Saturday, July 12, 1862.Washington, DC. | In the White House, President
Lincoln meets with Congressmen representing the border states, and urges, "Let
the states which are in rebellion see . . . that, in no event, will the states you
represent ever join their proposed Confederacy." Lincoln proposes that
border-state slaveholders release their slaves in return for "substantial
compensation" from the federal government. He reasons that the "friction and
abrasion . . . [and] the mere incidents of the war" will erode "the institution [of
slavery] . . . It will be gone, and you will have nothing valuable in lieu of it."
Appeal
to Border State Representatives to Favor Compensated Emancipation, 12
July 1862, CW, 5:317-19; New York
Daily Tribune (NY), 19 July 1862, 12:1; National Republican (Washington, DC), 16 July 1862, 1:3. Transmits to
House of Representatives information regarding relations with foreign powers.
Abraham
Lincoln to the House of Representatives, 12 July 1862,
CW, 5:319. Signs bill
creating national award for valor to be known as Congressional Medal of Honor.
Stat. L., XII, 623. Interviews Gen. Burnside who will
leave in evening for Gen. McClellan's headquaters. Marcy to McClellan, 12
July 1862, George B. McClellan Papers, Library of Congress, Washington,
DC. Directs Sec. Stanton to
write authorization for Gen. Dix to negotiate general exchange of prisoners.
U.S. Congress, Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War,
Supplemental Report on the Conduct of the War, 2 vols., 38th
Cong., 2d sess. (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1866), 2:Hitchcock
Report, 3. [Mrs. Lincoln and
Robert leave New York for West Point, N.Y. N.Y. Tribune, 12 July
1862.] |