February 7, 1862 Friday
Gen Grant made a personal reconnaissance of Fort Donelson on the Cumberland River near Dover, Tennessee, and his force established itself near captured Fort Henry. The gunboats moved back down the Tennessee River to the Ohio River, preparatory to ascending the Cumberland River to Fort Donelson. Confederate Gen A.S. Johnston, realizing his Kentucky line had been wrecked, hurried troops into Donelson. Gen Gideon Pillow from Clarksville, Tennessee and Gen John B. Floyd from Russellville, Kentucky were ordered to Donelson. At Bowling Green, Kentucky, Johnston, Beauregard, and William Joseph Hardee met to discuss the extremely serious situation. The populace North and South soon heard the news of the momentous, or tragic, breakthrough.
U.S.S. Conestoga, commanded by Lieutenant S. L. Phelps, forced Confederates on the Tennessee River to abandon and burn steamers Samuel Orr, Appleton Belle, and Lynn Boyd to prevent their falling into Union hands. Samuel Orr was loaded with torpedoes, "which," Phelps observed, "very soon exploded; the second one was freighted with powder, cannon, shot, grape, balls, etc. Fearing an explosion from the fired boats (there were two together), I had stopped at a distance of 1,000 yards; but even there our skylights were broken by the concussion; the light upper deck was raised bodily, doors were forced open, and locks and fastenings everywhere broken. The whole river for half a mile around about was completely beaten up by the failing fragments and the shower of shot, grape, balls, etc."
Brigadier General John A. McClernand, wrote Flag Officer Foote that he was giving the name Fort Foote to the captured Fort Henry. He congratulated the Flag Officer: "As an acknowledgment of the consummate skill with which you brought your gunboats into action yesterday, and of the address and bravery displayed by yourself and your command, I have taken the liberty of giving the late Fort Henry the new and more appropriate name of Fort Foote. Please pardon the liberty I have taken without first, securing your concurrence, as I am hardly disposed to do, considering the liberty which you took in capturing the fort yesterday without my cooperation. "Meanwhile, Tennessee Governor Isham G. Harris advised Confederate Secretary of War Benjamin from Nashville: "Fort Henry fell yesterday. Memphis and Clarksville Railroad bridge over Tennessee River destroyed. A large increase of force to defend this [state] from Cumberland Gap to Columbus is an absolute and imperative necessity. If not successfully defended, the injury is irreparable."
U.S.S. Bohio, Acting Master William D. Gregory, captured schooner Eugenie Smith, en route from Havana to Matamoras.
After laboriously moving vessels over the shallow bar at Hatteras Inlet on North Carolina’s Outer Banks, Ambrose E. Burnside’s Federal expedition headed toward Roanoke Island. Commodore Louis M. Goldsborough’s squadron attacked and routed the few underarmed, makeshift Confederate naval defenders, while in the afternoon and evening Burnside landed his troops on the island. Meanwhile, to the north, Federals reoccupied Romny, western Virginia as Confederates pulled back toward Winchester, Virginia. There was a small expedition and skirmish at Flint Hill and Hunter’s Mill, Virginia. Federal batteries shelled Harper’s Ferry briefly.
In the White House in Washington Willie Lincoln, youngest son of the President, lay critically ill and President Lincoln spends most of the day with him. President Lincoln interviews a delegation from Congress interested in settling the argument between Gen Hunter and Gen Lane. He borrows "Emerson's Representative Men" from the Library of Congress.
This will give you some inkling of what is about to occur the rest of this year -
http://americancivilwar.com/tl/tl1862.html .