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| President Lincoln: Resupply Fort Sumter, 1861 Every American president makes decisions with enormous repercussions for the future. Some of these decisions prove successful; others turn out to be blunders. In virtually every case, presidents must act with contradictory advice and limited information. |
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Following his election as president, Abraham Lincoln was faced with several pressing problems: • How could he prevent slave-holding states from seceding from the Union? • Was it possible to fashion a sectional compromise that would not violate the president’s antislavery principles or the Republican party pledge to prohibit slavery’s westward expansion? | |
| After South Carolina voted to leave the Union in December 1860, the president confronted an even more difficult challenge: Whether to hold on to federal military installations in states that seceded or to evacuate them. This challenge became even more intense when he discovered, immediately after his inauguration, that Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, harbor, was short of supplies. Since the president recognized that re-provisioning the fort would precipitate a crisis, he had to approach this problem with the utmost caution. |
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| Questions to Think About: 1. What should Lincoln have done, if anything, as president-elect and Republican party leader, to prevent secession and head off a possible Civil War? 2. Should President Lincoln have abandoned Fort Sumter or tried to hold on to it by sending a re-supply mission or by dispatching a military force? 3. Should President Lincoln have called off the resupply mission when it appeared that it would arrive too late to save Fort Sumter or would precipitate Civil War? |
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