25 February 1861
President-elect Lincoln attended a reception in both the House and Senate at the Capital and visited the Supreme Court. In Montgomery President Davis was attempting to take in hand the situation at Charleston, sending out messengers and making inquires.
25 February 1862
Federal troops moved into Nashville in full force. The capital of Tennessee, CSA was again capital of Tennessee, USA and a vital base for the Union, to be held throughout the remainder of the war. Its capture without bloodshed had been made possible by Grant's victory at Fort Donelson, although it was formally occupied by troops of Gen. Buell. Elsewhere there were minor operations in Loudoun County, VA and at Keetsville in Barry County, MO. Confederate Ma.Gen. Kirby Smith was assigned to command in east Tennessee.
The Federal War Department ordered control of all telegraph lines by the department to facilitate military moves. In Richmond President Davis sent a message to the Confederate Congress reviewing the war, calling for sterner measures and stating;
...we have been so exposed as recently to encounter serious disasters.
Davis thought the financial system was adequate and the postal department was improving. He desired to establish a Supreme Court. Naval construction was proceeding despite limited resources, the need for more soldiers was being met, and strenuous efforts were being made to reinforce armies in the threatened West. It was not wholly a dark picture, although the military situation led to sobering thoughts.
25 February 1863
The Federal Congress completed passage of the Conscription Act. Mr. Lincoln signed an act setting up a national bank system and national currency, with a Currency Bureau of the Treasury was established with a Comptroller of the Currency. In addition, an act to prevent correspondence with the "
present pretended rebel government" was approved.
Off St. Thomas in the West Indies USS '
Vanderbilt' seized the British merchantman '
Peterhoff' as a blockade runner. The capture had been ordered by Acting Rear Admiral Charles Wilkes, "star" of the Trent Affair, from his West India Squadron flagship '
Wachusett'. '
Peterhoff' was bound for Matamoros, Mexico and the British claimed the United States had no right to stop such trade, albeit some of the shipments into Mexican ports found their way into the Confederacy. While a major international crisis was averted, the incident focused attention on the considerable trade from Mexico into the South. Eventually courts ruled that the United States could not halt shipping into a neutral port no matter what its ultimate destination.
Skirmishing occurred at Hartwood Church and near Winchester, Strasburg, Woodstock and Chantilly, VA. Maj. Gen. D. H. Hill assumed command of Confederate troops in North Carolina. In Charleston, SC., the price of bread per half pound loaf went to 25 cents and flour sold at $65 a barrel.
25 February 1864
Federals under Maj. Gen. J.M. Palmer made their main effort at Buzzard Roost in the Demonstration on Dalton, GA. Johnston's Confederate positions proved too strong for the limited probing attack, and Palmer withdrew his forces to the main lines of the Army of the Cumberland.
An affair occurred near Hudsonville, MISS; and a Union scout from Whiteside's Tenn., to Stevens' and Frick's gap, GA lasted two days.
Maj. Gen. John C. Breckinridge was assigned to command the Confederate Trans-Allegheny Department or Western Department of Virginia, relieving Maj. Gen. Samuel Jones.
25 February 1865
Gen. Joseph E. Johnston assumed command of the Army of Tennessee, now in the Carolinas, and all troops in the Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. Meanwhile there was a skirmish at West's Cross Roads and Federal troops occupied Camden on the Wateree River, SC. Calvary and other detached units were operating over a wide expanse of South Carolina. Gen. Johnston, at Charlotte, NC, pointed out to Lee the difficulties of concentrating his Confederates and stressed that, including Calvary, militia and units not recently heard from, he had between 20,000 and 25,000 men to oppose Sherman.
In my opinion, these troops form an army far too weak to cope with Sherman.
He urged that his force join Bragg in North Carolina. In Kentucky a skirmish broke out at Piketon.