It was bombarded from about 4:30 pm April 12th to 14th.
Fort Sumter
Southern forces commanded by Pierre Beauregard bombarded the US Fort Sumter from April 12 through April 14, 1861.
On April 12, 1861 the confederate army bombarded Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor.
South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas were the first seven states to leave the Union before Fort Sumter was bombarded.
Confederate troops bombarded a federal arsenal at Fort Sumter in South Carolina.
Radical Confederates like Confederate President Jefferson Davis, wanted to show the South and the North that the Confederacy was real. Davis gave permission to have Fort Sumter in the Charleston harbor to be bombarded and forcing it to surrender. With little choice, as the Fort Sumter commander was low on supplies, he surrendered the fort to the South.
The Confederates bombarded Fort Sumter, Charleston harbor, South Carolina, on 12 April 1861
The Battle of Fort Sumter started as a result of the Union intention to resupply the fort in April of 1861. Unwilling to allow the fort to remain in Union hands, South Carolina's military units bombarded the fort into submission between April 12th and 14th, which resulted in the surrender of the fort as well as the beginning of the American Civil War.
The name of the Federal fort in the Charleston, South Carolina harbor, Fort Sumter, will always be remembered in US history. It was there that the Southern forces bombarded the fort with canon fire and for all practical purposes was the beginning of the US Civil War.
Fort Sumter
During the American Civil War, the force that laid siege to Fort Sumter initially consisted of militia troops from the Southern state of South Carolina. For several months, Fort Sumter was left alone, if also watched carefully, by these militia -- until April of 1861, at which time the fort was besieged and then bombarded into surrender.
The attack on Fort Sumter lasted for approximately 34 hours, beginning on April 12, 1861, and concluding on April 13, 1861. This engagement marked the start of the American Civil War, as Confederate forces bombarded the fort, which was held by Union troops. Ultimately, the Union garrison surrendered, and the fort fell into Confederate hands.