VICKSBURG, MISS.,
September 19, 1863.
General H. W.
HALLECK,
Commander-in-Chief U. S. Forces, Washington, D. C.:
MY DEAR GENERAL: I
have returned from New Orleans, arriving here on the 16th instant, and am still
confined to my bed, lying flat on my back. My injuries are severe, but still
not dangerous; my recovery is simply a matter of time. Although fatiguing, I
will still endeavor to perform my duties, and hope soon to recover that I may
be able to take the field at any time I may be called on to do so.
I have just read
General Sherman's private letter* to you, but do not fully coincide with the
general as to the policy that should be adopted toward these people. While I
believe with him that every effort should be made to fill up our thinned ranks,
and be prepared to meet and destroy their armies wherever found, I think we
should do it with terms held out that by accepting they could receive the
protection of our laws. There is certainly a very fine feeling existing in the
State of Louisiana and in most parts of this State toward the Union. I inclose
you copies of resolutions sent me by citizens of both Louisiana and Mississippi,
showing something of this feeling.
If able to write
myself I should write much more at length on this subject, but being compelled
to dictate for another to write I will be brief, and should I recover in a
short time sufficiently to write, I will address you again.
Yours, truly,
U. S. GRANT,
Major-General.
_______________
* See p. 694.
SOURCE: The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of
the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume
30, Part 3 (Serial No. 52), p. 732
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