THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

Somber mood surrounds 150th Civil War commemoration

Ft. Sumter marks start of hostilities

Dale Smith, 60, a reenactor, held a Confederate flag as he looked out to Fort Sumter from the Battery in downtown Charleston, S.C., during yesterday’s 150th Civil War anniversary. Dale Smith, 60, a reenactor, held a Confederate flag as he looked out to Fort Sumter from the Battery in downtown Charleston, S.C., during yesterday’s 150th Civil War anniversary. (C. Aluka Berry/The State via Associated Press)
By Bruce Smith
Associated Press / April 13, 2011

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CHARLESTON, S.C. — Booming cannons, plaintive period music, and hushed crowds ushered in the 150th anniversary of America’s bloodiest war yesterday, a commemoration that continues to underscore a racial divide that had plagued the nation since before the Civil War.

The events marked the anniversary of the Confederate bombardment of Union-held Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, an engagement that plunged the nation into four years of war at a cost of more than 600,000 lives.

Several hundred people gathered on Charleston’s Battery before dawn, much as Charleston residents gathered 150 years ago to view the bombardment of April 12, 1861.

About 4 a.m., a single beam of light reached skyward from the stone works of Fort Sumter. About a half hour later, about the time the first shots were fired, a second beam glowed, signifying a nation torn in two.

Nearby, a brass ensemble played a concert entitled “When Jesus Wept’’ as hundreds listened, some in folding chairs, others standing.

Fifty years ago during the centennial of the Civil War, there was a celebratory mood. But yesterday, the 150th anniversary events were muted. Even the applause seemed subdued.

Of about 1,200 people attending two main commemorative events, only a handful were black. One man whose Confederate ancestor is credited with firing the first shot of the war acknowledged his family legacy as a mixed blessing.

“I think it signifies the mood of the nation,’’ said Linda Marshall, 58, a registered nurse from Charleston as she waited for the second beam of light as dawn creeped up. “I think we’re much more sensitive to other people and the diversity in this country.’’

A little over two hours later, as a red sun rose on James Island across the harbor, Confederate reenactors fired an authentic 1847 seacoast mortar, signaling about 30 other cannons ringing the harbor.

Those cannons quickly thumped and smoke rose in a reenactment of the Sumter bombardment.

In a dispatch to The Associated Press in 1861, an unnamed correspondent observed the fort’s parapets crumbling under the pounding of artillery. He wrote of gun emplacements being shot away and shells falling thick and fast.

“The ball has opened. War is inaugurated . . . Fort Sumter has returned the fire and brisk cannonading has been kept up,’’ the dispatch said.

Sumter fell after a 34-hour bombardment.

One of those on hand on James Island was John Hugh Farley of Roswell, Ga. Many historians credit Farley’s ancestor, Lieutenant Henry Farley, as firing the first shot at Sumter.

“It’s a real big honor. We are very proud of our family,’’ said Farley, who had two other ancestors fight for the South. “It certainly is a mixed blessing because it’s bringing back a memory from way back, but it also helps us to look at history and learn from history.’’

Later in the morning, Danny Lucas, 53 and black, was walking out after visiting Charleston’s Old Slave Mart Museum, where the history of Charleston’s role as an urban slave trading center is recounted.

“I have no problem with the Civil War being honored as long as it is inclusive,’’ said Lucas, a Ridgeland, S.C. resident. “I don’t think whites should be so defensive and I don’t think blacks should feel they are unwelcome to these kinds of things. I think it will fade over time.’’

Lucas does think last December’s secession ball in Charleston, during which South Carolina’s leaving the Union was commemorated, may have soured some blacks on the 150th events.

“The secession ball discouraged them because in their minds, they saw the ball as a celebration,’’ he said. With other events they may decide “I’m not going to go because there will be a whole lot of rebel yelling and carrying on.’’

“In this moment of remembrance, let us all do the tough truth telling necessary for our nation to finally heal from the sins of slavery and fratricide,’’ said Benjamin Todd Jealous, the president and chief executive officer of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in a statement released by the civil rights group.

“Commemorative events must neither ignore slavery as the principal cause of the Civil War, nor romanticize those who fought to keep African Americans in slavery,’’ he said. “This is a time for the nation to reflect and repent, not ignore — let alone celebrate — the atrocities that tore our country apart.’’

State Senator Glenn McConnell, president pro tempore of the South Carolina Senate and a Civil War reenactor, told the audience of about 700 on James Island that the effects of the war are still being felt.

“The War Between the States triggered generations of disputes and controversies between regions, races, and cultures,’’ he said.

He said the South has moved on and “the time has come to move beyond the petty disputes of the past.’’

Then seven reenactors in Confederate gray fired a 21-gun salute in memory of all who died on South Carolina soil. Two buglers then echoed “taps.’’

As the event broke up, a small group of Confederate reenactors in the back of the crowd took up singing “Dixie,’’ although only a handful joined them and not very enthusiastically.

At the White House, President Obama captured the somber mood in a proclamation that the date would be the first day of the Civil War Sesquicentennial.

“On this milestone in American history, we remember the great cost of the unity and liberty we now enjoy, causes for which so many have laid down their lives,’’ the statement said.

Alluding to the war’s ultimate end in 1865, Obama said: “When the guns fell silent and the fate of our Nation was secured, blue and gray would unite under one flag and the institution of slavery would be forever abolished from our land.’’

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