Read Britannia's Fist: From Civil War to World War: An Alternate History Online

Authors: Peter G. Tsouras

Tags: #Imaginary Histories, #International Relations, #Great Britain - Foreign Relations - United States, #Alternative History, #United States - History - 1865-1921, #General, #United States, #United States - History - Civil War; 1861-1865, #Great Britain, #United States - Foreign Relations - Great Britain, #Political Science, #War & Military, #Fiction, #Civil War Period (1850-1877), #History

Britannia's Fist: From Civil War to World War: An Alternate History (17 page)

Trenholm did and decidedly did not like the thought. “Listen to me, John. It is not that most people in this country who matter, including those in government, would not like to see these things accomplished. And they would not shrink from war if there were no other choice. What they do mind is being manipulated by foreigners into it. We are a perverse people in that regard.”

Bulloch realized he had touched far too soft a spot and sought to deflect Trenholm’s distress. “I said not to worry, George. It will never come to that. My government would only wish the assistance of Great Britain if it were the result of great deliberation on a matter of imperial policy.”

Trenholm was still nervous. “But there is still great danger. Dudley’s men are sniffing around all the time. We cannot expect Russell to forever claim the mounting evidence Dudley digs up is only hearsay.”

“Now George, I think Russell’s basic sympathies for the Confederacy and his desire to see the bloodshed stopped will encourage him to see all evidence as hearsay unless it comes in written with the finger of God himself.”

“Don’t blaspheme, John. I’m afraid that damn Yankee is actually close to finding divine evidence.”

“We still have our friend in the Foreign Office. Let us just hope that the rams are ready for their sea trials before Russell is forced to act.”
19

MILITARY TELEGRAPH OFFICE, WAR DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON, D.C., 2:36
PM
, AUGUST 8, 1863

Sharpe sent an urgent telegram to John Babcock, his deputy in the Army of the Potomac. He was to send Sergeant Cline to Washington immediately.

Lincoln may have given him the charter to put order into the intelligence operations of the government, but Sharpe knew that he would have to win the goodwill of powerful cabinet officers if he were to have any chance of success. Seward would be no problem. A fellow New Yorker and friend of the family, he would see Sharpe’s appointment as the advancement of a protégé. He was also practical enough to see the effects of a central control. Sharpe paused to think for a moment as to what he would call his new office. Secret Service had already been given a bad name by Allan Pinkerton and McClellan and had become even more odious under Stanton’s private henchman, Lafayette Baker. Sharpe turned over various alternatives in his mind, to include the name of his bureau in the Army of the Potomac—the Bureau of Military Information (BMI). But his new office would have more than military interests and be encompassing all the government’s interests in intelligence. Nothing seemed to fit.

The first step was to find allies in the War Department. He did not consider Ripley as he had burned his bridges with him about as dramatically as Cortés had done in Mexico. Besides, if Ripley did not have the look of a man whose days were numbered, Sharpe was no judge of things.

He found Dana in his office late that afternoon and broached his plans to him. Dana was a shrewd man and listened intently. He had assumed many of the duties of intelligence at the War Department, but they were secondary duties, and he had not the time to give them the proper organization and attention they deserved. It was after seven when they finally finished brainstorming the new organization. Dana said as
he got up to put on his coat, “Well, Sharpe, what will you call this centralized intelligence agency of yours?”

“Hell if I know. Nothing comes.”

“How about the Federal Bureau of Information?”

“Sounds too much like law enforcement. The parts are all there; it’s just a matter of putting them together.”

On their way to dinner it struck him and he snapped his fingers. “That’s it, Dana, the Central Information Bureau! Just enough of a name to be functional without attracting too much intention.”
20

“There, that’s settled. Now for some airy business.” Sharpe handed a clerk another telegram to send. It was addressed to Professor Thaddaeus Lowe, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, and read:

RETURN IMMEDIATELY WASHINGTON TO COMMAND
NEW BALLOON CORPS STOP COLONEL’S COMMISSION
AWAITS STOP REPORT TO ME STOP GEORGE SHARPE,
BVT BRIG GENERAL, CHIEF, CENTRAL INFORMATION
BUREAU STOP.
21

 
LAFAYETTE SQUARE, WASHINGTON, D.C., 10:05
AM
, AUGUST 10, 1863

Sergeant Cline caught the train near Army headquarters and was in Washington the next day. He reported to Sharpe’s home on Lafayette Square. Cline was a hard man to surprise, but the Colonel had his head spinning as he laid out the problem and the sergeant’s role in solving it. First Cline found himself transferred to Sharpe’s new organization. Next he had a transportation voucher for the night train to Indianapolis and was armed with a letter of introduction to meet with Colonel Carrington. Sharpe felt that Carrington needed someone to replace Stidger, an actor who could command the stage. He had Lincoln’s verbal orders to take the strongest measures to scotch the Copperheads. Stidger’s death was proof of that. The need for action was immediate.

At the same time Sharpe had to organize and staff his bureau. He was starting from scratch. The effort it had taken to create the intelligence organization for the Army of the Potomac shrank in comparison to this. His first act was to acquire a competent deputy, and he asked for the assignment of civilian James L. McPhail, the provost for Maryland. From his Baltimore headquarters, McPhail had quickly gathered the strings of espionage directed at Richmond. He had eagerly shared everything he
learned with Sharpe, a rare characteristic in the intelligence business. Sharpe was a frequent visitor to Baltimore to coordinate and exchange information. It was apparent that McPhail was the rare professional in a sea of amateurs. McPhail had come down to Washington the day that he received the summons of a War Department telegram.

Sharpe, for want of office space and the time to look for it in a crowded city, had started shop in his own rented home on Lafayette Square. A few carefully selected military clerks had taken over the front parlor as an office. He took McPhail into the library and shut the sliding doors. “Jim, we have the labors of Hercules before us. This has never been tried before—a single national intelligence effort.”

“When do we start?”

“You already have by being here. You are my deputy, and I am going to work you near to death.”

McPhail grinned.

“This is how I see the President’s intent—to bring order to all these separate teams that are pulling each in its own direction, and this is where he is quite clear, he wants someone who will present him the equivalent of a thoroughly researched lawyer’s brief on any particular subject. He said Gettysburg taught him how dangerous it was that everybody seemed to have a finger in the pie when it came to finding out what General Lee was up to, including himself. Neither he nor Stanton had the time to do this well. He was also aware that in only the most haphazard manner, if at all, does one Union Army learn anything of use from another army.

“In practical terms, this is how I see our job. We must be the clearinghouse for all intelligence on the rebels. I do not mean to take over the staff work of the armies in the field, but they will provide us what they learn so we can build an overall picture to inform the President and Secretary Stanton. The President told me his inclination was to set up a separate agency that would report only to him, but he thought it not worth the fireworks from Stanton. He told me, ‘You need Stanton as an ally, not an enemy.’ For that reason I cannot touch Lafayette Baker’s National Detective Police. Baker and his NDP are Stanton’s pets.”

McPhail said, “I wouldn’t touch it with a ten-foot pole, George. Baker and his crew are a stench in the nostrils of honest men. Stanton protects them because they are his willing tools in any dirty thing he wants done.”

Sharpe was emphatic. “If we took over Baker’s crew, that stench would infect us as well. I mean the Bureau to be within the law, Jim. I
shudder to think of how Baker has trampled on the law to abuse just about anyone he wants without writ or judge to stop him. I am a practical man, and in crisis I believe that the old adage ‘Never let your conscience stop you from doing what’s right’ is sometimes necessary. The President himself has skirted the constitutionality of some of his actions, but they have been forced on him by necessity to protect the Constitution itself from destruction. That is the real world, not the ivory tower of civil libertarians who would see the Constitution burn up in front of their eyes rather than accommodate it to the fact that the roof is on fire. We shall stand on the right side of the law, but we will also follow Mr. Lincoln’s policy of ‘bending it here and there’ where necessary.
22

“Baker trumpets how well he has cleaned up rebel spies in Washington, but you know as well as I do, they continue to flourish here. What Baker excels at is shaking down merchants who supply the South.”

McPhail commented, “Well, we will need our own organization to counter the enemy’s espionage. How will you get around Baker?”

“Simple,” Sharpe said. “I have an independent budget thanks to the President. Don’t ask me where he gets it. We shall just set up our own organization to catch spies. Quietly. Let Baker make all the noise he wants to about catching Belle Boyd.
23
We will work rings around him. But watch him close, Jim; he’s a dangerous man.”
24

Their attention at that moment was drawn to the noise of the doors sliding open and the young soldier standing there. He was one of the studious young men clerking diligently in the outer office. In the two days since Sharpe had acquired the services of Cpl. Michael Wilmoth, the young Hoosier had shown a remarkable talent for order-of-battle analysis. He had already committed Lee’s order of battle to memory. “Sir, Professor Lowe is here.”
25

“Show him in.” Almost immediately the tall, lanky form of Thaddeus Lowe appeared. “Professor!” Sharpe exclaimed and rushed over to shake his hand. “Thank God, you’ve come. Here, let me introduce you to Jim McPhail.” The two shook hands as Sharpe waved them to sit. He sketched for McPhail’s benefit the travesty of Lowe’s treatment and the disappearance of the Balloon Corps. Lowe’s strong jaw tightened in the retelling. He was the foremost aeronaut in the United States, a gifted scientist, and a man of great energy who had the will and ability to get things done, none of which had been proof against military martinets.
26

“I tell you, George,” Lowe said, “that the only reason I have come is as a favor to you.” He looked at McPhail. “Colonel Sharpe was one of
the few men I met who appreciated the value of my balloons. It was a pleasure to work with him, and I would have been a damn sight happier had I worked for him, instead of that officious.…” His voiced trailed off.

Wilmoth had appeared again and handed Sharpe a folder. Sharpe said, “And we’re going to do things right this time.” He drew a finely printed parchment out of the folder and handed it to Lowe. “Long overdue, it’s your commission as colonel, signed personally by Lincoln and countersigned by Stanton.” He drew another paper from the folder. “And here are your orders assigning you as chief of the Balloon Corps. You are in charge of all the U.S. government’s efforts at aeronautics. And you work directly for me.”

Before Lowe could reply, Sharpe went on, “Professor, you have no greater admirer than I. Your contribution during the Chancellorsville campaign made Gen. John Sedgwick’s victory at Marye’s Heights possible. I was with Hooker as he received your stream of reports within minutes of your dispatching them by telegraph from your balloons all the way down the Rapphannock at Fredericksburg.”

Lowe’s excitement had risen to the point where it seemed he needed a tether, like his balloons, to keep him grounded. “When do I start, General?”
27

6
.
“Roll, Alabama, Roll!”
 
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND, 11:15
AM
, SEPTEMBER 1, 1863

It was a grand sight, sailing up the Mersey River with the great entrepôt of Liverpool to larboard and the smaller shipyards of Birkenhead to starboard. Lamson allowed the crew to line the decks to enjoy the sight. It was exciting, and he tried not to let it go to his head that not even a month ago he had been chasing down this very ship he now commanded. Then she was a swift blockade-runner; now she was the USS
Gettysburg
, and her fleetness was in the service of the United States Navy.

Fox had pulled out all the stops to convert her in record time; the Navy Yard made it top priority, and the crews had worked in round-the-clock shifts to strengthen her hull and decks to take the huge soda bottle–shaped Dahlgren guns. Her belly had been filled with all the ammunition and other naval accoutrements of war as well as the stores and the best of hard anthracite coal to see her on her way. Lamson had requested and received his old crew from the
Nansemond
, plus the pick of seamen then in Washington and Baltimore. The voyage across the Atlantic was blessed with good weather, and the
Gettysburg
’s fine engines sped her in record time. Gunnery practice and battle drills had filled the days and made them short.

Lamson was thankful that the breaks had all gone his way; he was also worried that they had all gone his way. He wondered if he had he used up all his good luck on the way to England. He was normally a young man who acted on the belief that you made your own luck through working hard, knowing your job, and being bold. If anything, his success had come as a result of boldly bending luck to his will. But he also knew
her to be a fickle goddess, apt to burst a boiler at a critical moment as to throw a laurel in your path. Overlaying this premonition were his confidential orders—“At all costs you will ensure that the rams do not escape.” At all costs.…
1

The English pilot who was enjoying himself, pointing out the details of the great port, temporarily distracted his thoughts. The city was unique among great ports in having a system of enclosed docks. Liverpool was the child of the North American trade and an immigrant gateway as well. It was unlike London or New York, where the steady flow and depth of the Thames and Hudson allowed their docks to line the rivers. The city was so close to the Irish Sea that the tidal Mersey, which had a difference of thirty-three feet between high and low tide, would have left ships beached on her mudflats at low tide. Strong winds, a swift current, and twenty thousand acres of shifting sandbanks contributed to the necessity of building Liverpool’s enclosed docks, where ships could be kept permanently afloat in deep water.

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