Wednesday, May 13, 1863.Washington, DC. | Lincoln offers "my sincere
sympathy and condolence" to Peruvian nation on death of President Miguel San
Roman. Abraham
Lincoln to Pedro Diez Canseco, 13 May 1863,
CW, 6:212-13. President
Lincoln writes to Secretary of War Edwin
Stanton about Clement Vallandigham, of Ohio. On May 5, Major General
Ambrose Burnside arrested Vallandigham on a charge of treason. Lincoln ponders
the government's next move. The Secretary of State William
Seward and the Secretary of the Treasury Salmon Chase
"think we better not issue the special suspension of the Writ of Habeas Corpus
spoken of." Chase believes that neither of the two federal judges who may hear
the case will "issue" the writ because they had "refused a similar application
last year." Abraham
Lincoln to Edwin M. Stanton, 13 May 1863, CW, 6:215. Lincoln writes Gen.
Hooker: "If it will not interfere with the service, nor personally incommode
you, please come up and see me this evening." Abraham
Lincoln to Joseph Hooker, 13 May 1863, CW, 6:215. Hooker at White
House in evening on invitation of President. Hooker to Lincoln, 13 May
1863, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of
Congress, Washington, DC. Lincoln writes Sec. Chase: "I
understand there are, or have been, some charges against Lieutenant [James H.]
Merryman [of Revenue Service], of which I know nothing. I only wish to say, he
was raised from childhood in the town where I lived, and I remember nothing
against him as boy or man. His father [Dr. Elias H. Merryman, involved with
Lincoln in his imbroglio with Shields. See Sept. 19, 1842.], now dead, was a
very intimate acquaintance and friend of mine." Abraham
Lincoln to Salmon P. Chase, 13 May 1863, CW, 6:214. Telegraphs Gen.
Totten: "I wish to appoint William Whipple, son of the General who fell in the
recent battle on the Rappahannock, to West-Point, next Spring, and I wish to
file this with you as a remembrance upon the subject." Abraham
Lincoln to Joseph G. Totten, 13 May 1863, CW, 6:216. |