Museum exhibit chronicles Civil War 'siege'

Display tells how city weathered barrage of 1861

Published: Sunday, May 30 2004 12:00 a.m. MDT

J. Grahame Long, curator of history at Charleston Museum, checks displays before the opening of a new exhibition that tells the story of the 587-day "siege" of Charleston by Union troops against Confederate troops.

Lou Krasky, Associated Press

Enlarge photo»

CHARLESTON, S.C. — The towering steeple of Second Presbyterian Church was used by Union batteries to sight the guns that lobbed shells into Charleston during a 587-day Civil War siege.

And now in its building nearby, the Charleston Museum has mounted its first permanent exhibit of those days of war and deprivation.

Although technically not a siege — the rail lines to the west still operated although tenuously toward war's end — the Union blockade put a stranglehold on Charleston, which refused to surrender.

The new exhibit in the nation's oldest museum shows how the city weathered the conflict that opened with the Confederate bombardment on Fort Sumter in the harbor in 1861.

The fort surrendered after that opening battle. The Confederates occupied it and later found themselves in turn under siege from Union forces. Historians say the fort has been shelled more than any other site in the Western Hemisphere.

"It is to describe not the Civil War in general or the Civil War nationally but how it affected Charleston," said John Brumgardt, the museum's director. "It was pretty grim on the home front."

Grim meant drinking acorn coffee instead of the real stuff; setting up relief houses so passing soldiers could get a meal; rushing to the docks when a blockade runner managed to sneak through with a supply of clothing or sugar.

The exhibit includes the chairs from Institute Hall where delegates signed the Articles of Secession by which South Carolina became the first state to leave the Union.

Here, too, is a pair of wedding slippers, with a price tag of $100 Confederate, that likely would have cost only $5 before the war. Inflation was an ever-worsening problem in Charleston where residents dealt with the psychological stress of shells falling every day.

"A spool of thread that cost 5 cents at the beginning of the war might cost 80 cents by 1862 and over $1 by the end of the war," Brumgardt said.

The city was never overrun, but Confederate troops evacuated as Sherman's army advanced in 1865.

The exhibit also includes a spray of flowers that decorated the flag pole at Fort Sumter when the Union flag was raised again at war's end.

The Civil War was not the first time this coastal city was under siege; the British captured Charleston, then the nation's fourth-largest city, after a six-week Revolutionary War siege in 1780.

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