The Man Who Saved the Union (108 page)

BOOK: The Man Who Saved the Union
8.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

CHAPTER 71

“great wrongs and frauds”
: from Davis, Jan. 6, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:10n.

“This may cause”
: from Davis, Jan. 11, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:10n.

“The act of the legislature”
: to Davis, Jan. 12, 1874.

“Gentlemen”
:
New York Daily Tribune
, March 31, 1874.

“silent contempt”
: Hamilton Fish diary, March 27, 1874, Library of Congress.

“The importance of doing something”
: from Morton, March 22, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:68-69n.

“I know from information”
: from L. Montgomery Bond, April 15, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:70n.

“Who are these men?”
: from Redstone, April 18, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:72-73n.

“In my intercourse”
: from Martin B. Anderson, April 15, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:70n.

“This bill is a violation”
: from Edward S. Jaffray, April 16, 1874,
New York Daily Tribune
, April 17, 1874.

“inflict a stain”
:
New York Times
, April 16, 1874.

“I deem this course”
: Draft message, April 22, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:65-67.

“He had given it”
: Fish diary, April 21, 1874.

“The President thought”
: Fish diary, April 21, 1874.

“I must express”
: Veto message, April 22, 1874, Public Papers.

“God Almighty bless you”
: from Pierrepont, April 22, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:77n.

“It is Vicksburg”
: from Manning Force, April 23, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:78n.

“I do not forget”
: from Elias Derby, April 24, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:79n.

“You have done
your
duty”
: from McCosh, May 4, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:80n.

“noble stand”
: from Drexel, May 9, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:80-81n.

“The president is mistaken … next term”
:
New York Times
, April 23, 1874.

CHAPTER 72

“I believe it to be”
: Memorandum, June 1, 1874.

“He speaks”
: Hamilton Fish diary, June 7, 1874, Library of Congress.

“A wedding at the White House”
:
New York Times
, May 22, 1874.

CHAPTER 73

“I heartily approve”
: to Baxter, April 22, 1874.

“Frauds may have been committed”
: from Williams, May 15, 1874,
Executive Documents Printed by Order of the Senate
, 43:2:12.

“all turbulent and disorderly persons”
: Proclamation, May 15, 1874, Public Papers.

“Even our opponents”
: from Kellogg, Aug. 19, 1874,
Executive Documents
, 43:2:9-10.

“We assure your excellency”
: from Ward, Sept. 4, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 25:216-18n.

“En route they were all shot”
: Kellogg to George Williams, Aug. 31, 1874,
Executive Documents
, 43:2:11-12.

“The purpose of the riot”
: S. B. Packard to George Williams, Sept. 14, 1874,
Executive Documents
, 43:2:14.

“Under Article 4”
: from Kellogg, Sept. 14, 1874,
Executive Documents
, 43:2:13.

“Turbulent and disorderly persons”
: Proclamation, Sept. 15, 1874, Public Papers.

“The result of our election”
: from Blaine, Sept. 14, 1874, Grant Papers, Library of Congress.

“Not before the meeting”
: to Cameron, Nov. 3, 1873.

CHAPTER 74

“There is no duty”
: Annual message, Dec. 5, 1870, Public Papers.

“The rules adopted”
: Annual message, Dec. 7, 1874, Public Papers.

“I never sought the office”
: to White, May 29, 1875.

“I followed the President”
:
Personal Memoirs of Julia Dent Grant
, 184-85.

“The whole subject … of sectional interference”
: Annual message, Dec. 7, 1874, Public Papers.

CHAPTER 75

“I think the terrorism”
: Sheridan to William Belknap, Jan. 5, 1875, in
New York Times
, Jan. 6, 1875.

“Coming among us”
: Cotton Exchange statement, in
New York Times
, Jan. 6, 1875.

“The Administration”
: Statement by Illinois Democratic State Central Committee, in
New York Times
, Jan. 6, 1875.

“They seem to be trying … No trouble is apprehended”
: Sheridan to Belknap, Jan. 7, 1875,
Executive Documents Printed by Order of the Senate
, 43:2:25-26.

“I am not afraid”
: Sheridan to Belknap, Jan. 6, 1875,
Executive Documents Printed by Order of the Senate
, 43:2:25.

“The President and all of us”
: Belknap to Sheridan, Jan. 6, 1875,
Executive Documents Printed by Order of the Senate
, 43:2:25.

“You had better mend”
: from “Conservative,” Jan. 7, 1875,
Papers of Grant
, 26:19n.

“If you cannot well back out”
: from “Deadshot,” Jan. 15, 1875,
Papers of Grant
, 26:19n.

“There will also be”
: from “Charles Howard,” Jan. 18, 1875,
Papers of Grant
, 26:19-20n.

“To say that lawlessness”
: Special message, Jan. 13, 1875, Public Papers.

CHAPTER 76

“currency of a fixed known value”
: Special message, Jan. 14, 1875, Public Papers.

“honest graft”
: William L. Riordon,
Plunkitt of Tammany Hall
(1905), 3-4.

“Let no guilty man escape”
: Endorsement on letter from William Barnard, July 19, 1875, forwarded to Bristow, July 29, 1875.

“Poor Ford is dead … Sylph”
:
Cases Determined in the United States Circuit Courts for the Eighth Circuit
(1876), 3:593, 610.

“To General Bristow”
:
Testimony Before the Select Committee Concerning the Whisky Frauds
, House of Representatives, 44th Congress, 1st Session, Misc. Doc. No. 186 (July 25, 1876), 3.

“The President manifested … in the negative”
: Hamilton Fish diary, Feb. 8, 1876, Library of Congress.

“How long have you known … Never”
: Deposition, Feb. 12, 1876.

“The President then”
:
Miscellaneous Documents of the House of Representatives
, 44:1:369.

“Belknap felt very much hurt”
:
Personal Memoirs of Julia Dent Grant
, 190.

“The President spoke”
: Fish diary, March 3, 1876.

“Did you ever know Orvil Grant”
:
Alleged Frauds in Contracts for Government Surveys in Wyoming Territory
(1876), 26.

CHAPTER 77

“I feel sorry for Belknap”
: William Sherman to John Sherman, March 4, 1876, Sherman Papers, Library of Congress.

“Being thoroughly of the opinion”
: from Ely Adams et al., March 17, 1875,
Papers of Grant
, 26:85n.

“I would like to start”
: Sheridan to Sherman, May 1, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 26:89n.

“Such an expedition”
: from Hare, June 9, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 26:87n.

“A general war”
: from Delano, June 9, 1874,
Papers of Grant
, 26:86.

“We have had great difficulty”
: Speech to Sioux delegation, May 26, 1875.

“I do not believe”
: Red Cloud statement, undated,
Papers of Grant
, 26:122n.

“We might just as well settle”
: Sheridan to Sherman, May 29, 1876,
Executive Documents Printed by Order of the House of Representatives
, 44:1:14:54.

“The President has just”
: Sherman to Sheridan, April 28, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 27:71n.

“Please intercept him”
: Sherman to Sheridan, May 2, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 27:72n.

“The recent reports”
: from Sherman, July 8, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 27:171-72n.

“I regard Custer’s massacre”
: Interview in
New York Herald
, Sept. 2, 1876.

CHAPTER 78

“excellent ticket”
: Speech, June 19, 1876.

“I am not aware”
: to Hayes, Aug. 16, 1876.

“It seems impossible”
: from Chamberlain, July 22, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 27:200-01n.

“The lives of white”
: from Simonton, June 3, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 27:239-40n.

“The scene at Hamburg”
: to Chamberlain, July 26, 1876.

“Our people are being shot”
: from James Major et al., Sept. 25, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 27:332n.

“Guns and pistols”
: from “Detective,” Nov. 2, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 27:335n.

“Insurrection and domestic violence”
: from Chamberlain, Oct. 11, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 27:330-01n.

CHAPTER 79

“See that the proper”
: to Sherman, Nov. 10, 1876.

“There is such apprehension”
: to Sheridan, Nov. 11, 1876.

“All they ask”
: from William Stage, Nov. 12, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 28:20-21n.

“We have a government”
: from James Rusling, Nov. 14, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 28:21n.

“The President must be”
: Hamilton Fish diary, Nov. 14, 1876, Library of Congress.

“The course you have pursued”
: from “Baltimore Secret Government,” Dec. 11, 1876,
Papers of Grant
, 28:35n.

“Hostilities there have grown”
: Annual message, Dec. 5, 1876, Public Papers.

“again the Louisiana trouble”
: Fish diary, Jan. 7, 1877.

“To do so would be”
: to Kellogg, Jan. 7, 1877.

“These different kinds”
: Special message, Jan. 22, 1877, Public Papers.

“The bill may not be perfect”
: Special message, Jan. 29, 1877, Public Papers.

“In my daily intercourse”
: from Asbury Hanes, Dec. 18, 1877,
Papers of Grant
, 28:132n.

“There is 200,000 men”
: from John Adams, Dec. 18, 1877,
Papers of Grant
, 28:132n.

“Wherever you can”
: Sherman to Sheridan, Dec. 11, 1877,
Papers of Grant
, 28:37n.

“While he most earnestly desired”
: Fish diary, Jan. 17, 1877.

“Three weeks remain”
: to Pierrepont, Feb. 11, 1877.

CHAPTER 80

“After an unusually stormy passage”
: to George Childs, June 6, 1877.

“I have no plans”
: to John Long, Jan. 28, 1877.

“There are books enough already”
:
St. Louis Globe-Democrat
, April 2, 1877, in
Papers of Grant
, 28:183-84n.

“Through your statesmanship”
: to Fish, March 9, 1877.

“I feel overcome”
:
New York Times
, May 18, 1877.

“What was my surprise”
: to George Childs, June 6, 1877.

“Once an emperor”
: Pierrepont to William Evarts, June 27, 1877,
Papers of Grant
, 28:261n.

“He has been the recipient”
: Badeau to Washburne, June 8, 1877,
Papers of Grant
, 28:215n.

“My reception”
: to Fish, June 22, 1877.

“Yesterday and the day before”
: to Ulysses Grant Jr., Sept. 23, 1877.

“My reception has been”
: Speech, June 28, 1877.

“There is no reception”
: Speech, July 3, 1877.

“There is one subject”
: Speech, Oct. 17, 1877.

“We have now been in Paris”
: to Borie, Nov. 19, 1877.

“The weather in Paris”
: to Daniel Ammen, Dec. 10, 1877.

“All the romance”
: to Ulysses Grant Jr., Jan. 7, 1878.

“I have seen more in Egypt”
: to Fred Grant, Jan. 25, 1878.

“Our visit to Jerusalem”
: to Badeau, Feb. 22, 1878.

“The Russian army”
: to Fred Grant, March 22, 1878.

“These horses”
: to Edward Beale, March 6, 1878.

“They seem to me”
: to Fred Grant, March 22, 1878.

“My impression of peoples”
: to Ammen, March 25, 1878.

“The General saunters … I believe so”
: John Russell Young,
Around the World with General Grant
(1879), 1:409-17.

“I propose to stay away”
: Interview, Aug. 29, 1877.

“The United States should always”
: to Ammen, Aug. 26, 1877.

“The country, and the country’s credit”
: to Sherman, March 21, 1878.

“It shows a willingness”
: to Drexel, March 22, 1878.

“It looks to me”
: to Abel Corbin, March 29, 1878.

“They have designs”
: to Badeau, March 22, 1878.

“I cannot tell you”
:
New York Herald
, July 24, 1878.

“Everything that our armies did”
:
New York Herald
, May 27, 1878.

“It is bliss”
: to Washburne, Oct. 7, 1878.

“We have seen the capitals”
: to Edward Beale, Dec. 6, 1878.

“Anchored outside the harbor … trade of the East”
: Grant journal, Jan. 23-July 26, 1879.

“I am ready to admit”
:
New York Herald
, Aug. 16, 1879.

BOOK: The Man Who Saved the Union
8.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Light Tamer by Devyn Dawson
The Daughters of Mars by Thomas Keneally
The Vampiric Housewife by Kristen Marquette
Valfierno by Martín Caparrós
The Wall by William Sutcliffe
Dead Asleep by Jamie Freveletti
Shade by Jeri Smith-Ready
The Pull of the Moon by Diane Janes
Gabriel by Nikki Kelly