I had a call from Mr. Sedgwick, who yesterday proposed
visiting Stover in Fort Lafayette and getting from him a confession as to those
who have participated in, or been cognizant of, frauds on the government. Gave
him a letter to Marshal Murray. An hour or two later Provost Marshal Baker
called on me and related the particulars of conveying Stover after arrest. Says
Stover is alarmed and ready to make disclosures; told him many facts; many
persons implicated. Says Henderson, clerk in Treasury, has been arrested; that
Clarke will be to-morrow. Thinks Sedgwick will not do well with Stover. Was
going to New York to-morrow, to-day will attend to it. I sent Fox to withdraw letter
from Sedgwick to Murray.
To-day Baker called on me at the Department and had a sprawling
mass of suspicions which he says were communicated by Stover, implicating
persons above suspicion. I told him I gave no credit to the statement, but
authorized him to satisfy himself as regarded the person (F.) whom he chiefly
criminated.
Late in the day, Jordan, Solicitor of the Treasury, called
upon me in relation to Baker, from which I come to the conclusion, after what I
have seen of B., that he is wholly unreliable, regardless of character and the
rights of persons, incapable of discrimination, and zealous to do something sensational.
I therefore withheld my letter for him to visit Fort Lafayette.
Mr. Rice, Chairman of Naval Committee in the House, informs
me that the trip of the Eutaw on Saturday was highly satisfactory. The efforts
of strangely unprincipled men to create prejudice against the Navy and impair
public confidence in its efficiency are most surprising and wholly incompatible
with either patriotic or honest intentions.
SOURCE: Gideon Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles,
Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and Johnson, Vol. 1: 1861 – March 30,
1864, p. 518-9
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