Present all. Capt
Cravens11 U. S. N. commanding Flotilla in the Potomac, reports great
progress made by the rebels with their batteries along the river — stretching
from Matthias’ point12 up — at intervals, for more than 25 miles,
and having at the different places, at least 40 heavy guns — so as, in fact to
command the river. Two of his vessels are between their strongest batteries,
and opposite Acquia Creek.13
The Capt says —
judging by the camp fires — that the enemy is increasing his force below, near
the batteries, every day — Each night there are more and more fires, and less
in the region of Occoquan.14 He thinks they are preparing to pass
over into Maryland.
If that be so,
they are growing desperate in their present position; and if we let them cross
it is our folly and crime. The fact that we allow them to obstruct the river is
our deep disgrace.
There was some
discussion about the battle near Leesburg15 yesterday and last night
— a most unsatisfactory affair.
Baker's16
brigade was driven back with great loss. Baker and several other high officers
were killed — the total loss not known but supposed from 2 to 300. McClellan17
was to go up in person.
< I hear
tonight that a large part of our force has passed the river— both Banks18
and Stone19 are on the Va. side and I do and [sic] not doubt that
the most strenuous efforts will be made to press the enemy, for our Generals
are I think by this time, (besides other motives) heartily ashamed of inaction
and inefficiency — the weather is very bad for active operations, by reason of
constant rain last night and today, still I expect hard fighting. >
Another subject
in C.[abinet] C.[ouncil] was the vexed question of the recall of Genl. Fremont.
The report of Adj't. Genl. Thomas,20 made by direction of the Sec of
War put it, I thought, beyond all question that the removal must be made and
instantly — The President seemed to think so, and said it was now clear that Fremont
was not fit to for the command — that Hunter21 was better — Still,
at the very pinch, the Sec of State, came again, as twice before, to the rescue
— and urged delay — “not today, put it off a little” — The idea (gotten by Mr.
Chase from Dr. Eliot22) seemed to be that the Army was devoted to
Fremont and had full confidence in him! while the evidence to the contrary is
overwhelming — Hunter and Curtis23 openly declared it — as stated in
Adjutant Genl. Thomas' report, and as far as I know, none actively support him,
but his own pet officers and contractors — Yet strange! both Cameron and Chase
gave in and timidly yielded to delay; and the President still hangs in painful
and mortyfying [sic] doubt. His suffering is evidently great, and if it were
not connected with a subject so momentous, would be ludicrous.
I spoke as
heretofore, plainly, urging the Prest. to avoid the timorous and vacillating
course that could but degrade the Adm[inistratio]n. and make it weak and
helpless — to assume the powers of his place and speak in the language of
command. Not to send an order clogged with conditions and provisos — send a
positive order or none at all. To leave him there now would be worse than
prompt removal — for you have degraded him before the world and thereby unfitted
him for the command, if otherwise capable — You have countermanded his orders,24
repudiated his contracts and denounced his contractors, suspended his officers
and stopped the progress of his
fortifications —
If under these circumstances we still keep him in command, the public will
attribute the fact to a motive no higher than our fears. For me — I think too
well of the soldiers and the people, to be afraid of any Major General in the
Army. I protested against having my State sacrificed on such motives and in
such a cause.
Still I fear he
will be allowed to hang on until he drops in very rottenness. And if we persist
in this sort of impotent indecision, we are very likely to share his fate —
and, worse than all, deserve it.
_______________
12 Spelled “Mathias.” A village thirty miles
below Washington.
13 A river-port at the outlet of a deep
tidal channel about fifty-five miles below Washington. It was the terminus of a
railroad from Richmond.
14 A village about six miles up the Occoquan
River from where it flows into the Potomac not far below Mount Vernon.
15 The Battle of Ball's Bluff where the
Union force was disastrously defeated when General Stone, under misinformation
about the enemy, actually crossed the Potomac into Virginia instead of making a
feint of doing so.
16 Supra, Oct. 12, 1859, note 9. He had
raised a regiment of volunteers and, though still senator, had led a brigade at
Leesburg.
17 George B. McClellan, West Point graduate
of 1846, served in Mexico, on the Pacific Coast, and in Europe, but resigned in
1857 to become chief engineer and later vice-president of the Illinois Central
Railroad. When the War came, he was given command of the Department of the Ohio
with the rank of major-general. After the Battle of Bull Run he commanded the
Army of the Potomac until political considerations and his constitutional
unwillingness to attack led Lincoln to remove him in November, 1862. He became
the candidate of the combined opposition to Lincoln in 1864 and ran for the Presidency
as a man who could secure both peace and union — Lincoln seemed to have sacrificed
both — but he ran on a platform that seemed to urge peace even at the cost of union,
and was defeated.
18 See supra, July 27, 1859, note 57. At
this time Banks was serving as major-general of volunteers in the Department of
the Shenandoah.
19 Charles P. Stone, graduate of West Point
in 1845, had served in the Mexican War and on the Pacific Coast until he
resigned in 1856. At the outbreak of the War he was put in command of the
District of Columbia. His disaster at Balls Bluff led him to ask a Court of
Inquiry, but McClellan exonerated him and the matter was dropped until he was
suddenly arrested in February, 1862. See infra, Nov. 1, 1861, note 28.
20 Supra, Oct. 1, 1861, note 9.
21 David Hunter, graduate of West Point in
1822, had served in Mexico and on the frontier, had commanded the main column
at Bull Run, and was now serving as major-general of volunteers in Missouri
under Fremont whom he succeeded on November 2.
22 Supra, Feb. 22, 1860, note 79.
23 Samuel R. Curtis: West Point graduate of
1831; civil engineer in the West; lawyer of Keokuk, Iowa, 1855-1861; Republican
congressman, 1857-1861 ; member of the Peace Convention of 1861; at this time
brigadier-general in the Department of the West. He commanded the Department of
the Missouri, 1862-1863, the Department of Kansas, 1864-1865, the Department of
the Northwest, 1865.
24 Lincoln, after first giving Fremont a
chance to recall it himself, had countermanded his order of emancipation of the
slaves and confiscation of the property of all Missourians who took up arms
against the United States. Lincoln also forbade him to carry out his order to
shoot as traitors, after a trial by court martial, all Missourians found with arms
in their hands.
SOURCE: Howard K, Beale, Editor, The Diary of Edward Bates, 1859-1866, p. 197-9