Friday, August 7, 1863.Washington,
DC. | Lincoln declines invitation of Gov. Joseph A.
Gilmore (N.H.) to visit Concord, N.H. Abraham
Lincoln to Joseph Gilmore, 7 August 1863, CW, 6:368. Directs that $20,000
be placed under control of Sec. Seward and $80,000 under control of
Sec. Stanton for expenses of carrying into
effect habeas corpus act. Abraham
Lincoln to William H. Seward, 7 August 1863,
CW, 6:368-69;
Abraham
Lincoln to Edwin M. Stanton, 7 August 1863,
CW, 6:370-71. President
Lincoln responds to New York Governor Horatio Seymour, who seeks to halt "the
draft in this State." Seymour cited the recent New York City draft riots and he
suggeted that the draft law was unconstitutional. Lincoln disagrees and writes,
"time is too important. . . . We are contending with an enemy
who . . . drives every able bodied man he can reach, into his ranks, very much as a
butcher drives bullocks into a slaughter-pen. . . . It produces an army with a
rapidity not to be matched on our side . . . My purpose is to be just and
constitutional; and yet practical." Horatio Seymour to Abraham Lincoln, 3
August 1863, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC;
Abraham
Lincoln to Horatio Seymour, 7 August 1863,
CW, 6:369-70. [Mrs. Lincoln and Robert are in White Mountains.
Dennett, Hay Diaries and Letters,
75.] |