The Man Who Saved the Union (109 page)

BOOK: The Man Who Saved the Union
10.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“To it we owe”
:
New York Herald
, Aug. 13, 1879.

“We all know … solemn business sessions”
:
New York Herald
, Aug. 15, 1879.

“Nagasaki we found … the whole people”
: Grant journal, Jan. 23–July 26, 1879.

“What I have learned in Japan … their own advantage”
: Conversation with Meiji emperor, Aug. 10, 1879.

CHAPTER 81

“Some time has passed … of your city”
:
New York Times
, Sept. 21, 1879.

“I cannot venture”
: to Borie, Sept. 28, 1879.

“It seems like returning home”
: Speech, Oct. 13, 1879.

“It is gratifying”
: Speech, Oct. 14, 1879,
Papers of Grant
, 29:258n.

“No honors that I received”
: Speech, Oct. 28, 1879.

“When I was in Europe”
: Interview in
Chicago Inter Ocean
, Oct. 31, 1879, in
Papers of Grant
, 29:275n.

“I am very glad”
:
Chicago Tribune
, Nov. 5, 1879.

“I always like to come here”
:
Cincinnati Enquirer
, Nov. 12, 1879, in
Papers of Grant
, 29:285n.

“We think now of going”
: to Ellen Grant Sartoris, Nov. 8, 1879.

“The first time I ever saw General Grant”
:
The Autobiography of Mark Twain
, ed. Charles Neider (1959), 316-18.

“He never moved … his body ached”
: Ron Powers,
Mark Twain
(2005), 428-31.

CHAPTER 82

“All I want”
: to Washburne, Feb. 2, 1880.

“The election before us”
: H. Wayne Morgan,
From Hayes to McKinley
(1969), 91-92.

“Individually”
: to Conkling, June 10, 1880.

“Oh, Ulys”
:
Personal Memoirs of Julia Dent Grant
, 197.

“Do you not desire success?”
:
Personal Memoirs of Julia Dent Grant
, 321-22.

“I have nothing to say”
: Statement to Chicago
Advance
, July 1880,
Papers of Grant
, 29:439.

“I feel a very deep interest”
: to Garfield, Aug. 5, 1880.

“I have never made”
: Speech, Aug. 27, 1880.

“I am a Republican”
:
New York Times
, Sept. 29, 1880.

“He is vain”
:
Cincinnati Gazette
, Oct. 5, 1880, in
Papers of Grant
, 29:461-62.

“Hancock is a man”
:
Chicago Inter Ocean
, Oct. 6, 1880, in
Papers of Grant
, 29:465n.

“Out there”
: Speeches (two),
New York Times
, Oct. 22, 1880.

“Every Northern state”
:
New York Times
, Oct. 31, 1880.

“I heartily congratulate you”
: to Garfield, Nov. 11, 1880.

CHAPTER 83

“By years of colossal labor”
:
New York Herald
, Oct. 17, 1880.

“One thing is certain”
: to Badeau, Aug. 12, 1880.

“You know Buck is married!”
: to Ellen Grant Sartoris, Nov. 4, 1880.

“But he has something”
: to John Long, Nov. 12, 1880.

“We are boarding”
: to Ellen Grant Sartoris, Nov. 4, 1880.

“Under no circumstances”
: to Logan, Feb. 9, 1881.

“In any other great nation”
: Morgan et al. to Pierrepont, Nov. 9, 1880,
Papers of Grant
, 30:137n.

“I am sure I turned”
:
Personal Memoirs of Julia Dent Grant
, 323.

“I hope with you”
: to John Creswell, Nov. 14, 1880.

“Harmony in the Republican party”
: to Garfield, Jan. 26, 1881.

“I sincerely hope”
: Remarks quoted in
Methodist Quarterly Review
, Oct. 1881, 648.

CHAPTER 84

“Your kind letter”
: to Clemens, Jan. 14, 1881.

“They have thirteen years”
:
New York Times
, Nov. 12, 1880.

“I have long been of the opinion”
: Speech, April 22, 1881.

“I am completely disgusted”
: to Badeau, May 7, 1881.

“Garfield is a man”
:
Pittsburg Times
, June 17, 1881, in
Papers of Grant
, 30:237-38.

“dastardly attempt”
: to Badeau, July 27, 1881.

“Of course my hopes”
:
New York World
, July 5, 1881.

“During the months of August”
:
Chicago Inter Ocean
, Sept. 7, 1881, in
Papers of Grant
, 30:265.

“You will please excuse me”
:
New York Times
, Sept. 20, 1881.

“I can hardly say”
: to Badeau, Dec. 11, 1882.

“The defeat was expected”
: to John Russell Young, Nov. 28, 1882.

“The reading of the whole”
: to Arthur, Dec. 22, 1881.

“An Undeserved Stigma”
:
North American Review
, Dec. 1882, 539, 545.

“The undersigned”
: from Theodore Lyman et al., Nov. 27, 1882,
Papers of Grant
, 30:434.

“As you state”
: from Longstreet, Dec. 30, 1882,
Papers of Grant
, 30:435.

“He had lost his hat”
:
New York Times
, June 30, 1882.

CHAPTER 85

“I have washed my hands”
: Interview for
Louisville Courier-Journal
, June 3, 1883, in
Papers of Grant
, 31:42.

“There is no man”
:
New York Times
, July 16, 1883.

“I am willing that Mr. Ward”
: to Fish, July 6, 1882.

“It is my plan”
: Hamlin Garland, “A Romance of Wall Street: The Grant and Ward Failure,”
McClure’s Magazine
, April 1898, 500.

“We are much better off”
: to Ellen Grant Sartoris, Nov. 24 and Dec. 15, 1883.

“almost a millionaire”
: Deposition, March 26, 1885.

“General Grant was informed”
:
New York Times
, May 7, 1884.

“The Grant family is ruined”
: to Clara Cramer, June 8, 1884.

“I pointed out”
:
The Autobiography of Mark Twain
, ed. Charles Neider (1959), 237.

“Sell
me
the memoirs”
:
Autobiography of Mark Twain
, 240-41.

CHAPTER 86

“I learned afterward”
:
The Autobiography of Mark Twain
, ed. Charles Neider (1959), 252.

“It is a matter for great congratulation”
:
New York Times
, Feb. 20, 1885.

“Sinking into the Grave”
:
New York Times
, March 1, 1885.

“The composition is entirely my own”
: to Webster & Co., May 2, 1885.

“It was a busy time”
:
New York Times
, May 2, 1885.

“Since coming … I signify all three”
: Notes, June 17 to July 20, 1885,
Memoirs
, 1111-20.

“If it is within God’s providence … in the end”
:
Memoirs
, 1116-19.

“He asked me with his pencil”
:
Autobiography of Mark Twain
, 252.

“I have my full share”
:
Autobiography of Mark Twain
, 253.

“I am older than your Father”
: from Sherman, March 17, 1885,
Papers of Grant
, 31:388n.

“profound sympathy”
: Resolution of Grand Army of the Republic, June 24, 1885, in Robert B. Beath,
History of the Grand Army of the Republic
(1889), 296.

“Tell the boys”
: Message, May 14, 1885.

“Look after our dear children”
: to Julia Dent Grant, June 29, 1885.

“I must try”
:
Memoirs
, 1118, 1115.

“Buck has brought up”
:
Memoirs
, 1118.

CHAPTER 87

“In General Grant’s death”
:
New York Times
, July 31, 1885.

“Ulysses S. Grant”
:
Washington Post
, Aug. 3, 1885.

“I heard him say once”
:
New York Times
, Aug. 3, 1885.

“Everything has been said”
:
New York Times
, Aug. 1, 1885.

“Why, you cannot trust”
:
New York Times
, Aug. 3, 1885.

“He was the truest”
:
New York Times
, July 24, 1885.

“Wherever General Grant’s body lies”
: Ron Powers,
Mark Twain
(2005), 504.

“There was a burst of sunlight”
:
New York Times
, Aug. 6, 1885.

…Grant’s casualties … were lower than Lee’s
: James M. McPherson,
The Mighty Scourge: Perspectives on the Civil War
(2007), 113; Jean Edward Smith,
Grant
(2001), 15, 629n6.

INDEX

abolitionism,
9.1
,
52.1
     
Dred Scott
decision and
     
emancipation proclamation on
     
in Harpers Ferry raid
     
of John Brown
Adams, Charles Francis,
64.1
,
65.1
,
65.2
Adams, John Quincy,
2.1
,
4.1
,
65.1
Aden
African Americans,
63.1
,
65.1
,
74.1
,
78.1
,
87.1
     citizenship question and,
11.1
,
51.1
,
52.1
     education of,
62.1
,
83.1
     
in Grant’s legacy
     
in prisoner exchanges
     
in Reconstruction era
     
Slaughterhouse Cases and
     suffrage issue and,
4.1
,
51.1
,
52.1
,
57.1
,
83.1
     
see also
slaves, slavery
Akerman, Amos,
63.1
,
63.2
,
70.1
Alabama,
14.1
,
62.1
,
79.1
Alabama
, CSS,
64.1
,
64.2
,
65.1
,
68.1
,
70.1
Alaska,
60.1
,
63.1
Albert, Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
Alden, Captain
Alexander, Edward Porter
Allen, Vanderbilt
American Party, U.S.
American Revolution,
1.1
,
2.1
,
57.1
     
Loyalists in
Ames, Oakes
Ampudia, Pedro de,
4.1
,
5.1
“anaconda plan”
Anderson, Robert,
7.1
,
15.1
,
15.2
,
24.1
Angier, Nedom
Antietam, Battle of
     
casualties in
     
Confederate retreat in
     
lost order in
Anti-Slavery Society
Appler, Jesse
Appomattox campaign
     
Confederate surrender in
     
evacuation of Richmond in
     Lee-Grant exchanges in,
49.1
,
49.2
Arapaho Indians
Arkansas,
30.1
,
35.1
,
65.1
,
65.2
,
75.1
     
electoral conflict in
Army, U.S.
Army of Northern Virginia, C.S.A.,
27.1
,
30.1
,
39.1
,
40.1
,
49.1
,
49.2
,
49.3
,
49.4
,
87.1
     shortages and desertions in,
39.1
,
47.1
Army of the James, U.S.,
39.1
,
39.2
,
47.1
,
49.1
Army of the Ohio, U.S.,
23.1
,
58.1
Army of the Potomac, U.S.,
25.1
,
30.1
,
33.1
,
36.1
,
36.2
,
39.1
,
39.2
,
39.3
,
48.1
,
84.1
,
87.1
     
Grant’s review of
Army of the Tennessee, U.S.,
36.1
,
48.1
,
82.1
,
87.1
     
reunion of
Army of Virginia, U.S.
Arnold, Isaac
Arthur, Chester,
82.1
,
84.1
,
85.1
87.1
BOOK: The Man Who Saved the Union
10.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Criminal Promises by Nikki Duncan
Save My Soul by Elley Arden
Death by Cashmere by Sally Goldenbaum
32 colmillos by David Wellington
Advertising for Love by Elisabeth Roseland
Hannah Howell by Highland Hearts
Switched by O'Connell, Anne
Murder at Barclay Meadow by Wendy Sand Eckel
The Demon Hunter by Lori Brighton