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Official notes now began to pass between
Sumter and surrounding points.
On the afternoon of the 27th, as we have observed,
Governor Pickens sent a message to
Anderson, requiring him to leave
Sumter and return to
Moultrie.
That commander refused.
On the following morning,
Anderson sent his post-adjutant to
Fort Moultrie, to inquire of the commander there by what authority he and armed men were in that fortification of the
United States.
He replied, “By the authority of the
Sovereign State of South Carolina, and by command of her government.”
Anderson's refusal caused
Pickens to treat him as a public enemy within the ___domain of
South Carolina; and the
Charleston Mercury, with the peculiar logic characteristic of the class it represented, declared that the “holding of
Fort Sumter by United States troops was an invasion of
South Carolina.”
In a letter written to
Adjutant-General Cooper, on the 28th,
Anderson said:--“I shall regret very deeply the persistence of the
Governor in the course he has taken.
He knows how entirely the city of
Charleston is in my power.
I can cut his communication off from the sea, and thereby prevent the reception of supplies, and close the harbor, even at night, by destroying the light-houses.
These things, of course, I would never do, unless compelled to do so in self-defense.”
On the same day, the authorities of
South Carolina seized and appropriated to the uses of the
State the
Custom House, and the Post-office kept within its walls.
That building, fronting on Broad Street, was venerated as the theater of many events connected with the old war for Independence.
1
From that time until the close of
President Buchanan's administration, and even longer,
Major Anderson was compelled, by Government policy, to see the insurgents gather by thousands in and around
Charleston, erect fortifications within reach of his guns, and
make every needful preparation for the destruction of
Fort Sumter and its little garrison, without being allowed to fire a shot.
Looking back from our present stand-point, we perceive in this forbearance either the consummate wisdom of man or the direct interposition of God.