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in such corps, regiments, or branches of the service as the exigencies of the service may require.

each loyal person to whom a colored volunteer may owe service a just compensation, not exceeding three hundred dollars, for 1864, Feb. 24-Provided for equalizing each such colored volunteer, payable out the draft by calculating the quota of each of the fund derived from commutadistrict or precinct and counting the num- tions, and every such colored volunteer ber previously furnished by it. Any per- on being mustered into the service shall be son enrolled may furnish an acceptable free. And in all cases where men of color substitute who is not liable to draft, nor, have been enlisted, or have volunteered in at any time, in the military or naval ser- the military service of the United States, vice of the United States; and such per- all the provisions of this act so far as the son so furnishing a substitute shall be ex- payment of bounty and compensation are empt from draft during the time for which provided, shall be equally applicable, as to such substitute shall not be liable to draft, those who may be hereafter recruited. But not exceeding the time for which such sub-men of color, drafted or enlisted, or who stitute shall have been accepted. If such may volunteer into the military service, substitute is liable to draft, the name of while they shall be credited on the quotas the person furnishing him shall again be of the several States, or sub-divisions of placed on the roll and shall be liable to States, wherein they are respectively draftdraft in future calls, but not until the pre-ed, enlisted, or shall volunteer, shall not sent enrollment shall be exhausted. The exemptions are limited to such as are rejected as physically or mentally unfit for the service; to persons actually in the military or naval service of the Government, and all persons who have served in the military or naval service two years during the present war and been honorably discharged therefrom.

The separate enrollment of classes is repealed and the two classes consolidated.

Members of religious denominations, who shall by oath or affirmation declare that they are conscientiously opposed to the bearing of arms, and who are prohibited from doing so by the rules and articles of faith and practice of said religious denomination, shall when drafted, be considered non-combatants, and be assigned to duty in the hospitals, or the care of freedmen, or shall pay $300 to the benefit of sick and wounded soldiers, if they give proof that their deportment has been uniformly consistent with their declaration.

No alien who has voted in county, State or Territory shall, because of alienage, be exempt from draft.

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be assigned as State troops, but shall be mustered into regiments or companies as United States colored troops,"

1864, Feb. 29-Bill passed reviving the grade of Lieutenant General in the army, and Major General Ulysses S. Grant was appointed March 2d.

1864, June 15-All persons of color shall receive the same pay and emoluments, except bounty, as other soldiers of the regular or volunteer army from and after Jan. 1, 1864, the President to fix the bounty for those hereafter mustered, not exceeding $100.

1864, June 20—The monthly pay of privates and non-commissioned officers was fixed as follows, on and after May 1:

Sergeant majors, twenty-six dollars; quartermaster and commissary sergeants of Cavalry, artillery, and infantry, twentytwo dollars; first sergeants of cavalry, artillery, and infantry, twenty-four dollars; sergeants of cavalry, artillery, and infantry, twenty dollars; sergeants of ordnance, sappers and miners, and pontoniers, thirtyfour dollars; corporals of ordnance, sappers and miners, and pontoniers, twenty dollars; privates of engineers and ordnance All able-bodied male colored persons of the first class, eighteen dollars, and of between the ages of twenty and forty-five the second class, sixteen dollars; corporals years, resident in the United States, shall of cavalry, artillery, and infantry, eighteen be enrolled according to the provisions of dollars; chief buglers of cavalry, twentythis act, and of the act to which this is an three dollars; buglers, sixteen dollars; faramendment, and form part of the national riers and blacksmiths, of cavalry, and artiforces; and when a slave of a loyal master ficers of artillery, eighteen dollars; privates shall be drafted and mustered into the ser- of cavalry, artillery and infantry, sixteen vice of the United States, his master shall dollars; principal musicians of artillery have a certificate thereof; and thereupon and infantry, twenty-two dollars; leaders such slave shall be free, and the bounty of of brigade and regimental bands, seventyone hundred dollars, now payable by law five dollars; musicians, sixteen dollars; for each drafted man, shall be paid to the person to whom such drafted person was owing service or labor at the time of his muster into the service of the United States. The Secretary of War shall appoint a commission in each of the slave States repreented in Congress, charged to award to

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hospital stewards of the first class, thirtythree dollars; hospital stewards of the second class, twenty-five dollars; hospital stewards of the third class, twenty-three dollars."

July 4-This bill became a law:

Be it enacted, &c. That the President of

the United States may, at his discretion, ut any time hereafter call for any number of men as volunteers for the respective terms of one, two, and three years for military service; and any such volunteer, or, in case of draft, as hereinafter provided, any substitute, shall be credited to the town, township, ward of a city, precinct, or election district, or of a county not so subdivided towards the quota of which he may have volunteered or engaged as a substitute; and every volunteer who is accepted and mustered into the service for a term of one year, unless sooner discharged, shall receive, and be paid by the United States, a bounty of one hundred dollars; and if for a term of two years, unless sooner discharged, a bounty of two hundred dollars; and if for a term of three years, unless sooner discharged, a bounty of three hundred dollars; one third of which bounty shall be paid to the soldier at the time of his being mustered into the service, onethird at the expiration of one-half of his term of service, and one-third at the expiration of his term of service. And in case of his death while in service, the residue of his bounty unpaid shall be paid to his widow, if he shall have left a widow; if not, to his children; or if there be none, to his mother, if she be a widow.

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vice of the States, as may be tendered, in such number as he may require, for any time not less than twelve months, unless sooner discharged.

March 6, 1861-The President was authorized to employ the militia, military and naval forces of the Confederate States to repel invasion, maintain rightful possession of the territory, and secure public_tranquillity and independence against threatened assault, to the extent of 100,000 men, to serve for twelve months.

May 4, 1861-One regiment of Zouaves authorized.

May 6, 1861-Letters of marque and reprisal authorized.

1861, August 8-The Congress authorized the President to accept the services of 400,000 volunteers, to serve for not less than twelve months nor more than three years after they shall be mustered into service, unless sooner discharged.

The Richmond Enquirer of that date announced that it was ascertained from official data, before the passage of the bill, that there were not less than 210,000 men then in the field.

August 21-Volunteers authorized for local defence and special service.

1862, January-Publishers of newspapers, or other printed matter are prohibited from giving the number, disposition, movement, or destination of the land or naval forces, or description of vessel, or battery,

less first authorized by the President or Congress, or the Secretary of War or Navy, or commanding officer of post, district, or expedition. The penalty is a fine of $1,000 and imprisonment not over twelve months,

SEC. 8. That all persons in the naval service of the United States, who have entered said service during the present rebel-fortification, engine of war, or signal, unlion, who have not been credited to the quota of any town, district, ward, or State. by reason of their being in said service and not enrolled prior to February twenty-four, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, shall be enrolled and credited to the quotas of the town, ward, district, or State, in which they respectively reside, upon satisfactory proof of their residence made to the Secretary of War.

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CONFEDERATE” MILITARY LEGISLATION. February 28, 1861, (four days before the inauguration of Mr. Lincoln)-The "Confederate" Congress passed a bill providing

1st. To enable the Government of the Confederate States to maintain its jurisdiction over all questions of peace and war, and to provide for the public defence, the President be, and he is hereby authorized and directed to assume control of all military operations in every State, having reference to a connection with questions between the said States, or any of them, and Powers foreign to themselves.

2d. The President was authorized to receive from the several States the arms and munitions of war which have been acquired from the United States.

3d. He was authorized to receive into Government service such forces in the ser

1862, February-The Committee on Naval Affairs were instructed to inquire into the expediency of placing at the disposal of the President five millions of dollars to build gunboats.

1862 Bill passed to "regulate the destruction of property under military necessity," referring particularly to cotton and tobacco. The authorities are authorized to destroy it to keep it from the enemy; and owners, destroying it for the same purpose, are to be indemnified upon proof of the value and the circumstances of the de struction.

1862, April 16-The first "conscription" bill became a law.

1864, February. The second conscription bill became a law.

The Richmond Sentinel of February 17, 1864, contains a synopsis of what is called the military bill, heretofore forbidden to be printed:

The first section provides that all white men residents of the Confederate States, between the ages of seventeen and fifty, shall be in the military service for the war.

The second section provides that all be

tween eighteen and forty-five, now in ser

The vote in the House of Representa

GUERRILLAS.

vice, shall be continued during the war in tives was-yeas, 41; nays, 31. the same regiments, battalions, and companies to which they belong at the passage of this act, with the organization, officers, 1862, April 21-The President was au&c., provided that companies from one State thorized to commission such officers as he organized against their consent, expressed may deem proper, with authority to form at the time, with regrets, &c., from another bands of partisan rangers, in companies, State, shall have the privilege of being battalions or regiments, either as infantry transferred to the same arm in a regiment or cavalry, to receive the same pay, rations, from their own State, and men can be trans-and quarters, and be subject to the same ferred to a company from their own State. regulations as other soldiers. For any arms Section three gives a bounty eight months and munitions of war captured from the hence of $100 in rebel bond. enemy by any body of partisan rangers, and delivered to any quartermaster at designated place, the rangers shall pay their full value.*

Section four provides that no person shall be relieved from the operations of this act heretofore discharged for disability, nor shall those who furnished substitutes be exempted, where no disability now exists; but exempts religious persons who have paid an exemption tax.

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The following resolution, in relation to partisan service, was adopted by the Vir ginia Legislature, May 17, 1862:

Whereas, this General Assembly places a high estimate upon the value of the ranger or partisan service in prosecuting the present war to a successful issue, and regards it as perfectly legitimate; and it being understood that a Federal commander on the northern border of Virginia has intimated his purpose, if such service is not discontinued, to lay waste by fire the portion of our territory at present under his

The tenth section provides that no person shall be exempt except the following: ministers, superintendents of deaf, dumb, and blind, or insane asylums; one editor to each newspaper, and such employees as he may swear to be indispensable; the Confederate and State public printers, and the journeymen printers necessary to perform the public printing; one apothecary to each drug store, who was and has been contin- | power. uously doing business as such since Octo- Resolved by the General Assembly, That ber 10, 1862; physicians over 30 years of in its opinion, the policy of employing such age of seven years' practice, not including rangers and partisans ought to be carried dentists; presidents and teachers of col-out energetically, both by the authorities leges, academies and schools, who have not of this State and of the Confederate States, less than thirty pupils; superintendents without the slightest regard to such threats. of public hospitals established by law, and By another act, the President was ausuch physicians and nurses as may be in-thorized, in addition to the volunteer force dispensable for their efficient management. authorized under existing laws, to accept. One agriculturist on such farm where the services of volunteers who may offer there is no white male adult not liable to them, without regard to the place of enduty employing fifteen able-bodied slaves, listment, to serve for and during the existbetween sixteen and fifty years of age, up-ing war. on the following conditions:

The party exempted shall give bonds to deliver to the Government in the next twelve months, 100 pounds of bacon, or its equivalent in salt pork, at Government selection, and 100 pounds of beef for each such able-bodied slave employed on said farm

at commissioner's rates.

In certain cases this may be commuted in grain or other provisions.

1862, May 27-Major General John B. Floyd was authorized by the Legislature of Virginia, to raise ten thousand men, not now in service or liable to draft, for twelve months.

1862, September 27-The President was authorized to call out and place in the military service for three years, all white men who are residents, between the ages of thirty-five and forty-five, at the time the The person shall further bind himself to call may be made, not legally exempt. And sell all surplus provisions now on hand, or such authority shall exist in the President, which he may raise, to the Government, or during the present war, as to all persons the families of soldiers, at commissioner's who now are, or hereafter may become rates, the person to be allowed a credit of eighteen years of age, and all persons be25 per cent. on any amount he may deliver tween eighteen and forty-five, once enin three months from the passage of this rolled, shall serve their full time. act; Provided that no enrollment since Feb. 1, 1864, shall deprive the person enrolled from the benefit of this exemption.

In addition to the above, the Secretary of War is authorized to make such details as the public security requires.

* 1864, February 16-Repealed the above act, but provided for continuing organizations of partisan rangers acting as regular cavalry and so to continue; and author

ising the Secretary of War to provide for uniting all bands of partisan rangers with other organizations and bringing them under the general discipline of the provisional army.

THE TWENTY-NEGRO EXEMPTION LAW. | Capitol was in danger, and must be de1862, October 11-Exempted certain fended at all hazards, and at any expense classes, described in the repealing law of of men and money. He spoke of the prethe next session, as follows: sent and future, without any reference to the past."

The dissatisfaction of the people with an act passed by the Confederate Congress, at its last session, by which persons owning a certain number of slaves were exempted from the operation of the conscription law, has led the members at the present session to reconsider their work, and already one branch has passed a bill for the repeal of the obnoxious law. This bill provides as

follows:

Douglas followed this with a great speech at Chicago, in which he uttered a sentence that was soon quoted on nearly every Northern tongue. It was simply this, that there now could be but two parties, patriots and traitors." It needed nothing more to rally the Douglas Democrats by the side of the Administration, and in the general feeling of patriotism awakened not The Congress of the Confederate States only this class of Democrats, but many do enact. That so much of the act apNorthern supporters of Breckinridge also proved October 11, 1862, as exempts from enlisted in the Union armies. The leaders military service service one person, either as who stood aloof and gave their sympathies agent, owner, or overseer, on each planta- to the South, were stigmatized as "Coppertion on which one white person is required heads," and these where they were so imto be kept by the laws or ordinances of any pudent as to give expression to their hosState, and on which there is no white male tility, were as odious to the mass of Northadult not liable to military service, and in erners as the Unionists of Tennessee and States having no such law, one person, as North Carolina were to the Secessionists agent, owner, or overseer on such planta- with this difference-that the latter were tion of twenty negroes, and on which there compelled to seek refuge in their mounis no white male adult not liable to mili-tains, while the Northern leader who tary service;' and also the following clause in said act, to wit: 'and furthermore, for additional police of every twenty negroes, on two or more plantations, within five miles of each other, and each having less than twenty negroes, and on which there is no white male adult not liable to military duty, one person, being the oldest of the owners or overseers on such plantations,' be and the same are hereby repealed; and the persons so hitherto exempted by said clauses of said act are hereby made subject to military duty in the same manner that they would be had said clauses never been embraced in said act.”

THE POSITION OF DOUGLAS.

After the President had issued his first call, Douglas saw the danger to which the Capitol was exposed, and he promptly called upon Lincoln to express his full approval of the call. Knowing his political value and that of his following Lincoln asked him to dictate a despatch to the Associated Press, which he did in these words, the original being left in the possession of Hon. George Ashmun of Massachu

setts:

April 18, 1861, Senator Douglas, called on the President, and had an interesting conversation, on the present condition of the country. The substance of it was, on the part of Mr. Douglas, that while he was unalterably opposed to the administration in all its political issues, he was prepared to fully sustain the President, in the exercise of all his Constitutional functions, to preserve the Union, maintain the Government, and defend the Federal Capitol. A firm poliev and prompt action was necessary. The

sought to give "aid and comfort to the
enemy" was either placed under arrest by
the government or proscribed politically
by his neighbors. Civil war is ever thus.
Let us now pass to

THE POLITICAL LEGISLATION INCIDENT TO
THE WAR,

The first session of the 37th Congress began July 4, 1861, and closed Aug. 6. The second began December 2, 1861, and closed July 17, 1862. The third began December 1, 1862 and closed March 4, 1863.

All of these sessions of Congress were really embarrassed by the number of volunteers offering from the North, and sufficiently rapid provision could not be made for them. And as illustrative of how political lines had been broken, it need only be remarked that Benjamin F. Butler, the leader of the Northern wing of Breckinridge's supporters, was commissioned as the first commander of the forces which Massachusetts sent to the field. New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio-the great West-all the States, more than met all early require ments. So rapid were enlistments that no song was as popular as that beginning with the lines:

"We are coming, Father Abraham, Six hundred thousand strong." The first session of the 37th Congress was a special one, called by the President. McPherson, in his classification of the membership, shows the changes in a body made historic, if such a thing can be, not only by its membership prosent, but that which had gone or made itself subject to

expulsion by siding with the Confederacy. We quote the list so concisely and correctly presented:

MEMBERS OF THE 37TH CONGRESS.

March 4, 1861, to March 4, 1863. HANNIBAL HAMLIN, of Maine, President of the Senate.

SENATORS.

Maine-Lot M. Morrill, Wm. Pitt Fessenden.

New Hampshire-John P. Hale, Daniel Clark.

Massachusetts-Thomas D. Eliot, James Buffinton, Benjamin F. Thomas, Alexander H. Rice, William Appleton, John B. Alley, Daniel W. Gooch, Charles R. Train, Goldsmith F. Bailey,* Charles Delano, Henry L. Dawes.

Rhode Island-William P. Sheffield, George H. Browne.

Connecticut-Dwight Loomis, James E. English, Alfred A. Burnham,* George C. Woodruff.

New York-Edward II. Smith, Moses F. Odell, Benjamin Wood, James E. Kerrigan, William Wall, Frederick A. ConkVermont-Solomon Foot, Jacob Colla-ling, Elijah Ward, Isaac C. Delaplaine,

mer.

Massachusetts-Charles Sumner, Henry

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GALUSHA A. GROW, of Pennsylvania, Speaker of the House.

Edward Haight, Charles H. Van Wyck,
John B. Steele, Stephen Paker, Abraham
B. Olin, Erastus Corning, James B. Me-
Kean, William A. Wheeler, Socrates N.
Sherman, Chauncey Vibbard, Richard
Franchot, Roscoe Conkling, R. Holland
Duell, William E. Lansing, Ambrose W.
Clark, Charles B. Sedgwick, Theodore M.
Pomeroy, Jacob P. Chamberlain, Alexan-
der S. Diven, Robert B. Van Valkenburgh,
Alfred Ely, Augustus Frank, Burt Van
Horn, Elbridge G. Spalding, Reuben E.
Fenton.

New Jersey-John T. Nixon, John L. N.
Stratton, William G. Steele, George T.
Cobb, Nehemiah Perry.

Pennsylvania-William E. Lehman, Charles J. Biddle, John P. Verree, William D. Kelley, William Morris Davis, John Hickman, Thomas B. Cooper,* Sydenham E. Ancona, Thaddeus Stevens, John W. Killinger, James H. Campbell, Hendrick B. Wright, Philip Johnson, Galusha A. Grow, James T. Hale, Joseph Baily, Edward McPherson, Samuel S. Blair, John Covode, Jesse Lazear, James K. Moorhead, Robert McKnight, John W. Wallace, John Patton, Elijah Babbitt.

Delaware-George P. Fisher.

Webster, Cornelius L. L. Leary, Henry
Maryland-John W. Crisfield, Edwin H.
May, Francis Thomas, Charles B. Calvert.
Virginia-Charles H. Upton, William
G. Brown, John S. Carlile,* Kellian V.
Whaley.

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Ohio-George H. Pendleton, John A. Gurley, Clement L. Vallandigham, William Allen, James M. Ashley, Chilton A. White, Richard A. Harrison, Samuel Shellabarger, Warren P. Noble, Carey A. Trimble, Valentine B. Horton, Samuel S. Cox, Robert H. Nugen, William P. Cutler, Samuel T. Worcester, Harrison G. Blake, G. Riddle, John Hutchins, John A. BingJames R. Morris, Sidney Edgerton, Albert

ham.

Maine John N. Goodwin, Charles W. Walton,* Samuel C. Fessenden, Anson P. Morrill, John H. Rice, Frederick A. Pike. New Hampshire-Gilman Marston, Ed-Jackson, Henry Grider, Aaron Harding, Kentucky-Henry C. Burnett, James S. ward H. Rollins, Thomas M. Edwards. Vermont-E. P. Walton, Jr., Justin S. Robert Mallory, John J. Crittenden, Wil Charles A. Wickliffe, George W. Dunlap, Morrill, Portus Baxter. liam H. Wadsworth, John W. Menzies.

* See memorandum at the end of list.

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See memorandum at end of list.

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