Poor Crowthers died
very peacefully about noon to-day. His cot is next mine and he seemed like one
of the family to me. The company has undertaken to raise money to send his body
home.
SOURCE:
Lawrence Van Alstyne, Diary of an Enlisted Man, p. 91
Poor Crowthers died
very peacefully about noon to-day. His cot is next mine and he seemed like one
of the family to me. The company has undertaken to raise money to send his body
home.
SOURCE:
Lawrence Van Alstyne, Diary of an Enlisted Man, p. 91
Orderly Holmes is
very sick. His discharge is under his pillow (or knapsack). He lies in a room
next to this and I can hear him talk, giving orders to the company as if he
were well.
SOURCE:
Lawrence Van Alstyne, Diary of an Enlisted Man, p. 91
This is a hard spot
to get well in. Two poor fellows are near their end to all appearances, and it
is trying to hear them rave about home and their families. I am glad their
friends cannot see and hear them. And yet the hardened wretches called nurses
find something in it to laugh at. I wish I could change places between them and
the sick ones. Wrote three letters to-day and don't feel so very tired. Begin
to think Dr. Andrus was right. If he would only let me eat about four times as
much, what a jewel he would be.
SOURCE:
Lawrence Van Alstyne, Diary of an Enlisted Man, p. 91
The finest morning
yet. The air is just right. The birds are singing, the sun shining bright and
everything seems just right for getting well. A man named Barker died last
night about midnight. He has seemed to be dying for a week and we have watched
to see him breathe his last any minute. Orderly Holmes is better and may get
well after all. Some of the boys killed an alligator to-day and cooked and ate
his tail. They say it is just as good as fish and looked like fish.
SOURCE:
Lawrence Van Alstyne, Diary of an Enlisted Man, pp . 91-2
Have been
downstairs. My legs just made out to get me there and back. Will they ever get
strong again? But I am getting there, slow but sure, as I can see by looking
back only a short time.
SOURCE:
Lawrence Van Alstyne, Diary of an Enlisted Man, p. 92
Another fine day,
and another trip downstairs. My legs behaved better this time. Am not near so tired.
Now that I can write without getting tired I must put down some things I
remember, but which I could not write at the time. I shall always remember them
of course, but I want to see how near I can describe them on paper. First I
want to say how very kind my comrades have been all through. I can think of
many acts of kindness now that I paid little attention to then, but they kept
coming along just the same. Whatever else I think of, the thought of their care
for me and how they got passes and tramped miles to get me something to eat,
always taking it to Dr. Andrus first to see if it would do for me these
thoughts keep coming up and my load of gratitude keeps getting heavier. Can I
ever repay them? God has been good to me, better than I deserve. I was first
taken to the room where I am now writing. I remember but little of what
happened before I was taken out and put in the big hospital tent. It is a large
affair, made up of several tents joined together endwise and wide enough for
two rows of cots along the side, with an alley through the middle, towards
which our feet all pointed.
I remember the head
medical man coming through every day or so and the doctors would take him to
certain cots, where they would look on the fellows lying there and put down something
in a book. I soon noticed that most always such a one died in a short time, and
I watched for their coming to my cot. One day they did, and I remember how it
made me feel. Dr. Andrus was so worked down that a strange doctor was in
charge, but under Dr. Andrus, who had charge over all. When he came through I
motioned to him and he came and sat on the next cot, when I told him I would
get well if I could get something good to eat. "All right," said he,
"what will you have?" I told him a small piece of beefsteak. He sent
one of the nurses to his mess cook and he soon came back with a plate and on it
a little piece of steak which he prepared to feed me. But the smell was enough
and I could not even taste it. The doctor then proceeded to eat it, asking if I
could think of anything else. I thought a bottle of beer would surely taste
good and so he sent to the sutler's for it. But he had to drink that too, for I
could not. He laughed at me and though I was disappointed, it cheered me up
more than anything else had done for a long time. When I got so I could eat, I
surely thought he would starve me to death.
A poor fellow across
the tent opposite me got crazy and it took several men to hold him on his cot.
The doctor came and injected something in his breast which quieted him for the
night, but when it wore off he was just as bad and he finally died in one of
them. On my right lay a man sick unto death, while on my left lay another whose
appetite had come and who was begging everybody for something to eat. His company
boys brought him some bread and milk which he ate as if famished. The next
morning when I awoke and looked about to see how many faces were covered up I
found both my right and left hand neighbors had died in the night and their
blankets were drawn up over their faces. The sights I saw while I was able to
realize what was going on were not calculated to cheer me up and how I
acted when I was out of my head I don't know. At any rate I got better and was
brought back to this room, where I have since been.
SOURCE:
Lawrence Van Alstyne, Diary of an Enlisted Man, pp. 92-4
Had a thunder shower
in the night and some sharp lightning. Was not allowed to go out to-day on
account of the ground being wet. We hear of hard fighting up the river, but
reports get so twisted I put little stock in them. Still I hope they are true,
for they are most all favorable to our side.
SOURCE:
Lawrence Van Alstyne, Diary of an Enlisted Man, p. 94
We are having, I
think, as warm weather as I have ever experienced. The papers have a curt
letter from Speed resigning his office. He has also written an elaborate but
not very profound letter to Doolittle, dissenting from the Philadelphia
Convention.
The President sent
in a veto on the new bill establishing the Freedmen's Bureau, or prolonging it.
His reasons against it were strong and vigorous, but the two houses, without
discussing or considering them, immediately passed the bill over the veto, as
was agreed and arranged by the leaders, Stevens and others. Very few of the
Members know anything of the principles involved, or even the provisions of the
bill, nor, if informed, had they the independence to act, but they could under
the lash of party vote against the President. Two or three of the Members, in
telling me the result, spoke of it as a great triumph in the manner of the
final hasty passage without any consideration.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, p. 554
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
The President tells
me that Dennison did not intend to leave, — that his purpose was to maintain
his party relations but conform to the Administration in his action. He did not
want nor expect his resignation would be accepted. These were the President's
impressions. He looked upon it as a refined partyism to which he would give no
attention. Speed, he says, thought to be very short, and he, therefore, did not
reply to Speed's note resigning, but considered it a fact in conformity with
the terms of the note.
The authentic
published proceedings of the Radical leaders are disgraceful to the Members who
were present and took part. It shows their incapacity as statesmen and their
unfitness as legislators. Raymond publishes the statement, the injunction of
secrecy having been removed. He also prints a letter in his paper, the New York Times,
disclosing the revolutionary feeling of the leading Radicals, who are, in fact,
conspirators.
Montgomery Blair is
possessed of the sentiment that another civil war is pending and that the
Radical leaders design and are preparing for it. I am unwilling to believe that
a majority of Congress is prepared for such a step, but the majority is weak in
intellect, easily led into rashness and error by the few designing leaders, who
move and control the party machinery. There is no individuality and very little
statesmanship or wise legislation, and as little in the Senate. The war on the
President and on the Constitution, as well as on the whole of the people South,
except the negroes, is revolutionary.
The President, while
he has a sound and patriotic heart, has erred in not making himself and his
office felt as a power. He should long since have manifested his determination
to maintain and exercise his executive rights, in fact should in the first
month of the session, and as soon as the spirit and hostility of the Radical
leaders was apparent, have drawn the lines and made his own position known and
felt. I so said to him on more than one occasion. But the influence and counsel
of Seward, who deals in vacillating expedients, have been disastrous. He has
striven to keep alive and strengthen the party organization, which is opposed
to the President, and thus given power to the Radicals, who are conspiring
against him. The President's friends have, as a result, been proscribed and his
opponents favored by his own Administration. In this way Congress, where the
Administration had or might have a majority, has become consolidated against
the President. Those Members who were kindly disposed have been disciplined and
drawn away from him by this trimming New York management. His mind is tardy in
its movements, though honest and firm, and required stimulating and urging
onward at the very time when Seward was exerting himself to suppress and hold
back any decisive action in order to secure a party ascendancy in New York
under Thurlow Weed. Stanton, of course, operated with Seward to prevent
Executive action, for he was in all his feelings with the extreme Radicals,
though contriving to so far keep in with the President as to retain his place.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, pp. 555-6
The Democrats have
had a large meeting at Reading in Pennsylvania. Mr. Blair is reported to have
made an ultra speech, denouncing the intrigues and schemes of the Radical
leaders and predicting civil war if they are not defeated at the fall
elections. The country has had too recent and too exhausting an experience for
another war.
A telegram from the
coarse, vulgar creature who is Governor of Tennessee says that there is a quorum
of the legislature and that they have ratified the Constitutional Amendment.
This legislature was chosen when war existed, and under circumstances and
animosities which would not be justified or excusable in peace. It is, of
course, no exponent of popular sentiment in that State. But under the urgent
appeals of the Radical Members of Congress, Brownlow, the Governor, convened a
special session of this dead body on the 4th of July, to ratify the changes in
the Constitution of the United States. But he was unable to get a quorum
together. Fifty-six were necessary for a quorum; only fifty-four would be
assembled, and two were arrested and brought to Nashville as prisoners. These
made the requisite fifty-six, and forty-three of these bogus members voted for
the Constitutional changes. This is an exhibition of Radical regard for honest
principle, for popular opinion, and for changes in the organic law. The change
is to be imposed upon the people by fraud, not adopted of choice.
I asked by way of
suggestion to the President, how it happened that General Thomas's telegram of
the 14th respecting the arrest of members of the legislature was not responded
to until the 17th. He said he could not tell, and, evidently apprehending my
object, said perhaps General Grant did not get it until the 15th and passed it
over to the War Department possibly the next day, and the Secretary of War
brought it here on the 17th. "Yet it does seem to have been some time on
the way for a telegram," said he. "In the mean time," continued
I, "two members of the legislature appear to have been arrested and
brought to Nashville." This is Stantonian. Why does the President submit
to be victimized?
The irregular
tidings that Tennessee had in any way, however illegal or by force and fraud,
confirmed the Amendment, as it is called, caused great exultation in Congress.
The Radicals felt as if they were relieved, or those of them who felt uneasy
under the dictation of Stevens, Boutwell, Schenck, etc. Conscious of their
wrongdoing and that they were trifling with the country for mere party
ascendancy and power, they broke away from Stevens and refused to follow him.
Tennessee can now be permitted to have Representatives, — a right from which
she has been excluded.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, pp. 556-8
I learn that the
President to-day sent in the nomination of Mr. Stanbery for Attorney-General.
He made no mention of it in Cabinet. There is a reticence on the part of the
President — an apparent want of confidence in his friends — which is
unfortunate, and prevents him from having intimate and warm personal friends
who would relieve him in a measure. Doolittle spoke of this to me last evening
as we came from the President's, with whom he wanted some frank and friendly
conversation, and he felt a little hurt that he was not met in the same spirit.
It is a mistake, an infirmity, a habit fixed before he was President, to keep
his own counsel. I find no want of confidence or frankness in him when I
introduce a topic, or make an inquiry, but it is unpleasant to seek information
which should, in friendly courtesy, be communicated or invited by him.
Professor Davies
comes to see me. Wants his nephew, General Davies, to be made Naval Officer at
New York. Says Smythe, the Collector, is doing nothing to sustain the
President, or the Philadelphia movement. I am inclined to believe there is
truth in it and that Smythe is a very indifferent officer, as well as a useless
politician, or party man, and that the President has been deceived in him. I
have heretofore expressed my doubts of his fitness to the President, McCulloch,
and Doolittle, and they, neither of them, controverted my
opinion. He is a weight, no aid.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, p. 558
The Senate has
altered and passed the resolution and preamble concerning the right of
Tennessee to be represented, Congress, or the Radical majority, graciously
permitting it, — not because the Constitution sanctions, or that the people or
State have any rights, but because a fragment of a legislature, less than a
quorum, elected nearly two years ago and summoned by the vulgar Governor, have
adopted or ratified the Constitutional Amendment. The whole proceeding is a
burlesque on republican government and our whole system of popular rights,
opinion, State action, and constitutional obligation.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, p. 559
Had a discussion
last evening with McCulloch and Doolittle in the council-room, the President
being by, respecting the preamble and resolution of Congress in regard to
Tennessee. McCulloch thought it might injure the President or help the Radicals
if he did not sign it. I preferred that he should not, especially that he
should not give his assent to the preamble. My own course would be to approve
of neither, for it would be claimed as a precedent in future toward the other
States. If it were an isolated instance, the resolution affirming that the
State might send Representatives would, perhaps, be harmless, but the precedent
in the present state of things would be bad. The President listened and then
read a dispatch from the Speaker, saying he would not sign a certificate that
the Amendment had been ratified.
Admiral Farragut and
myself have been busy to-day on promotions under the recent law.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, p. 559
Busy through the day
until dark on the subject of promotions, except for a short time at the
Cabinet. The promotions will, unavoidably, give pain to many worthy men, but
the principle which I have adopted will cause immensely less dissatisfaction
than the original recommendations of the boards convened under the previous
law. My action has been based on their recommendations, only deviating in a few
cases when I was convinced injustice had been done by partiality or prejudice.
Many would be glad
to dispense these promotions, but it has been to me a labor of sadness in many
respects, and, though as glad as anyone to assist in rewarding merit, yet, when
accompanied with the knowledge that a lifelong sorrow is to be inflicted on
others, necessarily, because extra promotion cannot be made without overriding
others, some of them estimable men though not proved heroic officers, I am
grieved.
Mr. Stanbery, the
new Attorney-General, took his seat to-day in the Cabinet. He seems to have encountered
no opposition in the Senate.
Seward presented a
letter which he had prepared to our Minister to Japan. I did not like it, nor
have I been favorable to the course which our Government and authority have in
some respects pursued towards the Japanese. We Americans had found favor in
their eyes above any Christian nation. To us they had opened ports and
permitted trade. The English and French sought the same privilege; ultimately
these countries and the Japanese became involved in hostilities, and the two
powers had their fleets there. They intrigued to get us to unite with them. But
the Japanese wanted no quarrel with us. Yet Mr. Pruyn, our then Minister,
persuaded or directed Captain McDougal, commanding the Jamestown, to furnish a
small detachment to go on board a small steamer which was chartered and
entered, with the American flag, into the fight. Although performing little or
no service, the two powers were delighted, extolled our men, who were mere
spectators, gave honors to our officers, who rendered no service, and when the
Japanese came to terms and agreed to pay three millions, it was insisted the
Americans, with their little chartered steamer and with no expectation, should
receive the same as the other powers with their large fleets and great expense.
Of this money, called indemnity, three hundred thousand dollars have been
received. The Japanese have now requested delay in the payment of the other
installments. Seward's letter was very arrogant, dictatorial, and mandatory.
This Government would consent to no delay; immediate and full payment must be
promptly made, unless the two other powers decided on a different course, when
our hostile policy would yield and conform to theirs. I was
disgusted and said so.
There was, moreover,
a by-transaction in which Thurlow Weed and Lansing of Albany, a brother-in-law
of the Minister, were interested to the amount of several hundred thousand
dollars in gold, which had been intrusted to their hands under the advisement
of the Minister for building ships years ago. When the war came on in Japan
these two gentlemen with Japanese money in their pockets desired our Government
to take the vessel which they had then built. President Lincoln, when I
declined the purchase, was appealed to. He had one or two interviews with me,
and as I considered the proceeding improper he put his name to a paper
expressing a wish that she might be taken into our service. But I was finally
successful, though with much difficulty, in resisting the scheme. Difficulties
between our Government and Japan on other subjects relieved Weed and company in
their matters.
When, therefore,
Seward read his letter to-day, I expressed a wish that if a refusal were to be
sent, it might be less harsh. I preferred, if he so shaped our relations that
we must be tied to England and France, they should take the initiative, and we,
acting independently, should consent to a reasonable delay even if they did not
assent. This, I thought, sufficiently humiliating. Seward was not pleased.
Stanton saw the point of my suggestion and doubted whether we should complicate
ourselves with the other powers. No other one made a remark or asked a question
to draw me out. They saw, which indeed was very perceptible, that Seward was
nettled, and they knew not the preceding history.
I took occasion,
immediately after the adjournment, to inform the President of the main points
and also McCulloch. On learning the facts, both declared themselves against
Seward's letter. The President said he recollected former remarks of mine in
Cabinet when the notice of the first installment was announced and Seward took
great credit to himself for the money. I said it cost the nation dear.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, pp. 559-62
I, early this
morning, took to the President the carefully prepared list of promotions. He
did not fully understand the subject and was disposed to delay. Stanton came in
and took him aside. I comprehended the whole matter.
Senator Doolittle
breakfasted with me and said some discontent was manifested because General
Grant's nomination had not been sent in to the Senate. I told him I presumed it
was because Stanton intentionally or from neglect had not made out and sent it
to the President, but that the whole might be remedied by sending up Grant's
and Farragut's nominations together, and as our bill for the Navy was only this
day confirmed, the conclusion would be that there was an object in having their
commissions of the same date. Doolittle went from me to the President with
these suggestions, and the President had immediately dispatched Colonel Moore,
his Secretary, requesting the Secretary of War to send him Grant's nomination,
and to me to send Farragut's. Colonel Moore did not get to the Navy Department
until I had left and overtook me as I was taking the Navy nominations, including
Farragut's, to the President.
This accounted for
Stanton's sudden appearance. He and the President thought it not [advisable] to
send in the nominations before adjournment of others than the two principal
officers. I differed and wanted the naval appointments off my hands. Stanton
said the Army Bill had not got through Congress. That was his fault.
Farragut and myself
were at General Grant's this evening. He said great noise had been made over
the Army Bill and nothing had been done, while the Navy had been quiet and
accomplished everything. Mrs. Grant said Mr. Grant had better see Stanton about
it.
I rode to the
Capitol this evening with Admiral Farragut. It is the first time I have visited
the Capitol during this session of eight months while the houses were sitting.
I did not now go in, for I found the Miscellaneous Bill was on the tapis and
should be during this evening's sitting. Farragut and Grant were this day
confirmed.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, pp. 562-3
Congress has agreed
to adjourn on Saturday. God speed them home. Still there is much important
business undone. League Island has not been accepted by the Senate. This is the
most important matter affecting the Navy which is now pending. Grimes says he
must leave to-morrow evening. He seems to have lost zeal in this matter, after
being earnest for it for years.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, p. 563
The naval
nominations were confirmed as submitted. I have labored hard to have as little
wrong committed as possible, and yet I fear injustice may have been done to
some worthy officers.
Randall, appointed
Postmaster-General in place of Dennison, this day attended the Cabinet-meeting,
and Harlan sent in his resignation. He was at the meeting of the Cabinet, but
made no mention of it at that time.
Mr. Stanbery, the
Attorney-General, read the rough notes, as he called them, of an embryo report
on the subject of filling vacancies. The paper possesses ability.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, p. 563
Went to the Capitol
a little before ten this A.M. Apprehended I should be late, for we had agreed
yesterday in Cabinet to meet in the President's room at nine. Only Randall was
there when I arrived, and it was more than an hour before the President and
others came. There had been some misunderstanding as to the hour of
adjournment, on which there had been conflicting votes.
The two houses sat
all night, and finished their labor of the session by increasing their own
salaries $2000 each per annum, and by a bounty bill involving an expenditure of
probably one hundred millions. Trumbull, who has gone astray, says not over
sixty-five millions. This is waste and reckless extravagance as well as
imprudent and careless legislation in almost all respects.
The President spoke
to me on the subject soon after he arrived. I said promptly I hoped he would
not sanction the proceeding; that it was profligate legislation and a good
question with which to go before the people, — I should be glad of such an
issue; — that neither wisdom, sound policy, nor good government would sanction
such reckless extravagance, though the country appears dumb and indifferent
over extravagant inroads; that the result of such waste and profligacy, if
countenanced and approved by Executive and Congress, must end in the prostration
of the Government and general repudiation.
When the bill was
received and read, Seward at once remarked that the President was not
responsible for the act and he had but one course to take, which was to sign
the bill. Stanton said promptly he would not have voted for it had he been a
Member, but that he would not advise a veto. McCulloch said the bill was not so
bad as it might have been and thought the Government could stagger through it.
Stanbery thought it had better be approved. I still objected. The President was
reluctant, but at length signed the bill. McCulloch put his arm around me as I
walked around the room and brought me up towards the President. As he did so,
he said, "I know this is against your opinion, but under the circumstances
we all think it is best." I told him and the President that I submitted,
and he perhaps could hardly be expected to do otherwise than assent to the Act
of Congress, supported by his entire Cabinet, including the Secretary of the
Treasury, I only differing. The President yields on questions when his friends
advise and urge him. They do not always have an opportunity. In the Cabinet
economy is not a cardinal point. McCulloch has correct views, but he, also,
yields too much. I should have been glad to have stood out with the President
on this issue, or rather to have had him with me. The country would have been
with him, because he would have been right.
I told the President
that I regretted the appointment of Clark1 to be judge in New
Hampshire. He said it was not acceptable to him, but there was a confused state
of things. It was hard to ascertain who was worthy. He thought some good
results might grow out of it. I can see nothing good and so said. On every
Constitutional point that has been raised, Clark has opposed the President. He
has been vindictive. He was the tool of Fessenden in expelling Stockton, and
has been as mischievously hostile as any man in the Senate. Yet he is selected
to be a judge. Such selections destroy public confidence.
So far as I am, or
the Navy Department is, concerned, Clark has been friendly and kind, but in his
course towards the President and as a politician and legislator I think badly
of him. The President has, under bad advice, committed a mistake. I am told
Hendricks and some other Senators interfered for Clark. There are loose
political morals in the Senate, and the President should disregard Senatorial
interposition for their own members, for they favor one another at the
country's expense.
I do not think the
Members were exactly satisfied with themselves in closing up the session. A
feeling of disappointment was apparent, and by many confessed, accompanied with
conscious guilt of wrong and feebleness. Weak capabilities, shallow
statesmanship, and intense partisanship are the qualities of this Congress.
_______________
1 Daniel Clark, Senator from New Hampshire,
1857-66, appointed United States Judge for the District of New Hampshire.
SOURCE: Gideon
Welles, Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and
Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1, 1864 — December 31, 1866, pp. 563-5
Senator Doolittle
called and wished me to accompany him to the President to meet General Dix, and
we sent to McCulloch to go there also. The selection of Dix as Minister to The
Hague, a third-class mission, is doing good. It is opening the eyes of
Doolittle and McCulloch, and I think the President, to the course of Weed and
Seward.
Doolittle called on
me the morning that this nomination was announced, and asked what it meant.
Said we could not spare Dix from the country at this time. I told him there was
no probability that Dix would leave. Certainly not on that mission. "What,
then, does it mean?" said Doolittle. I replied that it was intended to
dispose of Dix. The appointment was derogatory and designed to belittle him,
and then, as he would not accept, the place would be kept open for Seward to
play with.
I saw when I met Dix
this morning that he was, for him, a good deal disturbed, and was glad to have
him express his dissatisfaction and his opinions, and the views of others. He
says Weed is playing a strange game in relation to Governor of New York. Tells
of Weed's and Seward's policy, though only Weed's name used. Says that when
Weed wants his own party and servants to be beaten, he selects a weak
candidate, etc.
Smythe, the
Collector, came in soon after Dix went out, and he was even more full than Dix
in disclosing Weed's intrigues and the lectures and teachings of which he was
the recipient. Weed told Smythe he was a merchant and no politician. Smythe
said he knew enough to fire at mark, though he might not hit it.
SOURCE: Gideon Welles, Diary of Gideon
Welles, Secretary of the Navy Under Lincoln and Johnson, Vol. 2: April 1,
1864 — December 31, 1866, p. 566