Tuesday, May 26, 1863.Washington, DC.
| President Lincoln writes to Illinois Congressman Isaac N.
Arnold, who had criticized General Halleck Henry W. Halleck, who oversees the
Union military. Arnold claimed that the public had "lost . . . confidence" in
Halleck, and many believed that Halleck's "hostility" caused other generals to
leave "public service." Lincoln replies, "I am compelled to take a more
impartial and unprejudiced view of things. Without claiming to be your
superior, which I do not, my position enables me to understand my duty in all
these matters better than you possibly can, and I hope you do not yet doubt my
integrity." Isaac N. Arnold to Abraham Lincoln, 18 May 1863, Abraham
Lincoln Papers, Library of
Congress, Washington, D. C.;
Abraham
Lincoln to Isaac N. Arnold, 26 May 1863, CW, 6:230-31. There seems to be
a "kind of council of war" in session at White House. Journal, Samuel P. Heintzelman Papers, Library of Congress,
Washington, DC. Cabinet discusses release of man condemned as
spy. Welles, Diary. |