Still excessively
warm. Not much at the Cabinet to note. Stanton read a strange dispatch from
Gen. George H. Thomas at Nashville, stating that some of the Tennessee members
of the legislature would not attend the sessions and asking if he should not
arrest them. The President promptly and with point said, if General Thomas had
nothing else to do but to intermeddle in local controversies, he had better be
detached and ordered elsewhere. Stanton, who should have rebuked Thomas, had, I
thought, a design in bringing the subject to the President, who has warm
personal friendship for the General. On hearing the emphatic remark and
witnessing the decided manner of the President against Thomas's proposition,
Stanton dropped his tone and said he had proposed to say to T. that he should
avoid mixing up in this question. "But shall I add your remark?" said
he. "My wish is," replied the President, "that the answer should
be emphatic and decisive, not to meddle with local parties and politics. The
military are not superior masters."
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, pp. 554-5
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