A wintry morning — snow two or three inches deep, ground
frozen; the ninth day since this equinoctial set in. P. M. The sun came out
bright and warm about 9 A. M.; the snow melted away, and before night the
ground became [began] to dry off so that by night we had a very fair battalion
drill.
News of a battle near Winchester in which General Shields
was wounded. Union victories. I am gradually drifting to the opinion that this
Rebellion can only be crushed finally by either the execution of all the
traitors or the abolition of slavery. Crushed, I mean, so as to remove all
danger of its breaking out again in the future. Let the border States, in which
there is Union sentiment enough to sustain loyal State Governments, dispose of
slavery in their own way; abolish it in the premanently disloyal States, in the
cotton States — that is, set free the slaves of Rebels. This will come, I hope,
if it is found that a stubborn and prolonged resistance is likely to be made in
the cotton States. President Lincoln's message recommending the passage of a
resolution pledging the aid of the general Government to States which shall
adopt schemes of gradual emancipation, seems to me to indicate that the result
I look for is anticipated by the Administration. I hope it is so.
SOURCE: Charles Richard Williams, editor, Diary and
Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes, Volume 2, p. 218-9
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