Wednesday, February 27, 1861.Washington, DC.
| Lincoln walks two miles and holds long interview with former
Sen. John Bell (Tenn.) before breakfast. N.Y.
Times, 28 February 1861. Washington, D. C. Mayor James
G. Berret extends an official welcome to President-elect Lincoln, who resides
at the Willard's Hotel. Mayor Berret expresses hope that Lincoln will "restore
peace and harmony to our now distracted country." Lincoln acknowledges the "ill
feeling that has existed and still exists between the people of the section
from whence I came and the people here." He declares, "I have not now any
purpose to withhold from you any of the benefits of the constitution . . . that
I would not feel myself constrained to withhold from my own neighbors."
New York Herald, 28 February 1861, 1:3;
Reply to Mayor James G. Berret at
Washington, DC, 27 February 1861, CW, 4:246-47. Receives clerks
of executive departments. Talks with Sen. Douglas (Ill.) who stays late to make
impassioned plea for conciliation of South. National
Intelligencer, 1 March 1861; Fletcher Pratt, History of the Civil
War (New York: Pocket Books, 1956), 4. Goes to Capitol
and receives justices of Supreme Court in afternoon. N.Y. Times, 28 February 1861. At 9 P.M. group of
border statesmen, including former Sec. of Treasury James Guthrie of Kentucky
and Alexander W. Doniphan of Missouri, calls to talk compromise.
William E. Baringer, A House Dividing: Lincoln as
President Elect (Springfield, IL: Abraham Lincoln Association, 1945),
315. |