Mr. President:
— The National Union Convention, which closed its sittings at Baltimore
yesterday, appointed a committee, consisting of one from each State, with
myself as chairman, to inform you of your unanimous nomination by that
convention for election to the office of President of the United States. That committee,
I have the honor of now informing you, is present. On its behalf I have also
the honor of presenting you with a copy of the resolutions or platform adopted
by that convention, as expressive of its sense and of the sense of the loyal
people of the country which it represents, of the principles and policy that
should characterize the administration of the Government in the present
condition of the country. I need not say to you, sir, that the convention, in
thus unanimously nominating you fur re-election, but gave utterance to the
almost universal voice of the loyal people of the country. To doubt of your
triumphant election would be little short of abandoning the hope of a final
suppression of the rebellion and the restoration of the government over the
insurgent States. Neither the convention nor those represented by that body
entertained any doubt as to the final result, under your administration,
sustained by the loyal people, and by our noble army and gallant navy. Neither
did the convention, nor do this committee, doubt the speedy suppression of this
most wicked and unprovoked rebellion.
[A copy of the resolutions, which had been adopted, was here
handed to the President.]
I would add, Mr. President, that it would be the pleasure of
the committee to communicate to you within a few days, through one of its most
accomplished members, Mr. Curtis, of New York, by letter, more at length the
circumstances under which you have been placed in nomination for the
Presidency.
SOURCE: Henry J. Raymond, Lincoln, His Life and Times, Vol. 2, p. 559
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