登陆注册
4699800000013

第13章 THE BALTIMORE CONVENTION.(3)

Before the war, Mr. Johnson had been a Democratic Senator from Tennessee, and during the war, a gentleman of great influence in support of the Union cause. So pronounced and effective had been his loyalty that Mr. Lincoln appointed him a Brigadier General and Military Governor of Tennessee, to accept which he resigned his seat in the Senate, and so judicious and successful had been his administration of that office in behalf of the Union cause and of Union men, that Tennessee was the first of the revolted States to be readmitted to representation in Congress after the close of the war.

So it may be said of Mr. Johnson that he was a persistent and consistent Union Democrat of the old school--for war so long as war might be necessary to the preservation of the Union--for peace when the war was ended by the abandonment of the struggle by the insurgents--and for the restoration of the Union on terms consistent with then existing conditions--without slavery, which was dead--and the return of the people of the South to their loyalty to and support of the Government without debasing exactions--after they had laid down their arms. Aggressively radical so long as the people of the South continued in rebellion, he was considerate and merciful so soon as they yielded themselves to the authority of law and of the Union.

Like Mr. Lincoln, he opposed the idea strenuously advanced by Sumner, and Stevens, and that wing of the Republican party which they led, that the States in rebellion had committed suicide and were therefore dead and without rights, or entitled to consideration, even, in any proposition that might be adopted for their rehabilitation.

This record very effectually disposes of the criticisms of Mr.

Johnson's course, so common after he came to the Presidency and growing out of his disagreements with the extremists of Congress, that he had deserted and betrayed the Republican party after it had elected him to the Vice Presidency and thus made him Mr.

Lincoln's immediate successor--the facts of history showing that neither Mr. Lincoln nor Mr. Johnson were elected by the Republican party as Republicans, nor by the Democratic party as Democrats, but by a union of all parties of the North distinctively as a Union party and on a Union ticket and platform for the preservation of the Union and the destruction of slavery--and when those purposes were accomplished, the war ended and the Union party disbanded and was never heard of again. Mr.

Lincoln, had he lived, would doubtless have still been a Republican, as Mr. Johnson was still a Democrat, as before the war--the purpose of that war and of the Convention that nominated him having been accomplished--and under no obligations, especially of a partisan character, to adopt or promote the partisan purposes relative to reconstruction or otherwise, that came to actuate the Republican party.

As stated. Mr. .Johnson had, during the later years of the war, been acting as Military Governor of Tennessee, of which State he had been a citizen nearly all his life. His administration had been so efficient that Tennessee was practically restored to the Union at the close of the War, and so satisfactory to the loyal people of the country, that though an old line Democrat and a Southern man, Mr. Johnson's nomination by the National Convention for Vice President on the ticket with Mr. Lincoln for President, was, as has been shown, logical and consistent. Though a pronounced State Rights Democrat and a citizen of a Southern State in rebellion, he regarded himself as a citizen of the United States, to which he owed his first allegiance. State Rights meant to him, the rights of the States IN the Union, and not OUT of the Union.

In evidence of the confidence and esteem in which Mr. Johnson was generally held by those who knew him and knew of the valuable services he had rendered the cause of the Union, the following letter from Mr. Stanton, then secretary of War under Mr. Lincoln, is here reproduced. It was written to Mr. Johnson on his tender to the War Office of his resignation of the Military Governorship of Tennessee to accept the office of Vice President of the United States:

War Department, Washington, March 3, 1865.

Sir:--This Department has accepted your resignation as Brigadier General and Military Governor of Tennessee. Permit me on this occasion to tender to you the sincere thanks of this Department for your patriotic and able services during the eventful period through which you have exercised the highest trust committed to your charge. In one of the darkest hours of the great struggle for National existence, against rebellious foes, the Government called you from the comparatively safe and easy duties of civil life to place you in front of the enemy and in a position of personal toil and danger, perhaps more hazardous than was encountered by any citizen or military officer of the United States. With patriotic promptness you assumed the post, and maintained it under circumstances of unparalleled trial, until recent events have brought safety and deliverance to your State and to the integrity of the Constitutional Union, for which you so long and so gallantly periled all that is dear to man on earth. That you may be spared to enjoy the new honors and perform the high duties to which you have been called by the people of the United States, is the sincere wish of one who in every official and personal relation has found you worthy of the confidence of the Government and the honor and esteem of your fellow citizens.

Your obedient servant,Edwin M. Stanton.

His Excellency, Andrew Johnson, Vice-President elect.

同类推荐
  • 噶玛阑志略

    噶玛阑志略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 墨池琐录

    墨池琐录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Antiquities of the Jews

    The Antiquities of the Jews

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Congo & Other Poems

    The Congo & Other Poems

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上清八道秘言图

    上清八道秘言图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 无敌萌主绝宠天下

    无敌萌主绝宠天下

    她是玉瓷公主,太子爹早逝,寄人篱下,他是承佑世子,六岁曾随姐姐远赴沙场,少年威名远扬,谁是谁的劫?谁又是谁的惊鸿一瞥?(欢脱版)情节一:她躲在门后偷看他不小心被抓包,她假装擦汗,“今夜的月光好晒呀!”情节二:她大言不惭道,“你第一将军又如何?她第一美人又如何?我还是大盛的第一公主呐!”他闷哼,“我的名气论的是实力,她论的是美貌,而你的第一公主论的是——年纪!”(小虐版)上房揭瓦、独闯御书房、逃离皇宫……她总是小错不断,从来活得热闹,似乎总会惹他不高兴。远赴燕都、独有迟连、误闯贡绣……最后他逼自己喝下最毒的情思媚,她终于心死,“我放手,你解脱。”殊不知他以从所未有的坚定告诉她,“小白,我对你,从未放弃过!”原来,他一直为她挡下一身杀戮,宠她至深。这世上再无一个男子能为她做到如此,她又该如何如何生死相依……
  • The Moon and Sixpence

    The Moon and Sixpence

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 悠悠田园药草香

    悠悠田园药草香

    李芸穿越了。亲叔欺辱,她凶悍操刀护母。祖母恶毒,她强硬逼她退步。幼弟纨绔,她冷酷饿他肚腹。开荒地,种药材,努力变成白富美。悠悠田园药草香,引来采花俊儿郎。【片段1】“芸芸,你终于对我有感情了,我好欢喜。”“我一看到你这张脸就觉得讨厌。”“嘻嘻,还说对我没感情?要知道,讨厌也是一种情感。”“…”【片段2】“我发过誓不嫁人。”“那我嫁给你。”“不怕我克死你?”“石榴裙下死,做鬼也风流…哎哟,捏我做什么?”“你死了,我娶谁?”
  • 格言故事

    格言故事

    无数事实、经验和理性已经证明:好故事可以影响人的一生。而以我们之见,所谓好故事,在内容上讲述的应是做人与处世的道理,在形式上也应听得进、记得住、讲得出、传得开,而且不会因时代的变迁而失去她的本质特征和艺术光彩。为了让更多的读者走进好故事,阅读好故事,欣赏好故事,珍藏好故事,传播好故事,我们特编选了一套“故事会5元精品系列”以飨之。其选择标准主要有以下三点:一、在《故事会》杂志上发表的作品。二、有过目不忘的艺术感染力。三、有恒久的趣味,对今天的读者仍有启迪作用。愿好故事伴随你的一生!
  • 安如青春

    安如青春

    故事从小学开始,讲述了李辉东小学时发生在身边的种种事情,接着到了初三毕业之际交了第一个女朋友,没想高中时期再次与小学的一些同学同校,而这些同学之中,有一个却是从五年级开始便一直暗恋的女孩。当初懵懂天真,不谙世事,如今风华正茂,青春洋溢,本是大好时机,怎耐早有“家室”,如何是好? 另一方面,他的思想开始受到各个领域的名人的影响,日渐成熟,同时也开始慢慢形成自己独立的思想。只是不知道是他自己错了,还是其他人错了,他发现他的很多想法总是会和大众的想法发生很大的差异。
  • 用心工作

    用心工作

    本书以独特的视角,结合大量生动翔实的材料和案例,紧紧围绕“用心”二字,详细讲述了用心工作的理念,并提供了一套行之有效的方法。本书可读性、启发性和操作性都非常强,适合员工个人阅读,也可以作为企事业单位员工培训教材,相信本书的出版对企事业单位员工的个人阅读和培训大有裨益。本书由郑一群著。
  • 仙妖门徒:绝色小魔女

    仙妖门徒:绝色小魔女

    上古秘辛,奇幻纷纭,莫过于最古老的神魔。那时,神魔统御百族生灵,幻想称霸天地。人间祸起,成为了炼狱之地……欢迎加入仙妖门徒书友群:946301828
  • 重生女帝玩转天界

    重生女帝玩转天界

    修仙之路,漫漫无期。纵然凌曦前世问鼎天界巅峰,成帝位,踏仙途,成就星灵女帝之名,也终究逃不过漫漫岁月。寻遍万千古迹,携一《轮回灵女决》重生于少女时代,也不过弥补前世遗憾,不辜负爱自己的亲人朋友。这一世,她战无数天骄,领无数传承,也顺便俘获了无数美男的心。#纯良少年害羞抿唇:“姐姐,我最喜欢你了。”#邪肆妖孽勾唇一笑:“可愿做本王一生一世一双人中的一个?”#翩翩公子温润如玉:“再造之恩,无以为报,唯有以身相许。”#冰山美男寤寐求之:“纵江山如画,又怎抵你眉心一点朱砂?”#……世间哪得安全法,不负如来不负卿?情之一字,她生来……就不能拥有。[重生+修仙+无男主][不定时更新,入坑需谨慎]
  • 山区最后一班列车

    山区最后一班列车

    不是梦想,不是岁月,只为自己的那份执着,守护自己的家乡,为了最后的回忆。
  • 法医笔记

    法医笔记

    我选择当一名法医,古时候称之为仵作,被视为不祥之人,在三教九流中属下九流行当。入行这些年,我经历过各种离奇的案件,我叫容彦!