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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 20, 1908)
'3 TITE SUNDAY OREGON! AX, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 20, IPOS. IDA M. 'ii TO flreROtT FRIEND j ft OF EVERV BOY HE vfENT. HO feHE WATCHED THEM WITH PAT .17DKTA1 , r This Is the first of a series of articles by Ida M. Tarbell, tho well-known historian, on the hu man side of Abraham Lincoln. As the time approaches for the celebration of the great Presi dent's centenary next February, no biographical sketches can com pare with these In Interest for Americans. Especially do they commend themselves to the youth of the land. These articles. Illustrated by halftones of rare photographs of priceless value, will be published for several weeks In The Sunday Oregonian. Each Is complete In Itself. INCOLN never came to regard the I Army as a mere machine, never for- got the Individual men who made It upi From the outset, he was the per sonal friend of every soldier he sent to the front, and somehow every man seemed to know It. No doubt. It waa on Lincoln's visits to the camps around Washington, In the early days of the war, that the body of the soldlera got this Idea. They never forgot his friend ly hand-clasp, his hearty "God bless you," his remonstrance against the youth of some 15-year-old boy masquerading as ), his jocular remarks about the height of some soldier towering above his own six feet foiir. When, later, he visited the Army of the Potomac on the Rappahan nock and at Antlctam, these Impressions of his interest In the personal welfare of the soldiers were renewed. He walked down the long lines of tents or hute, noting the attempts at decoration, the housekeeping conveniences, replying by miles and nods and sometimes with words to the greetliiRs, rough and hearty. which he received. He Inquired Into every chase of camp life, and the men knew It and said to one another, "He cares for us: he makes us fight, but he carea." Heports of scores of cases where he Interfered personally to secure ome favor or right for a soldier found their way to the Army and gave solid foun dation to this Impression that he was the aoldiere friend. From the time of the arrival of the first troops In Wash ington, in April. 1SK1, the town was full of men, all of them wanting to see the President. At first they were gay and curious merely, their requesta trival; but later, when the Army had settled down to steady fighting, and Bull Run and the Peninsula and Antietam and Fred ericksburg and Chancellorsvllle had cut and scarred and aged the Army, the soldiers who haunted Washington were changed. They stumped about on crutches. They sat pale and thin In the parks, empty sleeves pinned to their breasts; they came to the White House begging for furloughs to see dying parents, for dismissal to support a suf fering family. No man will ever know how many of these soldiers Abraham Lincoln helped. Little cards are con stantly turning up In different parts of the country, treasured by private sol diers, on which he had written some brief note to a proper authority. In tended to help a man out of a difficulty. Here Is one: i' P-retary of War: Please the Pltts burr boy. He is very voting, and I shall be satisfied with whatever you do with him. A. LINCOLN. Aurust 21. IMS. . ft The Pittsliutg hoy" had enlisted at 17 years of age. He had been ill with a long fever. He wanted a furlough, and with a curious trust that anything could THE FRONT mm wri 4 be done If he could only get to the Presi dent, ' he had slipped Into the White House, and by chance met Lincoln, who listened to his story and gave him this note. Lincoln and "Cussing" Soldier. Many applications reached Lincoln he passed to and from the White Houae and the "War Department. It was, no doubt, as he crossed the park that he saw the colored man with one leg designated In a check signed by him and after listening to his story, gave him the money to help him out of his trouble. 1 A. W. Swan, of Albuquerque, N. M-, relates a pleaslncr Incident that fell under his own eye between Lincoln and a soldier in this same path between tho White House and the War Depart ment: "In company with a gentleman, I was on tlio way to the War Depart ment one day. Oar way led through a small park between the White House and tho War Department building. As we entered this park we noticed Mr. Lincoln just ahead of us, and meeting him a private soldier who was evident ly In a violent passion, as he waa swearing in a high key, cursing the Government from the President down. Mr. Lincoln paused aa he met the irate soldier, and asked him what was the matter. 'Matter enough, was the re ply. 1 want my money. I have been discharged here, and can't get my pay.' Mr. Lincoln asked if he had his papers, saying that he used to practice law In a small way and possibly could help him. My friend and I stepped behind some convenient shrubbery where we could watch the result. Mr. Lincoln took the papers from the hands of the crlppied soldlor, and sat down with him at the foot of a convenient tree, where he examined them carefully, and writing a line on the back, told the soldier to take them to Mr. Potts, Chief Clerk of the War Department, who would doubtless attend to the matter at once. After Mr. Lincoln had left the soldier, we stepped out and asked htm If he knew whom he had been talking with. 'Some ugly old fellow who pre tends to be a lawyer, was the reply. My companion asked to see the papers, and on their being handed to him, pointed to the Indorsement they had received. This indorsement read: "Mr. Potts, attend to this man's case at once and see that he gets his pay. A- L.' The Initials were too familiar with men in position to know them to be ignored. We went with the soldier, who had Just returned from Libby Prison and had been given a hospital certifi cate for discharge, to see Mr. Potts, and before the Paymaster's office was closed for the day he had received his discharge and check for the money due him. he in the meantime not knowing whether to be the more pleased or sor ry tq think he had cursed 'Abe Lin coln' to his face." The Company That Guarded Lincoln 'When we entered the city, Mr! Lln- vldual soldiers were, of course, transi ent, Washington was, for the great body of soldiers, only the half-way house between North and South. The only body of soldiers with which the President had long association waa Company K of the One Hundred and Fiftieth Pennsylvania Volunteers. This oompany, ralsea in urawiora county. In Northwestern Pennsylvania, reached Washington in the first days of Sep tember, 1SS2. September S. Captain D. V. Derlrkson, of Meadvllle, Penn sylvania, who was In command of the company, received orders to marcn his men to the Soldlera Home, to act there III LET. '"""fS-" POTOMAC 5 tJOWJL,LN"GOXrsr HEXJF!Ejy TttE c1CXLXXEri?oi as a guard to the President, who was occupying a cottage In the grounds. "Tho next morning after our arri val," says Mr. Derlckson, "the Presi dent sent a messenger to my quarters, stating that he would like to see the Captain of the guard at his resldonce. I immediately reported. After an in formal Introduction and hand-shaking, he asked me If I would have any ob jection to riding with him to the city. I replied that It would give me much pleasure to do so, when he invited me to take a scat In the carriage. On our way to the city, he made numerous In quiries, as to my name, where I came from, what regiment I belonged to, etc "When we entered the city, Mr. Lin coln said he would call at General Hal leck's headquarters and get what news had been received from the Army dur ing the night. I informed him that General Cullum, chief aid to General Halleck. was raised In Meadvllle and that I knew him when I was a boy. He replied. Then we must see both the gentlemen.' When the carriage stopped, he requested me to remain seated and said he would bring the gentlemen down to see me, the office being on the second flooor. In a short time the President came down, followed by "the other gentlemen. When he introduced them to me. General uullum recognized and seemed pleased to see me. In General Halleck I thought I discovered a kind of quizzical look, as much aa to say, 'Isn't this rather a big Joke to ask the Commander-in-Chief of the Army down to the street to be lntro- 'Supposlng that the invitation to ride to the city with the President was as much to give him an opportunity to look over and Interview the new captain as for any other purpose, I did not report the next morning. During the day I was Informed that It was the desire of the President that I should breakfast with him and accompany him to the White House every morning, and return with him In the evening. This duty I entered upon with much pleasure, .and was on hand In good time next morning, and con tinued to perform this duty until we moved to the White House In November. It was Mr. Lincoln's custom on account of the pressure of business to breakfast before the other members of the family were up, and I usually entered his room at half past 6 or 7 o'clock In the morning, where I often found him reading the Bible or some work on the art of war. On my entering he . would read aloud and offer comments of his own as he read. "I usually went down to the city at 4 'clock and returned with the President at & He often carried & small portfolio containing papers relating to the business ,jVt v r 4s -At. ATANTIFDVM cnEFX, 1863 of the day, and spent many hours on them In the evening. ... I found Mr. Lin coln to be one of the most kind-hearted and pleasant gentlemen that I had ever met. He never spoke unkindly of any one, and always spoke of the rebels as 'those Southern gentlemen.' " Lincoln's Delight in Camp Fun. This relation begun with the Captain, the President extended to every man of his company. It was their pride that he knew every one of them by name. "He always called me Joe," I heard a veteran of the guard say, a quaver in his voice. He never passed the men on duty without acknowledging their salute, and often vis ited their camp. Once In passing when the men were at mess, he called out: "That coffee smells good, boys; give me a cup." And on another occasion he asked for a plate of beans, and sat down on a camp-stool and ate them. Mrs. Lin coin frequently visited the company with the President, and many and many a gift to the White House larder from enthusi astic supporters of the Administration was sent to the boys now a barrel of apple butter, now a quarter of beef. On holidays Mrs. Lincoln made It a rule to provide Company K with a turkey dinner. The welfare of the men, their troubles. escapades, amusements, were treated by the President as a kind of family matter. He never forgot to ask after the sick. often secured a pass or a furlough for some one, and took genuine delight In the camp fun. "While we were In camp at the Sol diers' Home In the Fall of 1362," says C. M. Derickson, of Mercer, Pa., "the boys indulged In various kinds of amuse ment. I think it was the Kepler boys who Introduced the trained elephant. Two men of about the same size, both in a stooped position, were placed one ahead of the other. An army blanket was then thrown over them so that it came about to their knees, and a trunk, improvised by wrapping a piece of blanket around a small elastlo piece of wood, was placed In the hands of the front man. Here you have your elephant. Ours was taught to get down on his knees, stand on one leg, and do various other tricks. While the elephant was going through his exercises one evening, the President strolled into camp. He was very much amused at the wonderful feats; the elephant could per form, and a few evenings after he called again and brought a friend with him, and asked the Captain if he would not have the elephant brought out again, as he would like to have his friend see him perform. Of course It was done, to the great amusement of both the President and his friend." i By the end of 1S62. Mr. Lincoln could scarcely drive or walk in any direction about Washington without passing a ho- , 4 ' r fin?'- 1 V IX ? - a stKaMiraSiffia XvVJ l -i mm 3P$'v x-trx.v 1 rdNCOIT, OAT rijon xnnrx.ni TO THE) G07F,EJCEeATTi k 5 -h Lttjcol.isj Asr AtrrLE.'ZAjvt with ecJ"be,t?t MC3XJEn1WE pltal. Even In going to his Summer cot tage, at the Soldiers' Home, the Presi dent did not escape the sight of the wounded. The rolling hillside was dotted with white hospital tents during the entire war. In many places the tents were placed close to the road, so as to get more air, the grounds , being more thickly wooded than they are now. As he drove home, after-a harrowing day In the White House, the President frequently looked from his carriage upon the very beds of wounded soldiers. In 18(2 Mr. Lincoln called Dr. D. Willard Bliss from the field to Washington to aid In organizing a more perfect system of general hospitals in and about the city. One result of Dr. Bliss' coming was the building of Armory Square Hospital, one of the best conducted Institutions of the Civil War. Lincoln gave his personal at tention to the building of Armory Square, and for a long time met Dr. Bliss twice each week to consider the ingenious ap pliances which the latter devised to aid in caring for and treating the wounded. Some of these appliances the President paid for out of his own pocket. Not In frequently he had some suggestion to make for the comfort of the place. It was due to him that Armory Square be came a bower of vine and bloom in the Summer. Why don't you plant flower seeds?" he asked Dr. Bliss one day. The doctor said he would if he had the seeds. "I'll order them for you from the Agricultural Department," replied the President, and sure enough he did; and thereafter, all through the season, each of the long barracks had its own flower bed and vines. The President himself visited the hos pitals as often as he could, visits never forgotten Dy tne men to wnom ne spoKe as he passed up ana aown ine waras. shaking hands here, giving a cheering word there, making jocular comments i 1 i TO 1 AKMT r4 ,sv.i .,1 Wit 7 18 it t. srj& '3- y r --c 'Jl t everywhere. There are men still living who tell of a little scene they witnessed at Armory Suare In 1863. A soldier of the One Hundred and Fortieth regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers. had been wounded In the shoulder at the battle of Chancellorsvllle and taken to Washington. One day as he was becoming convalescent a whisper ran down the long row of cots that the President was in the building and would soon pass by. Instantly every boy In blue who was able arose, stood erect, hands to the side, ready to salute his commander-in-chief. The Pennsyl vanlan stood six feet seven inches In his stockings. Lincoln was six feet four. As the President approached this giant .tow ering above him, he stopped in amaze ment, and casting his eyes from head to foot and from foot to head, as if con templating the Immense distance from one extremity to the other, he stood for a moment speechless. At length, extend ing his hand, he exclaimed: "Hello, com rade: do you know when your feet get cold?" Lincoln rarely forgot a patient whom he saw a second time, and to stubborn cases that remained from month to month he gave particular attention. There was In Armory Square Hospital for a long time a boy known as "Little Johnnie." He was hopelessly crippled doomed to death, but cheerful, and a general fa vorite. Lincoln never failed to stop at "Little Johnnie's" cot when he went to Armory Square and frequently sent him fruit and flowers and a friendly message i through Mrs. Lincoln. "Xon Mean Confederates." Of all the incidents told of Lincoln's hospital visits, there is nothing more characteristic, better worth preserva tion, than the one following, preserved by Dr. Jerome Walker, of Brooklyn: . "Just one week before his assassina- 3i 1 Hf arm. f" ' 1 'jw 1 tion. President Lincoln visited the Army of the Potomac, at City Point, Virginia, and carefully exarainul tho hospital arrangements -of the Ninth, Sixth, Fifth, Second and Sixteenth corps hospitals and of the engineer corps, there stationed. At that time I was an agent of the United States San itary Commission attached to the Ninth Corps Hospital. Though a hoy of 19 years, to me was assigned the duty of escorting- the President through our department of the hospital system. The reader can Imagine the pride with which I fulfilled the duty, and as we went from tent to tent I could not but note his gentleness, his friendly greet ings to the sick and wounded, his quiet humor as he drew comparisons between himself and the very tall and very short men with whom he came In con tact, and his genuine Interest in the welfare of the soldiers. "Finally, after visiting the wards oc cupied by our invalid and convalescing soldiers, we came to three wards oc cupied by sick and wounded Southern prisoners. With a feeling of patriotic duty, I said, 'Mr. President, you won't want to go in there; they are only rebels.' I will never forget how he stopped and gently laid his large hand upon my shoulder and quietly an swered, 'You mean Confederates.' And I have meant Confederates ever since. "There was nothing left for me to do after the President's remark but to go with him through these threo wards; and I could not see but that he was just as kind, his hand-shakings just as hearty, his Interest Just as real for the welfare of the men as when he was among our own soldiers." Lincoln and the Deserter. One great cause of sorrow to Lin coln throughout the war was the ne cessity of DUnishing soldiers. Not only did the men commit all the crimes common to society, like robbery and murder; they were guilty of others pe culiar to military organization and war, such as desertion, sleeping on post, disobedience to orders, bounty jumping, giving Information to the enemy. As the army grew larger, de sertion became so common that it had to be treated with great severity. The President never ceased to abhor the death penalty for this offense. While he never commuted the sentence of a bounty-jumper, as far as I have been able to discover, over the great num ber of sentences he hesitated. He seemed to see what others Ignored, the causes which were behind. Lincoln knew that the "copperhead" agitation In. the North reached the Army and . that hundreds, of men were being urged by parents and friends hostile to the Administration to desert. His indig nation never was against the boy who yielded to this Influence. "Must I shoot a simple-minded sol dier boy who deserts," he said, "while must not touch a hair of the wily agitator who Induces him to desert? I think that in such a case, to silence the agitator, and save the boy, is not only constitutional, but withal a great mercy." Another cause that he never forgot waa that mortal homesickness which so often ate the very heart out of a boy away from home for the first time. It filled many a hospital cot In the Civil War, and shriveled the nerves and (Cenotuded on Pace 7.)