Thursday, May 29, 2014

Governor Samuel J. Kirkwood to Captain Henry. R. Cowles, January 17, 1861

Executive Office,
Iowa, Jan. 17, 1861.

R. [sic] R. Cowles, Captain Washington Light Guards, Washington, Iowa:

SIR: — In these days when cabinet officers abet treason, and use their official positions to bankrupt and disarm the government they are sworn to support, when members of both branches of our national councils are openly engaged in endeavoring to overthrow the government of which they are the sworn servants, and retain places and prostitute their powers to thwart the efforts of those who loyally seek to maintain that government — when in one portion of our country many men delirious with passion, regard the firing upon our National flag, the forcible seizure of our National forts, and the plunder of our National arsenals and treasuries as manly, honorable and patriotic service — when in another portion of our country a few men blinded by partisan prejudice can be found who justify these acts, and say the perpetrators of them must not be punished — when, in short, men are found in high places so lost to patriotism as to emulate the treason of Benedict Arnold, and so lost to shame as to glory in their infamy, and can find followers and apologists — it is gratifying to know that the gallant yeomanry of Iowa are still determined “to march under the flag and to keep step to the music of the Union.”

I accept with pleasure the services of the “Washington Light Guards” so frankly tendered, and should events render it necessary, shall promptly call you to the field to defend that flag under which our fathers fought so bravely, and to maintain that government they founded so wisely and so well.

Very respectfully,
SAMUEL J. KIRKWOOD

SOURCE: Henry Warren Lathrop, The Life and Times of Samuel J. Kirkwood, p. 112

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