Read A Disease in the Public Mind Online
Authors: Thomas Fleming
15
. James Ford Rhodes,
History of the Civil War, 1861â1865
(New York: 1917), 43.
16
. Mr. Lincoln & Friends,
http://mrlincolnandfriends.org/inside.asp?pageID54&subjectD=4
. Also see Robert C. Williams,
Horace Greeley: Champion of American
Freedom
(New York: 2006), 222. After Bull Run, Greeley admitted to himself and others that he was “done as a politician.”
CHAPTER 24: THE THIRD EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION
1
. Gary Joiner,
Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862
(New York: 2007), 427. For the letter in full see L. U. Reavis,
A Representative Life of Horace Greeley
(New York: 1872), 253â258.
2
. Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Horace Greeley, August 22, 1962, in
Speeches
, vol. 2, 357â358.
3
. Guelzo,
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation
, 92â97.
4
. Ibid., 29â31.
5
. Ibid., 44â51, 74.
6
. J. Michael Moore,
The Peninsula Campaign of 1862: A Military Analysis
(Jackson, MS: 2005), 16. “A History of Notable Senate Investigations,” Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War, U.S. Senate Historical Office,
http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/investigations/pdf/JCCW_Fullcitations.pdf
. For an excellent balanced history of this committee, see Bruce Tap,
Over Lincoln's Shoulder
(Lawrence, KS: 1998), Introduction.
7
. Essay by Howard Jones, in
Presidents, Diplomats and Other Mortals: Essays Honoring Robert Ferrell
, John Gary Clifford et al. (Columbia, MO: 2007), 22.
8
. Brian McGinty,
The Body of John Merryman: Abraham Lincoln and the Suspension of Habeus Corpus
(Cambridge, MA: 2011), 96. Also see Benjamin Quarles,
Lincoln and the Negro
(New York: 1991), 86; and Michael Burlingame,
Abraham Lincoln: A Life
(Baltimore, MD: 2008), 397.
9
. Michael Burlingame, ed.,
Lincoln Observed: Civil War Dispatches of Noah Brooks
(Baltimore, MD: 2002), 210. William Jackson Johnstone,
Abraham Lincoln: The Christian
(New York: 1913), 88.
10
. Robert Striner,
Lincoln's Relentless Struggle to End Slavery
(New York: 2008), 152â154.
11
. Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Hannibal Hamlin, Sept 28, 1862,
Speeches
, vol. 2, 375.
12
. Larry Tagg,
The Unpopular Mr. Lincoln: The Story of America's Most Reviled President
(New York: 2009), 317.
13
. J. M. Blackett,
Divided Hearts: Britain and the American Civil War
(Baton Rouge, LA: 2001), 175.
14
. Abraham Lincoln, Annual Message to Congress, December 1, 1863,
Speeches
, vol. 2, 393â415. Tagg,
The Unpopular Mr. Lincoln
, 334. Burlingame,
Abraham Lincoln
, 397.
15
. Guelzo,
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation
, 260.
16
. Tap,
Over Lincoln's Shoulder
, 142â148.
17
. Guelzo,
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation
, 181â185. Also see James C. Welling, editor of the
National Intelligencer
, on the abolitionists' threats in
Reminiscences of
Abraham Lincoln by Distinguished Men of His Tim
e by Allen Thorndike Rice (New York: 1909), 533.
CHAPTER 25: THE HUNT AFTER THE CAPTAIN
1
. Gary W. Gallagher,
The Union War
(Cambridge, MA: 2011). Anyone who seeks to understand the Civil War should read this book.
2
. Ibid., 52 (Seward memorandum), 63 (Miller diary).
3
. “My Hunt After the Captain,”
The Atlantic
,
http://theatlantic.com/magazine/print/1862/12/my-hunt-after-the-captain/308750
.
4
. The reference to fighting to defend their homes is further evidence of the persistence of Thomas Jefferson's nightmare in the southern public mind.
5
. Albert W. Altschuler,
Law Without Values: The Life, Work, and Legacy of Justice Holmes
(Chicago: 2000), 39â40. The Twentieth Regiment was known as the “Copperhead Regiment.”
6
. Ibid., 43â44.
7
. Ibid., 46.
8
. Menand,
The Metaphysical Club
, 67.
EPILOGUE: LINCOLN'S VISITOR
1
. Freeman,
R. E. Lee
, 113â148.
2
. David Herbert Donald,
Lincoln
(New York: 1995), 581â585.
3
. Ibid., 588.
4
. Marquis Adolphe de Chambrun,
Impressions of Lincoln and the Civil War: A Foreigner's Account
, translated from the French by General Adelbert de Chambrun (New York: 1952), preface, vâx.
5
. Ibid., 72â82.
6
. Donald,
Lincoln
, 589â590.
7
. Ibid., 591â592.
8
. John Raymond Howard, ed.,
Patriotic Addresses in America and England from 1850â1865
(New York: 1891), 688â689. Also see David Blight,
Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory
(Cambridge, MA: 2001), 67â68: “The Reverend Henry Ward Beecher, orator of the day, condemned South Carolina's secessionists to eternal damnation: the South's “remorseless traitors” were held fully responsible for the war.”
9
. Freeman,
R. E. Lee
, 206â207.
10
. John Hay,
Inside Lincoln's White House: The Complete War Diary of John Hay
, edited by Michael Burlinghame and John R. Turner Ettinger (Carbondale, IL: 1997), 67, 69, 70. Hay used the word so often that he sometimes shortened it and called Lincoln “The T” (68, 76).
11
. Charles Bracelen Flood,
Lee, The Last Years
(Boston: 1981), 51.
12
. Donald,
Lincoln
, 593. The visitor was Senator James Harlan of Iowa.
13
. Chambrun,
Impressions of Lincoln
, 84.
Abbott, Henry,
303â304
Abolition of slavery
    Â
attacks on Garrison,
111â113
    Â
British abolition of slavery in the West Indies,
110â113
,
192â194
    Â
disillusionment with,
301â303
    Â
founding generation's stance on,
47â48
    Â
Jefferson's support for,
29
    Â
pressures on Lincoln,
261
    Â
Quaker efforts for,
20â21
    Â
South America,
16â17
Abolitionists
    Â
attacks on Lincoln,
293â294
    Â
Clay's political compromise,
183â184
    Â
criticism of Lee,
270
    Â
demand for surrender,
306
    Â
Fredericksburg,
298
    Â
fugitive slave laws,
185
    Â
fundraising bill,
172
    Â
gag rule,
149â152
    Â
holding military funding,
299â300
    Â
hostility to Texas's admission,
162â163
    Â
Lincoln's plea for negotiated peace,
296â297
    Â
Lincoln's religious views,
294â295
    Â
Pierce's attack on,
219â220
    Â
political maneuverings between abolitionists and conciliators,
265â268
    Â
postwar hostility,
311â312
    Â
religious doctrine,
138â141
    Â
schism among,
137â138
    Â
Southern hostility towards,
145â146
,
181â182
    Â
Southern panic over slave revolts,
239â240
    Â
Southern propaganda,
143â144
    Â
The Slave Power replacing religion,
177â178
    Â
treatment of Lee's slaves,
236
    Â
Uncle Tom's Cabin,
187â190
    Â
Virginia's abolitionists,
123
    Â
Proposed ban on slavery in Washington, DC,
144
    Â
Weld's crusade,
129â135
    Â
See also
Brown, John
;
Garrison, William Lloyd
Adams, Abigail,
65
Adams, Charles Francis,
155
,
167
,
256
,
261
Adams, Charles Francis, Jr.,
261â262
Adams, John,
27â28
,
45
,
60â61
,
65
,
69â70
,
81â82
,
94
,
143
    Â
Amistad
revolt,
152â153
    Â
antislavery petitions,
146â148
    Â
death and legacy,
173â175
    Â
freedom of speech,
146
    Â
gag rule,
149â152
,
155â156
    Â
Garrison's disunion motion,
153â155
    Â
Mexican War,
169
    Â
Texas,
161â162
,
166â167
    Â
The Slave Power,
162â163
    Â
trade tariffs,
116
    Â
views of slavery,
144â145
    Â
Wilmot's Proviso,
172
Agassiz, Louis,
190â192
Alaska,
168
Alcoholism,
130
Alexander, Edward Porter,
306
Alford, Julius,
151
Alien and Sedition Acts,
84
Amalgamation, racial,
192
,
232â233
American Anti-Slavery Society,
111â112
,
131
,
133
,
137
American Colonization Society,
89â91
,
95â96
,
104
,
109
,
111â112
,
233
American Revolution (War of Independence),
32â35
,
39â49
,
54
,
82
Ames, Fisher,
82â83
,
102â103
Amistad
revolt,
152â153
Anarchism,
139
Andrew, John Albion,
245
,
248
,
255â256
,
274â275
Anthropology,
190â191
Antietam, Battle of,
295
,
302â303
Appleton, William,
267
Archbishop of Canterbury,
205
Articles of Confederation,
48
,
50â51
Austin, James T.,
140
Baker, Ned,
263
Ball's Bluff, Battle of,
302
Baltimore Massacre,
274â276
Battle Hymn of the Republic,
277
,
310
Beauregard, Pierre G. T.,
267
,
283
,
285â286
,
288
Beckham, Fontaine,
10