Glorious Victory?

Arizona Free Press
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Historic newspapers capture the growing conflict during the week of the First Battle of Bull Run. The National Republican newspaper in Washington trumpeted a Union victory one hundred and fifty years ago today. From the seat of war! ran the first of 17 stacked headlines. The enemy outflanked! Glorious Victory! In fact, the Union lost the first major land battle of the Civil War, later known as the First Battle of Bull Run. Newspapers had come a long way by 1861, but accuracy was a challenge when eyewitnesses could hardly tell Union soldiers from Confederates. Historic newspapers available online in the NEH-funded Chronicling America database take the reader back to late July of 1861. Historic newspapers available online in the NEH-funded Chronicling America database Soon after the battle, prisoners-of-war arrived in Washington. Eleven Confederate soldiers were marched through the streets of Washington to the Old Capitol Prison, according to the National Republican. Outside the Treasury, a crowd threatened to hang the Confederates, forcing guards to take the prisoners inside until the excitement died down. When they were led past the Willard Hotel, a bystander punched a prisoner, nearly knocking him down. Wounded soldiers also came to Washington, leading the army to seek donations of ice, sheets, wine, pure spirits, and mosquito netting. Farther afield, editors seemed to gnash their teeth at scant and conflicting reports. The Shreveport Daily News published the gossip of Northern journals. The World says there is no truth in the reported fighting at Bulls Run today, runs one account in the Louisiana newspaper. Their sources ranged from War Department reports to an intelligent and reliable gentleman. Others proved less reliable. Dispatches from St. Louis and other points are utterly useless, runs one report on conflicts taking place in Missouri. Private letters are equally so. Two weeks had passed before the weekly Independent in Oskaloosa, Kansas, reported the latest news received by magnetic telegraph the rebel battery taken by Northern troops, a battle fought to a draw, and finally a stampede as Union soldiers retreated. Newspapers captured other aspects of the growing conflict in July 1861. The army haircut was popular with Washington schoolboys, who drummed on their desks and hummed our national airs. A tailor was arrested for using seditious language in a New York boardinghouse, and in Mobile, Alabama, a runaway slave named Henry was captured in a swamp. Meanwhile, the government announced plans to buy 400,000 blue flannel coats, 200,000 infantry caps, and 800,000 pairs of drawers. As the weeks passed, this list would grow: pickaxes, tent poles, drum sticks, worsted lace, bugles with extra mouthpieces. As both sides prepared for the battles to come, the National Republican found a lesson in Bull Run: If you have any doubt as to the supply of arms in the Southern army, there can be no doubt (judging from recent exploits) as to their supply of legs.