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Saturday, April 20: “Lincoln is in a Trap”
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Published:June 2011
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Abstract
This chapter focuses on the growing panic among residents of Washington on April 20, 1861 as Union forces continued to make preparations against the Confederacy. It notes how the city's residents were making their escapes in different directions, depending on their sympathies. It also considers President Abraham Lincoln's insistence that Union troops should “march around Baltimore, and not through it” to prevent a “collision of the people of Baltimore with the troops,” along with the destruction of the critical bridges on the rail lines to the north and west of Baltimore that essentially cut off Washington's railroad connection to the North. Finally, the chapter cites Colonel Robert E. Lee's resignation from the U.S. Army and his decision to lead the Virginia military.
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