Complete Project Gutenberg Abraham Lincoln Writings eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,923 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Abraham Lincoln Writings.

Complete Project Gutenberg Abraham Lincoln Writings eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,923 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Abraham Lincoln Writings.

Yours very truly,

A. Lincoln,

ORDER PROHIBITING THE EXPORT OF ARMS AND MUNITIONS OF WAR.

Executive Mansion, Washington,

November 21, 1862.

Ordered, That no arms, ammunition, or munitions of war be cleared or allowed to be exported from the United States until further orders.  That any clearance for arms, ammunition, or munitions of war issued heretofore by the Treasury Department be vacated, if the articles have not passed without the United States, and the articles stopped.  That the Secretary of War hold possession of the arms, etc., recently seized by his order at Rouse’s Point, bound for Canada.

Abraham Lincoln.

DELAYING TACTICS OF GENERALS

To general N. P. Banks.

Executive Mansion, Washington,
November 22, 1862.

My dear general banks:—­Early last week you left me in high hope with your assurance that you would be off with your expedition at the end of that week, or early in this.  It is now the end of this, and I have just been overwhelmed and confounded with the sight of a requisition made by you which, I am assured, cannot be filled and got off within an hour short of two months.  I enclose you a copy of the requisition, in some hope that it is not genuine—­that you have never seen it.  My dear General, this expanding and piling up of impedimenta has been, so far, almost our ruin, and will be our final ruin if it is not abandoned.  If you had the articles of this requisition upon the wharf, with the necessary animals to make them of any use, and forage for the animals, you could not get vessels together in two weeks to carry the whole, to say nothing of your twenty thousand men; and, having the vessels, you could not put the cargoes aboard in two weeks more.  And, after all, where you are going you have no use for them.  When you parted with me you had no such ideas in your mind.  I know you had not, or you could not have expected to be off so soon as you said.  You must get back to something like the plan you had then, or your expedition is a failure before you start.  You must be off before Congress meets.  You would be better off anywhere, and especially where you are going, for not having a thousand wagons doing nothing but hauling forage to feed the animals that draw them, and taking at least two thousand men to care for the wagons and animals, who otherwise might be two thousand good soldiers.  Now, dear General, do not think this is an ill-natured letter; it is the very reverse.  The simple publication of this requisition would ruin you.

Very truly your friend,

A. Lincoln.

TO CARL SCHURZ.

Executive Mansion, Washington,
November 24, 1862.

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Complete Project Gutenberg Abraham Lincoln Writings from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.