Tuesday, July 7, 1863.Washington, DC.
| Lincoln at telegraph office in morning receives Gen. Grant's
dispatch announcing capture of Vicksburg, Miss. Bates,
Telegraph Office, 156;
Abraham
Lincoln to Henry W. Halleck, [7 July 1863],
CW, 6:319. Vice
President Hamlin and Senators from Maine confer with President and urge better
New England coastal defense against piratical depredations of enemy. Abraham
Lincoln to Gideon Welles, 7 July 1863, CW, 6:320-21. At cabinet
meeting President appears despondent because Gen. Meade has lingered at
Gettysburg. At 12:40 P.M. Sec. Welles gives President telegram from Acting Rear
Adm. David D. Porter [for retroactive promotion see December 8, 1863]
announcing surrender of Vicksburg on July 4, 1863. Welles,
Diary. In evening, upon
learning of the Union Army's victory at Vicksburg, Mississippi, "a procession
with bands of music proceed[s] to the Executive Mansion." A newspaper reports,
"a crowd enthusiastically cheered the President, [who] . . . appeared at an upper
window." Lincoln remarks that it is fitting that the Vicksburg victory occurred
on the "Fourth of July just passed," when defeat came to "those who opposed the
declaration that all men are created equal." Lincoln "praise[s] . . . the many
brave officers and soldiers who have fought in the cause of the Union." Response
to a Serenade, 7 July 1863, CW,
6:319-20; New York Daily Tribune (NY), 8 July 1863, 5:3;
The New York Times (NY), 8 July 1863, 8:1-2; Daily
Morning Chronicle (Washington, D.C.), 8 July 1863, 2:2-3. |