OF THE GREAT REBELLION, FROM ITS COMMENCEMENT TO ITS CLOSE, GIVING AN ACCOUNT OF ITS ORIGIN, THE SECESSION OF THE SOUTHERN STATES, AND THE FORMATION OF THE CONFEDERATE GOVERNMENT, THE CONCENTRATION OF THE MILITARY AND FINANCIAL RESOURCES OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, THE DEVELOPMENT OF ITS VAST POWER, THE RAISING, ORGANIZING, AND EQUIPPING OF THE CON- MEASURES OF THE GOVERNMENT, THE ENTHUSIASM AND PATEI- OTIC CONTRIBUTIONS OF THE PEOPLE, TOGETHER WITH SKETCHES OF THE LIVES OF ALL THE EMINENT FROM OFFICIAL SOURCES. By THOMAS P. KETTELL, AUTHOR OF EIGHTY YEARS' PROGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES, LATE EDITOR OF THE MERCHANTS' EMBELLISHED WITH NUMEROUS AND BEAUTIFUL STEEL PLATE ENGRAVINGS, COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME. FURNISHED TO SUBSCRIBERS ONLY. HARTFORD, CONN.: L. STEBBINS. CINCINNATI, OHIO, No. 111 MAIN STREET: SUCCESSOR TO HENRY HOWE. 1866. Checked ASTOR LIBRARY NOV 1976 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1865, BY L. STEBBINS, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the District of Connecticut. 1 PREFA СЕ. IN the following pages it has been attempted to give a succinct and authentic narrative of the war against the American Union, which, commencing practically with the secession of South Carolina in the autumn of 1860, in consequence of the election of Mr. Lincoln, terminated a few weeks after the second inauguration of the same chief magistrate. Although the period embraced within these limits comprises less than four and a half years, yet so prolific were these years of great events and great ideas, so radical were the social and political changes which they involved, so numerous the civil and military chiefs they brought into public notice, that a single volume may appear inadequate to describe the History of the Great Rebellion. Undoubtedly to another age and to another generation of writers belongs the elaborate treatment of special episodes of the struggle. Passion must also become cool, prejudices be softened, and the light of truth illumine many passages, at present obscure, before effects can be traced to their proper causes, and such a history be written as will bear the unmistakable imprint of accuracy and impartiality; and few, probably, who read these pages, will live to see that time. Our materials at present are like the direct evidence educed at a trial-the cross-examination has not yet been had. Meanwhile, however, a work which shall refresh and re-enforce the memory, bewildered by the rapid march of events, and give a clear outline of what these |