Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Events of the Week.

First and foremost, a Republican tenant for the White House from March 4th, 1861, will be nominated in a few days.

Incident to the gathering the above has brought hither of delegates, diverse evening entertainments are on the programme of the week.

This, Tuesday evening, the Chicago Musical Union offer a first class musical attraction more definitely referred to elsewhere. Tonight, also, the Hooley & Campbell Minstrel troupe, and admirable corps, give the opening of their series at Kingsbury Hall. At McVicker’s Theater also an excellent bill is offered.

To-morrow, Wednesday evening, will be made memorable to our music lovers and strangers from abroad by the noble instrumental Concert at Metropolitan Hall, by “GILMORE’S BOSTON BAND.” It will be one of the events of the week, and Metropolitan Hall should have no vacant seats, as it will have none.

SOURCE: “Events of the Week,” The Press and Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, Tuesday, May 15, 1860, p. 4, col. 2

Sunday Services in the Wigwam.

The Great Wigwam was the scene of a large and impressive religious gathering on Sunday afternoon. After singing, in which the whole audience joined, a prayer was made by Rev. Z. M. Humphrey, and a psalm read by Rev. J. E. Roy. Another hymn was then sung, and Rev. Henry Cox followed in a discourse upon Human Influence; its basis and usefulness, and the necessity of a thorough dependence upon the word of God. The sermon was founded upon the text from Joshua, ch. 3, v. 17. After the doxology and a benediction from Rev. W. W. Everts, the vast congregation was dismissed.

It is to be regretted that one of the Sunday services of Rev. Mr. Guiness could not have been delivered in the Wigwam, and thus have accommodated the crowds that would have pressed to hear this celebrated clergyman.

SOURCE: “Sunday Services in the Wigwam,” The Press and Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, Tuesday, May 15, 1860, p. 4, col. 2

Outrage on Runaway Slaves.

The people of Aurora, Indiana had quite an exciting time a few days ago over a couple of slaves who had been seized without warrants by some white men and taken to jail at Lawrenceburg, where, having no legal commitment, the jailer refused to receive them. They were taken back to Aurora, where they were so abused by their captors that the citizens became indignant, and the negroes were let go. They had not got beyond the town limits, however, before they were followed and set upon by a mob, against whom they fought manfully until overpowered, but at last beaten down, they were bound and horribly beaten with brass knuckles. There master arrived soon after from Boone county, Kentucky, and expressed the deepest indignation at the way his slaves had been treated by the mob. He declared that he would rather they had escaped entirely than have been so abused.—Indianapolis Journal.

SOURCES: “Outrage on Runaway Slaves,” The Press and Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, Tuesday, May 15, 1860, p. 3, col. 3, the article appearing at the bottom of the page was cut off when microfilmed; “Outrage on Runaway Slaves,” Janesville Weekly Gazette, Janesville, Wisconsin, Wednesday, May 16,1860, p. 3, col. 4.

Monday, June 16, 2025

The Winning Man—Abraham Lincoln.

In presenting ABRAHAM LINCOLN to the National Republican Convention, as a candidate for the Presidency, were are actuated not by our great love and esteem for the man, by any open or secret hostility to any other of the eminent gentlemen named for that high office, nor by a feeling of State pride or Western sectionalism, but by a profound and well matured conviction that his unexceptionable record, his position between the extremes of opinion in the party, his spotless character as a citizen and his acknowledge ability as a statesman, will, in the approaching canvass, give him an advantage before the people which no other candidate can claim. We are not disposed to deny that Mr. SEWARD, is the question of availability being set aside, the first choice of perhaps a majority of the rank and file of the party; that Gen. CAMERON has claims upon Pennsylvania which his friends will not willingly have overlooked; that the statesman like qualities, inflexible honesty and marked executive ability of SALMON P. CHASE entitle him to a high place in Republican esteem; that Mr. BATES’ pure life and noble aims justly command the confidence of troops of friends; that the chivalric WADE has extorted the admiration of the North and West; that FESSENDEN, for his gallant service but be gratefully remembers; and that JOHN McLEAN, whose life is without a stain and whose love of country has never been challenged, must be remembered as a strong and unexceptional man. But Illinois claims that Mr. LINCOLN, though without the ripe experience of SEWARD, the age and maturity of BATES and McLEAN, or the fire of FESSENDEN and WADE, has the rare and happy combination of qualities which, as a candidate, enables him to outrank either.

I. By his own motion, he is not a candidate. He has never sought, directly or indirectly, for the first or second place on the ticket. The movement in his favor is spontaneous. It has sprung up suddenly and with great strength, its roots being in the conviction that he is the man to reconcile all difference in our ranks, to conciliate all the now jarring elements, and to lead forward to certain victory. Having never entered into the field, he has put forth no personal effort for success, and he has never made, even by implication, a pledge of any sort by which his action, if he is President, will be influenced for any man, any measure, any policy. He will enter upon the contest with no clogs, no embarrassment; and this fact is a guaranty of a glorious triumph.

II. In all the fundamentals of Republicanism, he is radical up to the limit to which the party, with due respect for the rights of the South, proposes to go. But nature has given him that wise conservatism which has made his action and his expressed opinions so conform to the most mature sentiment of the country on the question of slavery, that no living man can put his finger on one of his speeches or any one of his public acts as a State legislator or as a member of Congress, to which valid objection can be raised. His avoidance of extremes has not been the result of ambition which measures words or regulates acts but the natural consequence of an equable nature and in mental constitution that is never off its balance. While no one doubts the strength of his attachments to the Republican cause, or doubts that he is a representative man, all who know him see that he occupies the happy mean between that alleged radicalism which binds the older Anti-Slavery men to Mr. Seward, and that conservatism which dictates the support of Judge Bates. Seward men, Bates men, Cameron men and Chase men can all accept him as their second choice, and be sure that in him they have the nearest approach to what they most admire in their respective favorites, which any possible compromise will enable them to obtain.

III. Mr. LINCOLN has no new record to make. Originally a Whig, though early a recruit of the great Republican party, he has nothing to explain for the satisfaction of New Jersey, Pennsylvania or the West. His opinions and votes on the Tariff will be acceptable to all sections except the extreme South, where Republicanism expects no support. Committed within proper limitations set up by economy and constitutional obligation to the improvement of rivers and harbors, to that most beneficent measure, the Homestead bill, and to the speedy construction of the Pacific Railroad, he need write no letters to soften down old asperities, growing out of these questions which must inevitably play their part in the canvas before us. He is all that Pennsylvania and the West have a right to demand.

IV. He is a Southern man by birth and education, who has never departed from the principles which he learned from the statesmen of the period in which he first saw the light. A Kentuckian, animated by the hopes that bring the Kentucky delegation here, a Western man, to whom sectionalism is unknown, he is that candidate around whom all opponents of the extension of Human Slavery, North and South, can rally.

V. Mr. LINCOLN is a man of the people. For his position, he is not indebted to family influence, the partiality of friends or the arts of the politician. All his early life a laborer in the field, in the saw-mill, as a boatman on the Wabash, Ohio, and Mississippi, as a farmer in Illinois, he has that sympathy with the men who toil and vote that will make him strong. Later a valiant soldier in the Black Hawk war, a student in a law office, bonding his great powers to overcome the defects of early training; then a legislator, and at last a brilliant advocate, in the highest courts, and a popular leader in the great movement of the age, there is enough of romance and poetry in life to fill all the land with shouting and song. Honest Old Abe! Himself an outgrowth of free institutions, he would die in the effort to preserve to others, unimpaired, the inestimable blessings by which he has been made a man.

VI. Without a stain of Know-Nothingism on his skirts, he is acceptable to the mass of the American party who, this year, will be compelled to choose between the candidate of Chicago and the nominee of Baltimore. The experience of two years has proved their error and his wisdom. They want the chance to retrieve the blunders of the past. Endeared by his manly defence of the principles of the Declaration of Independence to the citizen of foreign birth, he could command the warm support of every one of them from whom, in any contingency, a Republican vote can be expected.

VII. Mr. LINCOLN is an honest man. We know that the adage “Praise overmuch is censure in disguise” is true; and we know, too, that it is the disgrace of the age that in the popular mind, politics and chicane, office and faithlessness go hand in hand. We run great risk then in saying of Mr. Lincoln what truth inexorably demands,—that in his life of 51 years, there is no act of a public or private character, of which his most malignant enemy can say “this is dishonest,” “this is mean.” With his record, partizanship [sic] has done its worst and the result we have stated. His escutcheon is without a blemish.

VIII. After saying so much, we need not add that Mr. LINCOLN can be elected, if placed before the people with the approbation of the Convention to meet tomorrow. In New England, where Republicanism pure and simple is demanded, and where he has lately electrified the people by his eloquence, his name would be a tower of strength. New York who clings with an ardent embrace to that great statesman, her first choice, would not refuse to adopt Mr. LINCOLN as a standard bearer worthy of the holy cause. Pennsylvania, satisfied with his views in regard to the present necessity of fostering domestic interests, and the constitutional moderation of his opinions upon slavery, would come heartily into his support.

The West is the child of the East, and aside from her local pride in one of the noblest of her sons, she would not fail by her plaudits to exalt and intensify the enthusiasm which the nomination of Honest Old Abe would be sure to excite. The West has no rivalry with the East except in the patriotic endeavor to do the most for the Republican cause. Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin desire no triumph in which the East does not share—no victory over which the East may not honestly exult. In a contest for Lincoln, they will fight with zeal and hope that has never before animated the Republican hosts.

We present our candidate, then, not as the rival of this man or that, not because the West has claims which she must urge; not because of a distinctive policy which she would see enforced; not because he is the first choice of a majority; but because he is that honest man, that representative Republican, that people’s candidate, whose life, position, record, are so many guarantys [sic] of success—because he is that patriot in whose hands the interests of the government may be safely confided. Nominated, he would, we believe, be triumphantly elected; but if another, in the wisdom of the Convention, is preferred we can pledge him to labor, as an honest and effective as any that he ever done for himself, for the man of the Convention’s choice.

SOURCE: “President Making,” The Press and Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, Tuesday, May 15, 1860, p. 2, col. 1-2

President Making.

To the Editors Press and Tribune:

These are President making days. I presume there are very few men in these United States, who have not for the last few months, been trying their hands at it. I am among the number, and I beg to give you my conclusions on the subject. I am afraid of extremes. My father was a Revolutionist, a red-hot Whig,—ardent and, I guess, oftentimes a little fast. He used to often caution me to look out; to be careful and avoid extremes. Now I think pretty well of Senator Seward, but I am afraid he is a little on the extremes. He is quite a young man yet. He is doing very good service where he is, and we may want to send him as our Minister to England. I guess we had better take someone else this time.

I think firstrate of our own Lincoln. Why he is a real Harry Clay of a fellow. I love him. He too, however, is quite young yet. He will if he lives, be much better known four our eight years hence. I hope to live and see him President; but I think it will be best to have him serve us four years as Attorney General, and then, or four years after that, try him for President.

Gov. CHASE of Ohio, has ardent admirers, not only in that state, but through all the free States. He is an able man. I guess a very good man; but his record does not all of it suit me. He clung rather too long to Locofoco Democracy. He, too, is yet a quite a young man and can well afford a little longer probation. I am by no means sure he is not a little on extremes on the slavery question. I think he is a good man, but I am not in favor of giving him the first post yet.

My deliberate first choice for President is Thomas Corwin of Ohio. You can’t better it I believe. He will avoid extremes and is highly conservative. He has had a few lies told about him, in relation to his being a little fond of money. It is all nonsense. If we get no worse “Galphim” to take care of our strong box, I shall be glad. He cannot be beat. I propose Gov. Banks as Vice President with him. As my second choice, I propose Edward Bates of Missouri, and Gov. Banks as Vice President. The country will be safe under the administration of either of those gentlemen.

REPUBLICAN WHIG DEMOCRAT.

SOURCE: “President Making,” The Press and Tribune, Chicago, Illinois, Tuesday, May 15, 1860, p. 2, col. 7

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 4, 1862

Left Camp College Hill again and arrived at Goodlettsville on the 5th and took breakfast, making a march of 12 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 20

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 5, 1862

Left. Goodlettsville and arrived at Tire Spring camp, making the third time in this camp and our third march and counter-march over this ground, and encamped for the night, making a march of 9½ miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 20

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 6, 1862

Left Camp Tire Spring and arrived the same day at Franklin and encamped for the night, making a march of 22 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 20

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 7, 1862

Left Franklin camp, and arrived the same day at Bowling Green, encamping for the night, making a march of 21 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 20

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 8, 1862

Left Bowling Green camp and changed camp near Big Barren river the same day, and encamped for the night, making a march of 8 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 20

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 12, 1862

Left Big Barren River camp and changed camp to the centre of Bowling Green the same day, remaining four days in the above mentioned camp, making a march of 1½ miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 20

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 16, 1862

Left Bowling Green camp and got to the Great Cave Spring the same day, and encamped for the night, making a march of 4 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 20-1

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 17, 1862

Left the Great Cave Spring camp and arrived the same day at Robin Hood, near the Dripping Springs, making a march of 18 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 21

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 18, 1862

Left Dripping Springs camp and arrived at Deaumont Knob the same day, and encamped for the night, making a march of 18 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 21

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 19, 1862

Left Deaumont Knob camp and arrived at Bell's Knob the same day, and encamped for the night, making a march of 5 miles. Was rallied and fell into line of battle, and had a skirmish with the enemy, losing four men on our side, but we succeeded in routing them the same day.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 21

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 20, 1862

Left Bell's Knob camp and marched to Glasgow, Union county, Tenn., the same day, and encamped for the night, making a march of 24 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 21

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 21, 1862

Left Glasgow camp and arrived at Green river the same day, and fatigued and tired, laid down for the night in camp, making a march of 25 miles. On arriving in this camp the Green river bridge, which is thrown across that stream, with four piers, one hundred and fifty five feet from low-water mark, was on fire and falling, having been fired by the rebels on their retreat while we were following them up, and all the pontoon flats of a bridge thrown across said stream burned to the water's edge, to save their retreat.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 21

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 22, 1862

Left Green river camp and marched to Nolin the same day, making a march of 22 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 21

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 23, 1862

Left Nolin camp and marched to Mulgrove Valley the same day, and encamped for the night, making a march of 25 miles.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 21

Diary of Private Adam S. Johnston, September 26, 1862

Left Nolin camp and marched to Louisville, Ky., on the morning of the 27th, and encamped in the town for three days to rest and recruit and get four months' pay, and draw clothing, making a march of 31 miles. Being the second time we encamped in Louisville.

SOURCE: Adam S. Johnston, The Soldier Boy's Diary Book, p. 22