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Collection Reference Number GLC01594
From Archive Folder Unassociated Civil War Documents 1865 
Title Edwin H. McCaleb to T. P. Chandler, Esq., on Lincoln's assassination and the mixing of races in the South
Date 6 June 1865
Author McCaleb, Edwin H. (fl. 1844-1865)  
Recipient Chandler, T. P.  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description McCaleb thanks Chandler and his family for their kindness while a prisoner of war in the North. He writes that "All good citizens deeply deplore the assassination of Pres. Lincoln... Mr. L -- was a great man and more than that was a good man and countryy [sic] could ill afford to lose his services at this important crisis...." Expresses his concern with Andrew Johnson's use of military courts to try citizens and feels he is "overstepping his oath of office". Protests that turning an "ignorant Negro" into a self reliant citizen will stump the growth of the South. Finally, he defines miscegenation and says "[i]f such a detestable dogma becomes a law we shall soon have a race of mulattoes as fickle & foolish as the Mongrel population of Mexico...."
Subjects African American History  Abolition  Assassination  Lincoln Assassination  Civil War  Military History  Military Law  President  Government and Civics  Confederate States of America  Charity and Philanthropy  Prisoner of War  Oath  Suffrage  Latin and South America  Law  Children and Family  
People McCaleb, Edwin H. (fl. 1844-1865)  Johnson, Andrew (1808-1875)  Lincoln, Abraham (1809-1865)  
Place written Cold Springs, Mississippi
Theme The Presidency; The American Civil War; African Americans; Government & Politics; Law; Slavery & Abolition
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information As a result of the Civil War, the South lost a fourth of its white male population of military age, a third of its livestock, half of its farm machinery, and $2.5 billion worth of human property. Factories and railroads had been destroyed, and such cities as Atlanta, Charleston, Columbia, and Richmond had been largely burned to the ground. In South Carolina, the value of property plunged from $400 million in 1860, ranking it third in the nation, to just $50 million in 1865. In this letter, a former supporter of the Confederacy responds to Lincoln's death, describes conditions in the post-war South, and expresses distrust toward President Andrew Johnson. McCaleb was a soldier in the 12th Mississippi 12th Infantry Regiment, Company K.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945
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