Sunday, July 5, 1863.Washington, DC.
| 11 A.M. Principal discussion at cabinet meeting is request of
A. H. Stephens for permission to proceed to Washington for interview with
President. Welles, Diary. In the afternoon,
President Lincoln and his son, Tad, visit General Daniel E. Sickles, who is
recovering in Washington. During the battle at Gettysburg on July 2, Sickles
received a severe injury to his right leg prompting surgeons to remove the leg
to a point "five inches above the knee." A newspaper reports, "[Lincoln, Tad,]
and a mounted escort, rode on horseback to Gen. Sickles' door." Lincoln
"congratulated him on his ability and courage, and expressed the greatest
regret that [Sickles's] . . . wound . . . rendered amputation necessary."
Washington Chronicle, 6 July 1863;
Evening Star (Washington, DC), 6 July 1863, 3:2; New York
Times, 6 July 1863, 4:5. |