Bloody Crimes (62 page)

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Authors: James L. Swanson

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BOOK: Bloody Crimes
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280
“The troops are on the west side”
Crist,
Papers,
11:583.
283
“Far more eyes have gazed upon the face”
Coggeshall,
Journeys,
308.
283
“Standing, as we do today, by his coffin”
Coggeshall,
Journeys,
319.
284
“Evergreen carpeted the stone floor”
Carl Sandburg,
Abraham Lincoln: The War Years,
4:413.
288
“I am in such a state of excitement”
Andrews,
Journal,
204-6. 288
“It is with deep regret”
Crist,
Papers,
11:584. Rowland,
Jefferson Davis,
6:586-87.
288
“After some delay at Washington”
Reagan,
Memoirs,
212.
289
“The President left town about ten o’clock”
Andrews,
Journal,
206. 289
“The talk now is”
Andrews,
Journal,
217.
289
“This, I suppose, is the end”
Andrews,
Journal,
217. 289
“Twenty days after the terrible night”
Coggeshall,
Journeys,
325. 294
“Mr. Lincoln, on his way from Springfield to Washington”
Townsend,
Anecdotes,
243.
301
“Fully realizing that so large a party”
Lubbock,
Six Decades,
571.
302
“we halted on a small stream near Irwinville”
Lubbock,
Six Decades,
571.
302
“We had all now agreed”
Harrison, “Capture,” 142.
302
“The President notified us to be ready”
Reagan,
Memoirs,
218.
303
“After getting that promise from the President”
Harrison, “Capture,” 142.
303 “Time wore on” Lubbock,
Six Decades,
571.

10: “BY GOD, YOU ARE THE MEN WE ARE LOOKING FOR”

304
“From thence we proceeded to a blind woods”
OR, 49, I, 532.
305
“Impressing a negro as a guide”
OR, 49, I, 532.
305
“[J]ust as the earliest dawn appeared”
OR, 49, I, 536.
307
“Colonel, do you hear the firing?”
Harrison, “Capture,” 142.
307
“As soon as one of them came within range”
Harrison, “Capture,” 142.
307
“At this moment”
W. T. Walthall, “The True Story of the Capture of Jefferson Davis,”
Southern Historical Society Papers
5, no. 3 (Mar. 1878).
307
“We sprang immediately to our feet”
Lubbock,
Six Decades,
571.
308
“When this firing occurred the troops in our front”
Reagan,
Memoirs,
219.
308
“What does that mean? Have you any men”
Harrison, “Capture,” 142.
309
“The Federal cavalry are upon us”
Reagan,
Memoirs,
220.
310
“Knowing he would be recognized”
Chester Bradley, “Was Jefferson Davis Disguised as a Woman When Captured?”
Journal of Mississippi History
36 (Aug. 1974), 243-68.
311
“As I started, my wife thoughtfully threw over my head”
Varina Davis,
A Memoir,
2:701-2.
311
“in a short time they were in possession of very nearly everything”
Lubbock,
Six Decades,
572.
312
“I emptied the contents of my haversack”
Harrison, “Capture,” 144.
312
“This is a bad business”
Walthall, “True Story,” 14.
314
“The hardest to bear of all the humiliations”
Andrews,
Journal,
238.
315
“As soon as the firing ceased I returned to camp”
OR, 49, I, 536.
316
“I had been astonished to discover”
Harrison, “Capture,” 144.
316
“The man who a few days before”
Lubbock,
Six Decades,
572.
316
“[S]he bore up with womanly fortitude”
Lubbock,
Six Decades,
573.
320
“We have not got your saddle bags”
Reagan,
Memoirs,
221.
322
“When we reached Macon”
Reagan,
Memoirs,
221.
323
“As one of the means of making the Confederate cause odious”
Reagan,
Memoirs,
221.
323
“When I came up from breakfast”
French,
Witness,
477.
324
“Intelligence was received this morning”
Welles,
Diary,
2:306.
324
“I am sitting in the President’s Office”
Townsend,
John Wilkes Booth,
57-58.
326
“I am glad to sit in his chair”
Townsend,
John Wilkes Booth,
62.
328
“Barnum is a shrewd businessman”
Strong,
Diary,
3:598.
330
“ample provision being made for the families”
OR, 49, I, 516.

11: “LIVING IN A TOMB”

333
“They have him in his prison house”
Lincoln,
Collected Works, 2
:403-7.
335
“Mrs. Mary Lincoln left the City on Monday evening”
French,
Witness,
479.
336
“[T]he great review of the returning armies”
Welles,
Diary,
2:310.
337
“I put a gilded eagle over the front door”
French,
Witness,
478.
346
“I hate the Yankees more and more”
Andrews,
Journal,
371.
349
“I am now permitted to write you”
Crist,
Papers,
12:13.
349
“With regret and apprehension I have heard”
Crist,
Papers,
12:44.
351
“Last Christmas we had a home”
Crist,
Papers,
12:80.
351
“I hope that you will not think me a rude little girl”
Crist,
Papers,
12:114.
352
“It is true that I have not made [Jefferson Davis]”
OR, 914.
354
“The prison life by Dr. Craven”
Crist,
Papers,
12:153.
355
“I urged that the welfare of the whole country”
Reagan,
Memoirs,
231.
356
“poor Davis…wasted and careworn”
Crist,
Papers,
12:210.
357
“Last Friday [June 1], Hollywood was glorified with flowers”
Crist,
Papers,
12:214.

12: “THE SHADOW OF THE CONFEDERACY”

365
“I did not like the man”
Strode,
Tragic Years,
459-62.
366
“I have been compelled to prove General Sherman”
Strode,
Tragic Years,
473.
374
“Mr. Chairman and Fellow Citizens”
Rowland,
Jefferson Davis,
10:47.
375 “Permit me to cordially congratulate you” Rowland,
Jefferson Davis,
10:72.
376
“The package containing all of our correspondence”
Crist,
Papers,
1:348.
377
“Dreams my dear Sarah we will agree”
Crist,
Papers,
1:345.
377
“The shadow of the Confederacy”
Varina Howell Davis to Constance Cary Harrison, transcript in the collection of the author, courtesy of the
Papers of Jefferson Davis.

INDEX

The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.

Page numbers in italics refer to illustrations.

Abbeville, Ga., 298, 299, 305, 330
Abbeville, S.C., 219, 250-51, 262-63, 266-67, 273-74, 280
abolitionists, xi, 53, 356
Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, 392-93
Adams, John, 53
Adams, John Quincy, 167, 180
Agriculture Department, U.S., Farm Security Administration of, 399-400
Aiken’s Landing, 17
Alabama, 77, 366, 377, 383
Albany, N.Y., 199, 234, 235, 237, 241
Alexander, Dr., 138, 186, 286
Alexander, John, 285
Alexandria, Va., 163-65, 192, 208, 331, 382
American Museum, 345
American Revolution, 220-21
Anderson, Finley, 126
Anderson, Joseph Reid, 62
Anderson, S.C., 245
Andersonville Prison, 344, 350
Andrews, Eliza Frances, 73-74, 280, 288-89, 313-14, 346-47
Andrews, Garnett, 73, 288
Annapolis, Md., 214
Antietam, battle of, 112
Antietam, Md., 16, 156
Appomattox Court House, Va., 77-78, 82, 94, 147, 206, 361
Appomattox River, 6, 21-22
Arkansas, 123
Arlington National Cemetery, 396
Army, U.S., 53, 102, 140-41, 148, 192, 237, 354
Company D of the Seventy-fourth Regiment of, 242
First Wisconsin Cavalry of, 256, 298, 305-6, 313-14, 330
Fourth Michigan Cavalry of, 256, 298, 304-7, 310, 313-16, 321, 322, 330
frontier wars of, 361
Lincoln’s assassination and, 108
Lincoln’s funeral and, 150
Northern Department of Ohio in, 247
Second Cavalry Division, 297
Sixteenth New York Cavalry of, 314
Twelfth Veteran Reserve Corps of, 208
see also Union Army
Army of Georgia (Union), 336
Army of Northern Virginia (Confederate), 5, 13-14, 24, 26, 41, 67, 69, 74, 76
surrender of, 78, 79-80, 81-82, 91, 95, 102, 195, 197, 205-6, 224
Army of Tennessee (Confederate), 67
Army of the Potomac (Union), 176, 329-30, 336, 337
Army of the Tennessee (Union), 336
Army of the West (Union), 329-30
Arnold, Isaac N., 151
Asheville, N.C., 245
Ashmun, George, 158-59
Associated Press, 151
Atlanta, Ga., 3, 76, 279, 323, 371, 372, 383
Atlanta Constitution, 367, 370-71
Auburn, N.Y., 391
Augur, C. C., 116, 126, 150-51
Augusta, Ga., 245, 262
Bahamas, 122, 273
Baker, C., 126
Baker, Edward D., 167-68, 180
Ball’s Bluff, battle of, 167
Baltimore, Md., 98, 199, 203, 212-17, 218, 239, 346
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, 208
Barnes, Joseph K., 108-9, 117, 133-34, 188, 354
Barnum, P. T., 327-29, 344-45
Barringer, Victor C., 122
Bates, Edward, 170
Bates, Lewis F., 194-97
Beauregard, P. G. T., 67, 87, 204
Beauvoir, 362-64, 362, 366-67, 371, 373, 375-76, 377, 382, 403
Hurricane Katrina and, 402-3
Bedell, Grace, 246
Beecher, Henry Ward, 239-40
Ben-Hur (Wallace), 240
Benjamin, Judah, 8, 32-33, 41, 86, 247, 273, 274
departure of, 278-79, 317
Benton, Thomas Hart, 52
Bersch, Carl, 104-5, 130

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