Met John Tyler, Jr., to-day, who, with his native
cordiality, proffered his services with zeal and earnestness. He introduced me
at once to Hon. L. P. Walker, Secretary of War, and insisted upon presenting me
to the President the next day. Major Tyler had recently been commissioned in
the army, but is now detailed to assist the Secretary of War in his
correspondence. The major is favorably known in the South as the author of several
Southern essays of much power that have been published in a Review, signed “Python.”
The principal hotel is the Exchange, as in Richmond; the entrance
to the bar, reading-room, etc. is by a flight of stairs from the street to the
second story, with stores underneath. Here there is an incessant influx of strangers
coming from all directions on business with the new government. But the
prevalent belief is that the government itself will soon travel to Richmond.
The buildings here will be insufficient in magnitude for the transaction of the
rapidly increasing business.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's
Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 1, p. 35-6
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