:48] Really?
Speaker 2:
[47:48] I can get super specific with dealer listings and see cars based on my budget.
Speaker 7:
[47:53] You can really have it delivered.
Speaker 5:
[47:54] Or pick it up. Mommy, look!
Speaker 1:
[47:55] I think your kid is walking up the slide.
Speaker 7:
[47:57] Really?
Speaker 2:
[47:58] AutoTrader, buy your car online, really.
Speaker 1:
[48:05] It is September the 17th, 1862. As dawn creeps over the fields outside Sharpsburg, Maryland, a Union private shifts uneasily in the damp autumn cold. He stands shoulder to shoulder with his regiment, several hundred men strong, in Miller's cornfield, amid twenty acres of tall, dew-heavy stalks that rise above their heads and blur into a pale, mist-cloaked horizon. The air is so still he can hear the soft brush of corn stalks against his sleeves. Somewhere beyond the crops, field artillery wheels clatter into position, the sound distant but unmistakable. For a long breath, the men wait in near silence, boots sinking into soft earth, rifles held tight. Then, as the first slice of sun breaks over the far ridge, a Confederate volley cracks through the quiet. All around the soldier, the cornfield explodes. Bullets whip through the stalks, tearing them into drifting shreds. Cannon blasts punch shockwaves through the soil. He fires at flashes of muzzle light in the fog, at shapes that appear and vanish before he can focus. The air turns hot and metallic, the field suddenly choked with smoke. Within minutes, the cornfield is a blind heaving maze of bodies and noise. The private pushes forward, stumbles, rises, shoved by the momentum of men advancing and falling back all around him. Regiments surge past him, collide, scatter and form again in the haze, each convinced that one final effort will break the enemy line. Wounded men call out but cannot be reached. A drummer boy drops his sticks and tries to drag his injured friend away from the danger, but the danger is everywhere. The private's ears ring. His world narrows to flashes of orange, the shudder of recoil, the acrid sting of gunpowder assaulting his eyes. And there is so much blood. Blind fear consumes him, but he reloads and pushes on. By mid-morning, the cornfield has changed hands again and again. The tall rows that stood proud are flattened into mud and splintered stalks. The ground is slick beneath his boots. He no longer knows how long he has been firing, only that the noise never seems to stop. All around the exhausted private, men lie where they fell. Others stumble past him, faces gray with shock. Bodies pile upon bodies, Confederate men upon union, all united only in death. The private grips his rifle and steps into the haze, into a field that no longer resembles a field at all. By the end of what becomes known as the Battle of Antietam, nearly 23,000 will be killed, wounded, or missing. It will be the bloodiest single day in American history, and for the first time, Americans far from the fighting will be forced to confront what this war truly looks like.
Speaker 2:
[51:39] What makes Antietam even more powerful is that this will be the first battlefield that photographers are going to show up and start documenting the dead. And by this point, most of the Union dead had been buried, and whoever possesses this yield will bury their own dead first. And so by the time the photographers get there, most of the Union dead have been buried, but the Confederate dead have not. And these photographs will be shown in New York City, and this hits home in a way that just hadn't quite hit before. It's one thing to read casualty lists in a newspaper, but another to see the visceral carnage.
Speaker 1:
[52:23] And for Abraham Lincoln, the battle provides exactly what he has been waiting for. Though it's not a decisive victory, it's enough of a public military success to push through his move against slavery. When Lincoln issues the preliminary emancipation proclamation Five Days After and Tetum, followed by the full proclamation on New Year's Day 1863, he fundamentally reshapes the war. The document declares that all enslaved people in areas still in rebellion shall be, in its words, thenceforward and forever free. The Proclamation maintains the original goal of preserving the Union, while adding the second, irreversible resolution to destroy slavery. At the same time, it is also a pragmatic wartime measure. It applies only to territory under Confederate control, not to enslaved people in the loyal border states or in parts of the South already occupied by Union forces. On paper, it promises freedom to millions in practice, its power depends entirely on Union military success, making it somehow both sweeping and limited. What ultimately gives the proclamation its force is the response of enslaved people themselves. Thousands flee plantations to reach Union lines, turning military camps into places of refuge and labor. Others resist by withholding work, spreading information, or guiding Union forces through unfamiliar terrain.
Speaker 2:
[54:09] The Emancipation Proclamation, which goes into effect January 1st, 1863, will allow the use of Black troops. In March of 1863, Congress will pass another act that specifically helps to enlist African American troops.
Speaker 1:
[54:27] With Black men now allowed to enlist in the Union army, the Proclamation gains both moral authority and military teeth. While the Emancipation Proclamation doesn't end the war, and it does not free everyone overnight, it changes everything. From this point on, the Union is not just fighting for the nation's survival, but for a new definition of freedom itself. But what changes will come in the months ahead, when Black Americans are no longer simply the object of the conflict, but become soldiers in it, fighting for their own freedom? Who are the crucial men and women who help to turn the tide? And as months turn into years, how is the stalemate finally broken? Find out next time in the second installment of this special two-part Short History Of. The American Civil War.
Speaker 2:
[55:22] We can't understand race relations in the United States in the 20th century or even in the 21st century without understanding the way the past and especially how the discussions of slavery and the Civil War had been leveraged for political and social reasons throughout that time. It didn't just end in 1865.
Speaker 1:
[55:47] That's next time. You can listen to the next two episodes of Short History Of right now without waiting and without adverts by subscribing to Noiser Plus. Just hit the link in the episode description or head to www.noiser.com/subscriptions to unlock more episodes today.
Speaker 7:
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