The Abolitionists eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 198 pages of information about The Abolitionists.

The Abolitionists eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 198 pages of information about The Abolitionists.

A formal address was presented, the principal point being that, as the Missouri Unionists had furnished many thousand recruits to the Federal Army, they had a right to look to the Government for soldiers to assist in protecting their families and their property.  And here it will do no harm to state that, notwithstanding the heavy drain made by the Confederacy, Missouri, during the war, furnished 109,000 men to the national army.

After their formal address had been presented to the President, the members of the delegation tackled him, one after the other, as the spirit moved them, and it can truthfully be said that in some of the bouts that ensued he did not come out “first best.”  He admitted as much when, afterwards referring to this meeting, he spoke of the Missouri Radicals as “the unhandiest fellows in the world to deal with in a discussion.”

The conclusion of the interview was attended with an unexpected incident.  The recognized leading spokesman of the Missourians was the Hon. Charles D. Drake, of St. Louis, who was made Chief Justice of the Court of Claims at Washington by Grant, when he became President.  He was a very forcible speaker.  As Mr. Lincoln indicated by rising from his seat that the conference was at an end, Mr. Drake stepped forward and in well-chosen words thanked him for the lengthy and courteous hearing he had given his visitors, and in their names bade him good-by.  Then he started for the door, but something seemed to arrest him.  Turning sharply to Mr. Lincoln, he said:  “Mr. President, we are about to return to our homes.  Many of these men before you live where rebel sentiments prevail and where they are surrounded by deadly enemies.  They return at the risk of their lives, and let me tell you that if any of their lives are sacrificed by reason of the military administration you maintain in Missouri, their blood will be upon your garments and not upon ours.”

The President, evidently greatly surprised, made no oral reply.  Instead of speaking he raised his handkerchief to his eyes.  Seeing that he was weeping, the delegates quietly and quickly filed out, leaving Mr. Lincoln with his face still concealed.

The President denied the delegation’s request, although his formal decision was not announced for several days, and its members returned to their homes, when fortunate enough to have them, sorely disappointed.

It is here well enough to state that two or three months later the President relieved Scofield from his Missouri command and sent him to the front in the South, much to the betterment of his military reputation, and doubtless to his own personal gratification.  Rosecrans was made his successor.  Among the earliest things he did was the bringing into the State of a considerable force of Federal troops under Generals Pleasanton and A.J.  Smith.  These were sent through the State.  The effect was almost magical.  Some of the guerrilla bands went South to join Price, but the most of them dissolved and disappeared.  Their members, doubtless, went back to their former occupations, and that was the last of them.  Missouri was pacified.

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The Abolitionists from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.