February 20, 1862 Thursday
In late afternoon at the White House William Wallace “Willie” Lincoln died, dies from typhoid fever, probably caused by polluted drinking water in the White House, throwing personal tragedy upon the victories from the West (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willie_Lincoln ). A weeping President tried to console his distraught wife. The President stops in his secretary's office and says: "Well, Nicolay, my boy is gone—he is actually gone," and bursting into tears turns and goes into his own office. At the same time casualty lists from Fort Donelson were spread on bulletin boards North and South – more personal tragedy.
On the Mississippi River the Confederate bastion of Columbus, Kentucky was to be no more; the fall of the forts on the rivers had ordained its evacuation and orders were given from Richmond. Withdrawal into the middle South was a necessity for the Confederacy, and Kentucky was nearly devoid of organized Confederate troops. In North Carolina there was an expedition by Federals in Currituck Sound. Governor Isham Harris announced the removal of Tennessee’s capital from Nashville to Memphis. The Confederate Army, reassembling at Nashville, was pulling back to Murfreesboro, southeast of the city, at command of Gen Albert Sidney Johnston.
Flag Officer Farragut arrived at Ship Island to begin what Secretary of the Navy Welles termed the "most important operation of the war"--the assault on New Orleans. In his instruction of 10 February to the Flag Officer, Welles observed: "If successful, you open the way to the sea for the great West, never again to be closed. The rebellion will be riven in the center, and the flag to which you have been so faithful will recover its supremacy in every State." For some weeks prior to Farragut's arrival, Union forces had been gathering at the Ship Island staging area. As early as 30 December, General Bragg, CSA, had written from Mobile: "The enemy's vessels, some twenty, are below, landing supplies and large bodies of troops on Ship Island." With an inadequate naval force, however, the Confederates were unable to contest the steady build-up of Northern strength.
Major General John E. Wool at Fort Monroe, on hearing a report that Newport News was to be attacked by Virginia, wrote Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton: "We want a larger naval force than we have at present." Meanwhile, the same day, Secretary of the Navy Welles was writing Lieutenant Worden: "Proceed with the U.S.S. Monitor, under your command, to Hampton Roads, Virginia . . . "
Brigadier General George W. Cullum, General Halleck's Chief of Staff at Cairo, relayed an urgent message from General McClellan regarding the gunboats to Lieutenant S. L. Phelps: "General McClellan gives most emphatic order to have gun and mortar boats here ready by Monday morning. Must move on Columbus with at least four serviceable gunboats and mortar boats. Only two gunboats at all serviceable here, and but one mortar boat, three being ashore."
Flag Officer L. M. Goldsborough wrote Assistant Secretary of the Navy Fox: ''At Washington, and also at Newberne [North Carolina] the obstructions in the river are very formidable, and admirably placed. : They consist of a double row of piles thoroughly well driven by steam, and sunken vessels. The rows are at right angles to the shore and parallel with each other. One stretches all the way from the right bank nearly over to the left, and the other all the way from the left bank nearly over to the right, and there is a battery of considerable force on either bank between them; so that attacking vessels must first go bows on to one, and then after passing it, be raked aft by one and forward by the other at the same time." The Confederates sought to reduce the Union Navy's effectiveness by well-placed obstructions, making passage of shore batteries difficult and costly.
Armed boat expedition from U.S.S. New London, commanded by Lieutenant A. Read, captured 12 small sloops and schooners at Cat Island, Mississippi, suspected of being used as pilot vessels by blockade runners.
U.S.S. Portsmouth, under Commander Swartwout, captured sloop Pioneer off Boca Chica, Texas, with cargo of tobacco.