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<h2> VII. LINCOLN AND THE WAR </h2>
<p>It is one thing to be elected President of the United States,—that
means triumph, honor, power: it is quite another thing to perform the
duties of President,—for that means labor, disappointment,
difficulty, even danger. Many a man envied Abraham Lincoln when, in the
stately pomp of inauguration and with the plaudits of the spectators
ringing about him, he took the oath of office which for four years
transforms an American citizen into the ruler of these United States. Such
envy would have been changed to deepest sympathy if they could have known
what lay before him. After the music and cannon were dumb, after the flags
were all furled and the cheering crowds had vanished, the shadows of war
fell about the Executive Mansion, and its new occupant remained face to
face with his heavy task—a task which, as he had truly said in his
speech at Springfield, was greater than that which rested upon Washington.</p>
<p>Then, as never before, he must have realized the peril of the nation, with
its credit gone, its laws defied, its flag insulted. The South had carried
out its threat, and seven million Americans were in revolt against the
idea that "all men are created equal," while twenty million other
Americans were bent upon defending that idea. For the moment both sides
had paused to see how the new President would treat this attempt at
secession. It must be constantly borne in mind that the rebellion in the
Southern States with which Mr. Lincoln had to deal was not a sudden
revolution, but a conspiracy of slow growth and long planning. As one of
its actors frankly admitted, it was "not an event of a day. It is not
anything produced by Mr. Lincoln's election.... It is a matter which has
been gathering head for thirty years." Its main object, it must also be
remembered, was the spread of slavery. Alexander H. Stephens, in a speech
made shortly after he became the Confederate Vice-President, openly
proclaimed slavery to be the "corner-stone" of the new government. For
years it had been the dream of southern leaders to make the Ohio River the
northern boundary of a great slave empire, with everything lying to the
south of that, even the countries of South and Central America, as parts
of their system. Though this dream was never to be realized, the
Confederacy finally came to number eleven States (Alabama, Mississippi,
Louisiana, South Carolina, North Carolina, Florida, Texas, Arkansas,
Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia), and to cover a territory of more than
750,000 square miles—larger than England, Scotland, Ireland, France,
Spain, Germany and Switzerland put together, with a coast line 3,500 miles
long, and a land frontier of over 7,000 miles.</p>
<p>President Buchanan's timidity and want of spirit had alone made this great
rebellion possible, for although it had been "gathering head for thirty
years" it was only within the last few months that it had come to acts of
open treason and rebellion. President Buchanan had opportunity and ample
power to crush it when the conspirators first began to show their hands.
Instead he wavered, and delayed, while they grew bold under his lack of
decision, imagining that they would have a bloodless victory, and even
boasting that they would take Washington for their capital; or, if the new
President should thwart them and make them fight, that they would capture
Philadelphia and dictate the peace they wanted from Independence Hall.</p>
<p>By the time Mr. Lincoln came into office the conspiracy had grown beyond
control by any means then in the hands of a President, though men on both
sides still vainly hoped that the troubles of the country might be settled
without fighting. Mr. Lincoln especially wished to make very sure that if
it ever came to a matter of war, the fault should not lie with the North.</p>
<p>In his inaugural address he had told the South that he would use the power
confided to him to hold and occupy the places belonging to the Government,
and to collect the taxes; but beyond what might be necessary for these
objects, he would not use force among the people anywhere. His peaceful
policy was already harder to follow than he realized. Before he had been
President twenty-four hours word came from Major Anderson, still defying
the conspirators from Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, that his little
garrison was short of food, and must speedily surrender unless help
reached them. The rebels had for weeks been building batteries to attack
the fort, and with Anderson's report came the written opinions of his
officers that it would require an army of 20,000 men to relieve it. They
might as well have asked for twenty thousand archangels, for at that time
the entire army of the United States numbered but 17,113 men, and these
were doing duty, not only in the Southern and Eastern States, but were
protecting settlers from Indians on the great western frontier, and
guarding the long Canadian and Mexican boundaries as well. Yet Anderson
and his men could not be left to their fate without even an attempt to
help them, though some of the high military and naval officers hastily
called into council by the new President advised this course. It was
finally decided to notify the Confederates that a ship carrying food, but
no soldiers, would be sent to his relief. If they chose to fire upon that
it would be plainly the South, and not the North, that began the war.</p>
<p>Days went on, and by the middle of April the Confederate government found
itself forced to a fatal choice. Either it must begin war, or allow the
rebellion to collapse. All its claims to independence were denied; the
commissioner it sent to Washington on the pretense that they were agents
of a foreign country were politely refused a hearing, yet not one angry
word, or provoking threat, or a single harmful act had come from the
"Black Republican" President. In his inaugural he had promised the people
of the South peace and protection, and offered them the benefit of the
mails. Even now, all he proposed to do was to send bread to Anderson and
his hungry soldiers. His prudent policy placed them where, as he had told
them, they could have no war unless they themselves chose to begin it.</p>
<p>They did choose to begin it. The rebellion was the work of ambitious men,
who had no mind to stop at that late day and see their labor go for
nothing. The officer in charge of their batteries was ordered to open fire
on Fort Sumter if Anderson refused to surrender; and in the dim light of
dawn on April 12, 1861, just as the outline of Fort Sumter began to show
itself against a brightening sky, the shot that opened the Civil War rose
from a rebel battery and made its slow and graceful curve upon Sumter.
Soon all the batteries were in action, and the fort was replying with a
will. Anderson held out for a day and a half, until his cartridges were
all used up, his flagstaff had been shot away, and the wooden buildings
inside the fort were on fire. Then, as the ships with supplies had not yet
arrived, and he had neither food nor ammunition, he was forced to
surrender.</p>
<p>The news of the firing upon Fort Sumter changed the mood of the country as
if by magic. By deliberate act of the Confederate government its attempt
at peaceable secession had been changed to active war. The Confederates
gained Fort Sumter, but in doing so they roused the patriotism of the
North to a firm resolve that this insult to the flag should be redressed,
and that the unrighteous experiment of a rival government founded upon
slavery as its "cornerstone," should never succeed. In one of his speeches
on the journey to Washington Mr. Lincoln had said that devoted as he was
to peace, it might become necessary to "put the foot down firmly." That
time had now come. On April 15, the day after the fall of Fort Sumter, all
the newspapers of the country printed the President's call to arms,
ordering out 75,000 militia for three months, and directing Congress to
meet in special session on July 4, 1861. The North rallied instantly to
the support of the Government, and offered him twice the number of
soldiers he asked for.</p>
<p>Nothing more clearly shows the difference between President Lincoln and
President Buchanan than the way in which the two men met the acts of the
Southern Rebellion. President Buchanan temporized and delayed when he had
plenty of power. President Lincoln, without a moment's hesitation accepted
the great and unusual responsibility thrust upon him, and at once issued
orders for buying ships, moving troops, advancing money to Committees of
Safety, and for other military and naval measures for which at the moment
he had no express authority from Congress. As soon as Congress came
together on July 4, he sent a message explaining his action, saying: "It
became necessary for me to choose whether, using only the existing
means.... which Congress had provided, I should let the Government fall at
once into ruin, or whether availing myself of the broader powers conferred
by the Constitution in cases of insurrection, I would make an effort to
save it with all its blessings for the present age and for posterity."
Congress, it is needless to say, not only approved all that he had done,
but gave him practically unlimited powers for dealing with the rebellion
in future.</p>
<p>It soon became evident that no matter how ready and willing to fight for
their country the 75,000 volunteers might be, they could not hope to put
down the rebellion, because the time for which they had enlisted would be
almost over before they could receive the training necessary to change
them from valiant citizens into good soldiers. Another call was therefore
issued, this time for men to serve three years or during the war, and also
for a large number of sailors to man the new ships that the Government was
straining every nerve to buy, build and otherwise make ready.</p>
<p>More important, however, than soldiers trained or untrained, was the
united will of the people of the North; and most important of all the
steadfast and courageous soul of the man called to direct the struggle.
Abraham Lincoln, the poor frontier boy, the struggling young lawyer, the
Illinois politician, whom many, even among the Republicans who voted to
elect him President, thought scarcely fit to hold a much smaller office,
proved beyond question the man for the task gifted above all his
associates with wisdom and strength to meet the great emergencies as they
arose during the four years' war that had already begun.</p>
<p>Since this is the story of Mr. Lincoln's life, and not of the Civil War,
we cannot attempt to follow the history of the long contest as it unfolded
itself day by day and month by month, or even to stop to recount a list of
the great battles that drenched the land in blood. It was a mighty
struggle, fought by men of the same race and kindred, often by brother
against brother. Each fought for what he felt to be right; and their
common inheritance of courage and iron will, of endurance and splendid
bravery and stubborn pluck, made this battle of brothers the more bitter
as it was the more prolonged. It ranged over an immense extent of country;
but because Washington was the capital of the Union, and Richmond,
Virginia, the capital of the Confederacy, and the desire of each side was
to capture the chief city of the other, the principal fighting ground,
during the whole war, lay between these two towns, with the Alleghany
Mountains on the west, and Chesapeake Bay on the east. Between the
Alleghanies and the Mississippi River another field of warfare developed
itself, on which some of the hardest battles were fought, and the greatest
victories won. Beyond the Mississippi again stretched another great field,
bounded only by the Rocky Mountains and the Rio Grande. But the principal
fighting in this field was near or even on the Mississippi, in the efforts
made by both Unionists and Confederates to keep and hold the great highway
of the river, so necessary for trade in time of peace, and for moving
armies in time of war.</p>
<p>On this immense battle-ground was fought one of the most costly wars of
modern times, with soldiers numbering a million men on each side; in
which, counting battles and skirmishes small and great, an average of two
engagements a day were fought for four long years, two millions of money
were used up every twenty-four hours, and during which the unholy prize of
slavery, for which the Confederate States did battle, was completely swept
away.</p>
<p>Though the tide of battle ebbed and flowed, defeat and victory may be said
to have been nearly evenly divided. Generally speaking, success was more
often on the side of the South during the first half of the war; with the
North, during the latter half. The armies were equally brave; the North
had the greater territory from which to draw supplies; and the end came,
not when one side had beaten the other, man for man, but when the South
had been drained of fighting men and food and guns, and slavery had
perished in the stress of war.</p>
<p>Fortunately for all, nobody at the beginning dreamed of the length of the
struggle. Even Lincoln's stout heart would have been dismayed if he could
have foreseen all that lay before him. The task that he could see was hard
and perplexing enough. Everything in Washington was in confusion. No
President ever had such an increase of official work as Lincoln during the
early months of his administration. The halls and ante-rooms of the
Executive Mansion were literally crowded with people seeking appointment
to office; and the new appointments that were absolutely necessary were
not half finished when the firing on Fort Sumter began active war. This
added to the difficulty of sifting the loyal from the disloyal, and the
yet more pressing labor of organizing an immense new army.</p>
<p>Hundreds of clerks employed in the Government Departments left their desks
and hurried South, crippling the service just at the time when the sudden
increase of work made their presence doubly needed. A large proportion of
the officers of the Army and Navy, perhaps as many as one-third, gave
their skill and services to the Confederacy, feeling that their allegiance
was due to their State or section rather than to the general government.
Prominent among these was Robert E. Lee, who had been made a colonel by
Lincoln, and whom General Scott had recommended as the most promising
officer to command the new force of 75,000 men called out by the
President's proclamation. He chose instead to resign and cast his fortunes
with the South, where he became the head of all the Confederate armies.
The loss to the Union and gain to the Confederate cause by his action is
hard to measure, since in him the Southern armies found a commander whose
surpassing courage and skill inspired its soldiers long after all hope of
success was gone. Cases such as this gave the President more anxiety than
all else. It seemed impossible to know whom to trust. An officer might
come to him in the morning protesting devotion to the Union, and by night
be gone to the South. Mr. Lincoln used to say at this time that he felt
like a man letting rooms at one end of his house while the other end was
on fire.</p>
<p>The situation grew steadily worse. Maryland refused to allow United States
soldiers to cross her territory, and the first attempt to bring troops
through Baltimore from the North ended in a bloody riot, and the burning
of railroad bridges to prevent help from reaching Washington. For three
days Washington was entirely cut off from the North, either by telegraph
or mail. General Scott hastily prepared the city for a siege, taking
possession of all the large supplies of flour and provisions in town, and
causing the Capitol and other public buildings to be barricaded. Though
President Lincoln did not doubt the final arrival of help, he, like
everyone else, was very anxious, and found it hard to understand the long
delay. He knew that troops had started from the North. Why did they not
arrive? They might not be able to go through Baltimore, but they could
certainly go around it. The distance was not great. What if twenty miles
of railroad had been destroyed, were the soldiers unable to march? Always
calm and self-controlled, he gave no sign in the presence of others of the
anxiety that weighed so heavily upon him. Very likely the visitors who saw
him during those days thought that he hardly realized the plight of the
city; yet an inmate of the White House, passing through the President's
office when the day's work was done and he imagined himself alone, saw him
pause in his absorbed walk up and down the floor, and gaze long out of the
window in the direction from which the troops were expected to appear.
Then, unconscious of any hearer, and as if the words were wrung from him
by anguish, he exclaimed, "Why don't they come, why don't they come?"</p>
<p>The New York Seventh Regiment was the first to "come." By a roundabout
route it reached Washington on the morning of April 25, and, weary and
travel-worn, but with banners flying and music playing, marched up
Pennsylvania Avenue to the big white Executive Mansion, bringing cheer to
the President and renewed courage to those timid citizens whose fright
during this time had almost paralyzed the life of the town. Taking renewed
courage they once more opened their houses and the shops that had been
closed since the beginning of the blockade, and business began anew.</p>
<p>The greater part of the three months' regiments had been ordered to
Washington, and the outskirts of the capital soon became a busy military
camp. The great Departments of the Government, especially of War and Navy,
could not immediately handle the details of all this sudden increase of
work. Men were volunteering rapidly enough, but there was sore need of
rations to feed them, money to pay them, tents to shelter them, uniforms
to clothe them, rifles to arm them, officers to drill them, and of
transportation to carry them to the camps of instruction where they must
receive their training and await further orders. In this carnival of
patriotism and hurly-burly of organization the weaknesses as well as the
virtues of human nature quickly showed themselves; and, as if the new
President had not already enough to distress and harass his mind, almost
every case of confusion and delay was brought to him for complaint and
correction. On him also fell the delicate and serious task of deciding
hundreds of novel questions as to what he and his cabinet ministers had
and had not the right to do under the Constitution.</p>
<p>The month of May slipped away in all these preparatory vexations; but the
great machine of war, once started, moved on as it always does, from
arming to massing of troops, and from that to skirmish and battle. In June
small fights began to occur between the Union and Confederate armies. The
first large battle of the war took place at Bull Run, about thirty-two
miles southwest of Washington, on July 21, 1861. It ended in a victory for
the Confederates, though their army was so badly crippled by. its losses
that it made no further forward movement during the whole of the next
autumn and winter.</p>
<p>The shock of this defeat was deep and painful to the people of the North,
not yet schooled to patience, or to the uncertainties of war. For weeks
the newspapers, confident of success, had been clamoring for action, and
the cry, "Forward to Richmond," had been heard on every hand. At first the
people would not believe the story of a defeat; but it was only too true.
By night the beaten Union troops were pouring into the fortifications
around Washington, and the next day a horde of stragglers found their way
across the bridges of the Potomac into the city.</p>
<p>President Lincoln received the news quietly, as was his habit, without any
visible sign of distress or alarm, but he remained awake and in his office
all that Sunday night, listening to the excited tales of congressmen and
senators who, with undue curiosity, had followed the army and witnessed
some of the sights and sounds of battle; and by dawn on Monday he had
practically made up his mind as to the probable result and what he must do
in consequence.</p>
<p>The loss of the battle of Bull Run was a bitter disappointment to him. He
saw that the North was not to have the easy victory it anticipated; and to
him personally it brought a great and added care that never left him
during the war. Up to that time the North had stood by him as one man in
its eager resolve to put down the rebellion. From this time on, though
quite as determined, there was division and disagreement among the people
as to how this could best be done. Parties formed themselves for or
against this or that general, or in favor of this or that method and no
other of carrying on the war. In other words, the President and his
"administration"—the cabinet and other officers under him—became,
from this time on, the target of criticism for all the failures of the
Union armies, and for all the accidents and mistakes and unforeseen delays
of war. The self-control that Mr. Lincoln had learned in the hard school
of his boyhood, and practised during all the long struggle of his young
manhood, had been severe and bitter training, but nothing else could have
prepared him for the great disappointments and trials of the crowning
years of his life. He had learned to endure patiently, to reason calmly,
never to be unduly sure of his own opinion; but, having taken counsel of
the best advice at his command, to continue in the path that he felt to be
right, regardless of criticism or unjust abuse. He had daily and hourly to
do all this. He was strong and courageous, with a steadfast belief that
the right would triumph in the end; but his nature was at the same time
sensitive and tender, and the sorrows and pain of others hurt him more
than did his own.</p>
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