January 16, 1862 Thursday
Gunfire and boat crews, including Marines, from U.S.S. Hatteras, under Commander Emmons, destroyed a Confederate battery, seven small vessels loaded with cotton and turpentine ready to run the blockade, a railroad depot and wharf, and the telegraph office at Cedar Keys, Florida. A small detachment of Confederate troops was taken prisoner. Such unceasing attack from the sea on any point of her long coastline and inland waterways cost the South sorely in losses, economic disruption, and dispersion of strength in defense.
Flag Officer Foote reported: "The seven gunboats built by contract were put in commission today." The Eads gunboats augmented Foote's wooden force and would turn the tide in the Union's effort to split the Confederacy. (
http://civilwarwiki.net/wiki/USS_Cairo )
U.S.S. Albatross, under Commander Prentiss, destroyed British blockade runner York near Bogue Inlet, North Carolina, where York had been run aground.
In Kentucky Confederate forces, encamped near Beech Grove with their backs to the Cumberland River to their south, heard reports of Federal advances under George H. Thomas, but did nothing about it. The Confederates under Brig Gen Felix K. Zollicoffer had been at Mill Springs, south of the Cumberland, but Zollicoffer had unwisely taken them north of the river. The new commander, Brig Gen George B. Crittenden, had ordered Zollicoffer to retire south of the river, but he had not done so.
In Washington Edwin M. Stanton took over the Federal War Department with a drive and efficiency that startled those used to the previous slipshod management. From the beginning Stanton was going to be a hard but generally just man to deal with. President Lincoln gives his first written assignment to new secretary of war, E. M. Stanton : "If a clerkship can be given Mr. [Richard D.] Goodwin I shall be very glad I am very earnest about this."