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.
including the twelve sent before, and still omitting three, for which I suppose the enrolments are not yet received.  In looking over the fuller list of twenty-eight districts, I find that the quotas for sixteen of them are above 2000 and below 2700, while, of the rest, six are above 2700 and six are below 2000.  Applying the principle to these new facts, the Fifth and Seventh districts must be added to the four in which the quotas have already been reduced to 2200 for the first draft; and with these four others just be added to those to be re-enrolled.  The correct case will then stand:  the quotas of the Second, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth districts fixed at 2200 for the first draft.  The Provost-Marshal-General informs me that the drawing is already completed in the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Twenty-second, Twenty-fourth, Twenty-sixth, Twenty-seventh, Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, and Thirtieth districts.  In the others, except the three outstanding, the drawing will be made upon the quotas as now fixed.  After the first draft, the Second, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Twenty-first, Twenty-fifth, Twenty-ninth, and Thirty-first will be enrolled for the purpose and in the manner stated in my letter of the 7th inst.  The same principle will be applied to the now outstanding districts when they shall come in.  No part of my former letter is repudiated by reason of not being restated in this, or for any other cause.

Your obedient servant,

A. Lincoln.

TO GENERAL J. A. McCLERNAND.

Executive Mansion, Washington,
August 12, 1863.

Major-general McCLERNAND.

My dear sir:—­Our friend William G. Greene has just presented a kind letter in regard to yourself, addressed to me by our other friends Yates, Hatch, and Dubois.

I doubt whether your present position is more painful to you than to myself.  Grateful for the patriotic stand so early taken by you in this life-and-death struggle of the nation, I have done whatever has appeared practicable to advance you and the public interest together.  No charges, with a view to a trial, have been preferred against you by any one; nor do I suppose any will be.  All there is, so far as I have heard, is General Grant’s statement of his reasons for relieving you.  And even this I have not seen or sought to see; because it is a case, as appears to me, in which I could do nothing without doing harm.  General Grant and yourself have been conspicuous in our most important successes; and for me to interfere and thus magnify a breach between you could not but be of evil effect.  Better leave it where the law of the case has placed it.  For me to force you back upon General Grant would be forcing him to resign.  I cannot give you a new command, because we have no forces except such as already have commanders.

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