on this day Union troops under Brigadier Gen. Ulysses S. Grant invade
Kentucky, enraging the inhabitants of the state.
Kentucky had declared itself neutral in an attempt to spare the state the
ravages of the war, but when Gen.
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icon to follow us on Facebook.Grant marched in and occupied
Paducah, the majority of the legislature (which had been pro-Union) sided
with the Confederacy. The legislature officially seceded on the 4th and
asked for admittance as the twelfth state of the CSA.
The Confederates were overjoyed; with Kentucky on their side, this made it
easy for Confederate troops to march into the vital states of Ohio and
Indiana and wreak havoc. Also, the Ohio River formed the border between
Kentucky and the states to the north, giving the rebels an excellent
defensive position.
General Grant's campaign was for his army to march down the Mississippi
and cut the Confederacy in half, but on September 17th Confederate troops
began the siege of Cincinnati, forcing Grant's army to be recalled north
to relieve the city. For the next year, the Union army hammered away at
the Confederates in Kentucky, slowly driving them back. However, the Union
was dealt a major blow on October 1st, 1862, when southern raiders under
the command of Colonel Nathan Bedford Forrest rode north into Illinois,
tearing up the southern half of the state and briefly riding into the
outskirts of St. Louis.
At the same time, a raiding party led by Joe Wheeler went into Ohio,
making it as far as the state capitol at Columbus before returning south.
The states of the Old Northwest had considerable numbers of Southern
sympathizers, especially Illinois' south; in the mid-term elections in
November, these states went strongly Democratic, forcing Lincoln to rely
heavily on War Democrats in Congress.
The political success of these relatively minor raids did not go unnoticed
in Richmond, which ordered Forrest (promoted to Brig. Gen.) and Wheeler to
step up their attacks. The Union was forced to keep considerable numbers
of troops in the rear to guard against possible raids; these troops could
have made a huge difference on the front. Confederate raids increased
through mid-1863 and tapered off around August as the Union finally
developed a cavalry force capable of keeping up with the Southern
horsemen. However, the effect of these raids was immeasurable; by the time
of the presidential elections in 1864, the Union had only then begun to
march into Tennessee, and a three-year stalemate had been occuring in
Virginia with no results on either side.
President Lincoln was soundly defeated by his Democratic opponent, New
York Governor Horatio Seymour, who began peace talks with the South the
day after he was inaugurated. According to the terms of the Treaty of
Alexandria, Kentucky remained with the Confederacy, as did a piece of
southern Missouri that was added to Arkansas. Also, the Mississippi was
demilitarized and opened to Northern shipping. This became a moot point in
1867, when the states of Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota,
Kansas, and Missouri formed the Union of Midwestern States, with its
capitol centrally located at Des Moines, Iowa.
With a land connection to the east lost, the territories of the west
gradually broke off: California, Oregon, Nevada, and the western half of
the New Mexico Territory (Arizona) formed the Commonwealth of the Pacific
in early 1868; the Confederacy added the Indian Territory and the eastern
half of the New Mexico Territory (West Texas) later that year. The Dakota
and Nebraska Territories were annexed by the UMS, and Colorado was split
in two by the UMS and the Mormons, now in the Nation of Deseret. The
British even moved in, taking the northern half of the Washington
Territory as the Mormons nabbed the south. The USA, now limited to New
England and the eastern Great Lakes states, was a shell of its former
self. Abraham Lincoln was a broken man; with the secession the UMS in
1867, he collapsed into a deep depression.
On January 6th, 1868, at his home in Springfield, he put a pistol to his
head and committed suicide. His wife Mary awoke, and was so overcome by
grief she picked up the gun and shot herself as well. Ulysses S. Grant,
the man whose invasion of Kentucky most likely started the downfall of the
Union, was last seen drinking on a Mississippi riverboat in 1870; he is
believed to have fallen overboard and drowned.