DECEMBER 12, 1864:
Clear skies and cold clear air have replaced
storming cloud cover over Nashville. General George Thomas U.S.A. sends word to
Ulysses S. Grant that he is prepared to move against General John Bell Hood
C.S.A. as soon as the mired, mucky roads dry out.
In
Washington, D.C.. Abraham Lincoln has been working on obtaining passage of the
Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution since the morning after his State of
The Union Address. Lincoln knows this is an uphill battle, at least in the 38th
Congress. Although it became a lame-duck Congress as of Election Day, and
although Lincoln is well aware that he can get easy ratification of the
Amendment during the incoming 39th Congress in which the Republicans
hold a 75% majority, he prefers to see the Amendment passed by the fractious and
dysfunctional House of Representatives still sitting in December.
There
are a number of very good reasons:
First,
Lincoln knows that the Confederate Congress is debating emancipation and he
does not wish the South to free the slaves before the North. Such an
eventuality could change the military and political landscape beyond reckoning.
Second,
Lincoln knows that if the Republican-dominated 39th Congress passes
the Amendment, he will be in a politically weakened position. There have
already been difficulties with the Radical Republicans in Congress. They have
disputed Lincoln’s very liberal and forgiving Reconstruction plan and have
thwarted the counting of Electoral votes in the reconstructed States of the
South. Lincoln does not wish to be beholden to the Radicals of his party for
passing the Amendment, since as a quid
pro quo they may force the implementation of their extremist form of
Reconstruction which is both far more harsh to the South and far more cognizant
of immediate bestowal of black civil rights than Lincoln’s more tempered plan.
Lincoln fears that a political battle over these issues in a
freshly-reconstructed America could reignite the military battles.
Third,
Lincoln is concerned that if the Amendment is passed without clear bipartisan support
it may be subject to juridical disputes or repealed entirely by a future
Congress. He wants no such possibilities to raise their ugly heads. He has said
it: He will not see re-enslaved those
already emancipated or their descendants. He wants to guarantee that
slavery is, in fact, dead and buried in the reunified United States.
To
this end, he has asked various Cabinet members, Members of Congress, and other
influential figures to press recalcitrant Congressmen of both parties to pass
the Amendment. Moral suasion is preferred; spoils jobs are the next best offer;
bribery, arm-twisting, threats, and outright sliminess are to be (officially)
forbidden, though Lincoln keeps all the buckles of his political bag of tricks
unfastened.
Nevada’s
Congressional delegation is seated in Washington.