Rosecrans, General William S.,
succeeds Buell, see vol. ii.;
disapproves Halleck’s plan to invade
East Tennessee;
fights battle of Stone’s River;
reluctant to advance;
drives Bragg out of Tennessee;
refuses to move;
finally advances to Chattanooga;
defeated at Chickamauga;
unnerved after Chickamauga;
cheered by Lincoln;
besieged in Chattanooga;
relieved by Grant.
Russell, Earl, his prejudices in favor of South, see
vol. i.;
recognizes belligerency of South, see
vol. i.;
revises Palmerston’s dispatch in
Trent affair;
condemns Emancipation Proclamation, see
vol. ii.;
calls Alabama affair a scandal.
Rutledge, Ann, love affair of Lincoln with, see vol. i.
Saulsbury, Willard,
in Senate in 1861, see vol. i.
Saxton, General Rufus, permitted to raise negro troops, see vol. ii.
Schofield, General John M.,
treats with Johnston, see vol. ii.;
his removal from Missouri refused by Lincoln.
Schurz, General Carl,
refused permission by Lincoln
to leave army to support his canvass,
see vol. ii.
Scott, Winfield,
in Mexican war, see vol. i.;
supported by Lincoln for President;
suggests division of country into four
parts;
his help expected by Secessionists;
advises reinforcement of Southern garrisons;
threatens Southerners with violence;
warns Lincoln of plot to murder;
his military preparations;
thinks Sumter must be abandoned;
assembles troops at Washington;
wishes to induce Lee to command Northern
army;
instructed to watch Maryland legislature;
authorized to suspend writ of habeas corpus;
has difficulties with McClellan;
retires.
Seaton, William W.,
promises to help Lincoln’s emancipation
bill, see vol. i.
Secession,
mention of, avoided by Douglas and Lincoln,
see vol. i.;
question of its justification in 1860;
process of, in 1860-61;
discussed by Buchanan;
admitted by Northern leaders;
threatened by New York Democrats;
Lincoln’s view of;
Southern theory of;
its success makes union, not slavery,
the issue at stake;
renewed by Border States;
recognized as not the ultimate cause of
war, see vol. ii.;
again asserted by Lincoln to be cause
of war.
Sedgwick, General John,
beaten at Chancellorsville, see vol. ii.
Semmes, Captain Raphael,
his career with the Alabama, see vol.
ii.
Senate of United States,
proposes “Union-saving devices”,
see vol. i.;
defeats Crittenden compromise;
rejects plan of Peace Congress;
leaders of, in 1861;
passes thirteenth amendment, see vol.
ii.
Seward, Frederick,
warns Lincoln of plot in 1861, see vol.
i.


