網頁圖片
PDF
ePub 版

Cullough, 444, 445; G. refuses | Hancock, Winfield S., 247, 549.
to reissue in 1873, 446; pro- Hardee, William J., at West
posals in Congress to reissue, Point with G., 21; quoted,
447; bill to authorize maxi- 23.
mum of $400,000,000 vetoed
by G., 448-51.
Grier, Justice, 354.

Grimes, James W., criticizes G.'s
generalship, in Senate, 169.
Groesbeck, William S., nomi-
nated for President by free
traders in 1872, 418.

Hague Tribunal, the, 311.
Halleck, Henry W., supersedes
Frémont, 68; his character, 68;
and G.'s plan of operations,
68, 69; after Donelson, praises
everybody but G., 76, 77;
reprimands G., and puts
Smith over his head, 78, 79;
grudgingly restores G. to his
command, 79; attributes mis-
understanding to McClellan,
80, 81; G.'s comment on his
action, 81, 82; his plan of cam-
paign after Donelson, 84;
his humorous "capture" of
Corinth, 93; difference be-
tween his strategic theory and
G.'s, 95, 96; his treatment of
G., 96, 97; his reply to Lin-
coln as to responsibility for
Shiloh, 97; made commander-
in-chief, vice McClellan, 99,
100; and G.'s Vicksburg cam-
paign, 117 f.; his prejudice
against G. overcome by Vicks-
burg, 121; 59, 71, 72, 83, 94,
105, 111, 131, 134, 136, 137,
150, 165, 166, 167, 184, 226.
Halstead, Murat, 412, 414.
Hamer, Thomas L., appoints G.
to West Point, 17.
Hamilton, Schuyler, at West
Point with G., 21.
Hamlin, Hannibal, 494.
Hampton, Wade, 518.

Harlan, James, criticizes G. in
Senate, 98, 99; 321.

Harris, guerrilla officer, 54, 55.
Harrison, Benjamin, 492.
Haworth, The Hayes-Tilden Dis-
puted Election, quoted, 509,
510.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 291.
Hay, John, 214.

Hayes, Rutherford B., nomi-
nated for President in 1876,
498, 499; dispute as to his
election, 501 f.; has majority
of one in Electoral College,
507; declared elected, 516;
was he a fraudulent incum-
bent? 517, 520, withdraws
troops from Charleston, 518;
pledged against a second term,
537, but could not have been
reëlected, 537; 455, 508, 509,
511, 546, 547.
Hayti, 312.
Heintzelmann, Samuel P., 59.
Henderson, John B., and the

whiskey frauds, 478 ƒƒ.
Henry, Fort, strategic position
of, 69; taken by G., 71.
Hepburn vs. Griswold (Legal
Tender case), 352-54; over-
ruled, 355.

Hewitt, Abram S., 501, 505, 506,
510.

Hillyer, Captain, 121.
Hoadley, George, 412.
Hoar, Ebenezer Rockwood, ap-

pointed Attorney - General,
277; his difficulties with Sena-
tors, 277; his nomination to
Supreme Court rejected, 277,
325; on Joint High Commis-
sion, 309; his resignation as
Attorney-General requested,
and why, 325, 326, 386, 388,

404 ff.; 335.
Inflation.
Greenbacks.

See Currency and

Ingalls, Rufus, at West Point
with G., 21; G.'s superior in
his own.field, 162.
Ireland, American sympathy
with, 294.

Island No. 10, 99, 104.

Jackson, Andrew, 398.
Jackson, Claiborne, 47, 57.
Jackson, Thomas J. ("Stone-

389; accused of having as- | Indians, the, G.'s interest in,
sisted in "packing" the Su-
preme Court, 355, 356; quoted
on G.'s honesty, 485 n.; 354,
438, 492, 493.
Hoar, George F., quoted in de-
fense of his brother, 355, 356,
and on corruption in public
life, 429, 430; the victim of
his own hyperbole, 430; his
Autobiography quoted on G.'s
anger with Sumner, 438;
quoted on massacre at Col-
fax, 468; 439, 472, 513, 537.
Holden, Governor of North
Carolina, 367, 368.
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Life of
Motley, quoted, 303; quoted
on G., 381; 291.
Hood, John B., supersedes
Johnston, 173; beaten by
Schofield at Franklin, 182;
before Nashville, 182-84;
beaten by Thomas there, 185;
177, 181.

Hooker, Joseph, replies to Stan-

ton's "bribe" by losing Chan-
cellorsville, 116; at Lookout
Mountain, 138; 59, 131, 132,
137, 150, 160, 164.
Hooper, Samuel, 383.
Howard, Oliver O., 160.
Howe, Samuel G., 328.
Hunt, Justice Ward, 492.
Hunter, David, 59, 71.
Hunter, R. M. T., at City Point,
188.

Hunton, Eppa, 513.

Hurlbut, Stephen S., 85, 109.

Immigrants, literacy test for, be-
fore naturalization, urged by
G., 529, 530.
Impeachment of President John-

son, early talk of, comes to
nothing, 259; House passes
resolutions of, 259, 269; trial
in Senate, 269 ƒƒ.

wall"), in Mexican War, 30.
Jackson, Miss., taken by G., 118.
James, Thomas L., Postmaster-

General, 550 n.

Jewell, Marshall, Postmaster-

General, asked to resign, 487.
Johnson, Andrew, nominated
for Vice-President, 172; his
threat to try Lee for treason
opposed by G., 203-05; denies
amnesty to Lee and Long-
street, 205 and n.; declines to
interfere in Mexico, 207; his
accession regarded in North
as a Godsend, 212, 213; his
swift change of policy, 213,
214; his proclamation of am-
nesty, 215, 216; his character
and defects, 215-17, 219; tries
to win G.'s friendship, 217;
favors qualified negro suffrage,
218, 219; his early course com-
mendable, 218; sends G. on
mission to Southern States,
220; alienates both North and
South, 227, 228; his plan
of Reconstruction apparently
approved in North, 230, 231:
might have won by a concilia-
tory course, 231, 232; his
message of Dec., 1865, gener-
ally approved, 234; Sumner's
criticism of, 234; vetoes
Freedmen's Bureau bill, 235;

his violent speech of Feb. 22.,
1866, 235, 236; his vetoes of
Civil Rights bill and new
Freedmen's Bureau bill over-
ridden, 236; troubles with
Congress due chiefly to per-
sonal considerations, 237; his
"swing around the circle,"
238, 239; his relations with
Stanton badly strained, 239;
his fatuous opposition to Con-
gress and the result, 240, 241;
his influence responsible for re-
fusal of seceding States to rat-
ify 14th Amendment, 241; G.
out of sympathy with, 242,
250; orders G. to Mexico,
245-47; sends Sherman in
G.'s place, 247; his veto of
Reconstruction Act overrid-
den, 249; removes Republi-
can placemen, 249; his veto of
Tenure of Office Act overrid-
den, 249; and the measures of
the 40th Congress, 251; his
breach with Stanton com-
plete, 251; tells G. of his pur-
pose to oust Stanton and dis-
place Sheridan, 251, 252;
asks Stanton to resign, 253;
suspends Stanton and ap-
points G. ad interim, 254;
breaks with G. over Sheri-
dan's removal, 257, 258; his
removal of Stanton leads to
impeachment, 258, 259, 269;
resents G.'s surrender of sec-
retaryship, 261; question of
veracity between G. and,
261 ff.; his interpretation of
Tenure of Office Act, 261;
fails to understand G., 263;
G. breaks off intercourse with,
268; endeavors to get rid of
Stanton, 269; wishes to test
Tenure of Office Act in courts,
269; acquitted on impeach-
ment trial, 269, 270; recom-

mends annexation of San
Domingo, 313; suggests re-
pudiation of interest on debt,
341; 260 n., 274, 279, 293,
327, 372, 408, 476.
Johnson, Reverdy, Minister to
Great Britain, negotiates John-
son - Clarendon Convention,
293, 294.
Johnson-Clarendon Convention,
terms of, 294; ratification de-
feated in Senate, 295; 299,
300, 304.
Johnston, Albert Sidney, in
Mexican War, 30; commands
Confederate troops west of
Alleghanies, 69; commands at
Shiloh, 84, 85, and is killed
there, 88; effect of his death,
88; 72, 76.
Johnston, Joseph E., defeats
Rosecrans at Chickamauga,
130; forced back to Atlanta
by Sherman, 172; superseded
by Hood, 173; difficulty as to
terms of his surrender to Sher-
man, 201; 118, 131, 160, 161,
170 n., 185, 191, 193.
Johnston, William P., his Life

of A. S. Johnston quoted, 70.
Joint High Commission (1871),
its powers, 308; membership
of, 308, 309; submits Treaty
of Washington, 309.
Jomini, Baron Henry, 54.
Jones, Mr., Minister to Belgium,
321 n.

Juarez, President of Mexico, 247.
Julian, George W., quoted on
accession of Johnson, 213;
505, 506.

Kasson, John A., 505.
Kearney, Denis, 544.
Kearny, Philip, 59.
Kellogg, William P. (Louisiana),
466, 467, 469, 471, 472.
Kentucky Legislature, adopts

resolution favorable to Union, | L'Enfant, Major, 475.

62.

Keyes, Erasmus D., 59.
Kirk, Colonel, 367.
"Kirk's Raid," 367, 368.
Ku-Klux Act. See "Enforce-
ment Acts."
Ku-Klux-Klan, 358, 361 and n.,
367, 371, 373, 374, 375, 463.

Laird, Mr., builder of the Ala-
bama, 294.

Lee, Francis, quoted on G. at

Chapultepec, 28.

Lee, Robert E., in Mexican War,
30; (in Civil War) responsibil-
ity of, limited to his own com-
mand, 162; G. underrates his
quality, 162; precipitates bat-
tle of the Wilderness, 163;
forced back to Cold Harbor,
where G. is repulsed, 165, 166;
never face to face with G.
again, 166; his army eluded
by G. in flanking movement,
167; his losses in the Wilder-
ness campaign, 169; tries to
break through lines at Peters-
burg and join Johnston, 191;
evacuates Petersburg, 192,
193; at Jetersville, 193; asked
by G. to surrender, 194; cor-
respondence with G., 194-96;
their meeting at Appomattox,
196 f.; accepts G.'s terms,
197-99; their further conver-
sation, 200; threat of trial for
treason, opposed by G., 203-
05; denied amnesty, 205 and
n.; 99, 142, 143, 145, 153, 155,
156, 161, 169, 170 and n., 171,
172, 173, 178, 179, 181, 183,
187, 188, 201.
Legal Tender Act, held uncon-

stitutional by Supreme Court
(1869), 352-54; held constitu-
tional in 1872, 355. And see
Supreme Court.

Liberal Republican movement
of 1872, originates in Mis-
souri, 409; history of, 410 ff.;
principal figures in, 411-13;
absurdity of nomination of
Greeley, 415, 416.

Liberal Republicans, summoned
to meet at Cincinnati, 410;
convention of, how consti-
tuted, 411; candidates for
nomination of, 413, 414; nom-
inate Greeley, 415 ff.; their
address to the people, 418,
419; their platform and its
tariff "straddle," 419, 420.
Li Hung Chang, 536, 537.
Lieber, Francis, 212.
Lincoln, Abraham, appoints G.
brigadier-general, 58, 59; his
modification of Frémont's
emancipation proclamation
displeases North, 67, 68; ap-
points Halleck in Frémont's
place, 68; first promotes G.
alone for capture of Donelson,
77; compels G.'s restoration
to his command, 79; and the
responsibility for Shiloh, 96,
97; his characterization of G.,
99; makes Halleck comman-
der-in-chief, 99; his patron-
age of McClernand and Logan,
109, 110; conditionally in-
dorses McClernand's Missis-
sippi plan of campaign, 110,
111; denies McClernand's re-
quest for court of inquiry, 113;
and Swett's quarrel with G.,
116; his letter to G. after
Vicksburg, 122, 123; makes
G. major-general, 123; Dana's
reports largely responsible for
his clinging to G., 128; his
telegram to G. after Chatta-
nooga, 139; makes G. lieu-
tenant-general and comman-
der-in-chief, 140; fears advent

ment of, not recognized by
Congress, 210; conditions in,
under G., 359; (1872-1875),
466-72; in disputed election
of 1876, 502, 503 n., 504, 505,
506, 507, 508, 509; 375, 514.
Louisville Courier-Journal, 413.
Lowell, James Russell, quoted,
67, 284, 536; 291, 380, 499.
Lynch, John R., 361.
Lyon, Nathaniel, 47, 59.

of man on horseback, 141; his | Lookout Mountain, 138.
fears dissipated, 142; G.'s Louisiana, reorganized govern-
first interview with, 145; his
last words to G. leaving for
the front, 149, 150; his deal-
ings with G. and with other
generals, 150, 151; Northern
discontent with his conduct of
the war, 154; telegraphs G.
after Cold Harbor, 167, 168;
quoted on G., 168; renomi-
nated in 1864, 172; calls for
500,000 volunteers, 173; the
famous memorandum of Au-
gust 23, 173; and the Smith-
Butler row, 175; quoted, 179,
180; congratulates Sherman,
186; meets Peace Commission
at City Point, 188-90; pro-
posed message to Congress
urging compensation to slave-
owners, withheld, 190, 191;
murder of, 200, 212, 213; his
probable course in Recon-
struction, 208, 209; vetoes
Reconstruction Act of 1864,
209, 210; his plans opposed
by radicals, 210, 211; his
speech of April 11, 1865, 211,
212; Sumner's failure to un-
derstand, 285, 286; 33, 41, 66,
108, 126, 130, 177, 181, 183,
191, 193, 219, 227, 229, 232,
398, 466, 502.
Lodge, Henry Cabot, Early
Memories, quoted on Sum-
ner, 288, 289.

Logan, John A., ordered to re-
place Thomas at Nashville,
185; favors inflation, 447,
449, 450; 384, 423, 496, 513,
537, 540, 548.
Longfellow, Henry W., 291.
Longstreet, James, at West
Point with G., 21; quoted on
G. at Molino del Rey, 29;
denied amnesty by Johnson,
205 n.

McClellan, George B., at West
Point with G., 21; his aims and
achievement contrasted with
G.'s, 169; clamor in North for
G.'s supersession by, 173; 57,
59, 65, 70, 77, 80, 81, 99, 131,
150, 151, 153, 183.
McClernand, John A., super-
sedes Sherman, 108; his am-
bition and jealousy of G.,
109 f.; as a Douglas Demo-
crat, courted by Lincoln, 110;
his self-praise and attacks on
G., 110; his plan for the Mis-
sissippi River campaign con-
ditionally approved by Lincoln,
110, 111; recalled by G., com-
plains to Lincoln, 111; his in-
subordination, 112; relieved of
command for breach of dis-
cipline, 112, 113; attacks G. in
request for court of inquiry,
113; Sherman quoted on, 113,
114; 51, 52, 59, 64, 73, 77, 85,
86, 88, 94, 115, 118, 298.
McClure, Alexander K., 412.
McCook, Alexander M., 130.
McCrary, George W., 509.
McCullough, Hugh, Secretary
of the Treasury, greenbacks
retired by, 444, 445, 447; 341,
351.

Macdonald, Sir John A., on
Joint High Commission, 309.

« 上一頁繼續 »