Thursday, March 26, 1863.Washington, DC.
| President Lincoln writes to Tennessee's military governor,
Andrew Johnson, and urges him to "rais[e] a negro military force." The move
would inspire Unionists because, Lincoln explains, Johnson is an "eminent
citizen of a slave-state, and himself a slave-holder." Lincoln adds, "The
colored population is the great available and yet
unavailed of, force for restoring the Union. The bare sight of
fifty thousand armed, and drilled black soldiers on the banks of the
Mississippi, would end the rebellion at once." Abraham Lincoln to Andrew Johnson,
26 March 1863, CW, 6:149-50. Interviews Eli Parker of New York regarding appointment. Abraham Lincoln to Montgomery C.
Meigs, 26 March 1863, CW,
6:150. "The President is in excellent spirits to-day."
N.Y. Herald, 27 March 1863.
Mary F. Carpenter visits President. Mary F. Carpenter to Abraham Lincoln, 27
March 1863, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library
of Congress, Washington, DC. Lincoln shakes hands with Mr.
Fowler, old Shaker friend of Secretary of State Seward. William H. Seward to Abraham Lincoln,
26 March 1863, Abraham Lincoln Papers,
Library of Congress, Washington, DC. |