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Confederate Citadel
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Richmond, Virginia, became the capital of the Confederate States of America in May 1861. From that point on, it would be the target of multiple Union “On to Richmond” campaigns. Richmond was symbolic: its capitol building bore the imprimatur of the Revolutionary War generation and had been designed by Thomas Jefferson; on its grounds was a famous equestrian statue of George Washington. Nearby was St. John’s Church, where Patrick Henry had demanded liberty—or death.
But Richmond was an anomaly in the antebellum South. It supported a diverse population of whites, slaves, free people of color, and immigrants. It had modernized during the 1850s. By 1860, it ranked thirteenth nationally in manufacturing and boasted a robust commercial economy. When civil war erupted in 1861, it was only logical to shift the Confederate capital to the city on the James. Richmond became the keystone of the rebellion. Its people would sacrifice until there was literally nothing left. Rather than allow the Union army to take the city in 1865, the Confederacy’s military leaders fired the tobacco housed there, which created a firestorm that nearly destroyed the city. When the Federals entered Richmond on April 3, they could see the detritus that was a testament to the city’s and its citizens’ contributions to the Confederacy.
Title: Confederate Citadel
Description:
Richmond, Virginia, became the capital of the Confederate States of America in May 1861.
From that point on, it would be the target of multiple Union “On to Richmond” campaigns.
Richmond was symbolic: its capitol building bore the imprimatur of the Revolutionary War generation and had been designed by Thomas Jefferson; on its grounds was a famous equestrian statue of George Washington.
Nearby was St.
John’s Church, where Patrick Henry had demanded liberty—or death.
But Richmond was an anomaly in the antebellum South.
It supported a diverse population of whites, slaves, free people of color, and immigrants.
It had modernized during the 1850s.
By 1860, it ranked thirteenth nationally in manufacturing and boasted a robust commercial economy.
When civil war erupted in 1861, it was only logical to shift the Confederate capital to the city on the James.
Richmond became the keystone of the rebellion.
Its people would sacrifice until there was literally nothing left.
Rather than allow the Union army to take the city in 1865, the Confederacy’s military leaders fired the tobacco housed there, which created a firestorm that nearly destroyed the city.
When the Federals entered Richmond on April 3, they could see the detritus that was a testament to the city’s and its citizens’ contributions to the Confederacy.
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