Iowa History Project
______________________________________________________
History of Iowa
On the 5th of February,
1864, Governor Stone issued a proclamation notifying the people that Iowa would
be required to furnish 6,000 more men to fill the State’s quota under the
President’s recent call for 200,000 additional soldiers; and that a draft was
ordered to begin on the 10th of March, if the men were not furnished
by that time. The Governor made a strong appeal to the people to fill this
quota with volunteers and thus avoid the necessity for a draft. On the 14th,
he issued another proclamation, forbidding all persons to cross the Missouri
River before the 10th of March for the purpose of avoiding the
draft. Guards were placed at all of the crossings of the river below Sioux City
to enforce the order. The men required to be furnished by Iowa under the late
call of the President were secured by volunteering, and a draft at this time
was avoided. A new enrollment act was passed by Congress early in July, 1864,
by the terms of which the President was authorized at his discretion to call
for any number of volunteers to serve in the army for one, two or three years.
It was provided that in case the quota of any township or ward of a city should
not be filled within fifty days after the call, the President should
immediately order a draft for one year to fill such quota.
On
the 18th of July came another call of the President for 500,000 more
volunteers; and if they were not furnished by the 5th of September,
a draft was ordered to begin immediately thereafter in any township, or ward of
any city that was delinquent. Up to this time, by great exertions, Iowa had
been able to furnish volunteers to meet all calls made by the President, but
now it became evident that the quota under this call could not be filled
without resort to a draft.
The
progress of the war for the past year had, upon the whole, been favorable to
the Union cause but the Confederate armies were still formidable, and had won
some important victories. One of the greatest battles of the war was fought at
Chickamauga on the 19th and 30th of September, 1863, where
the Union army under General Rosecrans, had been beaten by the Confederates
under General Bragg, with a loss of more than 18,000 men. The redeeming feature
of this bloody conflict was the magnificent fight made by the right wing of our
army under General Rosecrans with the main body had been driven in confusion
from the field. General Rosecrans was soon afterward relieved of command, and
was succeeded by General Thomas. On the 11th of October General
Grant, who assumed command in person, reached Chattanooga and in November won
the brilliant victories of Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge, in which he
captured more than 6,000 prisoners and forty pieces of artillery, after
inflicting upon the enemy a loss of 3,000 killed and wounded. In Louisiana our army
under General Banks was led to a disastrous defeat in the Red River campaign,
through the incompetency of the commanders, notwithstanding the brilliant
fighting of the Iowa regiments in his army. Banks lost about 5,000 men, and a
large part of his artillery, in this campaign, and what little reputation he
had as a military officer.
The
Army of the Potomac, under Meade, had accomplished nothing since the Battle of
Gettysburg, and was still lying idle on the banks of the Rapidan, watching Lee.
At last, the patience of the country became exhausted over the long continued
inaction of that great army, and congress took radical action in the premises.
The Administration felt grateful to General Meade for the victory at Gettysburg
an the country shared this feeling, although there was a general conviction in
the North that he had neglected to reap the full fruits of that victory by the
extreme caution displayed in failing to make a vigorous pursuit of Lee’s
retreating army. As the months passed by until nearly three-quarters of a year
had elapsed and his magnificent army had accomplished nothing, the belief
became general that Meade lacked the aggressive energy that was necessary in a
commander to crush Lee’s forces, capture the Confederate Capital, disperse and destroy
its usurping government.
The
initiative for a radical change came from the West. E. B. Washburn of Illinois,
on the 1st of February, 1864, in the House of Representatives,
introduced a joint resolution to revive the grade of Lieutenant-General of our
armies, a rank hitherto held only by George Washington (General Scott being
only a brevet). General Garfield moved to lay the resolution upon the table,
but the House, by the decisive vote of nineteen to one hundred seventeen,
refused to table the proposition, and after amending the resolution by a vote
of one hundred eleven to forty-one, recommending Ulysses S. Grant for the post,
passed it by a large majority. It passed the Senate by a vote of thirty-one to
six. President Lincoln promptly approved the measure, and on the 1st
of March nominated General Grant for the place, and he was promptly confirmed
by the Senate. This act was almost unanimously approved by the loyal people of
Iowa and the West. Iowa and western soldiers had from the first served under
Grant, and borne a prominent part in all of his great victories. They had
unbounded confidence in his military ability, his untiring energy and his
uncompromising fidelity to the Union cause. They hailed his promotion to the
command of all of the armies of the Nation, under the President, as the sure
harbinger of ultimate success. He was summoned to Washington, accepted the
position, and was invested by the President with the command of all of the
armies of the United States. Leaving General Meade as commander of the Army of
the Potomac in name, General Grant made his headquarters with that army, and
thereafter directed all of its movements. From that day it made no more
retreats, but slowly and surely with shot and shell crowded the Army of
Virginia from one defense to another, until its shattered remnants were
compelled to surrender.
In July, while the
Governor and Adjutant-General were putting forth every possible effort to
secure volunteers to furnish the quota of the State under the late calls of the
President, authority was received from the War Department to raise two new
regiments of infantry to serve one, tow or three years, as the recruits might
choose. No new regiments were organized under this authority, and a draft was
made, beginning in September, 1864, to supply the deficiency then remaining. An
excellent class of men were secured, who, as a rule, cheerfully took their
places in the ranks, and made good soldiers.
On
the 27th of July, a general order was issued by Adjutant-General
Baker for the enrollment and organization of the militia of the State in
pursuance of the acts of the Tenth General Assembly. The number of companies
apportioned to each county was published in the order. On the 20th
of August, the Governor issued a proclamation in which he stated that he was in
possession of information that refugees from Rebel armies, guerrillas and
bushwhackers, guilty of robbery and murder of Union men in Missouri, were daily
coming across the line into Iowa, ostensibly for the purpose of becoming
citizens, but with the intent to commit robbery and other crimes.
“I
hereby forbid asylum in this State to this class of people, and all peace
officers in the first and second tiers of counties on the southern border, and
in the County of Pottawattamie, and all militia officers of the State are
commanded to stop and detain suspected persons, and unless they can give
satisfactory account of themselves they must be refused permission to remain in
the State.”
In an official letter to the Adjutant-General on the 12th
of September, 1864, Governor Stone sets forth at length, some of the serious
dangers menacing certain localities from disloyal secret organizations in
efforts to organize the State militia. He writes:
“In
several lodges of the ‘Sons of Liberty,’ a treasonable organization which now
exists in nearly every county in the State, it was determined by them to unite
in organizing military companies under the militia law and use these to cover
their movements from public observation. While pretending to drill as a militia
company, they could practice the peculiar tactics of their order without being
compelled as now to seek concealment. Most of the lodges in the southern part
of the State are in constant correspondence with their coadjutors in Missouri,
and since and since the first of July last their communications have been
characterized by the most unblushing treason, both to the Federal and State
Governments. Couriers are now running regularly on both sides of the State
line, and much of the extraordinary tide of immigration now pouring in from
Missouri is invited here by Iowa conspirators under promise of fellowship and
protection.
“When
you reflect that on the first day of August there were over 30,000 members of
this secret order enrolled in this State, bound together by oaths which, if
obeyed, renders every one of them an active traitor to the Union, and an
abetter of civil strife in our State; that large quantities of arms and
ammunition are being secretly brought into these counties to be used for
disloyal purposes, you may well conceive that the development of their
nefarious militia scheme, concocted in midnight conclaves, became with me a
matter of serious concern. The sad experience of our Missouri neighbors in
their late troubles with disloyal militia, was a sufficient warning for me to
carefully guard that point in Iowa. I am informed by anonymous letters that my
orders will be disregarded and my authority set at defiance. These orders will
remain unchanged and be strictly enforced in every case. Companies which
disregard them will not be recognized or treated for any purpose as portions of
the State militia. If the conflicts which they seem now desirous of inviting be
forced upon us, they may find us prepared at points where they least expect us,
and on our part at least there will be no blank cartridges used or shots thrown
away.”
In one case on the Missouri border, a militia company
elected as its captain a man who had been dishonorably dismissed from the
United States service for the utterance of treasonable sentiments. In another
case the captain had been a notorious Missouri guerrilla. In both of these
instances the request for commissions and arms were refused by the Governor and
Adjutant-General. Through the vigilance of these officers the secret schemes of
the disloyal conspirators to secure arms were defeated, but they were able in
some of the border counties to seriously embarrass the organization of the
militia.
On
the 8th of October, 1864, the Governor announced that the number of
men required from Iowa, under all calls up to that time, was less than 4,000
and these were soon after furnished by the draft then in progress. On the 16th
of November, the Adjutant-General issued an order requiring all militia
companies that had received arms from the State, to meet and drill once a
month, or surrender their arms.
On
the 30th of November, Governor Stone issued an address to the people
of Iowa, in which he called a special attention to the acts of the last General
Assembly requiring the levy of a special tax for the aid of the families of
soldiers in the service. He says:
“With
the number of soldiers’ families augmented beyond our anticipations, the
necessity for additional public effort in their behalf has been created. The receipts
from taxes will prove inadequate to provide for the increased number in many
counties, and further appeal to the generosity of our people is imperatively
demanded. For this purpose I request that Saturday, the 31st of
December, be set apart as a day for general contribution throughout the State.
If we could manifest a proper appreciation of the proud name our soldiers have
won for us on so many fields, and prove ourselves worthy of it, let us greet
them with the assurance that their wives and little ones shall not suffer in
their absence. Let us unite in sending them such a token of our love as will
cheer them wherever they are around the flag of the Union, whether on the land
or on the sea.”
On
the 9th of December, Adjutant-General Baker, upon learning that
deserters from Price’s Confederate army were crossing into southern counties of
Iowa for the purpose of robbery and murder, issued an order to the State
militia in that region to be on the alert, “and if these desperadoes enter the
State to rob, steal and murder, and are caught in the act, they are to be
treated as outlaws, and shot on the spot, or hung to the nearest tree.” These
energetic measures served to protect very generally the border counties.
The
number of militia companies organized under the acts of the last General
Assembly, during the year 1864, was nine hundred and seventeen. The returns for
that year showed the enrollment of the militia of the State to be 86,000. Of
the militia, there had been organized twenty-nine regiments and two battalions.
While
the war was absorbing every energy of the National Administration, and testing
to the utmost limit the patience, endurance and patriotism of the loyal people
of the country, in this fourth year of the conflict, the time for a Presidential
election was approaching. That election was to determine the most important
issue ever submitted to a vote of the American people. It was to decide whether
the Republic was to endure as one great nation, or be divided into hostile
factions, adopting different forms of government, liable to form alliances with
foreign nations for selfish purposes, leading to endless danger of civil wars
and internal disorders.
The
reelection of President Lincoln would be notice to the Southern Confederacy, to
its friends in the North and to foreign nations, that every power of our
National Government would be put forth for the suppression of the Rebellion
until national authority was restored in every State and Territory in the
Union.
When
the Rebellion began, through the influence of such leading Democrats as
Douglas, Stanton, Holt, Dix, Butler, Dickinson and Andrew Johnson, there was a
general uprising of the loyal people of the country in support of the President
in his efforts and measures to enforce the laws and restore the authority of
the Government. Partisan strife and conflicts were for a time ignored, and a
wave of patriotic fever swept over the Northern States. But as the war
progressed, wide differences of opinion arose over the policy to be pursued in
dealing with the Rebellion and slavery. The disloyal people of the Northern
States were untiring in the organization of the secret leagues before mentioned
as the “Knights of the Golden Circle” and the “Sons of Liberty.” These secret
gatherings enabled the disloyal to disseminate their doctrines with safety, and
this work went on unchecked until in August, 1864, when, as we have seen,
Governor Stone stated that the membership of these lodges numbered more than
30,000 in Iowa. These organizations extended throughout the States not engaged
in the Rebellion. Their influence was widespread and becoming a serious menace
to the Government. I order to counteract their treasonable conspiracies the
loyal people devised the “Union League,” a secret organization, which rapidly
spread throughout the loyal and border States. The purposes of this league will
be best understood by quoting a few passages from the ritual:
“In
times of peril to our Government and the Union it becomes the sacred duty of
all true patriots to unite in the preservation of constitutional freedom and in
thwarting the designs traitors. It is a strange and sad necessity which compels
American citizens to band themselves together in this manner to sustain the
Constitution and the Union; but the Government under which we live is
threatened with destruction. We claim in no way to interfere with your
religious or political opinions, save that you shall at all times and places
seek to protect, preserve and defend the Government of the United States. An
oath was administered to each member in which he swore “to support, protect and
defend the Constitution and Government of the United States and the flag
thereof, and aid in maintaining the laws of the United States, and to defend
the State of Iowa (or whatever State the member lived in) against invasion,
insurrection or rebellion, to the best of my ability. Furthermore, I will aid
and assist in electing true and reliable Union men, and none others, to all
offices of profit or trust, from the lowest to the highest; and should I ever
be called to fill any office, I will there and then faithfully carry out the
objects and principles of this League. To defend and perpetuate Freedom and the
Union, I pledge my life, my fortune and my sacred honor.”
As
the time approached for the assembling of the National conventions to nominate
candidates fro President, there were found to be among Democrats and
Republicans, those who were working together for a vigorous prosecution of the
war for the Union, a considerable number who were opposed to the renomination
of President Lincoln for various reasons. This element held a National
Convention at Cleveland, Ohio, on the 31st of May, at which about
three hundred and fifty persons were present.
The
resolutions adopted declared for a vigorous prosecution of the war for the
Union, the prohibition of slavery by amendment of the constitution and a
further amendment providing for election of President and Vice-President by a
direct vote of the people, limiting the term of the President to four years.
The convention then proceeded to nominate John C. Fremont for President and
John Cochrane for Vice-President.
The
first political State convention of the year was that of the Rebellion party,
held at Des Moines, on the 22d of February, to choose delegates to the National
Convention. The convention elected the following delegates for the State at
large: Wm. M. Stone, J. T. Clark, Francis Springer and D. D. Chase. The
district delegates chosen were: G. W. McCrary, D. P. Stubbs, D. W. Ellis, J. S.
Stacey, J. S. Woodward, George Kern, G. D. Woodin, J. M. Hedrick, Cole Noel,
Frank Stewart, G. M. Woodbury and Peter Melendy. The resolutions adopted warmly
indorsed the Administration and its war policy, and favored an amendment to the
National Constitution abolishing slavery.
The
Democratic State convention assembled at Des Moines on the 16th of
June, and nominated the following candidates for State officers: J. H. Wallace
for Secretary of State; H. B. Hendershott, Auditor; J. B. Larsh, Treasurer; B.
D. Holbrook, Register Land Office; T. M. Monroe, Supreme Judge; and C. A.
Dunbar, Attorney-General. For Presidential Electors the following nominations
were made; D. F. Miller, John Swineforth, I. C. Mitchell, I. M. Preston, B. B.
Richards, J. E. Neal, A. Lormier and J. M. Stockdale.
A
Republican State Convention was held at Des Moines on the 7th of
July, at which the following candidates were nominated: C. C. Cole for Supreme
Judge; James Wright, Secretary of State; John A. Elliott, Auditor; Wm. H.
Holmes, Treasurer; Isaac L. Allen, Attorney-General; J. A. Harvey, Register
Land Office; C. B. Darwin, W. G. Thompson, J. Van Valkenburg, S. S. Burdette,
B. F. Hunt, Dan Anderson, C. C. Mudgett and H. C. Henderson, Presidential
Electors.
The
National Republican convention, which was held at Baltimore on the 7th
and 8th of June, renominated Abraham Lincoln for President by a
unanimous vote, and Andrew Johnson was nominated for Vice President on the
second ballot. The resolutions approved the determination of the Administration
to make no compromise with Rebels, the offer of no terms of peace other than
“unconditional surrender,” and the return to allegiance to the constitution and
laws of the United States, and the complete extirpation of slavery from the
soil of the Republic by amendment of the Constitution. The resolutions
applauded the practical wisdom, unselfish patriotism, and unswerving fidelity
to the Constitution and the principles of American liberty, with which Abraham
Lincoln had discharge, under circumstances of unparalleled difficulty, the
great duties and responsibilities of the Presidential office; approved
especially the Proclamation of Emancipation, and the employment, as Union
soldiers, of men heretofore held in slavery. They indorsed the Monroe Doctrine
and the encouragement of foreign immigration by a liberal and just policy.
The
Democratic National Convention assembled at Chicago on the 29th of
August; Governor Seymour of New York was called to preside and, in his opening
address, foreshadowed the “peace policy” which was to dominate the convention.
Through their secret “orders” the anti-war men had been able to secure a large
preponderance of delegates in the convention. From the speeches made during its
sessions a few extracts are here given to show the character of the utterances
which received the loudest applause. Rev. Chauncey Burr of New Jersey said:
“The
south could not honorably lay down her arms, for she was fighting for her
honor. Two millions of men had been sent down to the he slaughter pens of the
South, and the army of Lincoln could not again be filled, neither by enlistment
nor conscription. If I ever uttered a prayer, it was that no one of the States
of the Union should be conquered and subjugated.”
Henry Clay Dean of Iowa said:
“For
over three years Lincoln has been calling for men, and they have been given.
But with all the vast armies placed at his command he has failed. Such a
failure had never been known. Such destruction of human life had never been
seen since the destruction of Sennacherib by the breath of the Almighty. And
still the monster usurper wants more men for his slaughter pens. Ever since the
usurper, traitor and tyrant has occupied the Presidential chair, the Republican
party has shouted ‘War to the knife, and the knife to the hilt.’ Blood has
flowed in torrents; and yet the thirst of the old monster is not quenched. His
cry is for more blood.”
Judge Miller of Ohio said:
“There
is no real difference between a war Democrat and an Abolitionist. They are
links of one sausage, made out of the same dog.”
C. L. Vallandigham wrote the platform adopted by the
Convention, which made the following declarations:
“This
Convention does explicitly declare, as the sense of the American people, that after
four years of failure to restore the Union by the experiment of war, during
which, under a pretense of military necessity of a war power higher than the
Constitution, the Constitution itself has been disregarded in every part, and
public liberty and private rights alike trodden down, and the material
prosperity of the country essentially impaired. Justice, humanity, liberty and
the public welfare demand that immediate efforts be made for a cessation of
hostilities, with a view to the ultimate convention of all of the States, or
other peaceable means, to the end that at the earliest practicable moment,
peace may be restored on the basis of the Federal Union of the States.”
Several other resolutions were passed denouncing tin bitter
terms most of the war measures of the Administration, as usurpations, not
warranted by the Constitution. General George B. McClellan was nominated for
President and George H. Pendleton for Vice-President.
When
the issue was thus squarely made between a vigorous prosecution of the war for
the preservation of the Union and a cessation of hostilities for the purpose of
attempting a compromise with the Southern Confederacy, the loyal people of the
country realized the fearful danger that confronted the Nation. Two attempting
a compromise with the Southern Confederacy, the loyal people of the country
realized the fearful danger that confronted the Nation. Two attempts had
recently been made to ascertain if it were possible to effect any kind of
settlement between the Government and the leaders of the Rebellion, by which
peace could be made by prominent leaders of the Rebellion who asked leave to
come to Washington and enter upon negotiations and to be assured of safety on
their journey. President Lincoln made them the following reply:
“Any
proposition which embraces the restoration of peace, the integrity of the whole
Union, and the abandonment of slavery, and which comes by and with authority
that can control the armies now at war against the United States, and will be
met by liberal terms on substantial and collateral points; and the bearer or
bearers thereof shall have safe conduct both ways.
(Signed) “Abraham Lincoln.”
Nothing more came of this attempt at negotiation, which was begun early in July, 1864. Very soon after, two prominent citizens of the North, with the knowledge of the President, but not by any direct authority from him, went to Richmond on a peace errand, being allowed to pass through the lines of both armies. They had a long personal conference with President Davis, after which he presented his ultimatum in the following terms:
“I desire peace as much as you do, but I feel that not one drop of blood of this war is on my hands. I tried all in my power to avert this war, but I could not. The North was mad and blind; it would not let us govern ourselves, and so the war came and now it must go on until the last man of this generation falls in his tracks, and his children seize his musket and fight our battles, unless you acknowledge our right to self government. We are not fighting for slavery. We are fighting for Independence, and that or extermination we will have. Say to Mr. Lincoln for me, that I shall at any time be pleased to receive proposals for peace on the basis of our independence. It will be useless to approach me with any other.”
Mr. Vallandigham, when banished to the Confederacy the year before for treasonable utterances, had assured Mr. Ould that, “if you can hold out this year, the peace party of the North will sweep the Lincoln dynasty out of political existence.”
With a knowledge of all these facts, the Chicago Convention had deliberately resolved in favor of an immediate cessation of hostilities, that peace negotiations might be entered into. Under these circumstances there could be no misunderstanding as to the vital issues involved in the Presidential campaign of 1864. Never before had the fate of the Nation been so clearly at stake in a political campaign. All parties to the war recognized the supreme importance of the approaching election. If McClellan should be elected, it meant an end of the war upon the best terms that could be made with the Southern Confederacy, which had been so clearly stated by its President that there could be no misunderstanding. However much the Democratic party in the North might have desired the restoration of the old Union, due notice had been given by the President of the Confederacy that such a proposition would not even be considered. Peace, then, could only be secured by an abject surrender of all that the Union army had, for more than three years, been fighting to maintain. All of the superb patriotism of the people, the sublime loyalty and heroic deeds of the Union soldiers, the sacrifice of hundreds of thousands of lives and hundreds of millions of dollars, would have been in vain. Or, failing to bring about peace, could the country afford to trust a vigorous prosecution of the war for the Union to McClellan, who, as Commander-in-Chief, was a most conspicuous failure.
The hope of the election of McClellan and the defeat of Lincoln was the inspiration that sustained Lee’s army in its desperate resistance to Grant’s terrific assaults upon its strong defenses all through the months of the political campaign. No one realized more clearly than the leaders of the Confederacy and its armies that the reelection of President Lincoln would seal their doom. The political campaign was one of unparalleled vigor, bitterness and stern determination. Union sympathizers were firmly possessed of the belief that the only hope of preservation of the Nation as one great undivided Republic, was the strong indorsement of the war measures and general policy of the President and Congress. They did not doubt that the reelection of Lincoln would bring an early end to the Rebellion, the destruction of slavery, and restoration of the Union.
While the Chicago platform and ticket received the support of the “Copperheads,” and all disloyal elements in the North, as well as in the five slave States, which still remained in the Union, it should not be inferred that it was not supported by thousands of Union men. There were hundreds of thousands of Democrats in these States, who were loyal to the Union, but were opposed to emancipation, and to the employment of negroes in the National army, and who believed it possible to restore the Union with slavery as it existed before the Rebellion. These men also supported McClellan. But, as the campaign progressed, it became evident that the contest was, as tersely stated by that great statesman, William H. Seward, when he said in a public address: “The issue is squarely made up—McClellan and disunion, or Lincoln and union.”
The country accepted that view, and on the 6th of September, General Fremont withdrew as a candidate of the radical Republicans for President, saying:
“The
policy of the Democratic party signifies either separation or re-establishment
with slavery. The Chicago platform is simply separation. General McClellan’s
letter of acceptance is re-establishment with slavery. The Republican candidate
is, on the contrary, pledged to the re-establishment of the Union without
slavery.”
In Iowa, the campaign was carried on with intense interest and earnestness. Public meetings were held in nearly every school-house, and the spirit of patriotism pervaded every neighborhood. Our State had more than 50,000 soldiers in the Union armies, and they represented a large majority of the families of the entire population. Women how had fathers, brothers, sons or lovers in the field, hospital or Southern prisons, could not restrain their intense interest in the absorbing contest; they turned out to the Union meetings, joined the processions, sang the war songs, and helped to swell the enthusiasm. A “Peace Convention” was called to meet at Iowa City on the 24th of August, which, among its resolutions, declared:
“That
the war now being prosecuted by the Lincoln administration is unconstitutional
and oppressive and is the prolific source of a multitude of usurpations,
tyrannies and corruptions to which no people can long submit without becoming
permanently enslaved.
“Resolved,
That, believing the war to be disunion, and desiring to stop the further flow
of precious blood for a purpose so wicked as disunion, we respectfully urge the
President to postpone the draft for 500,000 men to be driven like bullocks to
the slaughter, until the result of an armistice and a National Convention of
the States is known.
“Resolved,
That in the coming election we will have a free ballot or a free fight.
“Resolved,
That should Abraham Lincoln owe his re-election to the electoral votes of the
seceded States, under the application of the President’s ‘one tenth’ system and
military dictation, and should he attempt to execute the duties of President by
virtue of such an election, it will become the solemn mission of the people to
depose the usurper, or else be worthy the slavish degradation which submission
under such circumstances would seem to be their just desert.”
It will be seen by the action of this convention that Iowa had its share of citizens who never ceased to do all in their power to instigate resistance to the measures adopted by the Government to overthrow the Rebellion. It was in the midst of this momentous political contest that he draft was taking place to re-enforce the Union armies in the field. The draft at this time was a crucial test of the patriotism of the people, and was watched with intense anxiety by the National and State Administrations, Congress and the army. It was the most critical period of our national existence. Would the Government stand the strain, and would the people sustain the Administration, and , decree in the approaching election, that the war would go on and the army be re-enforced by drafts until the Rebellion was overthrown? These were the problems that the election would settle. There could be no doubt as to the answer that Iowa would give. Every indication pointed to an overwhelming indorsement of the Administration. In the East there was a widespread feeling of apprehension. But the October State elections in Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania, relieved the anxiety as all gave large Republican majorities.
At the November election, twenty-two out of the twenty-five states remaining in the Union gave their electoral votes for Lincoln and Johnson. Of these votes, Lincoln received two hundred and twelve, and McClellan twenty-one. In fifteen of the States, the soldiers in the field were permitted to vote. In twelve of these States the soldiers’ vote was 119,754 for Lincoln, and 34,291 for McClellan. In Iowa, the soldiers’ vote was 16,844 for Lincoln, and 1,183 for McClellan. The total vote in Iowa was 88,966 for Lincoln, and 49,586 for McClellan. On the State ticket the average vote for the Republican candidates was 90,033, and for the Democratic candidates 49,500. The election of the members of the new congress was also an overwhelming approval of the Administration. Of the one hundred and eighty-four Representatives chosen, one hundred and forty-three were Union-Republicans, to forty-one opposition. The Senate, after the election of the following winter stood forty Union-Republicans to eleven opposition. This gave the supporters of the Administration a majority of more than two-thirds in each branch of Congress.
The result of this election removed all doubt in the minds of the mass of the people, both in the North and the South, as to the final result of the terrible Civil War that had for more than three years desolated the country. The leaders on both sides clearly saw what the end must be. The officers of the Confederate Government and of its armies lost hope in the success of their cause, although they were impelled by their positions to continue the hopeless struggle six months longer. When the news of the overwhelming approval of the prosecution of the war was flashed over the civilized world, it was accepted as the death blow to the Southern Confederacy.
When Congress assembled on the 6th of December, 1964, President Lincoln, in his message, said:
“Judging
by the recent canvass and its results the purpose of the people in the loyal
States, to maintain the integrity of the Union, was never more firm, nor more
nearly unanimous than now…In affording the people a fair opportunity of showing
to one another, and to the world, this firmness and unanimity of purpose, the
election has been of vast value to the National cause.
“In
presenting the abandonment of armed resistance to the national authority on the
part of the insurgents, as the only indispensable condition to ending the war
on part of the Government, I retract nothing heretofore said as to
slavery…While I remain in my present position I shall not attempt to retract or
modify the Emancipation Proclamation, nor shall I return to slavery any person
who is free by the terms of that Proclamation, or any acts of Congress. If the
people should, by whatever mode or means, make it an Executive duty to
re-enslave such persons, another, not I, must be their instrument to perform
it.
“In
stating a condition of peace, I mean simply to say that the war will cease on
part of the Government whenever it shall have ceased on part of those who began
it.”
The President strongly urged the passage by the House of the Constitutional Amendment (which had already passed the Senate by a two-thirds majority) forever prohibiting slavery in the United States.
These explicit declarations in the message left no uncertainty as to the terms upon which the Civil War would be ended. The House promptly passed the amendment by a majority of more than two-thirds, fifty-six Democrats voting against it. All of the Iowa members, in both House and Senate were warm supporters of the amendment.
During the winter, an attempt was made by three Confederate commissioners, Stephens, Campbell and Hunter, on the part of the Confederate Government, to secure peace on some basis of separation from the Union. These commissioners were permitted to pass through General Grant’s lines at Petersburg, to meet and confer with President Lincoln and Secretary Seward at Fortress Monroe. A free conference took place, but the President would concede no terms that did not restore the Union of all of the States, and the Confederate Commissioners were not authorized to surrender the independence of the confederacy, and so ended the last effort to establish peace by negotiation.
In the meantime, Sherman’s great army was sweeping through Georgia and South Carolina with irresistible power. In it were a large number of veteran Iowa regiments. Thomas had won a great victory over Hood at Nashville and driven his army out of Tennessee. Grant was closing the coils around Lee’s veteran army at Petersburg and Richmond.
In the spring of 1865 the confederate cause was desperate. A most merciless conscription had already dragged almost every able bodied man of the middle and lower classes into the ranks. The wealthy scions of chivalry were holding Government positions or filling the offices in the army. The resources of men and money to be drawn upon were exhausted and all realized that the collapse was near at hand.
Soon after the inauguration of President Lincoln, in March, it was announced that Senator James Harlan, of Iowa had been invited to a seat in his Cabinet, as Secretary of the Interior. The appointment was especially gratifying to the people of our State. Mr. Harlan was the first Republican Senator from Iowa, having been chosen in the winter of 1855 to succeed General A. C. Dodge. He was a representative of the Antislavery revolution in politics which had just grown into control of the State, abut was not organized into the Republican party until the next year. He was one of the trusted leaders of the party, and had been kept continuously in the Senate, where he now ranked among the ablest members of that body.
Early in April came the glorious news of the fall of Richmond, the Capital of the Confederacy, and soon after the surrender of Lee and his entire army to General Grant. The rejoicing in Iowa, and throughout the North, was unbounded. The joy that entered the homes of the thousands of Union soldiers cannot be described in human language; neither can it be fully realized by the people of a later generation. No one doubted that it was the last great battle of the four years of war. Peace was comoing again to the country, and the National Government was again to be supreme over our vast domain. The fearful list of killed and wounded that had brought woe and desolation to countless homes through the long agonizing years, would come no more.
Hardly had the news of the crowning victory and the dawning of early peace, reached the distant parts of the country, when, like an awful flash from a clear sky came the startling tidings of the assassination of the President. No pen can describe the shock of horror that paralyzed the hearts of millions of people as the terrible details of the hideous crime were confirmed. They assembled in the churches and school-houses all over the Northern States to give public expression to their deep sorrow. Governor Stone, who was in Washington at the time, issued a proclamation to the people of Iowa, requesting them to assemble in their places of worship on the 27th of April, to testify their sorrow over this National calamity; they were also requested to suspend their ordinary labor on that day, and have all public offices draped in mourning. The day was observed by all classes of people, and for the time partisan differences were forgotten in the shock of a great crime and calamity.
____________________________________________________________________________________