Iggress. The Constitational Amendment prohibiting Slavery.--Its Defeat in the House.-Repeal of the Fugitive Blave Laws.--New Bureaus Established. - Dther Important Legislation.--"Reconstruction."--Opposition to the Presi. dent's Policy.-The Davis Bill.-Disagreement of the two Houses thereon.--Its Final Passage.-The President with holds his Signature.-His Proclamation on t be subject. --The Wado-Davis Manifesto.-Lotters of Mr. Lincoln in regard to Matters in New Orleans and St. Louis.-President Lincoln's Speech at tho Phil. adelphia Fair. A Democratic National Convention Callod and Postponed.- Clay, Thompson and other Conspirators in Canada.--The Greeley Nogotiations with them.-President Lincolu's Action in the Caso.-North-wostera Counpi. racy.-The Chicago Nominations and Platform, 1864...................... Military Operations before Petersburg and Richmond, from June to November, 1861. -Gen. Hunter's Campaign.-Movements in the Shenandoah Valley.- Early's lovasion of Maryland. --IIis Demonstration against Washington.-Ilis Retreat up the Valley, and Second Advance to tho Potomac.-Burning of Chambersburg-Successes of Gen. Averill.-Battle of Moorfield.--Gon. Sheri- dan takes Command in the Valley.-Admiral Farragut beforo Mobile.-Brilliant Naral Victories.-Movements of Sheridan.-Important Successes in the Val- Gen. Sherman's Campaign in Georgin.--From Marietta to Atlanta.-Passage of the Chattahoochee.-Ronsseau's Raid.-Battlos before Atlanta.-Heavy losses of the kebels after Hood Succeeds Johnston.-Cavalry expeditions under Stone- man and McCook.-Their Failure.- porations around Atlanta.-Kilpatrick's Raid. Sherman's Army on the Macon Railroad.-Batile of Jonesboro.-Cap- ture of Atlanta.-Rebel Raids.-Ilood's operations in Shorman's Rear.–Price's lorasion of Missouri.-General Results of the South-western Campaigns......... 604 The Presidential Canvass of 1864 concinded.-Spirit of the Opposition.—The North-western Conspiracy.-The Issuo Concerning tho Habeas Corpus and Mili. tary Arrests.--Letters of Mr. Lincoln on these Subjects.-Efforts of the Rebel Cabal in Canada to influence the Election.—The State Elections of September and October. The Voice of the Soldiers.--The Presidential Vote.--The Presi. dent's Gratitude to the Army and Navy.--Maryland a Free State.-Mr. Lincolo's Speech to Marylanders.--Cipher Dispatches, and Schemes of the Canadian CHAPTER VIII. Second Session of the Thirty-Eighth Congress. President Lincoln's last Annual Message.-Cabinet Changes.--Mr. Blair withdrawe, and Gov. Deunison becomes Postmaster-General.-Mr. Speed Succeeds Judge Bates, as Attorgey-General.- Death of Chief Justice Taney.--Mr. Chase his Successor.--Our Relations with Canada.-The Reciprocity Treaty to Terminate.--Call for 300,000 more Sol. diers.-- Amendment of the Constitution Prohibiting Slavery, Concurred in by the Bouso.--Popular Rejoicing.--The Rebel Treatment of Union Prisoners. Retaliation Discussed in the Senate, but Repugnant to Public Sentiment.---Tho Wharncliffe Correspondence.–Testimony of Coldwin Smith.--Peaco Memorial from Great Britain.-Correspondence Thereon.-Congratulatory Address of the Workingmen of Great Britain.-Speech of Mr. Lincoln in Reply to the Swe- dish Minister.-Speech of Mr. Lincoln on the Death of Edward Everett.-Polit- ical affairs in Tennessee, Louisiaua and Arkansas.-Abortive Peaco Negotia. tiona.-Full Details of the Hampton Roads' Conference.-Rebel accounts of the Same.--Affairs in Richmond.-Close of the Thirty-Eighth Congress.-Creation of the Bureau of Freedmen, and other Legislation...... 667 CHAPTER IX. Winter Campaigns of 1864–5.-Movement of Sherman from Atlanta to Savannah. -Fort McAllister Carried by Assault.-Communication Opened with Admiral Dahlgren's Fleot.--Savannah Occupied by Sherman.-Movements of Hood and Beauregard.—Campaign in Tennessee.- Battle of Franklin.-The Armies Before Nashvillo.-Raid of Stoneman and Burbridge.---- Battle of Nashville.---Defeat and Rout of Ilood's Army.-Movements Against Wilmington.-Failure of tho First Attack on Fort Fisher.-Success of the Second Expedition.-Fort Fisher Captured by Terry and Porter.-Movements of the Army Before Petersburg.- Sherman's Campaign in the Carolinas.-Capture of Charleston and Wilming. ton.-Advanco of Schofield and Terry on Goldsboro-Battles of Averysboro and Benton villo.--Occupation of Goldsboro and Union of the Three Armies in North Carolina. --Movements in Virginia.-Conference at City Point..................... 725 Close of President Lincoln'e First Term.-Order to Gen. Grant in regard to Poace Negotiations.—The Fourth of March.-Inauguration Ceremonies.-Mr. Lin. coln's Second Inaugural Address. --Contrasts.-Cabinet Changes.-Indisposi- tion of tho President.-IIis Speech at the National Hotel on Negro Soldiers in the Rebel Armoies.-He Visits Gen. Grant's Headquarters.—The Military Situa. tion.-Conference with his Chief Generals.-Movement of tho Forces under Meade and Sheridan.-Fighting near Dinwiddie Court House.-Sheridan's Vic- tory at the Five Forks.--Attack of Wright and Parko on the Lines before Peters- burg.–The Sixth Corps Carry the Enemy's Works.-Petersburg Evacuated.- Pursuit of the Enemy.--Richmond Taken.-Dispatches of Mr. Lincoln.-The Nation's Joy.--Lee's Army Closely Pressed.-Captures at Sailor's Creck.-Sur- ronder of Lee.--Mr. Lincoln at Richmond.-U is Visit to the City Point Hospi- tal.-D is Return to Washington.-Peace Rejoicings.-Speeches of Mr. Lin- coln.-Important Proclamations.--Demand on Great Britain for Indemnity.- Closing Military Movements.--Reduction of the Army.--Mr. Lincoln's Last Meeting with Uis Cabinet.-Celebration at Fort Sumter..................................... 753 Last Days of Mr. Lincoln.-Ilis Assassination.-Attack on Mr. Soward.Remains of Mr. Lincoln lying in State.-Obsequies at Washington.-Removal of tho Remains to Springfield, Illinois.-Demonstrations along the ronto.-Obsequies at Springfield.-The Great Crime, its authors and abettors.--The Assassin's End. The Conspiracy:-Complicity of Jefferson Davis.-How asrassins were trained to their work.--Tributes and Testimonials.-Mr. Lincoln as a Lawyer.-- Incidents and Reminiscences.-Additional Spoeches.-Letter to Gov. Ilalin, on Negro Suffrage.—Letter to Mrs. Gurney.-Letter to a Widow who had lost five Sons in the War.-Lettor to a Centenarian.-A Letter written in early life. A Speech made in 1839.-Letter to Mr. Choate, on the Pilgrim Fathers.-Letter to Dr. Maelean, on receiving tho Degroo of LL.D.-Letter to Gov. Fletcher, of PART I. CHAPTER I. MR. LINCOLN'S EARLY BOYHOOD IN KENTUCKY. Ancestry of Abraham Lincoln.—Their residence in Pennsylvania and Virginia.-His Grandfather Crosses the Alleghanies to join Boone THE ancestors of ABRAHAM LINCOLN were of English Berks county was not very long the home of Mr. Lincoln's immediate progenitors. There can hardly have been more than a slender pioneer settlement there, when one or more of the number made another remove, not far from the year 1750, to what is now Rockingham county, Virginia. Old Berks was first settled about 1734—then, too, as a German colony-and was not organized as a county until 1752 ; before which date, according to family traditions, this removal to Virginia took place. This, it will be observed, was pre-eminently a pioneer stock, evidently much in love with backwoods adventure, and constantly courting the dangers and hardships of forest life. Rockingham county, Virginia, though situated in the beautiful valley of the Shenandoah, and inviting, by its natural resources, the advances of civilization, must nevertheless have been, at the time just mentioned, in the very heart of the wilderness. Now, it is one of the most productive counties of Virginia, having exceeded every other county in the State, according to the census of 1850, in its crops of wheat and hay. A branch of the family, it is understood, still remains there, to enjoy the benefits of so judicious a selection, and of the labors and imperfectly requited endurances of these first settlers. From this locality, about the year 1782, Abraham Lincoln, grandfather of him who was to make the name illustrious, started Westward across the Alleghanies, attracted by the accounts which had reached him of the wonderfully fertile and lovely country explored by Daniel Boone, on and near the Kentucky river. During all his lifetime, hitherto, he could have known little of any other kind of existence than that to which he had been educated as an adventurous frontiersman. The severe labor of preparing the heavily-timbered lands of Shenandoah for cultivation, the wild delights of hunting the then abundant game of the woods, and the exciting hazards of an uncertain warfare with savage enemies, had been almost the sole occupation of his rough and healthful life. Perhaps the settlements around him had already begun to be too far advanced for the highest enjoyment of his characteristio mode of living; or possibly, with others, he aspired to the possession of more fertile fields, and to an easier subsistence. Whatever the reazon, he set out at the time just stated, with his wife and several young children, on his long journey across the mountains, and over the broad valleys intervening between the Shenandoah and the Kentucky. At this date, and for ten or twelve years later, the present State of Kentucky formed part of the old Commonwealth of Virginia. “The dark and hloody ground,” as afterward named for better reasons than the fiction which assigns this meaning to its Indian appellation, had then been but recently entered upon by the white man. Its first explorer, Daniel Boone, whose very name suggests a whole world of romance and adventure, had removed, when a mere boy, among the earlier emigrants from Eastern Pennsylvania, to Berks county. Here he must have been a contemporary resident, and was perhaps an acquaintance, of some of the younger members of the Lincoln family. At all events, as substantially one of their own neighbors, they must have watched his later course with eager interest and sympathy, and caught inspiration from his exploits. At eighteen, Boone had again emigrated with his father, as before, to the banks of the Yadkin, a mountain river in the north-west of North Carolina, at just about the same date as the removal of the Lincolns to Virginia. Some years later, Boone, in his hunting excursions, had passed over and admired large tracts of the wilderness north of his home, and especially along a branch of the Cumberland river, within the limits of what is now Kentucky. It was not until 1769, however, that, with five associates, he made the thorough exploration of the Kentucky valley, which resulted in the subsequent settlements there. The glowing descriptions, which ultimately got abroad, of the incredible richness and beauty of these new and remote forest-climes of Trans-Alleghanian Virginia, and of their alluring hunting-grounds, must have early reached the ears of the boyhood-companions of Daniel Boone, and spread through the neighboring country. The stirring adventures of the pioneer hero, during the next five or six years, and the beginnings of substantial settlements in that far-west country, must have suggested new attractions thitherward, to the more |