Chapter Index
    Cover of The Demon of Unrest
    Biography

    The Demon of Unrest

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Demon of Unrest by Michael James Fannon is a dark, atmospheric novel that follows a troubled protagonist as they confront supernatural forces and inner demons. Set in a mysterious, haunting world, the story weaves together elements of horror, suspense, and psychological drama as the character grapples with unsettling events that threaten their sanity and survival. Themes of fear, guilt, and the unknown drive the narrative, creating a tense exploration of what happens when external horrors mirror personal turmoil.

    On Feb­ru­ary 28, Major Ander­son sought his offi­cers’ assess­ments on the required per­son­nel and ships to rein­force Fort Sumter for sub­mis­sion to the War Depart­ment and Pres­i­dent Lin­coln. He instruct­ed each offi­cer to pro­vide their esti­mates autonomous­ly, hop­ing that the daunt­ing real­i­ties of rein­force­ment would dis­suade the gov­ern­ment from pur­su­ing aggres­sive action.

    Cap­tain Fos­ter, the chief engi­neer, report­ed the high­est esti­mate: land­ing and secur­ing the bat­ter­ies at Cum­mings Point and Mor­ris Island would neces­si­tate 3,000 reg­u­lars or 10,000 vol­un­teers, with an addi­tion­al 3,000 reg­u­lars required for Sul­li­van’s Island. To main­tain con­trol over these posi­tions after­ward, a force of 10,000 reg­u­lars or 30,000 vol­un­teers would be essen­tial. The antic­i­pat­ed resis­tance would come from South Car­olini­ans, bol­stered by troops from neigh­bor­ing states.

    Artillery Cap­tain Tru­man Sey­mour pre­sent­ed an even graver eval­u­a­tion. He assert­ed that resup­ply mis­sions via deceit were no longer fea­si­ble due to height­ened vig­i­lance, stat­ing that open attempts would fail unless ves­sels were imper­vi­ous to gun­fire. Such efforts would draw imme­di­ate atten­tion, and any siz­able Union troop move­ment toward Fort Sumter would pro­voke a swift Con­fed­er­ate response, con­sol­i­dat­ing sub­stan­tial local resources against an invad­ing force. Sey­mour warned of the pos­si­bil­i­ty of twen­ty thou­sand trained marks­men assem­bling to defend Charleston Har­bor, which he likened to the siege of Sev­astopol, pre­dict­ing cat­a­stroph­ic loss­es.

    Oth­er offi­cers con­tributed esti­mates for a nec­es­sary invad­ing force vary­ing between three thou­sand and ten thou­sand men, all requir­ing mar­itime pro­tec­tion. Quar­ter­mas­ter Hall sug­gest­ed deploy­ing sev­en war­ships, although he cau­tioned that suc­cess would hinge on improb­a­ble cir­cum­stances and a like­ly fail­ure was more prob­a­ble.

    Ander­son relayed these assess­ments to Wash­ing­ton, care­ful to express his con­cur­ring view that an effec­tive attempt to rein­force the fort would need at least twen­ty thou­sand well-trained troops. This rec­om­men­da­tion implied the need for a force larg­er than the entire U.S. Army at that time, demon­strat­ing the immense chal­lenge posed by rein­forc­ing Fort Sumter amidst the loom­ing con­flict.

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