Monday, August 10, 1863.Washington, DC.
| Lincoln assures Gen. Rosecrans: "I am not casting blame upon
you. I rather think, by great exertion, you can get to East Tennessee. . . . I
think of you in all kindness and confidence: . . . I am not watching you with
an evil-eye." Abraham Lincoln to William S.
Rosecrans, 10 August 1863, CW,
6:377-78. President Lincoln meets with Senator Samuel Pomeroy,
of Kansas, and with abolitionist and former slave Frederick Douglass. Lincoln's
personal secretary John Hay recorded, "[Douglass] intends to go south and help
the recruiting among his people." Also on this day, Lincoln adds the
endorsement, "I concur," to a letter that the Secretary of the Interior John
Usher and Senator Pomeroy signed. The letter acknowledges, "Douglass, is . . . a
loyal, free, man, and is, hence, entitled to travel, unmolested. We trust he
will be recognized everywhere, as a free man, and a gentleman."
Michael Burlingame and John R. Turner Ettlinger, eds.,
Inside Lincoln's White House: The Complete Civil War
Diary of John Hay (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press,
1997), 72; Pass for Frederick Douglass, 10 August 1863, CW,
10:198; Daily National Republican (Washington, DC), 11 August 1863, 2:4. Gen. Hooker visits Lincoln and accepts offer of command
under Gen. Meade. Abraham Lincoln to George G. Meade,
11 August 1863, CW, 6:381. At cabinet meeting President reads letter from Gov. Seymour (N.Y.) asking
that draft be postponed and his own reply refusing to postpone it.
Welles, Diary. Writes Mrs. Elizabeth E. Hutter, Miss Claghorn, and Misses Lager of
Philadelphia: "If anything could enhance to me the value of this representation
of our national ensign, so elegantly executed and so gracefully bestowed, it
would be the consideration that its price has been devoted to the comfort and
restoration of those heroic men, who have suffered and bled in our flag's
defense." Abraham Lincoln to Mrs. Hutter, Misses
Lager, and Miss Claghorn, 10 August 1863, CW, 6:375-76. Sends his ideas
regarding treatment of captured neutrals in prize courts to Sec. Seward, and
concludes: "My judgment [is] that the within, substantially, should be the
answer to Lord Lyons." Abraham Lincoln to William H.
Seward, 10 August 1863, CW,
6:378-80. Inquires of Sec.
Stanton : "I have not heard of any charges being filed against Gen. J.
A. McClernand. Are there any?" Abraham Lincoln to Edwin M.
Stanton, 10 August 1863, CW,
6:380. |