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The Civil War in America
Timeline

Home | Exhibition Overview | Exhibition Items | Public Programs | Learn More | Timeline | Biographies | Acknowledgments
Sections: Prologue | April 1861–April 1862 | April 1862–November 1862 | December 1862–October 1863 | November 1863–April 1865 | Epilogue 

Timeline

  • 1860

    November 6, 1860
    Lincoln elected sixteenth U.S. President

    December 20, 1860
    South Carolina secedes from the Union

  • First Flag of Independence . . . Savannah, GA. November 8th, 1860.
    Savannah: R.H. Howell, 1860. Prints and Photographs Division

  • The Dis-United States. Or The Southern Confederacy. New York: Currier & Ives, 1861. Rare Book and Special Collections Division
  • 1861

    January 9–26, 1861
    Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, and Louisiana secede

    February 1, 1861
    Texas secedes

  • [Unidentified solider in Confederate Artillery Jacket with Secession Badge and Artillery Forage Hat], between 1861 and 1865. Liljenquist Family Collection, Prints and Photographs Division.
  • February 4, 1861
    Confederate States of America (C.S.A) organized in Montgomery, Alabama; U.S. Army sets trap for Apache leaders in the Arizona Territory, igniting the Apache-Navajo Wars (1861-1865)

    April 12–13, 1861
    Confederates fire on Fort Sumter, South Carolina; Civil War begins

  • Bombardment of Fort Sumter, Charleston Harbor: 12th & 13th of April, 1861. [New York]: Currier & Ives, ca. 1861, Prints and Photographs Division
  • April 15–17, 1861
    Lincoln calls for troops; Virginia secedes

    May 6, 1861
    Arkansas secedes

    May 8, 1861
    C.S.A. President Jefferson Davis authorizes 400,000 C.S.A. volunteers

  • The Truth is Mighty, the South to the Rescue. Wood engraving on paper envelope. Baltimore, 1861. Rare Book and Special Collections Division
  • May 20, 1861
    Richmond becomes C.S.A. capital; North Carolina secedes

    June 8, 1861
    Tennessee secedes

    June 13, 1861
    U.S. Sanitary Commission created to provide care for wounded soldiers and their families

  • James Gardner, photographer. [Washington, D.C. Field Relief Wagons and Workers of U.S. Sanitary Commission], April 1865. Prints and Photographs Division

  • The First Battle of Bull Run, VA., Sunday Afternoon, July 21, 1861. New York: J. Howard Brown, 1884. Prints and Photographs Division
  • July 21, 1861
    Confederates rout Union troops at the first Battle of Manassas/Bull Run; Thomas Jackson earns the nickname "Stonewall"

    July 22, 1861
    Major General George B. McClellan takes command of the Army of the Potomac

  • Benjamin Brown French, photographer. Inauguration of Mr. Lincoln, March 4, 1861. Prints and Photographs Division
  • August 5, 1861
    Congress levies the first federal income tax

    November 8, 1861
    U.S. Navy seizes Confederate diplomats Mason and Slidell aboard neutral British vessel H.M.S. Trent, bringing U.S. and Britain to the brink of war
  • December 9, 1861
    U.S. Congress forms the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War

    December 26, 1861
    Factions of Creek and other Indian nations loyal to the Confederacy clash with the Union at the Battle of Chustenahlah, Indian Territory

  • Battle of Fort Donelson—Capture of Generals S. B. Buckner and His Army, February 16th, 1862. Chicago: Kurz & Allison, ca. 1887. Prints and Photographs Division
  • 1862

    February 16, 1862
    Brigadier General Ulysses S. Grant victorious at Fort Donelson, Tennessee

    March 8, 1862
    C.S.S. Virginia (Merrimack) sinks two wooden Union vessels

  • Battle between the Monitor and the Merrimac—Fought March 9th 1862 at Hampton Roads, Near Norfolk, VA. Chicago: Kurz & Allison, ca. 1889. Prints and Photographs Division
  • March 9, 1862
    Ironclads C.S.S. Virginia (Merrimack) vs U.S.S. Monitor battle to a draw in Hampton Roads, Virginia

    March 23, 1862
    Stonewall Jackson's Shenandoah Valley Campaign begins

  • Jedediah Hotchkiss, Cartographer. Map of the Shenandoah Valley, To Illustrate the Valley Campaign of "Stonewall" Jackson, 1862. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co., 1880. Geography and Map Division

  • Battle of Shiloh April 6th 1862. Chicago: Cosack & co. for McCormick Reaper Company, ca. 1885. Prints and Photographs Division
  • April 5, 1862
    McClellan's forces siege Yorktown, Virginia; Peninsula Campaign begins

    April 6–7, 1862
    Battle of Shiloh/Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee

    April 16, 1862
    Slavery ends in the District of Columbia; the C.S.A. initiates the first military draft

  • Frederick Dielman, artist. "Celebration of the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia by the Colored People, in Washington, April 19, 1866," Published in Harper's Weekly, May 12, 1866. Prints and Photographs Division
  • April 25, 1862
    U.S. Navy Captain David Farragut captures New Orleans


    Capture of New Orleans. Boston: L. Prang & Co., n.d. Prints and Photographs Division
  • May 6, 1862
    U.S. Congress passes Homestead Act, granting up to 160 acres of land to settlers who improve the land for at least five years

    May 31, 1862
    General Robert E. Lee assumes command of the Army of Northern Virginia

  • Augustus Tholey, artist. Lee and His Generals. Philadelphia: John Smith, ca. 1867. Prints and Photographs Division
  • June 17, 1862
    U.S. Congress passes the Morrill Land Grant College Act, one of the key pieces of education legislation in U.S. history

    June 19, 1862
    Slavery outlawed in U.S. territories

  • Justin Smith Morrill of Vermont, between 1855 and 1865. Brady-Handy Photograph Collection, Prints and Photographs Division
  • July 1, 1862
    Lincoln signs the Pacific Railroad Act; the Union's unsuccessful Peninsula Campaign ends

    July 17, 1862
    United States Congress passes the Second Confiscation Act, which frees slaves that come under Union control

  • Alfred A. Hart, photographer. Indian viewing railroad from top of Palisades. 435 miles from Sacramento. Sacramento: Golden State Photographic Gallery, between 1865 and 1869. Prints and Photographs Division
  • August 17, 1862
    U.S.-Dakota War (Sioux Uprising) begins in Minnesota (it ends on September 23, 1862)

    August 29–30, 1862
    Confederate victory at the Battle of Second Manassas/Bull Run

  • Freemen! Avoid Conscription! Charleston, Tennessee: Confederate States of America, 1862. Rare Book and Special Collections Division

  • The Second Battle of Bull Run, Fought Augt. 29th 1862. New York: Currier & Ives, ca. 1862. Prints and Photographs Division

  • Alexander Gardner, photographer. [Bodies of Confederate Artillerymen near Dunker Church], ca. 1862. Prints and Photographs Division
  • September 17, 1862
    The bloodiest day of the war occurs at the Battle of Sharpsburg/Antietam; 23,000 casualties

    September 22, 1862
    Lincoln issues the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation

  • Abraham Lincoln. First Edition of the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, September 22, 1982. Alfred Whital Stern Collection, Rare Books and Special Collections Division
  • December 13, 1862
    The Union suffers one of its worst defeats at the Battle of Fredericksburg

  • Uebergang Über den Rappahannock [Crossing the Rappahannock]. Neu Ruppin: Oehmigke & Riemschneider, ca. 1863. Prints and Photographs Division
  • 1863

    January 1, 1863
    Lincoln issues the final Emancipation Proclamation, officially allowing black soldiers and sailors into Union forces

    February 26, 1863
    Cherokee Nation abolishes slavery; declares support for the Union

  • "Pickets of the First Louisiana 'Native Guard' guarding the New Orleans Opelousas and Great Western Railroad," published in Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, March 7, 1863. Prints and Photographs Division
  • March 3, 1863
    Lincoln signs the first Federal draft law

    April 2, 1863
    A food riot breaks out in Richmond

  • "Southern Women Feeling the Effects of the Rebellion, and Creating Bread Riots," published in Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, May 23, 1863. Prints and Photographs Division
  • May 1–4, 1863
    Confederates win a stunning victory at the Battle of Chancellorsville; Stonewall Jackson is fatally wounded

    May 22, 1863
    The Bureau of Colored Troops is established to organize black regiments.

  • Battle of Chancellorsville—May 2, 3 & 4. Chicago: Kurz & Allison, ca. 1889. Prints and Photographs Division

  • [Unidentified African American soldier in Union uniform], between 1863 and 1865. Liljenquist Family Collection, Prints and Photographs Division

  • W. L. Nicholson, compiler. Map of the State of Virginia. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Coast Survey, 1863. Geography and Map Division
  • June 20, 1863
    West Virginia admitted to the Union

    July 1–3, 1863
    Battle of Gettysburg results in Confederate defeat

    July 4, 1863
    Vicksburg surrenders to Grant's army

  • James Fuller Queen, artist. The Story of Gettysburg, ca. 1864. Marian S. Carson Collection, Prints and Photographs Division

  • Siege of Vicksburg. Chicago: Kurz & Allison, ca. 1888. Prints and Photographs Division
  • July 13–17, 1863
    New York City draft riots

    July 18, 1863
    Union assault on Fort Wagner lef by the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts, an African American regiment

    September 19–20, 1863
    Confederate victory at Chickamauga; Union forces to retreat to Chattanooga and are besieged
  • September 23, 1863
    Largest pre-twentieth century movement of troops begins when Stanton orders 20,000 men, with equipment, moved 1,233 miles to relieve Chattanooga

    October 27, 1863
    Chicago hosts first sanitary fair to raise funds for the U.S. Sanitary Commission (runs through November 7, 1863)

  • Washington, District of Columbia. Tent Life of the 31st Penn. Inf. at Queen's Farm, Vicinity of Fort Slocum, 1861. Civil War Glass Negative Collection, Prints and Photographs Division
  • November 19, 1863
    Lincoln delivers Gettysburg Address

    December 8, 1863
    Lincoln issues Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction, which pardons secessionists who swear allegiance to the U.S.

  • Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, Gettysburg. November 19, 1863. Brady Civil War Photograph Collection, Prints and Photographs Division

  • Alfred R. Waud, artist. Negroes Leaving the Plough, published in Harper's Weekly, March 26, 1864. Prints and Photographs Division
  • 1864

    February 27, 1864
    War's most notorious prison camp opens near Andersonville, Georgia

  • Andersonville Prison, GA., south-east view of Stockade, August 17, 1864. Prints and Photographs Division

  • The Leader and His Battles—Ulysses S. Grant, Lieuteant-General, U.S.A. New York: Haasis & Lubrecht, ca. 1866. Prints and Photographs Division
  • March 9–10, 1864
    Grant is promoted to lieutenant general; appointed general-in-chief of U.S. armies

    April 12, 1864
    Confederates capture Fort Pillow, Tennessee. Many of the U.S. Colored Troops are murdered after they surrender.

  • M. Weir, composer. "Dixie Doodle." New Orleans: P. P. Werlein & Halsey, 1862. Music Division
  • May 5–7, 1864
    Grant launches Overland Campaign; U.S. General William T. Sherman marches toward Atlanta

    June 18, 1864
    Overland Campaign ends, ten-month siege of Petersburg, Virginia begins

  • The Battle of Petersburg Va. April 2nd 1865. New York: Currier & Ives, ca. 1865. Prints and Photographs Division
  • July 2, 1864
    Congress passes the punitive Wade-Davis Bill; Lincoln will pocket veto

    July 11–12, 1864
    Jubal Early and 12,000 Confederate troops threaten Washington

  • E. G. Arnold. Topographical Map of the Original District of Columbia and Environs Showing the Fortifications around the City of Washington. New york: G. Woolworth Colton, 1862. Geography and Map Division
  • August 9, 1864
    U.S. General Phil Sheridan begins Shenandoah Valley Campaign

    September 2, 1864
    Sherman captures Atlanta, Georgia

  • Grand National Democratic Banner. Peace! Union! And Victory! New York: Currier & Ives, ca. 1864. Prints and Photographs Division
  • November 8, 1864
    Lincoln defeats McClellan in the 1864 presidential election

    December 15–16, 1864
    Confederates' main western army shattered at the Battle of Nashville, Tennessee

    December 22, 1864
    Ending his March to the Sea, Sherman takes Savannah, Georgia

  • Battle of Nashville. Chicago: Kurz & Allison, ca. 1891. Prints and Photographs Division

  • Same Cooley, photographer. Savannah, Georgia. Ruins of Houses, 1865. Civil War Glass Negative Collection, Prints and Photographs Division
  • 1865

    January 31, 1865
    Davis appoints Lee general-in-chief; U.S. House passes the 13th Amendment, abolishing slavery (ratified December 1865)

  • Brady's National Photographic Portrait Galleries. Gen'l. Robt. E. Lee and Staff, April 16, 1865. Promised gift of the Liljenquist Family, Prints and Photographs Division
  • February 18, 1865
    Sherman's army moves through Columbia, South Carolina; Schimmelfenning's Union troops occupy Charleston

  • George Barnard, photographer. [Charleston, S.C. View of Ruined Buildings through Porch of the Circular Church], April 1865. Prints and Photographs Division

  • "A Peep at the Freemen's Bureau Office of Lieut. S. Merrill, Superintendent Third District," published in Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, February 2, 1867. Prints and Photographs Division
  • March 3, 1865
    U.S. Congress establishes the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands (Freedmen's Bureau)

    March 13, 1865
    Davis signs a "Negro Soldier Law," authorizing the enlistment of slaves

  • The Fall of Richmond Va. on the Night of April 2nd. New York: Currier & Ives, ca. 1865. Prints and Photographs Division
  • April 2, 1865
    Petersburg, Virginia, falls to the Union; Richmond evacuated and set ablaze

    April 9, 1865
    Lee surrenders to Grant at Appomattox Court House, Virginia

    April 14–15, 1865
    John Wilkes Booth assassinates Lincoln; Andrew Johnson becomes president

  • The Room in the McLean House, at Appomattox C.H. in which Gen. Lee Surrendered to Gen. Grant. New York: Major & Knapp, n.d. Prints and Photographs Division
  • April 26, 1865
    Sherman accepts the surrender of C.S.A's General Joe Johnston in North Carolina

    May 10, 1865
    President Johnson proclaims armed resistance at an end; Davis is captured
  • June 19, 1865
    In Galveston, U. S. Maj. Gen. Granger issued General Orders No. 3, confirming those enslaved in Texas had been freed under the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation. Local celebrations later inspired “Juneteenth,” commemorating the end of slavery.

  • The Surrender of Genl. Joe Johnston near Greensboro N.C., April 26th 1865. New York: Currier & Ives, ca. 1865. Prints and Photographs Division

  • Alfred R. Waud, artist. The Casemate, Fortress Monroe, Jeff Davis in Prison, 1865. Prints and Photographs Division
  • 1866

    June 13, 1866
    U.S. Congress passes Fourteenth Amendment, affirming citizenship for African Americans

    July 24, 1866
    Tennessee readmitted to the Union

  • Attributed to Jesse Harrison Whitehurst, photographer. [Andrew Johnson], 1860. Prints and Photographs Division
  • 1867


    Gustavus Dolfuss, composer. K.K.K., or Bloody Moon Waltz. Nashville: Jas. A. McClure, 1868. Music Divison
  • March 1867
    First Reconstruction Act passed by the U.S. Congress; overturning Johnson's veto

    April 1867
    The Ku Klux Klan reorganizes into a paramilitary organization led by a former Confederate General, Nathan Bedford Forrest
  • 1868

    June 22–25, 1868
    Arkansas, Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina readmitted to the Union

  • The Stars and Stripes Must Cover the Whole. Wood engraving on envelope. New York: Chas. Magnus, n.d. Rare Book and Special Collections Division
  • 1869

    March 4, 1869
    Ulysses S. Grant inaugurated as president

    May 10, 1869
    Transcontinental Railroad completed

  • "Completion of the Pacific Railroad—Meeting of Locomotives of the Union and Central Pacific Lines. . .. ," published in Harper's Weekly, June 5, 1869. Prints and Photographs Division
  • 1870

    January 26, 1870
    Virginia readmitted to the Union

    February 3, 1870
    Fifteenth Amendment ratified; granting all male citizens the right to vote
  • February 23, 1870
    Mississippi readmitted to the Union

    March 30, 1870
    Texas readmitted to the Union

    July 15, 1870
    Georgia readmitted to the Union

  • The Fifteenth Admendment. New York: Thomas Kelly, ca. 1870. Prints and Photographs Division

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