<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>THE SECRET SERVICE OF THE WAR.</h3>
<div class='intro'>
<p>Mr. Stanton's agents and spies—Regular subterranean traffic between
Washington and Richmond—A man who spied for both sides—The
arrest of the Baltimore merchants—Stanton's remarkable speech
on the meaning of disloyalty—Intercepting Jefferson Davis's letters
to Canada—Detecting the plot to burn New York, and the
plan to invade Vermont—Story of the cleverest and pluckiest of
spies and his remarkable adventures.</p>
</div>
<p>After Early's invaders had retired and quiet was
restored, I went to Mr. Stanton for new orders. As
there was no probability of an immediate change in the
situation before Petersburg, the Secretary did not think
it necessary for me to go back to Grant, but preferred
that I remain in the department, helping with the routine
work.</p>
<p>Much of my time at this period was spent in investigating
charges against defaulting contractors and dishonest
agents, and in ordering arrests of persons suspected
of disloyalty to the Government. I assisted,
too, in supervising the spies who were going back and
forth between the lines. Among these I remember
one, a sort of peddler—whose name I will call Morse—who
traveled between Washington and Richmond.
When he went down it was in the character of a man
who had entirely hoodwinked the Washington authori<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</SPAN></span>ties,
and who, in spite of them, or by some corruption
or other, always brought with him into the Confederate
lines something that the people wanted—dresses for the
ladies or some little luxury that they couldn't get otherwise.
The things that he took with him were always
supervised by our agents before he went away. When
he came back he brought us in exchange a lot of valuable
information. He was doubtless a spy on both
sides; but as we got a great deal of information, which
could be had in no other way, about the strength of the
Confederate armies, and the preparations and the movements
of the enemy, we allowed the thing to go on.
The man really did good service for us that summer,
and, as we were frequently able to verify by other means
the important information he brought, we had a great
deal of confidence in him.</p>
<p>Early in October, 1864, he came back from Richmond,
and, as usual, went to Baltimore to get his outfit
for the return trip. When he presented himself again
in Washington, the chief detective of the War Department,
Colonel Baker, examined his goods carefully, but
this time he found that Morse had many things that
we could not allow him to take. Among his stuff were
uniforms and other military goods, and all this, of
course, was altogether too contraband to be passed.
We had all his bills, telling where he had bought these
things in Baltimore. They amounted to perhaps
twenty-five thousand dollars, or more. So we confiscated
the contraband goods, and put Morse in prison.</p>
<p>But the merchants in Baltimore were partners in
his guilt, and Secretary Stanton declared he would ar<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</SPAN></span>rest
every one of them and put them in prison until the
affair could be straightened up. He turned the matter
over to me then, as he was going to Fort Monroe for
a few days. I immediately sent Assistant-Adjutant-General
Lawrence to Baltimore with orders to see that all
persons implicated were arrested. Lawrence telegraphed
me, on October 16th, that the case would involve
the arrest of two hundred citizens. I reported
to the Secretary, but he was determined to go ahead.
The next morning ninety-seven of the leading citizens
of Baltimore were arrested, brought to Washington,
and confined in Old Capitol Prison, principally in solitary
cells. There was great satisfaction among the
Union people of the town, but great indignation among
Southern sympathizers. Presently a deputation from
Baltimore came over to see President Lincoln. It was
an outrage, they said; the gentlemen arrested were
most respectable merchants and faultless citizens, and
they demanded that they all be set instantly at liberty
and damages paid them. Mr. Lincoln sent the deputation
over to the War Department, and Mr. Stanton,
who had returned by this time, sent for me. "All Baltimore
is coming here," he said. "Sit down and hear
the discussion."</p>
<p>They came in, the bank presidents and boss merchants
of Baltimore—there must have been at least fifty
million dollars represented in the deputation—and sat
down around the fire in the Secretary's office. Presently
they began to make their speeches, detailing the circumstances
and the wickedness of this outrage. There
was no ground for it, they said, no justification. After<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</SPAN></span>
half a dozen of them had spoken, Mr. Stanton asked one
after another if he had anything more to say, and they
all said no. Then Stanton began, and delivered one of
the most eloquent speeches that I ever heard. He described
the beginning of the war, for which, he said,
there was no justification; being beaten in an election
was no reason for destroying the Government. Then
he went on to the fact that half a million of our young
men had been laid in untimely graves by this conspiracy
of the slave interest. He outlined the whole conspiracy
in the most solemn and impressive terms, and then he
depicted the offense that this man Morse, aided by these
several merchants, had committed. "Gentlemen," he
said, "if you would like to examine the bills of what
he was taking to the enemy, here they are."</p>
<p>When Stanton had finished, these gentlemen, without
answering a word, got up and one by one went
away. That was the only speech I ever listened to that
cleared out the entire audience.</p>
<p>Early in the winter of 1863-'64 a curious thing happened
in the secret service of the War Department.
Some time in the February or March before, a slender
and prepossessing young fellow, between twenty-two
and twenty-six apparently, had applied at the War Department
for employment as a spy within the Confederate
lines.</p>
<p>The main body of the Army of Northern Virginia
was then lying at Gordonsville, and the headquarters of
the Army of the Potomac were at Culpeper Courthouse.
General Grant had not yet come from the West to take
command of the momentous campaign which afterward<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</SPAN></span>
opened with his movement into the Wilderness on the
5th of May.</p>
<p>The young man who sought this terrible service
was well dressed and intelligent, and professed to be
animated by motives purely patriotic. He was a clerk
in one of the departments. All that he asked was that
he should have a horse and an order which would carry
him safely through the Federal lines, and, in return, he
undertook to bring information from General Lee's
army and from the Government of the Confederacy in
Richmond. He understood perfectly the perilous nature
of the enterprise he proposed.</p>
<p>Finding that the applicant bore a good character
in the office where he was employed, it was determined
to accept his proposal. He was furnished with a horse,
an order that would pass him through the Union lines,
and also, I believe, with a moderate sum of money, and
then he departed. Two or three weeks later he reported
at the War Department. He had been in Gordonsville
and Richmond, had obtained the confidence of the Confederate
authorities, and was the bearer of a letter from
Mr. Jefferson Davis to Mr. Clement C. Clay, the agent
of the Confederate Government in Canada, then known
to be stationed at St. Catherine's, not far from Niagara
Falls. Mr. Clay had as his official associate Jacob
Thompson, of Mississippi, who had been Secretary of
the Interior in the Cabinet of President Buchanan, and,
like Mr. Clay, had been serving the Confederate Government
ever since its organization.</p>
<p>The letter from Mr. Davis the young man exhibited,
but only the outside of the envelope was examined.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</SPAN></span>
The address was in the handwriting of the Confederate
chief, and the statement of our young adventurer that
it was merely a letter of recommendation advising
Messrs. Clay and Thompson that they might repose
confidence in the bearer, since he was ardently devoted
to the Confederate cause and anxious to serve
the great purpose that it had in view, appeared entirely
probable; so the young man was allowed to
proceed to Niagara Falls and Canada. He made some
general report upon the condition of the rebel army at
Gordonsville, but it was of no particular value, except
that in its more interesting features it agreed with
our information from other sources.</p>
<p>Our spy was not long in returning from St. Catherine's
with a dispatch which was also allowed to pass
unopened, upon his assurance that it contained nothing
of importance. In this way he went back and forward
from Richmond to St. Catherine's once or twice. We
supplied him with money to a limited extent, and also
with one or two more horses. He said that he got
some money from the Confederates, but had not
thought it prudent to accept from them anything more
than very small sums, since his professed zeal for the
Confederate cause forbade his receiving anything for
his traveling expenses beyond what was absolutely
necessary.</p>
<p>During the summer of 1864 the activity of Grant's
campaign, and the fighting which prevailed all along
the line, somewhat impeded our young man's expeditions,
but did not stop them. All his subsequent dispatches,
however, whether coming from Richmond or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</SPAN></span>
from Canada, were regularly brought to the War Department,
and were opened, and in every case a copy
of them was kept. As it was necessary to break the
seals and destroy the envelopes in opening them, there
was some difficulty in sending them forward in what
should appear to be the original wrappers. Coming
from Canada, the paper employed was English, and
there was a good deal of trouble in procuring paper
of the same appearance. I remember also that one important
dispatch, which was sealed with Mr. Clay's seal,
had to be delayed somewhat while we had an imitation
seal engraved. But these delays were easily accounted
for at Richmond by the pretense that they had been
caused by accidents upon the road and by the necessity
of avoiding the Federal pickets. At any rate, the
confidence of the Confederates in our agent and in
theirs never seemed to be shaken by any of these
occurrences.</p>
<p>Finally our dispatch bearer reported one day at the
War Department with a document which, he said, was
of extraordinary consequence. It was found to contain
an account of a scheme for setting fire to New York
and Chicago by means of clock-work machines that were
to be placed in several of the large hotels and places of
amusement—particularly in Barnum's Museum in New
York—and to be set off simultaneously, so that the fire
department in each place would be unable to attend
to the great number of calls that would be made upon
it on account of these Confederate conflagrations in
so many different quarters, and thus these cities might
be greatly damaged, or even destroyed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This dispatch was duly sealed up again and was
taken to Richmond, and a confidential officer was at
once sent to New York to warn General Dix, who was
in command there, of the Confederate project. The
general was very unwilling to believe that any such
design could be seriously entertained, and Mr. John A.
Kennedy, then superintendent of police, was equally incredulous.
But the Secretary of War was peremptory
in his orders, and when the day of the incendiary attempt
arrived both the military and the police made
every preparation to prevent the threatened catastrophe.
The officer who went from Washington was
lodged in the St. Nicholas Hotel, one of the large establishments
that were to be set on fire, and while he was
washing his hands in the evening, preparatory to going
to dinner, a fire began burning in the room next to his.
It was promptly put out, and was found to be caused
by a clock-work apparatus which had been left in that
room by a lodger who had departed some hours before.
Other fires likewise occurred. In every instance these
fires were extinguished without much damage and without
exciting any considerable public attention, thanks
to the precautions that had been taken in consequence
of the warning derived from Mr. Clay's dispatch to Mr.
Benjamin in Richmond. The plan of setting fire to
Chicago proved even more abortive; I do not remember
that any report of actual burning was received from
there.</p>
<p>Later in the fall, after the military operations had
substantially terminated for the season, a dispatch was
brought from Canada, signed by Mr. Clay, and addressed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</SPAN></span>
to Mr. Benjamin, as Secretary of State in the Confederate
Government, conveying the information that a
new and really formidable military expedition against
northern Vermont—particularly against Burlington, if
I am not mistaken—had been organized and fitted out
in Canada, and would make its attack as soon as practicable.
This was after the well-known attempt upon
St. Albans and Lake Champlain, on October 19, 1864,
and promised to be much more injurious. The dispatch
reached Washington one Sunday morning, and was
brought to the War Department as usual, but its importance
in the eyes of the Confederate agents had led
to its being prepared for transportation with uncommon
care. It was placed between two thicknesses of the pair
of re-enforced cavalry trousers which the messenger
wore, and sewed up so that when he was mounted it was
held between his thigh and the saddle.</p>
<p>Having been carefully ripped out and opened, it was
immediately carried to Mr. Stanton, who was confined
to his house by a cold. He read it. "This is serious,"
he said. "Go over to the White House and ask the
President to come here." Mr. Lincoln was found dressing
to go to church, and he was soon driven to Mr.
Stanton's house. After discussing the subject in every
aspect, and considering thoroughly the probability that
to keep the dispatch would put an end to communications
by this channel, they determined that it must be
kept. The conclusive reason for this step was that it
established beyond question the fact that the Confederates,
while sheltering themselves behind the British
Government in Canada, had organized and fitted out a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</SPAN></span>
military expedition against the United States. But
while the dispatch afforded evidence that could not be
gainsaid, the mere possession of it was not sufficient.
It must be found in the possession of the Confederate
dispatch bearer, and the circumstances attending its
capture must be established in such a manner that the
British Foreign Office would not be able to dispute the
genuineness of the document. "We must have this
paper for Seward," said Mr. Lincoln. "As for the
young man, get him out of the scrape if you can."</p>
<p>Accordingly, the paper was taken back to the War
Department and sewed up again in the trousers whence
it had been taken three hours before. The bearer was
instructed to start at dusk on the road which he usually
took in passing through the lines, to be at a certain
tavern outside of Alexandria at nine o'clock in the
evening, and to stop there to water his horse. Then
information was sent through Major-General Augur,
commandant of Washington and the surrounding region,
to Colonel Henry H. Wells, then provost marshal
general of the defenses south of the Potomac, stationed
at Alexandria, directing him to be at this tavern at
nine o'clock in the evening, and to arrest a Confederate
dispatch bearer, concerning whom authentic information
had been received at the War Department, and
whose description was furnished for his (Wells's) guidance.
He was to do the messenger no injury, but to
make sure of his person and of all papers that he might
have upon him, and to bring him under a sufficient
guard directly to the War Department. And General
Augur was directed to be present there, in order to as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</SPAN></span>sist
in the examination of the prisoner, and to verify
any dispatches that might be found.</p>
<p>Just before midnight a carriage drove up to the
door of the War Department with a soldier on the box
and two soldiers on the front seat within, while the back
seat was occupied by Colonel Wells and the prisoner.
Of course, no one but the two or three who had been
in the secret was aware that this gentleman had walked
quietly out of the War Department only a few hours
previously, and that the paper which was the cause of
the entire ceremony had been sewed up in his clothes
just before his departure. Colonel Wells reported that,
while the prisoner had offered no resistance, he was very
violent and outrageous in his language, and that he
boasted fiercely of his devotion to the Confederacy and
his detestation of the Union. During the examination
which now followed he said nothing except to answer
a few questions, but his bearing—patient, scornful, undaunted—was
that of an incomparable actor. If Mr.
Clay and Mr. Benjamin had been present, they would
have been more than ever certain that he was one of
their noblest young men. His hat, boots, and other
articles of his clothing were taken off one by one. The
hat and boots were first searched, and finally the dispatch
was found in his trousers and taken out. Its nature
and the method of its capture were stated in a
memorandum which was drawn up on the spot and
signed by General Augur and Colonel Wells and one
or two other officers who were there for the purpose,
and then the dispatch bearer himself was sent off to the
Old Capitol Prison.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The dispatch, with the documents of verification,
was handed over to Mr. Seward for use in London,
and a day or two afterward the warden of the Old
Capitol Prison was directed to give the dispatch
bearer an opportunity of escaping, with a proper
show of attempted prevention. One afternoon the
spy walked into my office. "Ah!" said I, "you have
run away."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," he answered.</p>
<p>"Did they shoot at you?"</p>
<p>"They did, and didn't hit me; but I didn't think
that would answer the purpose. So I shot myself
through the arm."</p>
<p>He showed me the wound. It was through the fleshy
part of the forearm, and due care had been taken not
to break any bones. A more deliberate and less dangerous
wound could not be, and yet it did not look
trivial.</p>
<p>He was ordered to get away to Canada as promptly
as possible, so that he might explain the loss of his
dispatch before it should become known there by any
other means. An advertisement offering two thousand
dollars for his recapture was at once inserted in the
New York Herald, the Pittsburgh Journal, and the
Chicago Tribune. No one ever appeared to claim the
reward, but in about a week the escaped prisoner returned
from Canada with new dispatches that had been
entrusted to him. They contained nothing of importance,
however. The wound in his arm had borne testimony
in his favor, and the fact that he had hurried
through to St. Catherine's without having it dressed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</SPAN></span>
was thought to afford conclusive evidence of his fidelity
to the Confederate cause.</p>
<p class='p2'>The war was ended soon after this adventure, and,
as his services had been of very great value, a new place,
with the assurance of lasting employment, was found
for the young man in one of the bureaus of the War
Department. He did not remain there very long, however,
and I don't know what became of him. He was
one of the cleverest creatures I ever saw. His style of
patriotic lying was sublime; it amounted to genius.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />