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RUINS OF RAILROAD BRIDGE AT RICHMOND, BURNED BY THE CONFEDERATES.

forces, the Eleventh and Twelfth corps, were moved into Tennessee in 1863 by that road. A capital advantage of that line was that it avoided all large towns-a bad thing for the soldiers. If the Ohio River should be frozen, I proposed to move the corps by rail from Cairo, Evansville, and Jeffersonville, to Parkersburg or Bellaire, according to circumstances.

Commanders along the proposed route were advised of the removal, and ordered to prepare steamboats and transports. Loyal officers of railroads were requested to meet Colonel Parsons at given points, to arrange for the concentration of rolling-stock in case the river could not be used. Liquor shops were ordered closed along the route, and arrangements were made for the comfort of the troops by supplying them as often as once in every hundred miles of travel with an abundance of hot coffee, in addition to their rations.

Colonel Parsons left on the 11th for Louisville, where he arrived on the 13th. By the morning of the 18th, he had started the first division from the mouth of the Tennessee up the Ohio, and had transportation ready for the rest of the corps. He then hurried to Cincinnati, where, on the 21st, as the river was too full of ice to permit a further transfer by water, he loaded some 3,000 men on the cars waiting there, and started them eastward. The rest of the corps rapidly followed. In spite

of fogs and ice on the river, and broken rails and machinery on the railroads, the entire army corps was encamped on the banks of the Potomac on February 2d.

The distance transported was nearly 1,400 miles, about equally divided between land and water. The average time of transportation, from the embarkment on the Tennessee

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JACOB THOMPSON, DIPLOMATIC AGENT OF THE CONFEDERATE

GOVERNMENT.

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RICHMOND AT THE CLOSE OF THE WAR: RUINS LEFT BY THE FIRE ALONG THE OLD CANAL.

to the arrival on the banks of the Potomac, was not exceeding eleven days; and what was still more important was the fact that, during the whole movement, not a single accident happened causing loss of life, limb, or property, except in the single instance of a soldier jumping from a car, under an apprehension of danger. He lost his life, when, had he remained quiet, he would have been as safe as were his comrades in the

same car.

THE FALL OF RICHMOND.

All of the winter of 1864-65 I passed in Washington, occupied with these matters and the regular business of the Department. It was evident to all of us, as the spring came on, that the war was drawing to a close. Sherman was coming northward from his triumphant march to the sea, and would soon be in communication with Grant, who, ever since I left him in July, 1864, had been watching Petersburg and Richmond, where Lee's army was shut up. The end of March, Grant advanced. On April 1st, Sheridan won the battle of Five Forks; then, on April 2d, came the successful assaults which drove Lee from Petersburg.

On the morning of April 3d, before I had left my house, Mr. Stanton sent for me to come immediately to the War Department. When I got over there, he told me that Richmond had surrendered and that he wanted me to go down at once to report the condition of affairs. I started as soon as I could get a steamboat, Roscoe Conkling and my son Paul accompanying me. We reached City Point early on April 5th. Little was known there of the condition of

things in Richmond. There were but a few officers left at the place, and those were overwhelmed with work. I had expected to find President Lincoln at City Point, as he had been in the vicinity for several days, but he had gone up to Richmond the day before.

I started up the river immediately, and reached Richmond early in the afternoon. I went at once to find Major-General Godfrey Weitzel, who was in command of the United States forces. He was at his headquarters, which were in Jefferson Davis's former residence. I had heard down the river that Davis had sold his furniture at auction, some days before the evacuation, but I found when I reached the house that this was a mistake: the furniture was all there.

On arriving, I immediately made inquiries about official papers. I found that the records and papers of the departments and of Congress were generally removed before the evacuation, and that, during the fire, the Capitol was ransacked and the documents were scattered. In the rooms of the secretary of the Senate, and of the military committee of the House of Representatives, in the State House, we found some papers of importance. They were in various cases and drawers, and in great confusion. They were more or less imperfect and fragmentary. In the State engineer's office there were also some boxes of papers relating to the Confederate works on the Potomac, about Norfolk, and on the Peninsula. I had all of these packed in boxes without attempting to put them in order, and they were sent soon after to Washington.

Weitzel told me that he had learned at three o'clock in the morning on Monday,

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General Weitzel told me that he had found about 20,000 people in Richmond, half of them of African descent. He said that, when the President entered the town on the 4th, he received a most enthusiastic reception from the mass of the inhabitants. All the members of Congress had escaped. Only the Assistant Secretary of War, Judge Campbell, remained. Most of the newspaper editors had fled, but the "Whig" appeared on the 4th as a Union paper, with the name of its former proprietor at its head. The night after I arrived the theater opened.

There was much suffering and poverty among the population, the rich as well as the poor being destitute of food. Weitzel had decided to issue supplies to all who would take the oath. In my first message to Mr. Stanton I spoke of this. He immediately answered: "Please ascertain from General Weitzel under what authority he is distributing rations to the people of Richmond, as I suppose he would not do it without authority; and direct him to report daily the amount of rations distributed by his order to persons not belonging to the military service and not authorized by law to receive

GENERAL NELSON A. MILES, AT THE TIME HE HELD JEFFERSON DAVIS AS A PRISONER OF WAR.

April 3d, that Richmond was being evacuated, and had moved forward at daylight, first taking care to give his men breakfast, in the expectation that they might have to fight. He met no opposition, and on entering the city, was greeted with a hearty welcome from the mass of people: the mayor went out to meet him to surrender the city, but missed him on the road.

I took a walk around Richmond that day to see how much the city was injured. The Confederates, in retreating, had set it on fire, and the damage done in that way was enormous: nearly everything between Main Street and the river, for about three-quarters of a mile, was burned. The Custom House and the Spotswood Hotel were the only important buildings remaining in the burned district. The block opposite the Spotswood, including the War Department building, was entirely destroyed. The Petersburg railroad bridge and that of the Danville road were destroyed. All the enemy's vessels, excepting an unfinished ram, which had her machinery in perfect order, were burned. The Tredegar Iron Works were unharmed. Libby Prison and Castle Thunder had also escaped the fire.

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rations, designating the color of the persons, their occupation, and sex." Mr. Stanton seemed to be satisfied when I wired him that Weitzel was working under General Ord's orders, approved by General Grant, and that he was paying for the rations by selling captured property.

The important question which the President had on his hands, when I reached Richmond, was considering how Virginia could be brought back to the Union. He had already had an interview with Judge Campbell and other prominent representatives of the Confederate government. All they asked, they said, was an amnesty and a military convention to cover appearances. Slavery they admitted to be defunct. The President did not promise amnesty, but he told them he had the pardoning power, and would save any repentant sinner from hanging. They assured him that, if amnesty could be offered, the rebel army would be dissolved and all the States return. On the morning of the 7th, five members of the so-called Virginia legislature held a meeting to consider propositions which the President had given to Judge Campbell. The President showed these papers to me confidentially. They were two in number. One stated re-union as a sine qua non; the second authorized General Weitzel to allow members of the body claiming to be the legislature of Virginia to meet in Richmond for the purpose of recalling Virginia's soldiers from rebel armies, with safe conduct to them so long as they did and said nothing hostile to the United States. The President said, in talking over these documents, that Sheridan seemed to be getting rebel soldiers out of the war faster than the legislature could think.

The next morning, on April 8th, I was present at an interview between General Weitzel and General Shepley, who had been appointed military governor of Richmond, and a committee of prominent citizens and members of the legislature. Various papers were read by the Confederate representatives, but they were told that no propositions could be entertained that involved a recognition of the Confederate authorities. The committee was also told that if they desired to prepare an address to the people, advising them to abandon hostility to the Government at once and begin to obey the laws of the United States, they should have every facility for its circulation through the State, provided, of course, that it met the approval of the military authorities. The Union represen

tatives said that if the committee desired to call a convention of the prominent citizens of the State, with a view to the restoration of the authority of the Union, they would be allowed to go without the lines of Richmond for the purpose of visiting citizens in different parts of the State and inducing them to take part in a convention; they were promised safe conduct for themselves and such citizens as they could persuade to attend the convention. They were also told that if they were not able to find conveyances for themselves into the country, horses would be loaned to them for the purpose.

All this, they were informed, was not to be considered as in any manner condoning any offense of which anyone might have been guilty. Judge Campbell said that he had no wish to take a prominent part in the proceedings, but that he had long since made up his mind that the cause of the South was hopeless; that he had written a formal memorial to Jefferson Davis immediately after the Hampton Roads conference, urging him and the Confederate Congress to take immediate steps to stop the war and restore the Union, and that he had deliberately remained in Richmond to meet the consequences of his acts. He said that if he could be used in the restoration of peace and order, he would gladly undertake any labor that might be desired of him.

The spirit of the committee seemed to be generally the same as Campbell's, though none of them equaled him in ability and clearness. They were conscious that they were whipped, and were sincerely anxious to stop all further bloodshed, and restore peace, law, and order. This mental condition seemed to me to be very hopeful and encouraging.

A TALK WITH VICE-PRESIDENT ANDREW JOHNSON AT RICHMOND.

One day, after the meeting of this committee, I was in the large room downstairs of the Spotswood Hotel, when my name was called, and I turned around to see Andrew Johnson, the new Vice-President of the United States. He took me one side, and spoke with great earnestness about the necessity of not taking the Confederates back without some conditions or without some punishment. He said that their sins had been enormous; that if they were let back into the Union without any punishment, the effect would be very bad, and that they might be dangerous in the future. He spoke in this strain fully twenty

minutes, I should think, an impassioned, earnest speech, and, finally, when he paused, and I got a chance, I replied:

"Why, Mr. Johnson, I have no power in this case. Your remarks are very striking, very impressive, and, certainly, worthy of the most serious consideration, but it does not seem to me necessary that they should be addressed to me. They ought to be addressed to the President and to the members of Congress, to those who have authority in the case and who will finally have to decide this question which you raise."

"Mr. Dana," said he, "I feel it to be my duty to say these things to every man whom I meet, whom I know to have any influence. Any man whose thoughts are considered by others, or whose judgment is going to weigh in the case, I must speak to, so that the weight of opinion in favor of the view of this question which I offer may possibly become preponderating and decisive."

That was in April. When Mr. Johnson became President, not long after, he soon took the view which he condemned in this conversation with me.

Toward the end of this first week after we entered Richmond, the question about opening the churches on Sunday came up, and I asked Weitzel what he was going to do. He answered that all were to be allowed to open on condition that no disloyalty should be uttered and that the Episcopal ministers should read the prayer for the President of the United States. But the next day General Shepley, the military governor, came to me to ask that the order might be relaxed so that the clergy should only be required not to pray for Davis. I declined giving any orders, having received none from Washington, and said that Weitzel must act in the matter entirely on his own judgment. Judge Campbell used all his influence with Weitzel and Shepley to get them to consent that a loyal prayer should not be exacted. Weitzel concluded not to give a positive order; his decision was influenced by the examples of New Orleans, Norfolk, and Savannah, in all of which places, he claimed, the rule was not at first enforced. In a greater measure, however, his decision was the result of the President's verbal direction to him to "let the people down easy." The churches were all well filled on Sunday, the ladies especially attending in great numbers. The sermons were devout and not political, the city was perfectly quiet, and there was more security for persons and property than had existed there for many months.

THE SURRENDER OF LEE.

Monday morning the news of Lee's surrender reached Richmond. It produced the deepest impression. Even the most malignant women now felt that the defeat was perfect and the rebellion finished, while among the men there was no sentiment but submission to the power of the nation and a returning hope that their individual property might escape confiscation. They all seemed most keenly alive to this consideration, and men like General Anderson, the proprietor of the Tredegar Works, were most zealous in efforts to produce a thorough pacification and save their possessions.

The next morning I received from Mr. Stanton an order to proceed to General Grant's headquarters and furnish from there such details as might be of interest. News reached me that day, however, that Grant was on his way to Richmond; so I remained there to receive him.

As soon as Grant reached Richmond, I had a talk with him on the condition of Lee's army and the men and arms surrendered. He told me that, in a long private interview which he had with Lee at Appomattox, the latter said that he should devote his whole efforts to pacifying the country and bringing the people back to the Union. He declared he had always been for the Union in his heart, and could find no justification for the politicians who had brought on the war, the origin of which he believed to have been in the folly of extremists on both sides. If General Grant had agreed to the interview Lee had asked for some time before, Lee said, they would certainly have agreed on terms of peace then, as he was prepared to treat for the surrender of all the Confederate armies. The war, he said, had left him a poor man, with nothing but what he had upon his person, and his wife would have to provide for herself until he could find some employment.

The officers of Lee's army, Grant said, all seemed to be glad that it was over, and the men still more so than the officers. All were greatly impressed by the generosity of the terms finally given them, for at the time of the surrender they were surrounded and escape was impossible. General Grant thought that these terms were of great importance toward securing a thorough peace and undisturbed submission to the Government.

That night I left Richmond for Washington

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