Showing posts with label South Atlantic Fleet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Atlantic Fleet. Show all posts

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Senator James W. Grimes to Admiral Samuel F. Du Pont, October 19, 1863

Burlington, October 19, 1863.

Your favor of the 11th ult. reached my home about ten days after I began my political canvass of this State, and I only returned three days ago. Hence it is that it has been so long unanswered. I know so little of the official etiquette of your profession, or of any other, for that matter, that I am the last man in the world to advise you on the matter about which you ask my opinion. I can, however, give you what I believe to be the best advice; to follow the promptings of your own cool, good judgment. If you do, you will not much err, I am convinced.

I wish I could do something for Rodgers, and, if the matter is not disposed of for the year beyond recall, I will attempt it when I go to Washington next month. There is no man for whom I have a higher regard, and I know no one who would more adorn the position, or who deserves it more. Should I write, the letter would probably be thrown aside, and the subject be prejudged without a full hearing.

I think everybody is becoming convinced that your recall from the South Atlantic Fleet was a hasty, ill-advised measure, and that the clamor raised against you, and finding utterance in the Baltimore American, was wholly groundless. Such, at any rate, is the sentiment of those with whom I have conversed, and I think it is universal.

I shall go eastward in about four weeks. I do not expect hereafter to have much connection with naval matters, nor do I intend to serve any longer on the Naval Committee of the Senate.

SOURCE: William Salter, The Life of James W. Grimes, p. 239