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Authors: Doris Kearns Goodwin

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“of the gravest…and adviser”: Entry for July 22, 1864, ibid., p. 84.

plan to foster…“by contribution”: H. P. Livingston to AL, November 14, 1864, Lincoln Papers; AL to WHS, November 17, 1864, endorsement on Livingston to AL, ibid.; WHS to AL, November 17, 1864, endorsement on Livingston to AL, ibid. (quote).

Seward had long since…“by the President”: Seward,
Seward at Washington…1846–1861,
p. 528.

“Henceforth…of the human race”: WHS, quoted in Seward,
Seward at Washington…1861–1872,
p. 250.

“looked older…long one, perhaps”: Benjamin, “Recollections of Secretary Edwin M. Stanton,”
Century
(1887), pp. 758, 759–60.

letter to Chase…“labor and care”: EMS to SPC, November 19, 1864, quoted in Thomas and Hyman,
Stanton,
p. 334.

unwritten code…“felt it necessary”: Thomas and Hyman,
Stanton,
p. 390.

president’s assent…“interfere with him”: Flower,
Edwin McMasters Stanton,
pp. 369–70.

pressed by relatives…“circumspection”: AL to EMS, March 18, 1864, in
CW,
VII, pp. 254–55.

Stanton replied…“promptly obeyed”: EMS to AL, March 19, 1864, Lincoln Papers.

Lincoln looked…“his friends”: Carpenter,
Six Months at the White House,
p. 172.

clerk recalled…“wail of anguish”: William H. Whiton, quoted in Flower,
Edwin McMasters Stanton,
pp. 418–19.

group of Pennsylvania…“have to be done”: EMS and AL, quoted in Thomas and Hyman,
Stanton,
p. 387.

“I send this…in this blunder”: AL to USG, September 22, 1864, in
CW,
VIII, p. 17.

“his firmness…into arrogance”: Alonzo Rothschild,
Lincoln, Master of Men: A Study in Character
(Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1906), p. 231.

“hard to vote…is a ruffian”: Entry for September 17, 1864, in
Diary of George Templeton Strong,
Vol. III, p. 489.

“Go home…be found guilty”: Carpenter,
Six Months at the White House,
p. 246.

“Folks come up…don’t know ’em!”: AL, quoted in Rothschild,
Lincoln, Master of Men,
p. 285.

discreet New Englander…“political gossip”: Entry for August 31, 1864,
Welles diary,
Vol. II, p. 131.

Times
of London…“first class power”:
NR,
January 7, 1865.

Bates had contemplated…“to your age”: Barton Bates to EB, May 13, 1864, Bates Papers, MoSHi.

prospect of going home…“god’s blessing”: Entry for May 29, 1864,
The Diary of Edward Bates, 1859–1866,
p. 371.

Bates believed…“as long as I live”: EB to AL, November 24, 1864, Lincoln Papers.

first months as Attorney General…military matters: Entry for December 31, 1861,
The Diary of Edward Bates, 1859–1866,
pp. 218–19; entry for January 10, 1862, ibid., pp. 223–26.

deliver a legal opinion…“and clothing”: EB to AL, July 14, 1864,
OR,
Ser. 3, Vol. IV, pp. 490–93 (quote p. 493).

Abolitionists applauded: Entry for May 26, 1864,
The Diary of Edward Bates, 1859–1866,
p. 371.

citizenship issue…of the United States: Frank J. Williams, “Attorney General Bates and Attorney President Lincoln,” R. Gerald McMurtry Lecture, Lincoln Museum, Fort Wayne, Ind., September 23, 2000, author’s collection; Cain,
Lincoln’s Attorney General,
pp. 222–23.

“Though esteemed…constitutional interpretation”:
Daily Morning Chronicle,
Washington, D.C., December 4, 1864, quoted in
The Diary of Edward Bates, 1859–1866,
p. 430.

reveals frustration…“no subordination”: Entry for October 1, 1861, ibid., p. 196.

General Butler…arrests in Norfolk: Entry for August 4, 1864, ibid., pp. 393–94.

“chief fear…easy good nature”: Entry for February 13, 1864, ibid., p. 334.

troubled at the start…“sure to prevail”: EB, quoted in Carpenter,
Six Months at the White House,
pp. 68–69.

each of his colleagues…“affable and kind”: Entry for December 2, 1864,
The Diary of Edward Bates, 1859–1866,
p. 429.

Bates left…“with regret”: Entry for November 30, 1864, ibid., p. 428.

forever connected…“when I am gone”: Poem, quoted in entry for October 13, 1864, ibid., p. 419.

“My Cabinet…would have to be heeded”: AL, quoted in Titian J. Coffey, “Lincoln and the Cabinet,” in
Reminiscences of Abraham Lincoln,
ed. Rice (1909 edn.), p. 197.

Holt declined the offer…“personal character”: Joseph Holt to AL, December 1, 1864, Lincoln Papers.

“I appoint you…come on at once”: AL to James Speed, in
CW,
VIII, p. 126.

“Will leave tomorrow for Washington”: James Speed to AL, December 1, 1864, Lincoln Papers.

“I am a…everywhere forever”: James Speed, quoted in Gary Lee Williams, “James and Joshua Speed: Lincoln’s Kentucky Friends” (Ph.D. diss., Duke University, 1971), p. 137.

“We are less now but true”: James Speed to AL, November 25, 1864, quoted in ibid., p. 138.

“a man I know…ought to know him well”: AL, quoted in Coffey, “Lincoln and the Cabinet,” in
Reminiscences of Abraham Lincoln,
ed. Rice (1909 edn.), p. 197.

Had it been…“freely and publicly”: David Herbert Donald,
“We Are Lincoln Men”: Abraham Lincoln and His Friends
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003), p. 38.

“You will find…by a big office”: AL, quoted in Coffey, “Lincoln and the Cabinet,” in
Reminiscences of Abraham Lincoln,
ed. Rice (1909 edn.), p. 197.

only position…“Stanton ever desired”: Wolcott, “Edwin M. Stanton,” p. 162.

“You have been wearing…owes it to you”: Robert Grier to EMS, October 13, 1864, Stanton Papers, DLC.

Ellen Stanton…“subject tomorrow”: Entry for October 16, 1864, in Browning,
The Diary of Orville Hickman Browning,
Vol. I, p. 687–88.

Matthew Simpson…“I will do it”: AL, quoted in Gideon Stanton, ed., “Edwin M. Stanton.”

Grant worried…stay at his post: Thomas and Hyman,
Stanton,
p. 337.

Stanton informed…“among candidates”: Edwards Pierrepont to AL, November 24, 1864, Lincoln Papers.

He “felt that…higher ambition”: Wolcott, “Edwin M. Stanton,” p. 162.

“The country cannot…fame already”: Henry Ward Beecher to EMS, November 30, 1864, quoted in ibid., p. 163.

“Often, in dark hours…fresh hope”: EMS to Henry Ward Beecher, December 4, 1864, quoted in ibid., pp. 163–64.

Welles told Lincoln…“suppose he would”: Entry for November 26, 1864,
Welles diary,
Vol. II, p. 182.

taken his son’s…personal blow: Entry for September 27, 1864, ibid., p. 161.

“I beg you to indulge…of that Bench”: FPB to AL, October 20, 1864, quoted in Smith,
The Francis Preston Blair Family in Politics,
Vol. II, pp. 298–99.

“Chase and his friends…Chief-Justiceship”: MTL, quoted in “If All the Rest Oppose,” in
Conversations with Lincoln,
ed. Segal, p. 360.

“had been tried…stood by him”: FPB to John A. Andrew, quoted in ibid., p. 360.

“a crowning and retiring honor”: Entry for November 22, 1864,
The Diary of Edward Bates, 1859–1866,
p. 428.

had “personally solicited”: Entry for October 18, 1864, in Browning,
The Diary of Orville Hickman Browning,
Vol. I, p. 688.

“If not overborne…to private life”: Entry for November 22, 1864,
The Diary of Edward Bates, 1859–1866,
pp. 427–28.

“Of Mr. Chase’s…not hesitate a moment”: AL, quoted in John G. Nicolay and John Hay,
Abraham Lincoln: A History,
Vol. IX (New York: Century Co., 1890), p. 394.

similar comment…“life to the Bench”: Schuyler Colfax, quoted in Blue,
Salmon P. Chase,
p. 245.

“Now, I know…men can tell me”: Noah Brooks, “Personal Reminiscences of Lincoln,”
Scribner’s Monthly
15 (March 1878), p. 677.

“we have stood…fitness for the office”: AL, quoted in Blue,
Salmon P. Chase,
pp. 244–45.

Oblivious to Stanton’s…“life & work”: SPC to EMS, October 13, 1864,
Chase Papers,
Vol. IV, p. 434.

“I have something…will be satisfied”: AL and John B. Alley, quoted in John B. Alley, in
Reminiscences of Abraham Lincoln,
ed. Rice (1886 edn.), pp. 581–82.

Lincoln later told Senator Chandler…“nominated Chase”: Entry for December 15, 1864,
Welles diary,
Vol. II, p. 196.

“Probably no other…of the President”: JGN to TB, December 8, 1864, container 3, Nicolay Papers.

got the official word…“or office”: SPC to AL, December 6, 1864, Lincoln Papers.

“overflowing with…‘So help me God’”: Brooks,
Washington, D.C., in Lincoln’s Time,
pp. 175–76.

“I hope the President…in the court”: Entry for December 6, 1864,
Welles diary,
Vol. II, p. 193.

Within hours…first black barrister: John S. Rock to CS, December 17, 1864, enclosed in CS to SPC, December 21, 1864, in
Selected Letters of Charles Sumner,
Vol. II, ed. Palmer, p. 259 n1 (quote); entry for January 21, 1865,
Chase Papers,
Vol. I, p. 519.

Sumner stood before…“of this Court”: CS, quoted in Quarles,
Lincoln and the Negro,
p. 232.

Rock stepped forward…“of a great people”:
Harper’s Weekly,
February 25, 1865.

“has been quite…with good feeling”: MTL to Mercy Levering Conkling, November 19, [1864], in Turner and Turner,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
p. 187.

she had been terrified…“run in debt”: Keckley,
Behind the Scenes,
pp. 147, 149–50 (quotes).

exposed her…could not curtail: “Mary Todd Lincoln’s Unethical Conduct as First Lady,” appendix 2, in Hay,
At Lincoln’s Side,
pp. 185–205.

“Here is the carriage…many questions”: Entry for December 14, 1864, Taft diary.

new dress…“kid gloves”: Entry for July 3, 1873, Browning diary, quoted in appendix 2, in Hay,
At Lincoln’s Side,
p. 187.

“I can neither…your acting thus”: MTL to Ruth Harris, December 28, [1864], in Turner and Turner,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
p. 196.

Newspaper reports…“tasteful decoration”:
NR,
January 10, 1865.

“Mrs. Lincoln was…throughout”:
NR,
February 17, 1865.

“Overcoats…for safe-keeping”:
NR,
January 6, 1865.

“a more general…and themselves”:
NR,
January 10, 1865.


I
was pleased…
two
school boys”: MTL to Sally Orne, [December 12, 1869], quoted in Turner and Turner,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
p. 534.

lingering grief…favorite rooms: Entry for March 31, 1864, Benjamin B. French journal, reel 2, French Family Papers, DLC.

“darling Boy!…
far
from being”: MTL to Hannah Shearer, November 20, 1864, in Turner and Turner,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
p. 189.

Lincoln wrote to General Grant…“encumbered”: AL to USG, January 19, 1865, in
CW,
VIII, p. 223.

Grant replied…“Military family”: USG to AL, January 21, 1865, Lincoln Papers.

Stationed at Grant’s…“of the nation”: Porter,
Campaigning with Grant,
pp. 388–89.

“passing time and accumulating years”: Entry for January 1, 1865,
Welles diary,
Vol. II, p. 218.

last surviving…buried in Ohio: Entry for January 1, 1865,
Chase Papers,
Vol. I, p. 511.

Chase wrote to…New Year’s reception: SPC to AL, January 2, 1865, Lincoln Papers.

“Without your note…bereavement”: AL to SPC, January 2, 1865, in
CW,
VIII, p. 195.

“a great contrast…in good spirits”: Entry for January 1, 1865, Taft diary.

“Our joy…Confederacy were numbered”: Hugh McCullough, quoted in Thomas and Hyman,
Stanton,
p. 342.

“anxious
…than to acquiesce”: AL to William T. Sherman, December 26, 1864, in
CW,
VIII, p. 181.

“We have destroyed…for six months”: FB to FPB, December 16, 1864, quoted in Smith,
The Francis Preston Blair Family in Politics,
Vol. II, p. 180.

also paid tribute…“great light”: AL to William T. Sherman, December 26, 1864, in
CW,
VIII, p. 182.

telegram announcing…“candle in his hand”: Bates,
Lincoln in the Telegraph Office,
pp. 316–17 (quotes p. 317).

Fort Fisher…“rebels from abroad”:
NR,
January 17, 1865 (quote);
NR,
January 18, 1865.

at the cabinet…“President was happy”: Entry for January 17, 1865,
Welles diary,
Vol. II, p. 227.

Stephens considered…“or Atlanta”: Alexander H. Stephens,
A Constitutional View of the Late War Between the States,
Vol. II (Philadelphia: National Publishing Company, 1870), p. 619.

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