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Collection Reference Number GLC05606
From Archive Folder Unassociated Civil War Documents 1863 
Title John A. Rawlins to Mary E. Hurlbut discussing his love for her and Ulysses Grant's drinking problem
Date 16 November 1863
Author Rawlins, John A. (1831-1869)  
Recipient Hurlbut, Mary E.  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Discusses his love for her and Ulysses Grant's drinking problem. To his fiancée, with pencil lines between the pen. On Grant's drinking: "The necessity of my presence has made almost absolute, by the free use of intoxicating spirits liquors at Head Quarters which last nights developments showed me had reached to the General commanding. I am the only one here (his wife not being with him) who can stay it in that direction & prevent evil consequences resulting from it. I had hoped but it appears vainly his New Orleans experience would prevent him ever again indulging with this his worst enemy." The "New Orleans experience" may refer to the bad fall Grant took off a horse earlier that year in New Orleans. Rawlins was on Grant's staff throughout the war, and was always his friend and supporter. He believed Grant's drinking problem to be severe, and saw himself as the only one who could protect the General and his reputation.
Subjects Love Letters  Women's History  Civil War  Military History  Union General  Union Forces  Union Soldier's Letter  Soldier's Letter  Alcohol  Marriage  Injury or Wound  
People Rawlins, John Aaron (1831-1869)  Hurlburt, Mary Emmeline (1840-1874)  Grant, Ulysses S. (Ulysses Simpson) (1822-1885)  
Place written Chattanooga, Tennessee
Theme The American Civil War; Government & Politics; Health & Medicine
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information John A. Rawlins served under Grant throughout the Civil War, reaching the rank of Major General, and later became Grant's Secretary of War.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945