Thursday, February 28, 1861.Washington, DC.
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Sen. Crittenden (Ky.) calls to talk compromise. Several New York
delegations see Lincoln about cabinet appointments and other matters.
William E. Baringer, A House Dividing: Lincoln as President Elect (Springfield, IL: Abraham Lincoln Association, 1945), 319.
Cong. Elbridge G. Spaulding (N.Y.), capitalist, gives private dinner
at National Hotel in honor of Lincoln and Vice President-elect
Hamlin; Gen. Scott present, also some Republican leaders depressed by
prospect of losing Southern business. Evening enlivened by Lincoln
remarking, apropos news item about Georgian oath to wear no clothes
produced under Republican regime, that he would like to see some
Georgia gentlemen clad in the costume produced in their stateāa
shirt collar and a pair of spurs.
Fletcher Pratt, History of the Civil War (New York: Pocket Books, 1956), 4-5; National Intelligencer, 2 March 1861.
Lincoln and Hamlin make speeches responding to serenade by Republican
Association.
Baltimore Sun, 2 March 1861; Response to a Serenade, 28 February 1861, CW, 4:247-48.
George S. Boutwell, former governor of Massachusetts, and Gen. Wool
hold long interviews with Lincoln.
N.Y. Times, 1 March 1861. |