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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Adam Badeau, Grant in peace: from Appomattox to Mount McGregor, a personal memoir. Search the whole document.
Found 213 total hits in 41 results.
June, 1880 AD (search for this): chapter 37
Chapter 37:
Grant and Garfield.
until June, 1880, there had been nothing at all remarkable in the relations of Grant with the man who outstripped him at Chicago.
The most prominent of the Western generals was not likely to see much of the chiefof-staff of a distant commander, and in 1863, when Garfield was promoted to the rank of major-general, he had served only a few months under Grant.
In the second year of the war he was elected to Congress, and after the battle of Chickamauga, Garfield resigned his military commission and applied himself to civil duties, in which he was destined to rise to greater eminence.
He was in Congress during the entire period of Grant's Administration, and was always a loyal political supporter of the head of his party; but there was no approach to intimacy between them.
After the nominations at Chicago, Grant remained for a while entirely undemonstrative.
He sent no congratulations to his victor and gave no intimation of the course he inten