William Howard Russell (1827--1907) was an
Irish reporter for the Times
of London, and made a name for himself covering a variety of military
conflicts, beginning with the Crimean War (1853--56) and the Indian
Mutiny of 1857. With the election of Lincoln and the beginning of
secession, Russell decided to visit the United States, leaving Cork on
the evening of March 3, and arriving in New York City on March
16. The resulting publication from this trip, My Diary North and South,
covers only into the fall of 1862---Russell's Introduction is dated
December 8, 1862, and was written in London---but it is an important
perspective on the early parts of the war, especially the secession
winter and spring, which is why I have included these entries as part
of the Fort Sumter Chronology. This entry describes Russell's experiences at the March 28 state dinner. |
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March 28th.—I was honoured
to-day by visits from a great number of Members of Congress, journalists, and
others. Judging from the expressions of
most of the Washington people, they would gladly see a Southern Cabinet
installed in their city. The cold shoulder
is given to Mr. Lincoln, and all kinds of stories and jokes are circulated at
his expense. People take particular
pleasure in telling how he came towards the seat of his Government disguised in
a Scotch cap and cloak, whatever that may mean. In the evening I repaired to the White House. The servant who took my hat and coat was
particularly inquisitive as to my name and condition in life; and when he heard
I was not a minister, he seemed inclined to question my right to be there at
all: “for,” said he, “there are none but members of the cabinet, and their
wives and daughters, dining here to-day.” Eventually he relaxed—instructed me how to
place my hat so that it would be exposed to no indignity, and informed me that
I was about to participate in a prandial enjoyment of no ordinary character. There was no parade or display, no
announcement—no gilded staircase, with its liveried heralds, transmitting and
translating one’s name from landing to landing.
From the unpretending ante-chamber, a walk across the lofty hall led us
to the reception-room, which was the same as that in which the President held
his interview yesterday. Mrs. Lincoln
was already seated to receive her guests.
She is of the middle age and height, of a plumpness degenerating to the
embonpoint natural to her years; her features are plain, her nose and mouth of
an ordinary type, and her manners and appearance homely, stiffened, however, by
the consciousness that her position requires her to be something more than
plain Mrs. Lincoln, the wife of the
Illinois lawyer; she is profuse in the introduction of the word “sir” in every
sentence, which is now almost an Americanism confined to certain classes,
although it was once as common in England.
Her dress I shall not attempt to describe, though it was very gorgeous
and highly coloured. She handled a fan
with much energy, displaying a round, well-proportioned arm, and was adorned
with some simple jewellery. Mrs. Lincoln struck me as being desirous of making
herself agreeable; and I own I was agreeably disappointed, as the Secessionist
ladies at Washington had been amusing themselves by anecdotes which could scarcely
have been founded on fact. Several of the Ministers had already arrived;
by-and-by all had come, and the party only waited for General Scott, who seemed
to be the representative man in Washington of the monarchical idea, and to absorb
some of the feeling which is lavished on the pictures and memory, if not on the
monument, of Washington. Whilst we were
waiting, Mr. Seward took me round, and introduced me to the Ministers, and to their
wives and daughters, among the latter, Miss Chase, who is very attractive,
agreeable, and sprightly. Her father,
the Finance Minister, struck me as one of the most intelligent and
distinguished persons in the whole assemblage; tall, of a good presence, with a
well-formed head, fine forehead, and a face indicating energy and power. There is a peculiar droop and motion of the
lid of one eye, which seems to have suffered from some injury, that detracts
from the agreeable effect of his face; but, on the whole, he is one who would
not pass quite unnoticed in a European crowd of the same description. In the whole assemblage there was not a scrap
of lace or a piece of ribbon, except the gorgeous epaulettes of an old naval
officer who had served against us in the last war, and who represented some
branch of the naval department. Nor were
the Ministers by any means remarkable for their personal appearance. Mr. Cameron, the Secretary for War, a slight
man, above the middle height, with grey hair, deep-set keen grey eyes, and a
thin mouth, gave me the idea of a person of ability and adroitness. His colleague, the Secretary of the Navy, a
small man, with a great long grey beard and spectacles, did not look like one
of much originality or ability; but people who know Mr. Welles declare that he
is possessed of administrative power, although they admit that he does not know
the stem from the stern of a ship, and are in doubt whether he ever saw the sea
in his life. Mr. Smith, the Minister of
the Interior, is a bright-eyed, smart (I use the word in the English sense)
gentleman, with the reputation of being one of the most conservative members of
the cabinet. Mr. Blair, the Postmaster- General,
is a person of much greater influence than his position would indicate. He has the reputation of being one of the
most determined republicans in the Ministry; but he held peculiar notions with
reference to the black and the white races, which, if carried out, would not by
any means conduce to the comfort or happiness of free negroes in the United
States. He is a tall, lean man, with a
hard, Scotch, practical-looking head—an anvil for ideas to be hammered on. His eyes are small and deeply set, and have a
rat-like expression; and he speaks with caution, as though he weighed every
word before he uttered it. The last of the
Ministers is Mr. Bates, a stout, thick-set, common-looking man, with a large
beard, who fills the office of Attorney-General. Some of the gentlemen were in evening dress;
others wore black frock coats, which it seems, as in Turkey, are considered to
be en regle at a Republican Ministerial dinner. In the conversation which occurred before
dinner, I was amused to observe the manner in which Mr. Lincoln used the
anecdotes for which he is famous. Where
men bred in courts, accustomed to the world, or versed in diplomacy, would use
some subterfuge, or would make a polite speech, or give a shrug of the
shoulders as the means of getting out of an embarrassing position, Mr. Lincoln
raises a laugh by some bold west-country anecdote, and moves off in the cloud
of merriment produced by his joke. Thus,
when Mr. Bates was remonstrating apparently against the appointment of some indifferent
lawyer to a place of judicial importance, the President interposed with, “Come
now, Bates, he’s not half as bad as you think.
Besides that, I must tell you, he did me a good turn long ago. When I took to the law, I was going to court
one morning, with some ten or twelve miles of bad road before me, and I had no
horse. The judge overtook me in his
waggon. ‘Hollo, Lincoln! Are you not
going to the courthouse? Come in and
I'll give you a seat.’ Well, I got in,
and the judge went on reading his papers.
Presently the waggon struck a stump on one side of the road; then it
hopped off to the other. I looked out,
and I saw the driver was jerking from side to side in his seat; so says I, ‘Judge,
I think your coachman has been taking a little drop too much this morning.’ ‘Well I declare, Lincoln,' said he,’ I should
not much wonder if you are right, for he has nearly upset me half-a-dozen of
times since starting.’ So, putting his head
out of the window, he shouted, ‘Why, you infernal scoundrel, you are drunk!’ Upon which, pulling up his horses, and turning
round with great gravity, the coachman said, ‘By gorra! That’s the first rightful decision you have given
for the last twelvemonth.’” Whilst the
company were laughing, the President beat a quiet retreat from the
neighbourhood of the Attorney-General. It was at last announced that General Scott
was unable to be present, and that, although actually in the house, he had been
compelled to retire from indisposition, and we moved in to the banquettiug-hall. The first “state dinner,” as it is called, of
the President was not remarkable for ostentation. No liveried servants, no Persic splendour of
ancient plate, or chefs d’oeuvre of art glittered round the board. Vases of flowers decorated the table,
combined with dishes in what may be called the “Gallo-American” style, with wines
which owed their parentage to France, and their rearing and education to the
United States, which abound in cunning nurses for such productions. The conversation was suited to the state
dinner of a cabinet at which women and strangers were present. I was seated next Mr. Bates and the very
agreeable and lively Secretary of the President, Mr. Hay, and except when there
was an attentive silence caused by one of the President’s stories, there was a
Babel of small talk round the table, in which I was surprised to find a
diversity of accent almost as great as if a number of foreigners had been
speaking English. I omitted the name of Mr.
Hamlin, the Vice-President, as well as those of less remarkable people who were
present; but it would not be becoming to pass over a man distinguished for nothing
so much as his persistent and unvarying adhesion to one political doctrine,
which has made him, in combination with the belief in his honesty, the occupant
of a post which leads to the Presidency, in event of any occurrence which may
remove Mr. Lincoln. After dinner the ladies and gentlemen retired
to the drawing-room, and the circle was increased by the addition of several
politicians. I had an opportunity of
conversing with some of the Ministers, if not with all, from time to time, and
I was struck by the uniform tendency of their remarks in reference to the
policy of Great Britain. They seemed to think
that England was bound by her anti-slavery antecedents to discourage to the
utmost any attempts of the South to establish its independence on a basis of
slavery, and to assume that they were the representatives of an active war of
emancipation. As the veteran Commodore
Stewart passed the chair of the young lady to whom I was speaking, she said, “I
suppose, Mr. Russell, you do not admire that officer?” “On the contrary,” I said, “I think he is a
very fine-looking old man.” “I don’t
mean that,” she replied; “but you know he can’t be very much liked by you, because
he fought so gallantly against you in the last war, as you must know.” I had not the courage to confess ignorance of
the Captain’s antecedents. There is a
delusion among more than the fair American who spoke to me, that we entertain
in England the sort of feeling, morbid or wholesome as it may be, in reference
to our reverses at New Orleans and elsewhere, that is attributed to Frenchmen
respecting Waterloo. On returning to Willard’s Hotel, I was
accosted by a gentleman who came out from the crowd in front of the office. “Sir," he said, “you have been dining
with our President to-night.” I bowed. “Was it an agreeable party?" said he. “What do you think of Mr. Lincoln?” “May I ask to whom I have the pleasure of
speaking?” “My name is Mr. ——, and I am
the correspondent of the New York ——.” “Then,
sir,” I replied, “it gives me satisfaction to tell you that I think a great
deal of Mr. Lincoln, and that I am equally pleased with my dinner. I have the honour to bid you good evening.” The same gentleman informed me afterwards that
he had created the office of Washington Correspondent to the New York papers. “At first,” said he, “I merely wrote news,
and no one cared much; then I spiced it up, squibbed a little, and let off
stories of my own. Congress men
contradicted me—issued cards—said they were not facts. The public attention was attracted, and I was
told to go on; and so the Washington correspondence became a feature in all the
New York papers by degrees.” The hum and
bustle in the hotel to-night were wonderful.
All the office seekers were in the passages, hungering after senators
and representatives, and the ladies in any way related to influential people,
had an entourage of courtiers sedulously paying their respects. Miss Chase, indeed, laughingly told me that
she was pestered by applicants for her father’s good offices, and by persons seeking
introduction to her as a means of making demands on “Uncle Sam.” As I was visiting a book-shop to-day, a pert,
smiling young fellow, of slight figure and boyish appearance came up and
introduced himself to me as an artist who had contributed to an illustrated
London paper during the Prince of Wales’s tour, and who had become acquainted
with some of my friends; and he requested permission to call on me, which I
gave without difficulty or hesitation. He
visited me this evening, poor lad! and told me a sad story of his struggles,
and of the dependence of his family on his efforts, as a prelude to a request
that I would allow him to go South when I was making the tour there, of which
he had heard. He was under an engagement
with the London paper, and had no doubt that if he was with me his sketches
would all be received as illustrations of the places to which my letters were
attracting public interest in England at the time. There was no reason why I should be averse to
his travelling with me in the same train.
He could certainly go if he pleased.
At the same time, I intimated that I was in no way to be connected with
or responsible for him. |
Back to Civil War Chronologies (Main page) Back to Chronology of the Fort Sumter Crisis Source: My Diary North and South, Vol. 1, by William Howard Russell, pp. 60--67. Date added to website: January 10, 2025. |