The Career of a Soldier
General Grant's
Battles and Victories in War and Peace
The Savior of
Our Union
The Tanner's
Son, the Army's Leader, the Nation's Head
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
July 24, 1885
OBITUARY
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Library of Congress
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Ulysses S. Grant (undated)
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A survey of the events of
two-thirds of a century--telling a story thrilling to every patriot,
instructive to every observer of these times, and helpful to citizens in
every station and of all beliefs who wish their country well--this man,
humbly born, taught only in the nation's school, conquers a place among
the great ones of the earth, restores unity to a divided people, and
dies a plain American citizen, lamented alike by grateful countrymen,
loyal comrades, and admiring foes.
Events in a Great Career
I. West Point and Mexico
On the 27th of April,
1822, in the village of Point Pleasant, Ohio, 25 miles above Cincinnati
on the Ohio River, was born Hiram Ulysses Grant, the eldest of the six
children of Jesse R. and Hannah Simpson Grant. His great grandfather,
Noah Grant, and Noah's brother Solomon, of Connecticut, commissioned
officers in the French and Indian war, were killed in 1756. His
grandfather, Noah Grant, served all through the Revolutionary War. His
father and also his mother's father were born in Pennsylvania. The
father of Ulysses was a tanner by trade, and removed, the year after his
son's birth, to Georgetown, in the neighboring country, where the lad's
boyhood was passed. At the age of 17, he received a cadetship in the
Military Academy through the Congressman of his district, who
erroneously registered him as Ulysses S. Grant, and so his name remains
in history.
Graduated from West
Point in 1843, No. 21 in a class of 39 members, young Grant was attached
as Brevet Second Lieutenant to the Fourth Infantry, which, after various
garrison service, two years later joined Gen. Zachary Taylor's army,
assembling in Texas. War with Mexico broke out in the Spring of 1846,
and Grant, then a full Second Lieutenant, took part with his regiment in
many of Taylor's operations in Scott's campaign from the siege of Vera
Cruz to the capture of the city of Mexico, being present at the battles
of Palo Alto, Resaca de la Palma, Monterey, Cerro Gordo, Churubusco,
Molino del Rey, and Chapultepec. For gallantry at Molino del Rey he was
brevetted First Lieutenant, and for gallantry at Chapultepec Captain,
while his brigade commander, Col. Garland, said of him: "I must not omit
to call attention to Lieut. Grant, Fourth Infantry, who acquitted
himself most nobly, upon several occasions, under my own observation."
His commission as First Lieutenant was dated Sept. 16, 1847, two days
after the surrender of the Mexican capital.
Seven years of garrison
life at Atlantic, Pacific, and lake stations followed. In 1848 he
married Miss Julia T. Dent, of St. Louis, sister of a West Point man,
Lieut. Frederick T. Dent. He had been Quartermaster of the Fourth
Infantry in the Mexican war and again served four years in that capacity
until promoted to a Captaincy, in 1853. The following Summer, July 31,
1854, he resigned from the army. Seven years nearly of civil life
ensued, in which he was successively a farmer at Gravois, near St.
Louis; a real estate agent in St. Louis, and finally an assistant of his
father and brother in the leather business at Galena, Ill.
II. At the Outbreak of War
At Galena the outbreak
of the civil war found him. Fort Sumter fell on the 14th of April, 1861.
Ten days later Capt. Grant was in Springfield, the State capital,
offering for service a company of his townsmen which he had drilled.
Gov. Yates, however, found better employment for his military training
as a mustering officer of volunteers, and a month later commissioned him
Colonel of the Twenty-first Illinois Infantry to date from June 17,
1861. Volunteer troops came forward in throngs, and there was a great
demand for West Point officers of war experience for brigade and
division commands. Hardly had Col. Grant joined Fremont's department in
Missouri when he was appointed, on the 7th of August, one of the new
Brigadier-Generals of volunteers, to date from May 17. Assigned by
Fremont to the charge of the district of Southeast Missouri, including
the important region around Cairo, on the 4th of September he
established his headquarters in that city, and at once seized Paducah at
the junction of the Tennessee with the Ohio. This he did on the 6th of
September, having learned only the day before that the Confederate
General Polk had occupied Columbus and threatened Paducah.
This first act of
importance in the career of Grant as a General officer singularly
typified what was to follow. It was on the 5th, as has been said, that
he heard of Polk's advance to Columbus and Hickman, below Cairo. He
instantly notified both Gen. Fremont at St. Louis and the Kentucky
Legislature at Frankfort of this movement, and presently sent another
dispatch to Fremont: "I am getting ready to go to Paducah. Will start at
6:30 o'clock." This he followed with a third notification to Fremont: "I
am now nearly ready for Paducah, should not telegram arrive preventing
the movement." Still no reply came from St. Louis, and at 10:30 o'clock
that night he was off, with two gunboats, two regiments, and a light
battery. Reaching Paducah the next morning at 8:30 o'clock, he entered
the town without firing a gun, Gen. Tilghman and a few Confederate
recruits hurrying off at his approach. Leaving a garrison in the place
he started back at noon for Cairo, where he found Fremont's permission
to take Paducah "if he felt strong enough," and also, soon after, a
reminder from the same source that Brigadiers ought not to communicate
with State authorities except through the Major-General commanding.
Still, the Kentucky Legislature did not take ill this friendly
communication from Grant, which seemed to confidently call for patriotic
action on its part. It passed a resolution that "Kentucky expects the
Confederate or Tennessee troops to be withdrawn from her soil
unconditionally." Kentucky thus committed herself to a demand which was
not heeded by the Confederates, and as a State she thenceforth cast her
lot with the Union. The noteworthy feature of this Paducah affair was
its exhibition of Grant's promptitude, his entire willingness to take
responsibility, and his instinct not to suffer the delay of others to
interfere with the progress of his own plans. Four days later he gave a
second proof of aggressive energy in an unheeded hint to the department
commander: "If it was discretionary with me, with a little addition to
my present force, I would take Columbus."
Early in November Grant
received orders to demonstrate against Columbus, 20 miles below Cairo on
the Mississippi, so as to prevent Polk from reinforcing Price in
Missouri. On the 7th, accordingly, he presented himself with a force of
3,114 men near a little settlement called Belmont, on the Missouri side,
opposite Columbus, and dominated by its 140 guns. Leaving his two
gunboats and some infantry to protect the landing, Grant moved forward
to Belmont his remaining troops, 2,850 strong, including a battery. Polk
meanwhile reinforced his outpost at Belmont so that there were five
regiments and a battery under Gen. Pillow, in all about 2,500 men. The
troops on both sides were raw, but a sharp combat ensued, in which the
Union forces drove the enemy through his camp toward the river. There,
however, they came under the fire of the heavy guns of Columbus, while
four more regiments and a battalion were sent across to Pillow's aid
under Cheatham, Polk in person accompanying them. Grant, who had had a
horse killed under him, finding these heavy reinforcements vigorously
pressing him, set fire to the captured camp and ordered a withdrawal to
the transports. An officer at this juncture repeated to him a cry, "We
are surrounded!" heard among some of the men. "Well," quietly replied
Grant, "if we are surrounded we must cut our way out, as we cut our way
in." The embarkation Grant personally superintended, and then the whole
expedition returned to Cairo. The Union loss was 368 killed and wounded
and 117 prisoners or missing; total, 485. Polk's was 524 killed and
wounded and 117 prisoners or missing; total, 641. Grant captured and
brought off two guns and lost two caissons. He probably accomplished the
exact task assigned to him, which was not, as we need hardly say, that
of capturing Columbus, with its 140 guns, by the movements of one field
battery and 3,000 men on the opposite shore.
During this combat at
Belmont, which will perhaps be known in history less for its intrinsic
importance than for being the first action fought by Grant in command on
the field, an incident occurred which was near putting an end to his
career at the outset. While McClernand, who had two or three horses shot
under him, Col. Logan, afterward so distinguished, and many other
officers set a good example to the men, yet Grant, as the only
professional soldier present on the Union side, found that, in the
retreat to the transports, he had nearly everything to supervise. Riding
back from the bank alone, in order to observe the enemy, on glancing at
a cornfield in front, he discovered a Confederate line of battle, not 50
yards off, firing on his transports. Turning his horse, he rode rapidly
back to the shore, the animal sliding down the bank on its haunches, and
trotting, under musketry fire, across the gangplank of a transport
thrust out to receive him.
III. Forts Henry and Donelson
The Tennessee and the
Cumberland, emptying into the Ohio at points about 25 and 35 miles east
of Cairo, offered obvious advantages for a combined military and naval
advance. The Confederates, to check such an advance, established Fort
Henry on the right bank of the former river, and Fort Donelson, 12 miles
eastward, on the left bank of the latter, near the boundary between
Kentucky and Tennessee. With these forts, and with Columbus on the west
and Bowling Green on the east, they had a defensive chain, and Grant,
like Halleck and other military observers, saw that to break the line in
the centre was to break it everywhere. Gen. C. F. Smith, having reported
to Grant on his return from an expedition that the capture of Fort Henry
was easy and that "two guns would make short work of it," Grant six days
later, on January 28, 1862, telegraphed to St. Louis as follows: "With
permission, I will take and hold Fort Henry on the Tennessee and
establish and hold a large camp there;" and the next day, with his
customary persistence, he reverted to the subject, saying: "I would
respectfully suggest the propriety of subduing Fort Henry, near the
Kentucky and Tennessee line, and holding the position. If this is not
done soon there is but little doubt that the defenses on both the
Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers will be materially strengthened. From
Fort Henry it will be easy to operate either on the Cumberland (only 12
miles distant), Memphis, or Columbus." On the 2nd of February, 1862,
having at length obtained authority and instructions from Halleck,
commending the Department of the Missouri, Grant started from Cairo with
17,000 men on transports, accompanied by Flag Officer Foote with seven
gunboats, to ascend the Tennessee and attack Fort Henry. This was an
earthwork mounting seventeen guns. Recognizing that his works could not
be held, Gen. Tilghman drew out over 3,000 troops for retreat to Fort
Donelson, retaining his single company of trained artillerists to serve
the guns. On the 6th Grant ordered forward his troops, which had been
landing and taking positions, and Foote simultaneously opened fire.
After a severe artillery duel of about two hours, Tilghman hauled down
his flag and surrendered to Foote his gallant little garrison of
ninety-odd officers and men, with all his guns and garrison equipage.
"I shall take and
destroy Fort Donelson," said Grant quietly, in announcing to Halleck the
fall of Fort Henry; and this was the first mention of Fort Donelson in
any dispatches between Grant and Halleck. The latter answered, "Hold on
to Fort Henry at all hazards, and transfer guns to resist a land attack.
Picks and shovels are sent you. Large reinforcements will soon join
you." But for Grant Fort Henry was a bygone landmark; and without
awaiting attacks from the land side, or picks and shovels, or even
reinforcements, in spite of drenching rains that reduced all the roads
to quagmires, by the 12th his column of 15,000 men (2,500 being left at
Fort Henry) and eight light batteries drew up in front of Fort Donelson,
a strong work, on rugged heights, mounting 21 guns in position, besides
the field pieces of eight light batteries, garrisoned that night
probably by 16,000 men-- according to some authorities by 18,000. At
evening of the next day the fleet came up the Cumberland, bringing
supplies and reinforcements, so that Grant had in the end nearly 30,000
men under his command. On the 12th and 13th there was heavy skirmishing.
On the 15th a desperate effort was made by the Confederate garrison to
cut its way out, but the struggle, though costing a Union loss of 2,000
men and six guns, was unsuccessful, Gen. C. F. Smith making a splendid
and decisive counter-assault at the critical moment. That night the
senior Confederate Generals, Floyd and Pillow, escaped with many hundred
troops, and the next morning, the 16th, Gen. Buckner proposed an
armistice until noon in order to agree on terms of capitulation. "No
terms," replied Grant, "except an unconditional and immediate surrender
can be accepted. I propose to move immediately upon your works." The
terms were agreed to, and Fort Donelson was surrendered, with its
garrison, stores, small arms, and field and heavy guns. The total Union
loss was 3,329; the Confederate from 1,500 to 2,000 in killed and
wounded and probably about 12,000 prisoners. The gunboats had been of
minor service, being exposed to a plunging fire, which disabled them. A.
S. Johnston, who had fallen back from Bowling Green through Nashville,
retreated to Murfreesborough, and Polk from Columbus to Island No. 10.
The North rang with plaudits over this sorely needed victory and Grant
was made a Major-General of Volunteers, dating from the fall of Fort
Donelson.
In this capture of Fort
Donelson, not less remarkable than the energy with which Grant pushed on
from Fort Henry while Halleck was mainly anxious to "resist an attack"
against the latter, was the indomitable resolution with which he clung
to his purpose under unexpected obstacles. The rains and floods which
impeded his advance suddenly gave place to intense cold, with the
mercury below zero, and then to a driving storm of snow and hail.
Grant's troops in bivouac around Fort Donelson, with little shelter and
no fires, suffered intensely through two days and nights, being mostly
unused to the hardships of war, and it was under such circumstances that
the enemy made his desperate attack to break a way of escape through the
national lines. The news of that attack was brought to Grant, who had
just returned to the field from a consultation with Foote, and it was
added that the Confederate soldiers had come out with knapsacks and
haversacks. Grant promptly inquired if the haversacks were filled, and
on examining some prisoners it was ascertained that they had three days'
rations. "Then they mean to cut their way out," he said; "they have no
idea of staying here to fight us." There was still at that moment great
disorder among the Union troops, from the fierceness of the Confederate
assault; but Grant, intuitively grasping the exact situation, said:
"Whichever party now attacks first will whip, and the rebels will have
to be very quick if they beat me." The decisive attack of Smith followed
at once, and the result showed the correctness of Grant's judgment, as
it illustrated also the force of his will. As at Belmont Grant had much
responsibility for details thrown upon him, the only other professional
soldier present besides C. F. Smith being McPherson, of Grant's staff.
However, the Union volunteers were already developing genuine and
admirable soldiers through the stern schooling of the battlefield.
IV. Shiloh's Two Days of Blood
With the Tennessee now
open and the Confederates strongly holding the Mississippi an advance up
the former river would obviously threaten the eastern railroad
communications of Memphis, besides getting in the rear of the works
above at Forts Pillow and Randolph and Island No. 10. Halleck arranged
such an expedition and gave its command to C. F. Smith, after receiving
some complaints of Grant's alleged carelessness of discipline in an
anonymous letter, but soon restored it to Grant, to whom a gross
injustice would otherwise have been done. The Confederates meanwhile
were alert. Their chief line of railroad threatened was the Memphis and
Charleston, which crosses the Mobile and Ohio at Corinth, in the
northeastern corner of Mississippi, about 20 miles distant from the bend
of the Tennessee, near Pittsburg Landing. To Corinth, then, A. S.
Johnston took his Bowling Green army, which was speedily swelled by
Bragg's forces from the South, and others collected by Polk and
Beauregard. At Pittsburg Landing, on the other hand, Grant's army,
reinforced to nearly 40,000 men, was encamped, only waiting the arrival
of Buell's, 37,000 strong, from Nashville, to march, combined under
Halleck, against Corinth. Johnston determined to strike Grant before
Buell should come up, and accordingly, on the morning of April 6, 1862,
with an army 40,000 strong, fell upon the Union camps. These camps were
not intrenched, and indeed had been chosen with a view to the expected
advance rather than for defense, while one division was several miles
distant at another landing. The opening attack fell on the three Union
divisions encamped about two miles out from the landing, on either side
of Shiloh Church, a point on the Corinth road, and they were driven back
to the river. Grant, however, at no time despaired, and at night, aided
by his artillery, well massed on a bluff near the landing, and by the
difficult ground, as well as by the cross-fire of two gunboats, he
resisted all attempts to drive him into the Tennessee. Beauregard, who
succeeded Johnston when the latter was fatally wounded, at length drew
off his exhausted troops until the next day. Then, however, they
encountered not only their old opponents, but Buell's army, whose
advance indeed had reached the field the evening before, as well as
Grant's fresh division from Crump's Landing. Grant assumed the
offensive, and after more hard fighting the Confederates abandoned the
field and retreated to Corinth. In this battle of Shiloh, the bloodiest
till then ever fought on the continent, the Confederate losses were
about 11,000; the Union about 12,200. The Union army lost much camp
equipage and stores. The losses in artillery were about equal.
Gen. Bragg, in his
official report of the battle of Shiloh, declared that the Confederate
movement was one which, if successful, "would have changed the entire
complexion of the war." There can be no doubt of its dangerous
character, but the resulting battle was fought on both sides with a lack
of that perfected knowledge of the military art which could only be
developed by experience. If the Confederates criticised their opponents
for a lack of field intrenchments to protect their positions and for not
encamping their troops on the right bank of the Tennessee until ready to
advance, the Union forces were equally able to retort that the conduct
of the Confederate attack might have been made more effective. And if
the junction of the Union armies at the rendezvous near Pittsburg
Landing was less swiftly effected than it might have been at a later
period in the war, not less clear is it that Johnston's attack was also
delivered a day too late to accomplish his purpose. The simple truth is
that the gathering, organizing, drilling, and moving of great armies was
then a novel experience on both sides. The prudence and skill of troops
in constructing earthworks wherever they might camp, and the marvels of
the bridge building in later days, were still to come. The Union
position on the left bank of the river was originally chosen by Smith
and afterward retained by Grant, in constant expectation of moving
forward. Johnston, on his part, had delayed his attack with the view of
receiving important reinforcements from beyond the Mississippi, which he
eventually had to proceed without. So far as Grant is personally
concerned, that trait of pertinacity which afterward acquired a
world-wide reknown was, perhaps, never more distinctly manifested in his
military conduct than at Shiloh. The battle began while he was absent at
his headquarters at Savannah, several miles down the river. Hurrying
forward, he exerted himself to inspire confidence in his hard-pushed
troops. Reaching the division of Sherman, he reminded that officer of
the experience at Donaldson. "I saw there," he said to Sherman, "that
either side was ready to give way if the other showed a bold front," and
he inferred that, desperate as the present battle looked, it might have
a like outcome. Undoubtedly the consciousness that Buell's army was
close at hand gave him confidence, but it was also the temperament of
the man which caused him to say, even when his exhausted troops had been
driven to within a few hundred yards of the river, "I have not despaired
of whipping the enemy yet."
With the combined
armies, further reinforced by Pope, Halleck's way was easy to Corinth,
which Beauregard abandoned. Pope had already taken New-Madrid and Island
No. 10. Fort Pillow was abandoned on the capture of Corinth. Memphis was
then taken by the navy, and thus the Mississippi was open to Vicksburg.
Halleck becoming General-in Chief at Washington in July, Grant was left
at Corinth in charge of the Department of West Tennessee with about
60,000 men, afterward reduced about a third by reinforcements sent to
Buell in Tennessee. The Confederates, in fact, had already striven to
retrieve their fortunes by a bold stroke. Bragg, having first occupied
Chattanooga, marched across Tennessee into Kentucky, threatening
Louisville. Buell was opposing him, and to keep Grant from further
reinforcing Buell Price menaced Corinth. Grant directed Rosecrans to
check him, and this Rosecrans did on Sept. 19 in a battle fought at
Iuka, 21 miles east of Corinth. Grant then moved his headquarters to
Jackson, leaving Rosecrans in command at Corinth. There Price and Van
Dorn attacked Rosecrans on Oct. 3 and 4, but after a sanguinary battle
were driven off with great loss.
V.
Vicksburg and Chattanooga
Grant now urged a
campaign against Vicksburg, to free the Mississippi from source to sea.
His first move was to send Sherman from Memphis with 32,000 men and 60
guns down the Mississippi on transports, with Porter's gunboats, to the
mouth of the Yazoo, which joins the Mississippi just above Vicksburg. He
himself undertook to co-operate by land in marching along the Mobile and
Ohio Railroad, and defeating Pemberton, who had succeeded Van Dorn, or
driving him to Vicksburg. Sherman and Porter started, but Grant's
co-operation was foiled at the outset by the surrender to Van Dorn of
Holly Springs, with its large stores of food, arms, and ammunition, and
more especially by Forrest's raid on Grant's own communications. Sherman
assaulting the impregnable Haines Bluff on the Yazoo, was badly
repulsed, on the 29th of December, with a loss of nearly 2,000 men, the
Confederates losing less than 100. Some offset was had a fortnight later
in McClernand's capture of Arkansas Post with 4,791 prisoners and 17
guns, after a total Union loss of a thousand men.
Early in 1863 Grant
moved his whole army down the river to work out the problem of
Vicksburg's capture. Two months and more passed in fruitless operations
upon the neighboring bayous, seeking to evade the formidable defenses by
canals and the like devices. At length he determined to carry his army
below Vicksburg and turn the left of Pemberton, who commanded the works.
Sherman was sent above to feint at Haines Bluff. Porter ran the
batteries, and Grant's main force, moving along the Arkansas shore of
the Mississippi, crossed it at Bruinsburg, several miles below
Vicksburg, and, after a sharp fight at Port Gibson, advanced along the
Big Black to the rear of the city, and captured the towns of Raymond and
Jackson, after combats at each. Pemberton, by direction of Gen. Joe
Johnston, who was at hand to co-operate with a small force, sallied out
to attack Grant, but was defeated on the 16th of May, at Champion's
Hill, with the loss of 3,839 men, while the Union loss was 2,408. He was
immediately defeated again on the Big Black, and fell back into
Vicksburg, which Grant, after being reinforced till he had had 70,000
men and 250 guns, then regularly besieged. Assaults cost the Union arms
4,000 men and the Confederate but 500, and then Grant trusted to close
investment, using a part of his force to keep off Gen. Joe Johnston, who
hovered about but did not attack. On the 4th of July the starving
garrison surrendered, with about 30,000 officers and men and 172 guns.
The total Confederate losses in this Vicksburg campaign were from 42,000
to 45,000, with 60,000 small arms and 260 cannon. Grant's total losses
were not 12,000. The Confederates also lost, when Port Hudson fell, as a
corollary to Vicksburg, the great Mississippi, and its resources beyond.
The Vicksburg campaign
is one of the most complex and interesting of the phases of the civil
war, and it proved vastly important in its results. From the outset the
determination of the West had been that the Mississippi should run
"unvexed to the sea." Very slowly, however, and almost by inches, was
the Confederate grip wrenched from the great river. Before Grant
undertook the operations at Vicksburg several attempts upon it had
failed, and all his own early efforts were abortive. These had been
directed either to evading the domination of the Vicksburg batteries
over the Mississippi or that of the Haines Bluff batteries over the
Yazoo. All these failures nevertheless only served to set out in clearer
light that characteristic trait of Grant's soldiership which, defying
fate and stubbornly waiting for fortune to relent, at length achieved
its purpose. The conception of moving his whole army south of Vicksburg,
cutting himself entirely from his base and marching into the enemy's
domain to risk everything on a series of battles in the rear of the
city, may perhaps fairly be called the inevitable result of having tried
every other plan first. But the surpassing merit of the execution of the
project consists in the method, deliberation, and stoutness of heart
with which an enterprise of apparently enormous practical difficulties,
was carried into effect. Even Sherman himself, who had given abundant
proofs of intrepid soldiership, advised that the army should be taken
back instead to the line of the Yallabusha to begin the campaign over
again. To Grant, however, the deliberate launching of his whole army as
a movable column upon a new line in the rear of Vicksburg was attractive
by virtue of its boldness. Beyond question, the errors of Pemberton and
the failure of this officer and Johnston to effectively co-operate
furnished to Grant that share of good fortune which he, like many other
of the world's famous soldiers, usually received at the time when it was
most needed. Nevertheless, his own skill and energy in conducting the
final operations are as indisputable as the boldness of the purpose that
framed them.
The country was wild
with enthusiasm over this victory at the West and the simultaneous one
at Gettysburg in the East. For the first time Grant's merit as a soldier
was fully recognized. He was made Major-General in the regular army, and
congratulations and gifts showered upon him. But serious work was to be
quickly required. Buell the Autumn before, after fighting the battle of
Perryville with Bragg, had been succeeded by Rosecrans, who at the close
of the year had encountered the same General in the tremendous battle of
Murfreesborough. In the Summer of 1863 he had made his Tullahoma
campaign, pursuing Bragg to Northern Georgia, fighting the bloody
engagement at Chickamauga Sept. 19 and 20, and falling back into
Chattanooga, where Gen. Thomas relieved him in command of his forces,
the Army of the Cumberland. To Grant was assigned in October the
Military Division of the Mississippi, including that army, which was now
beset by Bragg on the heights around Chattanooga. Hurrying forward
Sherman's corps, which had been driving J. E. Johnston from the region
back of Vicksburg, Grant took command at Chattanooga, and his first care
was to open a line of supply by the Brown's Ferry road, already
contemplated by Rosecrans. This was handsomely accomplished on the 27th
and 28th of October by Hooker's defeat of Longstreet, who was aiding
Bragg, and then the siege of Chattanooga was ended. It remained to
dislodge Bragg, who was posted on the commanding heights of Missionary
Ridge, with his centre across Chattanooga Valley and his left on Lookout
Mountain. On the 24th of November Hooker carried this latter mountain in
his "battle above the clouds" or among the mists. Sherman, in Grant's
plan, was to have turned the enemy's right, while Thomas held him at the
centre, but on the 25th Sherman found that the difficulties of the
country were too great. Thomas accordingly was ordered to attack
seriously in his front, and with amazing enthusiasm and valor his Army
of the Cumberland swept up the heights and across the crest of
Missionary Ridge, and Bragg was driven back into Georgia. Succor was at
once sent to Burnside, who had been besieged by Longstreet in Knoxville
during these latter operations, and who drew off at its approach.
Thomas's loss at Missionary Ridge was about 4,000 men, Sherman's about
1,500, and with Hooker's included the total was about 7,000, while
Bragg's was still heavier, as about 5,000 prisoners were captured,
besides 40 guns.
VI. Command of All the Armies
Congress at once
ordered that a gold medal should be struck for Gen. Grant, and voted
thanks to him and his army, as did many of the Legislatures of the
Northern States. A bill to revive the office of Lieutenant-General was
passed, and to that grade he was appointed March 2, 1864, on the 17th
assuming command of all the armies of the United States. The vote in the
House of Representatives, where the bill reviving the
Lieutenant-Generalcy originated, was 117 to 19 in its favor. Mr.
Washburne during the debate declared that Grant had himself spoken no
word to bring about this memorable result. "I say what I know to be
true," added Mr. Washburne, "when I allege that every promotion he has
received since he first entered the service to put down this rebellion
was moved without his knowledge or consent. And in regard to this very
matter of Lieutenant- General, after the bill was introduced, and his
name mentioned in connection therewith, he wrote me and admonished me
that he had been highly honored by the Government and did not ask or
deserve anything more in the shape of honors or promotion; and that a
success over the enemy was what he craved above everything else; that he
only desired to hold such an influence over those under his command as
to use them to the best advantage to secure that end."
The high hopes
entertained of this successful officer became additionally manifest when
he took his journey eastward, for the railway stations along the route
were thronged with his enthusiastic countrymen. Arriving in Washington
on the 8th of March, he was presented to the members of the Cabinet the
following day by Mr. Lincoln, who read to him these words: "Gen. Grant,
the Nation's appreciation of what you have done, and its reliance upon
you for what remains to be done in the existing great struggle, are now
presented, with this commission constituting you Lieutenant- General in
the Army of the United States. With this high honor, devolves upon you,
also, a corresponding responsibility. As the country herein trusts you,
so, under God, it will sustain you. I scarcely need to add that with
what I here speak for the Nation goes my own hearty concurrence." The
reply of the Lieutenant-General was worthy of the address: "Mr.
President, I accept the commission with gratitude for the high honor
conferred. With the aid of the noble armies that have fought in so many
fields for our common country, it will be my earnest endeavor not to
disappoint your expectations. I feel the full weight of the
responsibilities now devolving on me, and I know that if they are met it
will be due to those armies, and, above all, to the favor of that
Providence which leads both nations and men." Sherman besought him to
remain at the West, where extraordinary success seemed to attend him;
but Grant recognized that the head and front of the Confederacy was in
Virginia, and that there was the hardest work. He therefore assigned to
Sherman the Spring campaign of 1864 in Georgia, from Chattanooga to
Atlanta, against J. E. Johnston, who had succeeded Bragg, while he made
his headquarters with the Army of the Potomac, then under Gen. Meade,
for a simultaneous campaign against the army of Lee and Richmond.
The unity of operations
now assured by Grant's command of all the armies was of immeasurable
importance. Early in the war McClellan had also been intrusted with the
powers of a General-in- Chief, but his career had been checkered, and
had early come to a close. Halleck, in succeeding to this command, had
but sparingly exercised it in the practical conduct of operations, and
even when he had exercised it had commonly done so with unfortunate
results. "The armies in the East and West," as Grant phrased it, "acted
independently and without concert like a balky team, no two ever pulling
together." His own elevation to the supreme command, however, had not
come as an experiment, but as the legitimate result of his victories,
which had called for higher and higher advancement and responsibility.
He had also achieved a reputation for tenacity which his subordinates
felt bound to imitate in the coming campaign. Added to these advantages
was his long service both in the Mississippi Valley and on the line of
the Alleghanies, which made the operations prepared for the West
perfectly familiar to him and subject to his control, although his own
presence was reserved for Virginia.
The troops he had at
command numbered more than 500,000 in the field. Sherman's army
comprised 100,000 men and 254 guns. The forces of Meade and Burnside, in
Virginia, numbered fully 120,000 effective, and those of Butler, on the
Lower James, about 40,000. Sigel and Crook had smaller columns in the
Shenandoah Valley and West Virginia. Banks, who had just been defeated
in Louisiana, had troops to spare for reinforcing other armies. There
were various minor forces on the grand theatre of war which called for a
share of attention. While the details of distant movements were left in
large measure to the discretion of the commanders intrusted with
performing them, it may be said with truth that Grant fully exercised
the office of General-in-Chief. "So far as practicable," said Grant to
Meade, "all the armies are to move together and toward one common
centre." The same view was expressed to Sherman, Butler, and Sigel. It
may be well to point out a little more specifically the character of the
Virginia operations under his own supervision, as they appeared to him
at this time. "You understand," he wrote to Butler on the 18th of April,
"that with the forces here I shall aim to fight Lee between here and
Richmond, if he will stand. Should Lee, however, fall back into
Richmond, I will follow up and make a junction with your army on the
James River." On the 29th of April he wrote to Halleck that his efforts
would be "to bring Butler's and Meade's forces together;" but he
contemplated the possibility of being "forced to keep in the country
between the Rapidan and the Chickahominy, in which case supplies might
be required by way of the York or the Rappahannock Rivers." This source
of supplies, in fact, afterward came into play. "When we get once
established on the James River," he proceeded, "there will be no further
necessity of occupying the road south of Bull Run." He likewise notified
Meade on the same day that "should a siege of Richmond become necessary,
ammunition and equipments can be got from the arsenals at Washington and
Fortress Monroe." These preliminary views are sufficient to indicate the
nature of the great final campaign which Grant contemplated.
Just before the opening
of the campaign on which so much depended President Lincoln addressed to
Grant a memorable letter: "I wish to express in this way," he said, "my
entire satisfaction with what you have done up to this time so far as I
understand it. The particulars of your plans I neither know nor seek to
know. You are vigilant and self-reliant, and, pleased with this, I wish
not to obtrude any constraints or restraints upon you. * * * And now,
with a brave army and a just cause, may God sustain you." Grant replied
that he acknowledged with pride the confidence which the President
placed in him. "From my first entrance into the volunteer service of the
country," he said, "to the present day, I have never had cause of
complaint, have never expressed or implied a complaint, against the
Administration or the Secretary of War for throwing any embarrassment in
the way of my vigorously prosecuting what appeared to be my duty." He
added that he had "been astonished at the readiness with which
everything asked for has been yielded, without even an explanation being
asked. Should my success be less than I desire and expect, the least I
can say is the fault is not with you."
VII. Lee and the Wilderness
At midnight of May 3,
1864, he crossed the Rapidan with Meade's army and Burnside's Ninth
Corps, afterward formally consolidated, and now aggregating 120,000 men.
Butler was at the same time to make a co-operative movement up the James
toward Petersburg, and Sigel to advance up the Shenandoah Valley. Lee,
who, while Meade was at Culpeper, had watched him from Orange and
Gordonsville, when he saw the Union army crossing the Rapidan at Ely's
and Germanna fords with intent to turn his right flank, marched forward
to attack it. There were at this time 62,000 officers and men present
for duty in the Army of Northern Virginia. Lee's attack fell in a region
aptly called the Wilderness, where for two days, May 5 and 6, raged a
battle the like of which had perhaps never been known--a steady roll of
musketry in a dense smoke-curtained undergrowth of scrub oaks and low
pines, where save on a few roads artillery could not be used, and where
the combatants could rarely even see each other. It was the desperate,
prolonged struggle of Lee to crush Grant's campaign at the start. The
opening shock of the encounter occurred between Warren's corps and the
corps of Ewell on the Orange turnpike, near the Old Wilderness Tavern,
where a murderous struggle ensued in the tangled underbrush. At length a
portion of Sedgwick's corps struggled through the chaparral in support
of the Fifth, while a little later in the afternoon Hancock came up on
the left, and at once hotly engaged Hill, who had meantime made his way
to Ewell's right. Until 8 P.M. the battle raged in Hill's front, when
darkness in the forest put an end to it. During the night after this
terrible and exhausting struggle, Grant formed his plan as to what do
next. It was to "attack along the whole line at 5 o'clock in the
morning." But resolute and prompt as was the Union General, the enemy
anticipated him by resuming the conflict a few minutes before 5 on the
morning of the 6th with an onset upon Sedgwick, who held the Union
right. Exactly at 5 o'clock the roll and gleam of musketry in Hancock's
front told that the Union line was advancing there; and after a
desperate contest it succeeded in driving back the corps of Hill for
more than a mile. Both sides, however, had by this time been reinforced.
Longstreet, who had not been present the day before, came up to Hill's
support, while Burnside moved into the space between Warren and Hancock.
With these dispositions perfected, the opposing armies found it
difficult to advance, and stood in a sanguinary deadlock of conflict
throughout the day. Some manoeuvring took place with but little effect,
and the hard contest closed with a double attack of the Confederates
against the Union breastworks, both on the left and upon the extreme
right flank, at which latter point several hundred Union soldiers were
captured. When the third day dawned on this deadly grapple for the
mastery, both combatants paused. Grant had lost 2,265 killed, 10,220
wounded, 2,902 missing--total, 15,387. Lee had lost perhaps
10,000--there is no way of knowing exactly how many. What was to be the
result? The same day Grant moved out once more by his left flank and
pointed onward along the road to Richmond.
Lee had the interior
lines, and hurrying to foil this second effort to turn his right,
stationed himself at Spottsylvania, in Grant's path. Grant had at the
outset notified Meade, who commanded the Army of the Potomac, that "his
objective was to be Lee's army;" and the gage of battle was again taken
up, where Lee's inferior numbers were aided by familiarity with the
country and, above all, by intrenched positions, covered by
entanglements unprecedented in the war. For ten days Grant sought in
vain to pierce or carry this position, the chief success being Hancock's
capture of 4,000 prisoners and 20 guns in assaulting a salient on the
12th of May. The night before, the 11th, the Second Corps had been moved
as near as possible to the position, which it was expected to storm, and
at early dawn the men, with ringing cheers, tore away such abatis as
there was, and dashed across the intrenchments. A brief but desperate
hand-to-hand conflict resulted in the capture of nearly a whole division
of Ewell's corps and the pursuit of the remainder for half a mile.
There, however, a new line of breastworks was encountered, while the
imminent danger in which Lee's position had been placed caused him to
bring forward a large force to retake the lost ground. The result was
the driving back of Hancock's corps to the line of works first captured.
There, however, the Union troops held their own. Assault on assault was
made by Lee with great fury, till the ground was strewn with Confederate
and Union dead. The losses on both sides were very heavy, but the Union
troops held their position and the honors of the day. By the 20th the
Union losses at Spottsylvania had been 15,722 killed and wounded, 2,001
missing--total, 17,723. The Confederate loss is uncertain--perhaps again
10,000 or 12,000. The Union killed and wounded in the Wilderness and at
Spottsylvania combined were 28,207, and the missing 4,903--total,
33,110. The Confederate loss is uncertain, perhaps not far from 20,000.
It was from Spottsylvania that Grant sent back to Washington the
memorable dispatch: "I propose to fight it out on this line if it takes
all Summer." Meanwhile Sheridan, the renowned leader of the Union
cavalry, after pioneering the way for the infantry and beating off the
Confederate horsemen, had raided on Lee's communications, defeated
Stuart, and, like a forerunner, had dashed at the outer defenses of
Richmond. In the Shenandoah Valley Sigel had been defeated and succeeded
by Hunter. On the line of the James Butler had fought a hard battle with
Beauregard, losing 3,500 men to the latter's 2,200, and had withdrawn
and intrenched himself at Bermuda Hundreds, whence he forwarded 16,000
troops to Grant, while Beauregard sent reinforcements to Lee.
On the 20th of May
Grant once more ordered Meade to move out by the left, and Lee, promptly
marching on his interior lines, confronted Grant at the North Anna River
in a position affording so obvious a check that the march by the flank
was again taken up, and the opposing forces next met on the historic
grounds of the Pamunkey and the Chickahominy. On crossing the Pamunkey
Sheridan's cavalry developed the presence of Lee and Hampton at Hawes's
Shop, where a very sharp engagement on the 28th of May ended in
Sheridan's holding the important junction. The losses were very severe
on both sides, those of the Confederates being the heavier. During the
two or three days succeeding there was severe skirmishing as the Union
Army advanced, over a region familiar to many of them two years before,
with the purpose of ascertaining the position of the enemy. On the 1st
of June the Sixth Corps, now under Wright, aided by portions of the
Tenth and Eighteenth, under W. F. Smith, from the Army of the James,
found the Confederates in force at Cold Harbor. Assaulting, they carried
one line of intrenchments, capturing 700 or 800 prisoners, the total
Union casualties, however, being about 2,000 men. It was evident that
Lee had determined to hold the line of the Chickahominy, and the other
Union corps were as rapidly as possible placed so as to strengthen the
position already secured by Wright and Smith. On the morning of the 3d
Grant moved the army to the attack. The position held by Lee was
exceedingly strong, but the forcing of it promised to have a great
effect on the operations against Richmond, so near was it to the outer
works of that city. The Second, Sixth, and Eighteenth Corps were
assigned for the assault. They moved to the attack most gallantly, but
were mowed down by a heavy combined fire of musketry and artillery. The
main part of the fighting was over in an hour, in which time the number
of killed and wounded, including those in the Fifth and Ninth Corps, was
between 5,000 and 6,000. When it became evident that the position was
too strong to be carried the assault was not renewed. Meade's aggregate
losses during this stage of the campaign were 10,433 killed and wounded,
with a total of 12,970 casualties. The Confederate losses were perhaps
4,000 or 5,000. About 3,000 sick were sent from the Peninsula to
Northern hospitals.
Hard as had been the
hammering Grant lost no jot of confidence, and persisted that the
Confederacy was "a shell" that must soon break. Finding the Peninsula
approaches to Richmond so difficult he crossed the James with his army
in June and began to operate against Petersburg. Practically this was a
continuation of the movement by the left to get around Lee's right. The
Union killed and wounded during the first series of assaults on the
Petersburg intrenchments numbered about 8,000, and the total losses
about 10,000. Those of Lee and Beauregard were also severe. Hard
fighting then ensued to cut the Weldon and Southside railroads,
particularly at Reams's Station on the former, and by the cavalry on the
Virginia Central. During the two months from May 1 to July 1 the losses
of the Army of the Potomac were nearly 50,000 killed and wounded, with a
total of 61,000; the total losses of the Army of the James were 6,903,
exclusive of casualties on the picket line. The Shenandoah Valley
casualties would bring the aggregate Union losses in the Virginia
operations thus far above 70,000. Lee had also suffered very severely.
VIII. The Siege of Petersburg
Grant now sat down to a
siege of Petersburg. During the month of July a strong line of redoubts
was constructed and furnished with heavy batteries, facing the
Confederate line of defense, which comprised a chain of redans and
parapets whose approaches were obstructed by abatis. Toward the end of
the month an officer commanding a regiment of Schuylkill miners in
Burnside's corps suggested the construction of a mine that should run
under a point of the enemy's works known as Elliott's salient. The
scheme was approved, but the preparations for executing it were most
inadequate. The mine was sprung on the 30th of July, and a yawning
crater produced at the point attacked. The assaulting troops advanced to
the crater with great difficulty, the entanglements in front of their
own works not having been properly removed. The leading division was
improperly formed and most meagrely supported. It remained in and near
the crater instead of advancing to the crest beyond. At length the
enemy, at first paralyzed by the explosion, after an inactivity of fully
half an hour, began to attack the huddled and ill-led troops at the
crater, and soon a confused retreat was made to the Union lines. Gen.
Grant tersely called this "a miserable affair;" but it was the ruin by
mismanagement of a project of much promise. The Union loss was 4,400
men, while a movement just previously made to the north side of the
James cost 300 more.
In August the movement
to the north side was renewed, under the charge of Hancock, who crossed
to Deep Bottom on the 13th. During several days following severe
fighting took place, with a Union loss of from 2,000 to 2,800.
Meanwhile, on the other flank, Warren was dispatched with the Fifth
Corps to seize and hold, if practicable, the Weldon Railroad. Warren
succeeded in placing his troops along the railroad on the 18th, and
repelled an assault of the enemy to recover it, losing 936 men, but
probably causing a severer loss to the enemy. The following day A. P.
Hill made a more determined attack on Warren, and captured over 2,500
men, besides inflicting a loss of nearly 400 in killed and wounded.
Nevertheless, the Union forces still clung to the railroad. Two days
after a third assault was made, but was bloodily repulsed.
Grant's next attempt
was to destroy the Weldon Road as far south as possible, and for this
purpose he determined to employ the corps of Hancock as soon as it
returned from Deep Bottom. The road was broken in the region of Reams's
Station, but at the latter point the Union forces were attacked and
driven back, with a loss of 2,372 men and 9 guns.
Toward the end of
September a movement of the corps of Ord and Birney was made on the
north side of the James, where, in a gallant assault, Fort Harrison, on
Chapin's farm, was captured. The Confederates made desperate efforts to
retake the captured points, but were repulsed with heavy losses. The
Union loss in the two days of fighting was 2,272. To co-operate with
this movement Grant simultaneously moved out on his left again with the
Fifth and Ninth Corps, the result being that that flank was extended to
Peeble's Farm, and though the operation cost 2,000 men the extension was
permanent.
The advance of the
season now told plainly that whatever was to be done for the capture of
Petersburg before going into Winter quarters must be done quickly. Grant
therefore resolved to make one determined effort to lay hold of the
Southside Railroad, Lee's main line of communication. The Petersburg
works had been extended to Hatcher's Run, where the Confederate right
rested. It was proposed to turn this, and in the meantime to press on to
the railroad. The Second, Fifth, and Ninth Corps were assigned for the
task, and moved on the 27th of October. Lee, however, was on the alert,
and some unfortunate dispositions caused the plan to result in total
failure. The losses were perhaps about 1,800 men, and the troops were
withdrawn to their original positions. Simultaneously Butler made a
co-operative movement on the north side of the James, where the losses
were about 1,100 men.
Grant's Virginia
campaign was now closing for the year. While promising everywhere, in
one quarter its end had been brilliant. In the Summer Hunter had
advanced up the Shenandoah Valley to Lynchburg after gaining a victory
at Piedmont, but being compelled to retreat by Early, detached by Lee
for that purpose, had done so through the Kanawha Valley, leaving
Early's force to march through the Shenandoah to the very defenses of
Washington. Wright, hurried forward by Grant from Petersburg, in his
turn forced the retreat of Early, who nevertheless lingered menacingly
in the valley. Thither, accordingly, Grant sent Sheridan, who gained
four victories, at Winchester, Fisher's Hill, Tom's Brook, and Cedar
Creek, the last giving him a great personal renown. As with his habitual
generosity Grant had warmly congratulated Sherman for his capture of
Atlanta, so he bestowed unstinted praise upon Sheridan for his victories
in the valley. Of the one at Winchester he declared, "It has been most
opportune in point of time and effect. It will open again to the
Government and to the public the very important line of road from
Baltimore to the Ohio, and also the Chesapeake Canal. Better still, it
wipes out much of the stain upon our arms by previous disasters in that
locality. May your good work continue is now the prayer of all loyal
men." After the victory of Fisher's Hill he said to Sheridan: "Keep on,
and your good work will cause the fall of Richmond." No trait of Grant
was more marked than the heartiness with which he praised the success
achieved by those to whom he had intrusted important tasks.
The Spring of 1865 told
plainly that the combinations and campaigns of the year before under the
Lieutenant-General had done their work, and that the end of the
Confederacy was at hand. Historical records show that his command of all
the armies was no mere honorary position, but that again and again in
Virginia demonstrations sometimes angrily criticised as useless because
having no obvious bearing on the Richmond campaign were specifically
ordered in co-operation with efforts made on distant fields. Sherman had
flanked and fought his way to Atlanta despite the resistance of Johnston
and Hood; when Hood's army, stealing away from Sherman's front, hastened
to Tennessee, Thomas had overwhelmed it at Nashville; Sherman had
marched from Atlanta to Savannah, and from Savannah was now coming
through the Carolinas against Joe Johnston and toward Virginia. Wilson
and Stoneman were sweeping through Alabama and East Tennessee. Not only
Mobile and Charleston, but Fort Fisher and Wilmington, had fallen.
Sheridan, taking 10,000 horsemen up the Shenandoah Valley, had broken
the neighboring railroads and the James River Canal, and now was at
Grant's left, to lead off once more in that movement to turn Lee's
right, present in Grant's mind ever since the Rapidan was crossed.
IX. Appomattox
Lee, meanwhile, had
seen that his only hope lay in abandoning Richmond and uniting with
Johnston at Danville to strike Sherman. On the 25th of March he sought
to do this, under cover of an attack from his left against Fort Stedman.
This work Gordon carried, but was then driven back, and Lee suffered an
ill-afforded loss of 4,000 men, against a Union loss of 2,000. Grant,
perfectly discerning the meaning of this move, carried forward his own
project. Sheridan on the 29th of March pushed out on the left, with the
infantry following, and Lee, divining the purpose, soon collected
everything he could on his right for a counter-blow. He struck the Union
lines heavily on the White Oak road, inflicting a loss of nearly 2,000
men. Sheridan, to whom Grant had sent a dispatch to stay by the main
army, "as I now feel like ending the matter," was driven to Dinwiddie;
but sending for assistance and receiving the Fifth Corps, he fell upon
Pickett April 1 at Five Forks, completely crushing him and capturing
4,500 men and 6 guns, with a Union loss of only 1,000.
On the night after
Sheridan's great victory at Five Forks Grant's lines surrounding
Petersburg, from the Appomattox to Hatcher's Run, opened a tremendous
bombardment from all their guns, keeping up the portentous roar until
nearly daylight. With the first flush of dawn, on Sunday, April 2, the
Sixth and Ninth Corps, under Wright and Parke, and the Army of the James
under Ord, made a general assault on the Petersburg works. The signal,
the firing of a gun at Fort Fisher, was given at 4:40 A.M., when just
light enough to see. The works to be assaulted consisted of parapets of
high relief and deep ditches, with two lines of short abatis in front
and batteries every few hundred yards distant. No precautions were
omitted that would insure success--the pioneers were in front, and the
artillerymen were provided with implements for turning captured guns
against the enemy. Amid a deadly fire the Union army charged the works,
rapidly cutting away the abatis, and rushing through the openings thus
made. In the 15 minutes Wright alone lost 1,100 men killed and wounded;
but he swept everything before him, capturing many guns and thousands of
prisoners. Parke and Ord also made advances on their fronts, and the
entire Union line drew close in upon the city. Humphreys, storming a
redoubt, moved up the Boydton plank road to connect with Wright's left,
while the remaining division of the Second Corps, under Miles, attacked
Heth's brigade near Sutherland Station on the Southside Railroad,
capturing two guns and 600 prisoners. Among the most sanguinary assaults
was one made by Gibbon with the Twenty-fourth Corps against Fort Gregg,
whose capture cost 714 men killed and wounded.
In that morning's work
Lee read the fate of Richmond. He instantly notified Jefferson Davis of
his purpose to abandon the Confederate capital that night; and no sooner
had darkness fallen than the whole Confederate Army, both north and
south of the Appomattox, stealthily withdrew from its works, and, moving
with all speed westward, by the next morning was 16 miles away. Grant,
who had announced his purpose to "make an end of it before going back,"
was already about to achieve one part of his purpose. Before daylight of
the 3d the troops pushed forward again to assault, but found their work
already done. Petersburg was evacuated, and great flames blazing from
Richmond told that the warehouses of the Confederate capital had been
fired by the retreating troops. Pillage, too, had been added to fire
before the Union forces marched in to quench the conflagration; and
thus, on the 3d of April, 1865, the great prize which general after
general had failed to obtain during four years of struggle was in the
hands of Grant.
Lee's westward race for
life was to prove of no avail. Caring little for what became of
Richmond, and leaving to others the gratification of entering the city,
Grant instantly directed his columns in urgent pursuit westward along
the south side of the Appomattox on a line parallel to the one taken by
Lee on the north side. The Confederate chief was aiming to join
Johnston, and, perhaps, to combine with him to overwhelm Sherman. He
started with a light heart and full of hope. "To follow me," he said,
"the enemy must abandon his lines, and can derive no further benefit
from his railroads or the James River." He fully expected to make his
escape, and either to continue the war further south or to be able to
negotiate peace on terms other than those accorded to a beaten and
ruined army. But he had not taken full account of Grant's relentless
vigor. On arriving at Amelia Court House he found Sheridan close upon
him with the cavalry and the Fifth Corps, and when he paused for rest,
Sheridan, still pressing onward, drew up at Jetersville, directly across
Lee's road to the Burkeville Junction, from which point he would have
had an easy line of escape by rail to Danville. It only remained for Lee
to fall upon Sheridan's isolated force and risk all in the attempt to
sweep it out of his path, or else, moving westward once more, to seek
escape by way of Lynchburg. But he had little or no food for either men
or horses, having brought away but one day's rations from Petersburg,
and hesitated to attempt the attack till food could be procured; in the
meantime Meade brought up the Second and Sixth Corps to Jetersville, and
his path was hopelessly barred. Then, at length, he moved toward
Farmville, the fiery Sheridan now heading him, now hanging on his
flanks, and constantly harassing him with remorseless fury. Near
Sailor's Creek, on the 6th, his rear guard, consisting of Ewell's corps,
was attacked by Union troops, both cavalry and infantry, and almost
entirely captured--men, wagons, guns, and flags.
Nothing seemed left to
the proud Army of Northern Virginia at this juncture but annihilation by
piecemeal. A less magnanimous soldier than Grant might have continued to
press it when at his mercy, but with a generosity prompt in the hour of
his long-sought triumph, he determined to himself make the overtures for
the inevitable end. On the 7th, at Farmville, Grant counseled Lee to
surrender the remains of his army, and on the 9th of April that
surrender was made at Appomattox. The capitulation of Johnston and of
all the other Confederate armies followed as an inevitable consequence.
The Confederacy was ended. It had been hammered to pieces, and amid the
exhaustion of its devotees there were signs of relief that the
inevitable day had come. Not less memorable in history than Grant's
victories will be his conduct to the vanquished. His interview with Lee
was a marvel of simplicity. Nothing was done to pass his beaten enemies
under the yoke. After his liberal and magnanimous terms of surrender
were fixed he added: "This done, each officer and man will be allowed to
return to his home, not to be disturbed by United States authority so
long as they observe their paroles." Under that promise, signed by
Grant, his prisoners, from Lee down, were safe.
Were it required to
point out the most marked traits of Grant as a soldier, the choice
should fall on his ceaseless aggressive energy under a calm demeanor,
and upon his inflexible stoutness of heart in whatever trial or peril.
Resolute as to ends, no one was less narrow-minded or obstinate as to
methods of achievement. He approached Donelson with fewer men at first
than were ensconced behind its strong works, and campaigned for months
against Vicksburg with hardly greater force than was assigned for its
defense. Like Wellington, he was "rich in saving common sense," and the
"hard pounding, but we will see who can pound the hardest," of the
famous British soldier seems echoed on field after field of the
American. But Grant is destined rather to be himself an exemplar for
historic comparisons, and in ages to come, if a great soldier is
indomitable in purpose and exhaustless in courage, endurance, and
equanimity; if he is free from vanity and pettiness, if he is
unpretentious, truthful, frank, constant, generous to friends,
magnanimous to foes, and patriotic to the core, of him it will be said,
"He is like Grant."
X.
Reconstruction Days
After the war Gen.
Grant placed Sheridan with a strong army of observation in the Southwest
to watch the Franco-Austrian empire which had been established in
Mexico, until the death of Maximilian. The gradual reduction of the
volunteer forces and the reorganization of the regular army also
demanded his attention, and the employment of troops during the
reconstruction period.
In the intervals of
official duty he made visits to various parts of the country, being
everywhere received with the greatest enthusiasm. Certain citizens of
Philadelphia presented him with a residence in that city at a cost of
$30,000, which he took possession of in May, 1865. On occasion of a
visit to his old home at Galena, Ill., a beautiful residence, completely
furnished, was given him by his old friends and neighbors. On the 10th
of November a magnificent reception and banquet was tendered to him in
the city of New-York. In the latter part of November and the early part
of December, 1865, he visited the South, and on his return made a report
to President Johnson on the condition of affairs, which was submitted to
the Senate in response to a resolution of inquiry. He was satisfied that
the mass of thinking men accepted the "situation of affairs in good
faith;" that they regarded the old questions that had divided the
sections "as having been settled forever by the highest tribunal," and
that they were "anxious to return to self-government within the Union as
soon as possible," but that they wanted and required protection from the
Government "while reconstructing." Early in 1866 the Thirty-ninth
Congress passed an act creating the grade of "General of the Army of the
United States," to be filled by the President "from among those officers
in the military service most distinguished for courage, skill, and
ability," and providing that the act should cease to be in force
whenever after such appointment the office should become vacant. The
grade was created for Gen. Grant, and he was appointed as a matter of
course, Gen. Sherman becoming Lieutenant-General. An incident of his
official life in 1866 was a visit to Buffalo in June to take measures to
stop the invasion of Canada by the Fenians, which was immediately
followed by a collapse of the raid. In May he had sent a letter to the
Secretary of War in regard to the proposed reorganization of the army,
and this was immediately laid before Congress. He urged the retention of
a small military force in the States lately in rebellion, hoping that it
would "not be necessary to enforce the laws, either State or national,"
but believing that it was needed "to give a feeling of security to the
people."
In 1867 Gen. Grant held
a very important relation to the work of reconstructing the States
recently in rebellion. In preparation for the contest with President
Johnson, the Thirty-ninth Congress, before its final adjournment on the
4th of March, had provided in a section of the Army Appropriation bill
that all orders and instructions relating to military operations should
be issued through the General of the Army, and that he should "not be
removed, suspended, or relieved from command or assigned to duty
elsewhere than at the headquarters in Washington, except at his own
request, without the previous approval of the Senate." The President
signed the Appropriation bill with a protest against this provision,
which, he said, "virtually deprives the President of his constitutional
functions as Commander-in-Chief of the army." Thus it happened that the
orders to the district commanders in the course of reconstruction came
from Gen. Grant. In June President Johnson obtained from
Attorney-General Stanbery his famous opinion of the reconstruction acts,
which was submitted to the Cabinet, and from which the Secretary of War,
Stanton, vigorously dissented, and caused it to be sent to the district
commanders for their guidance through the Adjutant-General's office. In
reply to an inquiry from Gen. Sheridan, then in command at New- Orleans,
Gen. Grant declared that the legal opinion thus distributed was not
entitled to the force of an order and instructed the district commander
to enforce his own construction of the law until ordered to do
otherwise. By the supplemental Reconstruction act passed at the
adjourned session in July the acts of the military commanders were made
subject to the disapproval only of the General of the Army, giving Grant
practically full control of the execution of the reconstruction laws.
The President as Commander-in-Chief of the army still had the power to
remove the district commanders, and after the second adjournment of
Congress made several changes, including the removal of Gen. Sheridan
from the Fifth District and the assignment thereto of Gen. Hancock. The
Tenure of Office act prevented him from removing any Cabinet officer
without the consent of the Senate, but he determined to suspend
Secretary Stanton and appoint Gen. Grant Secretary of War ad interim. On
the 11th of August Gen. Grant addressed a letter to the President, in
reply to propositions which had been made to him verbally, expressing
his sense of the "great danger to the welfare of the country" involved
in the designs which had been broached. He regarded the Tenure of Office
act as "intended specially to protect the Secretary of War, whom the
country felt great confidence in." He defended Gen. Sheridan's
administration at New-Orleans, and deprecated his removal as calculated
to encourage the opponents of the reconstruction policy. Nevertheless,
Mr. Stanton was suspended on the 12th of August and Gen. Grant was
designated to act as Secretary ad interim. In notifying the Secretary of
the fact and of his acceptance he said: "I cannot let the opportunity
pass without expressing to you my appreciation of the zeal, patriotism,
firmness, and ability with which you have discharged the duties of
Secretary of War." After the order had been issued changing the
assignments of district commanders Gen. Grant made another unavailing
protest, and declared that there were "military reasons, pecuniary
reasons, and, above all, patriotic reasons, why this order should not be
insisted on." Failing to move the President he continued to exercise the
powers of Secretary of War until the 14th of January, 1868, when he
informed Mr. Johnson that he had received official notice that the
Senate had refused to sanction the suspension of Mr. Stanton, and that
he regarded his functions as Secretary of War ad interim as
ceasing from the moment of the receipt of that notice. Being unable to
retain him, the President appointed Gen. L. H. Thomas Secretary ad
interim, and instructed the General of the Army to disregard any
orders coming from Mr. Stanton until he knew from the President himself
that they were his own orders. Gen. Grant asked that this instruction be
put in writing, whereupon a correspondence followed, in which the
General combated the President's view of his powers and corrected
statements that had been made concerning his own conduct. The President
claimed that Gen. Grant had promised to sustain and act with him, which
the latter denied, reviewing his course clearly in a letter dated Feb.
3, in which he said: "The course you would have it understood I agreed
to pursue was in violation of law and without orders from you, while the
course I did pursue, and which I never doubted you fully understood, was
in accordance with law and not in disobedience of any orders of my
superior." In conclusion, he said: "And now Mr. President, where my
honor as a soldier and integrity as a man have been so violently
assailed, pardon me for saying that I can but regard this whole matter,
from the beginning to the end, as an attempt to involve me in the
resistance of law for which you hesitated to assume the responsibility
in orders, and thus to destroy my character before the country. I am, in
a measure, confirmed in this conclusion by your recent orders directing
me to disobey orders from the Secretary of War--my superior and your
subordinate--without having countermanded his authority to issue the
orders I am to obey." President Johnson attempted to punish the General
for failing to help his designs by conferring on Gen. Sherman the brevet
title of General of the Army, and placing him in command at Washington.
This Sherman declined, as did Gen. Thomas, whom the President tried to
use for the same purpose. Johnson then turned to Hancock, who had been
sent to New-Orleans to relieve Sheridan, some of whose orders while
there Gen. Grant felt compelled to revoke. It was by Grant's
intercession that a bill for mustering Gen. Hancock out of the service
for the part he had taken was defeated. Nevertheless the latter accepted
the command of the new military division with headquarters at
Washington, which the President had created for the purpose of
humiliating Grant.
XI. First Term as President
This controversy
increased rather than diminished the popular confidence in the greatest
hero of the war. Before the end of 1867 a public meeting in this city,
promoted by prominent citizens, including A. T. Stewart, William B.
Astor, Hamilton Fish, Moses Taylor, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Peter Cooper,
and Moses H. Grinnell, had declared in favor of his nomination for the
Presidency. When the Republican National Convention met in Chicago on
the 20th of May, 1868, there was no thought of any other candidate. A
convention of soldiers and sailors, held on the preceding day, and
composed of large delegations from most of the Northern States, declared
that the "soldiers and sailors, steadfast as ever to the Union and its
flag, fully recognize the claims of Gen. U. S. Grant to the confidence
of the American people, and believing that the victories achieved under
his guidance in war will be now illustrated by him in times of peace by
such measures as shall secure the fruits of our exertions and a
restoration of the Union upon a loyal basis, we declare it as our
deliberate conviction that he is the choice of the soldiers and sailors
of the Union for the office of President of the United States." His
nomination by the convention was unanimous on the first call of the
States. His letter of acceptance, dated May 29, was very brief and quite
characteristic. He said that if elected it would be his endeavor "to
administer all the laws in good faith, with economy, and with the view
of giving peace, quiet, and protection everywhere." "In times like the
present," he said, "it is impossible, or at least improper, to lay down
a policy to be adhered to, right or wrong. Through an administration of
four years new political issues not foreseen are constantly arising, the
views of the public on old ones are constantly changing, and a purely
administrative officer should always be left free to execute the will of
the people. I always have respected that will, and always shall. Peace
and universal prosperity, its sequence, with economy of administration,
will lighten the burden of taxation, while it constantly reduces the
national debt. Let us have peace." At the election he received the
Electoral votes of all the States voting except Delaware, Georgia,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, New-Jersey, New-York, and Oregon. Three
States, Mississippi, Virginia, and Texas gave no vote for President. The
popular majority was 309,684, the whole number of votes being 5,716,082.
Of the Electoral votes, 214 were cast for Grant and 80 for Seymour.
The First Cabinet
After the canvass of
the Electoral vote a committee was appointed to present Gen. Grant with
the certificate of his election. In his reply to the committee he
announced his determination to make known his choice of Cabinet officers
before his inauguration on account of the many preferences that had been
urged upon him, but he declared that he should endeavor to call around
him advisers who would carry out the policy of economy, retrenchment,
and a faithful regard for the Government's obligations. In his inaugural
address he declared that while he felt the responsibilities of his new
position he accepted them without fear. He urged the strict enforcement
of all laws, saying that he knew of "no method to secure the repeal of
bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their stringent execution." He
dwelt especially upon the duty of paying the national debt in gold and
returning to specie payments. When the names of Cabinet officers were
sent to the Senate they created some surprise. They were E. B.
Washburne, of Illinois, for Secretary of State; A. T. Stewart, of
New-York, for Secretary of the Treasury; J. D. Cox, of Ohio, Secretary
of the Interior; Adolph E. Borie, of Pennsylvania, Secretary of the
Navy; John M. Schofield, of Illinois, Secretary of War; J. A. J.
Creswell, of Maryland, for Postmaster-General, and E. R. Hoar, of
Massachusetts, Attorney-General. The appointments were promptly
confirmed, but it was at once discovered that Mr. Stewart was
disqualified by a law of 1789, and the President asked that he be
exempted from its operation by a joint resolution. A motion was made to
repeal the law, but Senator Sumner objected to its present
consideration. Shortly after Mr. Stewart solved the difficulty by
declining, and the President withdrew his request. George S. Boutwell
was then appointed Secretary of the Treasury. Within a few days Mr.
Washburne resigned to take the French mission, and Hamilton Fish was
appointed to his place in the Cabinet; Gen. Schofield gave place to Gen.
Rawlins, who died in September, and was succeeded by Gen. Belknap, and
Mr. Borie retired, to be succeeded by George M. Robeson. During 1869 the
President took a deep interest in the completion of the work of
reconstruction, recommending by special message the act of Congress
providing for elections in Virginia, Texas, and Mississippi, and urging
the adoption of the act completing the work in Georgia. He wrote to his
brother-in-law, Judge Dent, of Mississippi, to induce him not to stand
as the candidate of the "Conservative Republicans" for Governor, as his
success would result in the defeat of what he believed to be "for the
best interest of the State and country." Judge Dent accepted the
nomination nevertheless, and was defeated by the Radical candidate
Alcorn. In his first annual message Gen. Grant urged still more strongly
the policy of returning as speedily as practicable to specie payments,
and suggested the advisability of tariff revision for the reduction of
taxes. He showed his interest in the interoceanic canal question by
announcing that the Minister to Colombia had been instructed to obtain
authority for a survey to ascertain the practicability of the Darien
route. He also discussed the Cuban rebellion and the controversy with
Great Britain over the Alabama claims. Another incident of the year was
the appointment of the Quaker Peace Commission to deal with the Indians.
San Domingo
It was in the first
year of his Administration that Gen. Grant conceived his great interest
in the plan of annexing a part of the island of San Domingo or acquiring
a naval station in the Bay of Samana. Treaties having that in view were
negotiated in 1869 and were followed by a good deal of commotion in the
island and opposition to the whole scheme in this country. The
opposition to the treaties was led by Senator Sumner, who had been
estranged from the President by the recall of his friend Motley from the
English mission. Their ratification was defeated. The President
continued to urge the subject as one of great importance, and obtained
authority at the beginning of 1871 to appoint a commission to go to San
Domingo and inquire into the whole subject. This commission, consisting
of B. F. Wado, Andrew D. White, and S. G. Howe made a favorable report,
and in a message submitting this to Congress, April 5, 1871, the
President said: "And now my task is finished, and with it ends all
personal solicitude on the subject." He declared that his opinion was
confirmed; that the "interests of our country and San Domingo alike
invite the annexation of that republic," but he suggested that no
immediate action be taken "beyond the printing and general dissemination
of the report." His apparent belief that the sentiment of the country
would sustain the policy of annexation was not justified, and in this
scheme were some of the seeds of the opposition to his Administration
which sprang up in the year following.
On the 30th of March,
1870, the adoption of the fifteenth amendment of the Constitution was
proclaimed, and the President took occasion to notify Congress in a
special message, as he considered it "a measure of grander importance
than any other one act of the kind from the foundation of the Government
to the present day." But he expressed the belief that it imposed upon
the Government the duty of encouraging and aiding "by every means within
their constitutional powers" popular education throughout the country.
Other special messages, in addition to one urging upon the Senate the
ratification of the treaty with San Domingo, related to measures to be
taken for increasing commerce and building up the mercantile marine and
one in relation to Cuban affairs. In the former he favored a subsidy
policy, and in the latter urged a strict neutrality. A proclamation of
neutrality in view of the war between France and Germany was issued in
August, in which the duties of Americans were defined. The negotiation
with Great Britain for the settlement of the difficulties relating to
the Alabama claims and the fisheries resulted in the treaty of
Washington in 1871 and the subsequent arbitration at Geneva. In all
these proceedings Gen. Grant took a conspicuous and creditable part, his
treatment of the questions involved evincing a clear understanding and a
dignified firmness in support of American rights, together with a
patriotic solicitude for the peaceful and equitable settlement of all
difficulties.
Kuklux Times
The year 1871 was
characterized by political disorders in various parts of the South. On
the 23d of March the President sent a special message to Congress
calling attention to these, declaring that the evils were beyond the
control of the State authorities, and that it was not clear that the
power of the National Executive, acting within the limit of existing
law, was sufficient for the emergency, and urgently recommending "such
legislation as in the judgment of Congress shall effectually secure
life, liberty, and property and the enforcement of law in all parts of
the United States." The result was the passage of the act to enforce the
provisions of the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution, which
empowered the President to suspend the writ of habeas corpus under
certain defined circumstances. On the 4th of May a proclamation was
issued calling attention to this act and enjoining its observance. In
this the President said: "Fully sensible of the responsibility imposed
upon the Executive by the act of Congress to which public opinion is now
called, and reluctant to call into exercise any of the extraordinary
powers thereby conferred upon me, except in case of imperative
necessity, I do nevertheless deem it my duty to make known that I will
not hesitate to exhaust the power thus vested in the Executive whenever
and wherever it shall become necessary to do so for the purpose of
securing to all citizens of the United States the peaceful enjoyment of
the rights guaranteed to them by the Constitution and laws." Disorders
continuing, especially in the State of South Carolina, a proclamation of
warning was issued Oct. 12, followed on the 17th by a proclamation
suspending the privileges of the writ of habeas corpus in nine counties
of that State. These vigorous proceedings, followed by uncompromising
efforts to enforce the law, finally put an end to what were known as
Kuklux outrages. It was in 1871 that Justices Strong and Bradley were
appointed to fill vacancies on the bench of the Supreme Court which
resulted in the reversal of the decision of the court adverse to the
constitutionality of the Legal Tender act.
Steps for Civil Service Reform
In his second annual
message to Congress in December, 1870, Gen. Grant called attention to
the need of reform in the civil service. He said: "I would have it go
beyond the mere fixing of the tenure of office of clerks and employes
who do not require the advice and consent of the Senate to make their
appointments complete. I would have it govern, not the tenure, but the
manner of making all appointments. There is no duty which so much
embarrasses the Executive and the heads of departments as that of
appointments; nor is there any such arduous and thankless labor imposed
on Senators and Representatives as that of finding places for their
constituents. The present system does not secure the best men, and often
not even fit men, for public place. The elevation and purification of
the civil service of the Government will be hailed with approval by the
whole people of the United States." In March, 1871, by a clause in the
Sundry Civil Appropriation bill, the President was authorized to
"prescribe such rules and regulations for the admission of persons into
the civil service of the United States as will best promote the
efficiency thereof, and to ascertain the fitness of candidates." He was
also authorized to employ suitable persons to conduct the necessary
inquiries and to establish regulations for the conduct of persons who
may receive appointments in the civil service. Under this authority a
Civil Service Commission was appointed, consisting of George William
Curtis, A. G. Cattell, Joseph Medill, D. A. Walker, E. B. Ellicott,
Joseph H. Blackfan, and David C. Cox. In December the President
transmitted to Congress the first report of the commission, with the
rules adopted for competitive examination, &c. He said: "We propose also
that in this country the places in the public service shall be restored
to those who are found to be fitted for them, and if any one is disposed
to think that an abuse of 40 years is a law of the republican system a
little reflection will show him his error. If he believes a reform is
impossible he merely shows that he is the victim of the abuse, and
forgets that in America every reform is possible." He expressed his
determination to enforce the rules that had been adopted, but asked for
them the sanction of Congress. "The improvement of the civil service,"
he said, "is emphatically the people's cause, the people's reform, and
the Administration which vigorously begins it will acquire a glory only
less than that of the salvation of a free Union." Of the sincerity of
his purposes at this time there can be no doubt, and the practical
failure of this first movement for civil service reform was due to a
lack of support from Congress, strong pressure from politicians, and the
absence of a sufficiently mature and vigorous public sentiment on the
subject.
The changes in the
Cabinet near the beginning of Gen. Grant's first term were followed by
others before its close. In 1870 Attorney-General Hoar resigned and was
succeeded by Amos T. Akerman, of Georgia, who was followed by George H.
Williams, of Oregon, in December, 1871. J. D. Cox, Secretary of the
Interior, also resigned in 1870 and was succeeded by Columbus A. Delano.
XII. Re-Elected President
The course of the
Administration in 1871 in the treatment of political disorders in the
South elicited a strong protest from the Democratic Party, which was put
in the form of an address to the people by the Democratic members of
Congress. In connection with the disappointment produced by some of the
President's appointments it also caused dissatisfaction among a small
body of Republicans and led to the agitation which at once secured Gen.
Grant's renomination and caused the Liberal Republican diversion of
1872. In April, 1871, a public reception had been tendered to the
President at Indianapolis, in which Senator Morton took a leading part.
This was regarded as the beginning of a movement looking to a second
term, the continuance of the policy of the Administration being declared
of the utmost importance to the country. Already early in the same year
at St. Louis there had been public expressions of disapproval of Gen.
Grant's course by Republicans. On the 10th of March, at a private
meeting in Cincinnati, in which J. D. Cox, Stanley Matthews, and other
Republicans took part, this opposition had assumed more tangible shape,
and a committee had been appointed to draft a declaration of principles
and purposes. Their report, signed by 100 Republicans, was the basis of
the movement which led to the convention at Cincinnati on the 1st of
May, 1872.
The political agitation
of 1872 was varied. The Labor Reformers nominated David Davis for
President, but after the nomination of Greeley at Cincinnati he
withdrew. Subsequently, declaring that they would support neither Grant
nor Greeley, they nominated Charles O'Conor, who never accepted the
candidacy. Greeley had been nominated after the convention of May 1 had
been deterred from naming Charles Francis Adams by a somewhat singular
letter from him. A month after the nomination of Greeley the Fifth
Avenue conference was held which nominated William S. Groesbeck for
President, and after the Democratic Convention had accepted Greeley, a
convention of straight Democrats at Louisville nominated Charles O'Conor
for President and John Quincy Adams for Vice-President, both of whom
declined. In the midst of these dissensions the regular Republican
Convention at Philadelphia, on the 5th of June, had renominated Gen.
Grant by acclamation, and put Henry Wilson on the ticket for the office
of Vice-President. A brief letter of acceptance was dated June 10, in
which the candidate for President said: "If elected in November and
protected by a kind Providence in health and strength, I promise the
same zeal and devotion to the good of the whole people for the future of
my official life as shown in the past. Past experience may guide me in
avoiding mistakes inevitable with novices in all professions and all
occupations." He expressed the hope of leaving to his successor, whether
at the end of that or another term of office, "a country at peace within
its own borders, at peace with outside nations, with a credit at home
and abroad, and without embarrassing questions to threaten its future
prosperity." He received a popular majority at the election in November
of 762, 991 and the Electoral votes of all the States except Georgia,
Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Tennessee, and Texas.
The Treaty of Washington
Gen. Grant's first term
as President was characterized by the successful negotiation and
execution of the treaty of Washington and its scheme of arbitration, the
failure of the project for annexing San Domingo, the completion of
reconstruction and a consistent adherence to the policy of protecting
life and political rights in the South, a firm advocacy of honesty in
the payment of the public debt in coin, and of a speedy return to specie
payments. The President urged a liberal policy in building up the navy,
encouraging the merchant marine by subsidies, developing internal
improvements, including a system of waterways from the Mississippi River
to the Atlantic seaboard, and the promotion of an interoceanic canal at
the isthmus. To him, at this time, is also due the inception of the
policy of civil service reform.
In his second inaugural
address Gen. Grant showed some feeling at the criticism and attacks that
had been made upon him. He made a brief explanation of his past course
and future purposes, declared that in all his public services he had
"performed a conscientious duty without asking promotion and without
revengeful feeling toward any section or individual. Notwithstanding
this," he added, "throughout the war, and from my candidacy for my
present office in 1868 to the close of the last Presidential campaign, I
have been the subject of abuse and slander, scarcely ever equaled in
political history, which to-day I feel that I can disregard, in view of
your verdict, which I gratefully accept as my vindication." Through his
second term, as during the first, the foreign policy of the country was
characterized by great dignity and firmness, a punctilious regard for
the claims of other nations and an unwavering support of our own. The
Cuban difficulties afforded occasion for skillful and judicious
diplomacy and were successfully dealt with. In a special message to
Congress near the beginning of 1874 the President explained the incident
of the capture of the Virginius by a Spanish vessel and the course which
had been taken by the Government, completely vindicating its authority
and yet preserving amicable relations with Spain. The President recurred
to the San Domingo affair frequently, and in his very last message
insisted upon the purity of his motives and the soundness of his
position, recalling the grounds of his action not as a "recommendation
for a renewal of the subject of annexation," but "to vindicate my [his]
previous action in regard to it."
Specie Payments
In nothing was Gen.
Grant more persistent and untiring than in his efforts to maintain a
sound system of currency and finance. In every annual message and in
several special messages he urged the importance of a strict regard for
the faith of the Nation and a constant adherence to the purpose of
re-establishing specie payments. After the panic of September, 1873, he
wrote a number of letters, including one to a New-York bank President,
on the relation of the Government to the crisis and its duty in adhering
to a firm and consistent policy. An important opportunity came to him in
April, 1874, when Congress passed the bill "to fix the amount of United
States notes and the circulation of national banks," known as the
Inflation bill. This he vetoed in a message setting forth clearly and
vigorously his objections and his views on the questions involved. In
insisting on the necessity of returning to specie payments he said: "I
am not a believer in any artificial method of making paper money equal
to coin when the coin is not owned or held ready to redeem the promises
to pay; for paper money is nothing more than promises to pay, and is
valuable exactly in proportion to the amount of coin that it can be
converted into. While coin is not used as a circulating medium, or the
currency of the country is not convertible into it at par, it becomes an
article of commerce as much as any other product. The surplus will seek
a foreign market, as will any other surplus. The balance of trade has
nothing to do with the question." In June of the same year, in reply to
an application from Senator Jones, of Nevada, who had been "deeply
impressed by the clearness and wisdom of the financial views" which he
had expressed in conversation, he gave out a memorandum of those views
for publication. In this he set forth more explicitly than he had done
before the measures which he considered important for the restoration of
specie payments. He advocated the repeal of the Legal Tender act to take
effect in a year, a provision for the redemption of Government notes in
coin after another year and their cancellation, the process being
facilitated by issuing bonds to be sold for gold as needed, and the
gradual withdrawal of all bills under $10, and the removal of all
restriction on free banking. In approving the resumption act in January,
1875, he transmitted a special message to the Senate, dwelling on the
importance of the act and of measures which should fully prepare for the
change in the condition of the currency. This he did, he said, because
he felt that the subject was of such vital importance to the whole
country "that it should receive the attention of and be discussed by
Congress and the people, through the press and in every way, to the end
that the best and most satisfactory course may be reached of executing
what I deem most beneficial legislation on a most vital question to the
interests and prosperity of the Nation." He did not cease so long as he
was in office to exercise his utmost influence toward the permanent
establishment of a sound financial policy.
Up to December, 1874,
President Grant had constantly urged upon Congress the necessity of
giving legislative sanction to the civil service rules. In his annual
message at that time he declared that it was impracticable to maintain
them "without the direct and positive support of Congress," and
announced that if that body adjourned without positive legislation on
the subject he should regard such action as a disapproval of the system
and abandon it, "except so far as to require examinations for certain
appointees to determine their fitness." Already the trouble had occurred
in relation to changes in the New-York customs service which led to the
resignation of Mr. Curtis as head of the commission. Nominally the
system was continued until Congress failed to make appropriations for
its expenses. The President was accused of disregarding the principles
of the system in his own appointments, for then there was no distinct
classification of the grades of the service to which the rules were
applicable and no authoritative sanction for their consistent
application. He always professed a desire to carry out the reform
faithfully within its proper scope, but failed to get the necessary
co-operation and support.
Disorders in the South
Political troubles in
certain of the Southern States did not cease so long as Gen. Grant
remained in the office of President. During his last term he always
deprecated any interference by the Government which was not imperatively
necessary to preserve peace and good order in the States. Early in 1873
he called the attention of Congress to the controversy in Louisiana on
account of the disputed election of the previous November. He stated
that he had recognized as the de facto Government that which had been
installed as the result of the decision of the Returning Board of the
State, and declared his purpose to adhere to its support if no action
was taken by Congress. He said: "I am extremely anxious to avoid any
appearance of undue interference in State affairs, and if Congress
differs from me as to what ought to be done I respectfully urge its
immediate decision to that effect. Otherwise I shall feel obliged, as
far as I can by the exercise of legitimate authority, to put an end to
the unhappy controversy which disturbs the peace and prostrates the
business of Louisiana by the recognition and support of the Government
which is recognized and upheld by the courts of the State." Congress
took no action, and the trouble was renewed with violence in 1874, when
a new canvass took place for the election of members of the Legislature.
Adherents of the McEnery and Penn ticket of 1872 resorted to arms in
New-Orleans against Kellogg, who appealed to the President for
protection. A proclamation was issued Sept. 15 warning "turbulent and
disorderly persons" to disperse within five days and submit themselves
to the law. United States troops, under Gen. Emory, were commanded to
preserve the peace. The trouble ceased for the time, and in referring to
it in his December message the President defended his course as the only
alternative left him by the inaction of Congress. He could only
recognize the State Government that existed in form under the State
laws. The trouble broke out afresh after the election, the Returning
Board having left several disputes unsettled as to the return of members
of the Legislature. The President sent Gen. Sheridan to New-Orleans to
investigate and report, and if necessary take command of the military
forces there. Gen. Sheridan took sides against Speaker Wiltz, who had
been chosen with the help of persons not returned as elected to the
House of Representatives. At the demand of Gov. Kellogg these persons
were ejected by Gen. De Trobriand and the Republican majority was
established with the aid of the military. The course of the President
and Gen. Sheridan gave rise to sharp criticism, in which some prominent
Republicans took part. The President submitted a special message on the
proceedings at New-Orleans in January, 1875, in which he discussed the
affair at length, and deplored the necessity of interference for the
preservation of order and protection of life and property. He earnestly
asked for Congressional action that should leave his duties perfectly
clear, "giving assurance at the same time that whatever may be done by
that body will be executed according to the spirit and letter of the law
without fear or favor." The opponents of Gov. Kellogg, finding the
national authorities on the side of the established Government of the
State, gave over the contest until the campaign of 1876.
At the election in
Texas, in December, 1873, the Democrats were successful for the first
time since reconstruction. The constitutionality of the law under which
the election was held was attacked, and it was declared invalid by the
Supreme Court of the State. Gov. Davis appealed to the President for
troops to sustain him in power. The President replied with the query,
"The act of the Legislature of Texas providing for the recent election
having received your approval, and both political parties having made
nominations and having conducted a political campaign under its
provisions, would it not be prudent, as well as right, to yield to the
verdict of the people as expressed by their ballots?" The Governor was
also reminded that his application was not made in accordance with the
requirements of the Constitution and the laws. The people of the State
were left to settle the controversy, and Gov. Coke was inaugurated under
protection of armed men. To a statement from the United States Marshal
that a conflict seemed inevitable the Attorney-General replied that
there was no power to interfere with force, and the parties should be
appealed to settle their differences peaceably. In Arkansas there was a
long controversy, beginning with the election of 1872, between Joseph
Brooks and Elisha Baxter, both Republicans, and both claiming to have
been elected Governor. In the Spring of 1874 the President was appealed
to for support by both sides. He replied to Baxter, expressing the hope
that the difficulty could be peaceably adjusted by the Legislature,
promising all assistance and protection to such adjustment that could be
given under the Constitution and the laws, and hoping that the military
forces on both sides would be disbanded. An attempt was made at
Washington under the sanction of the President to manage a compromise
between Brooks and Baxter, and an agreement to abide by the action of
the Legislature. This was rejected by Brooks, but the Legislature in May
having declared Baxter duly elected Governor and appealing for
protection against domestic violence, the President issued a
proclamation recognizing Baxter, commanding all turbulent and disorderly
persons to disperse and submit to the constituted authorities. This was
followed by provision for a Constitutional Convention in Arkansas; a new
Constitution was adopted and a new election held, at which A. H. Garland
was chosen Governor, although the old term of office extended to 1877.
An attempt was made to renew the controversy, and the President was
again called upon to interfere in the month of November. He declined and
turned the whole business over to Congress, which had ordered an
investigation. In a special message, Feb. 8, 1875, he again appealed to
Congress to take definite action and "relieve the Executive from acting
upon questions which should be decided by the legislative branch of the
Government." Once after this, and previous to the canvass of 1876, the
President was asked to interfere to protect a State Government, the
appeal coming from Gov. Ames, of Mississippi, in September, 1875. In
directing the Attorney-General to reply to Ames the President said: "The
whole public are tired out with these annual Autumnal outbreaks in the
South, and the great majority are ready now to condemn any interference
on the part of the Government. I heartily wish that peace and good order
may be restored without issuing the proclamation, but if it is not, the
proclamation must be issued. But if it is, I shall instruct the
commander of the forces to have no child's play. If there is a necessity
for military interference, there is justice in such interference to
deter evil doers." He urged that the local authorities should endeavor
to settle their own difficulties. There was no intervention, and the
Democrats carried the ensuing election.
Changes in the Cabinet
The only change in the
Cabinet at the beginning of the second term was caused by the retirement
of Secretary Boutwell, who was succeeded by William M. Richardson, of
Massachusetts. Mr. Richardson resigned in 1874, and B. H. Bristow was
appointed, accepting the office June 4. On the 24th of June, the same
year, Marshall Jewell succeeded Mr. Creswell as Postmaster-General. In
April, 1875, Attorney-General Williams resigned and was succeeded by
Edwards Pierrepont. In July Secretary Delano, of the Interior
Department, tendered his resignation, which was accepted on the 22d of
September, when Zachariah Chandler, of Michigan, was appointed to the
vacant place. The same year Treasurer Spinner resigned, and was
succeeded by John C. New, and Commissioner of Internal Revenue J. W.
Douglass gave way to Daniel D. Pratt. In 1873, on the death of Chief-
Justice Chase, Morrison R. Waite, of Ohio, was appointed to the vacancy.
It was in 1875 that the frauds upon the Internal Revenue Department
known as the "whisky frauds" were discovered. On the 10th of May 32
distilleries and rectifying houses were seized in St. Louis by officers
of the Treasury Department. Prosecutions followed, which resulted in the
conviction and imprisonment of Special Agent John A. Joyce and
Supervisor John McDonald. Indictments were found against William O.
Avery, Chief Clerk of the Treasury Department, and Gen. O. A. Babcock,
the President's private secretary. The former was convicted in December,
1875, and the latter was acquitted in February, 1876. At the time of the
discovery of the frauds the President had urged Secretary Bristow to
prosecute the offenders vigorously and "let no guilty man escape."
Afterward he disapproved of some things in the Secretary's course, it
being claimed that the latter was using the proceedings to discredit the
Administration and its friends and to advance his own political
fortunes. The difference resulted in Bristow's resignation June 20,
1876, and the appointment of Lot M. Morrill in his place. In the
meantime, near the beginning of the year 1876, Secretary of War Belknap
had been charged with corruption in disposing of a trading establishment
at the military post of Fort Sill. Being threatened with impeachment, he
resigned his place on the 2d of March, and his resignation was promptly
accepted. Resolutions in favor of impeachment were adopted the same day,
and the trial followed, ending on the 1st of August in an acquittal for
lack of two-thirds of the Senate in favor of conviction. The vote was 35
to 25 on the first article, some Senators explaining that they voted
"Not guilty" on the ground that the Senate had no jurisdiction, since
the accused had resigned his office before the proceedings began.
Alphonso Taft was appointed Secretary of War March 7, 1876, and resigned
May 22 to take the post of Attorney-General on the appointment of Mr.
Pierrepont as Minister to England. J. Donald Cameron succeeded Taft as
Secretary of War. July 11 Postmaster-General Jewell resigned and was
succeeded by James H. Tyner.
Among the incidents of
Grant's second term was the Centennial Exhibition at Philadelphia. This
was first proclaimed by the President July 3, 1873, and the
Commissioners for the several States were appointed by him. He also took
a prominent part in the opening proceedings.
On the 4th of May,
1876, the President made a spirited and dignified reply to a resolution
of the House of Representatives calling for information as to his
performance of executive duties at a distance from the seat of
government. In maintenance of the rights of the executive branch of the
Government, he said, he was compelled to decline any specific or
detailed answer to the request of the House. He was free to state,
however, that it had been his habit, as it had been that of his
predecessors, to absent himself at times from the capital, and that he
had not neglected or foregone the performance of his duties at such
times. He was not aware of any failure therein that had occurred. To
this message he appended a memorandum of the absences from the seat of
government of his predecessors, during which they had continued to
perform executive duties.
Third Term Talk
Before the middle of
Gen. Grant's second term there began to be talk of his nomination for a
third term. This started the familiar anti-third term agitation, which
was promoted by the ambition of other aspirants for the candidacy. In
1875 the Republican Convention of Pennsylvania, while praising Gen.
Grant's Administration in the highest terms, declared itself
"unalterably opposed to the election to the Presidency of any person for
a third term." This induced the President to write a letter to the
Chairman of that convention, in which he declared that he "never sought
the office for a second nor even for a first nomination," but had
vacated a congenial position because he was made to believe that the
public good called him to make the sacrifice. After accepting a first
term he was subject to "such a fire of personal abuse and slander,"
notwithstanding the conscientious performance of his duties to the best
of his understanding, "that an indorsement from the people, who alone
govern republics, was a gratification that it is only human to have
appreciated and enjoyed." As to a third term he said, "I do not want it
any more than I did the first. I would not write or utter a word to
change the will of the people in expressing their choice." After
expressing a doubt as to the wisdom of restricting that choice, he
added: "The idea that any man could elect himself, or even nominate
himself, is preposterous. It is a reflection upon the intelligence and
patriotism of the people to suppose such a thing possible. Any man can
destroy his chance for the office, but no one can force an election or
even a nomination." He declared that he was not and had never been a
candidate for renomination and would not accept it "unless it should
come under such circumstances as to make it an imperative
duty--circumstances not likely to arise." In September of the same year,
in a speech at the reunion of the Army of the Tennessee at Des Moines,
the President made some remarks upon the necessity of keeping public
education free from sectarianism and maintaining the independence of
Church and State, which were distorted by his enemies--or more
accurately speaking, by the friends of Mr. Blaine--to represent him as
seeking support for a third term by exciting prejudice against the Roman
Catholics. But the anti-third term movement derived its real strength
from the disfavor into which the Administration had fallen in
consequence of the scandals of the Belknap trial and the whisky ring
prosecution and the failure of civil service reform. There was a
conference of Republicans opposed to the Administration in the city in
May, 1876, which represented the demand for administrative reform. The
antagonism springing from this independent element, from the supporters
of Bristow and the workers for Blaine, together with a perceptible
weakening of confidence in the President, was such that when the
Republican Convention was held at Cincinnati, on the 14th of June, Gen.
Grant's name was not brought forward for the nomination at all.
The Campaign of 1876
During the canvass
which followed the conventions of 1876 the Government took measures for
the preservation of order and the protection of rights in the South. By
an order of the War Department, dated Aug. 15, Gen. Sherman was
instructed to have all available forces "in readiness to be used upon
call or requisition of the proper legal authorities, for protecting all
citizens, without distinction of race, color, or political opinion, in
the exercise of the right to vote, as guaranteed by the fifteenth
amendment, and to assist in the enforcement of certain condign and
effectual punishment upon all persons who shall attempt, by force,
fraud, terror, intimidation, or otherwise, to prevent the free exercise
of the right of suffrage, as provided by the laws of the United States;
and have such force so distributed and stationed as to be able to render
prompt assistance in the enforcement of law." This was followed in
September by a circular of instructions from the Attorney-General to
United States Marshals respecting their duties. The only call for troops
prior to the election came from Gov. Chamberlain, of South Carolina. A
proclamation was issued on the 17th of October commanding unlawful
combinations to disperse and the same day Gen. Sherman was directed to
place all available force in the division of the Atlantic at the command
of Gen. Ruger at Columbia, to be stationed where they could be most
effectually used, in case of resistance to the authority of the United
States. After the election, and while the result was in dispute in South
Carolina, the President gave orders for the use of the military to
preserve order only. Gen. Augur, in Louisiana, was instructed, Nov. 10,
"to preserve peace and good order, and to see that the proper and legal
Canvassing Board are unmolested in the performance of the duties. Should
there be any ground of suspicion of fraudulent count on either side,"
the President added, "it should be reported and denounced at once. No
man worthy of the office of President should be willing to hold it if
counted in or placed there by fraud. Either party can afford to be
disappointed in the result. The country cannot afford to have the result
tainted by the suspicion of illegal or false returns." It was at the
President's request that a delegation of prominent Republicans from the
North went to New-Orleans to supervise the canvass of votes. His
subsequent course was limited to precautions against any breach of law.
In signing the Electoral Commission bill, Jan. 29, 1877, President Grant
submitted a special message to the Senate approving the measure as
"calculated to meet the present condition of the question and of the
country," but urging the necessity of "permanent general legislation to
meet cases which have not been contemplated in the Constitution or laws
of the country." On motion of Mr. Conkling this "important and wise
message" was ordered printed and to lie on the table. In the settlement
of the pending controversy the President had no part to take, and on the
4th of March he retired from the White House after an occupancy of eight
years, covering a period of great importance in the history of the
Republic.
XIII. The Trip Around the World
On retiring from office
Gen. Grant determined to indulge his taste for foreign travel by making
a trip around the world and visiting places of interest on the way.
After a hasty visit to his old home at Galena, stopping at Cincinnati on
his way, where a reception was tendered him, he embarked from
Philadelphia May 17 on the steamer Indiana with his wife and oldest son.
A distinguished party of friends accompanied him down the river and bade
him adieu amid an enthusiastic demonstration of the people on shore. He
arrived at Liverpool May 28, and was received by the Mayor and members
of the Council in State. His tour of two years was attended by such
attentions and marks of distinction as have rarely, if ever, been
accorded to any living man. After a public banquet at Liverpool he
visited Manchester, and reached London on the 1st of June, where he was
greeted on his arrival with an address from the Lord Mayor and
Corporation. His five weeks in the British metropolis was a round of
festivities and compliments. He received the freedom of the city in a
gold box at a splendid banquet in Guildhall June 16, visited the Queen,
and dined with the royal family at Windsor June 27, received the degree
of D. C. L. from Oxford and made a visit to the ancient university,
where he was enthusiastically received. At a grand entertainment got up
in his honor by the authorities of Liverpool he received a
congratulatory address from the United Associations of British
Workingmen. He left London for a quiet visit to the Continent July 6,
crossing from Folkestone to Brussels. Though intending to travel quietly
he could not avoid all the attentions which the people desired to bestow
upon him. The King of Belgium called upon him at Brussels, he had a
public reception at Cologne, was entertained at a magnificent dinner at
Frankfort, and was everywhere enthusiastically greeted. At Geneva he
laid the cornerstone of the American Episcopal Church July 27, and after
being entertained at a banquet there crossed through the Simplon Pass
into Northern Italy. After a short tour amid the picturesque scenery
there he returned through Alsace-Lorraine to Great Britain, arriving
Sept. 1. He now visited Scotland, receiving the freedom of the cities of
Edinburgh and Glasgow, with other flattering attentions, spent some time
at the industrial centres in the North of England, where enthusiastic
receptions by the working people were a gratifying incident of his
experience. He visited Stratford-on-Avon on his way to Birmingham, and
there a holiday was made in his honor and an address was delivered to
him inclosed in a box of the wood of Shakespeare's mulberry tree. He
crossed the Channel in the latter part of October and made his first
visit to Paris, where he was received with the same demonstrations of
admiration and respect that had attended him elsewhere. He was the
frequent guest of President MacMahon, and attended numerous receptions,
dinners, and other complimentary ceremonies. He left France for the
Mediterranean in December, embarking on the United States steamer
Vandalia. He touched at Genoa Dec. 15, visited Naples, Mount Vesuvius,
and Pompeii a few days later, and reached Malta on the 28th, where he
was received with great distinction by the British authorities. There he
dined with the Duke of Edinburgh, and after a further cruise in the
Mediterranean visited Egypt and the Holy Land. At Alexandria, in
February, 1878, he was received as the guest of the Khedive. He went up
the Nile, visited the Suez Canal, and dined with de Lesseps, proceeded
to Jaffa, and made his journey thence to Jerusalem and other points of
interest in Palestine. Returning through Syria he embarked at Beyrout
for Rome, where, on the 30th of March, he was presented to the Pope by
Cardinal McCloskey, who had been taking part in the ceremonies attending
the elevation of Leo XIII to the Pontificate. After a short stay in Rome
he was taken by the Vandalia to Constantinople, where he was received by
the Sultan April 6, and presented with some Arabian horses from that
ruler's own stables. He next sailed for Greece, and was the guest of the
King at Athens, and by May 12 he was again in Paris to attend the
Exposition. He next made a trip through Holland, Germany, Denmark,
Norway, and Sweden to St. Petersburg, receiving the most distinguished
attentions everywhere. After a short stay in Russia, visiting points of
interest, he reached Vienna Aug. 18, and proceeded thence through
Switzerland and Southern France to Spain and Portugal. At Madrid he was
the guest of Castelar and afterward of the King, attended a grand review
and other entertainments in his honor, and at the end of the year
returned to Great Britain for the purpose of making a visit to Ireland.
He was enthusiastically received in Dublin, and at Cork encountered the
only slight he was destined to suffer on his extended tour. In January,
1879, he passed through France on his way to embark from Marseilles for
India, stopping on his way to dine with Marshal MacMahon in Paris. He
left Marseilles Jan. 23, passed through the Suez Canal and the Red Sea,
and took the steamer at Aden for Bombay Feb. 6, arriving on the 12th. He
visited all the famous places in India, being everywhere received by
natives and English with the most flattering attentions. At Calcutta he
was received by a guard of honor and entertained at a state banquet by
the Governor-General, Lord Lytton. In the latter part of March he
proceeded through Burmah and Siam to China. At Bangkok he was the
recipient of special attentions from the King. Passing through Cochin
China, with the incident of a reception by the French authorities at
Saigon, he reached Hong Kong April 30. Thence he went to Canton and
Shanghai, and later to Pekin and Northern China, many receptions and
entertainments being given in his honor by both native and foreign
notabilities. On the 1st of July he reached Yokahama and had a special
audience with the Emperor and Empress of Japan on the 4th, the Mikado
delivering a eulogistic speech of welcome. On the 7th there was a
brilliant review in honor of the great American General, and on the 8th
a gorgeous festival in the great hall of the Kobu Dai Gaku. An incident
of the visit to Japan was an invitation from Li Hung Chang, Viceroy of
Tien-Tsia, by authority of Prince Kung, to act as mediator between that
Government and Japan for the settlement of the Loo-Choo difficulty.
Leaving Yokohama Sept.
3, 1879, Gen. Grant and his party arrived at San Francisco on the 26th,
where a most enthusiastic reception of the authorities and the people
awaited them. After a short stay in San Francisco he visited other parts
of California and the adjoining States, including Oregon, and then made
his way eastward in a leisurely manner. In November he was once more at
his old home in Galena, and before the end of the year he was in
New-York and Philadelphia among admiring friends. But his travels were
not yet ended. Early in January, 1880, he set out for a Southern trip.
Passing through Augusta, Ga., Savannah, Charleston, and Jacksonville, he
made a visit to Havana, sailed thence to Vera Cruz, and spent some time
in Mexico, where he was treated with great distinction. He returned by
way of Galveston, reaching that city March 22, visited New- Orleans,
Mobile, and Memphis, and in the latter part of April was again at
Galena. He visited Iowa and other States west of the Mississippi during
the Summer, extending his journey to Santa Fe, New-Mexico, and returned
East in October.
XIV. Again a Candidate
During Gen. Grant's
absence from the country the question of his nomination for the
Presidency for a third term was again agitated, and after his return the
agitation took the form of serious efforts on the part of his political
admirers to bring the nomination about. The most prominent leaders among
these in their several States were Senators Conkling, Cameron, and
Logan. The Pennsylvania and New-York conventions of the Republican Party
were held early in 1880 and declared in favor of Grant's candidacy. The
example was followed in some other States, and many delegates were
chosen who were either pledged or known to be favorable to him. The
party sentiment in the South was strongly in his favor, and if it had
found free expression he would undoubtedly have received the nomination,
but there the Federal officeholders were wont to determine the selection
of delegates, and they were largely controlled in the interest of the
candidacy of Senator Sherman. The anti-third-term sentiment was still
agitated and used to advance the ambition of Mr. Blaine, while certain
Republicans of independent proclivities were for Edmunds or Washburne.
Throughout the 36 ballots in the National Convention, with the exception
of the one before the last, in which the Garfield movement fairly
started, from 302 to 312 votes out of a total of 756 were cast for Gen.
Grant. At that time he was on his way back from a visit to Mexico, and,
on hearing of the nomination of Garfield, expressed his approval, which
was afterward reiterated in letters to Secretary Dorsey, of the National
Committee, and to Gen. Arthur. On the 28th of September, while on his
way from the West, where he had spent the Summer, he made a speech at a
public meeting at Warren, Ohio, where Senator Conkling was the principal
speaker. In October he accompanied Conkling on a campaign trip through
this State, and gave his influence and support unreservedly to the
Republican ticket. During the same month he made a short trip through
New-England, one incident of which was a visit to Plymouth Rock. He was
entertained in Boston and Hartford at receptions. After the election he
received great attention in New-York and Brooklyn, visited Washington in
December, where he was received with special honor by Congress, and
Albany in January, 1881, where a reception was rendered him by the two
houses of the Legislature.
XV. Last Years
It was about this time
that he determined to settle down and make his home in this city. When
the World's Fair enterprise was under consideration, at the beginning of
1881, he consented to accept the Presidency of the commission, but
finding that, owing to division among the promoters of the undertaking
and the difficulty of obtaining a proper site, there was little prospect
of its being successfully carried out, he resigned on the 23d of March.
He continued to take great interest in the question of an interoceanic
canal at the isthmus, and publicly advocated the Nicaragua project. It
was understood that if that plan were carried out by private capital he
would accept the Presidency of the company. He also became interested in
Mexican railroad schemes, and made a second visit to Mexico in the
Spring of 1881 to obtain a concession for a company, of which he was to
be the head. He also took great interest in the general question of
establishing closer commercial relations with Mexico, and was largely
instrumental in securing the negotiation of the reciprocity treaty which
was signed Jan. 20, 1883. He was, in fact, with Mr. Trescot, a
Commissioner on behalf of the United States in conducting the
negotiations for that treaty, which took place the previous year. Gen.
Grant's name and influence were much sought after for association with
financial schemes, and he accorded a too ready assent. The banking firm
of Grant & Ward, in which his sons were interested, was formed in the
latter part of 1880, and he appeared as a special partner, and gave it
his confidence and support while taking no active part in the business
or, in fact, knowing much about its operations, which were conducted
chiefly by Mr. Ward. The failure of the firm took place on the 6th of
May, 1884, and its circumstances are still familiar.
Among the incidents of
Gen. Grant's last years was his review of the case of Gen. Fitz John
Porter, at the request of the latter's friends, and his candid avowal
that he found that he had previously been mistaken in his judgment. He
then, by correspondence and by a discussion of the case in a prominent
review, did what he could to promote the restoration of Gen. Porter to
the rank to which he would have been entitled on the retired list had
the sentence of the court-martial not been pronounced. The proposition
to place his own name on the retired list with the rank and pay of
General, which he had given up to accept the office of President, was
first made in Congress in 1881, and the bill for that purpose passed the
Senate in February, 1882. Owing to his supposed association with
profitable financial operations and active participation in private
business, it was not zealously supported in the House. It passed the
Senate again in 1884, and was taken up in the House at the following
session in 1885, where it met with little direct opposition, as it was
then known that Gen. Grant was out of active business, without wealth,
and in a bad state of health traceable in part to a serious accident
which he incurred by slipping down on the icy pavement in front of his
house in Sixty-sixth-street on Christmas Even, 1883, and to his
financial misfortunes. It was passed by the House, and being returned to
the Senate a few moments before the hour of adjournment on March 4, it
was enrolled and immediately signed by President Arthur, who at once
sent to the Senate a message nominating Gen. Grant to the place upon the
retired list provided in the bill, and the nomination was promptly
confirmed. This act entitled Gen. Grant to the pay of a General, $13,500
a year, but only during his life.
His Fatal Illness
The Progress of the
Malady to Which He Succumbed
The first evidence of
the disease which has terminated the life of Gen. Grant appeared during
his Summer residence in Long Branch in 1884. He had not been a well man
since Christmas Eve, 1883, when he slipped and fell on the ice and
received a painful injury in the hip. Pleuro- pneumonia followed, which
was aggravated by boils and bed sores, due to long confinement, and it
was several weeks before he was able to leave his house and hobble about
on crutches. During this time, however, his throat gave him no trouble,
and even his physicians had no suspicion of the existence in his system
of the germs of the terrible disease which has resulted in his death.
On June 2, 1884, while
eating his lunch at Long Branch, the General, as he tasted some fruit,
felt a lump in the roof of his mouth, and found that swallowing was
painful. The lump grew more troublesome day by day, and finally he
consulted Dr. De Costa, of Philadelphia, who was also passing the summer
at the Branch. Dr. De Costa at once recognized the fact that the trouble
was of a serious character, and advised Gen. Grant to consult his family
physician, Dr. Fordyce Barker, of this city, immediately. The General
unfortunately neglected to act on this advice until late in October
last, when the trouble with his throat increased to such an extent that
he found great difficulty in either eating or sleeping. Dr. Barker saw
that the disease was liable, if not promptly arrested, to develop into
cancer. He sent the General to Dr. J. H. Douglas, a specialist in throat
diseases, who had formerly treated patients of Dr. Barker's
successfully, and he at once began to treat the distinguished invalid.
It was on Oct. 22,
1884, that Gen. Grant first came under Dr. Douglas's charge as a
patient, and he continued to treat him until his death. At the outset
Gen. Grant was not confined to his house, and for four weeks he drove in
his carriage to Dr. Douglas's office nearly every day, submitted to an
examination of his throat, and received treatment calculated to allay
the pain. In addition to the trouble with his throat he had a very bad
tooth on the left side, which was exceedingly painful and caused him
much loss of sleep, which, of course, added to the irritation of the
throat. Drs. Barker and Douglas advised him to have this troublesome
tooth removed, which he did, and, acting on the advice of the dentist,
he also had three other decaying teeth extracted, which contributed
greatly to his relief. His physicians also believed that the irritation
of his throat was greatly increased, if it had not been originally
caused, by smoking. The General was an inveterate smoker, and his cigar
on the battlefield has become as much a matter of history as the story
of his life itself. To give up a life- long habit, which had been so
confirmed as this, was no easy task, and the physicians, recognizing
this fact, confined their advice to requesting him to limit his
indulgence in tobacco. They recommended him to confine his smoking to
three cigars a day, smoking only the first half of each, which would be
comparatively harmless, as the bulk of the nicotine in a cigar is
concentrated in the last half smoked. After complying with this
suggestion for a few days the General voluntarily abandoned smoking
altogether, and his abstinence, contrary to expectation, had no bad
effect upon his nerves.
Under the treatment of
Dr. Barker, who attended to his general system, and Dr. Douglas, who
devoted himself specially to the throat trouble, Gen. Grant improved
steadily, and at the end of four weeks he discontinued his visits to Dr.
Douglas altogether. During the warm days of early December he felt so
much relieved that he began to take morning walks, and during one of
these, which was the longest he had taken since the injury sustained by
his hip the previous Winter, he caught a cold. This was followed by an
aggravated return of his old trouble, which took the form of a severe
attack of acute pain in the throat, and prevented him from eating,
speaking, or sleeping. On Dec. 16 he again placed himself under the
charge of Dr. Douglas, and from that time on his treatment was
continual. The difficulty, as it then existed, consisted of an
irritation of the epithelium extending to the gland in the throat on the
right side at the angle of the jaw. The gland was enlarged very much and
was very painful. There was a slight ulceration in the tonsil of the
right side, and also a point of irritation in the roof of the mouth,
where the soft palate joins the hard palate. Here the epithelium was
very much thickened in three patches looking very much like warts, and
each about a quarter of an inch in diameter. Muriate of cocaine was
applied to relieve the General from the intense pain in the angle of the
mouth where the membrane is deflected from the tongue up to the soft
palate. This was applied twice a day at first and gave almost instant
relief from the pain. Then, as the patient sensibly improved, the
cocaine was applied daily, and later on every other day. The ulceration
in the tonsil was kept in a healthy condition by the application of
iodoform. Under this treatment, combined with that of Dr. Barker, which
was mainly constitutional, and intended to keep up the tone of the
system, the trouble in the throat was relieved, so that by Jan. 13 last
the congestion and inflammation had almost entirely subsided, and the
General was able to eat and sleep with comparatively little difficulty.
The patches in the roof of the mouth, however, refused to yield, but
they were not painful, and the General was cheerful and able to work
hard on his personal memoirs, which he was engaged in preparing when the
disease first attacked him. Everything indicated a continued
improvement, and his physicians, while they foresaw that cancer must
inevitably develop, had great hopes at this time of prolonging Gen.
Grant's life for a long time to come. On Feb. 17, however, the General,
while making his daily visit to Dr. Douglas, caught a severe cold, which
again prostrated him.
The physicians were
anxious to make a more satisfactory investigation of the nature of the
disease than was possible by examining Gen. Grant's mouth, and on Feb.
18 the throat was sprayed with a 41 per cent solution of the
hydrochlorate of cocaine, which allayed to a great extent the
irritability of affected tissue. Then Dr. F. C. Riley removed from the
ulcerated edge of the posterior pillar of the fauces a piece about as
large as a small pea. This, after being hardened by treatment with
alcohol, was subjected to a microscopical examination by Dr. George R.
Elliott, who found that the tissue examined was composed largely of
epithelial elements, grouped frequently under the form of distinct
lobules. The cells forming these lobules lay in close contact, and
showed a marked tendency to be arranged in concentric globes or "nests."
This latter arrangement of epithelia is characteristic of that form of
cancer known as epithelioma. The lobulated appearance of the epithelial
mass indicated a tendency of the new cell formation to burrow into the
deeper parts of the underlying tissue, and extravasations of blood were
also found among the epithelia. This condition Dr. Elliott regarded as
pointing to a new developing growth, and cell dissolution, leading to
rupture of the capillary blood channels, by which their contents escape
into the surrounding tissue. The conclusion reached by Dr. Elliott from
his microscopical investigation was that the more or less lobulated
appearance of the epithelial mass, the actual existence of some "cell
nests," the great diversity in the shape of the cell elements, the
marked evidences of epithelial proliferation, and the peculiar
appearance of the stroma warranted the diagnosis of epithelioma of the
squamous variety.
On Feb. 19 a
consultation was held in Gen. Grant's house by Drs. Fordyce Barker, the
family physician; John H. Douglas, who had special charge of the throat
trouble; Henry B. Sands, and T. M. Markoe. The General's throat and
mouth were thoroughly examined, and although the result of the
microscopical examination by Dr. Elliott was not then known, the
physicians all agreed that the trouble from which the General was
suffering was cancer. The only difference of opinion expressed at this
consultation was as to the probable rapidity of the fatal development of
the disease. The cancer was decided to be epithelial and malignant. If
it were in any other part of the body medical skill might hold it in
abeyance, but all that could be done for the patient was to prevent him
as far as possible from suffering pain, and thus lighten his steady
journey to the grave. The consulting physicians agreed that no possible
good could result from an operation to remove the cancer. The ulceration
had narrowed down under Dr. Douglas's treatment until it came out of the
root of the tongue. There was also a perforation of the folds of the
membrane which constitute the anterior border of the tonsular cavity.
From the time of that consultation the certainty of Gen. Grant's death
from the cancer was accepted by the doctors, and by such of the public
as knew of its result.
After that time Gen.
Grant sank slowly but steadily. His face showed little signs of the
disease, but his limbs fell away under the double effect of
sleeplessness and a lack of appetite. The food which he took was as a
general thing liquid, and he seemed to have no relish for it, taking it
only because it was ordered by his doctors, as he took medicine. He
found it almost impossible to sleep at night, and tossed restlessly
about until 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning, when he generally managed to
get asleep, from which he arose refreshed toward noon. Occasionally he
felt well enough to do some work on his book, and the one subject of his
waking thoughts seemed to be the completion of this work. He was always
glad to see old friends, and would talk with them as long as they
remained, but the doctors were obliged to limit these interviews, as
they resulted in increasing the irritation in the patient's throat. The
General was confined after March 1 to his bedroom and library on the
second floor of his house, and after that date he did not go down
stairs, except on such occasions as he felt well enough to take a short
ride in Central Park, accompanied by Dr. Douglas. His strength gradually
wasted away, and his sleeplessness increased. To overcome the insomnia
anodynes and strong coffee were prescribed, but these failed to bring
the desired relief, and finally, as a last resort, on March 17, a
hypodermic injection of morphia was given. The dose was a very small
one, but it induced the sleep which the patient required.
On March 8 a
consultation of physicians was held, attended by Drs. Barker, Douglas,
Sands, and George F. Shrady. Gen. Grant was quite feeble, although he
was able to walk across his library and seat himself in his chair for
the examination of his throat. It was found that the ulceration of the
posterior pillar of the right fauces had extended, and that the
perforation at the base of the anterior pillar had increased, so that
its internal edge was converted into a small bridle of tissue. The
entire soft palate was uniformly reddened and swollen, and the right
posterior border of the tongue was indurated from a point just in front
of the anterior pillar of the fauces as far back as could be reached by
the finger. The most grateful local application to the throat, next to
the spray of a 4 per cent solution of cocaine, was that of a hot
solution of salt and water, in the proportion of five parts to the
thousand, which the General used occasionally as a gargle. After the
consultation the ulcerative process in the anterior pillar extended to
the adjoining side of the tongue, and the bridle of tissue bounding the
perforation of the anterior pillar internally gave way on March 11. The
General's digestion was good at this time, and he suffered no pain, but
the local malady had perceptibly increased, and the parts in the
vicinity of the ulcerations were becoming more infiltrated.
On March 13 Gen. Grant
astonished his family by himself asking for food. He spent a short time
in writing, and then still further surprised them by ordering a chop,
which he ate with apparent relish, swallowing the fibre as well as the
juice. It was the first solid food he had eaten in several weeks, and
his indulgence enforced its own penalty in an increased soreness of the
throat. The next day, however, he ate another chop for breakfast, and
was driven in the Park for a half hour. On March 15 another consultation
was held by Drs. Barker, Douglas, Sands, and Shrady. The conclusion was
that the local disease had shown no marked tendency during the week
toward progressive ulceration. A thorough examination of the General's
throat was made with a view of discussing the expediency of a radical
surgical operation for the removal of the cancerous growth. Such a
measure would involve the division of the lower jaw in the median line,
the extirpation of the entire tongue and the greater part of the soft
palate, together with the removal of the ulcerated and infiltrated
fauces and the indurated glandular structures under the right angle of
the lower jaw. This was decided to be mechanically possible, but the
surgeons did not feel inclined to recommend the operation, as there
would be no guarantee that the limits of the disease could be reached
without immediate risk to life by severe shock to a constitution already
much enfeebled.
Mrs. Sartoris, the
General's only daughter, Nellie, arrived from Europe on March 20, and
although the physicians allowed her to have but a short interview with
her father for fear of unfavorable effects, her presence in the house
seemed to exert a beneficial influence on the sufferer, and that night
he slept remarkably well. During the week ending March 28 Gen. Grant
took several drives in the Park, the effect of which was apparently
good, but he continued to suffer from insomnia, to relieve which
morphine in small quantities was used. At the consultation held on March
22, which was attended by Drs. Douglas, Sands, and Shrady, it was
decided that the local disease was still in abeyance, and that the area
of ulceration had not perceptibly increased. The swelling under the
right angle of the lower jaw was somewhat greater, but the gland was not
more indurated, nor had it become more firmly fixed. There was no pain
in the act of swallowing, and from all the indications the doctors felt
no fear of any sudden failure of the vital powers, or of any
encroachment of the ulcerative process on the neighboring blood vessels.
The conclusion was that the death of the General might by proper
treatment be postponed for some little time. On Thursday, March 26, Gen.
Grant, at his own request, was submitted to a long examination in regard
to his connection with the affairs of Grant & Ward, taken in the
criminal trial against James D. Fish. In this examination he was obliged
to do a great deal of talking, and he arose from it somewhat exhausted,
but the doctors found no permanent bad effects from his exertions.
The first alarming
crisis in the General's illness, which gave rise to fears of his speedy
death, occurred in the early morning hours of Sunday, March 29. He had
taken a ride late on Saturday afternoon, from which he returned
apparently in good spirits, though somewhat fatigued. When Dr. Douglas
left him at 11 o'clock that night he was sleeping easily, and it was
thought that he would pass a good night. At about 1 o'clock Sunday
morning, however, he began to toss uneasily in the bed, and awoke
suddenly with a choking sensation in the throat, which prevented him
from breathing except with extreme difficulty. Drs. Douglas and Shrady
were hastily summoned and found the General suffering from a secretion
in the throat which he could not eject. After working nearly an hour
with their patient the doctors succeeded in relieving him and he was
placed under the influence of chloroform. The danger was considered so
great at this time that Drs. Douglas and Shrady remained at the
General's bedside until 4 o'clock in the afternoon, and Dr. Douglas
returned at 10 in the evening and passed the night watching with his
patient. The result of this violent attack of choking was to leave Gen.
Grant very weak, and as a consequence less able than before to struggle
with the disease which had fastened upon him.
For several days and
nights he was careful not to assume a recumbent position. He used his
chair for sleeping purposes as well as rest. He made no exertion of any
kind, and was unusually silent. He ate liquid food impassively, and
seemingly without inconvenience. Local applications reduced the
secretions in the throat, and no fears were entertained of a return of
the suffocating feelings of Sunday. A fit of coughing weakened him
greatly and his prospects looked cheerless, but on April 1 a change for
the better occurred. On the following day his physicians predicted he
would live to see Easter Sunday, and the General's improvement became so
marked as to be a subject of general comment. He grew bright and chatty,
and asked if he might not take a drive. His family began to think that
the disease had taken a permanently favorable turn. For three or four
days after this, although Gen. Grant was weak and despondent, he did not
become noticeably worse. Indeed, helped by anodynes, he passed the much
dreaded dawning hours without a recurrence of severe attacks until April
5, when he was seized with violent coughing, and the family were
summoned to what they feared would be the closing scene. On the night of
April 7 a fit of coughing brought on hemorrhage, from which grave
results were again feared. But that occurrence turned out to be of real
benefit, for it loosened the hardened secretions that coated the mucous
membranes of the affected parts, and in a few days they were dislodged,
leaving a clean surface of throat.
From this time
improvement continued steadily and with comparative rapidity for a week.
On April 11 and 12 his physicians left him unattended during part of
each day. The experiment was premature, for on the night of April 12 he
had a relapse, which lasted for two days. Then his improvement gained
something in permanency. He walked down stairs on April 16. On April 20
he was permitted to go to drive. He resumed work on his book during the
ensuing week, during which also he celebrated his sixty-third birthday.
From talking too much while engaged in dictation he was prostrated two
or three times, but his condition suffered no serious impairment until
the week beginning about May 13. Then the cancerous trouble, which had
been quiescent since improvement began, again asserted itself.
On May 16 he seemed
unusually depressed. On the advice of Dr. Douglas he took a ride through
a part of Madison-avenue in a street car instead of a carriage ride
through Central Park. The change was considered advisable on account of
the malarious condition of the Park. Upon his return from this trip his
manner gave his family much uneasiness. His physicians decided that his
depression of mind was due to the state of the weather. Mind and body,
they maintained, needed a change of scene and air. With occasional
slight changes for the better the patient remained in this condition for
a couple of weeks. The swelling in his throat became gradually enlarged,
and on the beginning of June had assumed painfully large proportions.
His voice also grew weaker, and at times became a mere whisper.
The advisability of
removing the General to the country having been thoroughly discussed by
his physicians, the latter concluded that to prolong his life a change
of air had become absolutely necessary. On June 17, accompanied by the
members of his family and Dr. Douglas, Gen. Grant was taken to Mount
McGregor, where the cottage of Mr. Joseph W. Drexel had been placed at
his disposal. He suffered much pain on the journey, and at its
conclusion was greatly exhausted. He spent a wakeful night and on the
succeeding day seemed ready to give up the fight. He wrote a note to
Col. Fred Grant and another to Dr. Douglas. Each contained a simple
death message. The General felt his end approaching and confessed his
inability to continue the struggle for life. Dr. Douglas at once
telegraphed for Dr. Sands, and the latter reached Mount McGregor on June
18. He found Gen. Grant had improved during the night. Both doctors
pronounced him not to be in immediate danger. On the following day he
was weaker than usual and passed a weary night. On the night of June 20
he slept for five continuous hours. This was the first really good sleep
he had enjoyed since he had left New-York. On June 28 he was able to do
some work on his memoirs. For several days his condition was
encouraging, but the case thereafter was one of increasing exhaustion.
The Patient in the
Sick Room
His Bravery While
Suffering and His Thoughtfulness for Others
The story of Gen.
Grant's patience under suffering, if it could be fully and faithfully
told, would be as pathetic as anything ever written. Fortitude in the
face of lingering death; a calm exterior when the truth could no longer
be concealed from his family and friends, and when all the
manifestations of his companions were of solicitous fear; a brave heart
and placid face when hope was gone; an unceasing anxiety to do for
himself while strength lasted and to save others trouble--these were
conspicuous features in his demeanor.
He had been a sufferer
for 19 months, almost without interruption. From first to last he bore
himself the same. The fall which made him take his bed happened as he
was engaged in an act of generosity. It had been his habit to make
presents of money or other gifts to his servants at the holiday season.
The accident happened in this way: On reaching his carriage he drew from
his pocket a twenty-dollar bill and offered it to his coachman as a
Christmas gift. To hand it to the coachman he had to step round the
carriage stone near the curb. As he extended his arm he slipped on the
icy pavement and fell heavily on his hip against the curb and stepping
stone. He was carried into the house and kept his bed for several weeks,
pleurisy in a severe form following the accident.
This was Gen. Grant's
first real sickness. It came upon him when he was nearly 62 years old.
Accustomed to outdoor life, with a constitution that had withstood
hardships without number, from the malarial attacks of a Southern
climate during four years of campaigning, in which he never spared
himself, to the strain and harassments of two terms in the White House
of exceptional excitement and responsibility, it was not unnatural to
expect that he would be impatient of sick room restraint. But his
self-command never failed him. He could not hide wholly the physical
signs of his malady, but neither his expression nor voice betrayed him.
He was always kind, always undemonstrative of pain, never murmuring, and
fully disposed to bear his affliction with the least possible annoyance
to those about him. When at last he was able to leave the sick room he
had to do it with the aid of crutches. No one knew how much of a
humiliation it was to the old soldier to go about in this way until
after the crutches were laid aside. Even then he mentioned it in a
bantering spirit. "Two legs were always good enough for me," he said,
"and I shan't want four again."
By the time the General
ceased to be an acute sufferer from his injured hip and its attendant
disease neuralgic pains came upon him. Sometimes they accompanied the
pleural fever, when it seemed to him as though the veins of his head and
body would burst. Breathing at such times was labored and painful. He
would sit in his chair or lie on the bed with his hands clinched and his
jaws compressed, without a groan or syllable of complaint escaping him.
When the physicians were near he would tell them simply how he felt,
rather understating his sufferings. The habitual calmness and quiet
manner in which he reported his condition to those who were about him
professionally were for a long time misleading. Indeed, it was not until
his frame began to waste and his voice to weaken that the physicians
fully understood his silent endurance. He never meant to mislead any one
in regard to his condition. The habit of saying little about it was due
to his desire to avoid giving trouble. No patient could be more
considerate than he of the feelings and comfort of those who attended
him. When asked if he was suffering severely--and such was usually the
case, of late months especially-- he would respond with a simple "Yes,"
and then rouse himself to an effort to turn the conversation to another
subject. And while scrupulous never willfully to misstate his
sufferings, although ever disinclined to make show of them in any way,
he expected, also, that no one would mislead him.
The appearance of the
cancer in June last year foreshadowed the end to him long before any one
else but the doctors apprehended fatal results. One of his first
questions when his throat was examined was, "Is it cancer?" His
suspicions amounted almost to a conviction that it was, and when he was
informed that it was epithelioma he was not long in ignorance of what
was meant and implied by that term. So long as the physicians were
hopeful that the cancer might be of a benign nature, meaning that there
was a chance of keeping it in check by toning up the system, Gen. Grant
was hopefully disposed, but the rapid progress of the disease, the decay
of his strength, and the attenuation of his frame soon convinced him of
what the end would be and about how long he could expect to live. He
accepted the logic of this discovery without a murmur.
Visitors to the sick
room, especially after it became definitely known that the cancer was of
a malignant type, invariably came away impressed by the cheerful
demeanor of the General. Such concern as he showed was only in regard to
his memoirs. His only remaining ambition was to finish them. The
completion of the first volume, in December, was hastened by the
General's apprehension that he had no time to lose. Leaving the details
of revision to Col. Grant he went into the preparation of the second
volume with as much vigor as he could command. His library and sleeping
room adjoined. The library contained his notes, and records of the war,
handily arranged for reference. As soon as the General had
breakfasted--his food had been almost entirely liquid since last Fall
and his chief diet milk and eggs--Col. Fred Grant and Gen. Badeau were
in the habit of joining him for work on his book. This was usually done
in the library. The General had not been able to do dictation for a long
time. It was easier for him to write, the strain on his throat making
extended speech painful. The physicians had also interdicted much
talking, as it would aggravate the disease, and Gen. Grant was
punctilious in obeying them.
Sometimes the General
could not sit at the table. When that happened his portfolio was placed
on the arm of his chair, on which also he rested his elbow. Then in few
words he would direct his assistants to read his notes to him as he
wanted them. This work was slow, but it did not tax him heavily, and
although it took him a long time to write a page he could pile up a very
good showing for a sick man by night.
On days when the
General felt unable to write he frequently indicated portions of his
notes from which he wanted abstracts prepared. Thus frequently, when
quite sick, he mapped out enough work to keep his helpers busy for two
or three days. At the end of the third week in March the book had been
carried to the operations attending the crossing of the James, in the
Summer of 1864, about nine months before the surrender of Lee. The rapid
progress made by the disease toward the close of March necessitated the
discontinuance of work on his book. He laid down his pen without the
expectation of writing another line of his memoirs, and gave
comparatively little thought to them for a month. Toward the end of
April his thoughts turned once more to his memoirs, and on the 1st day
of May he surprised and delighted his family and friends by resuming
work upon them.
While the preparations
of the book occupied the General's mind more seriously than anything
else, he was not unmindful of other demands upon him. The house
naturally was overrun with callers almost daily since early in March.
One of the few things about which the General allowed himself to express
concern was that his friends should not be denied the privilege of
seeing him. "Any one that really wants to see me," he often said, "ought
not to be sent away." Despite his wishes, it was at times considered
best for him to be left undisturbed, even by intimate friends. Col.
Grant's discretion was relied on to meet these difficulties. That was
one of the few things that were kept from the General. He never felt too
sick to see his friends, even to the last. They relieved the tedium of
his sufferings, and brightened up his spirits. His welcome to visitors
was always cordial.
From the time he became
a sufferer from neuralgia the General had to wear some indoor protection
for his head. During the Fall and Winter it was a knit woolen cap. That
lessened the frequency of the attacks but did not prevent them. When
they recurred in conjunction with the soreness of his throat, his pain
was agonizing. The most effectual and quick remedy for the neuralgia was
an application of very hot cloths. Many times, the pains coming
suddenly, he excused himself from visitors long enough to have the
cloths applied and then resumed his talk as though nothing had happened.
It was the rule with
him, whatever his pain, not to obtrude it further than was really
necessary upon the attention of his visitors or his family. From Col.
Grant he concealed nothing. The Colonel was his most constant attendant.
He knew of every change, every step in the progress of the disease, and
on that account while the physicians were giving out hopeful reports his
utterances on the subject of the General's condition were despondent.
But no one else in the family knew the whole truth about how the General
suffered, and it seemed at times as though the doctors hardly more than
suspected it. Callers on the General were thus naturally misled by his
appearance and manner.
The General was sadly
reduced in flesh during the Winter. From probably 180 pounds he wasted
to 125 or less. His frame and limbs showed emaciation. But his face held
its fullness and color quite well, and his voice was as good as could be
expected in a sick man. It was the common remark of those who saw him
before he left the city, but when his death was considered a matter of
days, that he did not look nearly as bad as they had expected to find
him. So many of them said that to him that he practiced the innocent
deception on callers of receiving them with a small robe thrown over his
limbs. As the emaciation was thus in some degree concealed, he had much
less the appearance of a sick man.
The General was
inclined, singularly, considering his habitual reticence, to talk much
more than was good for him during his cancerous trouble. Whether it was
a natural inclination to talk or a stubborn purpose to conquer the
obstacle in his way cannot be known, but he talked more in sickness than
had been his habit in health, so his friends thought, and sometimes he
was so chatty that it was necessary to chide him. He was always
good-tempered under correction of this kind, while evidently gratified
that the disease was not powerful enough to prevent his talking if his
will took a turn that way. When not in humor to try his strength of
speech he was at all times a good listener. Occasionally during the last
month of his residence in the city he walked about his room when
visitors were there, or followed them into the hall with his woolen gown
hanging about him and helped by his cane. At such times his attempts to
conceal his infirmities were pitiful. "He came to the head of the stairs
with me," one visitor said, "with his gown and cane and electric
skullcap, walking quite briskly for a sick man, but he was a very sick
man."
Until the last he took
nourishment as generously as the doctors suggested. His throat was sore,
and it was an effort for him to swallow. The ulceration at the root of
the tongue was deadened by cocaine. To avoid irritation liquid food was
prescribed. His diet rarely varied from beef soup, beef tea, and eggs
beaten in milk. But at breakfast time his easy chairs were wheeled up to
the grate fire and he sipped his nourishment as daintily and cozily as
though it were food of his choice, although he never had appetite for
it. The only instances of his eating with genuine relish were when he
was allowed a little solid food. Dr. Douglas used to say of him that he
was never hungry and never sleepy, but that he forced himself to eat
well, and, so far as will could control sleep, it was exercised in its
full strength. Unfortunately it became powerless in this respect.
Insomnia was the
General's bane all Winter. He had been troubled more or less with it
since his first sickness a year ago, but it grew upon him most irksomely
after his frame had wasted, and when he needed nothing so much as sleep
to keep his vitality up to the point of resistance to dangerous
encroachments. For hours at a time he would lie in bed with his eyes
closed so that his attendants might get rest, thinking him asleep, but
he was perfectly awake. The doctors, too, habitually credited him with
more sleep than he got, because of his way of closing his eyes and lying
quietly whenever they said they wanted him to sleep.
The rooms in which the
General spent a great part of his time from November last until the
middle of June face the street on the second floor of his house at No. 3
East Sixty-sixth-street, extending across the front. The bow window,
from which there are three angles of vision, lighted his sleeping room
on the west side of the house. The library, into which the sleeping room
opens, is on the east side and is lighted by two flat windows. Mrs.
Grant's room is directly back of the General's sleeping room, and was
connected with it by folding doors. Both the General's sleeping room and
the library were plainly furnished. Two leather-covered easy chairs,
which the General usually occupied; a lounge, a few plain chairs, and a
mahogany bedstead, with a soft modest carpet and plain window hangings,
comprised nearly all the belongings of the room. A crayon picture of
Judge Dent, Mrs. Grant's father, hung over the bed, but the walls were
otherwise almost without decoration. The library shelves were filled
with records, memoranda, military books, and other aids to the General's
crowning work. On the wall hung his commission as Lieutenant-General and
certificates of membership in the Grand Army and various organizations,
mostly of a military character. The office, or working room, and the
sick room adjoined also at Mount McGregor. Both were at the back of the
cottage--the office at the corner and the sick room inside. The latter
is a medium sized apartment with two windows looking out on a wooded
slope. It was plainly but comfortably furnished by Mr. Drexel, the owner
of the cottage. The General's easy chairs, which were sent up from the
city, were also put into it, as was a cot for the nurse, Harrison. A
door opens from it into the parlor, as well as one into the office. The
sick room walls got their share of the many pictures of the General that
were sent from various quarters. It has been proposed that the cottage
be deeded to the Government, that a fence be put around it, and that it
be preserved about as the Grant family leave it. Mr. Drexel has
consented to do this should it seem advisable. He has ornamented the
rooms with bric-a-brac taken from his Saratoga home. These articles he
would remove, but he would leave the furniture, carpets, and other
belongings as they were in the General's lifetime.
When abed the General
had a fashion of curling up into the smallest possible space. He lay
always on a small hair pillow, but took in his arm an immense feather
pillow, which he hugged close to his cheek, with his arm under it, as a
child sleeps. His crouching position enabled him easily to leave the bed
in an instant. He seldom gave notice of an intention to move, and
surprised his attendants often by appearing in the middle of the floor
on his way to his favorite easy chair. This was a square, roomy chair,
upholstered and trimmed with fine leather. The seat was long ago
softened for him by a feather pillow. A table, with his medicines and
whatever else he had use for, usually stood close to the arm of the
chair. On seating himself he almost invariably rested his arm across the
corner of the table. Another armchair or a large footstool, both of
which were handy, was then rolled up in front of him for his feet and
legs. After he began to use a robe to cover his limbs the footstool was
in demand oftener than the second easy chair.
Although the patient
rarely mentioned it it was long known to his attendants that whenever he
left his bed for the chair he was suffering, sometimes nervously, at
times from soreness of the throat or base of the tongue, and sometimes
from other pains. Such mental trouble as kept him awake bore on his book
and on the future of his family All of his friends knew how anxious he
was to finish the book. Few heard anything of the other source of
concern. When he bought the house in which he died a mortgage remained
on it for $52,000. He meant to give the house to his wife, and worried
that his affairs denied him the comfort of providing a place for her
that she might call home after his death. These were the only two
sources of worriment. He accepted as inevitable his physical decay and
said little about it. The cruel reports at one time published of his
worrying over the course in Congress of the Retirement bill were utterly
baseless. His mind did not descend to sordid or political
considerations.
When the General was in
his easy chair he liked to see his family and his friends about him,
unless he felt very miserably. His daughter was his chief delight. He
loved the music of her voice, and her caresses. Scarcely a day passed
when they were not left for an hour or so together, that she might read
to him the news and chat with him. At such times he lay back in his
chair with closed eyes, commenting occasionally on what she read and
enjoying every minute of her company. It was his usual custom of late to
keep his eyes closed when sitting up, though there were whole days at
times when he was as wide awake as a person in health. His desire for
the company of his daughter was strong also during his hours of
suffering. He seemed to want her always near him when the slightest
danger threatened. She could comfort and cheer him quicker than any one
else. This devotion was fully reciprocated, for her thoughts were all
with him, and often when he slept she glided into his room to see if
anything could be done for him.
His sufferings were
thus lightened by cheerful and loving companionship. Some one of the
family was always with him. His little grandchildren opened the day for
him with sweet greetings, and through the daylight hours Mrs. Grant and
the young ladies of the household were never far from him. At evening
the entire family, with whoever else might be present, gathered for
prayer and quiet and affectionate intercourse, and then, after the
doctor's visit, the night watch began with the Colonel and the General's
body servant as the regular sick room attendants. The General enjoyed
these evenings. No suggestion of gloom ever marred them, although he
knew that they would soon be impossible. Early in March Gen. Badeau
showed him papers which he thought might be of use in the memoirs after
a while. The General looked at them, passed his hand across his
forehead, and returned them, saying: "They are interesting, but I shan't
have time to use them. I shall last only about 30 days longer." Yet to
the end, the General followed the directions of his doctors with a
soldier's obedience. He knew they could do little, but he meant to help
them as much as lay in his power.
An incident on Sunday
afternoon, March 29, showed how Gen. Grant took his apprehension that
the end was approaching. He had just fairly roused from the effects of
the powerful anodyne under which the physicians had kept him during the
morning. They had been with him for 12 or 13 hours, following the
alarming attack of the previous night. On awaking Gen. Grant saw Dr.
Shrady at his bedside.
"Well," he said,
looking quizzically at his physician, "what do you think of me?"
"I think you have a
good deal of backbone--a good deal of it left, General," was the cheery
response.
The General was silent
a moment. Then looking straight at the doctor he said, with no shade of
feeling in his low voice, "I think I am nearly used up."
"Oh, no," the doctor
went on, "there is a good deal to you yet. You have gone through too
much to give out easily."
"Yes," the General
said, somewhat reassured, "it has blown pretty hard my way sometimes."
"That is true," his
companion continued, "but an oak, with its roots imbedded in the rocks
and earth, can't be blown over even in its age. It takes more than one
hurricane to uproot it."
The General smiled at
the simile, well pleased with it evidently, and closing his eyes passed
into a peaceful slumber.
"His courage is yet
unshaken," Dr. Shrady said afterward to Col. Grant, in relating this
incident. "I didn't expect him to be scared. Fright isn't in his nature.
But I never saw such composure in a man who thoroughly comprehended his
situation. Our hope and reliance are in his faith in us, which never
wavers."
On the following
Tuesday morning, when the General awoke, relieved somewhat from the
exceeding weakness induced by Saturday night's attack, Dr. Shrady said
to him: "Now, General, there is a fight on hand. We rely on you to help
us out. You will have to fight for us again as you once did."
"When was that?" the
patient asked.
"When you had the army
behind you."
"Yes," was the grim
response, "but I haven't the army behind me now."
A little later he
cleared all doubt as to the character of his thoughts, when he broke the
silence by saying, "What do you doctors know about me? I may go off in
an hour or last a month. Can you tell which any better than I can?"
He looked for death in
that dreadful attack of Saturday night, March 28. Life had hardly any
more attractions for him. He had felt the glands of his throat swelling
and closing tighter over the air passage, until he had to catch at every
breath and when the secretions gathered in this little opening each
moment was one of simple agony, a perpetual struggle for air. The
terrible feeling of suffocation and pain found expression from his lips
only once during that awful night, when in his torture, he exclaimed, "I
cannot stand this. I shall die."
Yet no other word of
complaint escaped then or since. The weary, weakening days that
followed, when he felt his vitality ebbing and his breath came with a
rasping sound over a surface of throat advanced to the last stages of
his disease, he was unmurmuring. He saw the approach of the end and
spoke of it sometimes, but without regret for himself. To the last he
was kind, patient, and regardful of the comfort of those about him. Of
death he spoke in his last days, as he had ever spoken, as though it
were only a journey to be undertaken without fear.
The Devotion of the
Family
The General's
Suffering Relieved by the Tenderness of His Dear Ones
The devotion of the
family to the General in his sickness was not lost upon the most casual
observer here. It was never ostentatious and differed in no degree from
that which had made the charm of home life in New-York. But in this
retreat, where the focus of outside gaze could more easily penetrate
domestic relations; where, indeed, conventional privacies were displaced
by rural freedom, and where the cottage and cottage life have been the
chief attractions, the happiness of the family and the mutual love that
bound them to each other and to the General have always been a subject
of gratified comment. One did not need to be obtrusive to see what
pleasure that household derived from itself, or how comforting were
these relations to the General's declining days. He was cheered to the
last by the sympathy and love and hopes of those dear to him. Days when
even his strong will would have despaired were brightened by these
influences, and often because of his family, to spare them distress, he
roused to a semblance of activity and interest when he was ill able to
do so, and found that the effort rewarded itself in renewed vigor.
Whatever his condition there was rarely a day when he failed to give
some time to his family. They knew that when he kept his sick room it
was because he could not leave it, and they were careful at such times
not to disturb him, and when, that they might be with him, he sent for
them their sympathy took the form of hope and cheer, calling his mind
away from pain and trouble as far as might be. His delight was to have
them gather around him on the porch, or in the parlor at nightfall, and
to listen to their conversation, though he could take little part in it.
They rarely sat with him long at a time outdoors, for mindful of his
enfeebled state they preferred to leave him to himself rather than risk
wearying him, but at evening, in the parlor, it was always he who
decided how long the gathering should last, leaving it as he felt the
approach of fatigue.
As he had been full of
quiet humor when in health his inclination to the pleasantry remained
with him into sickness, and many of his little written slips will be
preserved as mementos of this trait of his disposition, lingering beyond
his power of speech. He entered into family talk and gossip with much of
his former interest, restrained, of course, by his infirmity, yet
sometimes with an approach to real vivacity. He appreciated what others
were doing for him, and exerted himself always to make full return, so
far as he might.
The devotion of Mrs.
Grant was touching. As careful as any one not to tax him when he needed
only rest, she was never beyond easy call, and had no thought apparently
but for his comfort. Her greeting was the first to cheer him in the
morning after the doctor's treatment. It was her chair that was drawn
close to his on the porch. Whenever he wanted company she was part of
it, and many hours in his last days were spent with her alone. Often
they could be seen together when not a word was spoken, mere
companionship satisfying them. Visitors seeing them thus were wont to
remark that it was as though nothing so well suited them as that their
last days should be as were their first, sufficient for each in the
company of the other. So anxious was she to be at his side that she
would not leave the cottage at any time for any purpose, even declining
to go to the hotel with the family for meals. And when the General was
confined to his sick room or needed absolute rest and seclusion at any
time, she would retire to privacy and comfort herself with prayer in his
behalf. Her faith never wavered that her intercession spared him so
long.
The devotion of Col.
Grant was also most marked, as it had been at home. His services to the
General were beyond value. A light burning late into the night was not
specially conspicuous in New-York, for even on the quiet block on
Sixty-sixth-street the sufferer's home would not be singled out on that
account. But here, where early sleep is the custom, many an hour has the
lamp in the office room at the cottage been the only one to be seen,
while over the table the Colonel leaned, busy often past midnight with
the General's affairs. The family mail did not become less here than it
was in the city. Letters to the General ran from 150 upward a day; proof
revision demanded attention; the thousand and one things of domestic
direction and for family comfort needed an overseer. All this fell to
the Colonel, assisted by Mr. Dawson, the General's secretary and
stenographer. Work on the book, next to his anxiety for the happiness of
the family, was the General's chief concern. In this the Colonel was an
efficient helper.
The General took much
pleasure also with the others of the family. The sunny, affectionate
ways of Mrs. Sartoris were ever a charm. He liked the quick wit of his
son Jesse and the sturdy love of the son who bears his name. The prattle
and caresses of his grandchildren also pleased him. Affection lightened
his sufferings.
Dr. Douglas was almost
like one of the family. In devotion to the General none could surpass
him. For the best part of a year he gave practically all of his time to
the General, and from admiring him he grew to love him. Scarcely a night
for months did he get full rest, and by day he watched the General with
loyalty and diligence that could have but the most commendable
inspiration. Being nearly of the General's age, the work was specially
severe on him, and he showed it in his appearance. Once he had to call
Dr. Shrady to his relief, because he was so much worn that his family
began to fear for him rather than for the General. But even then his
activity was hardly suspended, and it was soon renewed at full pace
again. The General was quick to appreciate what the doctor was doing for
him, and fully reciprocated the affection that prompted it. He had a way
of reporting to the doctor his condition. One day, when he had written
about the sort of night he had passed and how he felt the disease had
progressed, noting in detail the change in his symptoms, he wrote to the
doctor as follows: "I would not have you think that I am usurping your
functions, but I detail to you the phases of the disease, as they appear
to me, for the benefit of medical men in dealing with sufferers from the
same affliction in the future."
The General's
conversation, restricted as it was by his infirmities, was usually
entertaining, and often instructive. One night, when the family were
gathered about him in the parlor, talk turned on the origin of famous
epigrammatic sentences. Some thought that such sentences were usually
the result of long thought. The General's "Let us have peace" was
brought up. On being asked how it was written, whether at a moment's
thought, or after dwelling long upon the subject of his letter, he
wrote: "The story that 'Let us have peace' was an afterthought is not
true, nor was the sentence spontaneous. It followed the rest of the
letter of acceptance as a natural sequence. The first part led up to
it."
It did not escape the
General's attention that everything he wrote was carefully preserved by
those to whom he addressed his slips. One night he showed that this
amused him by a pleasant allusion to it in a note to Dr. Douglas. "I
notice," he wrote, "that when any one gets a slip it is carefully folded
up and saved. No one throws one away. I think I shall have to stop
writing, or some day I will be hauled over the coals for my English."
"Whatever may be the
criticisms on what you have written, General," Dr. Douglas promptly
replied, "no one can ever assail your English."
The General smiled, and
his output of slips was not thereafter stinted. Every one, of course,
wanted one. Dr. Douglas was the envy of people at the hotel, as he went
about with a memorandum book thick with slips, and he was besieged with
applications by mail for specimens; but he rarely parted with one.
How the Memoirs Were
Written
Dictating to a
Stenographer and Personally Revising the Proofs
Necessity prompted Gen.
Grant to write his book. He might have turned to literary work late in
life had not financial disaster overtaken him. He had a fine library,
especially on military subjects. Mrs. Grant had urged him for a long
time to utilize that and his personal records for a book of his own. Had
he taken her advice he would have gone to work at a book instead of
trying to become a financier. With the crash, which came too late in his
life for him to recover and start ahead again, his only solicitude was
for his family and the others dependent upon him. "I must provide for my
family," was his frequent exclamation. "What can I do to provide for my
family?"
Then recurred the
suggestion that he take up literary work and write his memoirs. He had
little heart for it, but as it was a case of necessity he set about
finding what would be the best way of putting his memoirs into shape.
The Rev. Dr. Newman suggested table talks as a way likely to be
attractive and popular, and proposed that the General should take
subjects singly, and after having primed himself with one should get a
stenographer and talk it off to him at a sitting. Other plans were
suggested, and when the General had considered all of them he made his
decision. No time then was lost in beginning work, and none was wasted
in prosecuting it, as every one knows. The accounts of his
manifestations of solicitude about his ability to finish it would in
themselves make a volume. When his intentions were known publishers
besieged him. Their offers varied from 10 to 20 per cent net, all
conditioned upon the completion and sale of the book. Then Samuel L.
Clemens came forward. He knew that the family needed ready money. He
offered 20 per cent on the gross receipts of the book, with $40,000 cash
advance. The contract was made through him with C. L. Webster & Co., the
money to be paid to Mrs. Grant. That ended all cavil, and the General
went ahead with his immediate needs supplied. How his will kept him up
to fulfill his part of the contract in spite of an agonizing sickness
that was always draining his strength and vitality, and that brought him
four times so low that death seemed imminent, has been many times told.
In the compilation and
arrangement of his records, the General was assisted until along in the
Spring by Gen. Adam Badeau, as well as by Col. Grant. Gen. Badeau, from
having been the General's military secretary, and having written his
military life, besides having enjoyed more substantial indications of
the General's high personal esteem, was commonly regarded as the
General's mainstay in the preparation of the memoirs. Reports got out
that Gen. Badeau's pen had been employed in writing up whole blocks of
the book, implying that Gen. Grant, on account of his sickness and his
desire to have the book finished, was letting Gen. Badeau's work go out
as his own. Such reports worried the General. There was no truth in
them, and Gen. Badeau protested that he had nothing to do with starting
them. Matters went on, with Gen. Badeau still assisting in hunting up
and arranging records. One night early in April, when it was thought
that the General was dying, a definite report came out that he had
designated Gen. Badeau as his literary Executor. It was published in all
the papers and commonly believed. Not long after that Gen. Badeau
stopped going to Gen. Grant's. It was understood that a coolness had
sprung up between the Grant family and Gen. Badeau. Nothing was made of
it at the time, for there were too many other things to think of, and
this apparently small matter did not stand beside them. The Grant family
kept the matter secret, regarding it as concerning only themselves and
Gen. Badeau. The latter never spoke of it, and so it dropped quietly out
of public notice. The first volume of the book was supposed to be
completed before the estrangement occurred.
Along in June and July
evidence reached the General and his family that on or before the
publication of the genuine book other books purporting to be "Memoirs of
Gen. Grant" would be issued. They got wind of prospectuses so cleverly
prepared as to deceive a person of average intelligence. They had reason
to believe that the prospectus of Webster & Co. had been appropriated to
the use of other publishers to help the sale of bogus memoirs. Suspicion
was roused that piracy had been practiced, and that canvassers were out
for not less than three distinct books, each claiming to be the
General's memoirs. On top of these discoveries came the most painful
rumor of all, which was that tempting offers had been made for Gen.
Badeau's services in connection with some such work as that indicated.
The family were aghast, and the General felt keen disappointment and
horror at such a possibility. He was chagrined to think that his last
and only possible means of providing for his family were likely to be
hampered by piracy. He was shocked that the name of his old friend, to
whom he had been a benefactor, whom he had trusted fully, should be
connected with any such scheme. He could not believe it of him. At first
he was so incredulous of that report that he would not address Gen.
Badeau about it, thinking that it would be an insult to him. But with
the idea of defeating, so far as might be, the ends of piracy or
perversion he remodeled the first volume of the book after he came to
Mount McGregor, dropping the separate campaigns in order to treat of the
war as a whole, with the campaigns as incidents to it. Essential changes
were made pursuant to this new plan.
Disquieting rumors
continued to come in. Mr. Clemens visited the General for the purpose of
disposing of certain business with the family. The rumors were casually
communicated to him. He treated them lightly, saying that the publishers
could take care of the pirates. The matter then rested for a while. But
the General grew restless. His mind had not been reassured. He did not
believe in fighting in the dark, and he grew impatient under the
strictures on his old friend. On July 13, he wrote a letter to Gen.
Badeau. That was the day when the General had recovered in great measure
from the fatigue induced by his reception to the Mexican editors. Mrs.
Grant sat in the room with him, but did not know what he was writing.
None of the family knew what it was until some time after he had
finished. Then it lay in the house for several days before it was copied
and sent off, that it might be revised by him if any change occurred to
him. It was a kind but firm letter, recalling what they had been to each
other and detailing what he had heard. He was still distrustful of
rumor, although apparently well authenticated, and wanted to give his
old friend a chance to justify himself and deny the rumor if it was not
true. The tone of the letter partook of kindness, pain, disappointment,
and paternal reproof.
It must have occurred
to many, remembering the announcement early in June of the completion of
the book, that there was something incompatible in that announcement and
frequent references from here of continued work on the book. The book
was carried to a point in June at which it might have been considered
complete if the General had died then. But apart from the changes made
necessary as above, he felt and often said that he could work profitably
on it every day up to the time of its publication, if he had strength
enough. It was his ambition to make it complete and accurate. He foresaw
that it would be critically read and would be an authority on the
subjects treated. When he had covered everything that his original and
amended plans contemplated, he had furnished enough manuscript to fill
200 pages more than the contract demanded. That did not worry him, for,
indeed, he went on writing as suggestions occurred to him, adding on an
average a paragraph on his working days. That was a good day's work for
him. Once or twice he wrote considerably more. But the main work with
which he occupied his mind, when the remodeling was done, was in
elimination. The book is brightened by anecdotal reminiscences. Many of
the best anecdotes were eliminated. He was exceedingly anxious not to
hurt the feelings of any one, and for fear that some of his anecdotes,
although related in perfect good humor, might be misconstrued, he
sacrificed them. He had an innocent but funny story about a General who
is now in politics. It was cut out for fear that it might be perverted.
There was a good story about Gen. Burnside, but lest some of Burnside's
family or friends might feel sensitive about it he struck it out. There
were many instances of that kind. Some of his records were exact in
figures, showing the forces that he carried into various operations. He
dropped exactness several times for round numbers for the sake of
avoiding controversy with other authorities on the same subjects. He did
not fear criticism, but he wanted to steer clear of dispute over small
matters and to keep his book above personal cavil and free from things
of a personal nature that might be tortured into evil construction. Good
things that would have lived in story and to which no one but himself
could see objection were thus destroyed. To such corrections and to
other alterations in the proofs the Colonel and Mr. Dawson attended. By
their diligence all the revised proofs for the first volume of the work
were mailed to the publishers on July 11. That was a great relief to
all, for the General's mind could not be quieted on that part of the
book until it was beyond his reach.
Faith in His
Doctors' Skill
Gen. Grant's Written
Expression of His Satisfaction with Their Treatment
Many of the slips on
which the General wrote to Dr. Douglas will be of value in the history
of the case should the treatment ever need vindication. The others the
doctor chose to preserve as mementos of the affection that increased
between the two men during this long and trying ordeal. The General had
a keen appreciation of the jealousy and criticism to which the medical
staff were subjected, and he foresaw that criticism would pick busily to
find flaws after his death with the diagnosis, the treatment, and his
apparent helplessness in the hands of his attendants. Outcroppings of
kindly and well meant criticism which was prompted by friends reached
him on the mountain. It was a common and favorite saying of one of his
most devoted friends that the General never went into a battle merely to
keep off the enemy but to win, and that it was out of all harmony with
his life and habits that this last and most serious battle should have
been undertaken on the defensive. It was recalled that the doctors from
the beginning had never thought of curing the General, but merely of
easing and prolonging his life. The man and the occasion, it was thus
argued, demanded vigorous treatment that would set out to cure, not to
delay. It was urged also that this case ought to produce a degree of
aggressive medical skill which would relieve the profession of the need
of saying longer that this dread disease was incurable. It was love for
the General that suggested such criticism. The General did not agree
with it. As indicated in all parts of the account of his sickness and at
every stage to which it brought him, he believed in his physicians. They
were doing, he thought, not only the best they could for him, but the
best that could be done. His daily reports were made in order to place
the physicians in full possession of all the facts of interest. He did
not suppose them unobservant, but, knowing that the case would be
studied closely, he wanted to acquaint them with what might be beyond
their observation, so that the case, when written, would leave nothing
to be explained. Lest his motive in this should be misunderstood he
wrote notes every now and then indicating that he knew what the disease
was doing and what the end must be, and that all that was possible was
done for him. He wanted Dr. Douglas, his most constant attendant, to
know that his care and watchfulness were not unappreciated by him; that
he realized that to such devoted attendance his life was saved in the
Spring and into the Summer, and that, salubrious as were his
surroundings on the mountain, he felt that the relapses he suffered even
then could have been combated only by constant and affectionate
attention, such as Dr. Douglas bestowed. He believed Dr. Douglas was
just the man for the occasion, and often said so. His feeling toward the
others of the staff was also kind. Dr. Shrady came next to Dr. Douglas
in the General's affection, as he was next in his acquaintance. But all
these incidental notes, expressive of his satisfaction with his
treatment, were naturally addressed to Dr. Douglas, and were given under
circumstances that would be construed to apply to the attention and
treatment of Dr. Douglas. On July 11 the General wrote a statement about
this matter to stand as a defiance to criticism, after his death. He had
been very weak and listless since the preceding Wednesday, when he gave
a reception to the Mexican editors. Three days had passed since that
reception. Dr. Douglas had been so assiduous in his care of the General
in that interval that he exhausted himself, and had sent for Dr. Shrady
to relieve him of part of the sick room duty so that he might
recuperate. He went into the sick room that morning. The General did not
need attention, and the doctor turned to go out, when he was called
back.
"I notice you come in
here often, day and night," the General said. "Why do you watch me so
closely? Do you do it with all your patients?"
"I know I come in often
when you don't need me; often when you don't know it," the doctor
replied. "The reason is that I know that the gaze of the country is
turned on this cottage. In one sense I represent that gaze, and it is my
duty not to leave you long out of my sight. So I come often when I don't
suppose you will need me, but to see, as the representative of the
country, how you are getting on."
"You are very
faithful," the General replied, "I am sorry you have overexerted
yourself for me."
The General sat for a
while reflectively. Mrs. Grant entered the sick room with a clipping
from a Boston class journal which criticised the treatment. That fired
the General. Taking up his pad, weak as he was, he began to write. The
task occupied him steadily for nearly two hours. He put away the sheets
when he had finished. That evening he handed them over to his
stenographer. The transcription covered four sheets of commercial note
paper. He signed and dated the document and handed it over to Dr.
Douglas.
Nothing could
illustrate more kindly his forethought. The paper had not been
solicited, there was no previous intimation of it, and to a patient less
mindful of others and less grateful than he such a thing probably would
never have occurred.
The document was as
earnest as his indignation could make it. It spoke of the disease and
the treatment. He was satisfied, it said, that everything that could be
done had been done for him. The care and watchfulness of his physicians
had eased him through his lingering and painful disease and had
prolonged his life. He was very grateful to them, and believed that
better care and more conscientious attention than he was getting had
never been given a sick man. It could not be questioned, he thought,
that he might have commanded the most noted talent in the country. But
he was satisfied that whatever others might have done for him it could
not be more than he had received. He was perfectly content--and had been
from the beginning--to leave the case to the care of the staff of
physicians who were engaged upon it. He wanted no changes made: no one
sent away and no one added to the staff, and his sanction might be
considered as given to the resentment of criticism in regard to the
treatment. He believed, he said, that he was better treated than
Garfield had been, and that his staff was more competent than Garfield's
regular staff, leaving Drs. Agnew and Hamilton, the consulting
physicians, out of account. The General intended this document to stand
against criticism, both as to the nature of the disease and the manner
and skill with which it was treated, and should it appear in print
before the official history of the case is written it will be provoked
by seemingly earnest and well based criticism. To the last the General's
confidence in his physician was implicit, and no one grieves more deeply
over his death than Dr. Douglas.
The General's Sturdy
Piety
His Whole Life
Molded Upon Religious Principle
Gen. Grant's Christian
faith was simple yet sturdy. It combined childlike trustfulness with the
intellectual vigor of manhood's conviction. While never making display
of that side of his nature, it was the habit of his life to look to
Divine guidance in all of his undertakings, and he attributed his
successes to the inspiration gathered therefrom. Nor was his faith
shaken by reverses, although often in the family circle and with his
closest friends he expressed the wish that he was stronger in his
reliance.
"Oh, if I could only
have the faith that my sister, Mrs. Cramer, has," he sometimes said,
when trials beset him. "Her trusting nature would meet this trouble and
see a bright outcome to it better than I can."
His admiration was
equally strong for the faith of Mrs. Newman, the wife of his friend and
Pastor, the Rev. Dr. Newman. Her womanly sympathy was always cheering to
him, and during the reverses and harassments of the past year or two she
led him to see through the darkness a promise of better days, which
strengthened his purpose to bear uncomplainingly and without
discouragement what fell to his lot. Family prayers were usual in the
household for many years, and some of the most touching scenes of the
sick room have been the gatherings for prayer, to which the family and
guests were invited. Scarcely a day has passed since Dr. Newman's return
from the South without one of these gatherings, always at the General's
instance, the General sitting in his chair, the family and assembled
friends kneeling around him.
The General's religious
experiences date from childhood. He was reared at a reverential
hearthstone; and often in later years he has talked with Dr. Newman
about his spiritual training and belief. On that subject he was never
reluctant to speak, approaching it as freely as any earthly topic. He
spoke of it to few persons, regarding it as a matter with which only
those whom his heart loved were concerned; but in such surroundings his
nature was open and confiding.
In recalling recently
the religious training and experiences of Gen. Grant, Dr. Newman said:
"He was brought up in the Methodist Episcopal Church. His father's house
was the home of Methodist preachers for over 40 years. The General's
earliest recollections were associated with the clergy. He had to care
for their horses. He remembered that the horses were good ones and that
their owners always insisted on their having plenty of oats. Many a time
he was sent out by his father to take off the saddlebags and put up the
horses. Once a preacher was to move from the neighborhood in which the
Grants lived. He was to take his family and furniture in a wagon for 200
miles, and wanted some one to drive for him. Applying to the General's
father for a driver, the old gentleman detailed Ulysses, then a lad, for
that work. Afterward the preacher reported to the boy's father that
never in his life had he had such a good and silent driver.
"The General's father
was a farmer at that time. In later years he lived at Covington, Ky. He
was a churchgoer always, serving in the Methodist Church as Trustee,
Steward, and class leader. Wherever he went he was a ruling spirit in
church affairs. He was a man of sterling character, strong will, high
purposes, and at times arbitrary. His mother was modest, intelligent,
and sunny in spirit. The General inherited her nature. All of his
sisters were devout Methodists. One of them, Mrs. Cramer, married a
Methodist preacher, now the Minister of the Government at Berne,
Switzerland.
"The General was thus
indoctrinated in the faith of the church. He held to those great
principles of Christianity all his life. Accepting the Bible as the word
of God to man, he regarded Christianity as divine. But his mind tended
to the sunny side of Christianity. The beneficent results of the Gospel
promised to him the glory of the Messiah, the universal triumph of
Christianity.
"I became his Pastor in
1869. I have been his guest many times. And at all times, in the White
House at Washington or at his cottage in Long Branch, he always had
family prayer, in which he usually requested me to lead. I called at the
White House on his last Sunday there--his last night in office. Mr.
Hayes was then having a reception at John Sherman's. I found the General
and Mrs. Grant, with Mr. and Mrs. Sartoris, quietly sitting in the Blue
Room. We talked a while. Then at the General's request we all knelt in
prayer.
"I have been with him,"
Dr. Newman went on, "in private and in public and with all classes of
people. Yet I never heard him, utter a profane word or indulge in an
improper story, nor have I ever seen him smile approvingly at an
immodest story which some person present happened to have the audacity
to relate. He was altogether the purest man in conversation of whom I
ever had knowledge. During my pastorate of six years in Washington,
which included the greater part of his Presidency, he was a regular
attendant at church. Storm of no kind ever kept him away. He was the
most attentive and appreciative listener I ever had. To me he was an
inspiration, because of his profound attention and the indirect
influence I exerted through him on others. He was President of our Board
of Trustees and a liberal contributor to the church. His charities were
many and unostentatious. One day I was preaching on 'Lost
Opportunities.' I had occasion to say that whoever desired to find
worthy objects of charity could do so with little effort. I recalled a
visit I had made during the preceding week to a soldier's widow, who was
dying of consumption, and who, although destitute, was happy in the
Christian faith. I mentioned also a man who had lost his sight at
Government work, and who bore his affliction with a saintlike spirit,
although he was in distressing circumstances. After the service, as soon
as the President reached the White House, he sent me a twenty dollar
bill pinned to his card, on which was written, 'Please give $10 to that
soldier's widow and $10 to that poor blind man.' I remember receiving
from him one Christmas Day the following letter:
Executive Mansion,
December 23, 1869.
Dear Doctor: Inclosed
please find my check for $100, for distribution among the poor. Don't
forget the ragged school over on the Island.
Yours truly, U. S.
Grant.
"His life was full of
such deeds of quiet charity."
Recurring to his love
of family prayer, the clergyman continued: "I recall a visit to his Long
Branch cottage, where daily we had prayers after breakfast. One morning
an English gentleman called while we were at the table. He remained so
long that there was no opportunity that day for morning devotions. The
next morning the President brought the old family Bible into the
breakfast room with him. Handing it over to me he said, 'Doctor, we were
cheated out of our prayers yesterday, but to make sure that it shall not
happen again we will have devotions after this before breakfast.'
"After his term at the
White House he went abroad. He was specially interested during his tour
of the world in American missions, of which he visited a large number.
The educational movements connected with these missions appealed
strongly to his sympathy. I have a letter from him, written in Japan, in
which he unfolds the wonderful improvements in moral and educational
mission work which had taken place in that country under the management
of American missions. That work made a deep and lasting impression on
his mind. On his return to this country he attended my church in this
city, manifesting the same deep religious nature as formerly; the same
reverence for God and personal belief in Christianity. He had a
wonderful faith in Divine Providence, and believed in special
interpositions of Providence in the affairs of men and nations. I have
heard him talk by the hour on that subject, giving illustrations drawn
from his own life.
"Once I asked him, I
remember, what he considered his most providential experience. Without
hesitation he said: 'My resignation from the army in 1854. I was then a
Captain. If I had staid in the army I would have been still a Captain on
frontier duty at the outbreak of the war and would thus have been
deprived of the right to offer my services voluntarily to the country.
That opportunity shaped my future.'
"In connection with the
sick room I have spoken of the prayerful spirit that pervaded it," Dr.
Newman resumed. "I might add that the General never allowed suggestions
for the relief of his infirmities to interfere with his reverence for
the Sabbath. One Saturday night lately, when he was nervous and weary
and very restless, his son, the Colonel, hoping to divert his mind,
suggested some amusement. The General brightened at the idea of
diversion, but presently, with a grave face, he inquired the hour. It
was nearly midnight. 'Never mind,' the General said, with perfect
resignation. 'It is too close to the Sabbath to commence any
diversion.'"
A Talk with Sheridan
Shiloh and the
Valley Campaign--No Smile at Appomattox
Washington, July
23--From day to day, and almost hourly, during Gen. Grant's illness,
there has been one inquirer in this city whose concern has been
manifested by the earnestness of his questions about the brave patient
in New-York. In his quiet, unobtrusive, undemonstrative way, Lieut.-Gen.
Sheridan, Gen. Grant's companion in arms, has shown that he was pained
at the thought of the struggle that was going on between the great
soldier and a disease with which his sturdy courage could not hope to
successfully contend. While the dispatches have been coming in to the
office of the General of the Army, and in such moments as he could
spare, Gen. Sheridan has talked about his relations with Gen. Grant,
their joint efforts to overcome the rebellion, and has told over again
the story of some of the most memorable scenes in which both of them
participated. Gen. Sheridan does not readily take to story telling,
particularly when the telling of a story involves references to his own
valorous deeds. His diffidence, great now as it was when he was a boy,
is something remarkable in a man who showed an absolute lack of
diffidence in the face of an enemy. To get anything out of him in the
way of incident one must lead him carefully to the point upon which
information is desired. Then, in a low, simple, straightforward way he
will tell his story. It will be unimaginative, without attempt at
dramatic effect, and without a shade of boastfulness. Like Gen. Grant,
Gen. Sheridan has sometimes been called reticent and taciturn. This is
only true of him when he speaks with strangers or with curious people
whom he suspects of a desire to hear him blow his own trumpet.
Grant's Confidence In Sheridan
The writer dropped in
to see him a few days before his departure for the West, and, after
chatting about Gen. Grant's condition, expressed some curiosity to know
when he had first come in contact with Gen. Grant. "Well," said the
General, "you see, we were both attached to the same regiment in the
army. He had gone out of it after the Mexican war, and my service had
been continuous from the time I left West Point until I drifted down the
Tennessee River as an acting Quartermaster for Gen. Halleck. The battle
of Shiloh had just been fought. Our army was resting, a sort of
suspension following the battle. Hearing that Grant and McPherson were
both at the front, I took the first opportunity presented of reporting
to them. I found Gen. Grant with Gen. McPherson. He was sitting in his
tent smoking a cigar, and was in his shirt sleeves. Our greeting was
pleasant, and he expressed his gratification that I had been sent to the
front. I had just gone through with the Pea Ridge campaign, and he
seemed to have the notion that I could be useful to him in the advance
through Kentucky and Tennessee."
"I was pretty near
Grant from that time on until I was sent East to take command of all the
cavalry in Virginia. When I met the General at Shiloh he was the same
man in manner that he has always been to me. I did not find him
reticent. On the contrary, he was a very free and frank talker. He did
not need much explanation from me of anything I proposed to do, but
appeared to have entire confidence that I would do the best I could at
all times." The General referred most pleasantly to the influence
exerted by Gen. Grant in securing his transfer to the East after the
brilliant services he had rendered at Perryville, Stone Ridge, and
Chickamauga. "Gen. Grant agreed with me that whenever it was possible we
should fight cavalry with cavalry, and infantry with infantry. He agreed
with me in my plan of the valley campaign of 1864. The cavalry was taken
off of guard duty about the army and put to better use. I saw Gen. Grant
occasionally. He was always the same in manner. Never elated by victory,
he was also never cast down by defeat. He met all sorts of fortune
stolidly. His confidence in himself never failed. Under all
circumstances he treated his associates with the same simple courtesy.
Plainer in dress than most of his subordinates, he was so because he had
no thought for dress, his mind being upon the great task he had set
himself. He came to see me in September. Talked over the plans I had
made for fighting Early, and having faith in my confidence that I could
whip his army. Saw that no other instructions were necessary than the
injunction to 'go in.' He never visited me again for the purpose of
giving me orders, and in that way testified his full faith in my desire
and ability to comprehend and carry out his plans. His regard for me was
shown again after the valley campaign, and when I had been made a
Brigadier-General in the regular army, by the order for a salute of 100
guns."
Together at Appomattox
With great interest
Gen. Sheridan referred to the campaign events following his bold push of
March, 1865, to the south of Richmond, preceding the brilliant events in
which he was to take so conspicuous a place and win such lasting renown.
"At Dinwiddie Court House," said he, "came Grant's order about ending
the battle before going back. We were in bivouac. The weather was rainy
and the roads muddy. Wagons were everywhere up to their hubs. The
general movement forward appeared to be ended. At daybreak on the 30th,
I think, when everything was swamped, I rode back to see Gen. Grant. The
infantry were huddled together, wet and cold. Gen. Grant's tent was in a
sand field, and was as cheerless a place as could be found. He met me
cordially, and suggested that if the cavalry could move up a little it
would be better than an absolute standstill. I assented to the
suggestion--it was all that could be done, said 'good-bye' to Gen.
Grant, rode back to my command, and gave the order to move on Five
Forks. I did not see Gen. Grant again, except to get a glimpse of him at
Jetersville, until ten days later, when I joined him as he went to
receive the surrender of Lee at Appomattox.
"The story of the
surrender of Lee has been so often told," said Gen. Sheridan, "that
nothing could be added to it by me. Gen. Grant, arriving at Appomattox
Court House with Col. Newhall on the 9th of April after a long and hard
ride, was spattered with mud from his soft hat to his boots, in which he
wore his trousers. I had been riding hard, too, and had not had much
sleep for several days. Neither of us looked very nice. We greeted each
other briefly. The General knew what was about to be done, and little
was said about it. Gen. Grant showed no exultation. I took him to the
McLean House, where Gen. Lee awaited him. Gen. Grant and one or two of
his staff went in; the rest of us staid outside on the piazza until Col.
Babcock came out and invited us in. Presently Gen. Lee went out to take
his horse and drive away. He was dressed in a new gray uniform. We had
had no chance to get at our uniforms. All of us were rather silent and
serious. Gen. Grant wore no smile of victory on his face. He knew what
the victory meant, but his face did not show it."
Gen. Sheridan said he
had met Gen. Grant many times since then, and that their pleasant
relations during the war have always been maintained. He went with him
on a journey to Cuba and Mexico, and on that trip found him to be the
same simple man he had known in the army. In other places he has
occupied he has always been unchanged to his admired companion in arms.
Soldier-like, Gen. Sheridan is not effusive in his language when
expressing his affection for Gen. Grant; but it is not difficult to see
that there will be no heartstrings in the country more strained at the
death of Grant than those of "Gallant Phil Sheridan."
Longstreet's
Reminiscences
At West Point
Together--Grant's Courtship--The War and After
GAINESVILLE, Ga., July
23--"He was the truest as well as the bravest man that ever lived," was
the remark made by Gen. James Longstreet, when he recovered to-day from
the emotion caused by the sad news of Gen. Grant's death. Gen.
Longstreet lives in a two-story house of modern style about three miles
from Gainesville, where, amid his vines and shrubs, he was seen by The
Times's correspondent. He was dressed in a long and many colored
dressing gown; his white whiskers were trimmed after the pattern of
Burnside's, and he looked little like the stalwart figure which was ever
in the thickest of the fight during the bloody battles of the late war.
"Ever since 1839," said
he, "I have been on terms of the closest intimacy with Grant. I well
remember the fragile form which answered to his name in that year. His
distinguishing trait as a cadet was a girlish modesty; a hesitancy in
presenting his own claims; a taciturnity born of his modesty; but a
thoroughness in the accomplishment of whatever task was assigned him. As
I was of large and robust physique I was at the head of most larks and
games. But in these young Grant never joined because of his delicate
frame. In horsemanship, however, he was noted as the most proficient in
the Academy. In fact, rider and horse held together like the fabled
centaur.
Two Young Lieutenants
"In 1842 I was attached
to the Fourth Infantry as Second Lieutenant. A year later Grant joined
the same regiment, stationed in that year at Fort Jefferson, 12 miles
from St. Louis. The ties thus formed have never been broken; but there
was a charm which held us together of which the world has never heard.
My kinsman, Mr. Frederick Dent, was a substantial farmer living near
Fort Jefferson. He had a liking for army officers, due to the fact that
his son Fred was a pupil at West Point. One day I received an invitation
to visit his house in order to meet young Fred, who had just returned,
and I asked Grant to go with me. This he did, and of course was
introduced to the family, the last one to come in being Miss Julia Dent,
the charming daughter of our host. It is needless to say that we saw but
little of Grant during the rest of the visit. He paid court in fact with
such assiduity as to give rise to the hope that he had forever gotten
over his diffidence. Five years later, in 1848, after the usual
uncertainties of a soldier's courtship, Grant returned and claimed Miss
Dent as his bride. I had been married just six months at that time, and
my wife and I were among the guests at the wedding. Only a few months
ago Mrs. Grant recalled to my memory an incident with Gen. Grant's
courtship. Miss Dent had been escorted to the military balls so often by
Lieut. Grant that, on one occasion, when she did not happen to go with
him, Lieut. Hoskins went up to her and asked, with a pitiful expression
on his face: 'Where is that small man with the large epaulets?'
In
the Field of Duty
"In 1844 the Fourth
Regiment was ordered to Louisiana to form part of the army of
observation. Still later we formed part of the army of occupation in
Corpus Christi, Texas, Here, removed from all society without books or
papers, we had an excellent opportunity of studying each other. I and
every one else always found Grant resolute and doing his duty in a
simple manner. His honor was never suspected, his friendships were true,
his hatred of guile was pronounced, and his detestation of tale bearers
was, I may say, absolute. The soul of honor himself, he never even
suspected others either then or years afterward. He could not bring
himself to look upon the rascally side of human nature.
"While we remained in
Corpus Christi an incident illustrating Grant's skill and fearlessness
as a horseman occurred. The Mexicans were in the habit of bringing in
wild horses, which they would sell for two or three dollars. These
horses came near costing more than one officer his life. One day a
particularly furious animal was brought in. Every officer in the camp
had declined to purchase the animal except Grant, who declared that he
would either break the horse's neck or his own. He had the horse
blindfolded, bridled, and saddled, and when firmly in the saddle he
threw off the blind, sunk his spurs into the horse's flanks, and was
soon out of sight. For three hours he rode the animal over all kinds of
ground, through field and stream, and when horse and rider returned to
camp the horse was thoroughly tamed. For years afterward the story of
Grant's ride was related at every camp fire in the country. During the
Mexican war we were separated, Grant having been made Quartermaster of
the Fourth Regiment, while I was assigned to duty as Adjutant of the
Eighth. At the Battle of Molino del Rey, however, I had occasion to
notice his superb courage and coolness under fire. So noticeable was his
bearing that his gallantry was alluded to in the official reports.
Payment of a Debt of Honor
"In the long days of
our stay in Louisiana and Texas," continued Gen. Longstreet, "we
frequently engaged in the game of brag and five-cent ante and similar
diversions. We instructed Grant in the mysteries of these games, but he
made a poor player. The man who lost 75 cents in one day was esteemed in
those times a peculiarly unfortunate person. The games often lasted an
entire day. Years later, in 1858, I happened to be in St. Louis, and
there met Capt. Holloway and other army chums. We went into the
Planters' Hotel to talk over old times, and it was soon proposed to have
an old-time game of brag, but it was found that we were one short of
making up a full hand. 'Wait a few minutes,' said Holloway, 'and I will
find some one.' In a few minutes he returned with a man poorly dressed
in citizen's clothes and in whom we recognized our old friend Grant.
Going into civil life Grant had been unfortunate, and he was really in
needy circumstances. The next day I was walking in front of the
Planters', when I found myself face to face again with Grant who,
placing in the palm of my hand a five-dollar gold piece, insisted that I
should take it in payment of a debt of honor over 15 years old. I
peremptorily declined to take it, alleging that he was out of the
service and more in need of it than I. 'You must take it,' said he, 'I
cannot live with anything in my possession which is not mine.' Seeing
the determination in the man's face, and in order to save him
mortification, I took the money, and shaking hands we parted.
The Meeting at Appomattox
"The next time we met,"
said Gen. Longstreet, "was at Appomattox, and the first thing that Gen.
Grant said to me when we stepped inside, placing his arm in mine, was:
'Pete (a sobriquet of mine), let us have another game of brag, to recall
the old days which were so pleasant to us all.' Great God! thought I to
myself, how my heart swells out to such a magnanimous touch of humanity!
Why do men fight who were born to be brothers?
"During the war my
immediate command had engaged the troops of Grant but once--at the
battle of the Wilderness. We came into no sort of personal relations,
however. In the Spring of 1865, one day, while awaiting a letter from
Gen. Grant, Gen. Lee said to me, 'There is nothing ahead of us but to
surrender.' It was as one of the Commissioners appointed to arrange the
terms of peace that I met Gen. Grant at Appomattox. His whole greeting
and conduct toward us was as though nothing had ever happened to mar our
pleasant relations.
Friendship After the War
"In 1866 I had occasion
to visit Washington on business, and while there made a call of courtesy
on Gen. Grant at his office. As I arose to leave he followed me out into
the hallway, and asked me to spend an evening with his family. I thanked
him, promising compliance, and passed a most enjoyable evening. When
leaving Grant again accompanied me into the hallway and said: 'General,
would you like to have an amnesty?' Wholly unprepared for this I replied
that I would like to have it, but had no hope of getting it. He told me
to write out my application and to call at his office at noon the next
day, and in the meantime he would see President Johnson and Secretary of
War Stanton on my behalf. When I called he had already seen these men,
and assured me that there was not an obstacle in the way. He indorsed my
application by asking that it be granted as a special personal favor to
himself.
"In the January before
he was inaugurated President for the first time I paid him a passing
friendly visit. He then said to me: 'Longstreet, I want you to come and
see me after I am inaugurated, and let me know what you want.' After the
inauguration I was walking up the avenue one day to see him when I met a
friend who informed me that the President had sent in my name for
confirmation as Surveyor of the Port of New-Orleans. For several weeks
the nomination hung in the Senate, when I went to Grant and begged him
to withdraw the nomination, as I did not want his personal friendship
for me to embarrass his Administration. 'Give yourself no uneasiness
about that,' he said, 'the Senators have as many favors to ask of me as
I have of them, and I will see that you are confirmed.'
"From what I have
already told you," said Gen. Longstreet, in conclusion, "it will be seen
that Grant was a modest man, a simple man, a man believing in the
honesty of his fellows, true to his friends, faithful to traditions, and
of great personal honor. When the United States District Court in
Richmond was about to indict Gen. Lee and myself for treason, Gen. Grant
interposed and said: 'I have pledged my word for their safety.' This
stopped the wholesale indictments of ex-Confederate officers which would
have followed. He was thoroughly magnanimous, was above all petty things
and small ideas, and, after Washington, was the highest type of manhood
America has produced."
Gen. Grant and the
South
His Desire When
President to Befriend Its People
SAVANNAH, Ga., July
23--The Times's correspondent called upon Gen. Lafayette McLaws
recently. Gen. McLaws was one of the officers who resigned his
commission in the Federal Army for the purpose of following his State
into secession. During the four years' war which followed he held the
rank of Major-General and participated in some of the hardest fighting.
In his early days he had been on terms of the closest intimacy with the
young subaltern who was destined afterward to play so important a part
in the history of his country. When the war was over McLaws retired to a
farm in Effingham County, refusing all participation in politics. It was
not until 1876 that he visited Washington, when he called at the White
House. He had no sooner sent in his card to Gen. Grant than he heard the
President, who was at the time busily engaged, call out to his
secretary:
"Don't let McLaws go; I
want to see him."
"All at once," said
Gen. McLaws, "I saw a changed look on the faces of my companions in
waiting when they found there was one among them whom the President was
anxious to see. Meeting me on the doorstep Gen. Grant held out his hand
and said: 'I am delighted to see my old army comrade. I want you to dine
with me, when we can dream over the past.'
"After dinner he led me
into his private room and directed the conversation so as to find out my
personal condition. He listened to my narrative with interest, and
turning to me he said:
"'McLaws, would you
take office under an old comrade?'
"Taken aback by the
question, I at length replied that I was ready to perform all the duties
of American citizenship. 'I am sorry you did not come to see me before,'
rejoined the President; 'I would have taken pleasure in conferring
office upon you. My second term of the Presidency is now nearly ended,
but there has not been an hour of that time in which I was not only
willing but anxious to confer the offices upon reputable citizens. In
this, however, I was foiled by the politicians. The prejudices of the
Northern politicians were at work, but the great hindrance was in the
Southern Congressmen. They have always held aloof, treated me as a
stranger, and refused to give me an opportunity to befriend them. For a
Southern man to take office under me brought him under suspicion at
home.' "In fact," continued Gen. McLaws, "Gen. Grant spoke with the air
of a man who felt chagrined and disappointed at the manner in which the
politicians had used sectional differences to further their own
purposes. Finally, Gen. Grant said to me, 'Go home and have nothing to
do with the politicians, and leave your case with me, and I will take
care of you.' I had not much more than reached home when I was nominated
and confirmed for the Savannah Post Office, which position I held until
a few months ago.
"This is not the only
instance within my knowledge," said Gen. McLaws," of the interest taken
by Gen. Grant in the South. A story told me by the Hon. William
Dougherty, whose memory all Georgians revere, proves beyond question
that there would have been no sectional bitterness if Grant had been
listened to. When the policy of reconstruction had been resolved upon by
Congress Gen. Pope was appointed to take control of the Third Military
District, of which Georgia was a part. On assuming control of the
district Gen. Pope issued an order announcing that fact, the tenor of
which gave great satisfaction to the people. Judge Dougherty was so well
pleased with it that he felt called upon to make a visit to Gen. Pope
and to express in person his sense of gratification. This done he arose
to leave, when Gen. Pope said:
"'Judge, I have known
you by reputation a long time; it was my purpose to have invited you to
advise me on matters of state, but now that you are here we might as
well get to the point. My appointment to the command of this district
was made by Gen. Grant for a special purpose. I am from Illinois, a
State well settled with the children of Southern people. This fact, in
Gen. Grant's opinion, would make me feel more kinship here than would
some officer without these associations. Gen. Grant further instructed
me to call into council in Georgia the best citizens, naming Gov.
Jenkins, Chief-Justice Warner, and yourself. The Constitutional
Convention required under the Reconstruction act, if held under these
auspices, will perform its work quickly and intelligently. He
understands the difficulty you will encounter in dealing with the negro
question, but to palliate it he suggests that you adopt either a
property or an educational qualification, such as is to be found in some
Northern States. Gen. Grant knows that the requirements of the
Reconstruction act are extreme, and does not expect that a convention of
men like yourself would or could come up to them; but what he asks of
you is this: send your best men to the convention; your refined,
reputable citizens; let them adopt a Constitution as far advanced as the
prejudices of the people will admit; let them give evidence of an honest
purpose to reach an agreement with the North; and Gen. Grant promises,
in return, to use the whole weight of his influence to have Georgia
readmitted into the Union under that Constitution. What he desires,
above all things, is a supreme effort on the part of your people to
bring about that harmony which should exist between the States. He feels
that Georgia is the pivotal State; that if Georgia has the courage--he
knows that she has the statesmanship--to make a settlement of the
question, her example will be followed by the entire South. I have
offered the Presidency of the convention to Gov. Jenkins, but he has
declined it on constitutional grounds. I have offered it to
Chief-Justice Warner, but he declines it because the fight is too sharp
and the prejudices too deep to be met. Now, Judge Dougherty, will you
accept the Presidency?'"
Judge Dougherty
declined the honor, stating that it was too great a task to try to
overcome the prejudices of a whole people. Contrary counsels from those
of Gen. Grant led the Southern people into a train of disaster which it
has taken nearly 20 years to overcome.
"An officer who once
served on Gen. Grant's staff once told me an incident which illustrated
the quick decision of Gen. Grant. It was just after the battle of
Shiloh. The officers were grouped around a camp fire, when Gen. John A.
McClernand rode up to Gen. Grant, and handing him an autograph letter
from President Lincoln directing Grant to turn his command over to Gen.
McClernand, Gen. Grant read the letter carefully, and then, tearing it
up into small pieces and throwing them into the fire, said:
"'I decline to receive
or obey orders which do not come through the proper channel.'
"Pausing a moment, he
turned to Gen. McClernand and said:
"'Your division is
under orders to leave this department in the morning, and I advise you
to go with it.' McClernand went, and that was the last that was ever
heard of the order, for the culmination of events showed that Grant was
right, and no President dared to remove him, for a change of commanders
just after the battle of Shiloh would have led to very different results
for the Federals.
"The dogged
determination to do or die, which was so characteristic of Grant, was
what gave backbone to the Federal army. He would never acknowledge
defeat. Gen. Zachary Taylor once told me an anecdote of Grant, which
occurred during the Mexican war. Lieut. Grant was in charge of a party
of men detailed to clear the way for the advance of boats laden with
troops from Aransas Bay to Corpus Christi by removing the oyster beds
and other obstructions. Failing either by words or signs to make those
under him understand him, Lieut. Grant jumped into the water, which was
up to his waist, and worked with his men. Some dandy officers began
making fun of him for his zeal, when Gen. Taylor came upon the scene,
and rebuked it by saying:
"'I wish I had more
officers like Grant, who would stand ready to set a personal example
when needed.'"
Gen. Sherman
The Veteran's Recent
Talk About the Administration, Grant, and Others
From the Chicago
Inter Ocean, July 18
"I'm a soldier, not a
politician," said Gen. "Tecumseh" Sherman, as at the Grand Pacific
yesterday the old warrior offered his good-natured apology for neither
knowing nor caring much about politics. Said the General:
"I am on my way to Lake
Minnetonka, where my family now is, and I stopped over to arrange some
matters with Gen. Chetlain regarding our reunion of the Society of the
Army of the Tennessee that will be held here Sept. 9 and 10. It is all
arranged now, and I think we shall have a beautiful meeting. We shall
not throw it open so much to the general public as heretofore. It is a
reunion of soldiers, you see, to talk over old war times and keep alive
our old associations, as well as the organization itself. Yes, I have
been its President since its origin in 1868. How many shall we have
here? Oh, yes, over 200-250, I think. The first day we shall transact
our private business in some rooms Mr. Drake will give us here in the
Grand Pacific, and in the evening in some public place, for everybody to
hear, there will be a public address by Gen. Sanborn. The next evening
we shall have a banquet of the society."
The General got to
talking about the civil service institution, and he seemed cordially
willing to give the system his approval. He declared he believed it in
the interests of good government, and it seemed to him to furnish a
great relief to Senators and Congressmen, who had but to refer their
petitioners for office to the Civil Service Commission for an answer.
Said the reporter: "General, does it strike you that a good many
Republican soldiers have been removed from office?"
"No," promptly replied
the veteran, "I don't think there have been. They seem to have been very
moderate in that, and not to have removed a man except for
qualifications."
The subject was
introduced of Wade Hampton's recent letter regarding the particular
service of his troops at Manassas, whereat Gen. Sherman speedily said:
"Gen. Hampton is undoubtedly a truthful man, and I do not question that
Imboden is honest, but that battle was ten miles long, from Surrey
Church to Manassas, and a man is liable to write from the position he
occupied. My men were new and did not have sufficient tenacity; but they
were not driven by Jackson; they withdrew, and his men were not as a
'stone wall,' but they stood behind a stone wall in fact."
"Have you seen Gen.
Grant lately?"
"No, not since
December, but I heard three days ago from Fred, and they feel very
apprehensive about the General. Save the cancer in his throat he is
sound in his lungs, heart, and stomach, and I think he will live several
months yet."
"He has written a
valuable book, General?"
"Oh, yes, and he has
written it mostly with his own hand, but still it comes too late; that
is, I do not mean that it is really too late, but it would have been
better if he could have written it 20, 15, or 10 years ago when he was
fresh. A man commanding everything is better qualified than a colonel to
write such a book, for he knows all things. I feel even now, in view of
all the material that I had, that I have little to add to my memoirs."
"Shall you ever publish
again?"
"No, I think not,
though I may add an appendix to my memoirs, and perhaps insert something
here and there."
"Shall you put in
anything about Jeff Davis?" asked the reporter somewhat irrelevantly.
And the General shot out his reply with a soldier's sledge-hammer
emphasis:
"If Jeff Davis is a
patriot, I'm a traitor, and I ain't. If Jeff Davis is a patriot, Abraham
Lincoln is a traitor, and if God ever made a pure man Abraham Lincoln
was he. Oh, no, I have nothing to do with Davis. He saw fit to take up
something I said to a Grand Army post. No, I have never met him. I
believe Davis is honest, but his ambition led him into treason to his
country."
"You think Sheridan
will have no trouble with the Indians?"
"Oh, no, I think not.
You see the only way for an Indian to be honest is to kill a white man's
ox. There is no game left; the buffalo and the elk are gone. No, the
Indian question will be settled when he is given for his occupation a
section of land and the remainder invested for his benefit."
Gen. Sherman got up to
wish his visitor good day. The same plain, grizzly old fighter in
fatigue dress he remains. He stands with his feet together like the
soldier he was trained, and his tall form appears perfectly at ease in
black alpaca coat and low-cut white vest, whereon army buttons declare
the trade in which "Tecumseh" Sherman made his everlasting mark. When he
talks he talks with the utmost good humor and straightforward
simplicity. He was speaking of his home in St. Louis, his house
building, and the provision he wished to make for those that remained
when he was gone. When he mentioned his six children and seven
grandchildren he came to speak of the families of brother officers, men
his peers in the service years ago, who passed away only to leave those
dependent on them beggars for office at Washington, willing to work 10
hours a day for $40 a month, simply to get bread and meat. Forty such
instances he said he could recall, and the thought seemed to have its
deep pathos as the General dwelt feelingly upon it. |