The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Great Conspiracy, Complete
Title: The Great Conspiracy, Complete
Author: John Alexander Logan
Release date: June 1, 2004 [eBook #7140]
Most recently updated: December 30, 2020
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Widger
THE GREAT CONSPIRACY
By John Logan
Its Origin and History
PREFACE.
In the preparation of this work it has been the writer's aim to present in it, with historical accuracy, authentic facts; to be fair and impartial in grouping them; and to be true and just in the conclusions necessarily drawn from them. While thus striving to be accurate, fair, and just, he has not thought it his duty to mince words, nor to refrain from "calling things by their right names;" neither has he sought to curry favor, in any quarter, by fulsome adulation on the one side, nor undue denunciation on the other, either of the living, or of the dead. But, while tracing the history of the Great Conspiracy, from its obscure birth in the brooding brains of a few ambitious men of the earliest days of our Republic, through the subsequent years of its devolution, down to the evil days of Nullification, and to the bitter and bloody period of armed Rebellion, or contemplating it in its still more recent and, perhaps, more sinister development, of to-day, he has conscientiously dealt with it, throughout, in the clear and penetrating light of the voluminous records so readily accessible at the seat of our National Government. So far as was practicable, he has endeavored to allow the chief characters in that Conspiracy—as well as the Union leaders, who, whether in Executive, Legislative, or Military service, devoted their best abilities and energies to its suppression—to speak for themselves, and thus while securing their own proper places in history, by a process of self-adjustment as it were, themselves to write down that history in their own language. If then there be found within these covers aught which may seem harsh to those directly or indirectly, nearly or remotely, connected with that Conspiracy, he may not unfairly exclaim: "Thou canst not say I did it." If he knows his own heart, the writer can truly declare, with his hand upon it, that it bears neither hatred, malice, nor uncharitableness, to those who, misled by the cunning secrecy of the Conspirators, and without an inkling or even a suspicion of their fell purposes, went manfully into the field, with a courage worthy of a better cause, and for four years of bloody conflict, believing that their cause was just, fought the armies of the Union, in a mad effort to destroy the best government yet devised by man upon this planet. And, perhaps, none can better understand than he, how hard, how very hard, it must be for men of strong nature and intense feeling, after taking a mistaken stand, and especially after carrying their conviction to the cannon's mouth, to acknowledge their error before the world. Hence, while he has endeavored truly to depict—or to let those who made history at the time help him to depict—the enormity of the offence of the armed Rebellion and of the heresies and plottings of certain Southern leaders precipitating it, yet not one word will be found, herein, condemnatory of those who, with manly candor, soldierly courage, and true patriotism, acknowledged that error when the ultimate arbitrament of the sword had decided against them. On the contrary, to all such as accept, in good faith, the results of the war of the Rebellion, the writer heartily holds out the hand of forgiveness for the past, and good fellowship for the future.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
April 15, 1886.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
A PRELIMINARY RETROSPECT.
AFRICAN SLAVERY IN AMERICA IN 1620—CONTROVERSY BETWEEN THE
COLONIES AND ENGLAND IN 1699—GEORGIAN ABHORRENCE OF SLAVERY IN 1775—JEFFERSON
AND THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE—SLAVERY A SOURCE OF WEAKNESS IN
THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR—THE SESSION BY VIRGINIA OF THE GREAT
NORTH-WEST—THEORDINANCE OF 1784 AND ITS FAILURE—THE ORDINANCE
OF 1787 AND ITS ADOPTION—THE GERM OF SLAVERY AGITATION PLANTED—THE
QUESTION IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION—SUBTERFUGES OF THE OLD
CONSTITUTION—THE BULLDOZING OF THE FATHERS—THE FIRST FEDERAL
CONGRESS, 1789—CONDITIONS OF TERRITORIAL CESSIONS FROM NORTH
CAROLINA AND GEORGIA, 1789-1802—THE "COLONY OF LOUISIANA"
(MISSISSIPPI VALLEY) PURCHASE OF 1803—THE TREATY—CONDITIONS
TOUCHING SLAVERY—THE COTTON INDUSTRY REVOLUTIONIZED—RAPID
POPULATING OF THE GREAT VALLEY, BY SLAVEHOLDERS AND SLAVES—JEFFERSON'S
APPARENT INCONSISTENCY EXPLAINED—THE AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE—MULTIPLICATION
OF SLAVES—LOUISIANA ADMITTED, 1812, AS A STATE—THE TERRITORY
OF MISSOURI—THE MISSOURI STRUGGLE (1818-1820) IN A NUTSHELL—
THE "MISSOURI COMPROMISE"
CHAPTER II.
PROTECTION AND FREE TRADE.
CHIEF CAUSE OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION—OUR INDEPENDENCE,
INDUSTRIAL AS WELL AS POLITICAL—FAILURE OF THE CONFEDERATION DUE TO
LACK OF INDUSTRIAL PROTECTION—MADISON'S TARIFF ACT OF 1789—HAMILTON'S
TARIFF OF 1790—SOUTHERN STATESMEN AND SOUTHERN VOTES FOR EARLY
TARIFFS—WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON ON "PROTECTION "—EMBARGO OF
1807-8—WAR OF 1812-15—CONSEQUENT INCREASE OF AMERICAN
MANUFACTURES—BROUGHAM'S PLAN—RUIN THREATENED BY GLUT OF
BRITISH GOODS—TARIFF ACT OF 1816—CALHOUN'S DEFENSE OF
"PROTECTION"—NEW ENGLAND AGAINST THAT ACT—THE SOUTH SECURES
ITS PASSAGE—THE PROTECTIVE TARIFF ACTS OF 1824 AND 1828—SUBSEQUENT
PROSPERITY IN FREE STATES—THE BLIGHT OF SLAVERY—BIRTH OF THE
FREE TRADE HERESY IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1797—SIMULTANEOUS BIRTH OF
THE HERESY OF STATE RIGHTS—KENTUCKY RESOLUTIONS OF 1798—VIRGINIA
RESOLUTIONS OF 1799—JEFFERSON'S REAL PURPOSE IN FORMULATING THEM—ACTIVITY
OF THE FEW SOUTHERN FREE TRADERS—PLAUSIBLE ARGUMENTS AGAINST
"PROTECTION"—INGENIOUS METHODS OF "FIRING THE SOUTHERN HEART"—SOUTHERN
DISCONTENT WITH TARIFF OF 1824—INFLAMMATORY UTTERANCES—ARMED
RESISTANCE URGED TO TARIFF OF 1828—WALTERBOROUGH ANTI-PROTECTIVE
TARIFF ADDRESS—FREE TRADE AND NULLIFICATION ADVOCACY APPEARS IN
CONGRESS—THE HAYNE-WEBSTER DEBATE—MODIFIED PROTECTIVE TARIFF
OF 1832—SOUTH CAROLINA'S NULLIFICATION ORDINANCE—HAYNE ELECTED
GOVERNOR OF SOUTH CAROLINA—HERESY OF "PARAMOUNT ALLEGIANCE TO THE
STATE"—SOUTH CAROLINA ARMS HERSELF—PRESIDENT JACKSON STAMPS
OUT SOUTHERN TREASON—CLAY'S COMPROMISE TARIFF OF 1833—CHIEF
JUSTICE MARSHALL'S SOLEMN WARNING—JACKSON'S FORECAST
CHAPTER III.
GROWTH OF THE SLAVERY QUESTION.
"EMANCIPATION" IN NORTHERN AND MIDDLE STATES—VIRGINIA'S
UNSUCCESSFUL EFFORT—CESSION OF THE FLORIDAS, 1819—BALANCE OF
POWER—ADMISSION OF ARKANSAS,1836—SOUTHERN SLAVE HOLDERS'
COLONIZATION OF TEXAS—TEXAN INDEPENDENCE, 1837—CALHOUN'S
SECOND AND GREAT CONSPIRACY—DETERMINATION BEFORE 1839 TO SECEDE—PROTECTIVE
TARIFF FEATURES AGAIN THE PRETEXT—CALHOUN, IN 1841, ASKING THE
BRITISH GOVERNMENT FOR AID—NORTHERN OPPOSITION TO ACQUISITION OF
TEXAS—RATIONALE OF THE LOUISIANA AND FLORIDA ACQUISITIONS—PROPOSED
EXTENSION OF SLAVERY LIMITS—WEBSTER WARNS THE SOUTH—DISASTERS
FOLLOWING COMPROMISE TARIFF OF 1833—INDUSTRIAL RUIN OF 1840—ELECTION
AND DEATH OF HARRISON—PROTECTIVE TARIFF OF 1842—POLK'S
CAMPAIGN OF 1844—CLAY'S BLUNDER AND POLK'S CRIME—SOUTHERN
TREACHERY—THE NORTH HOODWINKED—POLK ELECTED BY ABOLITION VOTE—SLAVE-HOLDING
TEXAS UNDER A SHAM "COMPROMISE"—WAR WITH MEXICO—FREE-TRADE
TARIFF OF 1846—WILMOT PROVISO—TREATY OF GUADALUPE—HIDALGO—SLAVERY
CONTEST IN CONGRESS STILL GROWING—COMPROMISE OF 1850—A LULL—FUGITIVE
SLAVE LAW—NEBRASKA BILL OF 1852-3—KANSAS-NEBRASKA BILL,
1853-4, REPORTED—PARLIAMENTARY "JUGGLERY"—THE TRIUMPH OF
SLAVERY, IN CONGRESS—BLEEDING KANSAS—TOPEKA CONSTITUTION, 1855—KANSAS
LEGISLATURE DISPERSED, 1856, BY UNITED STATES TROOPS—LECOMPTON
CONSTITUTION OF 1857—FRAUDULENT TRIUMPH OF SLAVERY CONSTITUTION—ITS
SUBSEQUENT DEFEAT—ELECTION OF BUCHANAN, 1856—KANSAS ADMITTED—MISERY
AND RUIN CAUSED BY FREE-TRADE TARIFF OF 1846—FILLMORE AND BUCHANAN
TESTIFY
CHAPTER IV.
"POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY."
DOUGLAS'S THEORY OF POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY—ILLINOIS LEGISLATIVE
ENDORSEMENT OF IT, 1851—DOUGLAS'S POSITION ON KANSAS—NEBRASKA
BILL, 1854—DRED SCOTT DECISION—SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS,
REPUBLICAN CONVENTION OF 1858—LINCOLN'S REMARKABLE SPEECH TO THE
CONVENTION—PIERCE AND BUCHANAN, TANEY AND DOUGLAS, CHARGED WITH
PRO-SLAVERY CONSPIRACY—DOUGLAS'S GREAT SPEECH (JULY 9TH, 1858) AT
CHICAGO, IN REPLY—LINCOLN'S POWERFUL REJOINDER, AT CHICAGO, (JULY
10TH)—THE ADMIXTURE OF RACES—THE VOTING "UP OR DOWN" OF
SLAVERY—THE "ARGUMENTS OF KINGS"—TRUTHS OF THE DECLARATION OF
INDEPENDENCE—DOUGLAS'S BLOOMINGTON SPEECH (JULY 16TH), OF
VINDICATION AND ATTACK—HISTORY OF THE KANSAS-NEBRASKA STRUGGLE—THE
UNHOLY ALLIANCE—THE TWO POINTS AT ISSUE—THE "WHITE MAN'S"
COUNTRY—DOUGLAS'S PLEDGES TO WEBSTER AND CLAY—DOUGLAS'S
SPRINGFIELD SPEECH, JULY 17TH—THE IRRECONCILABLE PRINCIPLES AT ISSUE
BETWEEN LINCOLN AND HIMSELF—LINCOLN'S GREAT SPEECH, AT SPRINGFIELD,
THE SAME EVENING—DOUGLAS'S TRIUMPHANT MARCHES AND ENTRIES—THE
"OFFICES SEEN IN HIS ROUND, JOLLY, FRUITFUL FACE"—LINCOLN'S
LEAN-FACED FIGHT, FOR PRINCIPLE ALONE—DOUGLAS'S VARIOUS SPEECHES
REVIEWED—THE REAL QUESTION BETWEEN REPUBLICANS AND DOUGLAS MEN AND
THE BUCHANAN MEN—JACKSON'S VETO OF THE NATIONAL BANK CHARTER—DEMOCRATIC
REVOLT AGAINST THE SUPREME COURT DECISION—VINDICATION OF CLAY—"NEGRO
EQUALITY"—MR. LINCOLN'S CHARGE, OF "CONSPIRACY AND DECEPTION" TO
"NATIONALIZE SLAVERY," RENEWED—GREAT JOINT DEBATE OF 1858, BETWEEN
LINCOLN AND DOUGLAS, ARRANGED
CHAPTER V.
THE PRESIDENTIAL CONTEST OF 1860—
THE CRISIS APPROACHING.
HOW THE GREAT JOINT DEBATE OF 1858 RESULTED—THE "LITTLE GIANT"
CAPTURES THE SENATORSHIP—THE "BIG GIANT" CAPTURES THE PEOPLE—THE
RISING DEMOCRATIC STAR OF 1860—DOUGLAS'S GRAND TRIUMPHAL "PROGRESS"
THROUGH THE LAND—A POPULAR DEMOCRATIC IDOL—FRESH AGGRESSIONS
OF THE SLAVE POWER—NEW MEXICO'S SLAVE CODE OF 1859—HELPER'S
"IMPENDING CRISIS"—JOHN BROWN AND HARPER'S FERRY—THE MEETING
OF CONGRESS, DECEMBER, 1859—FORTY-FOUR BALLOTS FOR SPEAKER—DANGEROUSLY
HEATED CONGRESSIONAL DEBATES ON SLAVERY—THE DEMOCRATIC SPLIT—JEFFERSON
DAVIS'S ARROGANT DOUBLE-EDGED PRO-SLAVERY' RESOLUTIONS—DEMOCRATIC
NATIONAL CONVENTION, CHARLESTON, S. C., 1860—DECLARATIONS OF THE
MAJORITY AND MINORITY REPORTS AND BUTLER'S RECOMMENDATION, WITH VOTES
THEREON—ADOPTION OF THE MINORITY (DOUGLAS) PLATFORM—SOUTHERN
DELEGATES PROTEST AND "BOLT "—THE BOLTING CONVENTION ADJOURNS TILL
JUNE AT RICHMOND—THE REGULAR CONVENTION BALLOTS AND ADJOURNS TO
BALTIMORE—THE BALTIMORE CONVENTION—"THE AFRICAN SLAVE-TRADER A
TRUE MISSIONARY"—MORE BOLTING—DOUGLAS'S NOMINATION FOR THE
PRESIDENCY—THE BOLTING CONVENTION NOMINATES BRECKINRIDGE—THE
REPUBLICAN CONVENTION AND PLATFORM—NOMINATIONS OF LINCOLN, AND BELL—COMPARATIVE
ANALYSIS OF THE FOUR RIVAL PARTY PLATFORMS—THE OCTOBER ELECTIONS—THE
SOUTH PREPARING GLEEFULLY FOR SECESSION—GOVERNOR GIST'S TREASONABLE
MESSAGE TO S. C. LEGISLATURE, NOV. 5—OTHER SIMILAR UTTERANCES
CHAPTER VI.
THE GREAT CONSPIRACY MATURING.
LINCOLN'S ELECTION ASSURED—SOUTHERN EXULTATION—NORTHERN
GLOOM—"FIRING THE SOUTHERN HEART"—RESIGNATIONS OF FEDERAL
OFFICERS AND SENATORS OF SOUTH CAROLINA—GOVERNOR BROWN, OF GEORGIA,
DEFIES "FEDERAL COERCION"—ALEXANDER H. STEPHENS'S ARGUMENT AGAINST
SECESSION—SOUTH CAROLINA CALLS AN "UNCONDITIONAL SECESSION
CONVENTION"—THE CALL SETS THE SOUTH ABLAZE—PROCLAMATIONS OF
THE GOVERNORS OF THE SOUTHERN STATES, FAVORING REVOLT—LOYAL ADDRESS
OF GOVERNOR MAGOFFIN OF KENTUCKY—THE CLAMOR OF REVOLT SILENCES
APPEALS FOR UNION—PRESIDENT BUCHANAN'S PITIFUL WEAKNESS—CONSPIRATORS
IN HIS CABINET—IMBECILITY OF HIS LAST ANNUAL MESSAGE TO CONGRESS,
DEC., 1860—ATTORNEY-GENERAL JEREMIAH BLACK'S OPINION AGAINST
COERCION—CONTRAST AFFORDED BY GENERAL JACKSON'S LOYAL LOGIC—ENSUING
DEBATES IN CONGRESS—SETTLED PURPOSE OF THE CONSPIRATORS TO RESIST
PLACATION—FUTILE LABORS OF UNION MEN IN CONGRESS FOR A PEACEFUL
SOLUTION—ABSURD DEMANDS OF THE IMPLACABLES—THE COMMERCIAL
NORTH ON ITS KNEES TO THE SOUTH—CONCILIATION ABJECTLY BEGGED FOR—BRUTAL
SNEERS AT THE NORTH, AND THREATS OF CLINGMAN, IVERSON, AND OTHER SOUTHERN
FIREEATERS, IN THE U. S. SENATE—THEIR BLUSTER MET BY STURDY
REPUBLICANS—BEN WADE GALLANTLY STANDS BY THE "VERDICT OF THE PEOPLE"—PEACEFUL-SETTLEMENT
PROPOSITIONS IN THE HOUSE—ADRIAN'S RESOLUTION, AND VOTE—LOVEJOY'S
COUNTER-RESOLUTION, AND VOTE—ADOPTION OF MORRIS'S UNION RESOLUTION
IN HOUSE
CHAPTER VII.
SECESSION ARMING.
THE SOUTH CAROLINA SECESSION CONVENTION MEETS—SPEECHES AT
"SECESSION HALL" OF PARKER, KEITT, INGLIS, BARNWELL, RHETT, AND GREGG, THE
FIRST ORDINANCE OF SECESSION—ITS JUBILANT ADOPTION AND RATIFICATION—SECESSION
STAMPEDE—A SOUTHERN CONGRESS PROPOSED—PICKENS'S PROCLAMATION
OF SOVEREIGN INDEPENDENCE—SOUTH CAROLINA CONGRESSMEN WITHDRAW—DISSENSIONS
IN BUCHANAN'S CABINET—COBB FLOYD, AND THOMPSON, DEMAND WITHDRAWAL OF
FEDERAL TROOPS—BUCHANAN'S REPLY—SEIZURE OF FORTS, ETC.—THE
"STAR OF THE WEST" FIRED ON—THE MAD RUSH OF REBELLIOUS EVENTS—SOUTH
CAROLINA DEMANDS THE SURRENDER OF FORT SUMTER AND THE DEMAND REFUSED—SECRETARY
HOLT'S LETTER TO CONSPIRING SENATORS AND REBEL AGENT—TROOP'S AT THE
NATIONAL CAPITAL—HOLT'S REASONS THEREFOR—THE REVOLUTIONARY
PROGRAMME—"ARMED OCCUPATION OF WASHINGTON CITY"—LINCOLN'S
INAUGURATION TO BE PREVENTED—THE CRUMBLING AND DISSOLVING UNION—THE
NORTH STANDS AGHAST—GREAT DEBATE IN CONGRESS, 1860-1861—CLINGMAN
ON THE SOUTHERN TARIFF-GRIEVANCE—DEFIANCE OF BROWN OF MISSISSIPPI—IVERSON'S
BLOODY THREAT—WIGFALL'S UNSCRUPULOUS ADVICE—HIS INSULTING
DEMANDS—BAKER'S GLORIOUSLY ELOQUENT RESPONSE—ANDY JOHNSON
THREATENED WITH BULLETS—THE NORTH BULLIED—INSOLENT, IMPOSSIBLE
TERMS OF PEACE—LINCOLN'S SPEECHES EN ROUTE FOR WASHINGTON—SAVE
ARRIVAL—"I'LL TRY TO STEER HER THROUGH!"—THE SOUTH TAUNTS HIM—WIGFALL'S
CHALLENGE TO THE BLOODY ISSUE OF ARMS!
CHAPTER VIII.
THE REJECTED OLIVE BRANCH.
THE VARIOUS COMPROMISES OFFERED BY THE NORTH—"THE CRITTENDEN
COMPROMISE"—THE PEACE CONFERENCE—COMPROMISE PROPOSITIONS OF
THE SOUTHERN CONSPIRATORS—IRRECONCILABLE ATTITUDE OF THE PLOTTERS—HISTORY
OF THE COMPROMISE MEASURES IN CONGRESS—CLARK'S SUBSTITUTE TO
CRITTENDEN RESOLUTIONS IN THE SENATE—ANTHONY'S MORE THAN EQUITABLE
PROPOSITIONS—HIS AFFECTING APPEAL TO STONY HEARTS—THE
CONSPIRACY DEVELOPING—SIX SOUTHERN SENATORS REFUSE TO VOTE AGAINST
THE CLARK SUBSTITUTE—ITS CONSEQUENT ADOPTION, AND DEFEAT OF THE
CRITTENDEN RESOLUTIONS—LYING TELEGRAMS FROM CONSPIRING SENATORS TO
FURTHER INFLAME REBELLION—SAULSBURY'S AFTERSTATEMENT (1862) AS TO
CAUSES OF FAILURE OF CRITTENDEN'S COMPROMISE—LATHAM'S GRAPHIC PROOF
OF THE CONSPIRATORS' "DELIBERATE, WILFUL DESIGN" TO KILL COMPROMISE—ANDREW
JOHNSON'S EVIDENCE AS TO THEIR ULTIMATE OBJECT "PLACE AND EMOLUMENT FOR
THEMSELVES"—"THE POWERS OF GOVERNMENT IN THE HANDS OF THE FEW"—THE
CORWIN COMPROMISE RESOLUTION IN THE HOUSE—THE BURCH AMENDMENT—KELLOGG'S
PROPOSITION—THE CLEMENS SUBSTITUTE—PASSAGE BY THE HOUSE OF
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT PROHIBITING CONGRESSIONAL INTERFERENCE WITH
SLAVERY WHERE IT EXISTS—ITS ADOPTION BY THE SENATE—THE CLARK
SUBSTITUTE RECONSIDERED AND DEFEATED—PROPOSITIONS OF THE PEACE
CONGRESS LOST—REJECTION OF THE CRITTENDEN COMPROMISE
CHAPTER IX.
SLAVERY'S SETTING AND FREEDOM'S
DAWN.
THE LAST NIGHT OF THE 36TH CONGRESS—MR. CRITTENDEN'S PATRIOTIC
APPEAL—"THE SADDEST SPECTACLE EVER SEEN"—IMPOTENCY OF THE
BETRAYED AND FALLING STATE—DOUGLAS'S POWERFUL PLEA—PATRIOTISM
OF HIMSELF AND SUPPORTERS—LOGAN SUMMARIZES THE COMPROMISES, AND
APPEALS TO PATRIOTISM ABOVE PARTY—STATESMANLIKE BREADTH OF DOUGLAS,
BAKER AND SEWARD—HENRY WINTER DAVIS ELOQUENTLY CONDENSES "THE
SITUATION" IN A NUTSHELL—"THE FIRST FRUITS OF RECONCILIATION"
OFFERED BY THE NORTH, SCORNED BY THE CONSPIRATORS—WIGFALL AGAIN
SPEAKS AS THE MOUTHPIECE OF THE SOUTH—HE RAVES VIOLENTLY AT THE
NORTH—THE SOUTH REJECTS PEACE "EITHER IN THE UNION, OR OUT OF IT"—THE
DAWN OF FREEDOM APPEARS (MARCH 4TH, 1861)—INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT
LINCOLN—LINCOLN'S FIRST INAUGURAL—GRANDEUR AND PATHOS OF HIS
PATRIOTIC UTTERANCES—HIS FIRST SLEEPLESS AND PRAYERFUL NIGHT AT THE
WHITE HOUSE—THE MORROW, AND ITS BITTER DISAPPOINTMENT—THE
MESSAGE OF "PEACE AND GOOD WILL" REGARDED AS A "CHALLENGE TO WAR"—PRESIDENT
LINCOLN'S CABINET
CHAPTER X.
THE WAR-DRUM—"ON TO
WASHINGTON!"
REBEL COMMISSIONERS AT WASHINGTON ON A "MISSION"—SEWARD "SITS
DOWN" ON THEM—HE REFUSES TO RECOGNIZE "CONFEDERATE STATES"—THE
REBEL COMMISSIONERS "ACCEPT THE GAGE OF BATTLE THUS THROWN DOWN TO THEM"—ATTEMPT
TO PROVISION FORT SUMTER—THE REBELS NOTIFIED—THE FORT AND ITS
SURROUNDINGS—THE FIRST GUN OF SLAVERY FIRED—TERRIFIC
BOMBARDMENT OF THE FORT—THE GARRISON, STARVED AND BURNED OUT,
EVACUATES, WITH ALL THE HONORS OF WAR—THE SOUTH CRAZY WITH
EXULTATION—TE DEUMS SUNG, SALUTES FIRED, AND THE REBEL GOVERNMENT
SERENADED—"ON TO WASHINGTON!" THE REBEL CRY—"GRAY JACKETS OVER
THE BORDER"—PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S FIRST PROCLAMATION AND CALL FOR
TROOPS—INSULTING RESPONSES OF GOVERNORS BURTON, HICKS, LETCHER,
ELLIS, MAGOFFIN, HARRIS, JACKSON AND RECTOR—LOYAL RESPONSES FROM
GOVERNORS OF THE FREE STATES—MAGICAL EFFECT OF THE CALL UPON THE
LOYAL NORTH—FEELING IN THE BORDER-STATES—PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S
CLEAR SUMMARY OF THE SITUATION AND ITS PHILOSOPHY—HIS PLAIN DUTY—THE
WAR POWER—THE NATIONAL CAPITAL CUT OFF—EVACUATION OF HARPER'S
FERRY—LOYAL TROOPS TO THE RESCUE—FIGHTING THEIR WAY THROUGH
BALTIMORE—REBEL THREATS—"SCOTT THE ARCH—TRAITOR, AND
LINCOLN THE BEAST"—BUTLER RELIEVES WASHINGTON—THE SECESSION OF
VIRGINIA AND NORTH CAROLINA—SHAMEFUL EVACUATION OF NORFOLK NAVY YARD—SEIZURE
OF MINTS AND ARSENALS—UNION AND REBEL FORCES CONCENTRATING—THE
NATIONAL CAPITAL FORTIFIED—BLOCKADE OF SOUTHERN PORTS—DEATH OF
ELLSWORTH—BUTLER CONFISCATES NEGRO PROPERTY AS "CONTRABAND OF WAR"—A
REBEL YARN
CHAPTER XI.
THE CAUSES OF SECESSION.
ABOUNDING EVIDENCES OF CONSPIRACY—MACLAY'S UNPUBLISHED DIARY
1787-1791—PIERCE BUTLER'S FIERCE DENUNCIATION OF THE TARIFF—SOUTH
CAROLINA WILL "LIVE FREE OR DIE GLORIOUS"—JACKSON'S LETTER TO
CRAWFORD, ON TARIFF AND SLAVERY—BENTON'S TESTIMONY—HENRY
CLAY'S EVIDENCE—NATHAN APPLETON'S—A TREASONABLE CAUCUS OF
SOUTHERN CONGRESSMEN—ALEXANDER H. STEPHEN'S EVIDENCE ON THE CAUSES
OF SECESSION—WIGFALL'S ADMISSIONS—THE ONE "REGRETTED" CLAUSE
IN THE CONSTITUTION PRECLUDING MONARCHIAL STATES—ADMISSIONS OF REBEL
COMMISSIONERS TO WASHINGTON—ADMISSIONS IN ADDRESS OF SOUTH CAROLINA
TO THE SLAVE-HOLDERS—JEFFERSON DAVIS'S STATEMENT IN SPECIAL MESSAGE
OF APRIL 29, 1861—DECLARATIONS OF REBEL COMMISSIONERS, TO LORD JOHN
RUSSELL—HIGH TARIFF AND "NOT SLAVERY" THE PRINCIPAL CAUSE—PERSONAL
LIBERTY BILLS—PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S DECLARATION OF THE UNDERLYING
CAUSE OF REBELLION—A WAR UPON LABOR AND THE RIGHTS OF THE PEOPLE—ANDREW
JOHNSON ON THE "DELIBERATE DESIGN" FOR A "CHANGE OF GOVERNMENT"—"TIRED
OF FREE GOVERNMENT"—DOUGLAS ON THE "ENORMOUS CONSPIRACY"—THE
REBEL PLOT TO SEIZE THE CAPITOL, AND HOLD IT—MCDOUGALL'S GRAPHIC
EXPOSURE OF THE TREASONABLE CONSPIRACY—YANCEY'S FAMOUS "SLAUGHTER"
LETTER—JEFFERSON DAVIS'S STANDARD OF REVOLT, RAISED IN 1858—LAMAR'S
LETTER TO JEFF. DAVIS (186O)—CAUCUS OF TREASON, AT WASHINGTON—EVANS'S
DISCLOSURES OF THE CAUCUS PROGRAMME OF SECESSION—CORROBORATING
TESTIMONY—YULEE'S CAPTURED LETTER—CAUCUS RESOLUTIONS IN FULL
CHAPTER XII.
COPPERHEADISM VS. UNION
DEMOCRACY.
NORTHERN COMPLICITY WITH TREASON—MAYOR FERNANDO WOOD
RECOMMENDS SECESSION OF NEW YORK CITY—THE REBEL JUNTA AT WASHINGTON
INSPIRES HIM—HE OBEYS ORDERS, BUT SHAKES AT THE KNEES—KEITT
BRAGS OF THE "MILLIONS OF DEMOCRATS IN THE NORTH," FURNISHING A "WALL OF
FIRE" AGAINST COERCION—ATTEMPTED REBEL—SEDUCTION OF NEW JERSEY—THE
PRICE-BURNETT CORRESPONDENCE—SECESSION RESOLUTIONS OF THE
PHILADELPHIA DEMOCRACY AT NATIONAL HALL—LANE OF OREGON "SERVES
NOTICE" OF "WAR ENOUGH AT HOME" FOR REPUBLICANS—"NORTHERN DEMOCRATS
NEED NOT CROSS THE BORDER TO FIND AN ENEMY"—EX-PRESIDENT PIERCE'S
CAPTURED TREASONABLE LETTER TO JEFF. DAVIS—THE "FIGHTING" TO BE
"WITHIN OUR OWN BORDERS, IN OUR OWN STREETS"—ATTITUDE OF DOUGLAS,
AND THE DOUGLAS DEMOCRACY, AFTER SUMTER—DOUGLAS CALLS ON MR. LINCOLN
AT THE WHITE HOUSE—HE PATRIOTICALLY SUSTAINS THE UNION—HE
RALLIES THE WHOLE NORTH TO STAND BY THE FLAG—THERE CAN BE "NO
NEUTRALS IN THIS WAR; ONLY PATRIOTS AND TRAITORS"—LAMENTED DEATH OF
"THE LITTLE GIANT"—TRIBUTES OF TRUMBULL AND MCDOUGALL TO HIS MEMORY—LOGAN'S
ATTITUDE AT THIS TIME, AND HIS RELATIONS TO DOUGLAS—THEIR LAST
PRIVATE INTERVIEW—DOUGLAS'S INTENTION TO "JOIN THE ARMY AND FIGHT"—HIS
LAST EFFORTS IN CONGRESS—"CONCILIATION," BEFORE SUMTER—"NO
HALF-WAY GROUND" AFTER IT
CHAPTER XIII.
THE STORM OF BATTLE.
THE MILITARY SITUATION—THE GREAT UPRISING—POSITIONS AND
NUMBERS OF THE UNION AND REBEL ARMIES—JOHNSTON EVACUATES HARPER'S
FERRY, AND RETREATS UPON WINCHESTER—PATTERSON'S EXTRAORDINARY
CONDUCT—HE DISOBEYS GENERAL SCOTT'S ORDERS TO "ATTACK AND WHIP THE
ENEMY"—JOHNSTON CONSEQUENTLY FREE TO REINFORCE BEAUREGARD AT
MANASSAS—FITZ JOHN PORTER'S ACCOUNTABILITY FOR THE DISASTROUS
CONSEQUENCES—MCDOWELL'S ADVANCE UPON BEAUREGARD—PRELIMINARY
BATTLE AT BLACKBURN'S FORD—JUNCTION OF JOHNSTON WITH BEAUREGARD—REBEL
PLANS OF ADVANCE AND ATTACK—CHANGE IN MCDOWELL'S PLANS—GREAT
PITCHED-BATTLE OF BULL RUN, OR MANASSAS, INCLUDING THE SECOND BATTLE AT
BLACKBURN'S FORD—VICTORY, AT FIRST, WITH MCDOWELL—THE CHECK—THE
LEISURELY RETREAT—THE PANIC AT, AND NEAR, THE NATIONAL CAPITAL—THE
WAR FULLY INAUGURATED
CHAPTER XIV.
THE COLORED CONTRABAND.
THE KNELL OF SLAVERY—THE "IMPLIED POWERS" OF CONGRESS IN THE
CONSTITUTION—PATRICK HENRY'S PREDICTION—JOHN QUINCY ADAMS'S
PROPHECY—JOHN SHERMAN'S NON-INTERFERENCE—WITH-SLAVERY
RESOLUTIONS—JOHN Q. ADAMS ON EMANCIPATION—POWERS OF CONGRESS
AND MILITARY COMMANDERS—GENERAL MCCLELLAN'S WEST VIRGINIA
PROCLAMATION OF NONINTERFERENCE WITH SLAVES—GENERAL BUTLER'S
CORRESPONDENCE WITH GENERAL SCOTT AND SECRETARY CAMERON—CAMERON'S
REPLY—MILITARY TENDERNESS FOR THE DOOMED INSTITUTION—CONGRESS,
AFTER BULL RUN—CONFISCATION, AND EMANCIPATION, OF SLAVES USED TO AID
REBELLION—RINGING WORDS OF TRUMBULL, WILSON, MCDOUGALL, AND TEN
EYCK, IN THE SENATE—ROMAN COURAGE OF THE HOUSE—CRITTENDEN'S
STATEMENTS—WAR RESOLUTIONS—BRECKINRIDGE'S TREASONABLE SPEECH
UPON "THE SANCTITY" OF THE CONSTITUTION—BAKER'S GLORIOUS REPLY—HIS
MATCHLESS APOSTROPHE TO FREEDOM—HIS SELF-SACRIFICING DEVOTION AND
HEROIC DEATH AT BALL'S BLUFF
CHAPTER XV.
FREEDOM'S EARLY DAWN.
THADDEUS STEVENS'S STARTLING UTTERANCES—CAPTURED SLAVES MUST
BE FREE FOREVER—"NO TRUCES WITH THE REBELS"—HIS PROPHECY AS TO
ARMING SLAVES TO FIGHT REBELLION—SECRETARY CAMERON'S LETTER TOUCHING
FUGITIVES FROM SERVICE—GENERAL FREMONT'S PROCLAMATION OF
CONFISCATION AND EMANCIPATION—ITS EFFECT NORTH AND SOUTH—JEFF.
THOMPSON'S SAVAGE PROCLAMATION OF RETALIATION—PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S
EMBARRASSMENT—HE PRIVATELY SUGGESTS TO FREMONT CERTAIN MODIFICATIONS—FREMONT
DEFENDS HIS COURSE—"STRONG AND VIGOROUS MEASURES NECESSARY TO
SUCCESS"—THE PRESIDENT PUBLICLY ORDERS THE MODIFICATION OF FREMONT'S
PROCLAMATION—THE MILITARY MIND GREATLY CONFUSED—GENERAL
INSTRUCTIONS ISSUED BY THE WAR DEPARTMENT—GENERAL T. W. SHERMAN'S
PORT ROYAL PROCLAMATION—GENERAL WOOL'S SPECIAL AND GENERAL ORDERS AS
TO EMPLOYMENT OF "CONTRABANDS"—GENERAL DIX'S PROCLAMATION FOR
REPULSION OF FUGITIVE SLAVES FROM HIS LINES—HALLECK ORDERS EXPULSION
AS WELL AS REPULSION—HIS LETTER OF EXPLANATION TO FRANK P. BLAIR—SEWARD'S
LETTER TO MCCLELLAN ON "CONTRABANDS" IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CHAPTER XVI.
"COMPENSATED GRADUAL
EMANCIPATION."
PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S ATTITUDE—SACRIFICES OF PATRIOTISM—ASSERTION
BY CONGRESS OF ITS EMANCIPATING WAR-POWERS—THE CAUSE OF FREEDOM
SLOWLY "MARCHING ON"—ABANDONED SLAVES OF BEAUFORT, S. C.—SECRETARY
CAMERON FAVORS ARMING THEM—THE PRESIDENT'S CAUTIOUS ADVANCES—HE
MODIFIES CAMERON'S REPORT TO CONGRESS ON THE SUBJECT—THE MILITARY
MIND, ALL "AT SEA"—COMMANDERS GUIDED BY POLITICAL BIAS—HALLECK'S
ST. LOUIS PROCLAMATION, 1862—BUELL'S LETTER—CONTRARY ACTION OF
DIX AND HALLECK, BUELL AND HOOKER, FREMONT AND DOUBLEDAY—LINCOLN'S
MIDDLE COURSE—HE PROPOSES TO CONGRESS, COMPENSATED GRADUAL
EMANCIPATION—INTERVIEW BETWEEN MR. LINCOLN AND THE BORDER-STATE
REPRESENTATIVES—INTERESTING REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT—MR.
LINCOLN BETWEEN TWO FIRES—VIEWS, ON COMPENSATED EMANCIPATION, OF
MESSRS. NOELL, CRISFIELD, MENZIES, WICKLIFFE, AND HALL—ROSCOE
CONKLING'S JOINT RESOLUTION, ADOPTED BY BOTH HOUSES—HOOKER'S "CAMP
BAKER" ORDER—MARYLAND FUGITIVE—SLAVE HUNTERS PERMITTED TO
SEARCH THE CAMP—UNION SOLDIERS ENRAGED—SICKLES ORDERS THE
SLAVE HUNTERS OFF—DOUBLEDAY'S DISPATCH AS TO "ALL NEGROES" ENTERING
HIS LINES—TO BE "TREATED AS PERSONS, NOT AS CHATTELS"
CHAPTER XVII.
BORDER—STATE OPPOSITION.
APPOINTMENT OF A SELECT COMMITTEE, IN HOUSE, ON GRADUAL EMANCIPATION—DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA EMANCIPATION ACT—THE PRESIDENT'S SPECIAL MESSAGE OF
APPROVAL—GEN. HUNTER'S EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION—PRESIDENT
LINCOLN PROMPTLY RESCINDS IT BY PROCLAMATION—HIS SOLEMN AND
IMPASSIONED APPEAL TO PEOPLE OF THE BORDER-STATES—HE BEGS THEIR
CONSIDERATION OF GRADUAL COMPENSATED EMANCIPATION—GEN. WILLIAMS'S
ORDER EXPELLING RUNAWAY NEGROES FROM CAMP, AT BATON ROUGE—LIEUT.-COL.
ANTHONY'S ORDER EXCLUDING FUGITIVE-SLAVE HUNTERS FROM "CAMP ETHERIDGE"—GEN.
MCCLELLAN'S FAMOUS "HARRISON'S LANDING LETTER" TO THE PRESIDENT—"FORCIBLE
ABOLITION OF SLAVERY" AND "A CIVIL AND MILITARY POLICY"—SLAVEHOLDING
BORDER-STATE SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES AT THE WHITE HOUSE—PRESIDENT
LINCOLN'S ADDRESS TO THEM, JULY, 1862—GRADUAL EMANCIPATION THE THEME—COMPENSATION
AND COLONIZATION TO ACCOMPANY IT—THE ABOLITION PRESSURE UPON THE
PRESIDENT INCREASING—HE BEGS THE BORDER STATESMEN TO RELIEVE HIM AND
THE COUNTRY IN ITS PERIL—THEIR VARIOUS RESPONSES
CHAPTER XVIII.
FREEDOM PROCLAIMED TO ALL.
PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S PERSONAL APPEAL TO COLORED FREEMEN—HE BEGS
THEM TO HELP IN THE COLONIZATION OF THEIR RACE—PROPOSED AFRICAN
COLONY IN CENTRAL AMERICA—EXECUTIVE ORDER OF JULY 2, 1862—EMPLOYMENT
OF NEGROES FOR MILITARY PURPOSES OF THE UNION—JEFF. DAVIS RETALIATES—MCCLELLAN
PROMULGATES THE EXECUTIVE ORDER WITH ADDENDA OF HIS OWN—HORACE
GREELEY'S LETTER TO PRESIDENT LINCOLN—THE LATTER ACCUSED OF
"SUBSERVIENCY" TO THE SLAVE HOLDERS—AN "UNGRUDGING EXECUTION OF THE
CONFISCATION ACT" DEMANDED—MR. LINCOLN'S FAMOUS REPLY—HIS
"PARAMOUNT OBJECT, TO SAVE THE UNION, AND NOT EITHER TO SAVE OR DESTROY
SLAVERY"—VISIT TO THE WHITE HOUSE OF A RELIGIOUS DEPUTATION FROM
CHICAGO—MEMORIAL ASKING FOR IMMEDIATE EMANCIPATION, BY PROCLAMATION—THE
PRESIDENT'S REPLY TO THE DEPUTATION—"THE POPE'S BULL AGAINST THE
COMET"—VARIOUS OBJECTIONS STATED TENTATIVELY—"A PROCLAMATION
OF LIBERTY TO THE SLAVES" IS "UNDER ADVISEMENT"—THE PROCLAMATION OF
EMANCIPATION ISSUED—ITS POPULAR RECEPTION—MEETING OF LOYAL
GOVERNORS AT ALTOONA—THEIR STIRRING ADDRESS—HOMAGE TO OUR
SOLDIERS—PLEDGED SUPPORT FOR VIGOROUS PROSECUTION OF THE WAR TO
TRIUMPHANT END—PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S HISTORICAL RESUME AND DEFENSE OF
EMANCIPATION—HE SUGGESTS TO CONGRESS, PAYMENT FOR SLAVES AT ONCE
EMANCIPATED BY BORDER STATES—ACTION OF THE HOUSE, ON RESOLUTIONS
SEVERALLY REPREHENDING AND ENDORSING THE PROCLAMATION—SUPPLEMENTAL
EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION OF JAN. 1, 1863
CHAPTER XIX.
HISTORICAL REVIEW.
COURSE OF SOUTHERN OLIGARCHS THROUGHOUT—THEIR EVERLASTING
GREED AND RAPACITY—BROKEN COVENANTS AND AGGRESSIVE METHODS—THEIR
UNIFORM GAINS UNTIL 1861—UPS AND DOWNS OF THE TARIFF—FREE
TRADE, SLAVERY, STATES RIGHTS, SECESSION, ALL PARTS OF ONE CONSPIRACY—"INDEPENDENCE"
THE FIRST OBJECT OF THE WAR—DREAMS, AMBITIONS, AND PLANS OF THE
CONSPIRATORS—LINCOLN'S FAITH IN NORTHERN NUMBERS AND ENDURANCE—"RIGHT
MAKES MIGHT"—THE SOUTH SOLIDLY-CEMENTED BY BLOOD—THE 37TH
CONGRESS—ITS WAR MEASURES—PAVING THE WAY TO DOWNFALL OF
SLAVERY AND REBELLION
CHAPTER XX.
LINCOLN'S TROUBLES AND
TEMPTATIONS.
INTERFERENCE WITH SLAVERY FORCED BY THE WAR—EDWARD EVERETT'S
OPINION—BORDER-STATES DISTRUST OF LINCOLN—IMPOSSIBILITY OF
SATISFYING THEIR REPRESENTATIVES—THEIR JEALOUS SUSPICIONS AND
CONGRESSIONAL ACTION—PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE OF KINDLY WARNING—STORMY
CONTENTION IN CONGRESS—CRITTENDEN'S ARGUMENT ON "PROPERTY" IN MAN—BORDER—STATES
"BID" FOR MR. LINCOLN—THE "NICHE IN THE TEMPLE OF FAME" OFFERED HIM—LOVEJOY'S
ELOQUENT COUNTERBLAST—SUMNER (JUNE, 1862,) ON LINCOLN AND
EMANCIPATION—THE PRESIDENT HARRIED AND WORRIED—SNUBBED BY
BORDER STATESMEN—MCCLELLAN'S THREAT—ARMY-MISMANAGEMENT—ARMING
THE BLACKS—HOW THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION WAS WRITTEN—CABINET
SUGGESTIONS—MILITARY SITUATION—REBEL ADVANCE NORTHWARD—LINCOLN,
AND THE BREAST-WORKS—WASHINGTON AND BALTIMORE MENACED—ANTIETAM,
AND THE FIAT OF FREEDOM—BORDER-STATE DENUNCIATION—KNIGHTS OF
THE GOLDEN CIRCLE, ETC.
CHAPTER XXI.
THE ARMED—NEGRO.
"WHO WOULD BE FREE, HIMSELF MUST STRIKE THE BLOW!"—THE COLORED
TROOPS AT PORT HUDSON—THEIR HEROISM—STIRRING INCIDENTS—AT
MILLIKEN'S BEND—AT FORT WAGNER—AT PETERSBURG AND ABOUT
RICHMOND—THE REBEL CONSPIRATORS FURIOUS—OUTLAWRY OF GENERAL
BUTLER, ETC.—JEFFERSON DAVIS'S MESSAGE TO THE REBEL CONGRESS—ATROCIOUS,
COLD-BLOODED RESOLUTIONS OF THAT BODY—DEATH OR SLAVERY TO THE ARMED
FREEMAN—PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S RETALIATORY ORDER—THE BLOODY
BUTCHERY AT FORT PILLOW—SAVAGE MALIGNITY OF THE REBELS—A
COMMON ERROR, CORRECTED—ARMING OF NEGROES COMMENCED BY THE REBELS—SIMILAR
SCHEME OF A REVOLUTIONARY HERO, IN 1778—REBEL CONGRESSIONAL ACT,
CONSCRIPTING NEGROES—JEFFERSON DAVIS'S POSITION—GENERAL LEE'S
LETTER TO BARKSDALE ON THE SUBJECT
CHAPTER XXII.
FREEDOM'S SUN STILL RISING.
DEFINITE CONGRESSIONAL ACTION, ON EMANCIPATION, GERMINATING—GLORIOUS
NEWS FROM THE WEST AND EAST—FALL OF VICKSBURG—GETTYSBURG—LINCOLN'S
GETTYSBURG ORATION—THE DRAFT—THE REBEL "FIRE IN THE REAR"—DRAFT
RIOTS IN NEW YORK—LINCOLN'S LETTER, AUGUST, 1863, ON THE SITUATION—CHATTANOOGA—THE
CHEERING FALL-ELECTIONS—VALLANDIGHAM'S DEFEAT—EMANCIPATION AS
A "POLITICAL" MEASURE—"THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT" REPORTED IN THE SENATE—THADDEUS
STEVENS'S RESOLUTIONS, AND TEST VOTE IN THE HOUSE—LOVEJOY'S DEATH—ELOQUENT
TRIBUTES OF ARNOLD, WASHBURNE, GRINNELL, THADDEUS STEVENS, AND SUMNER
CHAPTER XXIII.
"THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT" IN THE
SENATE.
GREAT DEBATE IN THE U. S. SENATE, ON EMANCIPATION—THE WHOLE
VILLANOUS HISTORY OF SLAVERY, LAID BARE—SPEECHES OF TRUMBULL, HENRY
WILSON, HARLAN, SHERMAN, CLARK, HALL, HENDERSON, SUMNER, REVERDY JOHNSON,
MCDOUGALL, SAULSBURY, GARRETT DAVIS, POWELL, AND HENDRICKS—BRILLIANT
ARRAIGNMENT AND DEFENSE OF "THE INSTITUTION"—U. S. GRANT, NOW
"GENERAL IN CHIEF"—HIS PLANS PERFECTED, HE GOES TO THE VIRGINIA
FRONT—MR. LINCOLN'S SOLICITUDE FOR THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT—BORDER—STATE
OBSTRUCTIVE MOTIONS, AMENDMENTS, AND SUBSTITUTES, ALL VOTED DOWN—MR.
LINCOLN'S LETTER TO HODGES, OF KENTUCKY, REVIEWING EMANCIPATION AS A WAR
MEASURE—THE DECISIVE FIELD-DAY (APRIL 8, 1864)—THE DEBATE ABLY
CLOSED—THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT PASSED BY THE SENATE
CHAPTER XXIV.
TREASON IN THE NORTHERN CAMPS.
EMANCIPATION TEST—VOTES IN THE HOUSE—ARNOLD'S RESOLUTION—BLUE
PROSPECTS FOR THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT—LINCOLN'S ANXIETY—CONGRESSIONAL
COPPERHEADS—THINLY-DISGUISED TREASON—SPEECHES OF VOORHEES,
WASHBURNE, AND KELLEY—SPRINGFIELD COPPERHEAD PEACE-CONVENTION—"THE
UNION AS IT WAS"—PEACE ON ANY TERMS—VALLANDIGHAM'S LIEUTENANTS—ATTITUDE
OF COX, DAVIS, SAULSBURY, WOOD, LONG, ALLEN, HOLMAN, AND OTHERS—NORTHERN
ENCOURAGEMENT TO REBELS—CONSEQUENT SECOND INVASION, OF THE NORTH, BY
LEE—500,000 TREASONABLE NORTHERN "SONS OF LIBERTY"—RITUAL AND
OATHS OF THE "K. G. C." AND "O. A. K."—COPPERHEAD EFFORTS TO SPLIT
THE NORTH AND WEST, ON TARIFF-ISSUES—SPALDING AND THAD. STEVENS
DENOUNCE TREASON-BREEDING COPPERHEADS
CHAPTER XXV.
THE "FIRE IN THE REAR."
THE REBEL MANDATE—"AGITATE THE NORTH!"—OBEDIENT
COPPERHEADS—THEIR DENUNCIATIONS OF THE GOVERNMENT—BROOKS,
FERNANDO WOOD, AND WHITE, ON THE "FOLLY" OF THE WAR FOR THE UNION—EDGERTON'S
PEACE RESOLUTIONS—ECKLEY, ON COPPERHEAD MALIGNITY—ALEXANDER
LONG GOES "A BOW-SHOT BEYOND THEM ALL"—HE PROPOSES THE
ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF SOUTHERN INDEPENDENCE—GARFIELD ELOQUENTLY
DENOUNCES LONG'S TREASON—LONG DEFIANTLY REITERATES IT—SPEAKER
COLFAX OFFERS A RESOLUTION TO EXPEL LONG—COX AND JULIAN'S VERBAL
DUEL—HARRIS'S TREASONABLE BID FOR EXPULSION—EXTRAORDINARY
SCENE IN THE HOUSE—FERNANDO WOOD'S BID—HE SUBSEQUENTLY
"WEAKENS"—EXCITING DEBATE—LONG AND HARRIS VOTED "UNWORTHY
MEMBERS" OF THE HOUSE
CHAPTER XXVI.
"THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT" DEFEATED
IN THE HOUSE.
GLANCE AT THE MILITARY SITUATION—"BEGINNING OF THE END"—THE
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT—HOLMAN "OBJECTS" TO "SECOND READING"—KELLOGG
SCORES THE COPPERHEAD-DEMOCRACY—CONTINUOUS "FIRE IN THE REAR" IN
BOTH HOUSES—THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT ATTACKED—THE ADMINISTRATION
ATTACKED—THE TARIFF ATTACKED—SPEECHES OF GARRETT DAVIS, AND
COX—PEACE-RESOLUTIONS OF LAZEAR AND DAVIS—GRINNELL AND
STEVENS, SCORE COX AND WOOD—HENDRICKS ON THE DRAFT—"ON" TO
RICHMOND AND ATLANTA—VIOLENT DIATRIBES OF WOOD, AND HOLMAN—FARNSWORTH'S
REPLY TO ROSS, PRUYN, AND OTHERS—ARNOLD, ON THE ETHICS OF SLAVERY—INGERSOLL'S
ELOQUENT BURST—RANDALL, ROLLINS, AND PENDLETON, CLOSING THE DEBATE—THE
THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT DEFEATED—ASHLEY'S MOTION TO RECONSIDER—CONGRESS
ADJOURNS
CHAPTER XXVII.
SLAVERY DOOMED AT THE POLLS.
THE ISSUE BETWEEN FREEDOM AND SLAVERY—MR. LINCOLN'S
RENOMINATION—ENDORSED, AT ALL POINTS, BY HIS PARTY—HIS FAITH
IN THE PEOPLE—HORATIO SEYMOUR'S COPPERHEAD DECLARATIONS—THE
NATIONAL DEMOCRACY DECLARE THE WAR "A FAILURE"—THEIR COPPERHEAD
PLATFORM, AND UNION CANDIDATE—MCCLELLAN THEIR NOMINEE—VICTORIES
AT ATLANTA AND MOBILE—FREMONT'S THIRD PARTY—SUCCESSES OF GRANT
AND SHERIDAN—DEATH OF CHIEF-JUSTICE TANEY—MARYLAND BECOMES
"FREE"—MORE UNION VICTORIES—REPUBLICAN "TIDAL-WAVE" SUCCESS—LINCOLN
RE-ELECTED—HIS SERENADE-SPEECHES—AMAZING CONGRESSIONAL-RETURNS—THE
DEATH OF SLAVERY INSURED—IT BECOMES SIMPLY A MATTER OF TIME
CHAPTER XXVIII.
FREEDOM AT LAST ASSURED.
THE WINTER OF 1864—THE MILITARY SITUATION—THE "MARCH TO
THE SEA"—THOMAS AND HOOD—LOGAN'S INTERVIEW WITH THE PRESIDENT—VICTORIES
OF NASHVILLE AND SAVANNAH—MR. LINCOLN'S MESSAGE TO CONGRESS, ON
THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT—CONGRESSIONAL RECESS—PRESIDENT LINCOLN
STILL WORKING WITH, THE BORDER-STATE REPRESENTATIVES—ROLLINS'S
INTERVIEW WITH HIM—THE THIRTEENTH AMENDMENT UP, IN THE HOUSE, AGAIN—VIGOROUS
AND ELOQUENT DEBATE—SPEECHES OF COX, BROOKS, VOORHEES, MALLORY,
HOLMAN, WOOD, AND PENDLETON, AGAINST THE AMENDMENT—SPEECHES OF
CRESWELL, SCOFIELD, ROLLINS, GARFIELD, AND STEVENS, FOR IT—RECONSIDERATION
OF ADVERSE VOTE—THE AMENDMENT ADOPTED—EXCITING SCENE IN THE
HOUSE—THE GRAND SALUTE TO LIBERTY—SERENADE TO MR. LINCOLN—"THIS
ENDS THE JOB"
CHAPTER XXIX.
LINCOLN'S SECOND INAUGURATION.
REBELLION ON ITS "LAST LEGS"—PEACE COMMISSIONS AND
PROPOSITIONS—EFFORTS OF GREELEY, JACQUES, GILMORE, AND BLAIR—LINCOLN'S
ADVANCES—JEFFERSON DAVIS'S DEFIANT MESSAGE TO HIM—THE
PRESIDENT AND THE REBEL COMMISSIONERS AT HAMPTON ROADS—VARIOUS
ACCOUNTS, OF THE SECRET CONFERENCE, BY PARTICIPANTS THE PROPOSITIONS ON
BOTH SIDES—FAILURE—THE MILITARY OUTLOOK—THE REBEL CAUSE
DESPERATE—REBEL DESERTIONS—"MILITARY" PEACE-CONVENTION
PROPOSED BY REBELS—DECLINED—CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN GRANT AND
LEE, ETC.—THE SECOND INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN—A
STRANGE OMEN—HIS IMMORTAL SECOND-INAUGURAL
CHAPTER XXX.
COLLAPSE OF THE ARMED
CONSPIRACY.
PROGRESS OF THE WAR—CAMPAIGN OF THE CAROLINAS, 1865—MEETING,
AT CITY POINT, OF LINCOLN, GRANT, AND SHERMAN—SHERMAN'S ACCOUNT OF
WHAT PASSED—GRANT NOW FEELS "LIKE ENDING THE MATTER"—THE
BATTLES OF DINWIDDIE COURT HOUSE AND FIVE FORKS—UNION ASSAULT ON THE
PETERSBURG WORKS—UNION VICTORY EVERYWHERE—PETERSBURG AND
RICHMOND EVACUATED—LEE'S RETREAT CUT OFF BATTLE OF SAILOR'S CREEK—GRANT
ASKS LEE TO SURRENDER—LEE DELAYS—SHERIDAN CATCHES HIM, AND HIS
ARMY, IN A TRAP—THE REBELS SURRENDER, AT APPOMATTOX—GRANT'S
GENEROUS AND MAGNANIMOUS TERMS—THE STARVING REBELS FED WITH UNION
RATIONS—SURRENDER OF JOHNSTON'S ARMY—OTHER REBEL FORCES
SURRENDER—THE REBELLION STAMPED OUT—CAPTURE OF JEFFERSON DAVIS—THE
REBELS "YIELD EVERYTHING THEY HAD FOUGHT FOR"—THEY CRAVE PARDON AND
OBLIVION FOR THEIR OFFENCES
CHAPTER XXXI.
ASSASSINATION!
PRESIDENT LINCOLN AT RICHMOND—HIS RECEPTIONS AT JEFFERSON
DAVIS'S MANSION—RETURN TO WASHINGTON—THE NEWS OF LEE'S
SURRENDER—LINCOLN'S LAST PUBLIC SPEECH—HIS THEME,
"RECONSTRUCTION"—GRANT ARRIVES AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL—PRESIDENT
LINCOLN'S LAST CABINET MEETING—HIS FOND HOPES OF THE FUTURE—AN
UNHEEDED PRESENTIMENT—AT FORD'S THEATRE—THE LAST ACCLAMATION
OF THE PEOPLE—THE PISTOL SHOT THAT HORRIFIED THE WORLD—SCULKING,
RED HANDED TREASON—THE ASSASSINATION PLOT-COMPLICITY OF THE REBEL
AUTHORITIES, BELIEVED BY THE BEST INFORMED MEN—TESTIMONY AS TO THREE
ATTEMPTS TO KILL LINCOLN—THE CHIEF REBEL-CONSPIRATORS "RECEIVE
PROPOSITIONS TO ASSASSINATE"—A NATION'S WRATH—ANDREW JOHNSON'S
VEHEMENT ASSEVERATIONS—"TREASON MUST BE MADE ODIOUS"—RECONSTRUCTION
CHAPTER XXXII.
TURNING BACK THE HANDS
"RECONSTRUCTION" OF THE SOUTH—MEMORIES OF THE WAR, DYING OUT—THE
FOURTEENTH AND FIFTEENTH AMENDMENTS—THE SOUTHERN STATES
REHABILITATED BY ACCEPTANCE OF AMENDMENTS, ETC.—REMOVAL OF REBEL
DISABILITIES—CLEMENCY OF THE CONQUERORS—THE OLD CONSPIRATORS
HATCH A NEW CONSPIRACY—THE "LOST CAUSE" TO BE REGAINED—THE
MISSISSIPPI SHOT-GUN PLAN—FRAUD, BARBARITY, AND MURDERS, EFFECT THE
PURPOSE—THE "SOUTH" CEMENTED "SOLID" BY BLOOD—PEONAGE REPLACES
SLAVERY—THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1876—THE TILDEN "BARREL,"
AND "CIPHER DISPATCHES"—THE "FRAUD" CRY—THE OLD LEADERS
DICTATE THE DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE OF 1880—THEIR FREE-TRADE
ISSUE TO THE FRONT AGAIN—SUCCESSIVE DEMOCRATIC EFFORTS TO FORCE
FREE-TRADE THROUGH THE HOUSE, SINCE REBELLION—EFFECT OF SUCH EFFORTS—REPUBLICAN
MODIFICATIONS OF THEIR OWN PROTECTIVE TARIFF—THE "SOLID SOUTH"
SUCCEEDS, AT LAST, IN "ELECTING" ITS CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT—IS THIS
STILL A REPUBLIC, OR IS IT AN OLIGARCHY?
CHAPTER XXXIII.
WHAT NEXT?
THE PRESENT OUTLOOK—COMMERCIAL PROSPECTS, BRIGHT—WHAT
THE PEOPLE OF THE NORTHERN AND WESTERN STATES SEE—WHAT IS A
"REPUBLICAN FORM OF GOVERNMENT?"—WHAT DID THE FATHERS MEAN BY IT—THE
REASON FOR THE GUARANTEE IN THE NATIONAL CONSTITUTION—PURPOSES OF
"THE PEOPLE" IN CREATING THIS REPUBLIC—THE "SOLID-SOUTHERN"
OLIGARCHS DEFEAT THOSE PURPOSES—THE REPUBLICAN PARTY NOT BLAMELESS
FOR THE PRESENT CONDITION OF THINGS—THE OLD REBEL-CHIEFTAINS AND
COPPERHEADS, IN CONTROL—THEY GRASP ALMOST EVERYTHING THAT WAS LOST
BY THE REBELLION—THEIR GROWING AGGRESSIVENESS—THE FUTURE—"WATCHMAN,
WHAT OF THE NIGHT?"
IMAGES
ISAAC W. HAYNE,
WM.
H. SEWARD,
HENRY CLAY,
JEFFERSON DAVIS,
DANIEL
WEBSTER,
STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS,
THOMAS JEFFERSON,
ABRAHAM LINCOLN,
JOHN
C. CALHOUN,
SEAT OF WAR IN VIRGINIA.
(Map)
FIRST BULL RUN BATTLE-FIELD.
(Map)
FIRST BULL RUN BATTLE-FIELD,
(Map)
J. J. CRITTENDEN
LOUIS T. WIGFALL
DAVID
HUNTER
PATRICK HENRY
EDWARD D. BAKER
JOHN
C. FREMONT
SIMON CAMERON
H. W. HALLECK
BENJ.
F. BUTLER
LYMAN TRUMBULL
BENJ. F. WADE
GEO.
B. MCCLELLAN
THAD. STEVENS
HENRY WINTER DAVIS
J. C. BRECKINRIDGE