Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, BY CHARLES B. RICHARDSON, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT. IN issuing in the convenient form of two volumes the Southen History of the War, by Mr. E. A. Pollard, of Richmond, the actuating motive is the belief that this work is one of permanent historical value. Of the two classes of historical composition-namely, that | which is made contemporaneously with the transactions recorded and that which is made after the interval of years-it must always happen that the former will show errors of fact, errors in the interpretation of facts, and errors in the correlation of facts. These a calm, judicial survey will readily avoid. Yet public appreciation accounts such faults to be fully countervailed by the life-like interest of the narrative, by the revelations of actual motive on the part of the actors and by a tone and color of reality that only portraiture from the life can convey. The work of Mr. Pollard belongs to the former category. That many things are now known inore justly than when the author poured forth, from the warin feeling of the moment, his thoughts, impressione, and aspirations, it is easy to believe. There is also much in the tone of the book that now, since the close of the war and the failure of the Secession experiment, might appropriately be changed. A Yet granting all these drawbacks, which are inseparable from contemporaneous composition, the work of Mr. Pollard remains one of marked and peculiar value. Living at the centre of the Confederate power, Mr. Pollard's opportunities for penetrating the real springs of action were excellent. Gifted with aremarkable keenness of observation and analysis, he has expresand with pungent power the judgments of a mind distinguished . its independence. A Secessionist à l'outrance, believing with all the strength of his nature in the Confederate cause, he was yet a caustic critic of the Confederate government and of those charged with its administration and the conduct of the war; and he had the talent to express these views in a style of nervous and vigorous eloquence. Such were the circumstances under which this work was composed; and its pre-eminent value arises from the fact that it photographs the events of the war in the circumstances of their actual performance; the motives of action as they really revealed themselves, and the hopes and aspirations of the South as they beat in the breasts of living men. Doubtless some things in this history might be corrected; some made to conform to accomplished facts. But this would be to take away from rather than to add to its essential value, which is that of a mémoire pour servir. As such, it must always remain a valuable contribution to the history of the war; and from the side of the South it is the only complete record of the momentous four years during which Secession was fought for and lost. ИЕЛА ЛОВК CONTENTS. Delusive Ideas of the Union.--Administration of John Ada as. - The "Strict Con- structionists." The "State Rights" Men in the North. - The Missouri Restriction.- General Jackson and the Nullification Question. -The Compromise Measures of 1850. -History of the Anti-Slavery Party. -The "Pinckney Resolutions." -The Twenty- first Rule.- The Abolitionists in the Presidential Canvass of 1852.-The Kansas- Nebraska Bill. - The Rise and Growth of the Republican Party. The Election of President Buchanan. -The Kansas Controversy. -" Lecompton" and "Anti-Lecomp- ton."-Results of the Kansas Controversy. The John Brown Raid.-" Helper's Book."-Demoralization of the Northern Democratic Party. -The Faction of Stephen A. Douglas.- The Alabama Resolutions. - The Political Platforms of 1860.-Election of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States.-Analysis of the Vote.-Politica Condition of the North. Secession of South Carolina.-Events in Charleston Harbor. -Disagreements in Mr. Buchanan's Cabinet. - The Secession Movement in Progress. -Peace Measures in Congress. - The Crittenden Resolutions. - The Peace Congress.- Policy of the Border Slave States.-Organization of the Confederate States Govern- ment.-President Buchanan.-Incoming of the Administration of Abraham Lincoln. Mr. Lincoln's Journey to Washington. Ceremonies of the Inauguration. The In- augural Speech of President Lincoln. - The Spirit of the New Administration. Its Fi- nancial Condition.-Embassy from the Southern Confederacy.-Perfidious Treatment of the Southern Commissioners. -Preparations for War.-The Military Bills of the Confederate Congress.-General Beauregard.-Fortifications of Charleston Harbor.- Naval Preparations of the Federal Government.-Attempted Reinforcement of Fort Sumter.-Perfidy of the Federal Government.-Excitement in Charleston.-Reduction of Fort Sumter by the Confederate Forces.-How the News was received in Wash- ington. Lincoln's Calculation.-His Proclamation of WAR. The "Reaction" in the North. Displays of Rancor towards the South. -Northern Democrats.-Replies of Southern Governors to Lincoln's Requisition for Troops. --Spirit of the South.-Seces- sion of Virginia.-Maryland. The Baltimore Riot.-Patriotic Example of Missouri.- Lincoln's Proclamation blockading the Southern Ports. General Lee.--The Federals evacuate Harper's Ferry.-Burning of the Navy Yard at Norfolk. -The Second Secessionary Movement. Spirit of Patriotic Devotion in the South.-Supply of Arms in the South. -The Federal Government and the State of Maryland.-The Pros- |