Tuesday, December 23, 1862.Washington, DC.
| President sends for Asst. Sec. Fox before breakfast. Reason
unknown. Fox, Diary, Gist-Blair Family Papers, Library of
Congress, Washington, DC. Requests written opinions from
members of cabinet on admission of West Virginia into Union. Abraham Lincoln to Members of the
Cabinet, 23 December 1862, CW,
6:17. Receives memorial from Mil. Gov. Andrew Johnson and
prominent men of state asking that Emancipation Proclamation not apply to
Tennessee. Washington Chronicle, 4 December 1862. Considers proposal of Gen. Haupt to form military council of seven to
plan campaigns and determine policies. Haupt to Lincoln, 22
December 1862, Edwin M. Stanton Papers, Library of Congress, Washington
DC. John Pitcher, boyhood friend, calls on Lincoln about son
recovering from wound received at Battle of Cedar Mountain. Pitcher to Lincoln, 25 December 1862, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington,
DC. Mrs. Lincoln
prepares to serve Christmas dinner to wounded in hospitals. Philadelphia News, 24 December 1862. [Irwin
withdraws $9 from Springfield Marine Bank, interest on scholarship at Illinois
State University. Pratt, Personal Finances, 177.] Lincoln
writes to Fanny McCullough, of Bloomington, Illinois, regarding Fanny's father
Lieutenant Colonel William McCullough, who died on December 5, in a battle near
Coffeeville, Mississippi. William McCullough had been clerk of the McLean
County Circuit Court, where Lincoln frequently practiced law. Lincoln writes,
"You can not now realize that you will ever feel better...You are sure to be
happy again...I have had experience enough to know...The memory of your dear
Father, instead of an agony, will yet be a sad sweet feeling in your heart, of
a purer, and holier sort than you have known before." Abraham Lincoln to Fanny
McCullough, 23 December 1862, CW,
6:16-17; Illinois Daily State Journal (Springfield), 10 December
1862, 2:1. |