I did not know that one could live such days of excitement.
Some one called: “Come out! There is a crowd coming.” A mob it was, indeed, but
it was headed by Colonels Chesnut and Manning. The crowd was shouting and
showing these two as messengers of good news. They were escorted to
Beauregard's headquarters. Fort Sumter had surrendered! Those upon the
housetops shouted to us “The fort is on fire.” That had been the story once or
twice before.
When we had calmed down, Colonel Chesnut, who had taken it
all quietly enough, if anything more unruffled than usual in his serenity, told
us how the surrender came about. Wigfall was with them on Morris Island when
they saw the fire in the fort; he jumped in a little boat, and with his
handkerchief as a white flag, rowed over. Wigfall went in through a porthole.
When Colonel Chesnut arrived shortly after, and was received at the regular
entrance, Colonel Anderson told him he had need to pick his way warily, for the
place was all mined. As far as I can make out the fort surrendered to Wigfall.
But it is all confusion. Our flag is flying there. Fire-engines have been sent
for to put out the fire. Everybody tells you half of something and then rushes
off to tell something else or to hear the last news.
In the afternoon, Mrs. Preston,1 Mrs. Joe
Heyward, and I drove around the Battery. We were in an open carriage. What a
changed scene — the very liveliest crowd I think I ever saw, everybody talking
at once. All glasses were still turned on the grim old fort.
Russell,2 the correspondent of the London Times,
was there. They took him everywhere. One man got out Thackeray to converse with
him on equal terms. Poor Russell was awfully bored, they say. He only wanted to
see the fort and to get news suitable to make up into an interesting article.
Thackeray had become stale over the water.
Mrs. Frank Hampton2 and I went to see the camp of
the Richland troops. South Carolina College had volunteered to a boy. Professor
Venable (the mathematical), intends to raise a company from among them for the
war, a permanent company. This is a grand frolic no more for the students, at
least. Even the staid and severe of aspect, Clingman, is here. He says Virginia
and North Carolina are arming to come to our rescue, for now the North will
swoop down on us. Of that we may be sure. We have burned our ships. We are
obliged to go on now. He calls us a poor, little, hot-blooded, headlong, rash,
and troublesome sister State. General McQueen is in a rage because we are to
send troops to Virginia.
Preston Hampton is in all the flush of his youth and beauty,
six feet in stature; and after all only in his teens; he appeared in fine
clothes and lemon-colored kid gloves to grace the scene. The camp in a fit of
horse-play seized him and rubbed him in the mud. He fought manfully, but took
it all naturally as a good joke.
Mrs. Frank Hampton knows already what civil war means. Her
brother was in the New York Seventh Regiment, so roughly received in Baltimore.
Frank will be in the opposite camp.
Good stories there may be and to spare for Russell, the man
of the London Times, who has come over here to find out our weakness and our
strength and to tell all the rest of the world about us.
________________
1 Caroline Hampton, a daughter of General Wade
Hampton, of the Revolution, was the wife of John S. Preston, an ardent advocate
of secession, who served on the staff of Beauregard at Bull Run and
subsequently reached the rank of brigadier-general.
2 William Howard Russell, a native of Dublin, who
served as a correspondent of the London Times during the Crimean War, the
Indian Mutiny, the War of Secession and the Franco-German War. He has been
familiarly known as “Bull Run Russell.” In 1875 he was honorary Secretary to
the Prince of Wales during the Prince's visit to India.
3 The “Sally Baxter” of the recently published “Thackeray
Letters to an American Family.”
SOURCE: Mary Boykin Chesnut, Edited by Isabella D. Martin
and Myrta Lockett Avary, A Diary From Dixie, p. 39-41
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