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is a project of ILLINOIS HISTORIC PRESERVATION AGENCY ABRAHAM LINCOLN PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY & MUSEUM Co-Sponsored by ABRAHAM LINCOLN ASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS SPRINGFIELD Funding Provided by NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES NATIONAL HISTORICAL PUBLICATIONS & RECORDS COMMISSION The Papers of Abraham Lincoln would like to thank Director Amy Martin, Dave Blanchette, Kristy Bond, Paul Burke, James Cornelius, Brooke Diaz, Jennifer Ericson, Roberta Fairburn, Allen Guelzo, Eileen Mackevich, Brian McGrady, Mary Michals, Carmen Morgan, Patrick Russell, Dennis Segelquist, William B. Tubbs, Joan Walters, and Chris Wills for their assistance in creating this volume. On Lincoln’s Mind Leading the Nation to the Gettysburg Address Christian McWhirter Daniel W. Stowell Stacy Pratt McDermott Kelley B. Clausing Marilyn Mueller R. Boyd Murphree Daniel E. Worthington Edward A. Bradley David J. Gerleman With an Introduction by Governor Pat Quinn On Lincoln’s Mind Leading the Nation to the Gettysburg Address © 2013, Illinois Historic Preservation Agency Springfield, Illinois ISBN 0-942579-26-7 In partnership with the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation Not printed using taxpayer dollars. 10/13 7.5M IOCI 14-161 State of IllInoIS • offIce of the Governor • SprInGfIeld, IllInoIS 62706 Eighty-seven years and 272 words. Abraham Lincoln’s immortal Gettysburg Address delivered in 1863 took the nation back four score and seven years to 1776 and reminded us why the United States of America was founded and why its principles were worth fighting for. It continues to be one of the most profound speeches ever made by a head of state. But the Gettysburg Address is even more amazing when you realize that Lincoln wrote it while dealing with a myriad of other issues that demanded his attention. I know what that is like. When I’m not meeting with lawmakers, there is legislation to sign or veto, or constituent concerns to address. Policy issues arise within government agencies, crises need attention, public appearances need to be scheduled, and a host of other demands occupy every day of my life as Governor of Illinois. This pales in comparison with what a wartime president had on his daily agenda. I often wonder how Lincoln ever did it. And yet, the business of the Presidency had to continue. Besides the conduct of the war, President Lincoln had to run a country, most of whose citizens were not on the front lines. There were business and fiscal issues; infrastructure building and maintenance; expanding railroads; declaring a new national holiday, Thanksgiving; and on top of it all, seeking re-election. This publication gives us a rare, private glimpse into the Lincoln administration and the daily public and private issues the President had to deal with during the weeks surrounding the delivery of his Gettysburg Address. Based on original research and discoveries by the Papers of Abraham Lincoln, it reminds us that our nation’s leaders can make their mark on history through monumental speeches memorized by every school child, or through a simple note that changes the course of history for one individual. I encourage you to join Illinois and the nation as we commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Gettysburg Address, and to use this publication to gain a better insight into Abraham Lincoln. Pat Quinn, Governor State of Illinois W hen the last gun fired at Gettysburg on July 3, 1863, few understood what the battle meant to the conduct of the war or the Union cause, including Abraham Lincoln. Surely, Lincoln was elated to learn that his long-beleaguered Army of the Potomac had finally won a significant victory against Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia but it would be 139 days until the President visited that field and made his famous, cogent, and concise summation of the war’s cost and promise for America. During that time-span, Lincoln considered a host of issues and contended with numerous voices competing for his attention. Indeed, the hundreds of letters he received presented a perfect cacophony of requests, reports, complaints, and commendations. The pages that follow include examples of the correspondence sent to and by Lincoln between July 4 and November 19, 1863. They illustrate how the nation spoke to its leader in a time of crisis and how difficult it must have been for Lincoln to navigate such a range of issues and still complete the “unfinished work” of the men who died on that battlefield. Riots in New York The Battle of Gettysburg was notable for being one of the few major Civil War battles fought on northern soil but a different sort of violence broke out even deeper in the North only ten days later. From July 13 to 16, fighting erupted on the streets of New York City in the largest riot in American history. Desperate for assistance, four of New York’s most prominent citizens (including the grandson of the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court) telegraphed Lincoln for help: Rioters and New York police clash in front of the New York Tribune offices. On Lincoln’s Mind 1 John Jay and others to Abraham Lincoln – July 13, 1863 To The Prest of the U.S. Washington From New York Dated13th Rec’d July 13 Evening 1863 M Our City having given her militia at your call is at the mercy of a mob which assembled this morning to resist the Draft & are now spreading fire & outrage. Several buildings in different wards are in flames & the “Times” & “Tribune” offices are at this moment threatened. New York looks to you for instant help in troops & an officer to Command them and to declare martial law Telegraph wires cut in all directions John Jay Geo. T. Strong Walcott Gibbs James Wadsworth The federal draft was the immediate cause of the riot but the mob soon lashed out at everything anti-war New Yorkers hated about the current state of affairs. They targeted African Americans specifically, killing at least one hundred. Things calmed somewhat on the 15th, when officials suspended the city’s draft. On the 16th, the New York State Militia and Union soldiers fresh from the battlefield at Gettysburg put a final stop to the chaos. Restoring the Union was Lincoln’s primary goal but keeping the North unified enough to fight remained a challenge. Drawing names of draftees from a draft-wheel in New York. 2 On Lincoln’s Mind A Plea for Help from the Frontier Another potential powder-keg for Lincoln was growing tension between the federal government and Native Americans on the frontier. The federal government paid relatively close attention to its relations with Native Americans before the war but the rebellion in the South drew Lincoln’s attention away from the West. As a result, the often-corrupt federal Indian Agents were free to abuse their power even more than during peacetime, while the Native Americans they were supposedly assisting grew increasingly frustrated. Placed in federally-supervised reservations, many of these tribes depended on the government for food and supplies. Any dip in this support could cause serious repercussions. This tension showed itself most notably in the Dakota rebellion of 1862, which resulted in the largest mass execution in American history. However, resentments simmered in tribes all over the frontier. In the petition below, several leaders of the Kaw Tribe in Kansas sought compensation from Lincoln for items stolen from or promised to them by the federal government. Typically, such calls went unanswered during the war, as Lincoln simply did not have time to A group of Kaw Indians meet with the commissioner and chief clerk of Indian Affairs address them thoroughly. in 1867. The three on the far right were all signers of the 1863 petition to Lincoln. From right to left: Wah ti an gah, Kah he ga wa ti an ga, and Alega wah ho. Petition of Is-tata Sin and others to Abraham Lincoln – July 17, 1863 Kansas Agency. Council Grove July 17th 1863. My Great Father. I wanted to go to Washington to see you, but you did not want me to come, and now as you told me, I ask my agent to write you a letter. My Father! I am very poor and I want you to help me. I want to have two payments each year, and about $20. for each person. I have a big debt to pay and want some money left after paying it. On Lincoln’s Mind 3 Agent Montgomery stole $2000. of our money. I want it. I send you the papers proving it one year ago, and want you to examine them and pay me the money. You owe us 300. cattle, 400 hogs, 400. chickens 300. hoes, and 300 axes. We got carts once, and you owe us six more. We dont want any of these things, but there value in money. Major Harvey promised us some work horses. Our Great Father told us we were. the richest of all the Indians; now we are poor. Major Harey told us we should have $12000. as long as grass grows and the Kaw river runs; now we get only $8000 We have had 150 horses stolen by your white children which by the Treaty of 1825, you ought to pay us for. My Great Father! White men tell us that you are going to drive us off to another place. We dont want to go. We want our children to have this place when we are dead. My Great Father! Your White children have killed seven of my children, but I have listened to you and done them no harm. I suppose we have got some land on the Big Blue in Missouri. Which I think is worth a great deal of money, which I want. I hear this money has been taken to pay for our stone houses, and I want to know if there is any left. I don’t like the land the commissioner gave to my Half Breed children, which is scattered all over the Reserve; but I want it altogether on Rock Creek. I don’t like my trader, I want my first trader, Choteau, and another besides. We have some log-houses which need repairing very much. The former Agent promised me a good house to live in besides the kitchen which I now have. I have seen the houses of the Head Chiefs of other tribes, and I am ashamed of my house. You owe us six medles which you promised me more than a year ago, and I have not received them yet. My braves would like to have nine small ones. I need more cattle and farming tools. I want a Blacksmith and a Carpenter. The white man’s mill takes half my corn and wheat; I want my own mill to grind for me. Some of my men have no fields, and they want them. I have heard that our last Agent took some of our money, I want you to write me if this is so. and if it has been paid back. You promised to listen to my requests just as if I came to Washington and talked to you; and now my Great Father, I want you to attend to this and answer me very soon. I am very poor and hope you will do all you can for me and my people. About 70 of my boys are fighting in the army of my Great Father, and I rejoice to hear of his success Signed in the presence of, H. W. Farnsworth U.S. In Ag’t, Joseph James U.S. Interpreter his X mark 4 Is tata sin Nopa wi a On Lincoln’s Mind his X mark his X mark Joseph Dunlap Strong Sargent A Reeve Kah he ga wa ti an ga Wah Shun Gah E be sun ga Pah hus ka lun ga Alega wah ho Kah he ga shun ga Net he ga wah ches so Wah hah na sun Kah he gate she Wah pah jah Wah ti an gah Shen ga wah Sa On le Sha Mah she tum wa Pah hah na gah le No bah gah ho Pah du hol le Che hah she wa ti en gah his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark his X mark A member of the Kaw Tribe. As the Kaw petitioners indicate, seventy of their tribesmen had enlisted in the Union army. Nevertheless, this call for assistance appears to have gone unanswered. Shortly after the Civil War, the federal government had to allocate emergency funds to stave off starvation among the Kaws. In 1872, the government removed the tribe to Oklahoma to make room for white settlement on their lands in Kansas. Job Seekers A more mundane distraction for Lincoln was the almost constant stream of letters from job seekers or people recommending job seekers. The stream was more of a torrent early in Lincoln’s administration but it never died out completely as friends, acquaintances, colleagues, and strangers continually came knocking. Lincoln found wading through such paperwork particularly onerous On Lincoln’s Mind 5 and distributing thousands of jobs induced many headaches for the President. This letter from New York judge Truman Smith was typical; it was from a political and professional colleague speaking for a job seeker Lincoln knew from earlier in his career. The applicant, John B. Fry, had been the private secretary of Lincoln’s political idol Henry Clay, which made it very likely the President would approve his appointment for a similar position in the Judge Truman Smith. Quartermaster’s Office. Lincoln’s response was characteristically brief with a brief flash of wit – noting that his approval was unnecessary because Fry was already doing the job. Truman Smith to Abraham Lincoln – July 27, 1863 New York city (61 Wm St) July 27th/63 Mr President You will doubtless recollect the Bearer Mr Jno B Fry who was for several years the private Secy of the late Mr Clay and who (in Washington) participated in our labors and Efforts during the Canvass of 1848. Mr Fry has since experienced some thing of adverse fortune but he has at all times retained my Confidence as a man of honor & rectitude. The Hon Secy of War has recently at my instance appointed him to a Clerkship in the Quater Master Genls Office. I have said to him that he should renew his acquaintance with you & this he will do by presenting this note. I have the honor to be Mr President most faithfully & truly Yours Truman Smith [Endorsement] Mr John B. Fry, named within, is an acquaintance of mine, whom I first knew nearly twenty years ago. I shall be very glad to learn of his being settled in the position, which he seems very nearly in already. A. Lincoln August 5. 1863. 6 On Lincoln’s Mind In another job-seeking letter, written only a week after Smith’s, former Pennsylvania Governor James Pollock sought a government appointment for his nephew, William Pollock Dougal, who had been wounded at Gettysburg. While Smith requested a clerkship for a previous acquaintance of Lincoln’s, Pollock tried to draw on Lincoln’s sympathy for the common soldier to grant Dougal a position as a Brigade Commissary. Once again, Lincoln responded Former Pennsylvania with a brief but positive endorsement to the Secretary Governor James Pollock. of War, Edwin M. Stanton. The national sacrifice embodied by men like Dougal was a central theme of the Gettysburg Address and such losses clearly weighed heavily on Lincoln’s mind. Wounded Union soldiers convalesce with a nurse in Fredericksburg, Virginia. James Pollock to Abraham Lincoln – August 4, 1863 United States Mint Philadelphia Augst. 4/63. His Excellency Abraham Lincoln Sir My Nephew William Pollock Dougal, now Captain, Co. D. 150 Regt. P.A. desires the position of “Brigade Commissary”. He was severely wounded at the battle of Getysburg, is a brave and meritorious officer and, in any particular, well qualified for the position he seeks to obtain. He is a man of unimpeachable honesty On Lincoln’s Mind 7 and integrity, conscientious and upright in the discharge of any duty, and would discharge faithfully and the duties of “Brigade Commissary.” The nature of his wounds, and his apprehension of his inability to endure the marches that may be required, have prompted him to make this application. I do most cordially commend him to your most favorable consideration Yours with great respect. Jas Pollock [Endorsement] Can the Secretary of War find a place for this nephew of Gov. Pollock? I shall be glad if he can. A. Lincoln Aug. 22. 1863 While Fry secured his appointment as a clerk in the Quartermaster’s Office, Dougal did not become a Brigade Commissary. He resigned due to “disability” on January 26, 1865, potentially due to his Gettysburg wounds. Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton. The Plight of a Missouri Unionist Claims like the one in this letter from John E. Bostick of Harrisonville, Missouri, were also common throughout the later years of the war. Citizens claiming to be Unionists repeatedly requested compensation for damages inflicted on them by the Rebels or by federal troops. In this particular instance, Bostick claimed a local, presumably Union, militia was the culprit, highlighting the questionable loyalty of some such units. He also complained about the prevalence of guerilla warfare in Missouri, which was indeed pervasive and brutal. Although Missouri stayed loyal to the Union, the state’s population was extremely divided and Colorful stationery expressed the patriotic sentiments of the letter violence by paramilitary groups on writer, as in this letter by John E. both sides was common. Bostick to Abraham Lincoln. 8 On Lincoln’s Mind John E. Bostick to Abraham Lincoln – July 29, 1863 Harrisonville, Cass Co Mo July 29th 1863 Prest Abe Lincoln Mr Abe Lincoln, I thought that I would write to you about some things. I have heard for some time ago, that you would pay all the losses of loyal men and I thought I would state to you all of the things I have lost during these troublesome times. Before the war began I bought a big Bowie knife and a navy Revolver a colt Revolver for $30.00 and soon lost all by robbery, though I bought them to fight the Rebels with if I should have been called on to go to Battle with the union troops, but I have never been called on yet. And the Enrolled Militia at Butler, (Mo) took a very nice and excellent gun from me, which I would have hardly took $200 for it; it cost $50.00 when I bought it. They said that I should not have it any more and that I should not be paid for it at all. They took it because it was so fine & good, or rather because they were so mean and heartless men. They insult loyal men just as much as they would insult disloyal men whenever they say they have nothing to give them, when they ask for anything. I do not see any reasons why you should allow such outrages to be committed on some true loyal men by the militia and other troops now in this state. I would be glad if you would put a stop to it soon. I am as strong & true a loyal man as any of the best loyal men in Kentucky. And I am infavor of freeing the poor and abused slaves and almost every body about here are in the same wish to free the negroes quickly. I lost two good Cows and two Calves last spring, which I valued them at $28.00. The militia took them for Beef Cattle and would not pay nothing for them. I went to Clinton (Mo) last summer and then to Calhoun (Mo) and got $25.00 taken out of my pocket while I was asleep on my wagon and also a very beautiful pocket Book. I know that some rebel thief or Robber got it as there was no body with me to see or hear him at me. I wrote a letter to Gov. Gamble last spring about it and wished him to pay me for all I lost but I have never had any answer from him since and I Can tell plainly that he cares for nothing of the losses of the loyal men in this state. I learned from a good union man in this Co, that if I could not get any pay for my losses in this state, he advised me to write to you & tell you to pay it if you ever said the truth that you would pay all such losses of the loyal men. I have asked several others (I mean military leaders) to pay it, but have not had any of them answered at all. I know they care nothing for me because I am On Lincoln’s Mind 9 deaf & Dumb. I lost all these things I stated above, last summer and last winter & last spring. I have done more for the Cause of the Union, since the War broke out than anything else and will do as much more for it as long as the war lasts. There is no troops in this state so humane and good, than the Iowa troops and I like them more than all the other troops because they treat me well & because they are so polite and they are the bravest troops I have ever seen with my eyes yet! They have been scouring the County, of the Rebels, guerrilla men & Bush whackers almost every week but they are so thick all round here, so that they have not enough of troops to keep up scouring them out and I think that it will take 25.000 troops to keep the Western part quiet & there is not so much men in about here to make up 25000 and not quite one thousand. I have no more to say but one thing & it is that I wish you to pay me my losses of property if you Can do it immediately and if you will, direct your letter to Harrisonville Mo Care of Capt Blake I am your obedient servant, John Edwin Bostick, Harrisonville Cass Co Mo. [Postscript] A loss of $133.00 in property. Send the money in U.S Banks if you will pay me Claims from men like Bostick were so numerous that the federal government eventually made a conscientious effort to review and repay them in what became known as the Southern Claims Commission. Of course, the Union loyalty and support for emancipation expressed in Bostick’s letter may not have been genuine and sorting out such details for a host of claimants proved to be a significant challenge for the claims commissioners. Regardless, the fate of such men and the growing irregular violence in the border states concerned Lincoln and other northern commanders as they sought to end the rebellion. 10 On Lincoln’s Mind The Rock Island Arsenal as it appeared following its completion after the war. The Rock Island Arsenal and the Illinois Governor Richard Yates to Abraham Lincoln – August 5, 1863 State of Illinois Executive Department. Springfield Augst 5 1863. His Excellency Abraham Lincoln President &c Washington D.C. Sir: I desire to submit the within most important paper of Citizens of Rock Island and to request your earnest attention. It certainly is of the utmost importance that the Arsenal at R Island be at once commenced and completed, and I trust that the transfer of the Island of R. Island to the Iowa Military Department & jurisdiction will not for a single moment be entertained, and that you will set the minds of the people of R. Island and of the State easy by immediate direction to Capt Reynolds A. Q. M. or in such manner as you may deem best. Very Respectfully, Richd Yates Governor On Lincoln’s Mind 11 [Endorsement] Respectfully referred to the Secretary of War. A. Lincoln Aug. 12. 1863. This letter from Illinois governor Richard Yates amply demonstrated one of Lincoln’s other concerns: keeping all loyal state governors happy, especially Republican ones. Congress approved construction of the Rock Island Arsenal in July 1862, and the long delay clearly grated on Yates. Construction began three weeks later with the foundation of the Clock Tower but did not conclude until after the war. With great armies marching throughout the nation and the fate of the American Union in the balance, the construction and jurisdiction of an arsenal deep within the North may seem insignificant but the politics of such Illinois Governor Richard Yates. decisions gave them great importance. Lincoln could not merely ignore or delegate such a matter, as an incorrect decision could lose him vital political support or generate unwanted strain in his party–less than a decade old when this letter was written. Juggling competing personalities and interests was a major concern, and a major distraction, for Lincoln. Slaveholders in the Border States One of the knottiest issues facing Lincoln throughout his presidency was slavery in the Border States. Although they remained loyal to the Union, Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware continued to sanction slavery throughout the war. Thus, when Lincoln began moving toward emancipation in the summer of 1862, he had to do so in such a way as not to offend slaveholders in these states, lest they join the Confederacy. 12 On Lincoln’s Mind The primary way Lincoln sought to do so was by offering compensated emancipation. He repeatedly asked the governors of these states to adopt such a policy but was just as frequently rebuked. In West Virginia, the situation was even more complicated. Having separated from Virginia in 1861, West Virginia was admitted to the Union with slavery intact but Congress mandated the inclusion of a gradual emancipation clause in the state constitution. Regardless, military commanders became increasingly comfortable emancipating and recruiting slaves in the Border States and West Virginia was no exception. Complaints that northern soldiers were luring away slaves, like the one below, were troublesome for Lincoln because they placed his two war aims– Union and emancipation–at odds. He would eventually reconcile the two by supporting a constitutional amendment permanently outlawing slavery in America, which resulted in Congress’s passage of the Thirteenth Amendment on January 31, 1865. The correspondent here, William E. Arnold, was a West Virginia lawyer and owned seven slaves, most of whom he purchased within the last decade. That a Union officer could so easily lure away his recent investment clearly troubled him. Lincoln had to tread very carefully when dealing with circumstances like this one, as the wealth and status of men like Arnold carried significant weight in their home states. A group of African American "contrabands" with a Union officer. On Lincoln’s Mind 13 William E. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln – August 18, 1863 Weston West Va August 18th 1863 To. Abraham Lincoln President of U.S. When Imboden & Jones made their raid into our part of the Country in May last a negro boy of mine 19 years of age and who by our new Constitution is free at 25 years of age, went to the Union army then in command of Genl Roberts and he was taken by an officer of the 8th Va Reg as a waiter who told him he was then free and advised him not to return here to me. The consequence is, I have lost his services altogether. I saw Genl Averill on the subject and he was of opinion that the boy was freed by the act of Congress and he had no control over him. I wrote to Atty Genl Bates on the subject and he replied by saying that the subject did not come under his department of the govt, and therefore could give no opinion. It is proper I should say that I voted for the union and for our new State Constitution, and expected at least, that I would be allowed to have the use of such of my slaves as were freed by our new State Constitution till the time fixed in our fundamental law had arrived for their absolute freedom. According to what I conceive a fair legal interpretation of the Federal and State law upon this subject, the status of this boy is changed from that of a slave, to that of an apprentice, bound to me for a term of years as compensation for his absolute freedom at his arriving at the age fixed in our State Constitution; and that no Federal statute of which I am advised frees him, by his leaving my house and going into the lines of the Federal army. The emancipation proclamation does not reach his case, because the 48 Counties constituting West Va does not Come within its operation. If I understand your position on this question, you are an advocate of Compensated emancipation, and will at all times aid in restoring this species of property to loyal owners. A number of negroes whose status are similar to this boy of mine, have within the last two months left their homes and gone into the lines of our union army and their return prevented in the same manner of mine. Therefore, I write to you, believing that you will give the subject attention and Correct the wrong. I would gladly accept compensation for all my negroes and let them go free at once. But I greatly fear Congress will never pass another bill to Compensate another owner for his slave. And surely if any people deserve 14 On Lincoln’s Mind Compensation for their negro property freed by the war, it is the loyal Slave owners of West Va. All we can hope for now, is to have the services of such as are freed by our State Constitution until they obtain the ages of freedom proscribed therein, and this we can only do through you. Unless there is some general or Special order on this subject by the President U.S. or Secy of War, we may soon expect to loose all through the mistaken opinion (as I conceive) of our union military officers. I hope to be able to hear from you soon on the subject of this letter. Very Truly Yr friend Wm E. Arnold A Conspiracy in Mexico Much like the wartime Native American situation, tension between the United States and Mexico also heightened during the Civil War. France was eager to rebuild its empire in the Western Hemisphere and installed Maximilian I, a member of the Austrian royal family, as Emperor of Mexico. This change in government resulted in Mexico fighting a civil war of its own, as Maximilian’s forces tried to maintain their hold over the country against those favoring a republic. Lincoln sympathized with the Mexican rebels and surely opposed such a large scale seizure of territory by a European power but could do nothing to stop it. He was preoccupied with a rebellion in his own country and feared Emperor Maximilian I antagonizing France, lest the French crown of Mexico. throw its support behind the South. While it was true that the French emperor, Napoleon III, came dangerously close to recognizing the Confederacy during the war, neither France nor Mexico ever formed an alliance with the Confederate government like the one suggested in the following letter from Stephen A. Hurlbut. Such misinformation was common even among high-ranking military officers and Lincoln had to constantly evaluate the validity of what he read. That France could On Lincoln’s Mind 15 offer aid to the Confederacy in return for territorial concessions was a real possibility and Lincoln surely had to take such scenarios seriously, even if they proved false. Stephen A. Hurlbut to Abraham Lincoln – August 18, 1863 Head Quarters 16th Army Corps Aug. 18. 1863 Sir By recent arrivals from the South I have become satisfied that a perfect understanding exists between the Confederate Government & the French, both in reference to Mexico & American affairs generally. It is believed that concessions on the subject of Slavery are to be made, and a Protectorate of the whole or a part of the South recognized. Some expect a surrender in fact to the French of Texas and perhaps the Mouths of the Miss. Such a measure is no doubt being canvassed at the South how far it has proceeded no one yet knows, nor what effect the recent successes of our army may have Major General upon the policy of the French Emperor. Stephen A. Hurlbut. The people of the South who discuss this are much divided on the policy and so far as I can gather it will meet with most determined opposition, many insisting that if they yield nationality & reduce the tenure of Slaves they may as well do it for and in the Union I do not know that these statements can be certainly relied on but I believe there is foundation for them Very Respy Your Obt Servt S A Hurlbut Maj Genl His Excy A. Lincoln Prest U.S. 16 On Lincoln’s Mind Grant and Lincoln Discuss Strategy after Vicksburg The influence of Mexico’s civil war is also evident in Lincoln’s correspondence with his leading general, Ulysses S. Grant. As the two considered the military situation following the capture of Vicksburg on July 4, Grant favored a campaign against Mobile, Alabama. However, in an August 9 letter to the general, Lincoln rejected the idea, instead favoring a movement into Texas “in view of recent events in Mexico.” For Lincoln, “re-establishing the national authority in Western Texas” would hinder any Confederate attempts to ally with France and prevent the Mexican conflict from spreading into Major General American territory. The two men also discussed Ulysses S. Grant. the recruitment of African Americans into the Union Army. Lincoln encouraged Grant to vigorously enlist black soldiers along the Mississippi River, noting they were “a resource which, if vigorously applied now, will soon close the contest.” Ulysses S. Grant to Abraham Lincoln – August 23, 1863 Cairo Illinois August 23d 1863. His Excellency A. Lincoln President of the United States, Sir: Your letter of the 9th inst. reached me at Vicksburg just as I was about starting for this place. Your letter of the 13th of July was also duly received. After the fall of Vicksburg I did incline very much to an immediate move on Mobile. I believed then the place could be taken with but little effort, and with the rivers debouching there, in our possession, we would have such a base to opperate from on the very center of the Confederacy as would make them abandon entirely the states bound West by the Miss. I see however the importance of a movement into Texas just at this time. I have reinforced Gen. Banks with the 13th Army Corps comprising ten Brigades of Infantry with a full proportion of Artillery. On Lincoln’s Mind 17 I have given the subject of arming the negro my hearty support. This, with the emancipation of the negro, is the heavyest blow yet given the Confederacy. The South care a great deal about it and profess to be very angry. But they were united in their action before and with the negro under subjection could spare their entire white population for the field. Now they complain that nothing can be got out of their negroes. There has been great difficulty in getting able bodied negroes to fill up the colored regiments in consequence of the rebel cavalry running off all that class to Georgia and Texas. This is especially the case for a distance of fifteen or twenty miles on each side of the river. I am now however sending two expeditions into Louisiana, one from Natchez to Harrisonburg and one from Goodrich’s Landing to Monroe, that I expect will bring back a large number. I have ordered recruiting officers to accompany these expeditions. I am also moving a Brigade of Cavalry from Tennessee to Vicksburg which will enable me to move troops to a greater distance into the interior and will facilitate materially the recruiting service. Gen. Thomas is now with me and you may rely on it I will give him all the aid in my power. I would do this whether the arming the negro seemed to me a wise policy or not, because it is an order that I am bound to obey and do not feel that in my position I have a right to question any policy of the Government. In this particular instance there is no objection however to my expressing an honest conviction. That is, by arming the negro we have added a powerful ally. They will make good soldiers and taking them from the enemy weaken him in the same proportion they strengthen us. I am therefore most decidedly in favor of pushing this policy to the enlistment of a force sufficient to hold all the South falling into our hands and to aid in capturing more. Thanking you very kindly for the great favors you have ever shown me I remain, very truly and respectfully your obt. svt. U. S. Grant Maj. Gen. Neither Lincoln’s nor Grant’s plans for the army at Vicksburg ever came to fruition. Texas remained largely in Confederate control throughout the war and the closest Grant’s old army in Mississippi ever came to moving against it was the ill-starred Red River Campaign in the spring of 1864. Mobile also remained in Confederate hands and did not surrender until April 12, 1865–three 18 On Lincoln’s Mind days after Robert E. Lee surrendered his army to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia. However, Grant’s prediction that the enlistment of African Americans into the Union Army was “the heavyest blow yet given the Confederacy” proved true. Even as Lincoln and Grant discussed the subject, numerous black regiments were being formed throughout the North and South. Some were already in the field proving themselves as able soldiers. By the end of the war, over 178,000 African Americans enlisted in the northern ranks, comprising one-tenth of the total Union Army. Some Medicinal Help from a Friend Nathan Sargent to Abraham Lincoln – September 12, 1863 Sept 12, 1863 My dear Sir This is the season when you & I are apt to be afflicted with disordered bowels; & as my black berry cordial, like the rebellion, is pretty well “played out”, or “used up”, I send you for trial, an article which is highly reputed, but which I have not had occasion to try since it appeared in the shops. I hope you will find it beneficial. With good wishes & congratulations, I am Most respectfully, N Sargent Patent medicine cures such as these were common during the nineteenth century. The advertisement at left features a blackberry concoction similar to the one Sargent sent Lincoln. On Lincoln’s Mind 19 Nathan Sargent did not expressly provide his motivation for sending something to relieve the President’s “disordered bowels” but some of Lincoln’s contemporaries later claimed the President suffered from constipation. Regardless, such elixirs and cures were common in an age before the professionalization of medical science. Sargent was a journalist, Sergeant-at-Arms for the House of Representatives, and friend of Lincoln’s. He typically used colorful language in his correspondence, as is evident here in his joke that a previous cure, a “black berry cordial,” was “played out” like the Confederacy. Sargent does not say if he manufactured these cures himself or bought them from someone else but one suspects they had as much medicinal value (or lack thereof) as other pseudomedicines in wide circulation at the time. Regardless, if Lincoln did indeed suffer from such a surely uncomfortable condition, one can imagine it preoccupied him as he struggled through the various other concerns of his administration. A Mother Asks for Her Son’s Body The war’s toll on American families was evident in a number of letters sent to Lincoln from grieving family members and loved ones seeking the return of a serviceman’s body for burial. In this instance, Sarah Davis Lincoln (no relation) asked the President to send her the body of her sixteen-year-old son, who had died in Cuba while enlisted as a sailor. Whether or not the request was granted is unknown but the frustration and sadness of a grieving mother is evident in the letter. Sarah Lincoln, unlike many correspondents, seemed to be aware she was one of numerous requests and concerns placed upon Lincoln’s table. That he provided no endorsement could indicate that Lincoln did not have the time she requested. The anti-Catholicism present in the letter was prevalent among some Americans at the time. Such 20 On Lincoln’s Mind Unidentified sailor boy, who was the same age as Sarah Davis Lincoln's son when he died. Teenaged boys were common in nineteenth-century navies. religious and racial prejudices were significant in Lincoln’s America and could sometimes erupt with horrifying results, such as in the New York riots. Sarah Davis Lincoln to Abraham Lincoln – September 15, 1863 Titusville Crawford Co P.A. Sept 15th /63. Honored Sir: Can you in the midst of your numerous cares, devote a moment to an afflicted & troubled one? I will at once state my case. Two years ago the 24th of last June, our youngest & darling child Andrew Craswell Lincoln, at the age of sixteen years, died in the Hospital at Matanzas Cuba, & through the severe indisposition of the Capt of the Ship, at the time, the remains were deposited in a Vault there, instead of being brought home, with a promise from the Authorities that we could have it at the expiration of one year. After that time had expired, we sent out an Agent for it, & were refused, again we sent out early last Spring & were again refused. We have written to the Consul there regarding it, but get no reply & as I cannot give it up without making every possible effort, & as a final resort, I appeal to you, & will you please tell me if there is any way we can make a demand either individually, or through the Goverment, that would be effectual. God has bereaved me of any idol & I must submit, but cannot to the barbarity of those Catholics. If there is any way possible that we can recover that which is to us invaluable & to them worthless, we wish to know, & accomplish it as quickly as possible. You have had my hearty sympathy in your recent affliction. Our eldest, a promising youth of fourteen years, was taken from us sixteen years ago, bearing the name of your departed one, Willie Lincoln, & his remains rest in our native village in New England whither we desire to remove the precious remains of our latest-born, that they may rest together; & now my dear Sir if it will please you to give this your attention & advice, you will confer an invaluable favor. Please excuse the liberty I take in appealing to you in my extremity & anxiety & believe me Yours very respectfully Mrs John C. Lincoln. To Abraham Lincoln President of our United States. On Lincoln’s Mind 21 A Wounded Soldier Asks to Go Home George W. Smith to Abraham Lincoln – September 18, 1863 Sept 18th 1863 Presd A. Lincon sir we had inspection this morning by Dr Greenleaf surg and order our stands clean off and all the things that I had on was a Testament and a portfolio and a comb and lookingglass and I have lost a leg In the cose of the United States and I am reddy to loos my life in so good a caus but I should like to be sent some whare so that I could read the Testament for if they have to let me go home I have ben in the survis 23 month with out a furlow and my leg is all heald up and I would like to see my Dear Old Father & Mother and they say it will be 9 month befor I can get a wooden leg but if you cant grant me a furlow Pleas in the name of God send me to the State of New York to a hosptal at Syracuse and you shall have the prars of me and my parrents And Oblige Yours Geo W. Smith Blodgets mills Cortland Co N.Y. is whare I live Co F 76 Reg N.Y. V Geo W. Smith U.S. Gen Hospt Chesnut hill ward 11. bed 39 Philadelphia is whare i be A federal hospital in Alexandria, Virginia. 22 On Lincoln’s Mind Furlough requests, like this one from a New York soldier who had lost a leg, frequently crossed Lincoln’s desk. Although these men did not need to write directly to the President, many did believing their request had the best chance for success if it went directly to the top of the command chain. Others had a paternal view of the President as “Father Abraham,” believing he would grant their requests out of a sense of charity. Whether Lincoln saw all these letters is dubious but many included brief endorsements, directing them to the Secretary of War for further action. This letter does not have a presidential endorsement but Smith nevertheless received his furlough on November 15, 1863. The style of the letter was also common, as many soldiers came from rural or working class backgrounds with limited education. George W. Smith was literate enough to write the President but his spelling and grammar were clearly lacking and indicated he did not do much writing in his day to day life. Nevertheless, the fact that a soldier was willing and able to ask the chief executive of his government was a remarkable thing in the nineteenth century, when many other nations were still ruled by monarchs and aristocrats who had little contact with the general populace. A Black Soldier Demands Equal Pay One of the more famous letters written to Lincoln during this period, James Henry Gooding’s request that United States Colored Troops (USCTs) receive the same pay as white soldiers was an exemplar of the African American struggle for social and legal equality. Born into slavery, Gooding acquired his freedom and went to New York early in his life. With the enactment of the Emancipation Proclamation, he enlisted in the renowned fifty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. Having participated in that unit’s famous July 18 assault on Battery Wagner, Gooding wrote the President demanding that the $10 paid to USCTs be increased to the $13 paid to white soldiers. On Lincoln’s Mind An unidentified USCT corporal posing in uniform. 23 In doing so, Gooding joined with several other equal rights advocates and newspaper columnists demanding that this imbalance be rectified. Like Gooding, they believed any man who was deemed good enough to enlist in the army was entitled to the same pay as his fellow soldiers, regardless of race. Responding to such pressure, Congress finally awarded equal pay to USCTs on June 15, 1864, but Gooding could do little to celebrate. He was imprisoned at Andersonville, Georgia, where he died on July 19. James Henry Gooding to Abraham Lincoln – September 28, 1863 Camp of 54th Mass Colored Regt Morris Island Dept of the South, Sept 28th 1863. Your Excelency Abraham Lincoln: Your Excelency will pardon the presumtion of an humble individual like myself, in addressig you, but the earnest Solicitation of my Comrades in Arms, besides, the genuine interest felt by myself in the matter is my excuse, for placing before the Executive head of the Nation our Common Grievance: On the 6th of the last Month, the Paymaster of the department, informed us, that if we would decide to recieve the sum of $10 (ten dollars) per month, he would come and pay us that sum, but, that, on the sitting of Congress, the Regt would, in his opinion, be allowed the other 3 (three.) He did not give us any guarantee that this would be, as he hoped, certainly he had no authority for making any such guarantee, and we can not supose him acting in any way interested. Now the main question is, Are we Soldiers, or are we Labourers. We are fully armed, and equipped, have done all the various Duties, pertaining to a Soldiers life, have conducted ourselves, to the complete satisfaction of General Officers, who, were if any, prejudiced against us, but who now accord us all the encouragement, and honour due us: have shared the perils, and Labour, of Reducing the first stronghold, that flaunted a Traitor Flag: and more, Mr President. Today, the Anglo Saxon Mother, Wife, or Sister, are not alone, in tears for departed Sons, Husbands, and Brothers. The patient Trusting Decendants of Africs Clime, have dyed the ground with blood, in defense of the Union, and Democracy. Men too your Excellency, who know in a measure, the cruelties of the Ironheel of oppression, which in years gone by, the very Power, their blood is now being spilled to maintain, ever ground them to the dust. But When the war trumpet sounded o’er the land, when men knew not 24 On Lincoln’s Mind the Friend from the Traitor, the Black man laid his life at the Altar of the Nation, and he was refused. When the arms of the Union, were beaten, in the first year of the War, And the Executive called more food, for its ravaging maw; again the black man begged, the privelege of Aiding his Country in her need; to be again refused, And now, he is in the War: and how has he conducted himself? Let their dusky forms, rise up, out the mires of James Island, and give the answer. Let the rich mould around Wagners parapets be upturned, and there will be found an Eloquent answer. Obedient and patient, and Solid as a wall are they. all we lack, is a paler hue, and a better aquaintance with the Alphabet. Now Your Excellency, We have done a Soldiers Duty. Why cant we have a Soldiers pay? You caution the Rebel Chieftain, that the United States, knows, no distinction, in her Soldiers: She insists on having all her Soldiers, of whatever, creed or Color, to be treated, according to the usages of War. Now if the United States, exacts uniformity of treatment of her Soldiers, from the Insurgents, would it not be well, and consistent, to set the example; herself, by paying all her Soldiers alike? We of this Regt, were not enlisted under any “contraband” act. But we do not wish to be understood, as rating our Service, of more Value to the Government, than the service of the exslave, Their Service is undoubtedly worth much to the Nation, but Congress made express, provision touching their case as slaves freed by Military necessity, and assuming the Government, to be their The 54th Massachusetts Regiment attacks Battery Wagner. On Lincoln’s Mind 25 temporary Gaurdian: Not so with us. Freemen by birth, and consequently, having the advantage of thinking, and acting for ourselves, so far as the Laws would allow us. We do not consider ourselves, fit subjects for the Contraband act, We appeal to You, Sir: as the Executive of the Nation, to have us Justly Dealt with. The Regt, do pray, that they be assured their service will be fairly appreciated, by paying them as american Soldiers, not as menial hierlings. Black men You may well know, are poor, three dollars per month, for a year, will suply their needy Wives, and little ones, with fuel. If you, as chief Magistrate of the Nation, will assure us, of our whole pay. We are content, our Patriotism, our enthusiasm will have a new impetus, to exert our energy more and more to aid Our Country. Not that our hearts ever flagged, in Devotion, spite the evident apathy displayed in our behalf, but We feel as though, our Country spurned us, now we are sworn to serve her. Please give this a moments attention Corporal James Henry Gooding Co. C. 54th Mass, Regt Morris Island S.C. Members of the 54th Massachusetts march in the Robert Gould Shaw Memorial. 26 On Lincoln’s Mind Thanksgiving is Born Another of Lincoln’s most famous correspondents was Sarah J. Hale, who sent him the following letter after writing a series of editorials in Godey’s Lady’s Book (a popular women’s periodical at the time, which she edited) on the need for a national day of Thanksgiving. Americans already celebrated the holiday at different times in different places but Hale wanted a specific national day of giving thanks to God for the blessings received during the past year. The civil war context made such a day even more necessary, as both sides occasionally proclaimed days of thanksgiving to recognize and potentially foster divine support for their respective causes. Lincoln proved receptive to Hale’s ideas and officially declared the last Thursday in November “as a day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens.” He added (in an October 3 proclamation written by Secretary of State William H. Seward) that Americans should “with humble penitence for our national perverseness and disobedience, commend to His tender care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervently implore the interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of the nation and Editor Sarah J. Hale. to restore it as soon as may be consistent with the Divine purposes to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility and Union.” The holiday has been celebrated nationally on the same day ever since. Proclamations like this one were distributed throughout the North to announce the new Thanksgiving holiday. On Lincoln’s Mind 27 Sarah J. Hale to Abraham Lincoln – September 28, 1863 private Philadelphia, Sept. 28th 1863. Hon. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States Sir: Permit me, as Editress of the “Lady’s Book,” to request a few minutes of your precious time, while laying before you a subject of deep interest to myself and—as I trust—even to the President of our Republic, of some importance. This subject is to have the day of our annual Thanksgiving made a National and fixed Union Festival. You may have observed that, for some years past, there has been an increasing interest felt in our land to have the Thanksgiving held on the same day, in all the States; it now needs National recognition and authoritive fixation only, to become permanently, an American custom and institution. Enclosed are three papers (being printed these are easily read) which will make the idea and its progress clear and show also the popularity of the plan. For the last fifteen years I have set forth this idea in the “Lady’s Book”, and placed the papers before the Governors of all the States and Territories; also I have sent these to our Ministers abroad, and our Missionaries to the heathen, and commanders in the Navy. From the recipients I have received, uniformly the most kind approval. Two of these letters: one from Governor (now General) Banks and one from Governor Morgan are enclosed; both gentlemen, as you will see, have nobly aided to bring about the desired Thanksgiving Union. But I find there are obstacles not possible to be overcome without legislative aid: that each State should, by statute, make it obligatory on the Governor to appoint the last Thursday of November, annually, as Thanksgiving Day; or, as this way would require years to be realized, it has occurred to me that a proclamation from the President of the United States would be the best, surest and most fitting method of National appointment. I have written to my friend, Hon. Wm. H. Seward, and requested him to confer with President Lincoln on this subject. As the President of the United States has the power of appointment for the District of Columbia and the Territories; also for the Army and Navy and all American citizens abroad who claim protection from the U.S. Flag, could he not, with right as well as duty, issue his proclamation for a Day of National Thanksgiving for all the above classes of 28 On Lincoln’s Mind persons? And would it not be fitting and patriotic for him to appeal to the Governors of all the States, inviting and commending these to unite in issuing proclamations for the last Thursday in November as the Day of Thanksgiving for the people of each State? Thus the great Union Festival of America would be established. Now the purpose of this letter is to entreat President Lincoln to put forth his Proclamation, appointing the last Thursday in November (which falls this year on the 26th) as the National Thanksgiving for all those classes of people who are under the National Government particularly, and commending this Union Thanksgiving to each State Executive: thus, by the noble example and action of the President of the United States, the permanency and unity of our Great American Festival of Thanksgiving would be forever secured. An immediate proclamation would be necessary, so as to reach all the States in season for State appointments, also to anticipate the early appointments by Governors. Excuse the liberty I have taken. With profound respect Yrs truly Sarah Josepha Hale, Editress of the “Ladys Book” Popular depictions of Union soldiers and sailors celebrating Thanksgiving in 1864. On Lincoln’s Mind 29 Recruiting Black Troops USCTs in camp. The official enlistment of African Americans into the Union Army was a new practice during the Civil War. Its novelty and need for expediency sometimes clashed as overzealous or unscrupulous recruiters pushed the boundaries of acceptable practice. Lincoln appreciated the efficiency of his recruiters as was evident in this endorsement of John A. Nelson. Abraham Lincoln to Edwin M. Stanton – September 29, 1863 Executive Mansion, Washington, Sep. 29., 1863. Hon. Sec. of War Sir: The bearer of this, John A. Nelson, is represented to me, truly I believe, to be the first, and most efficient work day man, in raising colored troops in Louisiana. He wishes to engage in the same service, but wishes not to go back to that department. Can we not put him to it somewhere? Why not appoint him a Colonel and send him to Gen. Barnes, at Norfolk? Please see & hear him. Yours truly A. Lincoln However, Nelson’s efficiency also proved to be a significant problem. He was not simply offering military jobs to runaways and free blacks in the Deep South but was forcibly impressing African Americans into service. Nelson’s productivity surely made his work appear effective to someone as far removed as Lincoln but it was also morally questionable at best or illegal at worst. Nelson received his transfer but was soon dismissed by his commanding 30 On Lincoln’s Mind officer for the same ruthless tactics he adopted in Louisiana. Again, Lincoln defended the recruiter but a military examination proved Nelson’s guilt and confirmed his dismissal. Examples like Nelson’s show the potential complications when men who possibly viewed African Americans as racially and intellectually inferior supervised their recruitment. Lincoln’s defense of Nelson showed how the myriad responsibilities the President faced may have obscured harsh realities on the ground. Letter of Abraham Lincoln to Edwin M. Stanton regarding John A. Nelson. On Lincoln’s Mind 31 Andrews continued to work on his Aereon after the war. This illustration depicts one of his later models. Air Superiority Another matter that frequently crossed Lincoln’s desk throughout the Civil War was inventions, particularly of the military variety. Lincoln was himself an inventor and remains the only president to hold a patent. The potential for a single innovative idea to break the stalemate between North and South and potentially yield vast profits for the inventor motivated many of these men to contact Lincoln directly. Here Hamilton Fonda wrote Lincoln on behalf of dirigible inventor Solomon Andrews offering his new airship (called the Aereon by Andrews) for military use. Andrews himself followed-up the next day, making the same offer. Both men would have had good reason to expect a positive response. Hot air balloons were already in use in the Union Army, primarily as a tool for observing Confederate troop movements. Andrews’ hopes proved to be somewhat justified. He had successfully tested his Aereon on June 1 and the War Department was intrigued enough to arrange a demonstration of the invention at the Smithsonian in 1864. Apparently the dirigible did not impress Lincoln or his Cabinet and they passed on Andrews’ offer. It is nevertheless remarkable that the inventor was able to get as far as he did. Lincoln and the War Department generally ignored those who made similar offers. Hamilton Fonda to Abraham Lincoln – October 11, 1863 Perth Amboy. N.J. Oct 11th 1863 Sir Dr Andrews requests me to write to you about his air Ship and what I saw of his experiments. 32 On Lincoln’s Mind I saw the Ship inside and out. I helped to build her and to fill her with gas evry time and aided in all the experiments, but I had no faith in the sucess of the thing till after the first experiment. I assisted to attach the car in the last trial on the 4th of Sept and to send him off in it. She went upward and forward against the wind then blowing from the north not less than ten miles an hour. She minded her helm perfectly & the rudder was verry small for so large a vessel. He turned her around, came back to the place of starting & came Balloons were frequently used by the down to the ground. then He went Union Army during the Civil War for off to the westward and turned her reconnaissance. The Intrepid, shown head to the East and came down here, was one of the most famous. again. Then he tied one of the rudder cords to the side of the car, got out and took out several 7 lbs bags of ballast & sent her off in spiral course. She went off very swiftly in a circle not less than three quarters of a mile in diamater the circle increasing in size till She was lost to sight in the upper clouds, I saw her go into first clouds and came out again when she was still describing circles in the air. She had a blue jack on the rudder staff at the stern, and a streamer 30 feet long on the tail or rudder, as long as I could see these colors they stood out in a straight line behind her and I could see no differance in them when she went acrost the wind or before the wind when she was going to the north against the wind I could not see them because they was above the stern of the Ship, but as soon as she came around to the west I saw them distinctly before she had reached half way to the first clouds I saw her go in the same directions with them and mooving in the same direction faster than they did. When she went against the wind she past the clouds like two trains of cars passing each other. I have never seen anything but a sky rockett or a cannon ball go so fast. My onely regrett is that I did not go up with the Dr when he invited me to git into his car and that he destroyed the Ship. Hamilton Fonda Ex Ord Sargt 3d Conn Vols Foreman U.S. Ml Lck Factory Abram Linclon President, U.S. On Lincoln’s Mind 33 Lincoln Helps the Ladies’ National Army Relief Association In a time before female military service, women who wanted to help the war effort had to find other ways to become directly involved. During the Civil War, serving as nurses and sending medical supplies were two of the primary ways they did so. Many worked for the North’s two major charitable medical organizations, the U.S. Sanitary Commission and the U.S. Christian Commission, but the Ladies’ National Army Relief Association was a similar, if smaller, body. Comprised entirely of volunteers, it assisted in the care of wounded soldiers through nursing and other means, which was sorely needed in a war that created casualty numbers far higher than the military’s actual medical corps could handle. Sarah Edson, a Civil War nurse and the organization’s founder, likely solicited Lincoln’s endorsement. The warmth Lincoln expressed shows how he appreciated the efforts of these organizations and would make time to help them and their members whenever he could. United States Sanitary Commission workers in the South. 34 On Lincoln’s Mind Abraham Lincoln to Whom It May Concern – October 12, 1863 Executive Mansion, Washington, Oct 12, 1863. Whom it may concern: The objects of the “Ladies’ National Army Relief Association” as set forth on the attached newspaper slip, are most worthy, and meet my hearts approval, and highest commendation. Yet to avoid injurious interferences and collisions, I must leave to those in more immediate control of our armies, to determine how far the services of the Society can be profitably employed, and to regulate all details in relation thereto. Abraham Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln's endorsement of the Ladies' National Army Relief Association. On Lincoln’s Mind 35 Gearing Up for the 1864 Campaign Lincoln was a politician and, as 1863 ground to a close, he had to start thinking about his prospects for reelection the following year. He is often commended for not suspending the election due to the national crisis but, in doing so, he added yet another critical issue to his already overflowing workload. Fortunately for Lincoln, he lived at a time when American presidents did far less personal campaigning, so he could still devote the majority of his time to managing the war. Nevertheless, electoral concerns surely occupied his attention more and more as he moved toward the November 1864 election. However, Lincoln was still over a year away from that day when he received this letter from Illinois Congressman and political ally, Elihu B. Washburne, reminding him that the election was forthcoming. Of course, Lincoln secured the Republican presidential nomination and won a second term but neither prospect (especially the latter) appeared inevitable in late 1863. The war was going well for the President and the Union but not well enough to guarantee popular support. Congressman Elihu B. Washburne. Elihu B. Washburne to Abraham Lincoln – October 12, 1863 Galena, Illinois, Oct. 12. 1863. Mr. Lincoln: Notwithstanding the troubles that surround us, the time has come when we must confront the question of our next Presidential candidate. I think you ought to let some of your confidential friends know your wishes and feelings in that regard. I write you now on this subject because I have a recent letter from Hon. Thompson Campbell touching the question of our candidacy. He was one of the most effective and vigorous champions of our cause in California, before the late election, and is a member of the Legislature from San Francisco. Speaking of the Presidential candidate, he says: “If he wishes the nomination, I am clearly for your friend, Mr. Lincoln.” He says he consented to go into the Legislature for the purpose of being better able to shape things in regard to the delegates to the National Convention next year. He says 36 On Lincoln’s Mind further, and it is well to heed it, that if he be not greatly mistaken, the whole patronage of the Government in California will be wielded against you next summer. Campbell has done more to sustain your administration for the last six months, than all the office-holders in the State put together, and if he only knew your wishes and views I think he can be relied upon for an equally efficient service hereafter. Should you deem it best to make any suggestions to me in regard to these things, you know me well enough to be assured they will be properly and discreetly used. I enclose you a private letter from my brother, Maj. Genl Washburne, and you will see what he says about a leave of absence. He went into the service at the sacrifice of immense business interests, and he has served faithfully and acceptably in the most sickly climates for the last two years. His business imperatively requires his presence at home for a short time, and I think under the circumstances his request is not unreasonable. A longer leave than twenty days must be granted by Genl. Halleck. Twenty days would not more than enable him to get home from where he now is. If you will ask that such leave be given and transmitted to me here, at Galena, Illinois, it will be a favor for which I will feel very grateful to you, and which shall be more than reciprocated by me. Yrs. Truly, E B Washburne Thompson Campbell, whose correspondence with Washburne inspired this letter, was a former Illinois Secretary of State and a state representative in California during the war. One might suspect the political opponents he referenced in this letter were Democrats but it was likely Republicans that concerned him. As the party began preparing for the 1864 contest, Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase angled to replace Lincoln as the Republican nominee. California Representative The state patronage that Campbell warned would Thompson Campbell. be “wielded against” Lincoln was the result of the Secretary’s attempting to replace one of Lincoln’s California treasury department appointments with someone loyal to Chase. Lincoln eventually learned of Chase’s plan and instead appointed Frederick F. Low, who became governor of the state at the end of the year. As for the presidential election, Lincoln carried California with 59 percent of the vote. On Lincoln’s Mind 37 A freed African-American woman near a South Carolina wharf with a federal warship near the horizon. Clearing Charleston Harbor by Any Means Inventors were not the only correspondents offering new or unorthodox ways to subdue the South. With stalemate the order of the day, many citizens and friends offered Lincoln unsolicited advice on solving some of the military’s most vexing problems. Case in point: Charleston Harbor. Charleston’s political and economic importance to the war effort was clear to both sides: it was the birthplace of secession and a hotbed for blockade-running. However, the massive harbor was extremely difficult to invade due to its formidable fortifications (the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts’s famous charge at Battery Wagner was also part of the larger campaign to take Charleston) and the preponderance of Confederate mines or “torpedoes.” Here is one potential solution: Logan U. Reavis to Abraham Lincoln – October 19, 1863 Central Illinoian Office Beardstown Ill. Oct 19, 63 President Lincoln Dear sir: As difficulties naturally suggest remedies, the ingenuity of the war department is brought to bear upon the difficulties in Charleston Harbor, and as the difficulties consist in the rebel Torpedoes and their removal would insure the success of our arms, may I not suggest one thing of a novel nature to you, that you may consider whether their 38 On Lincoln’s Mind can be any thing made of it. You are aware that there are a kind of people in the world which owing to some freek of nature can see better in the night than they can in the daytime. now might not some of those kind of men be hunted up and taken to gen. Gilmore and let him arrange some small boats say not much larger than canoes, then let ropes be prepared with hooks tied down in the manner of anchors, then let these night seers quietly go out at night and pay out these ropes in the manner of a sein, and then by dragging them in, the hooks will catch the Torpedoes and the ropes holding them and that way a good work may be done for our cause. Of course the idea is a novel one, but may their not be some good in it. some of those kind of people lived at Greenville Bond co. some years ago. If such couild be used I suppose plenty could be found. Respectfully L. U. Reavis Torpedoes gathered from Charleston Harbor after the city fell into Union hands in 1865. Reavis was an Illinois lawyer and newspaper editor. His plan to use the supposed “night seeers” of Greenville in Bond County was certainly bizarre but was far from the strangest military idea offered to Lincoln. Regardless, the desperation to capture Charleston that undergirds Reavis’s scheme was very real. Indeed, Union soldiers did not occupy the city until February 1865, and then only after almost a full year of constant artillery bombardment combined with the approach of William T. Sherman’s army from the rear. Nevertheless, propositions like Reavis’s surely did not hold the key to Charleston harbor and Lincoln likely condemned this letter to the same file that was home to numerous other discarded supposedly war-winning ideas. On Lincoln’s Mind 39 Kidnapping Free Blacks As with the earlier letter about runaway slaves in West Virginia, the following one from David L. Phillips of Lincoln’s hometown in Springfield, Illinois, demonstrated how fragile freedom could be for African Americans. Phillips, a Republican and friend of Lincoln’s, described an elaborate scheme (which he also reported to Governor Yates) in which southerners kidnapped free and freed blacks from St. Louis to sell back into slavery in Louisville, Kentucky. David L. Phillips to Abraham Lincoln – October 23, 1863 Springfield Ill. Oct. 23. 1863. Dear Sir, I have just received a letter from Hon. Chauncy I. Filley, Mayor of St Louis, enclosing an open letter from Major Eastern U. S. Army, addressed to Gov. Yates, both relating to, what Seems to be, a very extensive Scheme of Kidnapping of free Negroes, and Negroes freed by the proclamation, and their removal to Kentucky through Illinois and Indiana by the Ohio and Miss. R. R. to Seymour and thence by the Jeffersonville R. R. to Louisville where they are Sold for from $200, to $300, each into Slavery. It is said that the parties who are engaged in this nefarious traffic, generally, have permits from Some one in or about the Provost Marshal’s office in St Louis. Downtown Springfield, Illinois. 40 On Lincoln’s Mind You know the law of Illinois touching such a traffic and therefore I will say nothing as to the legal questions of the case. That the traffic is going on to quite an extent, seems beyond any reasonable question. I enclose to you a Slip from the Chicago Tribune which I have just Seen. It explains itself. I do not know what evidence the Tribune people have in their possession. Gov. Yates being in Washington I have, taken the liberty of calling attention to the matter, knowing that you alone can, by an order to Gen. Schofield, Stop a trade which is not only legally a crime, but an outrage on humanity and an insult to the States of Illinois and Indiana. Very truly yours D. L. Phillips Hon. A. Lincoln Prest. U.S.A. Washington D.C. The validity of this particular claim seems dubious, as it would have required a fairly extensive conspiracy to operate, but the capture and re-enslavement of freedpeople was a very real possibility during the Civil War. When Confederate armies invaded northern territory or the Border States, they frequently sent out patrols to capture African Americans and forcibly move them into A slave auction in Alabama, 1861. On Lincoln’s Mind 41 the South and slavery. Furthermore, there was a long history of individual kidnappings of free blacks in Illinois and other northern states to be sold into slavery in the South. Indeed, as long as slavery remained legal in all or part of the United States, African Americans could not guarantee their freedom due to this sort of illegal behavior. Examples like this one did not go unnoticed by Lincoln and provided much of the motivation for his support of the Thirteenth Amendment. The Gettysburg Dead Dead Union soldiers on the Gettysburg battlefield. Gettysburg was the bloodiest battle ever fought on American soil. This letter–which arrived only five days before Lincoln’s invitation to speak at the battlefield–may have weighed on his mind as he considered what he would say on that hallowed ground. Here, a New York postmaster wrote on behalf of an impoverished couple asking that the government pay for the transportation of their son, William Morgan’s, body from Gettysburg to his hometown in Canandaigua. Morgan remained in Gettysburg and is buried there in the National Cemetery. Providing a proper eulogy for this fallen soldier and hundreds of others like him at the dedication of that cemetery would soon be one of the many tasks set before Lincoln. 42 On Lincoln’s Mind Edward S. Dixon to Abraham Lincoln – October 28, 1863 Halls Corners N.Y. Oct 28th 1863 To His Excellence the Hon Abraham Lincoln President United States In behalf of Mr & Mrs Morgan who had the misfortune to loose a son at Gettesburgh, I write to ask if your honor will provide Government Transportation for their dead son from there to Canandaigua the place of enlistment. They would not ask your intercession, but their extreme poverty makes it impossible for them to defray the expenses of exhuming & bringing the body, home. they have now their last and only son in the Army of the Potomac, thus their last & only hope of comfort, or support, hangs on the uncertainty of a Soldiers life, & now too in the last years of their life. Will you not? send their son to these bereaved parents if refference to my statements herein made is needed I will gladly send any number of Vouchers. His name is William Morgan, Company K 126 Reg. N. Y. S V. under Captain Wheeler Candaigua. Praying you will grant the relief asked or any other your honer may dictate. I remain Your Obt Servant E. S. Dixon P. Master Halls Corners Ontario County N.Y. The grave of William Morgan at Gettysburg National Cemetery. On Lincoln’s Mind 43 Invitation to Gettysburg David Wills to Abraham Lincoln – November 2, 1863 Gettysburg Nov. 2nd 1863 To His Excellency, A. Lincoln, President of the United States, Sir, The several States having soldiers in the Army of the Potomac, who were killed at the Battle of Gettysburg, or have since died at the various hospitals which were established in the vicinity, have procured grounds on a prominent part of the Battle Field for a Cemetery, and are having the dead removed to there and properly buried. These Grounds will be Consecrated and set apart to this sacred purpose, by appropriate Ceremonies, on Thursday, the 19th instant. Hon Edward Everett will deliver the Oration. I am authorized by the Governors of the different States to invite you to be present, and participate in these ceremonies, which will doubtless be verry imposing and solemnly impressive. It is the desire that, after the Oration, You, as Chief Executive of the Nation, formally set apart these grounds to their sacred use by a few appropriate remarks. It will be a source of great gratification to the many widows and orphans that have been made almost friendless by the Great Battle here, to have you here personally; and it will kindle anew in the breasts of the Comrades of these brave dead, who are now in the tented field or nobly meeting the foe in the front, a confidence that they who sleep in death on the Battle Field are not forgotten by those highest in Authority; and they will feel that, should their fate be the same, their remains will not be uncared for. We hope you will be able to be present to perform this last solemn act to the Soldier dead on this Battle Field. Gettysburg Attorney David Wills. 44 I am with great Respect, Your Excellency’s Obedient Servant, David Wills Agent for A. G. Curtin Gov. of Penna and acting for all the States On Lincoln’s Mind David Wills to Abraham Lincoln – November 2, 1863 Gettysburg Nov. 2nd 1863 To His Excellency A. Lincoln President U.S. Sir, As the Hotels in our town will be crowded and in confusion at the time referred to in the enclosed invitation, I write to invite you to stop with me. I hope you will feel it your duty to lay aside pressing business for a day to come on here to perform this last sad rite to our brave soldier dead on the 19th instant. Governor Curtin and Hon Edward Everett will be my guests at that time and if you come you will please join them at my home. You will confer a favor if you advise me early of your intentions. With great Respect Your Obedient Servant David Wills The previous pair of letters from David Wills to Lincoln constituted the immediate impetus for the Gettysburg Address. Wills was the primary force behind the establishment of a National Cemetery–the nation’s first–at Gettysburg, where he was a prominent lawyer and businessman. The main orator scheduled for the event was one of the nation’s renowned speakers, Edward Everett, and the limited role expected for Lincoln was evident in Wills’s request. Lincoln agreed to speak and to stay at Wills’s home (which still stands) but the brevity of his comments reflects Wills's modest request. The Wills House. On Lincoln’s Mind 45 Reconstructing Louisiana Preparing the Gettysburg Address was far from the only thing on Lincoln’s mind between the invitation on November 2nd and the dedication on the 19th. As this letter from Louisiana demonstrates, Lincoln still had plenty of knots to untangle in this one occupied state alone. John E. Tallon to Abraham Lincoln – November 12, 1863 Donaldsonville, La. Nov 12. 1863. His Excellency The President of the United States. Honble Sir, As you are our common Father, I presume to write a few lines to you respecting the political condition of things here, humbly hoping you will pardon the liberty. 1st Rebel Generals and others who have held commissions in the Rebel army are urgent to get back their Plantations, I most respectfully entreat that the Plantations shall not be returned unless said parties give pecuniary security to the Government for future loyalty; the oath is absolutely a dead letter: they think the violation of it, no crime. In truth I would prefer a settlement on the Plantations of Northern men, for I have no confidence in the loyalty of the Creoles. 2nd The French or rather Creole Rebels down along the Bayou near Napoleonville have sent into the City and bought shoes, clothing for their sons and then sent them back again to the Rebel army. The coloured people in the neighborhood volunteer their services to report such cases to the Provostmarshall. Shall they be permitted? 3d Major General Banks, I have been informed, issued an order for the recall of Major General Nathaniel Soldier-overseers, back again to their Banks, who commanded the respective Regiments. as you are the Department of the Gulf (which included Louisiana) Protector of the poor slaves, I entreat of you when Tallon wrote his letter to use your influence with General Banks to Lincoln. 46 On Lincoln’s Mind that his order may be carried into immediate execution. General Banks is a humane man, and doubtless cannot be aware of the usage the poor downtrodden coloured people have received and are now receiving at the hands of such infamous wretches. Trusting in your Kindness to forgive this liberty I have the honor to be your most respectful and most devoted wellwisher and St John. E. Tallon M. D Government Physician for the Sick Contrabands at Donaldsonville and vicinity. Tallon’s concerns here were legitimate, as Louisiana’s occupation became increasingly complicated for Lincoln and the army. Indeed, the former Confederate state was quickly turning into a sort of laboratory for federal plans to rebuild the South after the war. With the tides of war favoring the Union at last, Lincoln began formulating his reconstruction policy. He made his first attempt a month later with his ten percent plan, which was partially motivated by events in Louisiana. How a postwar America would look was certainly one of Lincoln’s many considerations as he sat to write the Gettysburg Address. African American "contrabands" from Louisiana. On Lincoln’s Mind 47 A Family Illness Lincoln thought about more than war and politics, and here, only a day before his address at Gettysburg, his son Tad’s health occupied a prominent place in Lincoln’s correspondence. By this time, the Lincolns had already lost two children–Eddie in 1850 and Willie in 1862–and Tad’s recurrent health problems constantly worried his parents. That Mary Lincoln telegraphed this news to her husband during what was sure to be a relatively short trip speaks to the concern both shared for Tad’s welfare. The President was devoted to his children and the thought of losing another haunted him. Tad Lincoln eventually succumbed to tuberculosis six years after his father’s assassination. Mary Lincoln to Abraham Lincoln – November 18, 1863 War Dept. Nov 18th “63. Hon. A. Lincoln Gettysburg Pa. The Dr has just left. We hope dear Taddie is slightly better. Will send you a telegram in the morning. Mrs Lincoln Abraham, Mary, and Tad Lincoln. 48 On Lincoln’s Mind The Dedicatory And finally, on November 19, 1863, Lincoln gave his nowfamous speech at Gettysburg National Cemetery. Despite the steady stream of voices and concerns he faced every day, Lincoln constructed this concise statement of purpose and remorse that became one of the greatest political speeches in history. There is a longstanding myth that Lincoln wrote the address during a quiet period on the train headed for Gettysburg (sometimes it is said he did so on the back of an envelope). Regardless, Lincoln surely needed a few moments of clarity to push through the clutter of issues bearing on his mind and focus directly on explaining why so many men died on that battlefield. The Civil War was not just a chess match between generals nor was it only a political crusade against slavery. It encompassed every facet of American life and Lincoln, as the nation’s leader, had to be conscious of the potential repercussions of every decision and every action. Such a heavy burden showed on his face and aged him prematurely but it did not weaken his mind. Here, in the Gettysburg Address, Lincoln let the soldiers who lost their lives consecrate the ground and ennobled a war that would create a more free and enduring America. Abraham Lincoln, taken by Alexander Gardner on November 8, 1863, only eleven days before Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address. On Lincoln’s Mind 49 Address Delivered at the Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettysburg (Everett Copy) November 19, 1863 Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived, and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives, that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate, we can not consecrate, we can not hallow, this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember, what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here, have, thus far, so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us: that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they here gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom; and that, government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. 50 On Lincoln’s Mind A crowd gathering on Cemetery Hill in Gettysburg for the dedication. A bare-headed Lincoln is seated and looking down just to the upper-left of the image's center. On Lincoln’s Mind 51 52 On Lincoln’s Mind On Lincoln’s Mind 53 Document Citations John Jay and others to Abraham Lincoln, July 13, 1863, Volume 117, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Petition of Is-tata Sin and others to Abraham Lincoln, July 17, 1863, Box 442, Record Group 75, Entry 79, Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, General Records, 18241907, Letters Received, 1824-1880, National Archives, Washington, DC. Truman Smith to Abraham Lincoln, July 27, 1863, Box 639, Record Group 92, Entry 225, Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, 1792-1929, Correspondence, 1818-1926, Consolidated Correspondence File, 1794-1890, National Archives, Washington, DC. James Pollock to Abraham Lincoln, August 4, 1863, U.S. Presidents, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL. John E. Bostick to Abraham Lincoln, July 29, 1863, Box 240, Record Group 107, Entry 18, Records of the Secretary of War, Record Series Originating During The Period 17891889, Correspondence, Letters Received, Letters Received (Main Series), 1801-1889, National Archives, Washington, DC. Richard Yates to Abraham Lincoln, August 5, 1863, Henry Horner Lincoln Collection, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Springfield, IL. William E. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln, August 18, 1863, Box 239, Record Group 107, Entry 18, Records of the Secretary of War, Record Series Originating During the Period 1789-1889, Correspondence, Letters Received, Letters Received (Main Series), 18011889, National Archives, Washington DC. Stephen A. Hurlbut to Abraham Lincoln, August 18, 1863, Volume 121, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Ulysses S. Grant to Abraham Lincoln, August 23, 1863, Volume 121, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Nathan Sargent to Abraham Lincoln, September 12, 1863, Volume 123, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Sarah Davis Lincoln to Abraham Lincoln, September 15, 1863, Volume 392, Record Group 59, Entry 113, General Records of the Department of State, Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1784-1906, Miscellaneous Letters, National Archives, College Park, MD. George W. Smith to Abraham Lincoln, September 18, 1863, Box 243, Record Group 107, Entry 18, Records of the Secretary of War, Record Series Originating During the Period 1789-1889, Correspondence, Letters Received, Letters Received (Main Series), 1801-1889, National Archives, Washington, DC. James Henry Gooding to Abraham Lincoln, September 28, 1863, Box 21, Record Group 94, Entry 360, Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1800-1947, Records of Divisions of the Adjutant General’s Office, Colored Troops Division, 1863-1889, Letters Received, 1863-1888, National Archives, Washington, DC. 54 On Lincoln’s Mind Sarah J. Hale to Abraham Lincoln, September 28, 1863, Volume 125, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Abraham Lincoln to Edwin M. Stanton, September 29, 1863, Box 29, Record Group 94, Entry 360, Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1800-1947, Records of Divisions of the Adjutant General’s Office, Colored Troops Division, 1863-1889, Letters Received, 1863-1888, National Archives, Washington, DC. Hamilton Fonda to Abraham Lincoln, October 11, 1863, Box 272, Record Group 107, Entry 18, Records of the Secretary of War, Record Series Originating During the Period 1789-1889, Correspondence, Letters Received, Letters Received (Main Series), 18011889, National Archives, Washington, DC. Abraham Lincoln to Whom It May Concern, October 12, 1863, Box 10, Record Group 46, Entry 761, Records of the United States Senate, Fifty-First Congress, 1889-1891, Records of Legislative Proceedings, Papers Supporting Specific Bills and Resolutions, 1889-1891, National Archives, Washington, DC. Elihu B. Washburne to Abraham Lincoln, October 12, 1863, Volume 128, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington DC. Logan U. Reavis to Abraham Lincoln, October 19, 1863, Volume 2, Record Group 45, Entry 36, Naval Records Collection of the Office of Naval Records and Library, 18821946, Records of the Office of the Secretary of the Navy, 1798-1921, Correspondence, 1798-1918, Miscellaneous Letters Received, 1801-1884, National Archives, Washington, DC. David L. Phillips to Abraham Lincoln, October 23, 1863, Volume 129, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Edward S. Dixon to Abraham Lincoln, October 28, 1863, Box 697, Record Group 92, Entry 225, Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1800-1947, Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, 1792-1929, Correspondence, 1818-1926, Consolidated Correspondence File, 1794-1915, National Archives, Washington, DC. David Wills to Abraham Lincoln, November 2, 1863, Volume 130, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. David Wills to Abraham Lincoln, November 2, 1863, Volume 130, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC. John E. Tallon to Abraham Lincoln, November 12, 1863, Box 249, Record Group 107, Entry 18, Records of the Secretary of War, Record Series Originating During the Period 1789-1889, Correspondence, Letters Received, Letters Received (Main Series), 18011889, National Archives, Washington, DC. Mary Lincoln to Abraham Lincoln, November 18, 1863, Gettysburg National Military Park, Gettysburg, PA. Address Delivered at the Dedication of the Cemetery at Gettysburg (Everett Copy), Henry Horner Collection, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Springfield, IL. On Lincoln’s Mind 55 Illustration Credits The Library of Congress: front cover, pp. 1 (facing), 6, 7 (bottom), 19, 25, 27 (top), 32, 34, 48-49, 51, back cover. The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum: pp. 1-2. 5, 8 (top), 11-13, 1617, 20, 22-23, 27 (bottom), 29-30, 33, 36, 38, 40-42, 46-47, 52-53. Public domain: p. 3. The Pennsylvania Capitol Preservation Committee: p. 7 (top). The National Archives and Records Administration: pp. 8 (bottom), 31, 35, 39. Chapultepec Castle, Mexico: p. 15. The National Gallery of Art: p. 26. Dennis Segelquist: p. 37. Dr. Allen Guelzo: p. 43. Gettysburg National Military Park: p. 44. The Gettysburg Foundation: p. 45. 56 On Lincoln’s Mind ABOUT THE PAPERS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN: The Papers of Abraham Lincoln is a long-term project dedicated to locating, imaging, transcribing, annotating, and publishing all documents written by or to Abraham Lincoln during his entire lifetime (1809-1865). The final publication will be a freely accessible online edition of more than 150,000 documents that will revolutionize the study of Abraham Lincoln and his era. The interface will encourage users to explore this virtual archive through both simple and sophisticated searching of accurate transcriptions, linked to color images, of the original handwritten documents. You can assist the project in Finding Lincoln by advising project staff of known or reported Lincoln documents in your locality. The project's scope includes all documents written or signed by Abraham Lincoln or written to him during his entire life, including military commissions, civilian appointments, brief endorsements, and any document sent to Lincoln. Visit www.papersofabrahamlincoln.org for more information about the Papers of Abraham Lincoln.