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men under him. One thing only remained to be attended to, and that was the placing in position of a small Blakely rifled gun, the first ever used in America, which had just arrived from England—an unexpected present to the State from Charles K. Prioleau, of Charleston, a partner in the Liverpool branch of the firm of John Frazer & Co. It arrived off the harbor on the day before the order from Montgomery was received, and delayed its execution for twenty-four hours. At two o'clock P. M. April 11th, General Beauregard, through his aids, Captain S. D. Lee, Colonel James Chestnut, Jr., and Lieutenant A. R. Chisolm, made a formal demand for the immediate surrender of Fort Sumter. The terms offered were: to transport Major Anderson and his command to any port in the United States he might select; to allow him to move out of the fort with company arms and property, and all private property; and to salute his flag on lowering it. General Beauregard's Report of the Bombardment of Sumte
Chapter 24: Troops resume their former positions after the battle of Shiloh. General Breckinridge forms the rear guard. General Beauregard recommends General Bragg for promotion. preliminary report sent by General Beauregard, April 11th, to the War Department. difficulty of obtaining reports of corps commanders. their reports sent directly to the War Department. Inaccuracies resulting therefrom. General Beauregard proposes an exchange of prisoners. General Pope gives no saticially to those who served directly under him. Under the same date (April 8th) a telegram was forwarded by General Beauregard to the Adjutant-General's office at Richmond, giving an account of the second day's battle; and shortly afterwards (April 11th) a preliminary report This Report is given in full in the Appendix to Chapter XX. was likewise sent by him, for the immediate use of the War Department. It was incomplete, and, in many respects, imperfect, as it was written on the spur of t
t, G. T. Beauregard, Brig.-Genl. Comdg. Headquarters Provisional Army C. S., Charleston, S. C., April 27th, 1861. Brig.-Genl. Cooper, Adj.-Genl. C. S. A.: Sir,—I have the honor to submit the following detailed report of the bombardment and surrender of Fort Sumter, and the incidents connected therewith. Having completed my channel-defences and batteries in the harbor, necessary for the reduction of Fort Sumter, I despatched two of my aids at 2.20 P. M., on Thursday, the 11th of April, with a communication to Major Anderson, in command of the fort, demanding its evacuation. I offered to transport himself and command to any port in the United States he might select; to allow him to move out of the fort with company-arms and property, and all private property, and to salute his flag on lowering it. He refused to accede to this demand. As my aids were about leaving, Major Anderson remarked, that if we did not batter him to pieces he would be starved out in a few days,