Mr. Seward sent to me at my house on Saturday evening a voluminous
bundle of dispatches, which had been placed in his hands by Lord Lyons,
relative to the case of the Chesapeake, and desired me after reading them to
interchange views in regard to the course to be pursued.
The documents were, first, sundry papers from a Mrs. Henry of Halifax,
complaining that her husband and a brother had gone on board the Chesapeake on
the 15th of December, and she apprehended they were detained. The owner and
captain of the schooner Intendant, which was in [Sambro Harbor] when the
American gunboat Ella and Annie took possession of that vessel, says he saw
them on board and did not see them leave. He further avers that when the Ella
and Annie appeared off the harbor, the Chesapeake raised the American flag
union down, and he with his vessel ran a few hundred yards further up the
harbor; that the boats of the Ella and Annie after taking possession of the
Chesapeake, boarded the Intendant, took some trunks that had been brought from
the C. and a man, Wade, who had been secreted, etc., etc. The other papers
related to the capture of the Chesapeake, her surrender to the Colonial
authorities, etc., much as we have in the newspapers.
It is evident the first papers, relating to the Henrys and the
schooner, were thrust into the foreground for a purpose, and are a matter which
should have no connection with the act of piracy.
I called on the Secretary of State this morning and told him the case
required no hasty action on his part. That it had gone into the Admiralty
Court, which was all very well if the British authorities had anything to do in
the premises. My advice is to wait, and not be drawn into any premature action.
Mr. Blair, the elder, and Governor Dennison of Ohio called on me last
evening. The chief talk related to Presidential matters, current events, and
proceedings in Congress. They were both at the President's to-day, and it seems
some conversation took place in regard to Senator Hale's strange course towards
the Navy Department, he being Chairman of the Committee. The President said it
was to him unaccountable except in one way, and that did no credit to Hale's
integrity. It was unpleasant to think a Senator made use of his place to spite
a Department because it would not permit him to use its patronage for his private
benefit.
Both Mr. Blair and Governor Dennison were pretty full of the
Presidency, and I apprehend they had a shadow of doubt in regard to my opinions
and preferences, and yet I know not why they should have had. The subject is
one on which I cared to exhibit no intense partisanship, and I may misjudge the
tone of public sentiment, but my convictions are and have been that it is best
to reelect the President, and if I mistake not this is the public opinion. On
this question, while not forward to announce my views, I have had no
concealment.
I am inclined to believe that there have been whispered
misrepresentations from sly intriguers in regard to me that have given some
anxiety to Blair and Dennison. The conduct of Dixon has been singular in some
respects, and he has a willing tool in Brandegee.1 . . .
_______________
1 Augustus Brandegee, a Member of Congress from Connecticut.
SOURCE: Gideon Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the
Navy Under Lincoln and Johnson, Vol. 1: 1861 – March 30, 1864, p. 508-9