ST. LOUIS, Feb. 23, 1886.
Dear Brother: I owe you a personal explanation as to why I
did not come to Washington during my last visit East. After positively refusing
to attend the banquet to the Loyal Legion at Cincinnati (President Hayes the
Commander), I was persuaded at the last minute that I ought to go. After I had
packed my valise, I heard of General Hancock's death, made one or two
despatches to General Whipple as Adjutant-General, my former Aide, asking him
to communicate with me at the Burnet House.1 On arrival, I was met
by President Hayes and General Cox and others, who explained that [by] the
death of General Hancock, the president of the Order of the Loyal Legion, they
had been forced to modify their programme, and that I must respond to the
memory of General Hancock. I was kept busy all that day by a stream of
visitors, and when the company had assembled for the banquet, full four hundred
in the room, without notes or memoranda, I spoke for about ten minutes. My
words were taken down and sent off without a chance of revision, but I
afterwards learned that Mrs. Hancock was especially pleased. At the Burnet
House I got all the notices of the funeral, which compelled me to travel to New
York. En route was delayed a couple of hours by the flood in Delaware. It was
two o'clock at night before I could lie down, and I had to be up at six to go
down to the Battery, where the funeral was to commence. We were kept busy till
night, when Miles and I went to Elly's2 for dinner, and it was
midnight when we got to the Fifth Avenue Hotel....
1 Cincinnati.
2 His daughter’s.
SOURCE: Rachel
Sherman Thorndike, Editor, The Sherman Letters: Correspondence Between
General and Senator Sherman from 1837 to 1891, p. 369-70
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