Thursday, April 6, 1865.City Point, VA.
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President authorizes Gen. Weitzel to give permission to "gentlemen
who have acted as the Legislature of Virginia, in support of the
rebellion" to assemble at Richmond and take measures to withdraw
Virginia troops.
Abraham Lincoln to Godfrey Weitzel, 6 April 1865, CW, 8:389.
In Col. Theodore S. Bowers' tent quotes Artemus Ward's account of
escape of "Polly Ann."
Bates, Telegraph Office, 187. Mrs. Lincoln and party join President on board steamer River Queen.
Adolphe de Pineton, marquis de Chambrun, Impressions of Lincoln and the Civil War: A Foreigner's Account (New York: Random House, 1952), 73-77.
President informs Gen. Grant of Sec. Seward's accident and of
conferences with former Assoc. Justice J. A. Campbell in Richmond. If
war is further persisted in South, confiscated property will bear
additional cost. Confiscations will be remitted to people of any
state which promptly withdraws its troops from resistance to
government. If Confederate Legislature of Virginia wishes to meet for
this purpose, Weitzel will protect them. "I do not think it very
probable that anything will come of this; but I have thought best to
notify you."
Abraham Lincoln to Ulysses S. Grant, 6 April 1865, CW, 8:388-89.
President visits military offices, anxious for news from Grant.
Official Records—Armies 1, XLVI, pt. 3, 595. |