Mourning Lincoln (46 page)

Read Mourning Lincoln Online

Authors: Martha Hodes

8
.
home:
Thomas Frederick Davis,
History of Early Jacksonville Florida
(Jacksonville, Fla.: H. and W. B. Drew, 1911), 105 (map), 108–9 (Pine Street).

9
.
many:
Christopher Looby, ed.,
The Complete Civil War Journal and Selected Letters of Thomas Wentworth Higginson
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999), 109 (Mar. 13, 1863, entry);
bitterly:
Susie King Taylor,
Reminiscences of My Life in Camp with the 33d United States Colored Troops, Late 1st S.C. Volunteers
(1902; reprint, New York: Arno Press and New York Times, 1968), 23. Dorman diary, Feb. 7, 1864 (Higginson’s). See also Thomas Wentworth Higginson, “The reoccupation of Jacksonville, Florida, in 1863,” undated ms., #19, Higginson Additional Papers, HLH; “Report of Col. T. W. Higginson, First South Carolina Infantry (Union),” onboard
Ben De Ford
, Feb. 1, 1863, U.S. War Department,
War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies
, ser. 1, 53 vols. (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1880–1898), 14:195–98; “Our Port Royal Correspondence,”
New York Times
, Mar. 25, 1863; “The Negro Troops in Florida,”
New York Times
, Apr. 21, 1863. Daniel L. Schafer,
Thunder on the River: The Civil War in Northeast Florida
(Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2010), 137, notes that a significant number of volunteers were between the ages of forty and sixty.

10
.
withdrawal:
Stevenson,
Journals of Charlotte Forten Grimké
, 466 (Mar. 26, 1863, entry);
claim:
“Statement and Schedule of Losses” and “Schedule of property of Rodney Dorman at Jacksonville Florida stolen & destroyed & burned by the enemy in March 1863,” July 3, 1863, Rodney Dorman, Citizens File, Confederate Papers Relating to Citizens or Business Firms, RG109-NARA, available at Fold3.com. See also correspondence between Dorman and the U.S. tax collector L. D. Stickney, Mar. 24, Apr. 23, May 7, 1866, copied into Dorman diary, vol. 3, “Note B, page 164,” 607–15; “The Ruins of Jacksonville, (Fla.),”
Daily National Intelligencer
, Apr. 27, 1863.

11
. Dorman diary, Apr. 29, May 20, 23, 1864, Apr. 16, 1865 (oath), May 23, 1864 (pass).

heaps:
George Heimach, “For the Christian Recorder,” near Jacksonville, Fla., Apr. 1, 1864,
Christian Recorder
, published Apr. 16, 1864;
mistresses, hospitals:
Rufus Sibb Jones, “Florida Expedition,” Jacksonville, Fla., Apr. 16, 1864,
Christian Recorder
, published
May 7, 1864;
glad:
Abraham Lincoln to David Hunter, Washington, D.C., Apr. 1, 1863,
War of the Rebellion
, ser. 1, 14:435–36.

On passes, see also Justus M. Silliman to brother, Volusia, Fla., May 16, 1864, in
A New Canaan Private in the Civil War: Letters of Justus M. Silliman, 17th Connecticut Volunteers
, ed. Edward Marcus (New Canaan, Conn.: New Canaan Historical Society, 1984), 68. For Orloff Dorman, see U.S. federal census, Saint Johns County, Saint Augustine, Fla., 1860; Orloff Mather Dorman, U.S. Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles, 1861–1865, Ancestry.com; Matthew Pinsker,
Lincoln’s Sanctuary: Abraham Lincoln and the Soldiers’ Home
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2003), 34, 208n31; Michael Burlingame and John R. Turner Ettlinger, eds.,
Inside Lincoln’s White House: The Complete Civil War Diary of John Hay
(Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1997), 145 (Jan. 20, 1864, entry), 300n37.

12
. Dorman diary, May 7, 1864 (raid); Sarah Browne diary, Apr. 25–May 9 (Jacksonville), Apr. 26, 1864 (havoc), May 1, 1865 (mementoes), BFP. For correspondence between Rodney Dorman and L. D. Stickney, see n10, above.

Chapter 1. Victory and Defeat

1
. Sarah Browne diary, Apr. 3, 4 (wild), 5 (rebels), 6 (Sheridan), 7, 8 (joy), 1865, BFP.

2
. Sarah Browne diary, Apr. 10, 11, 12 (disappointed), 13, 1865, BFP.

3
. Albert Browne to “Dear Ones,” Charleston, S.C., Apr. 16, 1865 (fast); Albert Browne to “Dear Ones,” Hilton Head Island, S.C., Apr. 12, 1865 (grand, glorious, man), both BFP.

4
. Albert Browne to “Dear Ones,” Charleston, S.C., Apr. 15 (grand, unspeakable), 16 (sights), 1865, BFP.

5
. Dorman diary, Apr. 16, 29 (conditions), 22 (nonsensical), 16 (defeat, blacker, if North), 20 (negro, thunder bolt), 1865.

6
. Dorman diary, Apr. 20, 25 (Carthage, Irish), 16 (summer), 1865.

7
. Dorman diary, Apr. 22, 1865.

newspapers:
Justus M. Silliman to mother, Jacksonville, Fla., Apr. 20, 1865, in
A New Canaan Private in the Civil War: Letters of Justus M. Silliman, 17th Connecticut Volunteers
, ed. Edward Marcus (New Canaan, Conn.: New Canaan Historical Society, 1984), 99.

8
.
Babylon:
Thomas Day Seymour to Nathan Seymour, Richmond, Va., Apr. 3, 1865, Seymour Family Papers, Yale-Sterling;
at last:
Chester dispatch, Richmond, Va., Apr. 4, 1865, in
Thomas Morris Chester: Black Civil War Correspondent—His Dispatches from the Virginia Front
, ed. R. J. M. Blackett (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989), 290;
slavery:
Frederick Douglass, “Nemesis,”
Douglass’ Monthly
, May 1861, in
Frederick Douglass: Selected Speeches and Writings
, ed. Philip S. Foner and Yuval Taylor (Chicago: Lawrence Hill Books, 1999), 451;
sold, violence:
Emmeline Yelland to Albert Yelland, Galena, Ill., May 29, 1865, Yelland Family Correspondence, Duke.

Countless sources convey the joyous crowds of African Americans; see, e.g., John C. Brock, “A Soldier’s Letter,”
Christian Recorder
, Apr. 29, 1865, and Allen H. Babcock diary, Apr. 4, 1865, Babcock Papers, NYSL.

9
.
Norfolk classroom:
Hope R. Daggett to George Whipple, Norfolk, Va., Apr. [n.d.],
1865, #H1-7058; Annie C. Woodbury to George Whipple, Norfolk, Va., Apr. [n.d.], 1865, #H1-7060; Mary E. Watson [mislabeled Hope R. Daggett] to George Whipple, Norfolk, Va., May 1, 1865, #H1-7070, reel 210, AMA;
songs:
Irwin Silber, ed.,
Songs of the Civil War
(New York: Bonanza Books, 1960), 17–19, 320–21; American Song Sheets, Duke, available at library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/songsheets; “‘A Jubilee of Freedom’: Freed Slaves March in Charleston, South Carolina, March, 1865,” History Matters, American Social History Project, Center for Media and Learning (Graduate Center, CUNY) and Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University, available at historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6381.

10
.
Richmond:
Chester dispatches, Richmond, Va., Apr. 6, 9, 1865, in Blackett,
Thomas Morris Chester
, 294–300 (
citizens
, 296); “The Richmond Freedmen: Their Visit to the President,”
New York Daily Tribune
, June 17, 1865; Garland H. White, “Letter from Richmond,” City Point, Va., Apr. 12, 1865,
Christian Recorder
, published Apr. 22, 1865.

11
.
thought:
Annie G. Dudley Davis diary, Apr. 10, 1865, HL.

12
.
hats, shoes:
Narrative of Appomattox Campaign, Apr. 9, 1865, in
The Civil War Letters of General Robert McAllister
, ed. James I. Robertson Jr. (1965; reprint, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1993), 608;
jove:
Charles S. Brown to mother and “Etta,” near Haywood, N.C., Apr. 18, 1865, Brown Papers, Duke;
muskets, cannons:
Edward W. Benham to Jennie Benham, Goldsboro, N.C., Apr. 9, 1865, ts., Benham Papers, Duke;
cheers, firecrackers, music:
Theodore St. John to Jane Harries, New Bern, N.C., Apr. 12, 1865, St. John Papers, LC;
9 a.m.:
Rufus Mead Jr. to “Dear Folks at Home,” near Goldsboro, N.C., Apr. 7, 1865, and Rufus Mead Jr. diary, Apr. 6, 1865, Mead Papers, LC;
jump, dance, music, whiskey:
Peter Eltinge to Edmund Eltinge, Morehead City, N.C., Apr. 7, 1865, ts., Eltinge-Lord Family Papers (Peter Eltinge Papers), Duke;
liquor:
William C. McLean diary, Apr. 8, 1865, ts., McLean Family Papers, NYSL, and Thomas Day Seymour to Nathan Seymour, Richmond, Va., Apr. 3, 1865, Seymour Family Papers, Yale-Sterling;
glory:
Lyman P. Spencer diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Spencer Papers, LC;
cannon:
“Lydia” to “Anna,” Clarksville, Tenn., Apr. 7, 1865, “Miscellaneous letters and fragments,” Adam C. Higgins Papers, HL;
pain:
Annie G. Dudley Davis diary, Apr. 3, 1865, HL.

13
.
wild:
countless sources invoke this word; see, e.g., Wesley Talley diary, Apr. 3, 1865, DHS;
crazy:
Thomas Francis Johnson diary, Apr. 5, 1865, Johnson Family Papers, MDHS;
agog:
Ellis Hughes diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Hughes-Gray Family Papers, Duke;
Wilmington:
Samuel Canby diary, Apr. 3, 1865, DHS; Anna M. Ferris diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Ferris Family Papers, FHL; Wesley Talley diary, Apr. 3, 1865, DHS;
New York:
Julia Anna Hartness Lay diary, Apr. 3, 1865, NYPL;
Cincinnati:
“Maggie!”: Maggie Lindsley’s Journal, Nashville, Tennessee, 1864, Washington, D.C., 1865
(Southbury, Conn.: Muriel Davies Mackenzie, 1977), 82 (Apr. 11, 1865, entry);
Chicago:
Stephen Thurston Farwell diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Farwell Collection, Princeton;
Sacramento:
Frederick G. Niles diary, Apr. 5, 6, 1865, HL;
crowds:
John Thayer to Lorin Low Dame, Dedham, Mass., Apr. 5, 1865, Dame Papers, MHS;
classroom:
Sarah Hale to Charles Hale, Brookline, Mass., Apr. 7, 1865, box 11, Hale Family Papers, SSC;
Washington:
Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy under Lincoln and Johnson
, 3 vols. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1911), 2:272–73 (Apr. 3,
1865, entry); Charles T. Cotton diary, Apr. 3, 5, 1865, Columbia; Simon Newcomb diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Newcomb Papers, LC; Elizabeth Blair Lee to Samuel Phillips Lee, Washington, D.C., Apr. 4, 1865, in
Wartime Washington: The Civil War Letters of Elizabeth Blair Lee
, ed. Virginia Jean Laas (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1991), 489; Benjamin Brown French,
Witness to the Young Republic: A Yankee’s Journal, 1828–1870
, ed. Donald B. Cole and John J. McDonough (Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England, 1989), 468 (Apr. 6, 1865, entry); James Thomas Ward diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Ward Papers, LC;
resplendent, tiers:
Mary Henry diary, Apr. 5, 1865, Smithsonian Institution Archives, available at siarchives.si.edu/history/exhibits/stories/end-civil-war-april-3-10-1865.

14
.
Richmond:
Emilie Davis diary, Apr. 3, 1865, HSP and davisdiaries.villanova. edu;
New Year’s:
Margaret B. Howell diary, Apr. 3, 1865, HSP; for Philadelphia, see also Mary Dreer diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Edwin Greble Papers, LC; Nicholas B. Wainwright, ed.,
A Philadelphia Perspective: The Diary of Sidney George Fisher …, 1834–1871
(Philadelphia: Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1967), 490 (Apr. 5, 1865, entry);
boys:
Lucy Pierce Hedge to Charlotte Hedge, Brookline, Mass., Apr. 4, 1865, Poor Family Papers, SL; Susan Heath diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Heath Family Papers, MHS;
legislature:
John Wolcott Phelps commonplace book, Apr. 10, 1865, Phelps Papers, NYPL;
Weaverville:
Franklin Augustus Buck to Mary Sewall Bradley, Weaverville, Calif., Apr. 27, 1865, Buck Papers, HL;
handshaking:
William Dean Howells to William Cooper and Mary Dean Howells, Venice, Apr. 27, 1865, 1784.13(15), Howells Family Papers, HLH.

15
.
corner stone:
John Prentiss journal, Apr. 8, 1865, Prentiss Papers, AAS;
great truth:
Alexander H. Stephens, “Cornerstone Address,” in
Southern Pamphlets on Secession: November 1860–April 1861
, ed. Jon L. Wakelyn (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996), 406.

16
.
entire:
Diary of Gideon Welles
, 2:273 (Apr. 3, 1865, entry);
yankeedom:
Henry Robinson Berkeley diary, Apr. 4, 1865, Berkeley Papers, ser. A, reel 2, VHS-CMM;
sour:
“Sanford” to Mary Peck, near Petersburg, Va., Apr. 7, 1865, Peck Correspondence, NYSL;
Confederates:
Chester dispatches, Richmond, Va., Apr. 4, 6, 1865, in Blackett,
Thomas Morris Chester
, 289, 296;
heavy, followed:
Michael Bedout Chesson and Leslie Jean Roberts, eds.,
Exile in Richmond: The Confederate Journal of Henri Garidel
(Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 2001), 368, 370 (Apr. 3, 4, 1865, entries);
contemptable:
Malcolm Canfield to Harriett Canfield, New York, Apr. 5, 1865, Canfield Papers, NYSL.

For Copperhead sentiment, see also Caroline Dunstan diary, Apr. 8, 1865, NYPL, and Mary Jane Church to Dennis Church, New York, Apr. 5, 1865, Church Letters, Cornell.

17
.
world:
Creed Thomas Davis diary, Apr. 2, 1865, ser. A, reel 13, VHS-CMM;
blues:
Amanda (Edmonds) Chappelear diary, Apr. 7, 1865, Chappelear Papers, ser. D,
part 3
, reel 9, VHS-SWF;
Yankee glee:
Nimrod Porter diary, Apr. 3, 1865, Porter Papers, SHC;
will not:
Emma F. LeConte diary, Apr. 13, 1865, reel 22, SHC-AWD-South;
fool:
Samuel A. Harrison journal, Apr. 4, 1865, MDHS.

18
.
isn’t so:
Henry M. Whitney to “Al,” City Point, Va., Apr. 4, 1865, Whitney Correspondence, MHS;
Fitzhugh:
Abram Verrick Parmenter diary, Apr. 7, 8, 1865, Parmenter Papers, LC;
Wilmington:
Anna M. Ferris diary, Apr. 7, 1865, Ferris Family Papers, FHL;
bogus:
Anna Cabot Lowell diary, Apr. 8, 1865, MHS;
heartsickening:
Henry Robinson Berkeley diary, Apr. 9, 1865, Berkeley Papers, ser. A, reel 2, VHS-CMM;
Lee:
William Williston Heartsill,
Fourteen Hundred and 91 Days in the Confederate Army
, ed. Bell Irvin Wiley (1876; reprint, Jackson, Tenn.: McCowat-Mercer, 1954), 240 (Apr. 20, 1865, entry), ACWLD.

Other books

Falling by Kailin Gow
All Monsters Must Die by Magnus Bärtås
Secrets Of Bella Terra by Christina Dodd
Healer by Carol Cassella
Brotherband 3: The Hunters by Flanagan, John
Pursuit by Robert L. Fish
Promissory Payback by Laurel Dewey
Dream Lover by Jenkins, Suzanne
Vodka by Boris Starling
The Becoming - a novella by Leverone, Allan