To-day I was startled by the announcement from Col. Bledsoe
that he would resign soon, and that it was his purpose to ask the President to
appoint me chief of the bureau in his place. I said I preferred a less
conspicuous position — and less labor — but thanked him. He said he had no
influence with the Secretary — an incontrovertible fact; and that he thought he
should return to the University. While we were speaking, the President's
messenger came in with a note to the colonel; I did not learn the purport of it,
but it put the colonel in a good humor. He showed me the two first words: “Dear
Bledsoe.” He said nothing more about resigning.
I must get more lucrative employment, or find something for
my son to do. The boarding of my family, alone, comes to more than my salary;
and the cost of everything is increasing.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's
Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 1, p. 55
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