Letter

Ordnance Office to Anderson, December 21, 1860

WAR DEPARTMENT,

Major ANDERSON, First Artillery, Commanding Fort Moultrie, S. C.:

Sm: In the verbal instructions communicated to you by Major Buell, t you are directed to hold possession of the forts in the harbor of Charleston, and, if attacked, to defend yourself to the last extremity. Under these instructions, you might infer that you are required to make a vain and useless sacrifice of your own life and the lives. of the men under your command, upon a mere point of honor. This is far from the President’s intentions. You are to exercise a sound military discretion on this subject.

It is neither expected nor desired that you should expose your own life or that of your men in a hopeless contlict in defense of these forts. If they are invested or attacked by a force so superior that resistance would, in your judgment, be a useless waste of life, it will be your duty to yield to necessity, and make the best terms in your power.

This will be the conduct of an honorable, brave, and humane officer, and you will be fully justified in such action. These orders are strictly confidential, and not to be communicated even to the officers under your command, without close necessity.t

Very respectfully,

*See Foster to De Russy, December 20, 1860, p. 100.
tSce Buell's memorandum, December 11, 1860, p. 89.
Pia. letter delivered to Major Anderson December 23, by Capt. John Withers,
104 OPERATIONS IN CHARLESTON HARBOR, &. C. (Cnae. .
Editor's Notes
From: Operations on the Pacific Coast, Pt. 1. Location: Washington. Summary: The Ordnance Office instructs Major Anderson to defend Fort Moultrie but to avoid futile sacrifice by yielding if resistance becomes hopeless against superior forces.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 50, Part 1 View original source ↗