(excerpts from letter)
“CHARLESTON, April 11th, 1861
. . . Your father was gone all night with Captain Hartstein, seeing to placing light boats, with fires of pine wood, in the harbor, for the purpose of detecting the approach of the enemy’s boats. He has gone again to-day and will not return until evening. . . . A demand for the surrender of the Fort was made to-day, but the answer has not yet come. In case of Anderson’s refusal (of which there is little doubt), the fire of the batteries on him will open at 8 to-night. God grant the Fort may be surrendered before the arrival of the Fleet, for although I believe General Beauregard is prepared on every side, yet I should feel all danger were over if we had the Fort. It will be a night of intense excitement and although I can’t help feeling shivery and nervous, yet I am not as much alarmed as I might be, and something tells me it won’t be so bad after all I am going down after a while to walk with Mrs. Chesnut on the Battery and will add more when I hear the answer Anderson returns.”
“April 12.
“I was awakened about half past four, this morning, by the booming of a cannon, and it has been going on steadily ever since—the firing is constant and rapid—with what results we don’t yet know. Your father has gone to Morris’s Island to obtain a report from the command there, and in order to avoid the guns of Sumter he has taken Major Whiting’s row boat, so as to run in by the Inlets. I don’t know how long he will be gone.”
“11 o’clock. The news we hear so far is good. No one killed on Morris’s Island so far—and a breach reported in Fort .Sumter. The iron battery is working well and the balls from Sumter have no effect on it. All is excitement of the most painful kind. Another story is that the Harriet Lane which was off the bar last night has been fired into and injured.”