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Personal Memoirs-2 [85]

By Root 636 0
the disaffected element,

sustained as it was by the open sympathy of the President, had grown

so determined in its opposition to the execution of the

Reconstruction acts that I resolved to remove from place and power

all obstacles; for the summer's experience had convinced me that in

no other way could the law be faithfully administered.



The President had long been dissatisfied with my course; indeed, he

had harbored personal enmity against me ever since he perceived that

he could not bend me to an acceptance of the false position in which

he had tried to place me by garbling my report of the riot of 1866.

When Mr. Johnson decided to remove me, General Grant protested in

these terms, but to no purpose:



"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES,

"WASHINGTON, D. C., August 17, 1867



"SIR: I am in receipt of your order of this date directing the

assignment of General G. H. Thomas to the command of the Fifth

Military District, General Sheridan to the Department of the

Missouri, and General Hancock to the Department of the Cumberland;

also your note of this date (enclosing these instructions), saying:

'Before you issue instructions to carry into effect the enclosed

order, I would be pleased to hear any suggestions you may deem

necessary respecting the assignments to which the order refers.'



"I am pleased to avail myself of this invitation to urge--earnestly

urge--urge in the name of a patriotic people, who have sacrificed

hundreds of thousands of loyal lives and thousands of millions of

treasure to preserve the integrity and union of this country--that

this order be not insisted on. It is unmistakably the expressed wish

of the country that General Sheridan should not be removed from his

present command.



"This is a republic where the will of the people is the law of the

land. I beg that their voice may be heard.



"General Sheridan has performed his civil duties faithfully and

intelligently. His removal will only be regarded as an effort to

defeat the laws of Congress. It will be interpreted by the

unreconstructed element in the South--those who did all they could to

break up this Government by arms, and now wish to be the only element

consulted as to the method of restoring order--as a triumph. It will

embolden them to renewed opposition to the will of the loyal masses,

believing that they have the Executive with them.



"The services of General Thomas in battling for the Union entitle him

to some consideration. He has repeatedly entered his protest against

being assigned to either of the five military districts, and

especially to being assigned to relieve General Sheridan.



"There are military reasons, pecuniary reasons, and above all,

patriotic reasons, why this should not be insisted upon.



"I beg to refer to a letter marked 'private,' which I wrote to the

President when first consulted on the subject of the change in the

War Department. It bears upon the subject of this removal, and I had

hoped would have prevented it.



"I have the honor to be, with great respect, your obedient servant,



"U. S. GRANT,

"General U. S. A., Secretary of War ad interim.



"His Excellency A. JOHNSON,

"President of the United States."





I was ordered to command the Department of the Missouri (General

Hancock, as already noted, finally becoming my successor in the Fifth

Military District), and left New Orleans on the 5th of September. I

was not loath to go. The kind of duty I had been performing in

Louisiana and Texas was very trying under the most favorable

circumstances, but all the more so in my case, since I had to contend

against the obstructions which the President placed in the way from

persistent opposition to the acts of Congress as well as from

antipathy to me--which obstructions he interposed with all the

boldness and aggressiveness of his peculiar nature.



On more than one occasion while I was
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