Thursday, May 19, 1864.Washington, DC.
| President declares null and void exequatur heretofore given
Charles Hunt as consul of Belgium at St. Louis. Washington
Star, 20 May 1864;
Proclamation Revoking Recognition of
Charles Hunt, 19 May 1864, CW,
7:352. Lincoln writes to staunch abolitionist U.S. Senator
Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts. Lincoln introduces Mary Elizabeth Booth,
whose husband, Major Lionel Booth, a black officer, was killed in battle on
April 12, at Fort Pillow, Tennessee. Lincoln writes, "She makes a point . . .
very worthy of consideration which is, widows and children infact, of colored soldiers who fall in our service, be placed in
law, the same as if their marriages were legal, so that they can have the
benefit of the provisions made the widows & orphans of white soldiers.
Please see & hear Mrs. Booth." Abraham Lincoln to Charles Sumner, 19
May 1864, CW, 10:243-44; Roy P. Basler, "And for His Widow and
His Orphan," Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 27,
no. 4 (October 1970): 291-94. |