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William Boynton, Sherman's Historical Raid, Chapter 17: (search)
general pacification. As will be remembered, Mr. Stanton caused to be made public the following among othen. Then arrived the Northern papers containing Mr. Stanton's bulletins in regard to the character of the firt storm of abuse which the latter poured out upon Mr. Stanton and General Halleck. For his criticisms upon te Disregarded, authenticated as official, by Mr. Secretary Stanton, and published in the New York papers of Aprwas his purpose to defy and violate my truce that Mr. Stanton's publication of the fact, not even yet recalled,nted phraseology of General Halleck's dispatch to Mr. Stanton, wherein he reports that he had ordered his generf the James, Richmond, Va., June 7, 1865. Hon. E M. Stanton, Secretary of War. Sir: I have just received t of the scope of Sherman's terms as, according to Mr. Stanton, were entertained at Washington. Mr. Reagan wres General Sherman's attack upon the memory of Secretary Stanton appear! General Sherman relates that at the
William Boynton, Sherman's Historical Raid, Chapter 18: (search)
ncreased violence to his old attack upon Secretary Stanton, and attempts to hold him chiefly respon He attempts to convey the impression that Mr. Stanton exceeded his authority in the matter, by thal in Washington, that they knew nothing of Mr. Stanton's publications setting forth the nature of in rejecting the terms on the grounds which Mr. Stanton made known. It is doubtless true that none of them, except Mr. Stanton, knew that these reasons were to be made public in the shape they werethink he afterward did, by refusing to take Mr. Stanton's hand, or as he expresses it, speaking of ach member of the Cabinet. As I approached Mr. Stanton, he offered me his hand, but I declined itaint is directed at the reasons assigned by Mr. Stanton for the rejection of his terms. He contendtrued the Sherman-Johnston terms exactly as Mr. Stanton and the other members of Lincoln's Cabinet Sherman terms as preliminary, and held, as Mr. Stanton said our Cabinet did, that subsequently a c