Dear Brother: . . . I expect all alteration to be complete
by the time we reach there, early in October, and after a short pause I will
come on to Washington, write up all by reports, and then ask the President to
order me to St. Louis to await my retirement February 8, 1884, and by or before
December 1st of this year to install General Sheridan in command of the army, vice Sherman retired.
It is better that
the change should occur with the new Congress. The country is now generally
prosperous, and the army is in reasonably good condition, considering the fact
that peace and politics are always more damaging than war. . . .
[Later he writes from St. Louis:—]
I have fixed
November 1st as the day for transferring the command of the army to Sheridan.
This will enable me to conclude my report, and in like manner enable Sheridan
to submit to Congress any special matters he may deem proper.
On the whole, the
time is most opportune, and I think I can leave my post with the general
respect of my fellows. . . .
SOURCE: Rachel
Sherman Thorndike, Editor, The Sherman Letters: Correspondence Between
General and Senator Sherman from 1837 to 1891, p. 356-7
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