Monday, January 19, 2015

January 21, 1865---"The Country is all under water"



JANUARY 21, 1865:           

General William Tecumseh Sherman gripes about the weather with General James H. Wilson via correspondence:

It is time for me to be off again for Columbia, but it has been raining hard and the Country is all under water, but I will soon be off.

My route north is well inland.


January 20, 1865---"Any last words?"; The last Blockade Runners



JANUARY 20, 1865:                    

Nathaniel Marks, formerly of Company A, 4th Kentucky, C.S.A. is condemned as a guerrilla. He claims his innocence, but is shot by a firing squad in Louisville, Kentucky. 


Having taken Fort Fisher, Union forces maintain the lighthouse fire on the newly-re-renamed Federal Point. What they do not know is that the beacon is kept lit as an indicator of safe passage for blockade-runners. Today, the vessels STAG and CHARLOTTE drop anchor in New Inlet, glad to have completed their passage, and unaware of the fall of the bastion. The ships, and their cargoes, crews, and passengers are all seized as contraband of war by the United States.


January 19, 1865---Robert Todd Lincoln joins the army; "Separate State Action"; The 117th New York at Fort Fisher



JANUARY 19, 1865:           


Young Robert Todd Lincoln insists, and he has insisted for months, to be allowed to join the fighting as almost all other young men are doing. President Lincoln fears for his life, and Mary Todd Lincoln is in daily hysterics over “Robbie’s” plans, fearing she will lose a third child to combat or pestilence. Thus, to date, at a cost of great friction between them, Lincoln has pressured and bullied his son not to serve. But he can do so no longer. Too many other families have empty chairs in their homes for the Lincolns to claim such privilege. Today, the President takes pen in hand to make a request of his leading general:


 Lieut. General Grant:


 Please read and answer this letter as though I was not President, but only a friend.  My son, now in his twenty second year, having graduated at Harvard, wishes to see something of the war before it ends.  I do not wish to put him in the ranks, nor yet to give him a commission, to which those who have already served long, are better entitled, and better qualified to hold.  Could he, without embarrassment to you, or detriment to the service, go into your Military family with some nominal rank, I, and not the public, furnishing his necessary means?  If no, say so without the least hesitation, because I am as anxious, and as deeply interested, that you shall not be encumbered as you can be yourself.


 Yours truly


A.   LINCOLN



Robert Todd Lincoln serves honorably on General Grant’s staff, and is present at Appomattox Court House.



Citizens of the Confederacy are increasingly convinced that the war will end badly for the South, and so all types of last-minute schemes for peace are being floated. Jefferson Davis, who has just heard out Francis Preston Blair on the subject, is approached by the Georgia Congressional delegation. They inform him that the Confederate Congress is considering a “Convention of Sovereign States” to broker peace. This idea relies on the Southern conception of each State as “Sovereign and Independent” and it is unrealistic on many levels. Davis raises his practical objections, and says in part:


. . . The objection to separate State action which you present in your letter appears to be so conclusive as to admit no reply. The immediate and inevitable tendency of such distinct action by each State is to create discordant instead of united counsels; to suggest to our enemies the possibility of a dissolution of the Confederacy . . . the false idea that some of the States of the Confederacy are disposed to abandon their sister States and make separate terms of peace for themselves . . . once engendered among our own people . . . would be destructive of that spirit of mutual confidence and support which forms our chief reliance for success in the maintenance of our cause.


. . . If the Government of the United States is willing to make peace, it will treat for peace directly. If unwilling, it will refuse to consent to the convention of States . . .


. . . [H]ow is the difficulty resulting from the conflicting pretentious of the two belligerents in regard to several of the States to be overcome? Is it supposed that Virginia would enter into a convention with a delegation from what our enemies choose to term the "State" of "West Virginia," and thus recognize an insolent and violent dismemberment of her territory? Or would the United States consent that "West Virginia" should be deprived of her pretensions to equal rights, after having formally admitted her as a State, and allowed her to vote at a Presidential election? Who would send a delegation from Louisiana, Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri? The enemy claim to hold the governments of those States, while we assert them to be members of the Confederacy . . . enough has been said to justify my conclusion that the proposal of separate State action is unwise, impracticable, and offers no prospect of good . . . 



An unnamed Union soldier of the 117th New York at Fort Fisher writes to his father:


Dear Father: 


Fort Fisher is ours and I am all right and the 117th NY was the first to mount the parapet and ours was the first flag that was planted on it . . . I will say that this, there never was and never will be any harder fighting than was done here. Our boys held one end of the parapet and the Rebs the other, and they threw grape, canister and shell.