Sunday, June 28, 2015

Captain William F. Bartlett to Lieutenant-Colonel Francis W. Palfrey, January 3, 1863

Headquarters Remainder Banks' Expedition,
No. 194 Broadway, New York, January 3, 1863.

. . . . A great many perplexing questions have come up during the week, involving heavy responsibilities, — the ordering of the various ships to sea, — telegraphing with the Secretary of the Treasury and Secretary of War in regard to duties on coal, etc., etc.

I have kept a stiff upper lip. Imagine me being asked for advice and authority to do this and that, by Commodore Van Brunt, Commodore Vanderbilt, U. S. quartermasters here, and “sich like.” In cases of doubt, which have required my authority and decision, I have kept an old maxim of mine before me. Do that, which according to your impartial judgment, tends most to promote the “good of the service.”

It has carried me safely through so far. . . . .

SOURCE: Francis Winthrop Palfrey, Memoir of William Francis Bartlett, p. 55-6

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