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Hours after the Pensacola incident, another pre-war clash took place in South Carolina.
Cadets from The Citadel military academy manning a battery on Morris Island fired on the steamship Star of the West as it tried to resupply 200 federal troops at Fort Sumter. The cadets forced the steamship to turn back, and others consider that action the first shots of the war, not the larger fight that happened at Fort Sumter three months later. "You can get real far down in the weeds about all of this," said Winfred B. Moore Jr., The Citadel's dean of humanities and social studies. "The truth is that what happened on April 12, 1861, at Fort Sumter had far, far greater significance than all of these events that came before." On Tuesday, booming cannons marked the 150th anniversary of the war's outbreak as hundreds of people watched a re-enactment of the Confederate bombardment of Union-held Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor
-- the engagement widely credited with plunging the young nation into a war that dragged on four years and claimed more than 600,000 lives. Union troops surrendered after about 34 hours of bombardment, Lincoln and the Confederates issued calls to arms, and fighting soon commenced. Moore said it was almost inevitable that the war would begin in South Carolina despite efforts
-- outlined in documents -- of attempts in Florida and elsewhere to avert hostilities. "But there are a lot of Civil War stories to be told and a lot that have never been adequately told, and it's understandable why people who live close to the history want to give it proper recognition," he added. And Civil War history did happen in Pensacola. Across the bay from Fort Barrancas lies Fort Pickens, where Union troops fended off Confederate attacks for four years and kept Pensacola Bay open to federal ships throughout the war. On a recent afternoon, Rudy Ynostrosa of Pensacola and his 12-year-old son Nicolas made their way through the maze brick tunnels and stairways that comprise Fort Pickens. Ynostrosa said he has long heard that the war's first shots were fired in his home town. "It always amazes me that this was a Union fort and it was out here in the heart of the South," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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