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Presidential Address
No Peace without Victory, 1861–1865
JAMES M. MCPHERSON
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For at least the past two centuries, nations have found it harder
to end a war than to start one. Americans relearned that bitter
lesson in Vietnam and, having apparently forgotten it, have been
forced to learn it all over again in Iraq. The difficulties of achieving
peace are compounded when the war aims of a belligerent include
regime change in the enemy polity. In the Napoleonic Wars, the coalition
forces finally ended the conflict when they forced Emperor Napoleon
Bonaparte to abdicate—twice. In World War I, Woodrow Wilson
insisted that the Allies would negotiate only with a democratic
government in Germany, and the armistice did not go into effect
until the kaiser abdicated. In World War II, the Allies demanded
the unconditional surrender of Axis governments in order to destroy
these governments and install new ones in their place. Both sides
in the American Civil War feared that regime change would be the
result of losing the war. Defeat would blot the Confederate States
of America from the face of the earth. Confederate victory would
destroy the United States and create a precedent for further
balkanization of the territory once governed under the Constitution
of 1789. Both antagonists foresaw these potential consequences in
1861 and embraced war as the only alternative. By 1863, however,
the death or wounding of half a million soldiers had replaced the
rage militaire of 1861 with a longing for peace. This longing
was expressed in music, especially the songs Tenting on the Old
Camp Ground and When This Cruel War Is Over. Both expressed
a profound desire for an end to the killing and suffering. "Weeping,
Sad and Lonely," begins the refrain of When This Cruel War Is
Over. "We are tired of war on the old Camp ground," sang those
at home and in the armies. "Many are the hearts that are weary tonight,
Wishing for the war to cease." 1
Yet the war did not cease; many wondered whether
this cruel war would ever be over. |
1
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| The
American Civil War could not end with a negotiated peace because
the issues over which it was fought—Union versus Disunion,
Freedom versus Slavery—proved to be non-negotiable. This was
a new experience for Americans. The American Revolution, the War
of 1812, and the Mexican-American War had all been brought to an
end by peace treaties. The Confederate government would have been
happy to bring the Civil War to an end in the same way, for a negotiated
treaty with the United States would have constituted de jure
as well as de facto recognition of Confederate sovereignty
as a separate nation. For that reason, the Lincoln administration
refused to consider formal negotiations as a means to end the war. |
2
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| This
refusal did not prevent numerous efforts to achieve peace through
negotiations, official or otherwise. These efforts proceeded through
three stages: foreign mediation, unofficial contacts, quasi-official
conversations. All failed. |
3
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| Most
civil wars tempt foreign powers to intervene either to end a conflict
that threatens their own interests or to support one side or the
other. The American Civil War was no exception. The French and British
governments believed their nations had a large stake in the bloodbath
occurring across the Atlantic. Emperor Napoleon III's intervention
in Mexico's own civil war would go better if a Disunited States
could not enforce the Monroe Doctrine. The Union naval blockade
and Confederate contracts for the building of warships in English
shipyards threatened to drag Britain into an unwanted war with the
United States. The American South had furnished three-quarters of
the cotton for the textile industries that were leading sectors
in the economies of both countries, especially Britain. In 1861,
key officials in Britain and France believed that the North could
never reestablish control over 750,000 square miles of territory
defended by a determined and courageous people. For all these reasons,
the world's two leading powers contemplated making an offer of mediation
to bring an end to the American war. Such an offer would have been
tantamount to recognition of Confederate independence. |
4
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| The
remarkable string of Northern naval and military victories from
February to May 1862, however, forced a temporary reconsideration
of this position. Union arms captured parts of the south Atlantic
coast, gained control of much of the South's interior river system
and of at least 50,000 square miles of Confederate territory, captured
New Orleans, Nashville, and Memphis, won the major battles of Fort
Donelson, Pea Ridge, and Shiloh, while General George B. McClellan's
powerful Army of the Potomac penetrated to within six miles of Richmond,
whose fall seemed imminent. |
5
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| These
events had a signal impact abroad. From Paris, the American minister
to France wrote to Secretary of State William H. Seward in April
1862 that "the change in the condition of affairs at home has produced
a change, if possible more striking abroad. There is little more
said just now as to ... the propriety of an early recognition of
the south."2
And Charles Francis Adams, American minister to Britain, reported
that, as a consequence of Union victories, "the pressure for interference
here has disappeared." His son Henry Adams, private secretary to
the minister, added that "the talk of intervention, only two months
ago so loud as to take a semi-official tone, is now out of the minds
of everyone."3 |
6
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| But
in the summer of 1862, the Confederacy picked itself up from the
mat at the count of nine and counterpunched so hard that by September
it had knocked Union forces back on the ropes. Robert E. Lee's Army
of Northern Virginia drove McClellan away from Richmond in the Seven
Days Battles, humiliated Union arms at Second Manassas, and invaded
Maryland, while western Confederate armies recaptured part of Tennessee
and invaded Kentucky. These developments reopened the question of
foreign mediation. The semi-official government newspaper in Paris,
the Constitutionnel, urged Northern leaders to "listen at
last to the voice of humanity" and "accept mediation" to end "a
war disastrous to the interests of humanity."4 |
7
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| In
London, the powerful Times demanded that the British Cabinet
"stop this effusion of blood by mediation," while the Morning
Post, semi-official voice of Prime Minister Palmerston's government,
proclaimed bluntly that the Confederacy had "established its claim
to be independent."5
Chancellor of the Exchequer William Gladstone agreed. "Jefferson
Davis and other leaders of the South," said Gladstone in a speech
at Newcastle, "have made an army; they are making, it appears, a
navy; and they have made what is more than either; they have made
a nation." Gladstone privately urged his colleagues to acknowledge
"that the South cannot be conquered ... It is our absolute duty
to recognise ... that Southern independence is established."6 |
8
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| By
September 1862, Palmerston and his foreign secretary, Lord John
Russell, the two men whose opinion counted most, were well-nigh
ready to agree with Gladstone. As the Army of Northern Virginia
crossed the Potomac into Maryland, Palmerston wrote to Russell that
Union forces had "got a very complete smashing" at Second Manassas,
"and it seems not altogether unlikely that still greater disasters
await them, and that even Washington or Baltimore might fall into
the hands of the Confederates." If something like that happened,
"would it not be time for us to consider whether England and France
might not address the contending parties and recommend an arrangement
on the basis of separation?" Russell concurred. Palmerston thereupon
informed Gladstone of a plan to hold a Cabinet meeting in October
to hammer out a joint proposal with France to the Union and Confederate
governments for "an Armistice and Cessation of the Blockades with
a View to Negotiations on the basis of Separation," to be followed
by official diplomatic recognition of the Confederacy.7 |
9
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| Secretary
of State Seward had previously made clear that the United States
would reject any offer of mediation and would break relations with
any government that recognized the Confederacy. But if the invasions
of Maryland and Kentucky were crowned with success, the Lincoln
administration might be forced by circumstances and by the growing
antiwar movement in the North to change its tune. As Palmerston
put it: "If the Federals sustain a great defeat ... [their] Cause
will be manifestly hopeless ... and the iron should be struck while
it is hot."8 |
10
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| As
matters turned out, however, the Federals did not sustain a great
defeat. Quite the contrary, they turned back the Confederate invasions
at the Battle of Antietam on September 17 and the Battle of Perryville
in Kentucky on October 8. These events, especially Antietam, caused
Palmerston to back away from the idea of mediation. The necessary
condition for such an endeavor, he said, would have been "the great
success of the South against the North. That state of things seemed
ten days ago to be approaching," but at the Battle of Antietam "its
advance has been lately checked." Thus "the whole matter is full
of difficulty," and nothing could be done until the situation became
more clear. By October 22, it was clear to Palmerston that
Confederate defeats had ended any chance for successful mediation.
"I am therefore inclined," Palmerston wrote Lord Russell, "to change
the opinion I wrote you when the Confederates seemed to be carrying
all before them ... We must continue to be lookers-on till the war
shall have taken a more decided turn."9 |
11
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| Russell
and Gladstone, along with Louis Napoleon, did not give up so easily.
The French asked the British government to join in a proposal for
a six months' armistice in the American war during which the blockade
would be lifted, cotton exports would be renewed, and peace negotiations
could begin. France also approached Russia, which refused to take
part in such an obviously pro-Confederate scheme. On November 12,
the British Cabinet also rejected it.10 |
12
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| Even
then, Napoleon did not give up. Unrest among unemployed French textile
workers inspired a new effort in January 1863 to bring the belligerents
together for talks. There was no proposal this time for an armistice
and no French offer of mediation. Rather, France's foreign minister
sent a note to the U.S. State Department urging negotiations with
the Confederates even as the fighting continued. Good precedents
existed for such a procedure. The Americans and British had negotiated
during the revolution and the War of 1812; the United States and
Mexico had done the same during the war of 1846–1848. Horace
Greeley, quixotic editor of the powerful New York Tribune,
who fancied himself a peacemaker, threw his support to this effort
and met personally with the French minister to the United States. |
13
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| An
angry Seward urged Henry Raymond, editor of the New York Times,
to stomp hard on Greeley for practicing diplomacy without a license.
Raymond was a political ally of Seward, and the Times was
a quasi-official spokesman for the Lincoln administration. Having
no love for Greeley, Raymond was happy to oblige. In an editorial
on January 29, he condemned Greeley as a fool and declared that
no peace was possible except on the basis of the Confederacy's unconditional
surrender. "The war must go on until the Rebellion is conquered,"
he wrote. "There is no alternative ... Our people will ... never
sell or betray their national birthright, and above all they will
never consent, under any circumstances, that any foreign Power shall
dictate the destiny or decide the fate of this Republic."11
For his part, Seward told a colleague that he would consent to hold
discussions with Confederate representatives "when Louis Napoleon
was prepared to consider the dismemberment of France, but not till
then!" Seward made the same point in more diplomatic language to
the French foreign minister.12 |
14
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| That
ended the matter. Meanwhile, the British developed alternative sources
of raw cotton from Egypt and India. A growing trickle of cotton
from the South also made it through the blockade. Never again did
the Confederacy come so close to foreign intervention and recognition
as in the fall of 1862. Thereafter, the burden of peacemaking efforts
shifted to the protagonists themselves. However, so long as the
Lincoln administration insisted on the unconditional surrender of
the Confederacy and Jefferson Davis's administration insisted on
unconditional recognition of Confederate independence, the chances
for a negotiated peace appeared nil. And Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation
Proclamation on January 1, 1863, raised the stakes of victory or
defeat for both antagonists. Nevertheless, Union military triumphs
at Gettysburg, Vicksburg, Chattanooga, and in Arkansas during the
second half of 1863 encouraged a belief in the North that war-weary
Southerners might be ready to throw in the towel and return to the
Union. In December 1863, Lincoln issued a Proclamation of Amnesty
and Reconstruction, offering pardons to most Confederates who would
take an oath of allegiance to the United States and agree to obey
all laws and proclamations concerning emancipation.13
In effect, this was a retail policy of unconditional surrender. |
15
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| Because
only a small percentage of Confederates took advantage of Lincoln's
offer, however, it did not promise to bring this cruel war to an
end anytime soon. More promising were the military campaigns planned
for 1864. With Ulysses S. Grant now in Virginia as general in chief
of Union armies and his principal subordinate William T. Sherman
in command of an army group in Georgia, the Northern people expected
these heavy hitters to crush the rebellion by the Fourth of July.
The initial over-optimistic reports from the front seemed to confirm
this confidence. "GLORIOUS NEWS ... IMMENSE REBEL LOSSES," blazoned
the headlines in the usually restrained New York Times. "The
Virginia Campaign approaches a Glorious consummation," added the
New York Herald. "Our long night of doubt and suspense is
past." Horace Greeley's New York Tribune proclaimed that
"Lee's Army as an effective force has practically ceased to exist"
and "LIBERTY—UNION—PEACE" were nigh.14
At the end of May 1864, Greeley remained confident that this "mortal"
contest between "Truth and Error, between Absolute Right and Absolute
Wrong," would soon end with "the unconditional surrender of the
'Confederacy.'"15 |
16
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| Within
six weeks, however, the mood of the mercurial Greeley had swung
by 180 degrees. And Greeley's growing despair reflected that of
the Northern people. Instead of winning the war by the Fourth of
July, the two principal Union armies were bogged down in front of
Richmond and Atlanta after suffering a combined 95,000 casualties
in the most concentrated carnage of the war. In the Army of the
Potomac, the number of casualties during the two months from May
5 to July 4 were nearly two-thirds of their total in the previous
three years. |
17
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| Northern
despondency was all the greater because of the euphoric expectations
at the beginning of these campaigns. "Who shall revive the withered
hopes that bloomed at the opening of General Grant's campaign?"
asked an editorial in the New York World on July 12. The
stalemate had become "a national humiliation," declared the World.
"This war, as now conducted, is a failure without hope of other
issue than the success of the rebellion."16
With unhappy timing, Lincoln on July 18 issued a call for 500,000
more volunteers, with the deficiencies in meeting quotas to be met
by a new draft. This call was "a cry of distress," lamented the
World. "Who is responsible for the terrible and unavailing
waste of life which renders five hundred thousand new men necessary
so soon after the opening of a campaign that promised to be triumphant?"17 |
18
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| The
World was a Democratic newspaper, and with the presidential
election approaching it left readers with no doubt that Lincoln
was responsible for this humiliating failure. But many Republicans
were equally despondent. "The immense slaughter of our brave men
chills and sickens us all," wrote Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles.
"It is impossible for the country to bear up under these monstrous
errors and wrongs." A State Department translator visited Philadelphia
in early August. "What a difference between now and last year!"
he wrote in his diary. "No signs of any enthusiasm, no flags; most
of the best men gloomy and almost despairing."18
The staunch New York Republican George Templeton Strong could "see
no bright spot anywhere." Even Sarah Butler, wife of General Benjamin
Butler, a favorite of radical Republicans, wondered "what is all
this struggling and fighting for? This ruin and death to thousands
of families? ... What advancement of mankind to compensate for the
present horrible calamities?"19 |
19
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| Sarah
Butler's plaintive question has been asked in all wars. But it had
special force in the terrible summer of 1864. As before in this
war, the peace wing of the Democratic Party—the so-called
Copperheads who opposed war as a means to restore the Union—came
to the fore when events on the battlefield did not go well for Union
arms. The plunge in Northern morale augured well for a Democratic
victory on a peace platform in the presidential election. "Stop
the War!" demanded editorials in Copperhead newspapers. "If nothing
else would impress upon the people the absolute necessity of stopping
this war, its utter failure to accomplish any results ... would
be sufficient." A Boston Peace Democrat believed Northerners were
becoming convinced that "the Confederacy perhaps can never really
be beaten, that the attempts to win might after all be too heavy
a load to carry, and that perhaps it is time to agree to a peace
without victory."20 |
20
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| Several
Democratic district conventions passed resolutions calling for a
cease-fire and peace negotiations. Confederate agents in Canada,
who were subsidizing several Democratic newspapers and politicians
across the border, encouraged the belief that such negotiations
might pave the way for eventual reunion. First might come "a treaty
of amity and commerce," suggested one of the Confederate agents,
Clement C. Clay, followed "possibly" by "an alliance defensive,
or even, for some purposes, both defensive and offensive." If Peace
Democrats were taken in by such doubletalk, wrote Clay to Confederate
Secretary of State Judah Benjamin, who oversaw these Canadian operations,
he was careful not to dispel their "fond delusion."21 |
21
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| By
July 1864, the peace contagion had spread well beyond the Copperheads.
The observation by the Richmond Dispatch, the Confederacy's
largest newspaper, that a majority of Northern voters would support
peace even at the price of Confederate independence may not have
been far wrong. "They are sick at heart of the senseless waste of
blood and treasure," declared the Dispatch. In New York,
George Templeton Strong was "most seriously perturbed" by the "increasing
prevalence" of "aspirations for 'peace at any price.'" The astute
Republican politico Thurlow Weed wrote to Seward in August that
Lincoln's reelection was "an impossibility" because "the people
are wild for peace."22 |
22
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| Horace
Greeley agreed with this assessment. In early July, he launched
a bizarre, failed peace initiative that nevertheless had large consequences.
From a self-styled "intermediary," Greeley received word that two
of the Confederate agents in Canada were accredited by Jefferson
Davis to negotiate a peace settlement. The credulous editor enclosed
this information in a letter to Lincoln on July 7. "Our bleeding,
bankrupt, almost dying country," Greeley declaimed, "longs for peace—shudders
at the prospect of fresh conscriptions, of further wholesale devastations,
and of new rivers of human blood." Therefore, "I entreat you to
submit overtures for pacification to the Southern insurgents."23 |
23
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| Lincoln
did not believe for a moment that the Confederate agents had genuine
negotiating powers. And even if they did, the Union president knew
that his Southern counterpart's inflexible condition for peace was
Confederate independence. Yet, given the despondent Northern mood,
Lincoln could not appear to rebuff any peace overture, however spurious.
He also thought he saw a chance to rally Northern opinion by demonstrating
that an acceptable peace was possible only through military victory.
So Lincoln immediately sent Greeley a telegram authorizing him to
bring to Washington under safe conduct "any person anywhere professing
to have any proposition of Jefferson Davis in writing, for peace,
embracing the restoration of the Union and abandonment of slavery."24 |
24
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| This
put Greeley on the spot by making him a guarantor of the agents'
credentials and a witness to Lincoln's good-faith willingness to
negotiate. Greeley balked, but Lincoln prodded him into action by
sending his private secretary John Hay to join Greeley at Niagara
Falls, Canada, to meet with the Confederates. The president was
willing to compromise his principle of refusing to acknowledge officially
the existence of the Confederate government by insisting on restoration
of the Union as a prerequisite for negotiations. Hay carried to
Niagara Falls a letter from Lincoln addressed "To Whom It May Concern,"
stating that "Any proposition which embraces the restoration of
peace, the integrity of the whole Union, and the abandonment of
slavery, and which comes by and with an authority that can control
the armies now at war with the United States will be received and
considered by the Executive government of the United States, and
will be met by liberal terms on other substantial and collateral
points."25 |
25
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| This
was an immensely important document that framed all discussions
of peace for the rest of the war. Lincoln intended it not only to
lay out his own conditions but also to elicit and publicize the
Confederacy's unacceptable counteroffer. But on this occasion, the
rebel agents outmaneuvered Lincoln. They admitted to Greeley and
Hay that they had no authority to negotiate peace but then released
to the press a letter to Greeley accusing Lincoln of sabotaging
the negotiations by prescribing conditions he knew to be unacceptable
to the Confederacy. Shedding crocodile tears, they expressed "profound
regret" that the Confederacy's genuine desire for a peace "mutually
just, honorable, and advantageous to the North and South" had not
been met with equal "moderation and equity" by President Lincoln.
Instead, his "To Whom It May Concern" letter meant "no bargaining,
no negotiations, no truces with rebels except to bury their dead
... If there be any citizen of the Confederate States who has clung
to the hope that peace is possible," Lincoln's terms "will strip
from their eyes the last film of such delusion." The Confederate
agents urged those "patriots and Christians" in the North "who shrink
appalled from the illimitable vistas of private misery and public
calamity" presented by Lincoln's policy of perpetual war to "recall
the abused authority and vindicate the outraged civilization of
their country" by voting Lincoln out of office in November.26 |
26
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| This
letter was, as the New York Times noted editorially, "an
electioneering dodge on a great scale" to damage Lincoln "by making
him figure as an obstacle to peace." It worked. As Clement C. Clay
reported with satisfaction to Judah Benjamin, Northern Democratic
newspapers "denounce Mr. Lincoln's manifesto in strong terms, and
many Republican presses (among them the New York Tribune) admit
it was a blunder ... From all that I can see or hear, I am satisfied
that this correspondence has tended strongly toward consolidating
the Democracy and dividing the Republicans."27 |
27
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| Greeley
did indeed criticize Lincoln both publicly and privately. The president,
he wrote in an editorial, made "a very grave mistake" by announcing
his own terms instead of asking the rebels to state their
terms first.28
In a remarkable letter to Lincoln on August 9, Greeley chastised
the president for giving the impression that his policy was "No
truce! No armistice! No negotiation! No mediation! Nothing but [Confederate]
surrender at discretion! I never heard of such fatuity before."
Greeley probably had in mind an editorial in the New York Times
that clearly spoke for the administration. "Peace is a consummation
devoutly to be wished," declared the Times, but not peace
at the price of Union. "War alone can save the Republic ... If the
Southern people will not give us peace as their fellow-countrymen,
we shall secure it as their conquerors. We know this is not gracious
language. But it is native fact." Greeley deplored such language,
he told Lincoln, because "to the general eye, it now seems the rebels
are anxious to negotiate and that we repulse their advances ...
If this impression be not removed we shall be beaten out of sight
next November."29 |
28
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| Greeley
was right about the potential political consequences of this affair.
The Confederates had scored a propaganda triumph and given the Copperheads
a boost. Lincoln sought to neutralize the setback by sanctioning
publication of the results of another and almost simultaneous peace
contact. On July 17, two Northerners met under flag of truce with
Jefferson Davis and Judah Benjamin in Richmond. They were James
R. Gilmore, a journalist, and Colonel James Jaquess of the Seventy-third
Illinois, on furlough and temporarily resuming his peacetime vocation
as a Methodist clergyman who wished to stop fellow Christians from
slaughtering each other. Lincoln had given them a pass through Union
lines in Virginia with the understanding that their mission was
strictly unofficial—although they were well acquainted with
Lincoln's preconditions for peace. Davis decided to meet with them
because, like Lincoln, he had to consider the desire for peace among
his own people and could not appear to spurn any opportunity for
negotiations. |
29
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| Gilmore
and Jaquess informally repeated the terms Lincoln had offered in
his amnesty proclamation the previous December: reunion, emancipation,
and amnesty. According to Gilmore's account, Davis responded angrily:
"Amnesty, Sir, applies to criminals. We have committed no crime.
At your door lies all the misery and crime of this war ... We are
fighting for Independence—and that, or extermination, we will
have ... You may emancipate every negro in the Confederacy, but
we will be free. We will govern ourselves ... if we have
to see every Southern plantation sacked, and every Southern city
in flames."30 |
30
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| Upon
his return north, Gilmore published a brief account of the meeting
in a Boston newspaper and a subsequent detailed narrative in the
Atlantic Monthly. Lincoln approved these publications because
they shifted part of the burden of refusing to negotiate from Lincoln's
shoulders to Davis's.31
The New York Times immediately grasped this point. The Gilmore-Jaquess
mission, declared the Times, "proved of extreme service ...
because it established that Jeff. Davis will listen to no proposals
of peace that do not embrace disunion ... In view of the efforts
now being made by the Peace Party of the North to delude our people
into a belief that peace is now practicable without disunion," Davis's
words were "peculiarly timely and valuable."32 |
31
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| The
Richmond Enquirer also recognized that Gilmore and Jaquess
had "provoked" Davis into "expressions of hostility which might
be represented as a refusal on our part to treat of peace" in order
to "rally the war party" in the North. The Enquirer then
proceeded to use this incident to fire up the Southern war party.
To the Northern demand for unconditional surrender, declared this
newspaper, the Southern people responded with the "sole and simple
condition" of "unconditional recognition" of Confederate independence
... They will die with arms in their hands before they disgrace
this demand by any qualification of their rights."33 |
32
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| The
publicity surrounding these peace overtures should have put to rest
the Copperhead argument that the North could have peace and reunion
without military victory. But it did not. At the rock-bottom point
of Northern morale in August 1864—when, as Thurlow Weed observed,
"the people are wild for peace"—Democrats were able to slide
around the awkward problem of Davis's conditions by pointing to
Lincoln's second condition—"abandonment of slavery"—as
the real stumbling block to peace. Across the spectrum from Copperheads
to War Democrats, and even beyond to conservative Republicans, came
denunciations of the president for his "prostitution of the war
for the Union into an abolition crusade."34
Democratic newspapers proclaimed that "tens of thousands of white
men must bite the dust to allay the negro mania of the President."
For that purpose, "our soil is drenched in blood ... the widows
wail and the children hunger." Emancipation was now Lincoln's sole
purpose; "the idea of restoring the Union no longer troubles the
Executive brain."35 |
33
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| The
most powerful Democratic newspaper was the New York World,
which was closely affiliated with General George B. McClellan, whom
the party was about to nominate for president. The World
claimed that Lincoln "prefers to tear a half million more white
men from their homes ... to continue a war for the abolition of
slavery rather than entertain a proposition for the return of the
seceded states with their old rights." Never mind that no such proposition
existed; Democratic newspapers convinced thousands of Northern voters
that the South would have accepted such a proposition if Lincoln
had not made abolition a condition of peace. The New York Herald,
an independent but Democratic-leaning paper with the country's largest
circulation, opined that Lincoln had signed his political death
warrant by making abandonment of slavery "a ne plus ultra
in the terms of peace."36 |
34
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| Even
some Republican editors expressed "painful and perplexing surprise"
that Lincoln had made "the abolition of slavery the principal object
of prosecuting the war."37
Horace Greeley, who two years earlier had criticized Lincoln's slowness
to act against slavery, now condemned him for insisting on what
Greeley had then demanded. "We do not contend," wrote Greeley in
a widely reprinted Tribune editorial, "that reunion is possible
or endurable only on the basis of Universal Freedom ... War has
its exigencies which cannot be foreseen ... and Peace is often desirable
on other terms than those of our own choice." George Templeton Strong
sadly concluded that Lincoln's emancipation condition was a "blunder"
that "may cost him his election ... [It has] given the disaffected
and discontented a weapon that doubles their power of mischief."38 |
35
|
| Henry
J. Raymond of the New York Times, who doubled as Republican
national chairman for this election campaign, thought he saw a way
out of the dilemma. Lincoln "did say that he would
receive and consider propositions for peace ... if they embraced
the integrity of the Union and the abandonment of Slavery,"
wrote Raymond in an important editorial, "but he did not
say he would not embrace them unless they embraced both conditions."
If Jefferson Davis were suddenly to offer peace and reunion, wrote
Raymond, "we believe that President Lincoln would thereupon stop
the war. We do not believe he would continue it for an hour longer,
for the abolition of Slavery or for any other purpose."39 |
36
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| As
a lawyer, Lincoln was no stranger to such hairsplitting. And the
enormous pressure on him from all sides to drop his abandonment
of the slavery condition almost caused him to succumb. On August
17, Lincoln drafted a letter to a Wisconsin newspaper editor who
had previously supported the administration but could no longer
do so if the president intended the war to continue until slavery
was abolished. "To me," Lincoln began his letter, "it seems plain
that saying re-union and abandonment of slavery would be considered,
if offered, is not saying that nothing else or less
would be considered." Lincoln concluded the letter with these words:
"If Jefferson Davis wishes ... to know what I would do if he were
to offer peace and re-union, saying nothing about slavery, let him
try me."40 |
37
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| In
the same draft, however, and in an interview two days later with
a pair of Wisconsin Republicans, Lincoln explained forcefully and
eloquently why he included abandonment of slavery as a precondition
for peace. "No human power can subdue this rebellion without using
the Emancipation lever as I have done," he insisted. Lincoln pointed
out that 100,000 or more black soldiers and sailors were fighting
for the Union. "If they stake their lives for us they must be prompted
by the strongest motive—even the promise of freedom. And the
promise being made, must be kept." To abandon emancipation would
"ruin the Union cause itself," Lincoln continued. "All recruiting
of colored men would instantly cease, and all colored men in our
service would instantly desert us. And rightfully too. Why should
they give their lives for us, with full notice of our purpose to
betray them? ... I should be damned in time and eternity for so
doing. The world shall know that I will keep my faith to friends
and enemies, come what will."41 |
38
|
| Recognizing
the inconsistency of these sentiments with his "let Jefferson Davis
try me" challenge, Lincoln filed that letter away unsent. When he
did so, he and everyone else believed that he would be defeated
for reelection on the peace issue. "I am going to be beaten," he
told a visitor, "and unless some great change takes place badly
beaten." On August 23, Lincoln wrote his famous "blind memorandum"
and asked Cabinet members to endorse it sight unseen: "This morning,
as for some days past, it seems exceedingly probable that this Administration
will not be re-elected. Then it will be my duty to so co-operate
with the President elect, as to save the Union between the election
and the inauguration; as he will have secured his election on such
ground that he can not possibly save it afterwards."42 |
39
|
| This
memorandum may have been prompted by a letter Lincoln received that
day from Henry Raymond. "The tide is setting strongly against us,"
wrote the editor. "Two special causes are assigned to this great
reaction in public sentiment,—the want of military success,
and the impression ... that we can have peace with Union
if we would ... [but] that we are not to have peace in any event
under this administration until Slavery is abandoned." To allay
this impression, Raymond urged Lincoln to appoint a commissioner
to "make distinct proffers of peace to Davis ... on the sole
condition" of reunion, leaving "all the other questions to be
settled in a convention of all the people of all the States." Of
course, Raymond added, Davis would reject such a proffer, and this
rejection would "dispel all the delusions about peace that prevail
in the North ... [and] reconcile public sentiment to the War, the
draft, & the tax as inevitable necessities."43 |
40
|
| Once
again, Lincoln seemed to yield to such pressure. On August 24, he
drafted instructions for Raymond himself to go to Richmond and "propose,
on behalf [of] this government, that upon the restoration of the
Union and national authority, the war shall cease at once, all remaining
questions to be left for adjustment by peaceful modes." Lincoln's
private secretaries and later biographers, John G. Nicolay and John
Hay, maintain that Lincoln had no intention of sending Raymond to
Richmond. His purpose in drafting this document, they assert, was
to make the editor a "witness of its absurdity."44 |
41
|
| In
any event, Raymond and the rest of the Republican National Committee
met with Lincoln and three Cabinet members on August 25. The committeemen,
according to Nicolay, were "laboring under a severe fit of despondency
and discouragement ... almost the condition of a disastrous panic."
Lincoln convinced them that the proposed commission to Richmond
"would be utter ruination ... worse than losing the Presidential
contest—it would be ignominiously surrendering it in advance."45
To back away from emancipation would not only betray a promise,
it would also give the impression of an administration floundering
in panic and would alienate the radical wing of the Republican Party.46
After all, Lincoln had been renominated on a platform pledging a
constitutional amendment to abolish slavery and calling for the
"unconditional surrender" of the rebels. For weal or woe, Lincoln
intended to stand on that platform.47 |
42
|
| For
a week after that fateful meeting at the White House, woe seemed
to be the fate of Lincoln's reelection prospects. On August 31,
the Democrats nominated McClellan for president and a Peace Democrat
for vice-president on a platform that declared, "After four years
of failure to restore the Union by the experiment of war ... [we]
demand that immediate efforts be made for a cessation of hostilities,
with a view to an ultimate convention of the states, or other peaceable
means, to the end that, at the earliest practicable moment, peace
may be restored on the basis of the Federal Union."48
This last phrase was little more than window dressing; almost everyone
recognized that an appeal by the U.S. government for an armistice
would be tantamount to confessing defeat.49
McClellan himself recognized this, and his letter accepting the
nomination made peace negotiations contingent on prior agreement
to reunion as a basis for such negotiations.50 |
43
|
| Whether
these internal Democratic contradictions would be put to the test
suddenly became moot. On September 3, a telegram from General Sherman
arrived in Washington: "Atlanta is ours, and fairly won." This news
turned morale around 180 degrees in both North and South. "Glorious
news this morning," wrote George Templeton Strong in his diary.
"Atlanta taken at last!!! ... It is (coming at this political crisis)
the greatest event of the war."51
The Richmond Examiner reflected with despair that "the disaster
at Atlanta" came "in the very nick of time" to "save the party of
Lincoln from irretrievable ruin ... [It] obscures the prospect of
peace, late so bright. It will diffuse gloom over the South." One
of the North's foremost clergymen, Joseph P. Thompson, delivered
a widely published sermon whose title summed up the meaning of Atlanta:
"Peace through Victory."52 |
44
|
| Few
in the North urged this policy with more determination than Union
soldiers themselves. Although many of them had a lingering affection
for McClellan, most denounced the war-failure plank of the Democratic
platform, and a remarkable 78 percent of them voted for Lincoln.
"To ellect McClellan would be to undo all that we have don in the
past four years," wrote a Michigan corporal. "Old Abe is slow but
sure, he will accept nothing but an unconditional surrender." A
New York lieutenant, a former Democrat, repudiated his party. "I
had rather stay out here a lifetime (much as I dislike it)," he
wrote, "than consent to a division of our country ... We all want
peace, but none any but an honorable one."53 |
45
|
| Prospects
for that honorable peace—a peace through victory—continued
to brighten through the fall and winter. General Philip Sheridan's
Army of the Shenandoah won several important victories in September
and October. Lincoln was triumphantly reelected in November. General
George Thomas's Union Army of the Cumberland virtually destroyed
the Confederate Army of Tennessee at the battle of Nashville in
mid-December. A month later, a combined assault by Union naval and
army forces captured Fort Fisher in North Carolina, closing the
port of Wilmington, which had been the principal remaining terminus
for blockade runners. In his annual message to Congress in December,
Lincoln promised no let-up in the war. Northern determination to
see the matter through "was never more firm, nor more nearly unanimous,
than now," said the president. But this consummation could not be
achieved by negotiations with "the insurgent leader," Jefferson
Davis, who "does not attempt to deceive us. He affords us no excuse
to deceive ourselves. He cannot voluntarily reaccept the Union;
we cannot voluntarily yield it. Between him and us the issue is
distinct, simple, and inflexible. It is an issue which can only
be tried by war, and decided by victory."54 |
46
|
| Nevertheless,
one more bid to end the war by mutual agreement took place. This
one was launched by Francis Preston Blair, the old Jacksonian Democrat
whose powerful family had become Republicans in the mid-1850s. Blair
had maintained his ties across party lines, however, and even across
the bloody chasm of war. With Lincoln's tacit consent, Blair traveled
to Richmond under flag of truce in January 1865 to visit his former
friend and political associate Jefferson Davis. Although the content
of their conversations remained secret, Blair's presence in Richmond
gave rise to endless speculation in the press both North and South.
Blair's purpose was to see whether there might be some way to reunite
Union and Confederacy in order to put an end to the internecine
bloodletting. |
47
|
| Signs
abounded that the Southern people, if not President Davis, were
prepared to give up. Desertions from Confederate armies soared.
The previously indefatigable chief of Confederate ordnance, Josiah
Gorgas, made despairing entries in his diary during January: "Where
is this to end? No money in the Treasury, no food to feed Gen. Lee's
Army, no troops to oppose Gen. Sherman ... There is a strong disposition
among members of congress to come to terms with the enemy, feeling
that we cannot carry on the war any longer with hope of success.
Wife & I sit talking of going to Mexico to live out the remnant
of our days."55 |
48
|
| Mexico
was also on Blair's mind. That country experienced its own civil
war in the 1860s, prompting Louis Napoleon to send 35,000 French
troops and to install Austrian Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian as
emperor of Mexico in 1864. Blair seemed obsessed with the idea that
a joint campaign of Union and Confederate armies to throw the French
out of Mexico would pave the way to reunion. Hints of Blair's suggestion
to Davis of such a project leaked out and elicited cautious approval
by Richmond newspapers and more enthusiastic endorsement by the
jingo press in the North.56
Davis returned a cool response to this Mexican scheme, but he did
give Blair a letter for Lincoln's eyes offering to appoint commissioners
to "enter into conference with a view to secure peace to the two
countries."57 |
49
|
| Lincoln
wanted nothing to do with Blair's proposed Mexican adventure. But
the president thought he saw an opportunity to end the war on his
own terms without compromising his refusal to recognize the legitimacy
of the Confederacy. He authorized Blair to return to Richmond with
an offer to receive any commissioner that Davis "may informally
send to me with the view of securing peace to the people of our
one common country."58 |
50
|
| Davis
overlooked the discrepancy between "two countries" and "one common
country." He appointed a commission composed of Vice-President Alexander
H. Stephens, President pro tem of the Senate Robert M. T.
Hunter, and Assistant Secretary of War John A. Campbell, a former
U.S. Supreme Court justice. Davis expected their efforts to fail
because he knew Lincoln would stick to his terms of Union and freedom.
This was the outcome Davis wanted, for it would enable him to rally
flagging Southern spirits to keep up the fight as the only alternative
to degrading submission.59 |
51
|
| This
peace effort almost foundered before it was launched. Lincoln sent
word to military commanders in Virginia that the Confederate commissioners
should not be allowed through the lines for an "informal conference"
with Secretary of State Seward, whom he had sent to Virginia, unless
they agreed in advance to Lincoln's "one common country" phrase
as a basis for talks. The commissioners instead showed to the army
major Lincoln dispatched to meet them their "two countries" instructions
from Davis. The major therefore barred them from crossing Union
lines. |
52
|
| That
would seem to have ended the matter. But this affair had generated
huge coverage in the press—more even than the peace flurries
of the previous summer—and had raised hopes that this cruel
war might soon be over. On the morning of February 2, Lincoln read
a telegram from General Grant: "I am convinced, upon conversation
with Messrs Stevens & Hunter that their intentions are good and
their desire sincere to restore peace and union ... I am sorry however
that Mr. Lincoln cannot have an interview with [them] ... I fear
now their going back without any expression from anyone in authority
will have a bad influence."60 |
53
|
| Grant's
intervention was decisive. On the spur of the moment, Lincoln decided
to go to Virginia to join Seward for a personal meeting with the
commissioners. This extraordinary, "informal" four-hour meeting
of the five men took place February 3 on the Union steamer River
Queen anchored in Hampton Roads. No aides were present and no
formal record was kept, although Seward and Campbell wrote brief
summaries and Stephens later penned a lengthy account, which must
be used with care.61
Despite an underlying tension, the mood was relaxed. Lincoln and
Stephens had been friends and fellow Whigs in Congress nearly two
decades earlier, providing a basis for a cordial atmosphere. |
54
|
| Lincoln
nevertheless stuck to the terms he had written out for Seward before
the president had decided to join him: "1 The restoration of the
National authority throughout all the States. 2 No receding by the
Executive of the United States, on the Slavery question ... 3 No
cessation of hostilities short of an end of the war, and the disbanding
of all forces hostile to the government."62
Stephens tried to change the subject by alluding to Blair's Mexican
project; Lincoln promptly disavowed it. What about an armistice
while peace negotiations took place? asked the Confederates. No
armistice, replied Lincoln, reiterating his third condition. Well,
then, said Hunter, would it be possible to hold official negotiations
while the war went on? After all, he noted, even King Charles I
had entered into agreements with rebels in arms during the English
civil war. "I do not profess to be posted in history," replied Lincoln—probably
with a twinkle in his eye. "All I distinctly recollect about the
case of Charles I, is, that he lost his head."63 |
55
|
| On
questions of punishing Confederate leaders and confiscating Southern
property, Lincoln promised generous treatment based on his power
of pardon. With respect to slavery, Lincoln even suggested that
if Confederate states abolished it themselves as part of a peace
settlement, he would ask Congress for partial compensation. In any
event, the Union Congress had passed the Thirteenth Amendment three
days earlier, and several states, including Lincoln's Illinois as
the first, had already ratified it.64
Slavery was dead, implied Lincoln, and to avoid further bloodshed
the Confederate leaders should recognize that the Confederacy itself
would soon be in the same condition. |
56
|
| Whatever
their personal convictions, the commissioners had no authority to
concede the death of their nation. They returned sadly to Richmond
and admitted their failure to President Davis—who was neither
surprised nor disappointed. Davis reported to the Confederate Congress
that Lincoln's terms required "degrading submission" and "humiliating
surrender." Richmond newspapers echoed the president's angry words.
The Examiner paraphrased Lincoln in this fashion: "Down upon
your knees, Confederates! ... your mouths in the dust; kiss the
rod, confess your sins." Davis addressed a rally in Richmond. He
predicted that Seward and "His Majesty Abraham the First" would
find "they had been speaking to their masters," for Southern armies
would yet "compel the Yankees, in less than twelve months, to petition
us for peace on our own terms."65 |
57
|
| War
fever in Richmond rose higher than at any time since April 1861.
"Every one thinks the Confederacy will at once gather up its military
strength and strike such blows as will astonish the world," wrote
the War Department clerk John Jones. One of the more moderate Richmond
newspapers declared that "to talk now of any other arbitrament than
that of the sword is to betray cowardice and treachery." We must
"conquer or die," declared another. "There is no alternative. We
must make good our independence, defend our institutions ... or
give up the ... lands we have tilled, the slaves we have owned ...
all indeed that makes existence valuable."66 |
58
|
| So
be it, responded the Northern press. Davis had made it clear, conceded
the one-time peace negotiator Horace Greeley, that we could only
have "Peace through War." The New York Times pointed out
that "we have always demanded 'unconditional surrender' ... We must
fight it out."67
Fight it out they did, for two more months, during which several
thousand more young men died. In his second inaugural address, Lincoln
acknowledged that in 1861 "neither party expected for the war, the
magnitude, or the duration, which it has already attained" or "a
result [so] fundamental and astounding." The same can be said of
many wars. None of the nations that opened fire with the Guns of
August 1914 foresaw the magnitude or duration of that war. The Germans
who invaded Poland in 1939 and the Japanese who bombed Pearl Harbor
two years later surely did not expect such a fundamental and astounding
result of their actions. Nor, presumably, did the U.S. government
when it sent American troops to South Vietnam in the 1960s. As historians,
we cannot know—though we can certainly speculate—that
the leaders of these nations would have acted differently if they
could have foreseen the consequences. It is also quite possible
that Americans in 1861 would have chosen a different course if they
knew that the war into which they plunged would last four years
and cost 620,000 lives. In any event, when Lincoln was inaugurated
for a second term on March 4, 1865, he remained committed to the
fundamental and astounding results of a Union victory, no matter
what it cost and how long it took. He served notice that, if necessary,
the war would continue "until all the wealth piled by the bond-man's
two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and
until every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by
another drawn with the sword."68 |
59
|
| Mercifully,
it did not take that long. Three months after Jefferson Davis had
breathed defiance to "His Majesty Abraham the First," the ex-Confederate
Ordnance Chief Josiah Gorgas pronounced his nation's epitaph: "The
calamity which has fallen upon us in the total destruction of our
government is of a character so overwhelming that I am as yet unable
to comprehend it ... It is marvelous that a people that a month
ago had money, armies, and the attributes of a nation should to-day
be no more ... Will it be so when the Soul leaves the body behind
it?"69 |
60
|
|
James M. McPherson is George
Henry Davis '86 Professor of American History at Princeton University,
where he has taught since 1962. He received his PhD in 1963
from Johns Hopkins University, where he studied with C. Vann
Woodward. McPherson has written fourteen books, mostly focusing
on the American Civil War and Reconstruction, including Battle
Cry of Freedom, which won a Pulitzer Prize in 1989, and
For Cause and Comrades, which won the Lincoln Prize in
1998. In addition to serving as president of the American Historical
Association, he has been president of Protect Historic America
and the Society of American Historians. He is currently working
on a book about the navies in the Civil War.
Notes
1.Ê
Paul Glass and Louis C. Singer, Singing Soldiers: A History
of the Civil War in Song (New York, 1975), 152–53, 267–69;
Willard A. Heaps and Porter W. Heaps, The Singing Sixties:
The Spirit of Civil War Days Drawn from the Music of the Times
(Norman, Okla., 1960), 159–60, 224–26.
2.Ê
William L. Dayton to William H. Seward, April 17, 1862, in Papers
Relating to the Foreign Affairs of the United States, 1862,
part 1 (Washington, D.C., 1863), 333.
3.Ê
Charles Francis Adams to William H. Seward, March 13, 1862, in
Papers Relating to the Foreign Affairs of the United States,
1862, part 1, 48; Henry Adams to Charles Francis Adams, Jr.,
March 15, 1862, in The Letters of Henry Adams, Vol. 1:
1858–1868, J. C. Levenson, ed. (Cambridge, Mass.,
1982), 284–85.
4.ÊConstitutionnel,
July 19, June 7, 1862.
5.ÊThe
Times, July 17, 1862; Morning Post, quoted in New
York Tribune, July 30, 1862.
6.ÊThe
Times, October 9, 1862; Gladstone to Lord John Russell, August
30, 1862, Gladstone to William Stuart, September 8, 1862, in Gladstone
Letterbooks, quoted in Howard Jones, Abraham Lincoln and the
New Birth of Freedom (Lincoln, Neb., 1999), 93.
7.Ê
Palmerston to Russell, September 14, 1861, Russell to Palmerston,
September 17, 1862, Lord Russell Papers, Public Record Office,
London, quoted in James V. Murfin, The Gleam of Bayonets: The
Battle of Antietam and the Maryland Campaign of 1862 (Baton
Rouge, La., 1965), 394, 396–97; Palmerston to Gladstone,
September 24, 1862, in Gladstone and Palmerston, Being the
Correspondence of Lord Palmerston with Mr. Gladstone, 1861–1865,
Phillip Guedalla, ed. (Covent Garden, 1928), 232–33.
8.Ê
Palmerston to Russell, September 23, 1862, Russell Papers, quoted
in Murfin, Gleam of Bayonets, 399–400.
9.Ê
Palmerston to Russell, October 2, 22, 1862, Russell Papers, quoted
in Ephraim Douglass Adams, Great Britain and the American Civil
War, 2 vols. (New York, 1925), 2: 43–44, 54–55.
10.Ê
Howard Jones, Union in Peril: The Crisis over British Intervention
in the Civil War (Chapel Hill, N.C., 1992), 210–23.
See also Frank Merli and Theodore A. Wilson, "The British Cabinet
and the Confederacy: Autumn 1862," Maryland Historical Magazine
65 (1970): 239–62.
11.ÊNew
York Times, January 29, 1863. See also New York Tribune,
January 9, 14, 22, 1863.
12.Ê
Seward quoted in The Diary of George Templeton Strong,
Vol. 3: The Civil War 1860–1865, Allan Nevins and
Milton Halsey Thomas, eds. (New York, 1952), 293, entry of February
1, 1863. This affair is analyzed at length in Lynn M. Case and
Warren F. Spencer, The United States and France: Civil War
Diplomacy (Philadelphia, 1970), 384–97; and in Daniel
B. Carroll, Henri Mercier and the American Civil War (Princeton,
N.J., 1971), 251–69.
13.Ê
Roy C. Basler, ed., The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln,
9 vols. (New Brunswick, N.J., 1952–55), 7: 53–56.
14.ÊNew
York Times, May 9, 1864; New York Herald, May 14, 1864;
New York Tribune, May 14, 1864.
15.ÊNew
York Tribune, May 31, 1864.
16.ÊNew
York World, July 12, 30, August 6, 1864.
17.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 7: 448–49; New
York World, July 19, 1864.
18.ÊDiary
of Gideon Welles, 3 vols., Howard K. Beale, ed. (New York,
1960), 2: 44, 73, entries of June 2 and July 11, 1864; Adam Gurowski,
Diary, 3 vols. (Boston, 1862–66), 3: 254, entry of
August 19, 1864.
19.ÊDiary
of George Templeton Strong, 474, entry of August 19, 1864;
Sarah Butler to Benjamin Butler, June 19, 1864, in Private
and Official Correspondence of General Benjamin F. Butler during
the Period of the Civil War, 5 vols., Jesse A. Marshall, ed.
(Norwood, Mass., 1917), 4: 418.
20.ÊColumbus
Crisis, August 24, 1864, quoted in Wood Gray, The Hidden
Civil War: The Story of the Copperheads (New York, 1942),
174; Boston Pilot, quoted in Thomas H. O'Connor, Civil
War Boston: Home Front and Battlefield (Boston, 1997), 202.
21.Ê
Clement C. Clay to Judah P. Benjamin, August 11, 1864, in War
of the Rebellion ... Official Records of the Union and Confederate
Armies, 128 vols. (Washington, D.C., 1880–1901), Series
IV, vol. 3, p. 585 (hereafter, OR). For the activities
of Confederate agents in Canada, see Oscar A. Kinchen, Confederate
Operations in Canada and the North (North Quincy, Mass., 1970),
esp. 35–103.
22.ÊRichmond
Dispatch, July 23, 1864; Diary of George Templeton Strong,
470, entry of August 6, 1864; Weed to Seward, August 22, 1864,
in Abraham Lincoln Papers (Robert Todd Lincoln Collection), Library
of Congress.
23.Ê
Greeley to Lincoln, July 7, 1864, Lincoln Papers.
24.Ê
Lincoln to Greeley, July 9, 1864, in Basler, Collected Works
of Lincoln, 7: 435.
25.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 7: 440–42, 451;
Inside Lincoln's White House: The Complete Civil War Diary
of John Hay, Michael Burlingame and John R. Turner Ettlinger,
eds. (Carbondale, Ill., 1997), 224–29, two memoranda written
by Hay circa July 21 and after July 22, 1864; John G. Nicolay
and John Hay, Abraham Lincoln: A History, 10 vols. (New
York, 1890), 9: 184–92.
26.Ê
Clement C. Clay and James Holcombe to Greeley, July 21, 1864,
in New York Times, July 22. This letter was published in
many Northern newspapers on July 22 or 23 and appeared in Southern
newspapers soon after, with extensive editorial commentary. In
a letter to Jefferson Davis on July 25, Clay and Holcombe explained
that their purpose in this affair had been to "throw upon the
Federal Government the odium of putting an end to all negotiations."
Clement C. Clay Papers, Perkins Library, Duke University, Durham,
N.C., quoted in Larry E. Nelson, Bullets, Ballots, and Rhetoric:
Confederate Policy for the United States Presidential Contest
of 1864 (University, Ala., 1980), 67.
27.ÊNew
York Times, July 23, 1864; Clay to Benjamin, August 11, 1864,
in OR, Series IV, vol. 3, pp. 585–86.
28.ÊIndependent,
July 26, 1864; New York Tribune, August 5, 1864.
29.Ê
Greeley to Lincoln, August 9, 1864, Lincoln Papers; New York
Times, July 25, 1864.
30.Ê
No official record of this meeting was kept. This account and
the quotation are taken from Gilmore's article in the Atlantic
Monthly 8 (September 1864): 372–83. Gilmore wrote a
briefer version describing the meeting for the Boston Transcript
of July 22, 1864, and a longer one in his memoirs many years later.
These versions vary slightly in detail but agree in substance,
as does Judah Benjamin's account in a circular sent to Confederate
envoys abroad after Gilmore's article was published in the Atlantic.
Benjamin to James M. Mason, August 25, 1864, in Official Records
of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion,
30 vols. (Washington, D.C., 1894–1922), Series II, vol.
3, pp. 1190–94.
31.Ê
James R. Gilmore, "A Suppressed Chapter of History," Atlantic
Monthly 59 (April 1887): 435–36; Gilmore, Personal
Recollections of Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War (Boston,
1898), 289.
32.ÊNew
York Times, August 20, 1864.
33.ÊSemi-Weekly
Richmond Enquirer, August 26, 30, 1864.
34.ÊNew
York World, August 15, 1864.
35.ÊColumbus
Crisis, August 3, 1864; New York News, quoted in Washington
Daily Intelligencer, July 25, 1864.
36.ÊNew
York World, July 25, 1864; New York Herald, August
7, 1864.
37.ÊNewark
Daily Advertiser and Ann Arbor Journal, quoted in Washington
Daily Intelligencer, August 8, 1864.
38.ÊNew
York Tribune, July 28, 1864; Diary of George Templeton
Strong, 474, entry of August 19, 1864.
39.ÊNew
York Times, August 18, 24, 1864.
40.Ê
Lincoln to Charles D. Robinson, dated August 17, 1864, in Basler,
Collected Works of Lincoln, 7: 499–501.
41.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 7: 500, 506–07.
42.Ê
William Frank Zornow, Lincoln and the Party Divided (Norman,
Okla., 1954), 112; Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln,
7: 514.
43.Ê
Raymond to Lincoln, August 22, 1864, Lincoln Papers.
44.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 7: 517; Nicolay and
Hay, Abraham Lincoln, 9: 220.
45.Ê
Nicolay to Hay, August 25, 1864, Nicolay to Theresa Bates, August
28, 1864, in With Lincoln in the White House: Letters, Memoranda,
and Other Writings of John G. Nicolay, 1860–1865, Michael
Burlingame, ed. (Carbondale, Ill., 2000), 152–53.
46.Ê
On this matter, see Burlingame, ed., Inside Lincoln's White
House, 238, Hay's diary entry of October 11, 1864; and Charles
A. Dana to Henry J. Raymond, date not specified, in Francis Brown,
Raymond of the Times (New York, 1951), 260n.
47.Ê
For the platform, see Edward McPherson, The Political History
of the United States during the Great Rebellion, 2d edn. (Washington,
D.C., 1865), 406–07.
48.Ê
E. McPherson, Political History of the United States, 419–20.
49.ÊHarper's
Weekly 8 (August 30, 1864): 530; New York Times, August
17, 1864; New York Tribune, September 2, 1864.
50.Ê
McClellan struggled to strike a balance between the platform and
his own commitment to reunion as a prerequisite for negotiations.
For an analysis of the successive drafts of McClellan's acceptance
letter, see Charles R. Wilson, "McClellan's Changing
View on the Peace Plank of 1864,"AHR 38 (1933):
498–505. Drafts of McClellan's letter are in the McClellan
Papers, Library of Congress, and in the Samuel L. M. Barlow Papers,
Huntington Library, San Marino, Calif.
51.Ê
Sherman to Henry W. Halleck, September 3, 1864, in OR,
Series I, vol. 38, part 5, p. 777; Diary of George Templeton
Strong, 480–81, entry of September 3, 1864.
52.ÊRichmond
Examiner, September 5, 1864; New York Times, September
19, 1864, published the sermon.
53.Ê
Delos Lake to his mother, July 12, November 1, 1864, Lake Papers,
Huntington Library; John Berry to Samuel L. M. Barlow, August
24, 1864, Barlow Papers.
54.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 8: 149, 151.
55.ÊThe
Journals of Josiah Gorgas, 1857–1878, Sarah Woolfolk
Wiggins, ed. (Tuscaloosa, Ala., 1995), 147–49, entries of
January 6, 18, 1865.
56.ÊRichmond
Enquirer, January 19, 1865; Richmond Sentinel, rpt.
in New York Herald, January 24, 1865; New York Herald,
January 25, 1865; New York World, January 23, 1865; John
B. Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary, Earl Schenck Miers,
ed. (New York, 1958), 489–90, entry of January 30, 1865.
57.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 8: 275.
58.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 8: 275–76. Italics
added.
59.Ê
William J. Cooper, Jr., Jefferson Davis, American (New
York, 2000), 510–11.
60.Ê
Grant to Edwin M. Stanton, February 2, 1865, in Basler, Collected
Works of Lincoln, 8: 282.
61.Ê
"Memorandum of the Conversation at the Conference in Hampton Roads,"
in John A. Campbell, Reminiscences and Documents Relating to
the Civil War during the Year 1865 (Baltimore, 1877), 11–17;
Seward to Charles Francis Adams, February 7, 1865, in OR,
Series I, vol. 46, part 2, pp. 471–73; Alexander H. Stephens,
A Constitutional View of the Late War between the States,
2 vols. (Philadelphia, 1870), 2: 598–619. The best study
of the Hampton Roads Conference is William C. Harris, "The Hampton
Roads Peace Conference: A Final Test of Lincoln's Presidential
Leadership," Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association
21 (2000): 31–61.
62.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 8: 279.
63.Ê
Stephens, Constitutional View, 2: 613.
64.Ê
In his account, Stephens maintained that Lincoln had urged him
to go home to Georgia and persuade the legislature to take the
state out of the war and to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment prospectively,
to take effect in five years. This claim cannot be accepted; Lincoln
was too good a lawyer to suggest any such absurdity as a "prospective"
ratification of a constitutional amendment. The president had
just played a leading part in getting Congress to pass the Thirteenth
Amendment, and he was using his influence to get every Republican
state legislature as well as those of Maryland, Missouri, and
Tennessee to ratify it. Stephens, Constitutional View,
2: 611–12. See also Harris, "Hampton Roads Peace Conference,"
51.
65.ÊRichmond
Examiner, February 6, 1865; Jefferson Davis, Constitutionalist:
His Letters, Papers, and Speeches, 10 vols., Dunbar Rowland,
ed. (Jackson, Miss., 1923), 6: 465–67.
66.Ê
Jones, War Clerk's Diary, 493, entry of February 6, 1865;
Richmond Dispatch, February 7, 1865; Richmond Whig,
February 6, 1865.
67.ÊNew
York Tribune, February 7, 1865; New York Times, January
18, February 13, 1865. See also Harper's Weekly 9 (February
4, 1865): 66: "The government does insist on an unconditional
surrender. That was the exact issue before the people in the late
election. There was to be no compromising, no compounding, no
convention, no waving of olive boughs."
68.Ê
Basler, Collected Works of Lincoln, 8: 332–33.
69.ÊJournals
of Josiah Gorgas, 167, entry of May 4, 1865.
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