<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>EARLY'S RAID AND THE WASHINGTON PANIC.</h3>
<div class='intro'>
<p>President Lincoln visits the lines at Petersburg—Trouble with General
Meade—Jubal Early menaces the Federal capital—The excitement
in Washington and Baltimore—Clerks and veteran reserves called
out to defend Washington—Grant sends troops from the front—Plenty
of generals, but no head—Early ends the panic by withdrawing—A
fine letter from Grant about Hunter.</p>
</div>
<p>Although Grant had decided against a further direct
attack on the works of Petersburg, he was by no
means idle. He sent out expeditions to break up the
railroads leading into the town. He began extending
his lines around to the south and southwest, so as to
make the investment as complete as possible. Batteries
were put in place, weak spots in the fortifications were
felt for, and regular siege works were begun. Indeed,
by July 1st the general opinion seemed to be that the
only way we should ever gain Petersburg would be by
a systematic siege.</p>
<p>A few days later we had an interesting visit from
President Lincoln, who arrived from Washington on
June 21st, and at once wanted to visit the lines before
Petersburg. General Grant, Admiral Lee, myself, and
several others went with him. I remember that, as we
passed along the lines, Mr. Lincoln's high hat was
brushed off by the branch of a tree. There were a dozen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</SPAN></span>
young officers whose duty it was to get it and give it
back to the President; but Admiral Lee was off his
horse before any of these young chaps, and recovered
the hat for the President. Admiral Lee must have been
forty-five or fifty years old. It was his agility that impressed
me so much.</p>
<p>As we came back we passed through the division of
colored troops which had so greatly distinguished itself
under Smith on the 15th. They were drawn up in
double lines on each side of the road, and they welcomed
the President with hearty shouts. It was a memorable
thing to behold him whose fortune it was to
represent the principle of emancipation passing bareheaded
through the enthusiastic ranks of those negroes
armed to defend the integrity of the nation.</p>
<p>I went back to Washington with the presidential
party, but remained only a few days, as Mr. Lincoln
and Mr. Stanton were anxious for my daily reports of
the operations around Petersburg. On the return, I arrived
at City Point on July 1st. The army occupied
about the same positions as when I had left it a week
before. Two corps were engaged in siege work, their
effort being to get possession of a ridge before them,
supposed to command Petersburg; if they succeeded in
this, Grant thought that the enemy would have to abandon
the south side of the Appomattox, and, of course,
the town. On the left our line extended southward
and westward across what was known as the Jerusalem
road, but at so great a distance from the Confederate
fortifications as to have no immediate effect upon them.
Farther around to the west, toward the Appomattox<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</SPAN></span>
above Petersburg, the enemy's works extended, and
the idea of enveloping them for the whole distance
had been given up. The efforts to break up the railroads
leading from Petersburg had been very successful,
Grant told me. There were plans for assault
suggested, but Grant had not considered any of them
seriously.</p>
<p>Before the army had recovered from its long march
from Cold Harbor and the failure to capture the town,
there was an unusual amount of controversy going on
among the officers. Smith was berated generally for
failing to complete his attack of June 15th. Butler
and "Baldy" Smith were deep in a controversial correspondence;
and Meade and Warren were so at loggerheads
that Meade notified Warren that he must
either ask to be relieved as corps commander or he
(Meade) would prefer charges against him. It seemed
as if Meade grew more unpopular every day. Finally
the difficulties between him and his subordinates became
so serious that a change in the commander of the
Army of the Potomac seemed probable. Grant had
great confidence in Meade, and was much attached to
him personally; but the almost universal dislike of Meade
which prevailed among officers of every rank who came
in contact with him, and the difficulty of doing business
with him, felt by every one except Grant himself, so
greatly impaired his capacities for usefulness and rendered
success under his command so doubtful that Grant
seemed to be coming to the conviction that he must be
relieved.</p>
<p>I had long known Meade to be a man of the worst<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</SPAN></span>
possible temper, especially toward his subordinates. I
think he had not a friend in the whole army. No man,
no matter what his business or his service, approached
him without being insulted in one way or another, and
his own staff officers did not dare to speak to him unless
first spoken to, for fear of either sneers or curses.
The latter, however, I had never heard him indulge in
very violently, but he was said to apply them often
without occasion and without reason. At the same
time, as far as I was able to ascertain, his generals had
lost their confidence in him as a commander. His orders
for the last series of assaults upon Petersburg, in
which we lost ten thousand men without gaining any
decisive advantage, were greatly criticised. They were,
in effect, that he had found it impracticable to secure
the co-operation of corps commanders, and that, therefore,
each one was to attack on his own account and
do the best he could by himself. The consequence was
that each gained some advantage of position, but each
exhausted his own strength in so doing; while, for the
want of a general purpose and a general commander to
direct and concentrate the whole, it all amounted to
nothing but heavy loss to ourselves. General Wright
remarked confidentially to a friend that all of Meade's
attacks had been made without brains and without generalship.</p>
<p>The first week of July the subject came to pretty
full discussion at Grant's headquarters on account of an
extraordinary correspondence between Meade and Wilson.
The Richmond Examiner had charged Wilson's
command with stealing not only negroes and horses,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</SPAN></span>
but silver plate and clothing on a raid he had just
made against the Danville and Southside Railroad, and
Meade, taking up the statement of the Examiner for
truth, read Wilson a lecture, and called on him for
explanations. Wilson denied the charge of robbing
women and churches, and said he hoped Meade would
not be ready to condemn his command because its
operations had excited the ire of the public enemy.
Meade replied that Wilson's explanation was satisfactory;
but this correspondence started a conversation
in which Grant expressed himself quite frankly
as to the general trouble with Meade, and his fear
that it would become necessary to relieve him. In
that event, he said, it would be necessary to put Hancock
in command.</p>
<p>In the first days of July we began to get inquiries
at City Point from Washington concerning the whereabouts
of the Confederate generals Early and Ewell. It
was reported in the capital, our dispatches said, that
they were moving down the Shenandoah Valley. We
seemed to have pretty good evidence that Early was
with Lee, defending Petersburg, and so I wired the
Secretary on July 3d. The next day we felt less positive.
A deserter came in on the morning of the 4th,
and said that it was reported in the enemy's camp that
Ewell had gone into Maryland with his entire corps.
Another twenty-four hours, and Meade told me that he
was at last convinced that Early and his troops had
gone down the valley. In fact, Early had been gone
three weeks. He left Lee's army near Cold Harbor on
the morning of the 13th of June, when we were on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</SPAN></span>
the march to the James. Hunter's defeat of Jones
near Staunton had forced Lee to divide his army in
order to stop Hunter's dangerous advance on Lynchburg.</p>
<p>On the 6th General Grant was convinced that Washington
was the objective. The raid threatened was sufficiently
serious to compel the sending of troops to the
defense of the capital, and a body of men immediately
embarked. Three days later I started myself to Washington,
in order to keep Grant informed of what was
going on. When I arrived, I found both Washington
and Baltimore in a state of great excitement; both
cities were filled with people who had fled from the
enemy. The damage to private property done by
the invaders was said to be almost beyond calculation.
Mills, workshops, and factories of every sort
were reported as destroyed, and from twenty-five
to fifty miles of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
torn up.</p>
<p>During my first day in town, July 11th, all sorts
of rumors came in. General Lew Wallace, then in command
at Baltimore, sent word that a large force of the
enemy had been seen that morning near that city. The
Confederate generals were said to have dined together
at Rockville a day or two before. The houses of Governor
Bradford, Francis P. Blair, senior, and his son,
Montgomery, the Postmaster General, were reported
burned. We could see from Washington clouds of dust
in several quarters around the city, which we believed to
be raised by bodies of hostile cavalry. There was some
sharp skirmishing that day, too, on the Tennallytown<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</SPAN></span>
road, as well as later in front of Fort Stevens, and at
night the telegraph operators at the latter place reported
a considerable number of camp fires visible in front of
them.</p>
<p>I found that the Washington authorities had utilized
every man in town for defense. Some fifteen hundred
employees of the quartermaster's department had
been armed and sent out; the veteran reserves about
Washington and Alexandria had likewise been sent to
the front. General Augur, commanding the defenses
of Washington, had also drawn from the fortifications
on the south side of the town all the men that in his
judgment could possibly be spared. To this improvised
force were added that day some six boatloads of
troops which General Grant had sent from the Army
of the Potomac. These troops went at once to Fort
Stevens.</p>
<p>With the troops coming from Grant, there was force
enough to save the capital; but I soon saw that nothing
could possibly be done toward pursuing or cutting off
the enemy for want of a commander. General Hunter
and his forces had not yet returned from their swing
around the circle. General Augur commanded the defenses
of Washington, with A. McD. McCook and a lot
of brigadier generals under him, but he was not allowed
to go outside. Wright commanded only his own corps.
General Gilmore had been assigned to the temporary
command of those troops of the Nineteenth Corps just
arrived from New Orleans, and all other troops in the
Middle Department, leaving Wallace to command Baltimore
alone. But there was no head to the whole. Gen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</SPAN></span>eral Halleck
would not give orders, except as he received
them from Grant; the President would give
none; and, until Grant directed positively and explicitly
what was to be done, everything was practically at a
standstill. Things, I saw, would go on in the deplorable
and fatal way in which they had been going for a week.
Of course, this want of a head was causing a great deal
of sharp comment on all sides. Postmaster-General
Blair was particularly incensed, and, indeed, with real
cause, for he had lost his house at Silver Springs. Some
of his remarks reached General Halleck, who immediately
wrote to Mr. Stanton the following letter:</p>
<div class='letter'>
<p class='nr9right'>
<span class="smcap">Headquarters of the Army</span>,</p>
<p class='nr5right'><span class="smcap">Washington</span>, <i class='date'>July 13, 1864</i>.</p>
<p>Hon. <span class="smcap">E. M. Stanton</span>, Secretary of War.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>: I deem it my duty to bring to your notice the
following facts: I am informed by an officer of rank
and standing in the military service that the Hon. M.
Blair, Postmaster General, in speaking of the burning
of his house in Maryland this morning, said, in effect,
that the officers in command about Washington are
poltroons; that there were not more that five hundred
rebels on the Silver Springs road, and we had one million
of men in arms; that it was a disgrace; that General
Wallace was in comparison with them far better,
as he would at least fight. As there have been for the
last few days a large number of officers on duty in and
about Washington who have devoted their time and
energies, night and day, and have periled their lives in
the support of the Government, it is due to them, as
well as to the War Department, that it should be known
whether such wholesale denouncement and accusation
by a member of the Cabinet receives the sanction and
approbation of the President of the United States. If
so, the names of the officers accused should be stricken
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</SPAN></span>from the rolls of the army; if not, it is due to the honor
of the accused that the slanderer should be dismissed
from the Cabinet.</p>
<p class='nr3left'>Very respectfully, your obedient servant,</p>
<p class='nr9right'>
<span class="smcap">H. W. Halleck</span>,</p>
<p class='nr5right'>
<i class='title'>Major General and Chief of Staff</i>.</p>
</div>
<p>The very day on which Halleck wrote this letter we
had evidence that the enemy had taken fright at the
arrival in Washington of the troops sent by Grant, and
were moving off toward Edwards Ferry. It was pretty
certain that they were carrying off a large amount of
cattle and other plunder with them. By the end of another
day there seemed no doubt that Early had got
the main body of his command across the river with his
captures. What they were, it was impossible to say
precisely. One herd of cattle was reported as containing
two thousand head, and the number of horses and
mules taken from Maryland was reported as about five
thousand. This, however, was probably somewhat exaggerated.</p>
<p>The veterans, of course, at once moved out to attempt
to overtake the enemy. The irregulars were
withdrawn from the fortifications, General Meigs marching
his division of quartermaster's clerks and employees
back to their desks; and Admiral Goldsborough, who
had marshalled the marines and sailors, returned to
smoke his pipe on his own doorstep.</p>
<p>The pursuit of Early proved, on the whole, an egregious
blunder, relieved only by a small success at Winchester
in which four guns and some prisoners were
captured. Wright accomplished nothing, and drew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</SPAN></span>
back as soon as he got where he might have done something
worth while. As it was, Early escaped with the
whole of his plunder.</p>
<p>One of the best letters Grant sent me during the
war was at the time of this Early raid on Washington.
When the alarms of invasion first came, Grant ordered
Major-General David Hunter, then stationed at Parkersburg,
W. Va., to take the direction of operations
against the enemy's forces in the valley. Hunter did
not come up to Mr. Stanton's expectations in this crisis,
and when I reached Washington the Secretary told me
to telegraph Grant that, in his opinion, Hunter ought
to be removed. Three days later I repeated in my dispatch
to Grant certain rumors about Hunter that had
reached the War Department. The substance of them
was that Hunter had been engaged in an active campaign
against the newspapers in West Virginia, and
that he had horsewhipped a soldier with his own hand.
I received an immediate reply:</p>
<div class='letter'>
<p class='nr5right'>
<span class="smcap">City Point, Va.</span>, <i class='date'>July 15, 1864</i>—8 <small>P.M.</small></p>
<p><span class="smcap">C. A. Dana</span>, Assistant Secretary of War:<br/></p>
<p>I am sorry to see such a disposition to condemn so
brave an old soldier as General Hunter is known to be
without a hearing. He is known to have advanced into
the enemy's country toward their main army, inflicting
a much greater damage upon them than they have inflicted
upon us with double his force, and moving directly
away from our main army. Hunter acted, too,
in a country where we had no friends, while the enemy
have only operated in territory where, to say the least,
many of the inhabitants are their friends. If General
Hunter has made war upon the newspapers in West
Virginia, probably he has done right. In horsewhip<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</SPAN></span>ping
a soldier he has laid himself subject to trial, but
nine chances out of ten he only acted on the spur of
the moment, under great provocation. I fail to see yet
that General Hunter has not acted with great promptness
and great success. Even the enemy give him
great credit for courage, and congratulate themselves
that he will give them a chance of getting even with him.</p>
<p class='nr5righte'>
<span class="smcap">U. S. Grant</span>, <i class='title'>Lieutenant General</i>.</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />